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County Offer Much For Grac

Sanford,Seminole

With Beautiful Churches, Fine Schools, Many Lovely Homes

p r-rp rrp r

the home oi tut. end Mrs. Charlcu Loriuely is in Vvynnewood

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R o tU m D

Mention
O f 'Phillips' Has M uch
Queitlon: Whet
Meaning To Central Floridians frrr»tp»t
aixot?
’n Central FloriJa when you say
rblllipi It meani something; Phil*
lip* Propartlei. Wellborn C. Phil­
lips Is the lirc ts t builder In Central Florida, specializing In. hornet
that arc designed for Florida liv­
ing and the latcat In modern equip­
ment.
Hla building activities have ex­
pander' Into Sanford, Kissimmee,
St. Cloud, Apopka, Deland, Fusils,
and Ocala with hla borne office In
Otlando.
Whan yoq buy a Phillips home
the yards a rt landscaped and
shrubs are planted. The interlora
are furnished with all the modern
conveniences such as complete

Crammar School Oldest Building
i Bepferd Grammar School,
d a t 7tn. I t , and lira Are.,
a the oldest school building
in operation In Seminole
i main atract ur* was built
ft! with tb# two wings being
I In ISIS.
-rounded by huge live oaks,
wbcol takes up two city
a. ,The front block la lined
shade trees with tha center
for tha recreational activities

« children.

lag*, monkey bars, marrymods, soft ball, bsikstbsU,
ball volleyball and football
enjoyed by the youngstere
" f t * tjr, forming a well-rounded
peeregMooal program.
fn addition to those sporti,
fWQ$ dancing Is taught by the
teachers during Physical Ed. Ma­
ny of the My* and girls ara very
■ te rlitc d in the folk dancing
Iddeane and make costumes to
perfana for tbo various civic and
Mheol dubs.
VMtdy Is considered a fra* day
l i which tha student may do as
Re pleeses during th* phyiacal
n i ppried. Moot likely though, the
math In (rent of tho school will

be lined with couplte practicing albla for their given program
tha dance* they hare learned to days. That* arc three kinds af
tha music of tho loud cpcckcrs programs! Major, Involving cotend roccrd player.
I tumaa an avary pupil; minor, In
Tha highlight of tha yaar I* tha which a poem or song can ba (tv*
program presented by tha etu- *n by tha talented onasi end
dente In honor of tha King end speaker In which the roopi Invite*
Quean of May.
j various buslnaiamcn or an ef*
Lest year every room in the filial to g|vo an Interesting lee*
ishool reprsssntsd a forslgn coun- ture on soma popular subject,
try with coatumca and daneca .
At tha present, the Sanford
On rainy days, or whan the Grammar School cares for the
waatber la bed, ebaas and checkers fourth, fifth and ilxth grade*,
are enjoyed Indoor*. Alio, the Heeded by Principal H. R. Hack*
students, themselves, sat aside enbaeh. There era l$8 children
Friday for tho gtrla and Satur- |g teachers, a aacrotary, Janitor,

In June 195t, Mr. and Mr* Earl
Faust purchased Laney'i Drug
Store. After remodeling and rede­
corating they were ready for bullMl*. Th# Fault'* ball from John­
stown, P f.
Thi *Uff at Fau»f# ha* grown
from thro* clerks to ten girls on
tha fountain, three cashiers, four
drug and cosmetic clerks and two
r I o r I d f registered pharmacist*
threa porter* and a cook.
Mr. and Mf$- Faust feel that
their most Important duty In op­
erating' Utelr drug store la to ac­
curately and expertly compound
Ihelr customers’ prescrptlons with
(rosh drug* at • fair price.

General Electric kllcl,*n* with far*
bag# disposal, automatic washing
machine, automatic dlabwasher,
ceramic tile baths, closets, cup­
boards, carport and screened liv­
ing porch,.
W C. Phillips Jr. hat previous­
ly constructed approximately 300
hornet in the Sanford area and haa
announced building plans for this
year with an additional 11 hornet
being released for rale in the
Wyncwood subdivision. Prices ran­
ge from $10,000 to 113,000 each
home with wide frontage, beauti­
ful landscaping, and fully equip­
ped. t-'HA and VA financing are
available.
In March construction will be­
gan on 23 ntw homes in Dr*sm&gt;
wold which have a special new
and modem design. They will ran­
ge In price from $10,600 to $11,000
available through FHA end VA
financing with low down ppyrnanti.
A third area scheduled for devel­
opment in 1953, Little Venice Is
Loch Arbor, will be g great addi­
tion to Sanford and Itmlnola
County, rhiillpa Intandi to con­
struct approximately |T hom o
during this year and announced
that a favorable amount of Inter­
est haa been shown In many of tbo
locations. The f ln t five of thoao
homes are now under construction.
For information contact Mrs. Adel­
aida Motes at the talei office on
Osceola Ava. in Droapjwo)d or tele­
phone 1304.

I*

Florida'*

• - l a i M t : J i f r phlldrfn *m! youth.
To develop and protect thU •*»«t, more than 760 local parent*
teacher eaaociations throughout
the state are Inviting Interested
citlxeni to join this great organlaation which already he* a state
membership of 217.676. Local,
county and diitrict groups, under
th* leadership of1 Mrs. George
memberHanford, uof Leesburg,
I. _
ship chairman f o r _____
Congress of Parents and Teach­
ers, are uniting their efforts to
reach a goal of 230.000 for the
1064-58 period. Mrs. Hanford
states that it ran be accomplished
If each district increases Its mem­
bership by ten per cent.
"In number# there Is strength,"
laid Mr*. C. Durward Johnaon. of
Quincy, Prccldept of the Florida
C p n g m i a f parent* atid Taaehera, "and the Florida Congroe*
has galnad In membership avary
year slnea Its organisation mora
than thirty yearo ago. Wa shall
continue to gain, for there a rt

m A w b s M , js

ual values. Parents and t«ach*ra
will be wise te link together, in
their children's thinking, moral
beliefs and moral actions, pointing
out the wisdom of uiing our moral
energy on ilia around US over
which we have control.
There la still another obligation!
the need to give our children a
sense of civle responsibility that
freedom calls for. Freedom is not
something wa Inherit and draw
dividends on. ft is something that
must be worked for, something
to be held on to. " ‘And finally,
Mrs. Leonaard points out that she
would teach freedom'* ejiUdreo
what a wise historian of our time*
baa said so pointedly*" Nations are
not destroyed from without. Na­
tions crumble from within, destroy­
ing thamaclvei by their own fear
•M filtW aiinfM ," pRe $4&lt;W.
Mr*. U o ftfN f e n iM f f bey

qulra the Interested consideration
and support of many people,"
Sparking this latanalva member*
•hip enrollment campaign which la
b*|ur enrried on threugheut a r m
itate In our M tlan during th*
month of October, M n. wewton
Leonard, of Provldenee, Shod*
Island, president of th* National
Congress of Parent* and Teach­
ers proclaims; "During the past
yaar wa hare mad* great gain* In
1'iemberahlp until today wa number
almost nina million man nnd wom­
en. For our task* we need the

lyC jgv/B

TTEP UP CONTROL
TALLAHASSEE, - (FNS) A •
stepped up program for control ?
end eradication or Bang’e Disease •
from Florida livestock haa b een '
authorized by the U. S. Depart* ment of Agriculture and th* Fie*
rida Livestock Board,.it ha* been4
■
Iiiivw tn by
VJ E. D.
u. nAdams,
w m i, »a ;
announced
veterinarian with th# agriculture
department.
Dr. Adame stated arrangement*
have been completed tor livestock
owners to obtain free vaeelnatione
tor their rattle. Onty calves be♦wean th* a r ts of six and eight
* •$ ! W bW bW "

la n d of Flow ers

and S u n s h in e !
" F w ll

F lo w tri

th e

year round

The First Baptist Church wsi
Mundbd on Feb. 3, 1114. Thera
were 1$ charter members repfe-ntlng seven different states. The
-it pastor waa Rev. J. W. Butts‘to preached two Sundays In Or■Jit's and two Suodayf here in San
-d.

r - e church ha* grewn to a pro­
mt membership of nearly U00
wit' ’a Sunday School of a bit over
1400.
The church ha* always been a
coon: atlng church with |ha asmclatlcni and convections of which

*on whoa# interest In children lmorils him to act In their behalf."
Mr*. Leonard point* out that
while wa racogpls# that wa cap*
not abandon our leag-raage pro­
tects, wc also knew that wa can­
not for a moment negloct tha Im­
mediate needs that face us. Tha
first of these, In her opinion, la
the cfltlcal shortage of teachers,
which must not fofee sUndarda to
to lowdred. Members must do thalr
til moat to Inspire more young peo­
ple to chooi* teaching a* n profearion.
Also to be reckoned with Is the

i* R. STEW A RT, F L O R I S T
14 W rrtje A vn
w l W ln w h

Phope 360-W
fpnrR ept. enytlma

Sweeney’s Gift Shop was first
established in 11X3 under the name
of Coleman's. They carry a com­
plete Una of dlnaerware. grafting

AtUd coming to WesMdo
Igf school' would coo a ham*
ffpwUng atructure, rasem*
a im fth a m homo of yostar*
Tha pfdrictt* front porch

a a l ehelteriw sake seem s e e l
appropriate for X li neighborhood achocl.
Soon tha child would learn that
her*, children and taachOr* live

YOU W ILL ENJOY SANFORD
AND YOU W ILL ENJOY
OUR MODERN DESIGN
IN PLU M BIN G!

many 'thing*: th* fundamental* I
of reading, writing and arlthm*- ■
tic, of count I and many more I
thing*

HI.a

tprlllng,

sdvuce, ■

health, pbyilcal educaUoo, art, ■
and a u s fc ‘
The’child would appreciate th o |

.

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.

Souttade School

W S “ ?sKS *•

SEE FLORIDA FROM
SANFORD. . .

P"!

for there are second servings for
The
p m ------iw.
ew nr oae, . an d aU for Jest S i south Sid* M a u ry S c h o o l, lo*
A half block play ground would nolia Ave- were built la 1934,
loviu tha child to have fun and •yU aa addition «4 tea ty eau U

Urge te a child until all tha chil­
dren arrived. Than he would no- h* emullaieat haa grewn from
tire hot* «landing or sitting le (03 pupils and thirteen taaeh or.
*'•
xt room and think, "The
*d big, but paw It Ip
articular aM d bpMM

sra

'ulUHng haa
oubla aoeotoa

ar«

• FOR JUICY,
TOW OF THE
CROW YOU
CAN'T H A T
FLORIDA'S

�•a i

jfHE SANFORD HERALD

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(B U IL D E R S

&gt;?• II
v

OF O VER

300

C H O IC E H O M E S

IN

S AN FO R D )

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PLANS FO R 1955, THE DEVELOPMENT
O F SUCH D ELIGH TFUL RESID EN TIA L
AREAS AS
----------------------

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LOCH ARBOR

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ciind
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DREAM W OLD

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PREVIOUS DEVELOPMENTS INCLUDE:
4

V

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•

• SAN LANTA

i

PINEHURST
M AGNOLIA HEIGHTS

1
Ij

r RANK L. W O O DRUFF SUBDIVISION

U|

t
•

&lt;

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• HIGHLAND PARK
1 *

• SANFO PARK
I
• FRANKLIN TERRACE
• PHILLIPS TERRACE
1I

IT[
*
V» •

%

V

'
&amp;

• BUENA VISTA
if- *fcj»r«&gt;!

V#

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• • ;'••• /..
'
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W YN N EW O O D

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p / " n f,' P r' w n n , f i

U SO I s '
HomeAway From Ho
Where M any Events Take Pjo.ce

4. r f r c t l r t r i F ~ ' "

.St:-.

£- Chase Compan
founded 1884
By Partnership
! ,‘ c h m and Company
found
tof MM when a partqtnhlp u
rmed between Sydney 0. Chi
who came to SanNTd In II
Bad hi* brother. Joihua C. CM
._ j arrived In the aprln* 6t 1»
from the fln l these men start
.# look around for orange grot
'i r . t i n d to engage In the foulness
••/"buying, packing and idling i
. ; . . anges and other cltrua fruits.
L-m* What la - known aa the " I
JJ5SFreeze of *84", which killed mi
i t the cltrui treei to the groui
ml
company to “
other opportunltlel. i n d ' l f w
ihortly after this time that vai
Uble growing itarled lo Scralm
County.
.
, .
The flrat celery In any volui
amounted to about three or fo
carload* a year. Since then, t
1 '.volume ha* grown until Chase
Company handle* a large and
creating volume from Ihc ta
land* and muck farm* of Florid
!
In addition lo hundred* of car*
i . cabbage,'eicarole. lettuce, peppei
squash and cauliflower.
' A'
During the spproximste thn
I
quarters of a century the grow
• of the company ha*. been itea
until today It I* known a* ono
the stable and substantial companT ^ '.T e a of tho State. A fertiliser fac—- • l o r y located at Sanford, produce*
■
the widely known CHACO ferllllMr. which I* told and used over
• a wide territory. A vegetable prei
cooler, cold storage and Ice plant,
with the moil up-to-date machin­
ery Insure the product** arrival
at destination In garden fresh conI
dition.
The company maintains a sales
office and loading depot at the
State Farmers Market. Here Is
■bandied mixed osdera--which are
dipped by truck.
TM Company also acts as Job'•a for building materials, coverImarily the central part of
^ . ^ 4 . Materials .handled In this
Jvlslon a rt inch Items as roofing,
metal lathe, cement, gypsum pro­
duct*. paints, nails, Insulation, lid
ders, building paper, fencing, brick,
sower pipe, etc.
W. A. Leffler Is chairman of
the Board of Directors. Mr. Lefflor M s been associated with Chase
* Company for 4T years and beJ i n as clerk and laler served as
A iu a g e r , vice-president and PresiA n t Ha is a native of Sanford.
* Randan Chase, son of one of
the founders ot the company, the

•.if**.
^•fnt

.%

e m p lo y e e s oi t , nase ana co m p a n y
Sydney O. Chase, Is vice-president.
It is interesting to note that
many of the employees have been
associated with the Company for
many years, Only recently Claude
P Herndon was retired after hav­
ing been associated with the Com­
pany for 48 year*. There are a
number of others who have been
associated with the company, 23,
30 and 33-ycars.
The Company has shipped Vege­
tables and fruit from Florida Into
330 markets In the greater part of
the United States and Canada. It
also ships pearhes from (leorgla.
The Company paid t4l.M7.33 In
City, County and State taxes dur­
ing 1104 and Its officers and em­
ployes are active In the affairs of
Seminole County and the State of
Florida.
The Company Is alert to the
great opportunities for Improve­
ment In the growing, preparation
and aale of Florida winter produce.
Younger men and women are com­
ing Into the business all the Ume
assuring a continuation of the keen
interest In the welfare of Florida.

gypsli
p*. a,M' u Pml.
of Chase A Company. S. O. rope appear at the beginning
tM 'V &amp; Ceutgry,____________

Many Churches
In Lake Mary Area
The churches of Lake Mary are
active. The Natarcne, Presbyter­
ian and Baptist faiths have church
organizations there.
The Rev. I,. A. Peterson, who Is
pastor of the Nazarcne church,
came to Lake Mary a short while
ago from Mallland.
Although the membership Is
small the members hive a nice
church building in which to wor­
ship. The Sunday School Is grow­
ing In leaps and bounds and the
church members have Just remodled the parsonage.
The Rev. Lucian W. Scott, who
Is pastor of the Presbyterian
Church of Lake Mary, took over
his dulls* there In December. MSI.
The'Rev. Scott moved to Florida
and Lake Mary from Dunkirk, N.
Y. His church Is also growing In
membership and has an active Sun­
day School. The ehureh has Just
purchased a Hammond Orgsn
whlth was dedicated last Mother's
Day in appropriate ceremonies.
The pastor of the Lake Mary

Three Nurseries Operate Nearby
There aro three nurseries at
Lake Mary. A. U. Ailing, A. E.
Crokcr and K. W. Smith are each
engaged in this occupation. The
first two specialize in ornamen­
tal Dowering plants, particularly
the azalea and camellia with a var­
iety of other plants both hearing
fruit and ornamental. E. W. Smith
grows citrus plants, evergreen
shrubs and a large variety of per­
ennials other thin azaleas and ca­
mellias. Mr. Smith abo does land­
scaping In addition to his nursery
business.
Lake Mary has two groceries, a
filling station, a home demonstra­
tion club and a Chamber of Com­
merce E. R. Zimmerman I* the
president of tho Chamber of Com­
merce and Mrs. James Dlngman,
Is the president of the Home De­
monstration group.
Baptist Church. Rev. Herbert A.
Frith, lives In boLand but comes
over weekly to hold Sunday ser­
vices. The Baptist Chapel has al­
most completed a vfry nice con­
crete block ehureh, Immediately
west of the CMmber of Commerce.

Many Interesting people live In
Lake Mary. Col. W. E. Baker col
lects stamps and has won several
honors in the recent state show.
Sam Cochran raises birds as a
bobby and Ann Alexander, Rus­
sian wife of L. C. R. Alexander
growa dwarf trees. Some of her
trees are valued at $30 and over.
The Chamber of Commerce or­
ganized In 1822 and voted to have
three main objects. They were to
work for good school buildings, a
hard-iurfaeod road througgh Lake
Mary and electric lights. AO three
have been accomplished plus many,
many more things.
- MI DC FT TELEVISION
SAN RAFAEL, CALIF. (OB) A 2-inch television seL built in
1849, brings In all the local sta­
tions. A store has the tiny set on
display - In a doll's Musa.
Recent sample
measurement*
Indicated that 8-year-old boys av­
erage U Inches taller and ll.T
pounds heavier than 8-year-old
boys were la 18SL

i t Is the cleat responsibility of
thei civilian
community and, as
c iv '
its chief agency the USO, to de
&gt;nunit rata an even greater Inter
es*. Ir the wc'fare of the men and
women in uniform than ever be
fore and to provide for them dur­
ing their off-duty hours, healthy In­
fluence and a wholesome environ­
ment. Chsractei and career guld
ance physical fitness, recreation
and welfare, religious devotion,
and the serviceman's usefulness as
a private citizen, especially in the
y e n s to come aftei ha sheds his
uniform, are the primary concent
of the USO The USO providaa
him with a “ Home away from
Home” where he will feel that he
is a welcome addition to the civil
Ian community, no matter where
he may happen to be sen t By
offering him an opportunity to
meet respectable'girls and to be
invited out (o dinner at the homes
of their parents and by maintain
ing bis Interest in religious activi­
ties, and giving him a chance to
attend entertaining programs and
camp shows, the USO makes
a tremendous contribution toward
maintaining the morale of this
civilian army, and toward winning
the peaee in as significant a man
ner as It helped to win the war
years ago.
The Sanford USO Is located on
First St and Sanford Ave. It la
a comfortable building where a
serviceman may read from the
books and many magazines found
on the tables In the rooms, write
letters on stationary furnished him
or spend time Just resting, play
Ing the “Juke box," or piano.
Comfortable chairs and lounges,
plu* card tables and tamps aro
there for his convenience. At ene
end of the big dance room la ■
fire place where almost always
you can find a blazing fire la the
wintertime when It Is cool enough.
Ping pong, eards, ehess, tele­
vision. dancing, skating, swim­
ming, wiener roasts, song fsts,
dancing lessons, and many otMr
things are enjoyed by the man.
Tie plan partlea end danees, look
afler the refreshments and Just
be there to entertain are the Jun­
ior hostesses. These ere n selec­
ted group op girls who are under
30 and above the ages of IT. Also
working with the Junior hostesses
are the senior hotsesses. These are
women representing the different
church organisations and el vie
clubs around RanfOrd wM come
every night ef the week to open
and elose the UIO and lend n help­
ing hand.
There la a kitehen complete with
stove, ‘ refrigerator and sink for
nan a t any time. Alan an electric

coffee maker and cups and sail
cers.
Behind the dance floor Is a tele­
vision room which has been newly
painted by the boys for these who
wuuld .athei watch TV piugraiRS
than dance.
There Is usually one formal dance
a month and regent dances every
Wrdnevday Friday and Saturday
nights. On Sunday nights a song
fest is held aRer church and re­
freshments are served.
During 1834 beach parties and
patio dances were ipfltc popular
as w en wiener roasts and skating
parties
Mrs B. C Kuhn Is general chair
man of the Sanford USO and la

sU ays ready with helping hand
a,id friendly smile.
Plans for a variety of p r o g r a m s
and ianees have made the atten™
denre records higher than ever be­
fore.
itood clean fun and high Ideals
are the task to which the Sanford
USo set Its mind and all agree
the goal has been readied ten
times ovet.
Recent school physical exami­
nation* In Pennsylvania showed
tl.at about 40 per cent of them
children had defects or allmenta
which could and should have remedled care compared to 54 per
cent In 1943.

YOU CAN STOP
GOING ROUND IN
CIRCLES

LOOKING FOR A BETTER PLACE
TO LIVE • • • • • • • •
FOR YOU HAVE FOUND IT IN

SANFORD
AND YOU WILL FIND
A BETTER GASOLINE
AT

Owen's Gulf Service
M IS 8. PARK AVE.

PHONI 1171

BY THEIR FRUITS YE SHALL KNOW THEM

■ n

77 years of Service and Fa ith
That is the long record of Chase and Company
£

e

.

s e r v ic e

.

.

to the citrus and vegetable growers; and

the building material dealer*.

Faith in the progress and growth of our community. N
s

e

O ar business of selling Florida fresh fru its and vegetables extends Into m ost of th e U nited S tates end into the
Provinces o f Canada.
! w**f . ' ». Vt

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a

Our facilities fo r pecking, refrig eratin g end shipping th ese products ere
•

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•

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THE SANFORD HERALD

SecMon T&gt;. P n g e 8

Central Baptists
Organized In 1937
The Southside Baptist Church, to 9!h Street and Laurel Avenue.
After moving the location to 9th
was organized by a Rev. Thomp
son during the &gt;car of 1937.
Street and Laurel Avenue, there
The fir*t meeting was held in a were several pastors; however,
records were not kept during the
dwelling house near Gindcrvillr.
Later, the church was moved to early years of the church. On June
25th Street and after a few years 11918, the Rev. S L. Whatley wa*
a Rev. Tucker was called as the called as pastor.
The church then consisted of
pastor and the church was moved
approximately 60 members.
In December, 1952, the church
moved into a new concrete block
building at the corner of 14th
Street and Oak Avenue and the
name was changed to Central Hap
list Church. The entire building is
valued at approximately $65,000,
the auditorium has recently been
furnished with new f u r n i t u r e
throughout and an organ has also
hern installed.
Poultry is on the increase in
The educational building con­
Seminole County with the great­ sists of 26 rooms inrluding office
est activity in the Forest City i space, library, nursery and rest
section. Members of thin poultry j roomV
colony, however, ate not expect­ The Rev. J. W. I'arham. former­
ing any rapid expansion of exist­ ly of Comer, Ga is now pastor of
ing flocks, pointing out that the the church. He is married to a
volume of esc production—and Sanford* girl, the former Miss
the price of eggs—from mid-1955 JAlycc DcCourscy.
and for about a year after will
depend largely on the number
of pullets airsed from replace- ward as early as May or June
if it seems that so few replace­
merit chicks next spring.
ment chicks are coming along
Because of the current low that stored eggs may be in Jeprices for eggs and the prospect mand n fewer months later.
for continued low prices during
In any case, efficient produc­
the next six months, farmers'
tion
now will help egg, producers
normnl n actions would be to
ijive fewer replacement chicks weather current low egg prices.
during the spring of 1955.
This suggests that — start­
Two types of oranges, sour and
ing sometime next fall — egg[ sweet, have been known for cen­
prices will improve because there turies. In the United States, sour
will probably he fewer birds pro­ orange trees are used as stock
ducing, Egg prices could turn up- on which to graft sweet oranges.

Poultry Increase
In This County
Steadily Rising

Church Of Christ Has Broadcasts
Daniel in the long ago, as he de­
scribed the Image erected by Neb-chadnirzar, prophe.tcd that In
the day* ot thise kings the God ot
heaven would set up his kingdom
whteh would last forever. Jqsus
continued this thought while here
on earth by staling “ I will build
my church." and told Peter and
the other disciples, "I will give
thee tile keys of this kingdom and
• h a t they would bind on earth
» * J d be txmnJ in heaven and
Wuat was nut required here would
•o t be required in heaven.
Jesus l.ie r initiurtcd that he
wteld send the Holy Spirit to
j«M i tbim into all truth and when
lit. left to go back to the Father
be rw unta-t ».i«m to tarry in the
th y at J a r .stem until they receiv­
ed the promts*! p*wer.
On the first Pantacost after Jcsus’ resurrection the Spirit came in
power and Jesus' d.«e&lt;p!es began
their work In the kingdom. The
church or king tom previous to
this time was spoken nf in the
future sens*. Rut beginning with
this Penteeoit as recorded in the
aeccod chapter of Acts the church
la spoken of In fact or present
tens*. The church of our Lord had
iti beginning here and the teach­
ing or doetrlnd of the apostles
which was binding on the people
then and recognized in heaven has
tba tam e binding effect on the peo­
ple In the loth century.
Therefore, to know if we today,
•a a religious people, comprise
lb* body of the Lord all we need
be do is to go to the New Testa
Bi«nt and check thr pattern giver
and compare ourselves with that
pattern.
The church-today w ill have-Hs
origin as the first Peritecost after
Christ’s resurrection; i f will wear
(ha name that was recognized In
h* New Testament; tho terms of
asembershlp will bo the aame re­
quired by the apostles; the teach
teg will be the teaching found in
Ike New Testament; the worship
will be according to the New Testa*
men*. pattern and its government
or orgsnziaUon will conform to
New Testament standards.
The church of Christ today ad­
vocates the very principles out­
lined above and pleads io r a re­
turn to the New Testament as a
eemplete and final guide in reli­
gion.
The Sanford church, of Christ
Brat began to meet for worship on
the first Sunday in February, 1M4,
for the purpose of proclaiming the
gospel of Christ in Its simplicity
and truth. Tht group of eleven
■am bers met In the Woman.'t
Club with David H arreli.es min­
ister. Previous to this time (here
bad been no such group meeting
aaecpt for a meeting held by Byron
f . Conley in IN I.
In the fall of 1M4, Arthur L.
Butler of Montgomery, Alabama,
• a m t to work with the congrcgaMas sa full time mlalster. Soon
•Ite r plans warn made to erect n

building and a lot was purchased
on the corner nf Second Street and
Elm Avenue. Construction of the
building began in September 1945
During the month of July, 1946.
the first service was held in the
building The cost of the building
was approximately $7,000.00. Soon
after two-flftcen minute weekly
radio programs were begun.
Other ministers to serve the congirgation during the period of the
next six years were: J. P. lowcry, O. E. Moss, J. C. Nicholson,
and J. H. Harwell.
In August, 1053, Sam Binkley
began to work with the Church in
Sanford. During his stay the work
was resumed among the colored
people. A meeting was held and is
congregation was established at
Fifth Street and Pine Avenue. The
radio work was resumed, a meet
ing was held in DeBary, and the
fourth Sunday singing group wai
begun in this area.
On January 30, 1955. nalph P
Brewer Jr. began wurk with llir

church of Christ in Sanford.
Since the first meeting eleven
years ago. the congregation has
grown tn a membership of 85. And
seeing Ihc need of a congregation
in Geneva, some of the members
of the Sanford congregation estab­
lished a congregation in that lo­
cality in 1949. The Sanford building
was remodeled both Interior ami
exterior with the addition of two
class rooms at the cost $3,000.00
E. S. Stcaklcy and S. Beall are
the elders of the congregation with
Nelson Crawford a* song leader.
With the la&gt;lng by in store on
the first day of the week, the
total indebtedness of the congrega­
tion is reduced to $300.00. The
Church of Christ In Sanford con­
tinues to grow In grace and spirit.

Lake Mary Enjoys
Surge Of Growth
It would be difficult to determine
specifically why Lake Mary is
enjoying such a spectacular surge
of growth because its assets arc
quite numerous. This fast — grow­
ing community Is nestled brtween
two rlear sparkling lakes. It Is
centrally located between Orlando
and Sanford arrd is in the orange
growing district. It Is a one hour
drive to the Atlantic Ocean beaches
and a three hour drive to the Gulf
of Mexico.
Good water long has been a
drawing card for prospective resi­
dents tn Lake Mary. Coming from
two deep wells the water in the
city is annually tested by the State
Board of Health and Is found to be
over 99 5 percent pure. Nn traces
of iron sulphur or any other dis­
agreeably tasting mineral are pre­
sent.
There arc no city taxes. The com­
munity 1A not Incorporated and
therefore does not have the annual
tax problem to look forward to.
There Is in active Chamber of
Commerce and the modem build­
ing is available to the public as
a community center.
Maybe it Is the recreational
facilities, which include fishing,
bathing, boating, water skiing, and
shuffle board, that makes Lake
Mary so attractive. The public
bathing beach on Crystal Lake is a
popular spot for swimming and
party-goers.
Lake Mary is the plare to set­
tle down. Her story is one of pro­
gress, of Intelligent and profitable
real estate investment and a com­
munity of people working together
for their mutual betterment.

THE SANFORI) JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL

Seminole High School Located
O n Land That Occupies 37 Acres

WARD’S
Lonffwood Hotel

Seminole High School Is located A large number of the school pollin Sanford, Florida at 18th St. and cies arc determined by the Student
French Ate. The present physical Council. Among the other arliviplant, which is 28 years old. is tics arc the school newspaper
on a 37 acre tract of land, and is yearbook, plays, musical activities
composed of 4 Urge buildings.
honor societies. Futuro Farmers
The school employs 25 teach­ Fultire Homemakers and Library|
ers and a principal, one office Council. Banquets and dances are
assistant, two custodians, and yearly functions of each of the soseven cafeteria workers. All of cial organizations,
the regular teachers in the school j
have a Bachelors Degree and 121
of them holJ thr Master of Arts
Degree. The average leaching ex- j
pericncc is U years for th faculty,
as a whole.
A total of 75 regular courses arc
taught in the school. The curri­
culum is broad and tn line with
that of most modern schools in the
state. Courses of study include. Col-1
lege Preparatory, General, Bust
ness Agriculture, Homcniaking.
Mutlc, Art Physical Education, and
Tetegraphy. Since the school is a
member in good standing of the
Southern Association of Schools
anJ Colleges, a graduate may en-j
ter college without having to take
an entranre examination. With an
enrollment of 567, an average of
30 per rent of all senior graduates
attend college.
Over the period of its existence
at the present sight. Seminole
High School has had only two
principals. G. E. McKay, its first
principal, served with honor for
the first 18 years. The present ad­
ministrator Is H. E. Morris who
has been serving since 1941.
The school strongly emphasizes
the academic portion of the stu­
dents’ development although the
extra curricula activities arc not
neglected. Each teacher is keenly
Interested in the individual, with
training in both individual and
group guidance.
The purpose of the extra-curricu­
la activities is to develop the so­
cial aspect of the students' life.

DINING

ROOM

And

r o rK T A IL

LOUNGE

Hatf-»ay Between Sanford
and Ortando — One Mile
Off 17 * 92 in Longwood.
Home of George Barr’a
Umpire SrhooL

E N JO Y
%

A

V A C A T IO N !

S A N FO R D , FLO R ID A
LET US HELP SUPPLY
YOUR OFFICE NEEDS.

First Church O f N azarene Is Newly O rganized
The First Church of the Naza­
rene was organized Aug. 27, 1944
al 113 i’almeltu Avc. in what is
now the Downtown Cleaners and
laundry. District Superintendent
Strirkland appointed Itcv. C. G.
Ilrailey pastor. Rev. Bailey served
two years at the end of which time
Itcv. L. It. Hushton was called.
The growing congregation felt
need of larger quarters amt
such was afforded by the B. P.
Arnold residence at 608 W. First
St., which became a chapel ol
worship with living quarters for
the pastor and family upstairs.
Under the aggressive leadership
of Rev. Itushton and the farsight­

ed ptanning of the people, lots
were purchased on the corner of
Second St. and Maple Avc. and a
building program was launched.
Through sacrificial giving of money
and manhours, plus donations by
many appreciative friends, a cor­
nerstone ceremony was observed
as the congregation moved to its
present location in February of
1917. Rev. John L. Knight was now
District Superintendent and offi­
ciated at this service.
For a time an apartment behind
Ihc rhurch served as living quart­
ers for the Rushton family, but in
1951 a beautiful three bedroom
parsonago was built on the cor­

ner of West First and Poplar
which is now conservatively ap­
praised at fourteen thousand dol­
lars. After nine years of fruit­
ful labor Rev. Rushton resigned
in August of 1954 to accept pas­
torate of the Panama Park Church
of the Nazarene in Jacksonville.
The Bev. It. H. Spear Jr., then
pastoring in Titusville, accepted
pastorate of the Sanford Church
of the Nazarene and officially be­
gan hts duties Oct. 24, 1954. P lin i
are currently being made far a
much needed Educational Annex
for the Church School. Truly it can
be said. "What God hath wrought."

EXPENSIVE BOUNCE
EAST ORANGE, N. J. &lt;!*) Paying traffic fines with rubber,
checks can he more expensive than
double parking. Magistrate Luke
M. Mchenny fined an offender US
because his $4 check bounced.
The judge got tough when the
number of had checks roming in
the mad with traffic tickets in­
creased to an average of 10 a
month.

V IS IT U S . . . .

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110 M agnolia

A re .

Phone

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Holy Cross Episcopal ChurcK Began To Form In 1870
Holy Lux* teem* to have hid
ft* beginning in Mellonville. We
• And la "Record* of tbe beginning
' of church work at Mellonville end
1 adjoining eetUemenU”. the follow. lag entry — "On Good Friday,
April 15—1S70, the Rev. Edward
McClure. Missionary of Upper SL
John'*, held the flrat aenrlec la the
Martin and Evan* Hotel." The
Evans mentioned wae the father
af Mr*. Minnie Jonee and Mra.
Lilly Herndon, and Mr. Martin
was the father of the late Mr* E.
1 A. Douglas, Pott Mailer of Lake
Mary, A aecond entry tells of a
. congregation of aevoafen at tbe
name location oa y a y I t. h t e
a went eervioea were bold it Me
school house at Port Rood, hut act
lo r long.
It waa probably ia the tam e
wear that Oaaeral Haary I . le a
f&gt;t*4 deeded te a In *Mg daaonatua Mon for churrb bdM tagi. Tbe
Rev. Edgar Penmagtei. wrtttag
for Tequstta, aayi that in U71 it
v i i reported "At Sanford, near
MeUonrlQe, on Lake Mvnroc, a
b 'te tifu l church, after designs by
UtJonn it nearly ready f ir Conteer.l'u n , by toe aide of winch it to
be arerted a haciory." !btt enurch
W*S sm te c ra u d by Bishop Yjuag,
Mm brat Sunday after Etater,
A M , 1*73. P ill building wet
located on the loti now occupied
by an* Pariah Houie. General and
Sara. Sanfotd contributed generousand started their Influence in
eonatruwtion. The fact that it
• a * eon*ecrated to soon, bears

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frflE S A N F O lu i llKKAI.D
P « g e 4 . S ectio n D

wilneia that any indebtedness waa
quickly taken care af. Tbe San­
ford* gave the beautiful painting
of “ Christ on the Croat,'' now bang­
ing in the Chapel of Peace, end
also a very sweet toned bell, east
la Belgium, which was destroyed
lo the fire of ISO. We read that
Holy Croes waa an effective pow­
e r for good In the early days of
our town, under the ministrations
of Rev. Lyman Phelps, living in
Sanford and Missionary to Orange
Cossnty. He conducted aervlrei in
a number af millions, including
Orlando, whera is lB t, SL Lukes
Panel) waa admitted Into Union
wMk Me Council af the Diocese of
Ftenda (• Coaim Mica ate ta I *77).
Mao sawed wore MaMaod. Port
P an Maasa (lator probably
i and Softwood.
On August IS, jm . a hurricane
M y Oraao. Btapa worn
pdy toko* Par rebuilding, but
mo die w h l e h tbe proeeut
ehurch occupies. Tbe year 1IM
teusd the Cburtk and Rectory not
yet OMpWte. Alee the Rev I B.
Carpenter had auooeeded lb* Rev.
Lvnan Phelps as Mlaatonary ia
Charge. Bishop Ca.*ptnt*r of Ala­
bama ia tbe ion of the early Rea
mr. The Rev. Mr. Carpenter bed
twelve families at St. Jsines Mil­
lion, Citarpriae, ala familial in
the Zcilwood Apopka Million in
tl**3. By Ihen,, regular services
bad begun in Winter Park, which
showed evidence of being a strong
church community. By 1*M. Rockledga, Tropic, Eau Callie and Mel­
bourne had been adned on the In
rfian River as well aa Maitland and
Bartow on the South Pie. R. R.

These were further added to and
in ! • » the Rev. Mr. ca'ifSR ar re­
ported mock progrtee ta A a Diocosaa Council, with a ptea ter
more woikara.
Bishop Whipple, af Mlaaaaota,
built and cousecrated tat ISM the
Church of the good tk r pkar il in
Mnitland. He also mods gifts which
resulted In the founding af tbe “ Bi­
shop Whipple School for Boyi” in
Sanford. It wae located oa Lake
Ada almoet acroaa the highway
from the present Parmer* Auction
Market. Ita life came to and end
when fire destroyed it ta ISM. It
waa often referred te locally as the
Bate* School—Use Rev. Mr. Bates
being &lt;be Heed-Matter. They have
la Holy croat. at leant two or
Area who it tended tbit school.
Tbe flrat record af a pariah meetlag te elect a Veatry van April S3,
IMS. E. R. Trafterd waa elected
Cbelrmaa aed the teDewtag chosen
Veetrymea: J. R. Ingraham. E. K.
Pester. T. L. Newton, T. P. HuggtsM. Dr. King Willy, B. P. Whitnor, T. J. Miller, E. D. Durlln,
and C. 8. Partridge. On Nov. 1,
1M1, the new Church being out of
debt it was consecrated by Bishop
Wand. Before the turn of the een
tury, Holy crosa waa served by
the Rev. Meiara. 8. B. Carpenter,
Lyman Phelps, E. L. Turquand,
J. J. Andrew, Cottle, Bates and
probably others. The Rev. Mr.
Carpenter has alwaya been eoasld
ered the first Rector of Holy Croat.
Undoubtedly bit status became
sirh with what seema to be the
setting up of our I’arlah machin­
ery in IM .
Tbe Rev. flamnel Day aervad a*

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the Rector from ISO® until 1904. unHrnt.pdiny. Jtiendxhip served ta
During that period minions were i bold things together ami enable the
maintained at Lake Mery, Sylvan | parish lo remain active and ready
| to dircharge Uieir obligations, as
Lake and Enterprise.
The great freeiet of 1SS4 and belter days finally made their ap­
1S9I, also tosses and hardships of pearance. During his rectorship
the following ten years after Mr. here, too, he married one of our
Dey'a ministrations ended, Holy best loved young ladies, contribut­
Cross was unable lo have a resi­ ing to a sense of being ■ part of
dent prieeL Scarcity ef nvailtblc ! our community, even after their
means may have been a factor, but ' move to Tampa. His Consecration
Just as with the rest of us, a as Bishop Suffragan alto created
priest must generally accept a call ' an unusually pleasing situation for
that promises a lubstalning sal­ Holy Crotx, shared only by Holy
ary. During that period, services Trinity, West Palm Beach, two
■t Holy Cross continued on regu­ successive Rectors now Bishop
lar schedule, some conducted by and Bishop Suffragan.
the lay-reader, B. P. Whltner, but
The Rev. Frank E. Pulley rim e
more by a visiting clergyman. Our to Holy Cross in 1B4I and served
parishioners came lo regard one until 1945. On August 1. 1942 the
of these, Archdeacon B. P. Brown, present church, the third building,
as really their own Rector. He was became free of indebtedness and
retired and living in Orlando, but therefore, eligible for Consecration.
came up on Saturday afternoon's This was made possible by large
train and returned Sunday after memorial gifts by members of the
service. He was a delightful elder­ Chase family and a concerted
ly gentleman and prepared many drive to raise the remainder. The
of us for Confirmation by Bishop Church w u Consecrated G et 4,
Gray. One* ■ Methodist Minister, of that year by Bishop Wing. Soon
Mr. Brown, a great student and after leaving Sanford, Mr. Pulley
scholar, came to the conclusion becama Chaplain at the U. S. Mili­
(hot he must make the change ei­ tary Academy, Weil Point. N. Y.
ther lo Rome or the Episcopal
The Rev. M irk T. Carpenter was
Church. Only after much study Installed as Rector, Trinity Sun­
and correspondence with Cardinal day, May 37, 1943. by Bishop Wing.
Gibbons on the one hand end the He served here for three years,
Many of our winter visitors
The First Presbyterian Church gram Is being felt throughout tha
scholars of the Angellcen Church leaving to become Rector at Ft.
find a roulial welcome and c tje j
on the other, did he make bis de­ Lauderdale. During this period the of Hanford, located at the corner life of tha church, although it haa the fellowship as they worship.
of 3rd. 81. ami Oak Ave, is the been in progresa only about three
cision.
little Church ,a t Enterprise, now only Presbyterian Church in tha (months. Added to the activities
Rev Angus U. Mclnnis finish
In January 111* the Rev. Arthur
ed six years a i pastor on the
"All
Saints"
was
repaired
snd
for­
city,
and
haa
grown
with
Hanford
centered
in
this
program
are
the
Searing Peck came to Holy Cross
ef February this year. Misa
from Galesburg, 111. He resigned mally reopened by Bishop Louttit- through tha yeara serving the peo­ Roy Scouts, and Brownies, and first
’ the junior and senior high choir* Katherine Bruwi: ia the director
late In 1834, the resignation to Uke the first Sunday In December, 1946. ple of the city and county.
The church now has an active who are under the able direction of Christian B£*-~tion;
M r*
effect the following January, com It is interesting lo note that the
first
Rector
of
Holy
Cross,
the
Rev.
membership
of around 1,000. mem­ of Mr*. George Toughy, whose George Touhy, minister of m uns m
plating 13 years of service. Mr.
Peck’s work with Ih* young people S. B. Carpenter, held Ihe first bers living throughout the county 1reputation as an organist and and Mr*. Grace Fort ehurch *ec« • ’
of Sanford will be long remember servlet ir Enterprise in the hotel. and across the SL Johns River at choir director Is well known retary. T. R. Runge serves as
clerk of the session.
ed and appreciated. Senior and Brock House "Parlors'* and was DeBary. It is tha third largest throughout the state.
Junior Chapters of the Brotherhood instrumental in bringing about the church in the St. John's Presby­
of St. Andrew were formed and construction of the present beauti­ tery.
To meet the demands of growth
thrived, influencing many young ful little Church, In IU3. It had
men, whether Eplscopaliani or not been neglected for years until Holy the church ha* erected an educa­
Our first Pariah House was built Cross Rector, the Bcv. bfark T. tional building. This newly o rg .
DUAl-PURPOSI
oariy ia 1S14 and dedicated Easter Carpenter, waa given charge of the nixed building la constantly used
week-after the Wednesday evening restoration and reopening. During by the various organisations of
4-WHIKL-DRIVI
service. Bishop Gray waa present thin rectorship, too, the indebted the Church and Sunday School.
An achievement of the past
for the occasion, though it was af- ness on our rectory was discharg
AU-STIKL AOOY
tof hi* resignation bad been ten­ ed, leaving all of Holy Cross pro­ year waa the tecuring of a direc­
tor
of
Christian
education
to
wot
k
dered. He w u also present, the perty unmortgaged.
Since the eomlng of the present with the program of religious
evening before, at the Men's Banm e t tendered by Aa Womans Atn Rector, in ISM, the Rev. H. L. education, and direct the recrea
iilary, April I t The mala discus­ Zimmerman, Ac Parish has shown tlon for our young peopla. Al­
sion of the evening w u the forme growA In every way. Thf number ready the influence of this pro­
of Communicants has Increased
Uon of a Men's Club.
On Nov. 17. I t a , fire destroyed materially, the number of Commu
tbe entire plant af Holy Croes, ideations aven more. The Church
Chareb, Pariah House, Rectory and School and Y. P. S L. are keeping
Brotherhood Club rooms. White pace nlth A s congregation a* a
"Hello, What's your name? I’m
tbe ishot were still smoking, pians whole. Before long It is hoped that
were begun for rebuilding. Mr. U will be feasible to add the ser­ Little Black Sambo." These clear­
Reck exerted • major Influence ia vices of an assistant priest, as ly spoken words have amused and
the planning ef the ehurch, but well as enlarged the facilities for even startled people entering “ Bare
It w u net an ill niter his resigns- church school and other parochial Living Gifts" Bird Shop In Casael
harry, Florida. People have re­
Uon that tbe building w u complet work.
ed. Tbe first service was held la
Holy Cross Episcopal Church Is turned from great distances over
K SB Easter Sunday, 1823.
quite proud of Us klndergarden, and over again, to hear Aese
The Rev. Mortimer Glover bo­ Holy Cross Parish Day School. Tho words.
It happens A at "Little Black
u r n e Rector af Holy Cross te Ncv Rev. H. Lyttletoa Zimmerman Is
ember of that yeor, services during iriadpiil sad Mrs. J. B. SL J o h u Sambo" is Ac very popular Mynah
the Intervening month* bttag taken is A* teacher. The school Is gov Bird from India wiA A* most
car* af by tbe retired Dean ef St treed by a board of seven mem human voire of any talking bird
ta all w attkar,
rte J s *r
st
tubs*, the Rev. Jam es G. Gleet. here from the pariah. There are hi Aa world. Hia large vocabulary,
Mr. Glover resigned te ISM te sixteen pupils enrolled at present, his whistle, his laugh and his cough
scoop* e cdll te BL Andrews, Tam the maximum enrollment being amuses every one all day long.
. The Perish Hem e w u finished twenty-five, children from til de­ Ha is never too thy to perform
a
for an attentive audience.
1837. During this rectorship our nomination j r a welcomed.
"LitUe B l a c k Sambo" has
church school nu d e notable growth
RAN IT TM WOEIt'S UIM ST MAKER OF AWMttt M W I YIMOU
The purpose of the day school
after the dteaotrww fire at Is te prepare your child for the brought untold happAesi to many
homes
because
other
litlle
Sam­
ISO, Holy Cross purchased the first grad*. It Is believed Aat
bos have been purchased.
league residence located Just south schools would prepare children
of our property, where McKinley to live Hi a democracy. We leant
Hj U now itin d f. floon after Mr. to live by living today, not getting
Glover's arrival this residsnes was ready to live tomorrow, A child
1883 there was a difference l n L - „ _
sold sad the present Rectory was must leant to accept his responsi­ time of five seconds between A e
PHONE 150ft
bR EN C H A V E,
bilities In order to grow and devel­ two ends of Ae Brooklyn Bride*. 1
built
la ISM Ih* Rev. Henry T. Lout op Into a well rounded personali­
tit became Rector of Holy Crass- ty. The school will try to help
ramnteteg until be resigned in your child to develop:
MSI te f t te Holy Trinity, West 1. Spiritually — To bring the child
Palm Bench, from which te 1941, Into a meaningful and conscious
be w u elected Bishop. During this relationship with God through Ac
period there was increased aroused fellowship af His Church, that ha
among tbe young people. Rely "m ap love whatsoever tklags are
Cross Ubes Is rscnfl Bishop Lout- true aad pure aad lovely and at
tit's Rectorship here.
' report following Ao example
The Rev. Martin J . B rim came of hisi Savior Jesus Christ."
te ns te MM end remained u t i l t. 1Mentally — Ta tears sad use
lS4f, when he reaigned te accept I t M
j P Hsnd
W attitudes
P H i P HeowparaP H
i skills
a• esn te— BL^ Andrew.
Tempo. Ib is
Ms te kla spa snd grada tevaL
—A
Af
peuOE &lt;epi veMTlVE M EVflM M 8. Physically — Ta team Aa teapartenea at RantA.
1 la o tta a a lly — Ta tear* te be
a happy whatsum s w al adjusted

First Presbyterian C h u rc h
Has Shown Continued Growth

W o h o v e ill

W IU Y S

WAGOty

Talking Mynah
Amuses Customers

LAKE

r u n ic

sch o o l

• BEDROOM, ^
—nw .
1 acre, furnished, aurreundod
by beautiful Onin, g mllao out,
paved read, 17,000.00, roeuiree
82,400.00 down.
M Arras e f choice Oreva Vuid«
I1M.00 ear acre.

ivi y v m ,

BAR ft PACKAGE (tore oa
17-SI between flonford ft Or*
Undo, owner rottrine,
era
toe
no
m
wwew
■eswe*

i I

NEW. 1 1 ______H I _____ ■
horns In banuUful section test
out of city. S8.t00.00 renulriag
11,000.00
RIVERFRONT came on bene*
tlful Wekiva. now cottejro Jurt
eamulated. ever 138 feel i t
rlverfroater*. 88*00.00 te rn s.

(REALTORS)
T. W. MERO
PHONE Sf

F le rife )

•O il THBBBtH
fed
Mred. *R •
NOW 53% MOMpawat will ns hp*#pai4«rlcsaa U|ln«

C

WIUVSMOTW
SLINC*fated* »#

A

W

h

a

t

SEM INOLE TR U CK

b

TRACTOR CO .

Courtesy Is Oar

B U SIN ESS....

Su n in oIsL fa u lty *
(■ ••(* 4

BOTH

— To acquire kaWts

at interest te '
a

WeVft built our builneM on Courtesy
fo r wo know tb it's w h it tho avorago
M otorist Is looking for! Drlvo in tho
next tim e you have to "Gas Up" and
wo know you will m ake It a h a b it

bars te a quote

'w

m

tu

J j F j K * : - " T W Ma*
tery at lawfoad and at Holy Great
is s a t sf sh stsriss avtreoma. tt it
a retard at Aa u r ttaa ah t reater
aad alsatarteE R te a witaaaa at
tepaltp aad aarvtea te Oa4 aad to
■ a a ."

j ,!

TH E

COM FORT O F
AN
ECHOLS M ATTRESS!

M

Furniture Center
B, F. GOODRICH TIRES-BATTERIES
Has Complele Line
. . . . COMPLETE WHEEL ALMNMKNT BBXV1CI . . .

SEE US FOB THE FINEST
IN SLEEPING
EQUIPMENT

Tho f t — Itote (Stater located at
118 W. 1st IL (a n te s a complete
Uaa at haaw tawtehtags ia aattestaUp advertised brands. One at
tea sparia lttea at A a fureltare
Castor te Aa wMt variety at aat a wltei&lt; furniture A at aoams te
ha tha latest tread ia mode re fue•teh tep ,

i * . M.

...A T FACTORY PRICES— SINCE ISM
'S lttp e * u t e U k —TJ* K m t k K u jT
_______

}

COMPLET! U N I Of GOOOWCH
AUTOMOT1VH P A R I AND

• **

HAIFA! LUBRICATING

Tha f i — Kara Csatsr i
• Mreytete ateasttea at
Mr, Orter aad Mr, C arrel Kata
sa tia te d A a f areftars Caster t a

a n is

AYH.

a r arw t a i
Is A s a —

104

B.F.C

JM

i

»
•Hfcd'.ii*!?} &lt;' i t.

.
r

^

�I

ODHAAA &amp; TUDOR, m
e
BUILDERS

OF

FINE

HOMES

“FOR BETTER LIVING”
P R O U D LY

O FFER S

TO

YOU

N EW

P IN E CREST HEIGHTS SUBDIVISION
"I BLOCK SOUTH
OF S A N F O R D ' S C I T Y
LIM ITS"
2600
B L O C K ON F R E N C H ,
L A U R E L &amp; ELM AVE.
A C R O S S T H E S T R E E T F R O M N E W P I N E C R E S T S C H 0 0 L S -G ra d es 1-8

32 BEAUTIFUL 3 BEDROOM
HOMES
PRICED $ 11,500 - TO $11,800
i V E T E R A N S - F. H. A. C O N V E N I E N T F I N A N C I N G .
DOWN
PAYMENT
VETERANS
$ 4 0 0 . CLOSING COSTS
F . H . A . $1 0 7 5 P L U S C L O S I N G C O S T S .

i

§

• PAYED

S T R E E T S - C IT Y WATER &amp; SEWERAGE
• FLEX A LU M V EN ET IA N BUN D S

• 75' LOT-FRONTAGE LANDSCAPED

•

• BEAUTIFUL TERRAZZO TILE FLOpRS

• 9 C U . FT. G E R EFR IG ER A T O R

•.FULL TILED BATH
• AIR-VUE JALOUSIES

G E ELEC T R IC R A N G E -1 9 5 5 M O D EL

• G E 4 0 GAL. H O TW A TER H EA TER
•

B EA U T IFU L DEL M A R C A B IN ET S

Modern Florida living at Ita heat • • Thla la the hanlr Idea wr h a r t
■aed In the construction of these homes I huie striven to giv$ the people
of this community a home that la moderately priced hut with nil the con*
▼enlences that make C entral Florida the ideal place In whirh to IKe.
Quality m aterials and workmanship subject lo both VA and FIIA Inspec­
tion have been used throughout in the construction of these homes.

�♦

•)) &gt; ’ Fago S, Section D

T H E SANFORD H E H J W

BPW Has Four Basic Principals Christian, Missionary .-Alliance
11m m ajor objectives of the Flo Mrs. McPherson, the superinten­ thc*c effort*.
The local club at this time num­
ridk Federation of Business and dent, they soon find Ihcr.nclvcs
Professional Women's Clubs arc part of -a group with many com­ bers 33 members, of whom 2( re­
munity interests Although the girls side in Sanford. Members fill posi­
principally four:
To elevate the standard for wo­ wear uniforms the BPW clubs tions of responsibility In neary all
men for business and in the pro­ donate clothing hence when the categories of activity economic,
former are invited to outside enter- professional and political. And the
fessions;
To promote the Interest of husi- Uint.r^?; — u- they often arc — field of their activities Is constanlth**y have suitable apparel.
ly broadening.
g w and profeyJonsi women;
m&gt; bring about a spirit of co­ Those on the Honor Roll arc glv- Officers are: president, Gene
operation among business and pro­ cn some sort of a trip once each Nunnclly; vice-president, Lillian
fessional women of the United month, such as: to Marincland, a Long: second vice-president, Olga
concert or a circus. The clubs of Hunter; recording secretary. StelStates; and
To extend opportunities to busi- the state have recently purchased la Pryor; cortcsponding sccrcrcsS and professional w o m e n the girls an organ for their new tary, Betty Baker; treasurer, Hethrough education along lines of chapel; and the Ministerial Asso- ten Pearson,
industrial, scientific and vocational ciation of Ocsla sends speakers Standing Committees are cornactivities.
each Sunday afternoon to provide posed as follows: education and
vocation, Myrtie Wilson; finance
The lll'W has considered that a church service.
They arc also permitted to at- Rachel Rrinson; health and safety
one of its most important local
projects is to endeavor to make tend churches of their choice in Mary Faris; International relalions Marguerite Grabain; and
life a little brighter for the unfor­ Ocala, under supervision.
tunate girls at the State industrial
The local club has a project for legislation Josie Carter,
School in Ocala. Periodic visits free denial work for children who Heading committees are Mrs.
arc made there by club members have no means of obtaining this Olga Hunter, membership; Mrs.
and gifts arc sent at Christmas service. Needy applicants are Lillian Long, program coordinainstead of exchanging gifts be­ rccommrnded to our Dental Clinic tion; Mrs. Viola Kastner, news
tween the members. Many of these Committee by nurses of the local service; Mrs. Arolyn True, pub
girls ara victims of broken homes Health Unit. Money In finance lie affairs; radio and television,
and other unfortunate circumstan­ this clinic is secured in various Mrs. Glendora Rider; national se
ces over which they had no con­ ways through activities of the curity, Mrs. Sybil Roulh. Heading
trol; consequently they enter the BPW club.
special committees are Gertrude
school frightened and many times
Also the club members as Indivl- Gilbert, dental; Mrs. Peggy Kuhn,
defiant.
duals also participate in all phases USO; Lorcne Ball, bulletin; Betty
H Is a fact however that under of civic and community work, and Baker, flowers, and Eula Granthe able and wise management of are both active and effective In tham, scrap book and chaplain.

WOMAN’S CLUB— Mr*. C. E. C ’m , left, 1* handed the
gnvel by Mrn. Roy Tillm iw Mr*,
assumed her new
duties iw prenldent of Ihe Sanford Woman’* Club.

Sanford Woman's Club
Goals Are Sei High
“Our objects shall hr literary,
aoeial, scientific, and philosophic.
W# shall promote In general, higher social and moral condition in
tha community."
These were the alms outlined by
the charier members of the Sanford Women’s Club In 1913, lighting the torch of Ideals which has
been pressed to 22 presidents to
“ hold them high” down through

"
Sanford Museum when It Is cor
p|flcd. The exhibit include* vi
uahlr art works, rare edition
suites of furniture, clothing; ai
otht-r (jnrry of the past era.
The attractive building is
Rreat demand by other civic at
g ^ iji organizations for parties at
banquets, and contains a comple
an(t wcll equipped kitchen. Th

First Christian Church Abides By. Biblical Ride

ford women, banded together to
better serve aa ever-growing com­
munity.

Many nf Sanford’s most distin­
guished women have hold the gav­
el and guided Hie r|ub through
the perilous days nf three wars,
the Florida boom, Ihe dlsailerous
depression, snd on to our present
lime. Among them were Mrs. John
W. Djckini, Mrs. Galloway, Mrs.
Morgan, Mrs. John Lconardy,
Mrs. H. E. Tolar, Mrs. Henry
Wight, Mrs. E. A. Douglas, Mrs.
Donald F. Drummond, Mrs Glen
E. McKay, Mrs. Theodore Lengley,
Mrs. Ralph A. Smith, Mrs, Walter
L. Cooper, Mr*. A. M. Phillips,
Mrs. R. J . Holly, Mr*. C. R. Daw­
son, Mrs. James Moughton, Mrs.
H. W. Rucker, Mrs. O. P. Hern­
don, Mrs. B. B. Crumley, and
Mrs. noy Tillis. Mrs. Clara Ginn
began her tenure of office last
October and will serve as presi­
dent until 1934.
The current program ceacerai
building a belter commualty, with
various civic leadsrs appearing on
tha General Luncheon programs
each, month, better acquainting the
members with tha intricies of
city governments and thsreby be­
coming more dvle minded.
The departments of tha clubs
have evolved to Include the Social,
Civic, American Home, and Fine
Art*. The American Homo la th*
newest department of tho organisa­
tion and concerns itself mostly
with homemakiag programs and
Projects, am) is composed of tho
younger members. The Fin* Arts
Department Includes Literature,
Muile, Bible, Art, Drama diviMens, with programs s p a c e d
.(teeugteut the year to Include all

Spanish
Veterans
Organize

The S p a n i s h American War,
fought In UN, Is the only war In
our history, which h id ■ complete­
ly volunteer enlistment and which
hid no men drafted In Its ranks.
The veterans are the oldest rank­
ing veterans, since th* days of the
G. A. It.
Tha Col. Theodore Roosevelt
Camp number 13, comprised of
Spanish War Veterans, was organ­
ized In Sanford In 1931. This was
the first camp to be organised In
Central Florida, and many other
camps were started aa outposts of
this camp, and later became camps
In their own righto.
The present membership Is com­
posed of l l msmbers, living In
Sintord, Altamonte Springs, Winter
Park, Osteen, Upsala, Lake Mary,
and Gtnava, Three men a n still
charter msmbers of this group.
The average age of all Spanish
Wsr Veterans U about 7t years
old. Tb*. camp's ages range from
7» to t t years of age, with Us
membership representing birth la
about 13 states of the Union.
Camp number 11 holds its meetl a p on the second Sunday of each
month at l p.m. in the Legion Hut
to Sanford. AU Spanish War Vete­
rans not affiliated with tha Camp
are welcome to moot or to visit
with It
The officers, ever W M ara eld,
t i e Cam mender Frank Iv an s;
sealer vice Ttmmandir C. c.
F rio*! junior Commander-Lewis
• et Ikes*.
Brsee mayor; adjutant and quarter,
In IBM, in cooperation with the m srter Q. P ictorial. officer of tha
M ile Harrison Chapter of . the If.
. S.D.A.R., the Woman's Club p v t
tbs attraction balcony to tte ten d ­
ing to bourn tte troaanion iwMth
wfil t e displayed in tte O m n i

The First Christian church In
Sanford is a part of the great body
of Christians known as the Disci­
ples of Christ or the Christian
Church, has a congregational form
of government, and strives to abide by rules laid down In the Bi­
ble for Its government and proce­
dure. They do not believe they are
the only “ Christians," but do not
believe In calling themselves by
any name except the name of
Christ, who is the head of the
church.
In July of 1923 under the leader­
ship of Mrs. R. A. Terhune, sev­
eral members met wtlli the Rev.
0. S. Brooks of Eustls and he
preached for a few ^peks. On Sept.
20 of the same year, a meeting was
called at the Women's Club, pre­
sided over by Rev. J. L. Jackson,
chairman of the Orlando District,
and the charter was signed and
the clfUrch organized for Sanford.
Most of the charter memberk have
since died or moved away, and
Mrs. Phillip Mara and Mrs. J. R.
Rlchsrds are the only members
who signed the Original charter.
For some lime they met In the
American Legion Hut, and brought
their own chairs, and Rev. O. S.
Brooks was the first minister. Af­
ter he was called to the church In
Kissimmee, Rev. If. T. Bolton, who
with his daughter, Martha, was
spending his winters In Florida
ministered for a short time, followed by Rev. O. If. GreenweU, and
Rev. Edward Rudicel. As many
members had now been* added to
the little congregation, they sought
quarters In the Junior High School
building In IM . After Mr. Rudicel

was called to another church, the
Board called tha Rev. Frank M.
Mailer, who did valuable work in
the church and the community.
Ilia first sermon was preached on
Mother's Day, 1927, and through
his efforts the present building was
erected and the first services to
bo held in the new church was on
Mother's Day In 1929.
During the first years they were
partially supported by the State
Mission Board, but became selfsupporting In 1931, and since that
time have helped support other
mission churches In the state, Mr.
Marlcr's work was evangelistic
and added many members to the
church, but his chief Interest was
In the young people. His wife, Rose,
was also Interested In young peo­
ple and organised the first Girl
Scout Troop in Sanford. The Marler'a served the church for seven
years. Ministers who followed him
were: Rev, W. Herman Forbes,
Rev. Isenberg, Rev. Dance, Rev.
Grantham, Rev. William Perry
Yesley, Rev. Farris, Rev. Herbert
J. Bass, and tha Rev. If. E. John­
son. Two of the ministers passed
away while they were serving the
church, the Rev. Dance and the
Rev. Yesley, both of heart at­
tacks. After Mr. Yesley's death, a
parsonage committee consisting of
Lester Tharp, O. D. Landress, and
Mrs. Phillip Mars planned a par­
sonage for the church as a Yesley
Memorial. Funds w e r e raised
among tha members and friends
of Mr. Yesley both la Sanford and
the west where he formerly minis­
tered, and partially financed by the

National Church Extension Board.
Tha church, which today as com­
pletely debt free, is looking for­
ward tn the erection of a new Edu­
cational Building In the near fu­
ture.
In the past three years the church
auditorium has been completely
re-decorated, new pews, carpets,
draperies, pulpit and communion
service. A new consonata organ
has been InslaUed and paid for.
The old pews were borrowed from
their Presbyterian friends and have
now been returned after a years.
Thank you neighbors.
The church Is now In better fin­
ancial and spiritual condition than
at any time in Ua history and it
Is expecting even greater things
In the future. It has a well organ­
ized, graded Sunday School with
Mrs. O. T. Pearson Sunday School
Supt. and an active Men and Wo­
men’s Fellowship. An excellent
choir Is under the direction of Jay
M. Walter, with Mrs. N. V. r a r ­
er, organist
The present membership Is 130.
The Rev. J. R. Golden is serving
as mlnlstar Interium.
LAWSONS HOSPITALIZED
KINGSPORT, TENN. (UP) Holston Valley Community Hospi­
tal was. teaming with Lawsons re­
cently. At on* time, there were 14
persons by that asm s. Two of
them, In the maternity ward to
add a couple of more Lawson*,
both were named Dorothy Mari*.
Nuraea solved that ooe by calling
them by Uialr husband' first nama:
George Washington and Andrew
Jackson Lawson.

Among Newly Organized Groups
The Christian and Missionary Al­
liance Church of Sanford Is one'of
the more recently organised groups
of Christians in the community.
Prior to the present organization
the church was known as the Full
Gospel Tabernacle. The former
meeting place was built in 1928 and
was located on the Orlando High­
way just south of the Sanford city
limits. The building was seriously
damaged in a hurricane and the
new edifice now located at Park
Ave. and 14th Street was begun in
1948. The construction of this build­
ing has processed on a pay-as-yougo basis but as yet Is not entirely
completed. At the present there is
no outstanding debt on any of the
church property.
The Church was Incorporated
into the fellowship of the Christ­
ian and Missionary Alliance in
1943. National headquarters for the
parent organization of the church
are In New York City. Local
churches constituting a Society ra ­
ther than a denomination are dedi­
cated to the promotion of the Gos­
pel of Christ both at home and
abroad. There is a special empha­
sis on foreign missionary work.
The doctrinal position of the-Socie­
ty Is expressed in the motto::
"Chr|«t Our Savior. Sanctifier,
Healer, and Coming King."
In 1943 the charter membership
of the present Sanford church was
only 17. Since that time the adult
membership has grown to about
forty-five active members and ele­
ven inactive members. Rev. Glenn
E. Smith was the minister of the
church for eight years prior to
leaving for another charge in the
winter of 1932. It was he who
brought the group into union with
the Christian Missionary Alliance.
He was also responsible for other
great strides of advance during
the period of his psstorate.
The psstor now is the Rev. David
S. Camcflx who has had the charge
of the work sinco February 1933.
Under his leadership continuing
improvement is being mado with
the blessing of God. A building pro­
gram Is being carried on In an
effort to complete the Sunday
School wing on the south side of
the church. All the church's facili­
ties’are being pressed to the full­
est extent of their capacity. Sunday
School growth has made it neces­
sary for one class to meet In a
home across the street from the
church. Other classes a r t crowd­
ing their classrooms each Sunday.
It Is apparent to all that the Sun­
day School expansion must be com­
pleted as soon as possible. Other
plsns for Improvement are also
under consideration Including the
construction of a new parsonage.
Behind the church there Is a
building which was once used for
a garage and storage that haa
been completely remodeled to pro­
vide facilities for a Youth Annex.
It is used for various activities of
the Sunday School and Church as
well as other week-day programs.
Two teacher training classes meet
there each week. The church spon­
sors two Youth clubs; one called
the Girl’s Christian Activity Club
which meets every Monday after
school, the other is the "Sky Pilot's
Club" for boys which meets every
Thursday evening. Troop 3 of the
Brownie Scouts also meets In the
Youth Annex each week.
The church operates on aa an­
nual budget of more than five
thousand dollare for general expen­
ses and the building program. The
members also contribute generous­
ly to foreign missions over and
above their regular offering* to the
chureh. A missionary pledge Is sub­
scribed In th* Annual Missionary
Convention held each winter. For
1933 th* pledge amounted to $!,♦
314.00. This represents a voluntary
commitmant by the Individual
members, averaging shout 133.00
per caplto contributed solely to
foreign missions.
Over a year ago an naepieloui

morning program of the church,
Services for the Sunday Sell- i and
Worship which had been conducted
separately before were combined
into one service beginning at 9:43
a.m. and ending at 11:30 each Sunday. The program Is divided Into
three sessions. The assembly of
the Sunday School begins a study
period with classes for every age
group. In the worship period which
follows the pastor presents an illustratlon sermon which is directed
especially to the children, a* well
as a message planned and delivered on an adult level. This order of
service, though in some ways unusual, has been marked with sueees, from It. Inception.
Some adults who did not benefit
by the Sunday School program are
now enjoying the inspiration of the
broader program of Christian Instruction and worship. Furthermore, children who were unaccustomed to participation in the worship service arc now being trained
In this Important phase of ChristIan experience. The good results
of this arrangement are indicated

by Ihe fact
day School i
and the attc
has nearly
besides th
|ng service
ducts a me
ing and a
Wednesday
evening sen
)n which U
d to
h y m „ and
jn perj0nal
n , e Mid-Wc
un|ted prayt
. . .
H .’
agM from t
_____
ATI!
FROGVIL
Grant, him
Choctaw C&lt;
just turned
alders hlmse
T H be a
father lives,

For Your Retirement Home

Modest Cost
The standard in Horn* hi the Sunshine 8 ta te
la Florida Builders Home w ith its modern Uneg,,
proved construction, dependability. Prices s ta r t'
a t $6450.

See these now a t our Open House a t
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,
Wo also build quality custom homes on your
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Builder
11$ S u m m e rlin A t *.
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Phono 1

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Associates
B . P ntm moo, J r . — J o h n W . Meiaefc
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1 . W . W ill (n n u , F o r e s tr y C o n s u lta n t

RARE
Living Oilu
—1 ■
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rone! have acre** In tha Library I THE SANFORD HERALD
fic relaxation, study and enter ,
S e c tio n I), P«V« 1
tainment.
/snn
wnenewr Ihe country li have for Ihe p u t III ytara, to
And whenever
“ Rig lor Church Service*"
they went tilth to defend our coon with the aid of a flannel hoard with called In arms, the Navy Chap-1 tend "Men of God" wherevar tha
Till* In the announcement OimI I* jiiy the Chaplains were there also, symbols. Purpose of these lec­ lain* Corps stands ready, aa they ‘ bluejacket defend* our Flag.
heard over the public addre** *&gt;* j Dunns World War II, and the Ko tures Is to help the men develop
leni* ol most ships in the U. S. rcan War, clergymen of all faiths and increase good character. Alsu
Navy every Sunday morning ll responded once asnin to th. "alt to aid in character building, movie*
a u pro perty n o m as
means that the Chi pie in ha* come • and donned the uniform of the and outside speakers are present
aboard and is preparing to hold i naplain and went with the men cd. All this is designed to assist
| lo far fluiis buttle fronts.
Navy personnel lo become bettet
Divine Service*.
The primary duty of a Navy and m ist responsible citizen*.
In the Navy, there ha* been a
Chaplains Corps ever since the Chaplain i* the conducting of Wor­ When men sre admitted to
fir»t ship nl the Continental Navy ship Services for Naval personnel. “ sick-bsy” , they expect and re
went to sea lie, a* a “ Man of These Services arc conducted ac­ reive visits frum Ihe Chsplsln
God", traveled with the tleet cording to the custom of his These visits are made- with the
wherever it* mission carried him church. Generally, three types of intention of solving problems and
Lake F r o n l- m ' aa beaUful
and whatever Its task might be service* arc held. Protestant, Ca giving of enrouragement.
Hemet with lacam il, m m *
Crystal Lake, 1 acres, wooded, furnished, walking d i s t a n c e
thnllc
and
Jewish.
Services
are
If
a
man
Is
confined
to
the
When the men of our country
rolling, cleared, electricity, wa­ town, irhoeli, church**, and
sailed the seas in tune of war. the offered on Sundays and oilier spe “ brig", he is not forgotten by the
Chaplains were with them. When rial occasion*. Through these ser­ Chaplain. Visits are made to help
ter, U miles from Country library. Uadar $16,000.
vices. a man's spiritual growth him adjust tn his situation and aid
Club.
continue* to multiply while he is in making him a better sailor when
HAS SAME TAG
in the Navy.
restored
FOR OI.lt OOIIOF
Another closely related duly of
Realizing that good books build
tl,ooooo down, buya this I Choice location 0 unit apartSt. Petersburg, — (FNS) A. F. the Chaplain's i* that of counsel­ good moral character, Ihe Navy
bedroom euttage with 3 acre*. n u t houia, hardwood floor*,
Itendu*. who hat been drivinu the ing with men on their prnblrms. makes seleclrd reading available
same Dodge for ill years, is a- Guidance I* given in regard* to tn it's personnel. As a collateral
360' on lake, good fishing, Ideal living room* with flraplai**,
niazed at the coincidence that ha* religion, marriage and financial
rltrua land. Triced for quick designed for gracious living
duty at Ihe Sanford Naval Auxtloccurred three year*
running
'-'em* The door lo the Chap- ! iary Air Station, Ihe Chaplain Is
U rm i, owner financed.
sale $3,300 00.
when hr houirlit hit Iicon** ■
In Jt*5.‘t he wns issued 4Q-‘JM i.iiu's Office is always open in in charge of tha library. With the
In 1054 when Itendu* applied at .hose in need. This counseling also aid nf an enlisted librarian, hooks
tha license window he was given extended lo all dependents who are srleced and purchased month­
ly. Curret magazines are also made
4Q-2K1. I.ast week he went to the may nerd guidance.
R ru m lry -ru le a to n B ld f.
Ph. S lit
Pinellas County license tag head­ Another function of Ihe Chaplain available lo personnel during their
Sanford.
Florida
I*
Ihe
giving
of
rharacler
guidance
off-duty
hours.
During
this
spare
quarters for his „cw ulant. lie was
lectures. The Irrturrs are given time, both Stalinn and Fleet pergiven No. 4Qd!.M.

Navy Conducts W eekly Services

i First Methodist Church History
- Associated With Ernest Chapel
"The history of Uio First Method Methodist Conference, in June, vrnience of parents with small
children
lit Church of Sanford li closely aa 1640.
The tolal church. In its Official
aoclated with thet of Erneat Che
Before Ihe church was built at
ol, whleh wai located near tha o!&gt;ld Sanford, The Florida Conference Hoard and various Commissions
townalte of MelloavlUn, and Eben had established the "Mellonvillo is striving lo create the best pos
anor Church, In tha Lord Mltla- Circuit", which Included the town slble church organization and pro
■ e a t south of Sanford.
of Mellonvtlle, east of Sanford. The grams for the Methodists of San
ft had independont beginning, Rev. R. H. Bim elt, one of the pio­ ford, striving to attain knowledge
hmrevar, being established by
neers of Methodism in Florida, was of present need* tn order to fulfill
•mail band of Methodists living In assigned as preacher in 1874. When them more complricly, and with
x
that city shortly after it was he arrived there by boat he found a wide-open view toward the future
v
'
founded
by General Henry S. San only IS Methodists and no church. of the churrh as the city of San
•j
lord, for whom the city Is named. August J. Vaughn gave two ford expands.
Present church officer* and staff
Organization of tho church was acres of his homestead for a
i
; preceded by the establishment of church and school site and a eo- are headed by the Rev. Milton II
n Sunday School In 1M2 by Mrs metery. When the church was Wyatt, present minister; the Rev
Leffler, Mrs. Speneley and Mias erected it was called Ernest Chap­ Richard O. Knight, Associate Min
Jennie Smith in a building on el, in honor of a Mr. Ernest, a zea­ istcr; Mrs Clara Swain, Secre
First Street belonging to C. H. lous member. The building was an Iary; Roger Harris, Choir Direc­
Leffler. Later it was moved to Impressive structure of Colonial tor; Charles Morrison. Evening
Dodd'i Hall oa Palmetto Avenue. type architecture with large col­ .Song Leader; Mr*. Albert Hick
son, Organist; Mrs. Leslie Me»
It wee at Dodd's Halil that lha umns and a handsome belfry.
_
, _ , . ,
. . Ewan. Organist Emeritus; It. U
• First Methodist Church had Ita
!
!
"
Hut chi son, chairman of the Off.
i Inception. Socials, bazaars, picnics the! town' of !Sanford,
many of the
i ' and voluntary *u*f«eriDtloni provtd- inhabitants of Mcllonvilla moved to rial Hoard; Z. H. Ratliff, Trcasur
cr; C. R. Bowes, Church School
od funds for th* building. Central tha now city.
Superintendent; Ashby Jones, Com
Sanford had given loti to all deno­ In 18-0 the !.*L&gt; J. M. Lord sug
minations for their houses of wor Rested that the residents of south mission on Education; J. C. Davis,
ahip. The one given to the Method west Sanford build a church and Chairman, Commission on Finan
lata was on Sanford Avenue near he gave an acre of his land for rc; Eugene Williams, Chairman on
Stewardship: Mrs Joe Azzsrrllo,
Sixth Street.
,
that purpose. Ernest Chapel had Chairman. Commission on Mem
Principal builder of the church been sold and the proceeds divided bership and Evangelism; Mrs
was a Mr. Presbrey, who was a between the church in Sanford and Neal Farmer, Chairman, Commis
carpenter, and lay preacher. Mr. the Methodists who wished to build sion on Mission*. The Committers
C. H. Leffler furnished the shin­ a chureh a t Lord's.
arc as follows; Social and Itecrc
gles at cost- declaring that hi*
alion Co/nmlttec, Mrs. William
Tha
now
ehurch
was
completed
wife would allow him only to make In August of that year with the Hunter; Pastoral Relations Com
a spiritual profit out of tha trans­ furnishings of Ernest Chapel and miltee. L. P. Hagan; Parsonage
action.
with an organ Mr. Lord donated. and Church Property, Judge R. W
This church was a targa wooden When asked what the new chureh Ware; Ushering Committee, Jame
building with a steep roof. Mrs. should be called, Mr. Lord said, Dozartl; Nomination* Committee,
| Leffler played tha organ until the "Ebenezer", which means, "Hith R. W. Ware.
arrival 6 Sanford of John M. Met- •rto hath tha Lord helped us."
tingor, who dlroctad Mm choir and
Another milestone in the pro­
furolshod th* music for is yaars.
and wha aervod as Sunday School gress of the local congregation oc
purred In 1646 when the beautiful
Superintendent for SO yean .
naw educational building was comla UM a M a t Mm aornar of plated, and dedicated aa McKinlay
By C. R. DAWSON
F a r t At*, and Fifth St. was ae- Hall. This was accomplished dur­ Now that the hunting season i
fulrad and th* church building ing the pastorate of the Rev. J. E, ovar there seem* to be some ini
was moved there. Two rooms were McKinley. The Christian educa. provemrnt on the obiervanrc of
, added on the front and a bell-tow­ tlon of between 400 and 47S Church (he*e ticut. There ale still some
e r and ntw Mats installed.
School student* is carried forward folks, however, who do not know
.! Thli ehurch housed tho congre­ each Sunday by a staff of rouse- or apprrriair why caltlriiien tin
gation until i n f when it was re- crated teachers and Church School interested in keeping folks oul ol
nsevod to make way for the pre­ workers. Teacher training pro­ their eow pastures.
paid brick structure. This was dur- grams are instituted each year in Trespassing disturb the rattle
toc th* paitorage of the Rev. F. order that workers might grow in and (here have been ii number i f
S . Stainueyer. Th# lata Stephen knowledge and techniques ade­ case* when gates have been left
Olia Sdnholsor waa tho builder quate for meeting the needs of open and fence wire cut with ut
IR mw Aa old church waa torn modern Christian education as well ter disregard for the trouble and
u given lo tha aa tha Individual needs of each pu­ expense (Ids causes the owner.
a t Lake Moarot. pil. An activa Commission on Edu­ When a property Is legally "Poet
church contains cation work! diligently to provide ad" the trespasser is subject tn
■tiinod-gtasi me- the best equipment, skill and tech- &gt;prnsrrutinn under the law and the
, Mm moet beautiful niaue. Nursery facilities are pro­ Seminole County Cattlemen's As­
Park Avenue. This vided each Sunday during the sociation Is urging all Its mein
tat to tk* Florida Morniag Worship Hour for the eon- bers lo post Ihctr pasture lands.

Cullen Cr Harkey, Realtors

U

*

'The Store That Thrift Built
AND MOVED INTO SANFORD IN 1928
AND EVEN
F R A N K L IN W O U LD A G R EE

See Improvements
As Season Closes

M

m
m
r

A 'M ust' stop on your trip to Florida!

A| WAY\

•
I
i
P

L

MEANS

'i t

PORK AND BEEF BARBECUE
DELIGHTFUL SHORT ORDERS
VARIETY OF BEVERAGES
DELICIOUS MEALS

a i

••

♦

V.

S.

H TW A Y

IT • W — SA N FO R D

B.

C O L O N IA L

D R IV E — O R L A N D O

Mr. J. C. Penney founded our g rea t company back In 1902 and wag founded upon A b u t t of alm pt*
th rifty and eaay to live w ith pollciM. Aa early

as

1028, th e Penney Company moved into Sanford

. . . n ot a U rge apadoua store a t th a t tim e, b u t b ringing th e good policies end a sto re of FIB 8T
QUALITY MERCHANDISE. Sines t h e t tim e F IN N E Y ’S h as m ore then' doubled Its floor * a a o
end has a completely modern end ap-to-date sto re . T hrough th o jroaro to oomo, wo will oont inuo
s triv in g to g iro th e easterner hie M l dollar's valno o f T iro l Q uattty
t

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TOR SANFORD ITKRAT.D

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brightening

T d in tm n

HOUSTON, r e x . (IA) — At tha
of Iradpcncits I* fitted to the
wooden can* muit b« made with too, 40 sun lamps have been install,
ed In the monkey cages.
in .0005 of an Inch accuracy.

D e B A R Y IS MY H O M E
MAY I HELP MAKE
IT YOURS?

L SOULS CATHOLIC

Congregational Christian Church
Proudly Boasts Of New Structure
Nineteen Fifty Four was a no-1 the trustees, deacons, diacones- cnee made an address and there
tahle year in the annals of thieUes, women’s societies and church was a half hour organ recital
school. Cius Schmah wax cho
Dr. J. Ilrmnrd Root has been
fifth oldckt
Saufuitl,
tl'«
Songrcgutio.-ud sen builder. H r used fine Judg­ iiaitoi i . the church 'fo r'28 years
Church. It r.,arkrd the relocation ment in the organisation and and la now going itrong aa a vi
of the congregation on the tame superintendence of construction goruus Biblical preacher.
avenue a:id principul highway, ami in the coordination of archl*
Truly the year has been a no
changing thn church aite from n Icclurul details. It was decided (o tnldn one In the hlatory of this
buxines* to a rcniilcntiul district. havo the church completed for Church.
Sanford la growing rapidly and worship and activities before It
the Church ahnred the experience. wax opened,
A (.round Breaking ceremony,
Sixty five ycara ago thl* conin which Mayor Kundnll Cliaxo
and Itev. I.ucian W. Scoll of the
Seminole County Ministerial As­
sociation participated, was held
on November -'J, 105.1, at the new
site on the south' est comer of
Park Avenue (Highway 17-02)
and Twenty Fourth 8U 21 blocks
directly south from the former
The 30th Annual Pioneer Night
church site.
The four lots for the new will be held at the Chamber of
churrh extend 268 feet elong the Commerce Building, In Lake Mary,
highway and 17 feel west. The on March 15. An unusually Interest­
spacious grounds are to lie land- ing program la being arranged
sen cd with tropical palms, • by the Committee, and all who are
lawn and a few shrubs in front no years old or over are Invited.
Each year a “ Pioneer Night" la
and there will be long parking
along the alley at the rear. The jbserved by the settlers of Lake
new churrh with its educational Mary. Thla event, originally found­
an 'X now stands on the comer ed by Frank Evans, prominent
lot—a thing of beauty, much Lake Mary resident, featurei musi
commended for its proportions, cal numbers, play sketches and
symmetry and coloring. It la vaudeville stunts. There is also
heavily reinforced with steel srsl group singing along with refresh­
has a red Spanish tile roof. It ments.
L hurricane proof and could be­ The five oldest men and the five
come a refuge in a fierce atorm. oldest women attending are pre­
So now the new church Is the sented with prlsea.
The register kept from the past
first to appear on the highway
as you drive In from tho south. years reveala that almost all the
It is ono long block from the
southernmost
traffic highway countries Including Germany, En­
light at 25th Street whero the gland. Nova Scotia, Sweden, Cana­
thriving now shopping center Is da, Norway, Finland, Italy, Ire­
land, and Prince Edward, Italy
located.
Isle.
The interior of the new church
"Young people have parties all
is as winning as the exterior. The
the
time. Let’s havo a party for
chancel with Its alter, pulpit and tha old
people," said Mrs. Frank
lectern lx finished in South AEvans 30 years ago. Thus Pioneer
merican Fir, The nave has var­ night, enjoyed by young and old
nished boxed beams. The natural alike, waa born.
pine pews below were made for
Aa one man put it "They have
the old church over fifty years
fun on Pioneer Night than a
ago by E. B. Itandall. The walls more
bunch of teenagers a t a ‘bop’
are cream and tho mottled green session."
glaia of the windows Is pleasing.
A thriving church school la su­
perintended by Ure. Mary Robin­
churrh school grew and a number son Schmah. New members ara
of new members Joined the joining Uie church frequently. The
church.
’■
churrh opening waa on Novcmbor
Elton J, Moughton bees mo tho &gt;1, 1051, the general public being
church architect. A cruolforra
jj____ _________
Spanish Mission typo edifice waa In which Associate Supcrlnton* I gavo him i
ideslgned. The Building Committee dent Bobbins Half of the Florida I night Stick,
[consisted of representative* of Congregational Christian Confer. It broke.

Annual
Pioneer
Night

'V t-

URC

Catholic Church
Opens Doors
To All Visitors
A sign on the comer of Ninth
and Park on Highway 17-02 dl
recta Catholic travelers to All
Soul’s Catholic Church one block
away on Ninth and Oak In San
ford.
Ono hundred years ago there
was no church here. Catholics
who settled In Sanford at that
time felt fortunate Indeed when
the priest came to their homes to
say Masa. Tho first church, a
frame structure, was dedicated on
July 4, 1887, and waa destroyed
by fire In 1031. At that time the
present tile and stucco church
waa built and still serves the
Catholics of Sanford and Semin
ole County. It scats 425 persons
Three masses must be said
each Sunday morning to accomo­
date the present increased con
grcgatlon. Last September, something new waa added, an eight
grade
sdc Parochial School known aa
All Soul’s School. Already It has
160 pupils and Is taught by the
Sisters o( Christian Charity of
Mcndham, New Jersey.
The promise of this school and
its fulfillment has already In­
duced a doxen or more families
to settle In 8anford. The school
and convent are across the
street from tha church. The rec­
tory la located at 718 Oak Ave.
The Rev. Richard Lyons la paa
tor.

D eB A R Y *S

AUTO S E R V IC E ...................

F IR S T

R EA LTO R

Invites you to send for inform ation on charm ­

A L L MAKES AND MODELS!

ing retirem ent homes, choice residential or
business lots, income property, groves farm s

• SPEEDOMETER REPAIRS

and business

• FRONT END REPAIRS

th is entire vicinity. W rit* fo r folder and list*

• MOTOR TUNE UP

tags.

opportunities

of all kinds

t

• EX PERT MECHANICS
• COMPLETE JOB REPAIRS
• PARTS AND ACCESSORIES

ACCORDING TO PLAN
BOISE, IDAHO ((A) - An un­
scheduled touch of realism was
added to a civil defenia test.
The script said three Snake Ri­
ver bridges were out, wrecked by
Imaginary bombs. But on the day
of the test, one of the bridges real­
ly was knocked out. There was no­
thing Imaginary about the truck
that broke through It.

R A Y E . PEC K
REALTOR

B ut ford, Fla.

DaBarr,

Box 245
Phono Sanford 552

HILL HARDWARE
HEADQUARTERS

FO R THE

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Theodore Roosevelt Auxiliary W as Begun In
The Colonel Theodore Rooscvelt Auxiliary So. 3 of the United
Spanish War Veterans was organ­
ised fas June of 1922 by Mrs. Lou
Smith Tarhune.
The chapter was Issued under
Cora Thompson, National Presi­
dent ou August IS, 1922. The first
officers elected were. . .
Lou Smith Tcrhune, president:
Jane Lyles, senior vice president:
Mae Shafer, junior vice president:
Marion Ballard, secretary, and
Maud Schmidt, treasurer.
Thart ware alghttaa names on
tha chartar list; feur of these still
remain. They ars Mrs. Marion
Batlard, Mrs. Jsnls Lyles, Mrs.
Arris King and Mrs. Mae Sheafer.
TM Celoasl Roosevelt group
wga ess af tha three auxiliaries
composing ths Department of
Flsrtda when organised In 1923
at tha encampment U. S. W. V.
held In Sanford. Credit Is due to
tAJfiUp Dragon, national president.
Mrs. fo rtu n e and Mrs. Ballard

7922

in maintained interest and further : husband Frank Evans is com
ed the welfare with various ac­ i mandcr of the Colonel Theodore
tivities and entertainments in the Roosevelt Camp 13 United Span­
ish War Veterans.
earlier history of the auxiliary.
Officers now serving are presi­
Many members of the Auxiliary
No. 3 formed clubs In other towns dent. Mrs. Frank Evans; senior
with St. Augustine,., Daytona, Or­ vice president, Mrs. Lew tirade
lando. St. Petersburg and St. meyer; junior vice president. Mrs
Cloud included. The latter now has L. M. Himes; patriotic instructor,
r membership of over 200. The Mrs. W. E. Jameson; chapntn
present membership of Auxiliary ! Mrs. Alfred Erieon; historian.
No. 3 is 24. The purpo&gt;e is to ex­ Mrs. C. C. Priest; secretary and
tend aid and sympathy to the j treasurer. Mrs. Mae Sheafer; conveterans of the Spanish War and ductor, Mrs. J. R. Lyles; assis­
their dependents and to cooperate tant conductor, Mrs. C. P. Braswith them In thoir work and their ington; guard, Mrs. Leon Picker­
social affairs; promote patriotism: ing.
humanity and proper rcvcncc for
Out of town members are wel­
the Flag.
come.
The Auxiliary meets a 3 p. m.
on the second Sunday of the month
Among commissioned r e u t l t in
at 113 Elm Ave. There have been the U. S. Navy, dcstruyer-t) pa
meetings here for the psst 28 ships out number all others. That
years.
include the whole list — war­
An interesting note Is that Mr*. ships, amphibious vessels, mine
Frank Evans of Lake Mary heads warfare, patrol and auxiliary
the Auxiliary for 1935 while her sols.

Seminole County
Is Able To Claim iS-SS***
“ ^' am*
Many Advantages
WE
E

Seminole ran claim many ad­
vantages over the rest of the
world—but rust prevention is not
one of them. A valuable place of
fnrm machinery will rust hers
just as fast as anywhere.
That
ever present destroyer—rust—can
cost you Important mepay In
ruined machines and lost time un­
less you do something to eemhat
it. Use a rust prsvsntativa on the
soil-polished parts of plows, disks
and cultivators, as wall gs op
saw s and othsr hand tools qp soon
as you finish working with them. I
Don't use old crankcase oil for
this purpose. It is not a good &lt;
rust preventative, since It usually,
is contaminated with oxides am)
acids formed in the engine.
•

SERVE
GOOD FOOD
At

TH E
SANFORD
RESTAURANT
;ot N. PAW AVf.

ui'lM L tm

f First Church O f Christ/ Scientist Has Planned Services Every Week
F irst Church of Christ, Scien
A fre t lactura on Christian Club. On May 28, 1921 this group I
tilt, 100 E. 2nd St., Sanford, haa 8clence Is sponsored by First was rsfognlsed by TRa Methar |
regular Sunday aarvicca a t 11 Church of Christ, Scientist, every Church la Boston, as a Christian
a.m
year by a member of tha Board Science Society. Chripttfn Sriencs
Tha King Jatnaa Vcralon of tha of Lectureship of Tho Mother ■endecs continued In ths Woman's ]
Bible and tha Chrlatlan Science Church. Tha public Is eofdUUy In­ Club unt|| 10|9 whfn tbs present
taxtbook, “Sclanea and Health vited to ottsnd these lectures church edifies was
m with Kay to tha Scriptures" by where soma of tha bssie truths of 1923 a Sunday School was atartad |
Mary Dakar Eddy, arc uaed in tha Christian Science gnd facts about and la continuing ovspr Sunday.
services of all the rhurrhea of Mrs. Ed&lt;jy srs dlMUtffd by com­
n \ In l i f t in a room
,0* * a f a |
thia (((nomination. Thatr two petent speakers.
opsnad
booka w ire designated tha only
A free Christian Science read­ Sanford offico building.
pastor by Mary Baker Eddy ing room is maintalnsd by tha loOn Aug. 4, 1926, Christian I
In Tha Manual of The Mother •al church In Sanford at 104 S. Science Society was recognised by
Church, The Flrat Church of Fark Ave. on the aecond floor. ths Board of Director* of ths
Christ, Scientist, In Boaton, Mata. The Bible, Science oi)d Health, Mother Church in Bspton, os First
Tha 6unday acrvicea are con* other writings by Mrs. Eddy. Tha Church of Christ, Scientist, fagducted b7 two Rcadera, the Second Christian Science Journal, Chris­ ford.
Reader ranis from tha Bible, then tian Science Sentindl, The Chris­
Ths eom tr stone af tho * regent I
the Flrat Rtader rcada correlative tian Sciencs Monitor and othar church edifice eras laid with ap*
passages from the Science and authorised Christian Science liter­ propriata csremtnlsa on Uia morn­
Health. The citations arc ured aa ature may l&gt;e read, borrowed, or ing of May s, 1929. It was first
indicated |n the Chrlatlan Science purchased- The public Ip cordially used for services on July )lQuarterly for tha subject. Thli Invited to attend the church ser­
A Christian Selene* Church
acrvlca opens with a hymn am vices and to make uss of ths fret cannot b* dedicated until it is fra#
the reading of a Scriptural setae* reading room, which Is open Mon­ of debt and tha Sanford branch of
tlon by the Flrat Reader. After day through Friday from 12:10 Tho Mother Church was dsdleatad
this the congregation unites In p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
on January 2e, 1999. gad has
silent prayer, followed by the
Sunday School Is held fv try growp' steadily sines Itf bagia,
tJdlbl* repetition of the Lord's Sunday in ths church edifies at ring.
Prayer, with Ita spiritual inter* 9:30 a.m. and the first lessons the
In Science and Health Mrs.
I nratatlon aa given in tha text­ rbildren learn are the Ten Com Eddy defines ’’Church”aa: “The
book.' Following a solo the Read­ mandmfnts, tha Beatitudes, and structure of Truth and Love;
ers read the principal part of tha tlio Lord’s Prayer with it's splrl whatever rests upon and proceeds
service's. The two Readers are tusl Interpretation. Pupils ars ac­ from divine Principle. The Church
elected to office by tho church cepted in the Sunday School up :a that institution, which affords
members every third year.
to 20 years of agt.
proof of its utility and la found
Wednesday evening testimony
The purpose of tha 8unday elevating ths race, rousing ths
meetings a r e
held in Flrat School teaching is to give the dormant understanding from ma­
C'-.urch of Christ, Scientist, aw ry pupils a practical understanding terial beliefs to tho apprehension
\ ednesday evening at 6 p.m. of tha presence am, power of Qod of spiritual Idsaa and tha damanIh cre services are conducted by and how to realise that presence stratlon of divine Sciencs, there­
the First Reader who reads sclec* and power through prayer. Tho by casting out devils, or orror, |
$ t ns from the Bible and then cor* study in the senior classes centers and healing tha sick."
I
ire passages from Science largely on the-weekly lesson-ser­
i
Ikallh . About a half hour mon. A t tho Sunday acrvicea and
SCABY TRIP
i -AC Wednesday avenlng servlet In the Sunday School classes tho
TARlFfVILLE, Conn.
li devoted to the giving of testi­ rnrlstlan Sciencs Quarterly (Bible Alan Lta Bolin Sr., gasped whtn
monies of healing in Christian Lessons) are used. The Quarter­ ha saw hla car lsavt tha curb
L .toce. Many inspiring testi­ lies have 20 subjects which ars re­ whara he’M parked It with bis
monies are heard every Wednes­ peated twice each year, and were fiva- year-old ton, ^lan. Is tha |
day evening as Individuals tell selected by Mrs. Eddy to bo read front scat.
l:c;v they havo experienced the ' at all Sunday servlets and to bo
H it car rallad downgrade, tigl.eallng of sickness, sorrow, sin, studied dally by all aarnsst stu- sagged fro mons aids to tbo other,
a d other inharmonlcs through tbs dsnta of Christian Science.
but missing parted c*rs along i
i'R i&gt;.aye? of spiritual understanding.
Ths history of First Church of tb* wop. At fh* foot of tho grtdo
On Thanksgiving Day a special Christ, Scientist, began with a It swerved iato a parking spar*
service strewing gratitude la small group of persons Interested and halted. Racing to it, Bolin |
L«U. ChilstUn Sclviuv services jjr, Christian Science in the year found hie son behind tha wheel.
r e devoid of ritualism as tho | IBIS. The first services wart held
*T mscared, paddy," agtd the
5 ‘h ttll is on the spiritual slg- |„ a private home and In 1914 this youngstar.
a canet, which underlies oat- group moved Into the building
“ Ms Wo," Said Bolia aa fa slid |
w .rd ceremony,
I then occupied by the Women’* Into ths driver’s seat.

••f

. . . LIVE HERE

WORK HERE

PLAY HERE
"The C E L E R Y H EA R T of the W O RLD

— W H E R E IN D U S T R Y

"

GATEWAY TO CENTRAL FLORIDA

THE CITY OF SANFORD
i. DENVER CORDELL

JACK RATIGAN

MAYOR

COMMISSIONER

JOHN KRIDER

H. N. S A Y iR

COMMISSIONER

CITY CLERY

EARL Higginbotham

A. E. SHINHOLSER

1SSIONER

F D. SC O TT

CITY ATTORNEY

W . E. KN O W LES
CITY M A N N ER

M

�/

WE L C O ME TO

EVANSDALE!
Shoh&amp;Au

Ofc.

The Village Of Lake Mary
la In A Growing Community,
Nestled Between Two Clear
Lakes. I t Is Centrally Located
Between Orlando And Sanford,
And It Is In The Orange Growing
District. It Is One Hour Drive
To The Atlantic Ocean
Beaches, And A Three Hour
Drive To The Gulf Of Mexico.

Pure W ater Of Excellent Quality
Good Schools And Churches.
Unincorporated — H as No City Taxes.
Active Chamber Of C om m erce,.
And The Modern Building Is Available
To The Public As A Community C e n t o
Recreational Facilities, Include
Fishing — Boating — B athing
W ater Skiing — Shuffle board Courts.

A,

F or Over 25 Y ears
Lake M ary W ith Its
Sunshine and Palm T ress
H as Been O ur Home jv

FOR

• LO TS

P. D. And atton
Raymond M. Ball
Frank Bvana
HomarGtagyoa
Roy L. Howatt
J.A.Packham
Loan Plckariag
Harvay Pugh
Robart E. T ro t

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IfYlahi^.

A TTR A C TIV E FEATURES
IN FRIEN DLY LAKE MARY

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Section E.

anford Naval Auxiliary Air Station O f Great Importance
Seminole County With Its Activities, Friendly Personnel
r y j i ^ n i f .w i.iiPiwr

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5 fi$ $
A helicopter given a deaw o tratloa of a ir rescue a a f e ^

a n FOF Cougar J e t, a t NAAS,

VC-9 planea ia formation m r Florida’a beautiful lake-dotted land.

K a v ; a irc ra ft practice c a rrie r landing on m arked off runway.

A group of men almnrd th e Nnvnl AuxIMnrv Air Station nrr «' own m-t"** (hetr
a p a rt lime to work a t the Station Ilobby Shop.

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THE SANFORD HERALD
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MEMBERS OF THE 1955 Executive Board o f the Naval Auxiliary A ir Station, Officera
Wives Club. (L eft to right) standing: Mr*. A. N. Mclnnia. Mra. F. F. Johnion, Mra. H.
A. Hall, Mik . J. A. Goodwin Front row seated: Mra. G. F. Kube, Mrs. K. F. Rowell, Mra.
T. 0 . Murrny (president), Mrs. J. E. Vose J r.. Mrs. A. E. Waller. Two members of the
Executive Board not In photograph are Mrs. J . E. D yar and Mrs. G. S. Blake .

( d r . J . A . Goodwin
Third To Take Helm
CDR .John A. Goodwin Is the Air Technical Trsinlng Command
third Commanding Officer to take at Ward Island, Corpus Chrlstl,
the helm of Photographic Squad­ Tex., where he served as Opera
ron 62 since the snuadron was flons Officer.
eon'rrjlMloned under cDH J. Ken­ In }9|6. c p jl Qoodwia was sent
nedy. Jr. In April of 1052 »t Neval to photographic school in P enucola and upon completion of this
Air Station, Jacksonville.
CDR Gepdw-Jtj relieved CPfl. H school and operational training re6 Klepk. who hid eopimipded tlje lleved CDF Klenk as Executive Of.
iquidroq since June of 19X3. op (Jeer of VfP-?. then ti»« east
July 9 ef last year. Thi) mtrked coast phetegraphlc squsdren - Pgr*
the third time tnat CDR Goodwin fng the 33 months In this squadron,
ha I relieved the U tter of hit duty he served is Officer-ln-Charge of
several aerial aurveyi In Central
nation In the past eight years.
and South America.
in assuming the responsibilities
Altar this duty, he served as
&lt;! Commanding Officer o{ VC-62 superintendent of tha Aeronautical
Cdr. Goodwin bat charge of some Photographic Experimental Labora­
of the most important tasks in the tory at the Naval Air Material
military services ol our country.
Center, Philadelphia, Pa.
Ifc and his men, which number apIn 19)1, CDR Goodwin was sent
for any photographic roeonnalsto
general line school at Monterey,
S |c e missions on the Atlantic
43lit of the U. $. as wall as prac. Calif., for a year’s training In
tieglly |U Ngvy photo mlisUos in ship-boan! procedures and then in
received orders to the USS
the eastern hemisphere of the 19)2
Wright CVL-49, and saw duty In
globe that are required by any tho Mediterranean and tha Far
Navy or other federal agencies
requesting this type of work from East.
Among hi) decorations ara tha
«M N»vy.
American Area Flbhop, American
Since fisum iof command, CDR defense Service Medal, Pacific
r&gt;cdwin has deployed four de« Theatre Jtlbbon, World War II Vic­
►hmants overseas to all part* of tory Medal, four Air Medala, the
(ho eastern world on strategic Distinguished Flying Cross and the
photographic operations In addition European Occupation Medalto the missions that photographic
From the Wright, CpR Goodwin
Squfdron 62 lias been accomplish­ proceeded to VJ-62 to duty as the
ing in Florida and surrounding Commanding Officer.
areas. The squadron has been highin October of last year, CDR
ly praised by Lutii iiiilil.ry und Goodwin made a seven weak in­
civilian sources for the flno aer- spection and coordinating tour of
ff 1 photographic work that they V J-tt’a oversea* detachments. Ha
bfve performed during tho past
ad to Sanford in Decambar
year &gt;
satisfied that nls squadron
CDR Goodwin began his career was doing ita job well.
In June 1940 as a Nival aviation
The men under the command of
cadet, taking primary flight train- CDR Goodwin ara happy man and
log at Squamtum Nfv^i Air 6ta- tiU pPflrja in efiling him "Tlt*lr
tlon in Squamtum. Mass, following
which be was sent to Pensacola
Tho Commander is a native of
for his basic flight training.’ He Provident*. H. i. He attended tha
was commissioned an Ensign and Rhode Island College of Education
designated a Naval aviator in and graduated with a Bachelor of
March l9ti
Education degree: On Juno I, 1941,
Ha remained at Paniycola as a ha m frrled hij childhood sweet­
flight instructor until February of heart. Trudy Kem ball, also of
X®43, at which time he was trios- Provldenea, In their home town.
lerrad to Like city for fleet op- The couple had been going to­
•rational training. Uo then pro­ gether since their hiah school days.
ceeded to Iho Pacific area, rcrvlng
CpR (foodwlh and bis wife sow
• tth Fleet Air Wing 6. VB-142A fttr a year period in the Pacilie.
h® was transferred to the Naval in Sapjord at 4400 Kay St.

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Intelligence
Big Part
Of Service *

Cc/r. Plumber Has
Colorful Background

E

F. Mickle
Heads 62
At NAAS
CPR Frances L. Mickle. USNft,
Executive Officer of Photographic
Squadron 62 halls from DeLand,
just la miles from the squadron’s
hom® port of Saniopd.
CPF Mickle repoptad to photo,
Bon 62 on June &gt;J. 19)4. Jn Aug­
ust of that year he took over at
"Exec" when CDR F. J. Plumer,
former officer to hold the position,
became Officer-ln-charge of oqe of
VJ-fig’s overseas det*chm*l&gt;&lt;». Da
tachmant "item ".
As a Naval aviator. CDR Mickle
pilots the photographic squadron's
AJ-2P aircraft "Tho Savage" and
flya daily on the project of maplng the southern part of Florida,
hese photographic flights a r e
made over the state at an altitude
of 30,000 feet.
The Commander entered the Naval service in 1941, after attend­
ing Demand High School and Stet,
S*n University wljera he carried
a pre-engineering major. He re.
celved his commission as Ensign,
USNR, and was designated a Na
val aviator at Corpus Christ], Tex
upon completion of flight train
log in Juna of 1942.
CDR Mickle was retained at the
Naval Air Station Corpus Chrlstl,
as a flight instructor until October
,of 1912 when ha wat assigned to
three months flight training with
American »nd United commercial

?

Commander K. J. Plumer, USN,
former Executive Officer of Photo­
graphic .Squadron G2, has one of the
most colorful Naval backgrounds
of any officer attached to VJ-62
at this time.
An Iowa farm boy, Cdr. Plumcr entered the Naval service early
In 1941 as an aviation cadet after
attending towa State College. He
was commissioned Ensign, USNR,
and designated a Naval aviator in
October of 1941 upon completion of
his flight training at Corpus
Chrlstl, Texas.
Cdr. Plutncr remained a t Cor­
pus Christl for 18 months serving
as a flight instructor in baste and
primary training
After his tour of instructor dutyin July of 1913, Cdr. Plumer was
transferred to NAS Norfolk, Va
for a brief time where he served
as a pilot and Radar Officer in
VS-38.
In August of 1943 the Command
cr was transferred to Beaufort,
South Carolina, where ha was as
signed duty as Structural Officer
and Squadron Test Pilot to VB
149, a patrol squadron flying long
range patrol aircraft.
April 1944, saw the beginplng of
some unusual duty for Cdr. Plum­
er when he began a temporary
stint with the Balkans Air Force
in Europe. Stationed at Brindisi
and Bari, Italy and flying PV-1
type aircraft with special equip­
ment, tho duty involved flights
over Yugoslavia, Bulgaria and in
to Hungary. Following t h o s e
flights the aircraft were utilized
during the Normandy and South
ern France Invasions in which
Cdr. Plumer participated.
Cdr. Plgmer'a ne*t assignment
la Comw*t
Atlantic
Fleet serving a i Engineering Of­
ficer and Executive Officer in addltioq to bis flying tasks (or Uti
j f r p « U g n * B t Ok* h»Md - ®t
August, 1*46 saw Cdr. Plumer
receive orders for duty at the
Naval Air Experimental Station
In Philadelphia. Ha held many
joba during his stay to lb® City
o( Brotherly Love such as Airistant Officer-ln-Charge of the Flight
Test Service Division, Flight Offleer Test Pilot and finally ai Of.
ficer-ln-Charge of Flight Teat Service Department.
When Cdr. Plumer left Philade­
lphia in February 1948, it wai for
Monterey, California for a year*
course of Instruction at the Gancrel Line School leading ship­
board procedural.
Aftar completion of this eeurse,
cdr. Plurnar reported to Composite
Squadron Four and remained with
that squadron until August 1930
with such varied positions as Na­
vigation Officer, Safety Officer,
Personnel Officer and at tima of
his d®P*rti4r®, Administrative Of.
fleer.
H* than got his taste of Florid*
duty when he reported to tho Na­
val Air Station, Cecil Field, Jack­
sonville as Assistant Operations

air Hn®».

0Wc*r 4b4 Uto? Admliq»tr*ll¥a

i1941k fo: January
ptrio ' A S P
Of ___
1944.

gfcfV
am p**® *
who was than toa Air

seas Detachment "Item'* which
was (teployed in early September
of last year f.w over five months
time on an aerial photographic
mission.
Promotion to Commander, USN,
was received by Cdr. Plumer two
months after arriving at the San­
ford based squadron. He has well
over 4.000 hours of flying time to
his credit and has among his de­
corations the American Area Rib­
bon, Asiatic-Pacific, World War
II Victory Medal, European occu
palion ribbon and the European
African-Middle Eastern Area rib­
bon with one battle star.
Cdr. Plumer met his wife while
on a leave in Naples, Italy during
World War 11. Mrs. Plumer the
former Miss Deity Rcresford, of
Long Island, N. Y., at that time
was a Captain in the Army Nurse
Corps. She was then stationed with
tlie 300th General Hospital based
at the Victor Emmanuel Hospital
in Naples.
Mrs. Plumer taw s e r v i c e
throughout the Salerno Landings
and at the front tines with Army
Mobile Medical Teams. She served
a total of 18 months in this area.
The Plumars were married In
1047 while he was stationed In
Philadelphia. They have tw o
daughter*, Valarie, 6, and Ginger.
3. They are residing in Sanford
at 309 Edltha Circle.

Naval Photography
Is Integral Part
Of All Activities
Naval photography, at present
an integral part of every Naval
activity including txptfitncntal, op.
eratjbAal aqa training, h*d Us
conception at tha Naval Air Sta­
tion, Pensacola. Florida In 1941.
W. L. Richardson, an amateur
photographer, whose assigned du­
ties were those of Ship's Cook at
this station, started snapping pic.
tures of Naval activities around
the base with a box camera. Shoot­
ing both on the ground and from
the orange crate and balling wire
aircraft of that day, this prugeni-

C. E. CAMPBELL (rig h t) A ssistant Field Service M anager
of N orth American Aviation Corporation, Columbus, Ohio,
makes a routine visit to NAA representatives R. M. Mercer
(VJ-A2) and H. S. Roller (VC-11) who are working a t NAAS
Sanford, Florida w ith Fleet Unila assigned a t the base. (Of­
ficial US Navy Photo)
ture of tho modern Naval photo­
grapher was the first of a long line
of earnest and oft-times heroic
men who have recorded every
phase of Naval history Including
World Wars I and II and the Ko­
rean actions and all of the import­
ant and routine event* In between.
Since this Inconspicuous start,
photography hat progressed in the
Navy from the haphazard box ca­
mera through development stages
not only paralleling Ita develop­
ment In civilian life, but going
further into the fields of high
speed motion picture photography,
tlmo lapse photography, all phases
of experim ental photography and
the all-important aerial mapping
and reconnainance photography.
Savings of countless lives In in­
vasions and military operations
and untold millions of dollars
worth of equipment may directly
be contributed to the roll of Na-

V %

CPB Mick)® r®turned to his CW»*j ugtii 4®t*ib*d to August
iiont® are* in January of u u ti
Cdr. Plumer left his Florida as­
serve ai a flight Instructor at
NAAS Sanford for all months. signment for tha U. S. B. Wright
From Sanford he wap transferred (CVL49) a* Ui* ship'* navigator
(0
to Nav*
Naval Air Station. “St.
h*r® h® p®nr#&lt;i c d r . j . a .

CDR Mickle wai released to In ship.
Ha remained aboard to t Wright
active duty In 1
October 1913, whan vh* daa* Electronic* Officer 01 f'ltrol
___
Bomber Squadron i ll and aa Com • s rttd for Corpqi CbriiU.’lhli Umt
muolcstlon* Officer with Exparl- for jat training. Completing hit in­
mantal Squidrod S3 luccaaiively struction in December, ha raportrd to the Commander Air Force,
from Jan. 1144 to June of 1943.
.from •*MV* duty U. 8. Atlantic Fleet for assign­
ment and was transferred to VJ-62
as Executive Officer, taking over
position on January 22, 1954.
aigned, constructed and put 00
The Commander ramalned as
Executive Officer of tba photothe *lr In September of 1941.
Siqc* reactivated into tb« N®vy graphio pquadran u n til^ b e c a m e

f e a s !
s m jB J v

I One, where b* «
aa qualified ballcopter
htlleopter pUo
pilot,
NASI Key ......................
eat and abo at
el
West
Electronic* Teat
Teat Division of

■ » ..i' iu—»i 1^*
three children, Franeaa Jr., t, sha
at ron, 7, and Christopher, I, reside
the in DeLand a t OO North Arlington
the Ave.

su n s 3
g&amp;
guarjw B S
to Photo Bon a .

Among bis deoofsUoQs *ra the

D. W . KRUEGER lift* m aetU I « w e n » Into th e c u m com
pertin en t of th e AJ-2P. The earner* will be Hecured I* one of
the eeveral cam era m ounts in the com partm ent, (Official
US N avy Photo)
__________________ _

One O f VJ-62's M ain Missions
Is Training Flight Personnel
Ope ef toe primary mission* of
uad rm *2. based at
Photographic Squadron
______
personSanford,_ _________
is training flight
fl
Ml to perform peace and wartime
aerial photographic missions.
---------*— I W Drp*»

a seal# ef 1:30,000 and smaller.
IHls photography la used In mak
tog small scale maps and ia espe­
cially useful In determining high
and tow elevations to terrian.

et

at trot. Determining Ugh and low
elevations to Florida terrain la a
major task of the Central and
Southern Florida Flood Control
Dlftriat to coaaooUoa with it* pregram of flood control Improvemoot. In Una with tho Navy’s poli­
cy et aiding tha civilian populace
whenever and where possible, au­
thorisation was granted to t u n
ovar to to* state aay atrial trainlag Photography which weuld be ef
aaa to flood eoatgoi that was ef ga
further training value to tha aquadron. This film used to the Ugh
alUlrde phase of this squadron's

val photography and Its men.
From July 1931 when it wai com
missioned as a separata command,
at the Naval Air Station, Pensa
cola, to the end of the World War
H in September 1943, the Naval
School of Photogpahy trained 1,338
Photo Officers and 5,388 man,
sending them out In globe-circling
missions to all Naval activities and
nearly all capital ships. Photogra­
phers were present in the first as­
s i s t waves of every *mphib|ou|
operation in tba Pacific Theatre
and followed the invasion forces In
land recording history in miking
for posterity. Daily flight quarters
aboard U. S. aircraft carriara hive
photographers assigned to take
motion picturat and stills of all
landings and take-offs to aid In
instructing and informing the pilots
making these flights in tho proper
and safo operational procedures.
When an accident occurs these mo­
tion picturs studios assist In local
Ing and determining the cause of
tho accident and avoiding a similar
accident in future operations.
In'aerial photography It has been
estimated by military authorities
that during tha Pacific Campaign
to World War It that 80 to 90 per
cent of all military intelligence
obtained wai from pro and post
attack aerial reconnaissance photo­
graphy of enemy held territory and
assault beaches in peace time and
Army Mapping Service, the Coait
and Geodetic Surveys, the Navy
Hydrographic Office and many
other government agencies utilize
the servlets of PholograpMe Squid
rocs such as VJ-62 to obtaining
aerial mapping photography and
aaftal photographic mosaics for
us# to compiling accurst* map*
and charts m r aaa and air naviga­
tion, geographers, geologists and
other uaan. There are obtained at
a email fraction of tho coat of a
ground survey party and many
flmts ar* obtained to araaa where
It would be impossible for a ground
party to operate. These assign­
ments taka Utt VJ-62 pbotog
era to many station* and to
land* to accomplish this phis* of
thalr mission.
Routine* recording of historic
•vents, public Information, Identifi­
cation of personnel, construction
and papalr and many 0titer varied
task* a r t but a small part of the
duties a Naval photographer may
be called on to accomplish. He
must be familiar with all types of
photographic equipment; pram type
camera*, ail types of motion picture camera*, copy, view and
portrait cameras, to the increas­
ingly complicated aerial camcraa
which are electronically operated
and controlled and aomettotas re­
quire two or more me* to install
thim to aircraft because ef their
bulk and weight lorn# of thee*
cameras make a negative aa targe
a* 9x11 inebts and tha rolls mea­
sure 400 feet to length.
certainly coma
the original BhJ
tpber Richard*
antiquated box camera to the ginsent day ikfltod
------ ‘

to flood control which
directly benefits Utt people et
Florida.
Te date imo ehotaaraphs
b(g 34*0 fllght^Un. m¥*s
been turned over to the Central
usd Southern Florida Flood Con
trol District and more wU| be
forwarded a* ita tratotog value la

Si

-

RIVERSIDE, Calif.
T. Arlington, author of
ateriaa under toa past pome "Dear
Dog Lady," has gives away h at
few Palmetto— Bhe aaya 6h*1
herama aBergic to dog* and " c a n t f j f — »
•v M 'S 'sn d 1* hoar a dog h a rt t t ^ e t w i B H w U g ,

a -ra re w m a

Photo Intelligence, or interpre­
tation as it is more often called
is one of the main links in tho
chain of the intelligence system
of the government services. Tho
Phntn Squadron based at NAAS
Sanford has within its midst sev­
eral qualified photo interpreters.
These officers and men had td|p
complete six months of intensive
training at the Navy’* Photographic
School in Washington, D. C. Tho
background of tha parionnal at­
tending " P I" school is of nacassity varied. This Is vary valuable,
for each man's past experience
and knowledge can contribute a
great deal to accurate and com­
plete interpretation of the many
varied areas of tha world. The
school la divided Into three p h a se s/
of training; Tactical, Strategic,
and Photogrammetry.
The use of aerial photography to
obtain Information of tha agamy
wai first used during World War
One whan oblique photoi were tak­
en from observation balloons and
the flying Jennies of that era.
With the evolution of the aero­
plane and precise photographic
equipment, interpretation has be­
come a highly specialized art. J
Prior to World War Two, Gen­
eral Ober Von Fritach, Chief of
Staff of the German Army, pro­
phesied that the side having tho
b e a t photographic intalligtncn
would win the naxt war. W* all
know the out-come of World War
Two.
During war approximately 83%
of the total intslUgence Informa­
tion la obtained photographically..
-It la used both by the combat com-w.
mandi and for long-ranga stra­
tegic planning.
The combat commands within
an hour can have photographs
(bowing the ansmy’a position,
Strangth, vulnerability, apd dam­
age dona In p u t attacks.
Tha itrateglc commands with a
staff of geologists, engineers, in­
dustrial analysts, ate. caa mak*
long-range plans with the know-^
ledge of the enemy potentlalitiu
and weak points.
We also use the seme method!
to help determine our own short
comings and weak points.
Photo interpretation is t mili­
tary must, but it has enumerable
peacetime uses. For example,
Wild Life Services take photo cen­
sus of animal herds and migratory
bird flocks. Forest Services use It
for tree counts to determine th a *
proper time tor cutting. At tha
present time the Flood Control
Authority of Florida la making aa
extensive photo study of the SL
John’s River Valley to determine
tha proper places tor drainage
canals, locks, and roiarvolrs to
prevent future floods to this area
and aid to further development of
the state.
Photogrammetry or Photo G
Geo­
*o
metric* la a closely allied su b ject«
It I* the making and corrocttoR*
of map* and charts by m
mean
eins of
aerial photograph*. Although tha
actual compiling of maps ia 1
at tha Navy Hydrographic Office
and Army Map Service to Wash­
ington, D. C., squadron* such u
VJ-ea supply the M c tfie n r photo­
graphy, photo aurvey la tha fash
Wt, least expensive, gad aft** tha
moat accurate means of compillag
a map. With a minimum am ount^
of ground aurvey work for control*
statlona and surprisingly tow ear*
U1 photographs, a vary accurst*
map caa be made. Aa example,
bv tba Trimatrogon method, panntoaular Florida from Jackson villa
to Miami would taka lass than
900 photograph! from an altltud
30.000 fe
fact.
Th. could be photoof 10,000
e t This
graphed by ton
four VJ-62 Aker aft
In approximately one hour.
The role of th* Photo In terp ret^,
er* in Pbotolton Itoty Two la th a r
training ef Photo pitot*. N«
to n , and related perstMM.
photo Interpreters brief th* 1
craws concerning altitude, weath­
er, and photography to bo flow*.
Bach morning before tha dally
training f l i g h t s go out the
1’heto Interpreter diaewaaaa tha
procedtog day’« photography with
the flight crews. Constructive ,
criticism is given and tha w ortff
graded to accordance with the as­
signed ayUaboi. Upas suateasfid
completion of the aouadraa’e
photo syltofew the flight arawa era
considered qualified to carry oat
j u y h t o y ^ d m i w h l * the Wavy

SIR

�»»?

.

THE SANFORD HERALD

MiV.^enance Department Largest

Page 3, Sec. E

V J - 6 2 Hi s t or y I i nt erest i ng

therefore the men of Airframes the aircraft of the squadron. Each
By BOB ALMASSEY
The Maintenance Department of spend much of their working day aircraft hat numerous log books
Photographic Squadron Slxty-Twe keeping it in top condition.
which apply to different parts of the
Photographic Squadron 62 is • squadron, and one of the few in N S S Lake Champlain. Th#
is the largest department In the The Electronics Division is divid­ plane, such a t engine log books
comparatively new addition to the the Navy, to qualify in both day group received a “well done"
ed
into
two
parts;
Radio
and
Elec­
and propeller log books. These
squadron and It b a t tha biggest job.
Navy and to Commander Air and night carrier landings in the from the Commanding Officer of
Csre end up-keep of fourteen van- trical. The Radiomen or Aviation must be kept daily with accurate
Force U. S. Atlantic Fleet, but AJ-2P.
the ship.
t
«ao s types of multl-englned aircraft Electronics Technicians, repair and entries of hours of operation and
the squsrdon ha* proven iUclf a
April 10—Photographic Squad­
September 10 — Detachment
can be quite a problem, and usual­ replace all the many pieces of ra­ other chronological histories. Then
“Mighty
Infant"
in
the
past
two
ron 62 celebrated
its second How returned to its homo port
dio and radar gear which enable there are the routine maintensnee
ly la Just that-qulte a problem.
years and 10 months since its in­ birthday with a
caket candles after three months in Labrador
The story actually begins with the pilot to navigate the aircraft checks which must be performed
ception.
and Greenland.
and all the trimmings.
the men of the Maintenance De­ and to communicate with his base on the aircraft each 90, 60, 60, and
The squadron was commission­
September 17 — Lcdr. R. F.
April 16 — Three Photogra­
partment, over two-hundred of Sometimes this Job Is done In eon 120 hours of operation. These
ed on April 10, 1052, at the Na­ phers Mates. H. J. Connelly, 11. Bishop and his Detachment “Jig ’*
tham, Including officers, who come venient, shop work spaces, but checks are performed to make
val Air Station, Jacksonville with L. Hamel and L. A. Garrett, re­ departed for a three month photo*
Into the Navy from every state in more often than not, the radioman sure the planes are in flying con­
only a handful of enlisted men ceived a letter of commendation graphic mission to the Mcilittcrmust
crawl
and
squirm
into
the
dition.
the onion 'and from all walks of
and a few officers attending its for the outstanding quality of ranean area.
life. After these men have been confining radio spaces of the air­ The checks sre distinguished by
inaugeration. The Commanding their photographic work perform­
September 10 — Surrounded by
in the Nevy for ewhlle and have craft, where to do the Job a great maintenance check sheets which
Officer had not yet arrived and ed of rrseareh activities for Wai­ over a hundred photographers a
been assigned to the Aviation deal of Inventiveness and "stick sre filled In and signed by the
Lcdr. D. C. McNeill was the ter Reed Medical Center, Wash­ Chief Aviation JIaehinist's Mate,
maintenance crews from all divi­
lranch, they usually find them* toitism,” must be applied.
•d in g Commanding Officer un­ ington, D. C. These were
__ ____
Take
a
space
approximately
70
con­ hi. L. Annis, pulled a switch
sions. When the check sheets arc
Jelves
In one of the many aviation
i
til the designated Commanding ducted
at tho Lowell Research *n&lt;^ walked off with the first
rating schools, called Class “ A" feet long, 10 feet wide and 12 feet signed It signifies that the sirOfficer, CDR Jefferson Kennedy, Laboratory in Sanford.
prize, color division, in th# Sixth
School. These are the schools of high, fill It with miles of wire clr craft, after a pre-flight, will be
Jr., finished his course of in­
Naval
the Naval Air Technical Training cults, lights, switches, fuses, cir­ ready to go. The check sheets are
April 21 — PhotoRon 62's over­ test. District Photographic con­
struction at the Naval School of
Centers located at Memphis, Tenn­ cuit breakers, voltage regulators then routed to the proper officers
seas
Detachment “Fox" departed
Photography in Pensacola.
September SO — Detachment
essee; Jacksonville, Florida; Ola and you will have some Idea of for Inspection and afterwards are
for the Meditteranean area. De­
Since
that
time
PhotoRon
62,
tho
Aviation
Electricians
Job.
This
filed for reference. This isn’t all
the, Kansas; or Norman, Okla­
tachment “ Easy” returned to Its "Gcorgo" returned to Sanford af­
has grown to bo one of the lar­ parent squadron.
mass of wires and gadgets repre­ the paper work or even the begin­
ter being deployed overseas ia
homa.
gest aircraft squadrons in the
tha Azores on a photographic
These schools demand the high­ sents the aircraft electrical system ning. There la paper aupply of
April
28
—
The
Electronics
di­
Atlantic FleeUWith approximately
mission for over threo months.
est type of men In order that they The responsibility of the electri parti, discrepancies on aircraft,
vision
captured
tho
VJ-62
Bowl­
■100 men on its roster, there is st
October 7 — A fter
six
and even special liberty for main­
may comprehend the difficult, com- clan Is to keep it operating.
Another very Important, but sel tenance personnel needing It, and DO YOU HAVE a filter for your camera? Photographic 1present only one other squadron ing league championship after a month tour of overseas duty, De­
- ^plicated technical data they will
Squadron 62 also uses fillers but they nre a bit Inrger than U the Navy ef tlie same type, 15 week season .it tho Sanford j tachment "Fox” returned to its
%eed to maintain the aircraft of dom mentioned part of maintenance it goes on and on.
home base in Sanford.
tha Navy. Eventually, after com is the paper work connected with The Publications section of main­ the ones on am ateur cameras. E. M. Swartz is shown prepar­ which is it* sister squadron VJ-61,1 Bowling Alleys.
Chief W. Duncan, Jr., C hief October 27 — Commanding Ofpitting their technical courses, the
tenance la a vital factor. Here Is ing to place a yellow filter on the lens cone of nn aircraft the Pacific Fleet photographic
Cpodu-j},
where all the Maintenance Man- camera. In the background arc shelves used for storing aquadron based at Mira Mar, Aviation Machinist's Mate retired
men are assigned to an aircraft
L'al.
from tho Navy and VJ-62 after parted on an inspection in Novemsquadron and there they strive to
uali are kept. These are books camera equipment. (Official US Navy Photo)
Tho squadron employ* the North twenty years service.
which hold the answers to most of
achieve the common goal of the
her—PhotoRon 62 received their
American made AJ-2I’ "Savage",
April 29 — Korty-soven Photo- results of the service wide exthe maintenance problems, but the
maintenance department to keep
a long range bomber utilizing Ron *’&gt;‘2 men received notification animation for advancement in
tha squadron aircraft (lying.
One. of the most useful type air actual aniwers are not always
two propcllor-type engines and a that they had successfully passed rating.Eighty-nine
of the 159
However, training doesn’t end craft«ever known to the Navy's there.
with the man’s assignment to
jet engine in the tail section, the service examination they had men that
competed w*ra to be
Sesreh and rescue Service, the
In the final analysis the success
This aircraft, which can he either competed in three month* prior advanced.
_adron. On the contrary, along “ Hup" helicopter, was added to of the maintenance mission de­
land or carrier based, lias been *nd were to be advanced to th*
th all the actual work on the the Sanford Naval Auxiliary St* pends, not on the hand tools, ma­
November 7 — A movie crew
___ aft an up-to-date technical tion’s roster just a little less than chines and answers in books, but
modified primarily for photogra- next highest pay grade.,
from the Naval rhotngraphls
Thc Special Services division parts or equipment to complete phic reconnaissance missions.
May 16 — CDR 11. S. Klcnk, Center, NAS Anacostia, D. C.
training program must be present a year ago.
it depends on the working men. aboard any ship or station is main­ the smallest engine tune-up on his
•d. This serves two purposes, first
In the year of 1954, Photoron Commanding Officer of VJ-62, arrived at VJ-62 to shoot scenes
With the arrival of the helicop­ And so the story ends with the tained to contribute by every automobile or the largest over
H helps' a man prepare for ad ter here In early April, the Sta men also-the men of the Mainten­
62 saw many changes and pleas- presented twenty men of th# for a Navy training film on tha
vaneement In rate and second, !t tion assumed a more Important ance Department of Photographic mean* possible, within the bounds haul or repaint job.
ing events occur. The following squadron with good conduct med­
of military requirements, to the
A.iothcr feature of the Hobby is a brief calendar of high points als at a Captain's personnel in­ T-II aerial camera. The squad­
helps keep his mind concerned role In the Alr-Sea rescue pro­ Squadron 62.
ron uses this type camera on its
development
of
a
high
state
of
Shop
is
the
assortment
of
lathes,
with the technical data necessary gram.
that took place in the squadron spection. A Navy man must have detachment* and photo training
morale
and
physical
condition
of
saws, drills and sanders available during the past year.
to the fulfilment of his task.
a clear record in conduct for a flight* for cartographic mapping
all Naval personnel.
As before, but now with the
to those who might possibly wish
The Maintenance Department of
March 1— VJ-62 based at consecutive three yenr period to missions.
ability
of
this
aircraft
to
cover
This program Is designed and to construct furniture, boats oc NAAS Sanford, Florida. Com­ he eligible for this award.
Photographic Squadron Sixty-Two
November 28 — CDR D. C.
operated to add to a persons con­ autoinobile trailers. And for small manding Officer, CDR H.S. Klenk.
is divided into four divisions. The greater distance over land or tea,
June 14 — Detachment “How"
McNeill, USNR, was released to
tentment, refreshment and com er projects, the Hobby Shop Is well
f lig h t Division, the Power Plants the mission of the NAS Search and
lrpartrd
on
an
aerial
Photogra­
March
19—
Lieutenant
Com­
fort by providing activities of his stocked in model boats, airplanes mander D. C. McNeill and F. J. phic reconnaissance mission to inactive duty after 13 year* of
Tblvlslon, the Aircraft Division and Rescue Service remains that "sav
outstanding Naval service. Cl)lt
or ':its for leather crafting.
choice during off-duty hours.
the Electronic^ and Electrical Dlvl ing life and property and render
I'lumer exchanged their gold oak Labrador and Greenland.
MrNrill was feted at a qoingThe outdoor sportsman also leaves and gold hrnidrd hats as
•ion. Each division Is assigned i Ing assistance to aircraft, surface
To develop and maintain this
June 17—Detachment “George" •way party held at the NAAS
craft
and
Individuals
In
distress.
find*
an
array
of
conveniences
on
separate general task, however
high state of morale requires conboth of these VJ-62 officers re­ operated on an overseas photo­ H.O.Q. a few days prior to his
Before the advent of the helicon
teamwork la a by-word In the
tinuus and systematic attention to hand to suit his every need. At the ceived promotion to Commander. graphic mission to the Azores.
releasfl.
maintenance of modern aircraft ter, however, the Navy here wai
any and all details affecting the "gear-locker", items such as rods
June 20 — A tingle VJ-62 airApril 1— This date saw Phil
December 9—CDR J. A. Good­
and reels or shotguns, may be l.ogan, Photographers Mate Third craft and a small crew returned
and tha aeparate tasks are usually not without a rescue service. Al­ In a photographic squadron, the welfare of personnel.
from his seven
checked nut to the individual, Class, sweep to n victory In the to Sanford NAAS after a »lx win returned
accomplished by mixed teams though now obsolete, and no long camera repair and Installation di
Throughout the Navy, non-ap
made up of man from all divisions. er In use, they maintained three vision plays an important part In propriated funds, constitute by far thus allowing him to lake advant slnglrs of the NAAS tennis tour- week photo mission In the Carr!- week tour of VJ-62's overseas
detachment. CDR Goodwin was
For axampla, when a powerful hlghpowered crash boats that were the ftilfilment of the assigned mis the greater part of the money &gt;igc of the abundance nf wildlife nament and then with Bill Dalee, bean area.
highly satisfied with the work
assigned
air-sea
rescue
work.
found
here
in
Central
Florida
tlon.
This
group
of
highly
skilled
ft-ltoO-MW engine must be ehangJuly 0 — CDR J. A. Goodwin of the squadron detachments.
used by the Special Services pro­ The NAAS hunter or fisherman Is Aviation Electronics Technician
The
“
Whlrly-blrd"
has
proved
technicians
Is
charged
with
the
tod on one of the AJ “Savage” a ir
Airman, also of VJ-62, to garner relieved CDR It. 8. Kienk os
gram. Briefly, those are: (a) a
January, 1955 found Photocraft it is a job that comes under Its versatility on severs) occasions. maintenance, repair, installation percentage of the Navy Exchange also entitled to a "boat chit". I. the doubles championship.
i Commanding Officer of Photo- Ron 62 preparing two detach­
e.,
an
agreement
between
the
the responsibility of Power Plants The most recent took place on and operation of all the aircraft profits; (b) resale activities; (c)
April 8— LCDR C. C. Shirley, graphic Squadron 02 at a change- ments, “ King" and "Love," for
Me* from tha Power Plants Divi Dec. 16, 1954, when an Air Force cameras assigned to Photographic motion pictures; (d) bowling, golf Special Services Division and some VJ-62 Photographic Officer since of-Command held In conjunction j overseas photographic reconnai•loo will be ealled upon, but you jet pilot was rescued after balling Squadron 62, the only squadron of and billiards; (e) recreation owned of the local fishing camp* that the squadron was commissioned, with a personnel inspection. CDR ssunre m‘s*i«n* and lookm- firwill also find man from the Flight out of hi* disabled fighter over the this type in the U. S. Atlantic vending and amusement mac­ they will pay for the man's rent was transferred to Washington Klenk was transferred to the Bu- ward to the new year. Detach­
Division, Aircraft and Electrical ocean south of New Smyrna Beach Fleet. The camera repair section hine*; (f) dividends from conces­ cl of a boat.
D. C. and the Bureau of Aero- reau of Aeronautic* in Wash- ment Item will toon return end
Golfing too It a favorite with nnutirs.
and maybe a radioman from Elec­ Alrborna nine minutes after re­ also maintains the ground photo­ sionaires and (g) miscellaneous
ington, D. C,
new units will be deployed. The
tho mrn at the NAAS. A Station
tronics aB working on tha job to­ ceiving the “ Mayday" distress graphic equipment assigned to the revenues.
T h e Photnlinn 62 basketball
August 2.1 — Vice Admiral F. Commanding Officer, J. A. Good­
team,
open
to
both
officers
and
squadron.
call, the NAAS helicopter rushed
gether.
Accordingly, larger ships or cnliste- men, Is maintained by team chalked up two more tro- W, McMahon, Commander Air win gives his men a "Well Done"
This able group of young men,
The Flight Division, which con to the scene fo the mishap, and
phies foi the squadron as t icy Force U. 8. Atlantic Fleet, made and knows they will accomplish
bases
are usually able to afford
slats of th# Aviation Machinist completed the rescue at sea In headed by LTJO R. L. Scales, as­ the men a more varied and diver Special Services. For those who blazed their way to the Orlando a one day Inspection of the squada t much and possibly more la
play
a
spectators
game,
golf
clubs
sisted by Chief Photographers
tofate rating group, provides plane Just 31 minutes.
Recreation League championship ron.
siflcd field In Special Services.
the next 12 months.
may be obtained, at no expense, and
captains who serve as In-flight en­ Following tha rescue, the Air Mates Edwin Jennings and R. F.
also the Central Florida
August 31 — Five VJ-Ct aviathe Naval Auxiliary through the gear locker. As an
gineers of airborne maintenance Force pilot commented, “That was Reynolds, eomblna their talents as AirHowever,
tort of the tquidron’e Detach­
AAU championship.
Station at Sanford, a compara­
man. Thay are assigned to IndJvl tha most expeditions! pick-up I've photographers, electronic techni tively small station, has In a added feature, golf cards, that en­
April 0 - CI)K D. C. McNeill ment “ Item" qualified In carrier
title
a
man
to
play
on
tho
local
clans, etc. to keep the equipment
dual aircraft, and largely, their ever seen."
short period of time organized a links, free of charge, are avail- bceam# tho only aviator io the landings in the AJ-21* aboard the
In operating condition.
)eb is to fly with tbs aircraft and
recreation
program that contains aide.
The
Naval
Air
Station
at
Jack­
Two men are assigned to each
to make aura the engines and other
places of equipment of their plane sonville, Fla., has been designated aircraft and they are responsible an assortment of well-rounded In­ In othrr sporting endeavors, the
Trimctrogon Photography 1 1
Special Services Division support*
are properly maintained while the by the Commander Naval Air for the Installation and operation to resit.
commonly called, horizon In horiBases,
Sixth
Naval
District,
as
The
diffirult
task
of
accomplish­
both
varsity
and
Intrani-ral
has
of all the camera equipment. One
plana la in the air and on the
ron photography. Using this type of
ground. They ere first assistants, Naval Rescue Co-ordination Center of these two men flies as photo ing the rather simple sounding de­ ki-lball, volleyball, softball, skeel
photography, four of Photophlc
and
Naval
Rescua
Commander,
technician on every mission. When finition of Special Services at the shooting, bowling, baseball and
ao to apeak, to the pilots. Each
Squadron 62's AJ-2P aircraft, fly­
m ontag the plane captains report Area Four, of which the NAAS mechanical failures occur, t h e NAAS, is the job of Lieutenant H. lennls teams. Here again, they
ing parallel course- north to south,
Sanford
is
a
p
a
rt
A.
Hail,
USNR,
and
bis
craw
of
arrange
matches
and
contests.
camera
repairmen
are
called
in
m the flight line and turn-up their
could map all of peninsular Flo­
14
enlisted
men.
Not
only
aro
they
In
the
event
of
a
distress
Inci­
During
the
summer
months,
a
to help locate and correct the trou­
tnes' engines. This is the pre
rida in a period of 55 minutes.
responsible for providing a con­ swimming pool, complete « with
1 cheek and the final check be- dent within the vicinity of this ble.
Tills would have to be done under
the pilots take the planes up Station, the NAAS effects im­ Each day tha Photo Interpreta­ stant recreation program for all qualified life-guards, is in daily
perfect conditions, such as no
mediate aenrch and rescue opera­ tion Office delivers the “ Installa­ Station personnel, but also for the operation.
tketr dally flights.
clouds over Iho entire peninsula.
tions.
The
NAAS
also
reports,
or
fleet
units
based
here.
One
of
the
most
widely
use
tion Sheet" which lists the planes
The men of tho Power Plants
Trimctrogon
photography
11
relays
reports
to
the
NRCC
at
Organization
of
athletic
teams,
Special Services ft ires, by bot
to be flow* and the equipment to
Moisten stay on the ground, but
simply three six-inch focal length
Imtr job is of no lesser Import- Jacksonville, information concern­ be Installed. The plane crew as­ scheduling of events, issuing of the men and their dependents, i&gt;
cameras shooting simullaneously,
lace. Called upon to repair, Install ing incidents Involving aircraft In sembles the correct cameras, film, equipment, nightly showing of the Station Movie Hail. With a
one to port ami one to starboard.
tod modify the powerful aircraft distress and Indicating assistance magazines, connecting cables, etc. movies and maintenance of the seating capacity of more than 350
The two tide or oblique cameras
toghme of the squadron, their talk r squired.
and Install them In the plane. When all-important Hobby Shop are just and a different movie each night
are st a fixed angle of thirty de­
a
few
of
their
routine
assign
of the week, the theater It a post
Aamanda know-how, Initiative and
Commander J. R. W i l t o n , this Is completed they are “ brief­
grees from the horizontal.
live morale booster. A majority
Rertarvanee. Tha ratings In this USN, the NAAS Operations Officer, ed'' by the pilot and take off for ments.
This type of photography Is u«r-l
flvision are also Aviation Machln- serves as Search and Rescue Co­ the assigned mission. Their suc­ One of the most recent lnova- of the pictures shown st the Movie
to make Inexpensive topographic
at Matas.
cess depends largely upon the tions, brought about through tho Hall arc the top movies of ;hc day.
ordinator for this bate.
maps at small scales such at 1:1,The old cliche, "all work and no
Airframes U ■ term that applies
Sometime in the near future, through ground check of the came­ efforts of the Special Services
00O.000
Division, was tho opening of the play", was realized long ago by
• the body or fuselage of the air* the NAAS will be assigned another ra equipment prior to the flight.
W it II also tak fi in all tho eon* craft to aid In the air-sea rescua
Teh photo technleian must be a Lake Golden Beach Area last the Navy. Today, Navymrn every­
DOG ON THE CAItl'HT
n « M parta n e b aa wlnga, and program, known as an “ alrboat" qualified alrcrewman. Many hours August This beach area, equipped where are doing better Jobs, and
WORCESTER, Mass. &lt;/P&gt; —
nil atruetaro. Tbo men of Air* This shallow draft boat It pushed of instruction and study are re­ with open fire places, it an ex­ enjoying their work more, because
Wiggles, a 0-month-old mongrel
N m ai a r t called Aviation Btroc* through tha water by a small air­ quired before a man can be ex- cellent spot for family week-end o the many pleasant hours of offdog, it building quite • display
oral MeclianJci and aa their title craft angina and propellor. Airted to know this phase of his picnics, boating or water skiing duty entertainment supplied by
of rugs In tho Joseph It. Mahoney
topline they a r t charged with up* boats have been known in navigate
He m utt be able to operate all Located within the confines of the Special Services Divisions.
home—and Mahoney doesn't know
f t p of all the structural parte of in no more water than is contained of the numerous switches and con base, It also provides the various
where they're coming from.
-So aircraft. Among these is the
BABY BITES DOG
m anky ground and at speeds trola in the plane, except those act­ squadrons or departments of the
Ho says the dog—has dragged
ydraulle system, which involves op to 43 mpn.
PORTSMOUTH, N. H. ((to) While
ually operated by the pilot. Ball Station with a location for their
at least half a dozen rugs, . .sema
T
Y
P
IC
A
L
OF
T
H
E
specialized
equipment
available
.
for
gllas of tubing and thousands oi At tko present time. Lieuten­ out and ditching at aea drill are annual parties.
in-a downtown store, Michael Hau
MuhoI tfie itl Ptfile
nv
™tnl ,n*„„th"
The Hobby Shop alto ranks high er, I, bit a dog's tail, police said. photographic Interpretation la the Sonne 8l*reo*eople viewer *
ant P. P. Johnson, USN, and conducted periodically aa well at
w £ f ,#§ Bpparenu y work, fBr
This la the system which enables Chlaf Avlatioir Pilot W. 0 . Chag- tho many othar emergency pro- In importance to many of the Then the dog bit Michael. The Nhown here in utse by L tjg. C. K. Greenwalt of P h o to g ra p h ic
M landing M i r to move up and
Navy men at the NAAS. Here, a yoAiqster was treated for a minor Squadron 62. A continuums atrip of photography may he a.fi«]c| ai neighbors canvassed by
USN, are serving as hall- ceedurct.
aw*, and helps the pilot move his copter alert pilots. Tho man The camera crew must repair, maa can obtain all the nrcestar* faritl rut.
viewed in th rre dimension)* and magnified considerably. ; tha Mahoney children report no
Herons, elevator and rudder; maintain tog tko helicopter and ser­ service, and maintain all of the
(Official US Navy Photo)
I losses.
toss a i t the parts which steer ving aa crewman are: W. M. HU photographic equipment T h e s e
la aircraft. The hydraulic system ton. ADZ, USN; J . R. Eldson, ADS man are called upon to repair aucb
l eatramety Important la the tor* USN; M. ft. Williams. ADS, USN varied Items as a preat camera,
and J . Lb Sonday, ADS, USN.
the ahutter of which has over ISO
parts and la aa delicate aa a fine
watch, to a huge aerial camera
almost as Urge aa they are. They
service tha electronic camera con­
trol equipment, aoma of which have
-more tubes than the average tele­
vision set. These versatile young
men have all attended the Navy'a
DIAMONDS
special camera repair school, in
tife . I
addition to t h a Photographer’s
SIL V E R W A R E
American Beauty
Mates school at Pensacola, Flori­
Royers
Bros.
Keepsake
da.
Community
“Any
size
stone
de­
la this modem age of electronic
Oneida
sired. In platinum, yel­
controls, the camera repair shop
low
and
white
void.
resembles an electronics service
WATCHES
Reasonably p r i c e d .
shop. Because of the hl(h degree
See us first."
El In
- t y .
ef skill required, moat of tho men
Buloya
assigned to camera repair are senIlelbros
How's
your
time
run­
tor petty officers with a higher
Hamilton
ning T If wrong see us.
thaa average aumber of years Na
“ In wh e an-' yellow
Expert Watch Repair­
gold. Also Diamond
val service in this field.
man on duty a t all
models. Stop and see
Approximately oat-third of the
timet.
JEWELRY
cur selection."
In this division are residing
Wide selection of w hite for
l l Sanford, Florida, with the rest
Summer, a l s o Rhinestone,
Uvtos aboard tho air station.

4

Search, Rescue Aid
Valuable To Navy

Special Services Division Has
M ach To Do With Developments

Camera Repair
Plays Important
Role In Missions

Pictures Of State
In Only 55 Minutes

K

FOR YOUR JEW ELRY
NEEDS W HILE IN
SANFORD V IS IT US!

ff

pm it*

Gold and Sterling. Large
variety of Necklace and
E arrin g Seta.

BATTALIONS OPEN
ALL-OUT CAMPAIGN
NAIftOBL Kenya &lt;to-KJgkt bat-

THE CAMERA REPAIRMAN apemda n eck of his time aertk ta f alactromlc eomtrola for the aircraft cameras. 8. J. Was*
Is srsp sria f to chock tho circuit of a complex l»«trument
which rloctroulcalljr aaaps tho casMra ahutter at nn interval
tot E. la t ST.
determined by the yhsto Ischald— la the aircraft. (Official
US Navy Photo)
____

E
W E R T J E W E L R Y S T O R PHONE

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Navy Takes
Active Part
In County

Executive
Of Fasron

tsw fUMn tnAuV nttmr •

Participation In community affair* by the men of hi* command
I* a'waya a aourco of pride for the
commanding officer of a naval
activity.
In view of thit, CDfl T. 0 . Mur­
ray. C. 0. of Pleet Aircraft Sen
vice Squadron 31, ha* a great deal
to be proud of Men under hi* com­
mand are active in many activltie*
In Sinford,

■

Primary Mission Is
Care of Fleet Squad (
•

** a

^

,

■
!i
I
v§
I
1

f

number of men are
the
Iho expirell-jn of their flrit enlistment 1 bello\ r Ui at ninny of them do not
realize fully whit they are giving
up."
on to cite
the cxcCIcnt chance* for advancemeld, liberal retirement benefit*
end especially the many advinlagr* offered to married servicemen.
obtain these
bene-

fit* In civilian life,*’ contend* LC-

INSPECTION — Cdr. T. 0 . M urray. Com nundln* O tf!;«r J *
1 JB
fs
of Heel A ircraft Service S q u a d ro n 51 la sh o w n conductlnir n .untlally larger salary’ than moat
Personnel Inspection of th# men of his command Thane in. men in the avw age group are
jaiftdifUP.«!. J 'fId jiia tif »mct a tnnrCh. nre designed to malnUinJ.-^oUfirt to ask for.,r
n high degree of sm nrtness In the appearance of th e crew. I LCDR MeCort reported to PaaAwards earned by men of the command are often awarded ron31 *•*! July to relieve LCDS

and visited 17 porta In the Pacific, Japan, Agfa, Europe and
Newfoundland before relum ing to lioaton In October Of the
same year. The whip steamed approxim ately 56,000 nautical
C th e cruise fpr an average pf about ISO land
The P o ______
ller naW considerable
in Korean
miles every tday.
, _____
_____ duty
___ __________
wntent and fired the last shot by UN navnl forces in the war.
(Official U8 Navy Photo)

Lucian

coming lo Sanford, LC D B MeCort
scrvpl i t BUli of Material Officer
and Assistant, Program manning
Division, In the Bureau of Aero­
nautic*, Washington.
In Februnry 1341 he t „mplet«d
night training at Psmacnla and
* n commlnloned at in Ensign.
He wai promoted
to Ll*utan*nt
fjg) In June I W . fill mnntha later
ha advanced to full Lieutenant and
In July IMS became l Lieutenant
Commander.
After completing Bight training,
nia first tour of duty wai it Tensacola as * night In t r u d e r . Me re­
mained there for four month*, be­
fore going to Jacksonville In July
1941 foe similar duties.
Me b#cam# * studant again In

Administrative Dept
tinny and varied are Ihe servlct* performed by Navy adminitlraliva departments Thl* fact ii
even more pronounced in a until
command *uch as l-’loct Aircraft
Service Squadron Fifty-One, where
manpower ia at a premium.
All matlar* pertaining lo dittribulion and aaiignment of perionntl,
routing and handling of incoming
and outgoing correspondence, and
welfare and recreation of lha
snuadtun arc the responsibility ol
t h e Administrative Department.
Thai* arc In addition lo auch
thing* a* public Information, legal
matters, supervision ol outgoing
trrport», preparation: oUndcnjulcg-.
TJflon and liberty card*.-and dis­
charges and rccnllslments, to list
£ only a .faw, • i
.- ,
*
Direct supervision of this depart. ment Is Ihe responsibility of Hatvcutlve OKiecr LODIl John W. MeCert, URN, However, Lt Itobcrt T.
NorCirhlge, USNR, aa Assistant
AdmlnDIratlve/Parsonnal officer
Is In charge of lha department.
Chrtle L. R Card wall, UHN, Is Lt
Northrldgt'a assistant.
Directing Ihe officiant operation
of tho administration office Is John
Matthews, chief yeoman, of De­
troit, Michigan. A vataran of II
years of naval icrvlco, Matthew*
Is wcll-versod in the Navy's sys­
tem of pcrsynncl administration.
He has bean attached (o Ihe'aSmthUtratlon ataff Of Bve admirals In
various Atlantic. Fieri forces .Hpr

rccnllilmrnt* a i v*rjl a* the main­
tenance of officer'! aerviee recorda.
Claude Rn*e, yeoman second
clan, of Albany, New York la
charged with claiaiflcation m ater
tal control. Thl* Include* corre*pondence and publication* of a con
fldcnttal or *ocret nature. Ill* du
tiei alio Include recording all In
coming and outgoing eorratpon
enc* and report*. II* wrote a ma­
jor portion of ihe Pairon-S! storlea
and articles In this Mall-Away edi­
tion of the Herald.
Lawrcnre Shugirt*, t e a m a n .
Ilarrtiburg, Pcnna , I* in charge of
the enlisted records department.
Thl*Job reaujrc* him to carry opt
*H the necessary procedures when
men are reporting for duly or beIng transferred-out. Ills job la an
Imjrortant dne and he perform* It
Thomas Latch*, yeoman (hind
class, Cranbury, New Jersey sees
(hat all correspondence being rou­
ted to Ihe vanoui department* la
not being “pigeon-holed" but con­
tinue* lo flow smoothly to tha de­
signated officii.
Functioning Improperly, an ad­
m inistrative d e p a r t m e n t can
quickly undermine the morale of a
command. Howavar, lha personnel
of Fleet Aircraft Bervlre Fifty-One
agree that for awift, efficient and
Impartial action, Ibelr admlnlstraa.dep*r)roealcaanot be topped,

by Harble Flam, the 10th beat
amateur in the U. S.
Chief Yeoman John Malhawa
and hi* wife, who live at MU
Adams Court, Wynnewood, won
first plat* in the outdoor Christme* decorating contest laat year.
They-were awarded a Sts living
bond by the Sanford Chamber of
(,’ommarce.
Chief Charles Lawl*. m i Ran­
dolph St., la ■ member of the Ma­
sonic Lodge and the Shrlnera Club
and regularly attends the Firat
Baptist Church where Mra. Lawla
Il a teacher In the Sunday School.
Alio very aellve In Ihe First
Baptist Church I* Chief Aviation
Machinin'* Mate Norrla N. Hall,
SOS n th Street.
Thomas Jefferson Parker, yeo­
man second clssa, recently joined
the Sanford VFW and plana to take
sit active part in that organisation.
There are others who undoubted­
ly alio contribute In some way to
ejvla. life of the community

Assistant offlear manager It,
Thoms* Jefferson Parker, yeoman
second class, af La Grange, Geor­
gia, He handle* all djtcbar^o* and

paneae plane* twooped down on
the umuipecting .hip* anchored
there and dealt one of the most
crushing blow* ever Buffered by
the U. S. Navy.
Two men attached lo Fleet Air­
craft Service Squadron 11 ware at
P airl Harbot that Sunday morn­
ing Francb Deame, pmonnalman
first clsai. Pittsfield, M an., was
* -onimunlcsttons yeoman aboard
tho battleship West Virginia which
was almost completely destroyed
by fire and explosion. LTJG P. L
Coilicott, Fasron-31 Supply Officer,
was a third class storekeeper ai
that time, attached lo the Submar­
ine Base at Pearl Harbor.
Sli battleships were lied up te
quays at Ford Island that day, eo
close together that they ware “ ailling ducks" for the attacking Japa.
The sis* battl* wagons ware lined
up In two rowa of three ahlpa each,
with lha Waal Virginia In the coa­
ler of the lino farthest from Ford
Island. The attacking Japs cam*
In low over tha channel toward
now-famed Battleship Row and the
Wait Virginia, of course, waa In
tha moat vulnerable position of all.
Aboard the "W eV eeD eam e had
Juit gone off wateh In the radio
shack and was in his division’*
berthing space when Ihe ahip took
Ita flrit bit- U waa not until after

Partaln, airmaa, Fleet A ircraft
Service Squadron i l , about being
■tatloned ia k b ewa kern* town.
Don attended arkeol la Saarerd
prior te b b entry Into the Navy.
He tilth* aoa of Mr*. L u d lb Partola of 1M7 Magnolia AsronoC. AI
preaent Den b attached nt tbo
F.\8R O N -ll ____ IJeutenant'n
__________
Department, fa addition t* hfa
preaent duty sta tb u , ha hau beta
la Japan aad aboard the
August IMS wbao be waa trans­ btatloned
battleuhlp lldl.S. New Jaraey.
ferred to Lake City, Fla. for train­
ing In twin engine patrol plane*
until December of the tam e year.

training, after which ha was order­
ed to Patrol Bombing Squadron

a very Impraaaive war record. It
participated la the firat strike
against the Jap* by the U. S. Navy
at the MerabaU-OUbert Island! only
two week* after the Pearl Harbor
attack.
W (jg) Coilicott remambera that
he had Juit arisen on that fateful
day and waa proceeding to tbo
“ haad" with ahavtag gear in hand
when he happened to look out
and tea Use planet coming in ever
the harbor. “ At firat”, |* remem­
bers, “ I thought they war* Just

Lt (jg) Ootlteett, waa not damaged
aerioualy. on* small bomb did
drop on tha dispensary but aurprla
Ingly (fid not cause any damage.
It seems that the building wta
eon atrue ted with a patio la the
middle and tha bomb Undid dir
ectiy In It. Tha explosion failed te
oven brook a window of the dta
peatery.
LT (if ) Coilicott Aral enlisted tn
IMS nod advanced through the
rank* te Chief Avia tie* Stereheep
or. Ha urea Oral oemwtmtoaad U
May 1 M pad loot November waa
advanced te Lieutenant (jg),
Deans# ia a veteran e l IT years
aerviee, nearly all of w hirl beg
been te aim teiatritiv t w ort. Re

"Aridities are an Important fac­
tor In the physical and mantal
well-being of all Navy man." aaya
Float Aircraft Service Squadron
Fifty One athalatlc officer Lt Rof
Dodson

And te* Fasron41 aperte pro­
gram U one of which U Dedaon
can wen be proud.
Feur Fasron me* are teomhert!
of the Floet Air Detachment baab-|
etbnll team which participated la
tee Fleet Air JaebaoevUie teuroomeet m ently, The team to eOmPrtaed of player* ftom the throe
Jteet im id ran s: Fasron U. VC4,
and- VJ4B Imprvsslv* Igainat
en. N o rristo w n , P i n C lyde
P il , nil a v ia tio n te M h ln to t'i
m laaiona, (a d n d liig su p p ly

YO U

R. 1., to attend General Line Sebee
until May IMP. At that time he re­
ceived order* te report to the air­
craft carrier USB Wright, where
hie job we* assistant flight officer.
Squadron VR-0 at Weitover Air
Force Bate, Springfield, M an.,
the next aaiignment for LCDR
MeCort la May IMP. He remained
with that aquadron tor II moatha
aad then shifted te the staff,
IMqtra, Military Air Traarpnr
Service, alao at Wesjover AFB.
Here he served aa u sltta n t chief
of the Leglsties and Flawing Dtvt-

I11

T'J
m
A

'

D

M. Byman, hai the roaeonaihilfty
of Npervialag work performed la
tke maintenance of engine*, J*t ta d
reciprocal, fuel end oil
the propaQer end gev«
P R i.,.
__________. j s d t o
Or»|WIWO| flMVIlVIB lllVlMVt n TV14
Victory, European occupation and
National Defame Medals,
A active of WtEavlfla, Ohio,
LCDB MeCort graduated from
Keet State Ualversity, le n t, Okie
with the O is i of 1MT wNB a
Bachelor of Iclear# degree.
He to eurrtod te tee tenner
Lola Drew of JaekeoawQte and they
ore ten parents t i throe heya:
John Jr., J«. Lawrence, I, ate
Wayne, i The MeCort* reaid* at
MM Saaterd Ave. |e Insterd.

DO N T

NEED

iN S U W A N C E

COMPLIMENT* OP

By EN I 0 . M. BYMAN
The Maintenance department of
Fleet Aircraft Service Squadron
Fifty-On* maintained for the tupport of all fleet equadrena baaed at
the U. S. N. A. A. ».. Sanford. At
the preaent time these Include VCI and VJ-tt.
The Maintenance Officer, U L.
E. Lewis, hat the responsibility of
raper supervision of the divisions
i his department. These divisions
are: Airframes, Power Pleats aad
Technical Library.
The Assistant Maintenance Offi­
cer, LTJO J, E. Mills, has tho res­
ponsibility for the technical publi­
cations and line maintenance crew.
He tees that all aircraft changes
and technical publication* are kept

work with the asslitaaeo officer is
Urn technical aircraft changes.

The Airframes Officer, Chief
Aviation Machinist's mate 0 . F.
Buaetto. ia roopon slhio lor Mpervicing an w ort k tkn aH nU aania
of aircraft.

"
By LTJG P. L. COLLICOTT
The primary minion of Fasran*
41 la mpport of lha flcat operating
iquadrona bated at NAAS Sanford,
To maintain modern Navy aircraft
in tip-top operating condition, hun­
dred* of Kama of aircraft aparn
part*, electronic parta, tool* and
other material* are required by
squadron mechanic* each month.
The job of (muring that the** parta
a r t available i* animated to th is
Supply Department.
The rttpom ibilitiei of the Sup­
ply Department include the pro­
curement, receipt, atorage, inven­
tory, l«tue and accounting lor
ipar* parta and material* required
for aircraft maintenance. Admlniatration of fluid* granted for operat­
ing enpemea i* another big re*poniiblilty.
The Supply Officer ia Lt fjg ).
P L. Coilicott, (SC), UIN, of D eni1
v 'r . Colorado, and Buffalo, Misaouri. He received hi* eoh'ra&amp;jVon
in the Navy Supply Corp* ia lfU .
after U y e a n naval earvlce a*
aa ealUted man aad warraat effi-

Lake Mary, Florida. A veteran a i
M y e a n naval aervtce, chief Pa*
her 1* wen verted la *0 phatea of
aviation aupply.
Alie rilling • key billet la the
depirtm eat la William M. Brawn,
ADC. chief Brawn, well kaowa In
Sanford, ha* completed nearly SO
year* In the Navy and plana te
-retire eooa. H* baa charge of tbo
engine build-up part* atoreroom
and'alio auptrviae* tbo proeeialng
of exchange parta turned la for re-*
pair.
*
la charge of office fuaetlea la
Richard D. Duff, aviaUoa storekeeper tin t *Uia, af Ford a ty ,
Panna, Ho aupervlaei procurement
and accounting function*, and
bagdlea the general admlniatratioa
of the Supply Offlee.
At AMeuatlng Storekeeper, Chea­
ter J. Millard Jr., aviation atore­
keeper third clasa, of Maien City,
Iowa fllla aa important billet. 11*
maintain* the accounting record/
and prepare* allotment aad oper­
ating eoat report*.
“
iray, aviation
storokeei
Wil’d, II
.
_______
_
gear atoruroom. He handlaa the re­
ceipt, storage, euatody and Issue
of aviator* aptclal clothing usd
flight gear.
Edward H. Gallegos, aviation
storekeeper third d a ta , of U Jara.i
Colorado operate* the electronics/
electrical peril atem oom . Hun­
dreds of amen Item*, a t well as
complete laatrumenti and electronIt equipment, are stocked In thl*
atoreroom.
Others hi the department In­
clude) John Abraham, Vontoo,
Iowa, John Sheehan, Boston, War­
ren Way, Davenport, Iowa, Onranee Hunter and Franklin Nairn,
Winter Park, aad Peter Pop*.
Brooklyn, all nvUtiea aioeehispir1
airmen. Leroy Springsteen, avte*

�i
. . V**

GROWING
WITH SANFORD...

t

HELPING

SANFORD G R O W ...

1

Oar officers and staff have watched the growth of Sanford with pride. . . it’s their
town. They take an active part in civic activities and community life. They live and
rear their families here. They believe that Sanford will continue to grow • . • • and
they have confidence in Central F lo rid a ...

The past year has been momentous for u s . . . . it has seen the accomplishment
of our expansion and modernization program that haa more than doubled the
f' ‘

.^

;

floor space of our fully air conditioned banking house and instalment loan depart*

it
f

ment, and enabled us to improve and expand our services to &amp;U our customers.

With all our renovation, expansion and modernization one thing haa remained the sam e. . . That ia the PLAIN OLD
FASHIONED FRIENDLINESS AND COURTESY THAT REFLECTS OUR SINCERE DESIRE TO BE HELPFUL TO. .YOU
IN ALL .YOUR BANKING NEEDS.

*

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This we hope always to keep unchanged because we feel that is a strong reason for the steady'
,
frR

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and continued growth of our bank.i • •

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Navy Aircraft
Equipment Kept
By Ordnance

The Ordnance Department to responsible for the loading of all
ordnance store* carried in the
squadion'a airplane* and for main­
tenance of thii equipment on the
airplaaea. Aim Included In Ha du­
ties li the training at flight erewa
in the operation and use of the air­
craft armament.
The head of the Department to
LT. R. J. Brown, whose experience
in ordnsnee includes service as
an enlisted man. According!/ be
is a "Mustang” who rose, through
the ranks because of outstanding
performance of his duties as non­
commissioned officer. LT. Brown
to assisted by ENS. L. E. Foley.
The everyday routine of the ord­
nance department is not so rou­
tine. Doing the work of losding
framing bombs, checking ordn­
equipment In the airplane,
LT. B. R. MORROW, Snfety and Survival Officer of VC-9, snee
and Instructing the flight crews
and Chief J. F. D u R o Im a t the denk a re checkin* the opera­ in lha use of ordnance equipment
tions schedule for the day. (Official US Navy Photo)
are enlisted ordnancemen (AO).
These experienced men stand rea­ J . H . H A IL E Y A D I, In giving an A J Tiavag* a pre-flight
dy to do a much more important inspection prior to a routine training flight. (O fficial US
job if they are ever called upon Navy Photo)
again to load the real weapons of
war.

s

Cdr. A . NJVUInnis
Heads Operations

Hie importance of the Operations
Department in a squadron such as
VC-9 can be seen In that the thirdyanking officer In the squadron Is
detailed to duty as the toad of
the department. As Operatlona Of­
ficer, Commander A. N. Mclnnis

Tactical Crew
Has Three M en
VC-r* Tactical Crew Number
One l* composed of Commander
W. E. Lemo* as Plane Comman
der, LT(Jg). F. D. Ellis ** Bomb­
ardier Navigator and J. II. Bailey,
ADI, as Third crewman
Commander Lemos la also the
. Commanding Officer of V M , As
. ouch, bis administrative duties are
' ' also os paramount Importance. As
Commanding Officer, his day beearly and ends late, and he is
ntly interrupted at home by
that require hie decisions,
srith all other Plane Commanv dors, be must attend many toctures and briefing during the day, be
flying the AJ. He must und e n t and the duties of hla BombV arise and Third Crewman. To do
\ this, be attends other ground train; lag frith his crew. Finally, as
•Plane Commander, ho coordinates
Ms crow on training missions on
Which the crew simulates battle
In prepare Itself lor
T h a Bombardier-Navigator of
Crew Numher One, L T &lt; m BU*.
l a s responsibility both of the crew
and the Operations D epartment
B e to a Naval Aviator Observer
fR edar), and the senior Bombard­
ie r In the flquadron, using time
nerved In the Squadron as a yardi. One of Ms administrative da­
ta serving as the Bombardier
Training Officer. Ib is
lea an bis time while
flying. LTCJg). Bills also ser­
es Bombardier for the first
mending officer el VC-9, ComF. 0 . flooding, Jr., who
the Squadron to September,
LTtJg). Blito was one of the
Aviation Ground Officers to
as Bombardier-Navigator in
vy Attack Squadron. Hla ex' icludes almost stl the
which VCA has i
Be com missioning.
■- Bailey. ADI, to the Third
ian of Tactical Crew NumOne. As such, bo elan serves
Plane Captain on the Crew's
no. Hi* duties begin early
* tote, and bis personal pride
airplane to welfkaown throwthe Squadron. His duties reMm Morally to live with his
Mtowing It through p e r
iMwees c h e e k s , tu
AJ'e
Petty o

Ian hvainable part
rteaff bis i

i.

Is responsible to the Commending
Officer for the planning accompli
shmenl of the daily flight and
ground training schedule Under
the direction of the Operations Of­
ficer, the flight crews are given
the training and information nec­
essary for the completion of as­
signment aerial missions. These
missions are the final product and
purpose of all the work perform­
ed in the squadron.
The Operations Department to
responsible for flight training;
flight crew ground training; diss­
emination of Intelligence, safety
and survival material; and coord­
ination of all other departments
to Insure the completion of the
day’s flight and ground training
schedule.
Assisting the Operations Officer
are LCDR. A. W Smith, Flight and
Training Officer; LT. R. S. Held,
Landing Signal Officer; LT B. R.
Morrow, 8afety and Survival Offi­
cer. LT(Jg) W. T. Laub, Air Intel­
ligence Officer; LT(jg) F. D. El­
lis, Bombsrdlcr-Navlgator Training
Officer, LT(Jg) 0 . W. McGuire,
Navigation; and LT(Jg) R. L. Rho­
des, Assistant Training Officer.
These officer! gave definite responalbiUttea of their own and must
be4 ready to assume tha responsi­
bilities of other officers as a re­
sult oi absences due to flight op­
erations nr other commitments.
Assisting to Use work of the de­
partment a r t .enlisted Yeoman
who prepare reports, schedules
and the targe amount of written
material required of the office.
The Operations Department, with
the assistance of the other depart­
ments of tha squadron, has eonducted Um activities of the squad­
ron in such widely separated areas
waa Maine, Cuba, B e r m u d a ,
French Morocco, and England,
MHs
and has conducted operations off
most of tha aircraft carriers
the Atlantic F leet

Electronics Dept.
Must Take Care
Of Air Equipment

C d r Compton, Executive H ead,
Maintenance Is
Responsible For Squadron
Big Assignment The “skipper" of Composite in October 1943. Ha then reported
Squadroo Nina to ultimately res­ to tha Naval Air gtation at Jack­
for everything the squad sonville, Florida a i a Flight In­
Aircraft Upkeep ponsible
ran or anyone In the squadron structor. Following this he had du­

Charged with keeping the air­
planes flying to the aquadron'a lar­
gest unit, the Maintenance Depart­
ment This department to divided
into three revisions, Airline, Pow­
er Plants, and Electrical. Adminis­
tering this department to the fourth
ranking officer, CDIt. E. Win­
ter. Hi* assistants are LCDR J. E.
Dyar. Assistant Maintenance Offi­
cer; Lt D. W. Ludwig, Power
Planti, LTJG C. M. Bramley,
Flight Line Lalson; J. J. Bacon,
Air Framea and Electrical; and
ENS W. Wlgton HI.
Performldg t h a maintenance,
service changes, and safety checks
on the airplanes are three very im­
portant groups of enlisted men.
These groups are Aviation Mach­
inists Mates (AD), and Aviation
Electricians Mates (AE). T h e
Maintenance Department performs
regulai and complate checks on the
airplanes. These checks are "pre­
ventative maintenance," and their
frequency and acope to based on
years of experience in Naval Avia­
tion.
Besldea them regular checks,
the Maintenance Department to
c o n c e r n e d with fixing the
"squawks", or irregularities, which
a pilot may report upon tha com­
pletion of a flight. Tima, by regul­
ar periodic comprehensive checks
and by day to day upkeep of equip­
ment, Maintenance keeps the air­
planes safely flying. Maintenance
baa to be ready at all times to
■end detachments anywhere the
Squadron's may fly. Tha efficiency
and know-how of the officers and
men of this Department have made
possible successful operations to a
number of faraway placet.
Maintenance, with Electronics,
and Ordnance, natures tha comp­
letion of tha day’s flight operations
by insuring that tha equipment op­
erate! properly. VC-9*a fine operat­
ional record to « tribute to (he
hard work of all (he Departments
to the Squadron, end Maintenance
Justly claims its sham of the hon­
or for this fine record.

The Electronics Department to
rvsponsioto for the maintenance of
the intricate and fbturtouc equip­
ment which le tram m ed tote mod­
ern dap aircraft to c u b ic toe avia­
tor to eoamunicate, navigate and
Had bis target to all kinds of wea­
ther. Htto to toe realm of the high­
ly tratood eavy technician. With­
out those capable technicians tha
electronics gear would
be useless and tha modem airplane
would a r t be able to complete Ms

ens of different electronics units
■re technicians with n wealth of
experience ta d tratotog la naval
electronic*. These teehaieUns are
Aviation Fire Control Taehakiaaa
(AQ); Aviation Electronics Techni­
cians (AT); and AviaUaon Electrooiesmen (AL). A day’s work to
Electronics may sea officers and
men busy wltth a variety af pro­
blems, Theta problems are solved
and the equipment to the airplane*
to brought Into lop flying readiness
The efficer hi charge af this by a system of regular checks an
eoaptoa department la another ve- equipment and a system far Be­
ing day to day failures. VC-fa
electronic* efficiency has art *s
Mm to LT. W. C. c in a
enviable eeamyto to ether ammd
m e e t the Atlantia fle e t.

does. With this responsibility he
has the authority that goes with IL
VC-S's Commanding Officer, Com
mindet William Edward Lemos
has had the experience that more
than qualifies him for this ex
tremeiy important post.
Commander Lemos was bom In
1917 la Riveradale, Rhode Island

CDR. R JL COMPTON
He attended public schools In, Ri­
verside and B e a t Providence.
Commander Lemos comes froma
family of boat builder*, and since
hla early childhood^h* has been
very dose to sailing and the life
of the tea. A career in tha Navy
w*a Urn logical conclusion, so Com­
m ando Lemos entered the Naval
Academy at Anna polls, Maryland
in I t n . During hia four y e a n at
the Academy he w u Commodore
of the Boat Club and Captain of
tha Silling Team.
Commander Lemos’ duties to
the Navy have been many. Upon
graduating from Naval Academy
to 1941, he wee ordered to the Na­
val Gun Factory’* F i n Control
He then waa d v n ilu t to
duty aboard the D. fl. g. North
Carolina, participating in tha Guadecanal and the Restern Bolomon
Campaign. Ha left the North Caro­
lina in February IMS for flight
tratotog at the Naval Air Station
to Dallas, Teaaa. He waa designat­
ed Naval Aviator upon completion
of flight Training a t the Navel
Air Button, In P asscode, Florida,

V-

Cdr. Lemos Commanding O fficer
O f Sanford Navy Squadron VC-9

Six Units
Compose

VC-9
Under the Commanding Officer
and the Executive Officer of VC-9,
are six Departments. Most of these
Departments are headed by exper­
ienced Naval Aviators, and as
would be expected, most of the oth
er officers of VC-9 are Navel Avia­
tors. Ail officers have administra­
tive duties in one of these Depart­
ments. Wearing "wings of gold in
VC-9 are; Commanders W. E. Le­
mos, R. F. Compton, A. N. Meinnls, E. J. Winter; Lieutenant-Corn
manders J. D. Watson, A. W.
Smith, J. E. Dyer, and H. V. DeWitt; Lieutenants R. S. Raid, D
W. Ludwig, W. C. Clapp, B. R.
Morrow, H. W. Jacobs, and J. E.
King; and Ensigns P. F. O'Dea,
B. F King C. C. Tanner, W. Wig*
ton IU, and D. fl Todd.
Aviation Line Officers detailed
to fly as Bombardier-Navigators
and wearing Naval Aviation Obser­
ver (Radar) wings are lieuten­
ants (Junior-grade) R. Cox, F. D.
Ellis, E. H Carson, H. R. Ford, C.
Myers, O. W. McGuire, C. M.
Brsmtoy, and R. L. Rhodes. Other
Aviation lin e Officers In training
to become Bombardier-Navigator*
are Ensigns L. H. Foley, J . T. Leeton. and J . T. Dailay.
Other officers who era supposed­
ly purely ground officers, but still
required to fly frequently are
Lieutenant Commander V. L. Bedfield, LT. R. J. Brown, LT (Jg).
W. J Laub, and LT (Jg). J. J .
Bacon. As officers In VC-9, all
m utt find time to fulfill import­
ant administrative duties when
they are not flying. Under the
Commanding Officer and the Executlce Officer, the Departments
VC-9 are; Operations, Maintenance,
Administration, Material, Electron­
ics, and Ordnance.

Many Functions
Being Carried Out
By Administration
The Administration Department
of VC-9 has many functions. Su
pervlslng tha Department, and de­
tailing tasks to the separate di­
visions within the Department, to
LCDR. J. D. Watson.
Among the many functions of
this Department are admlnlatratlon of regulations on promotion,
leave, liberty, military Justice, se­
curity of classified material, edu­
cation, and public Information.
Other duties of the department in­
clude publishing fire prevention re­
gulations, assuring tha cleanliness
at spaces occupied by the squad­
ron, and keeping the voluminous
records on personnel filed and
available for ready reference. Al­
io, tha Administrative Department
prepares er edits all official cor­
respondence which goes out from
the squadron and receives and dis­
tributes all Incoming correspond­
ence In the people concerned with­
in the squadron. LCDR. Wateoe'a
chief assistants are LT. King, Per­
sonnel Officer, end LL h T w . Ja ­
cobs, Communications Officer. Oth­
e r assistants are LT(Jf) B. H.
Carson, LT (Jg) R. Cox, LT (Jg)

Every Naval Squadron has an
executive officer to coordinate the
varioua Departments and insure
that the policies of tha Command­
ing Officer are followed. VC9'a
"exec* to Commander Raymond
Francis Compton. As in all Naval
Squadrons, be to tha second rank'
ing officer. Hla duties and respon
sibill ties reach into every facet of
the squadron's activities. As the
"Exec", be serves as Acting Com­
manding Officer during absence of
the Commanding Officer. As such,

be to extremely well qualified by
virtue of a long and colorful naval
career Including previous duty as
Commanding Officer af a Fighter
Squadron.
Commander Compton was born
tn 111* In Atchison,___________
_
Kansas. He attended Atchison Public School and
Maur Hill High School In Atehlaon,
and later attended Loyola Univer­
sity «of New Orleans. While at Loy
ola University, be
‘ played toft end
the varsity footbal foam,
Thoa*
toe yyears
e a r s in
_________
se w ae n the
foe lata
Thirties, when Loyola fielded footbell teams to match any to the
country. Commander Compton’s in­
terest In sports baa continued. Beaide* being Interested to conven­
tional sports such aa baseball, foot­
ball and basketball Commander
Compton to the unofficial cham
Indian Wrestler of VC-9. T h is ___
or was won by him while VC-9
w u based to Port Lyautoy,
French Morroeo.
Commander Compton’s N a v n l
Career begin to November, 1940,
at Fairfax, Field, near K a u a i
City, Kansas, as an Aviation Ca­
det. He received hla commission
and Naval Aviators Wings of Gold
at Pauacola In August, 1941.
Commander Compton's n a v a l
service since 1941 has been a suc­
cession of responsible duties in na­
val aviation in nearly every corn­
er of the globe. Hla first duty after
being designated e Naval Avia­
tor waa aboard tha U. S. 8. Quin­
cy, a heavy cruiser, In the South­
west Pacific. In August, 1943,
while flying scouting planes off the
Quincy he sustained battle InjurH. H. Ford, LT. (Jg) C. E. Myera,
ENS D. G Todd., and ENS. P. w.
O'Dea These officers are respon­
sible for fulfilling the many duties
of tha Administrative Department.
The duties of the department
could not be fulfilled without the
hard work of enlisted Yeoman
(YN). A Yoeman to the Navy to a
combination secratary, expert on
regulations and old hand at listen­
ing to the troubles of other people.
The volumes of printed material
neceisary to the administration of
an aviation iquadron are typed,
disseminated, filed, and account­
ed for by these hard working sail­
ors;
The administration department
lias a very great responsibility in
the fulfillment of many duties. The
Department can Justly claim its
share of credit for the outstanding
record of VC9 during Ha first two
years to commtoiton.

CDR. W. R. LEMOS
ies and waa transferred to a Naval
Hospital in California for treat­
m ent After two months of treat­
ment he returned to duty and saw
action with Scouting Squadrons
Forty Seven and Seventy in the Paeffto until November 1944. He waa
then transferred to .th e Air Bu­
tton at Sanford for three months of
training. Ha next served with
Fighter-Bomber Squadron One Fif­
ty Two, end then became Air Offi­
cer, Executive Officer, and finally
Commanding Officer of tha U. f . 9.
Mends, an escort aircarft carrier.
As Commanding Officer, be put
the Munda into "mothballs." His
next duty was Commanding Offi­
cer of rtghter Squadron Seventy
Throe He next saw duty at WrighV
Patterson Air Fore* Base, Dayton,
Ohio and from there to the Bureau
of Aeronautics. Next came duty
under instruction at tha General
Una School in Newport, Rhode Itland, and then duty in Nava) Air
Reserve Training a t Glenview, Illi­
nois. His last duty before coming
to VC-9 was as a student at Heavy
Attack Training Unit at the Naval
Air Station Norfolk, Virginia.
Hto decorations for duty lnolude
ona of the countries highest the
Purple H eart He w ean many oth­
er campaign ribbons and service
medals.
Commander Compton m arried
the former Miss Elsie Hail of Wa­
tertown, Massachusetts, at New­
p o rt Rhode Island, to October,
1947. Their five children are Su­
san Marie; David; Carol; Loulie,
Raymond F. Jr. and Cynthia Ann.
Comptons and family reside a t
3410 Stevens Avenue In Sanford.
Commander Compton reported to
VC-9 from Norfolk, Virginia in Ju ­
ly, 1933, and waa made Executive
Officer a few months later. Ha 1s
Plane Commander of the Squad­
ron's Tactical Crow Number Two.
VIGILANTE8 ON TOE ROAD
CARDIFF, Calif. (A1) —
A
mother's vigilante committee it
active here to curb reckless dri*
vers who endanger their children.
Mrs. Grace Peterson, spokes*
man for the committee said each
member carries pencil and pad
to Jot down license numbers of
automobile owners violating safe­
ty rales. They report the mint*
her* to the etato highway patrol.

Co

m inder at Tactical Crew Number
One, end es inch he files Ms share
Si the squadrons missions. Hla ex­
perience end ability are
■live of the Navy’*
serve the countryr iIa l

POOD
4 BT.

m

To

MARKET
PHONB 1295-J

MOVE TO FLORIDA
AND

l o

WHILE IN FLORIDA VISIT

ty wi'h Scouting Squadron Forty
Six (VS-49) at Pearl Harbor,
where be aerved until November
of 19M. Commander Lemos next
duty was aboard the U. S. S Wash­
ington as Senior Aviation Officer
on the Staff of Battleship Division
Six, until July of 1943. During this
period the Washington participated
in the Third Fleet Support Opera­
tions at Luton, Formosa, and the
China Coast; the |wo Jlm a opera­
tion; and the Okinawa operation.
The end of World War II found
him again at the Naval Air Station,
Pensacola, Florida, followed by du­
ty in Fighter Squadron NinetyEight (VF-98).
Ilia active operational flying was
interrupted by assignment to post
graduate instruction in Aviation
Ordnance. He attended the Naval
Post-Graduate School for one year
and then spent two years at the
Massachusetts Institute of Techno­
logy, for which be received the
Master of Science Degree.
In 1949 he was happy to return
to active flying in Florida, this
Uma in Air Development Squadron
One (VX-I) at Key West. In 1933
he wat ordered to duty In the Navy
Department, Bureau of Ordnance,
where be was Section Head of Re­
search and Development of bomb­
ing systems. This led directly to
hia present assignment, and after
two monthi with the Heavy Attack
Training Unit, he assumed com­
mand of VC-9 in September of
1934.
Commander Lemos has been pri­
marily concerned with Naval Avia­
tion since 1943. and moat of bis
Combat Experience has been a t a
-Naval Aviator. Hia decorations in­
clude the Distinguished F l y i n g
Cross, the Air Medal with Gold
Star, and the Navy Commendation
Ribbon with Combat Claip. His
campaign experience to told in
that be wears the Asiatic-Pacific
Area Service Ribbon with Five
Stars, the American Campaign
Ribbon, American Defense Ribbon,
World War II Victory Medal. Philliplne Defense Ribbon, and the
National Defense Ribbon.
Commander Lemo* married the
larm cf Miss Elisabeth Baifcoor
Barton of Amherst, Massachusetts,
In Providence, Rhode Island, In
March of 1943. Commander end
Mrs. Lemo* have five children,
William B. J r ; Stephen H.; Peter
B.) Elisabeth B.; end Laurie A
Lemos. They reside a t 3000 Oak
Avenue, in Sanford.
As Commanding Officer. Com­
mander Lemoa to the Plane Com-

•■

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STAKE •

SA N FM D AND
■C U U N ffa W M B t

iNFORD ELECTRIC CO.

YO U'LL L IK I CENTRAL FLA.
SANFORD AUTO FARTS SFEC IA LIZIS
IN
• COMPLETE MACHINE SHOP
SERVICE FOR AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR
ENGINE RERUILDING.

Sauftrd Auto P u ts , Inc.
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"NATIONAL AUTOBflOTTYI P A R S !---------

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T H E SANFORD HERALD

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FLORIDA

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STATE

‘

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BANK

OF SAN FO RD

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W ELCOM ES YOU

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To SANFORD, FLORIDA

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Growing with and helping
Central Florida to grow

STATEMENT OF CONDITION

rf*|

FLORIDA STATE BANK

' 04.

Comparative«

SANFORD, FLORIDA
O rfanlted Jan* 3, 1939

•M

■ Statement O f Condition

DECEMBER I I , IBIS
RESOURCES
Loans and Discount* —........... Rankin* House, Furniture, Fixture* ..........

71,700.00

O rird rafts

Non*

.........- .............

..........
. 12,760A IB.64

Other Bonds ------

. 186488.07
. 1,080,601.81 4,967,109.01

O r i u l n J June I, 1BSB

----------------- 16,666,236.77
TOTAL RESOURCES
LIABILITIES

DECEMBER 31,1951

Capital Stock
Surplus ......—

_
__

|

160,000.00

Undhridcd Profit* and
Dividends Parable January 1, IBM

—

68.404.0t

__

6 000.00

.

__ M,66*4»«.7T

OFFICERS*
C. H. MdtULTT, O slnssn af the Beard
T. E. TUCKER, P rieH -t
W. I. PEACOCK JR , CaskUr
MART LTND DOUGLAS. AsaUtaat Cambist
RALPH W. PEZOLD, Aaetaaat Csskler
DALLAS R. LOOP, Maaaper Pars—al L eu
DIRECTORS
ANDREW CARRAWAT
Carrawap and McKIkMa
Seaferd, Plertda
CL R. CLONTB
Credit
c* K tL r w :
C l MdtULTT
Chalrmu af tke Beard,
PUrlda
W. A. PATRICK

Prm tlwt ef Patrick Pru* CerporaUaa
■eaferd. Plertda

St

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P reeldsat e f the
vT* tfiH
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tilitwH
Mil
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RESOURCES
__ 32,017,136.88

Loans and Discount* ___________
Banking House, F u rn ltu rs, Fixtures

.

80,000.00

O verdrafts _______________________

.

None

O ther B o n d i .... ......
Cash and Due from B a n k a ____________________________

498,984.88
2,829,241.51

TOTAL R E SO U R C E S_________________________________________

6.107.402.54
38,204,539.42

LIABILITIES
Capital 8 cock

3 100,000.00

Surplus -------

210 ,000.00

Undivided Proflta and R e se rv e s___

57,941.15

Dividends Payable Ja n u ary 1, 1955
Deposit* ....................
.............

5,000.00

3BJt04.589.4S

Invest in our 2%% Savings Certificates.
■:3
•H

Federal Depeeit law aac* Cerperati—

TtaM

1

-------

I
W« solicit Inquiries about
Sanford and Saminola County.

V*’.' 'V

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7,831,598.27

TOTAL LIABILITIES

.•

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12.784,170.70

U. 8. G ov't Bond*

ef M

iv.vLvi w -." &gt; &lt; :,j

u

*!. I.
its ‘ q

100,000AO

— _'8441,812.71
TOTAL LIABILITIES

‘1 *4

Sanford, Florida

D. S. Gov't Bonds
Cash and Du* from Banks .

f ■■■.&gt;/

Florida State Bank of Sanford

11,824,427.74

*

Bank
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rO f f i c e r s W i v e s
Plan Many Events
The NAAS Officer*’ Wive* Clublwilh style* by Gibbs-Louis nf Orwill celebrate it* first anniversary lando, to raise fund* for forest
in March. Prior to a year ago,) Park School for Exceptional child
wive* of officer* at the station anJ rcn.
Fleet Air Detachments b a s e d ! In retrospect, the Navy Wive*'
thereon participated in social acli-|Club’i first year has proved to be
vities mainly within their own1a successful beginning to a long
units. However. Mrs J. E. Vose range course of srrvicr to the,
Jr., wife of Capl Vnse. C o m m a n d - 1community as well a* a source nf
ing Officer nf the Base, felt very entertainment for Navy wives and
strongly that there should be one their guests.
unified group. Need for this uni-1
—— ------------------------ficatinn was recognised, and at a
luncheon meeting at the Mayfair
Inn in March 1954. an Executive
Board for the new Organization
was elected and the club was on
its way.
The first Executive Board was
composed of ten member* two
from each unit and at their first
meeting the following officer* were
chosen: president. Mrs. F. A.
Nash, vice-president, Mr*. I. G.
Sanford heralds the return of the]
Peter* and Mr*. F. 0. Gooding; sea g o i n g Composite Squadron IN AN KFFOKT In maintain constant readiness for emergencies, the Fire and (’rash Dlvf.
recording secretary, Mr*. B. F. i VC-51 currently based ashore a ts i o n n f the NAAS Security Department demonstrate their ability In fight the flames o f .*
Compton; corresponding secretary. '•"Naval Auxiliary Air Station
burning aircraft during n recent drill. These drills, all unscheduled, nrc held at IcaM
Mrs. J. K. Davis; lunrheon chair­
‘ird
twicc a wcck- Through this constant practice, the crash crew is nhle In •‘rescue" the pilot
man. Mr*. R. N. Vchorn; wel­
cxl&gt;,nKuish lhe blaze in
lhnn 08c niinutc after arriving on the scene. (Official US
fare Chairman. Mr*. E. M. Al­ tion. Naval Air Facility. Port Lyau
I'h llfo )____________________________________________________________
brecht; treasurer, Mrs. R. B. Wel­ tey French Morocco, to relieve the I
don, and publicity chairman, Mrs. sister squadron of Sanford. Comj CDIt. i. (i Peter*, the command- iuur ui du'.y.
I the Navy’s Sunday punch — tha
F J. Plumer. During the summer. nron Nine.
Shortly after the arrival in Port | ing officer of Compron five, flow
Mrs. Plumer resigned with Mrs
Lalci. in November, the L.XS capability of atom bomb dcluery.
A. Goodwin assuming her posi­ Lyautcv. officer* and men began; aboard the USS Coral Sea, to com
’
1 mp
—" clcomc
tion s* Publicity Chairman, and saying good-bye to friends again mcnce a Mediterranean tour which and the Compron Five dctachmcn.s
a J°b well done, a* exMr* V. L, Redfield look Mr*. «s VC-5 was dissected into three! carried them to sonic twelve for- easily made the transition to the ,um&lt;;
pressed by the Commander Siiih
Goodwin's place when her husband ■letaenments. One detachment rc-j cign norts during the four munth earric. Randolph.
received order*.
maincri in Port Lyautey a* a log ; operations.
Compron Five's depliiymenl mar-; Elect, m nim andcr Fleet Air E®!The purpose nf (he club is two­ •sties support group to handle the
CDR L Weidlein. the executive ked the fust attempt to operate ern Atlantic and Mediterranean,
fold; lo provide an opportunity, infinite paper work problems of
monstrous machine, the A. J. Commander Carrier Division Two,
ufticcr
of Comprun Five, led a ihe
through varied social activities, your modern navy and lo locale
Savage
for an extended period .n(j cuimnanding Officers of tna
'bird
Right
of
AJ's
to
the
USS
Lake
for wivr* nf officer* al lhe station needed supplies.
of lime aiioard ship. Through the JSS 1-akc Champlain and the USJ
and Reel activities In become bel­ A second delarhmcnt, led by Champlain for an uninterrupted pilots' dexterity and the ingenuity I Randolph.
ter acquainted; second, Insofar as
of maintenance crews, the AJ was I
fund* are available, tn assist lo­
definitely established as a practi-{
DANGCRI
cal charities and, when requested
cal carrier based plane.
In do so hy the Chaplain, navy
Compron Five, one of the Heavy II u
Relief. Although the organization
\ltark Squadrons, has established1
is new, considerable progress has
Jself through its highly successful t Chronic bronchitis may develop if
your cough, chest cold, or acute hri| •
hern made Inward accomplishing
ipcration, as an integral part of chilis
is not treated and sou cannot
Ihrse objective*.
afTord to take a chance with any medi­
On the serial side, events got
cine less potent than Creomulsion. It
WANT JUNIOR COLLEGE
under way with a luncheon and
eocs into the bronchial system to help
PANAMA CITY i.4%—A committee kMsien
and cspel germ laden phlegm
fashion »hnw at the Woman’* Club
• *•
headed
by
T.
Brannon
Copeland,
,»•*: •
and aid nature lo soothe and heal raw,
*\;»'"r»**Tx* 7*;r* ' ' &gt;,-&gt;•••. •• i May. Yowell’* provided the
insurance
man,
U
seeking
a
junior
tender, infl.imcdhrnnchiilmemhrinc*.
.
clothe* and arrrssnries while Navy
college for Panama City.
Creomulsion blends beechwood
wive* modrled and a thoroughly
creosote
hy special process with other
The committee was name.] by
enjoyable time was had hy all
time-tested
medicine* for coughs. It
:
.
,
Bay County Reps Frank Allen and
no narcotics.
who altrnded. During the July and
. , »V;
*• •
J C. Bodiford and Sen. George contains
Gel a large bottle of Creomulsion at
September meetings, Jim Spencer’*
Tapper of Port St. Joe. They will your drug store. Use it all os directed.
air conditioning was the main at­
&lt;sk funds to start the project from Creomulsion it guaranteed to pleau*
traction, but in November the
'he Legislature.
you or druggist refunds money. Adv.
luncheon was held at the BOQ on
the Base and Mr*. Gordon Sween­
*■»• -i h
r wff
&gt;
ey gave an interesting preview of
* '
'
*
.
.
,
’
•
5.1
Christmas gifti for 1954.
At the suggestion nf the hus­
\ \
rfiu1
^
bands, who felt they should be in­
cluded in these activities, two
steak fries were planned. These
were so enthusiastically received
that they are sure lo be included
™ ----- I
, Ki-K
in Rourthcnming plans. A gala
Christmas Dinner Danre completed
the activities for the year.
Due to uncertainty of fund*, aid
to the Ml. Dora Christian home
was limited tn a psrty a month
• • •
for the children. A highly success­
ful Benefit Rridge, given by the
wive* in November, insured tha
rnntinuanca of this monthly party
fur at least another year.
In Jsnuray another Executive
Hoard assumed office with the fol­
lowing officers: president, Mr*. T.
0. Murray; vice-presidents, Mra.
J. E. Dyer and Mrs K. F. Rowell;
recording secretary, Mrs A. E.
Waller; corresponding secretary,
Mr* G. S. Blake; luncheon chair­
man. Mrs. H. A. Hall; welfare
chairman, Mr*. F. F. Johnson;
publicity Chairman. Mrs. J. A. R. g , ADAIR, M roffraphcr’a m at* airm an, U 8 N . of the

VC-5 Back
At SNAAS
After Trip

A v n n i

O f 'it v e n n Naval service nnd experience, 3r» years as flyers and more than

V

J T I.n o lr h a v e Ire i. logged hv the Sanford Naval Auxiliary Air Station's
* They are ( l! In ID Chief Aviation Ordn.mceman It. It. Fife, a heavieronlv enh-l I 11 *
. , r |{j,.,,,.r \V. (i. Chagnon. helirnpler pilot, and Chief Aviation
MetaUn*Hli**1• V&gt;. Minin', a lighleMhan-nir (airships) pilot. All are nllaclietl to the NAAS
Operations Dept. (Official US Navy I’hoto)
________________________
I""'

RepresentativesPlaylmportantPart
la

!■

l il

The typical representative’* day planes safe anil ready for Right
Seldom heard at. yet ever l»r«’
The representatives tour of duly
lent is lhe North American Avia Piav to,, .st .,1 working .directly
.
, with any one squadron is horn !H
Hon Corporation llcpre &lt;illative* with maintenance personnel, to ad
|(( ,W() J r a r , ,lurln8 wl,|ch
thiit air a part nf Hie I lrrl» unit* vise and in-trni’l them in mamten lum- ult&gt; represrulalivc’s working
hated at NAAS Sanford. Each .nice nperatloiis. It may be working j day paiallcls that "f Rio squadrnr.
squadron bn ed hire living air Rreetly with flying itersonnels, to to which he is assigned, lie Is nn
rralt inanufaclurerd liy NAA t* *s advise and instruct on operational call on a 21 hour basis to assist in
licned a field *'rpre enlntive. Till* problems. It may lie the estali any and all emergencies that may
representative Ir.ivrl- willi Hie it limriil and eomliiclmg of class arise. In several instances the re
squadron where ever It may go loom eourses on mainlcnanec. presentalivc lias saved thousand.*
pet forming hi* duties as a rrgulai and for flying personnel on opera- of dollars in the prevention of an
hicinticr nf the unit.
lion of assigned aircraft. It may accident to say nothing of the
The basic function nf Ilie* I mid he working with the supply officer possible loss of life of the flight
(service Representatives is to (urn to set up spare parts requirement* crew.
l-.li terhnical
- &gt;1itaneo tn tin and to assist m maintaining stork
In summary the funrlion of the
United state* Navy while ho i level*.
Service Representative is two­
serving mi Held assignment, a:
lte&gt;|Min ilntity of ll.e represen fold. namely to furnish technical
the tamo lime he nlw wrve» tatives to the cii'tomcr entail* assistance to the U. S. Navy in
North American Aviation t&gt;' re spending much of his time with the lirld anil to render service to
porting on the status and perform- the mainlrnnncr prr-ouurl who hi* company (rom the field. In ailtru e ol delivered airplane*.
perform most of the actual work rtition to In-ing a technical advisor
NAA Service Representatives on the alriplane. Tin* in ftigld to the Navy the representative will
boM College degrees consisting nf status nl the airplanes is hi.-* prime serve liix company ,is an observer,
n sorted crerlit*. most preferred j rnnrrrn, and any ailvirc he ran I a correspondent, and engineer and
I* an eiigincrring degree. The etim | offer will help lo keep more air- J a general ambassador of service.
moil thing among all Itepresenla
lives is that limy ace well lorll
fii-d with aviation experience. The |
experience ha* been accumulated
In the armed lories and private
Industry.
Applicant* for the very Interest­
ing occupation are for the must
part chosen from department*
within the plant. Once an applicant
hss passed the examination and
•alls,ied the various other require­
ment* he then attend' an intensive
six month* training connrse. Upon
successful completion of the train
Ing cour*p he is then ready tor hi*
ftr*t assignment. The (irvt a lig n ­
ment Is under the *upervt*inn nf
N00uT!n‘ i *nd U ,*,ur*rt Mr‘ A- Aerology Division release* a w eather balloon used in deter
an experienced service representa­
WFebruary ind M .rrh .r iM ii.. mining the wind direction and velocity as chief a e ro g ra p h e r’it
tive.
will include a spring danre at the B ,ale **• D« P arham , USN
through a lhi*odnl te i to
NAAS on Feb, 25. for all officers !m eaaure i s vertical and horizontal m r Im . An «ccurale
NUB OF THE TALE
and their wives; and a benefit w eather picture, both locally and throughout the U. 8 .. is or
APPOMATTOX, VA. CTI —Some
lime bark a gentleman cat came to
fashion show tea on March lo. prim e im portance to all pilota. (Official US Navy Photo)
Itay at the home of the t'harlle D.
Lewises. He had no sign o( a tail •
not even a nub. No sign of ampu­
tation. Just no tail.
At length he met a lady rat. a
YOU DON’T HAVE TO
perfectly normal one with a nice
long tail. Eventually they presentBE A DETECTIVE TO
r*I the Lewises with four kittens
which would have rejoiced lhe DlltKCTING AM. MOVING (raffle nn (he ramp, (nxlwnyn,
heart of Mendel. Two of the kit­ runwnyH nnd in the nir In the direct responsibility of th»
DISCOVER SANFORD
tens had tails like mother’s, hut ( ’outrol Tower crew. More than 30 vehirlen and Hirrrafl in
the other (wo just shurt nub* less molion nt the same time hnve been rerorded hy this division
AND SANFORD’S
than an inch long.
of the Operations Dept. (Official U8 Navy Photo)
r-L ;
FINEST RESTAURANT
-------------------------------- 1----------------------

SANFORD, FLORIDA
Seminole

County

AND LOUNGE THE
M A R -LO U BAR A GRILL

■i.i£
. •* l/.., .-■
.

7t

CHARMING
ENGLISH COTTAGE

-

l.nrat»&lt;t n n th * St J n h n » P l v . r a t t h * s o u t h . r n
»n.| n t a l » r l i . ( u n i In la n d w . l t r w . ) - r h a n n r l t n N e w a r k . X. J.. t h i s r l i . r n i l n c K n a l l t h
r o l l a a e n v . r l n o k t a b r o a d * » |i a n , » n t t h a r l v . r
fo u r m ile , so u th e a it n t Sanford, fifteen m i l t ,
f r m n W i n t e r P a r k , t w e n t y mil** f rn m O r l a n d o
St. Johns’ HIvcr from Front Porch
a n d t h l r t y - O v a m llaa f r o m A t l a n t i c O cea n r a ... .
anne.
*V ,i |* a i a p q i a - l l a w n , r m i n i . . I l.y e i a l e l r n a k a a n d p a l m t t e e a a n d b r i g h t e n e d by b r i l l i a n t l y f l o w . r i n g
J a . a r a i n l a k nnd P"lni l arm ,. 11,1, , a r e f u l l y p u n n e d r u n . l l . u t a ' r e d d e n , e. I.ultl l.y n n . o f i ' e n i r a l I 'l n r l fla • | . i . d i n g a i r l i l i e . i , f m l .l, u w n u , r . I , , , b o n b e a u t i f u l l y l a n d , c a | . c d w i t h b lb la c u a , a m l a a a , c m l u n , . Ja au iln n a n d l» .g aaln« Ilia.
Hull! »l f i . a t y i n a... In &gt; o . n , O u t lin n w ith till, k a n d a l u . r n a id in g an.) c o u r r e t a f o u n d , I Inna, w i t h
m d a l n , . » n i.n l wiii.lnwr, a t l . e t l o , t h l n g l a r u n t a n d o a k floor* , t h l a s t u r d i l y b u i l t h a n t a c o n t a l a a t h r a a
b ed ruoni* a n d l a , tiled b * lh a , t h o r o u g h ly t n o d t r n » ll-* te r » r lc k i t c h e n , d i n i n g ro o m a n d i p a r l n u * l l r .
I n c run in l i l l b l i g h i e d b) c a t l i o d r a l t&gt; p a b e a m e d ca l l l n c a n d t a r c a b r i s k f l r e p l a . t f l a n k e d b y b u l l t - l n

Wi '

l.oi.kr.t.&lt;,

T h e R e l" C r o . n i n p t n e o u r l l i r m i n h w l d r P r . n r h d o o r a t o a a r r e * n a d - ) n p o r c h a f f o r d i n g i t e l l g h l f u l
i K . T S i j L ’ U f l ' t n n . l l ' a r l l e r . . Tlis^ full e O r d .illiln * r o o m o |. e n a t a i n n u t i t n n r t e r r a c e a h a t a k i n g
a du *s a m
n i . ik*
k e o fr tl.e-i'»l&lt;&gt;rfiil
ll.e *&gt;&lt;il»rrin M
e e li t li n g A lung
Iona h a l l w a y ea n d ea i a l r , Ii r a d t o t h a u n f l n l t h t d aai-uad f l e o r , p r e -

--- . . . .-----. •— ---- ------------ -------- - ■ ----.._rr. .

leeidetice * r.m m i l l.r.lruuins, 5 b a t h , ) , t.'n f l n l a b r d a s ppaanndda ab bl al a aet-ond
______ _____
floor. _____
M a a____
o n r r ____
e o n a_t r u e .
lin n , b i t . k a n d e l u . s . i t i d i n g : . . . n . i e l e a n d brl.-k f o u n d a t i o n , a t l . a e l n a t h l n i 1- r o o f; h e a v y m e t a l r a a a i n e n r . w'lidow e; n . k fluure : a u t u m a i l r elec lint w a t e r l i e a l t r ; D . i w a g e a r » l l -f l r a d h a t - a i r t h e r m o e r a t
v .in i r n l l r d I , t i l i n g u n i t , p r i v a t e a r t e e i a n well an il a u m m a l l c p u m p : et-pii. t a n k e . ro m n a i r c u n d l l l a n a r .
Main Ki.-nr: K n l i e n . e por.-li a n d hall, &lt;»ai . I n t e l .
I.Iv in a m u m &lt;11* a J O . f i r e p l a c e , b o n k r a e e e , r a l h . d i . i - . j p . , I,rain ed c e l l i n g : o p e n , lo e. r t e u e d p o r t h . t u n i n g l o o n . I l f i I k ' l i o pen* l a t e r r a c e , t
lle.tr.-unit. | Hatha. K l lv lia n ( I a l l ‘), H l e u i l c ato v e , d l t h w a a b a r ; a i d e p o r c h t o f u r n a c e a n d o u l d a a r
|« l l » t
A t t a c h e d J - i ' e r r t a i a a t ' A d e .i u a i e t t « r a g a . f u r n a c e r»..m a n d o u t d o o r t o l l a t .
F r b p a r l j i lou' r i v e r f r o a t e g o a I t * ' t o m a d . A d d i t i o n a l f r o a u a a a v a i l a b l e . R l p a r l a a r l g h la .

r ttc c : HUN*

i . W . H A L L , R EA LT O R
HaU” Phona 1758

SPECIALIZING IN
DELICIOUS FOOD.
SERVED IN A
PLEASING
MANNER.

LOUNGE

BETTER SANFORD
3W i

Supplying Farmers
Of Sanford And
Seminole County
For Over 40
Years With:

• SEED
V • FUNGICIDES
• FERTILIZER

TV

•
•

INSECTICIDES
DUSTERS

•

FARM SUPPLIES

HOME &amp; GARDEN
SUPPLIES

SOFT LIGHTS
DELICIOUS DRINKS

..... r ■-------*,,d a bath._

.d r
____ _
Jeiillr u,e*| for ..unf.utal.tt aturage. but available for l , u. he.lr.uime

Florida S lala

RESTAURANT

nM

Baak B alU tag

THK MAR • LOU 18 LOCATED
JUST OUTSIDE THE CITY LIMITS
OF SANFORD. DURING YOUR
TRIP TO FLORIDA VISIT THR

KllGO tt SKO
VHONE
F L O R ID A

MAR-LOU BAR and GRILL

SA N FO RD

�•a j

Origin Of Auxiliary Station
Attributed To Pearl Harbor
The U. S Naval Auxiliary \ r "as 1 mounding Officer at the
Station at Sanford, was a Naval M-• rr Detachment ot the Station
Air Station used for training bomb and in i so was division officer
er and fiRhtcr pilots during W &gt;r! 1 of the Seaman' and the U. S. Coast
War II and was later a ‘little city" Guard. The Coast Guard reported
In Itself giving employment to about aboard in January 1914. for the
SOO persons, instruction to 3tU) an i purpo.e of manning the interior
providing living quarters for more guard posts and with them came
than 900.
a K 9 detachment consisting of sev.
The origin of the Naval Air Sta en war sentry dogs.
tion here can be very definitely *•After World War II, the need no
tributed lo the sneak attack on longer existed for a Naval Air Sta
Pearl Harbor by the Japanese, tion in Sanford Consequently, on
m ' Dec. 7, 1911. Immediately after March 13. 1916. Captain Smoot was
this disaster, the Secretary of the relieved and the Station was form­
Navy decided that U. S. aviation ally decommissioned and turned
training facilities were inadequate over to the City of Sanford.
to meet the exigencies of warfare
The Station was renamed San­
on land, sea and air.
ford
Municipal Airport and various
CtWIn order to take the training ; civilian business concerns began
load off existing air stations at Pen­ moving into the former Navy build
sacola, Miami, Corpus Christ!, and I ings.
Jacksonville, and to train simultan­ Early in 1917, George Barr’s
eously, pilots for all types of Nav­ ! Umpire School moved to the Munial aircraft, the Secretary of the ‘ cipal Airport from their former
Navy directed the establishment of training *pnt In Orlando The
the Naval Air Operational Training school held its classes In the buildCommand with Staff Headquarters ! mg now used as a carpenter shop
at the Naval Air Station. Jackson­ and students later practiced their
ville.
umpiring at the New York Giants'
The site of Sanford, was proposed 1spring training exhibition games.
In May 1942 to base and train two
In October 1947. the New YorV
bomber training units However, I Giants began construction of right
only one unit, Squadron V'U-21 was baseball fields at the Station tu be
actually established. Lieutenant used by their farm clubs and In the
Commander George T Swlggum. I spring of 1946. manager Frank
USN, was appointed resident of­ Shrllcnhark brought hit Minneapo­
ficer in charge of construction and lis Millers, of the American AsIt was under his direction that the j kociation here to open spring trainbase was nearly completed bv i lnp. activities fer 15 of th« New
mid-September 1912. Hear Admiral York Giants farm cluha.
A. It. Cook. USN, the Chief of Na­ In conjunction with their spring
val Operational Training, conduct­ training activities, the Giants op­
ed appropriate ceremonies, during erated a baseball school under the
which he turned the Station over Instruction of Carl Hubbell, direc­
to Captain Francis M Hughes, tor of their farm teams with over
USN, the first Commanding Officer. 3ou men in attendance.
On Nov. 15, 1912, the first student
Other major projects In the "lit­
officers reported aboard the Sta tle city" included the Fellowship
(Jon
Front, a Christian colony of more
Construction of a satellite field than 650 members, and the Fellow­
at Osceola, was completed Sept. ship Seminary and Bible College.
1, 1913 and Inter that month, a The college had IS faculty mem­
squadron of fighter planes replaced bers teaching 92 students. The li­
the PV bombers.
brary. auditorium, classrooms and
Captain Hughes was relieved in officers for the college were lo­
Nov. 1913 and Captain L. \V. John­ cated In t h e Visual Education
son, USN, concluded a short per­ Building, which Is at present.
iod of duty as Commanding Officer Building Three.
In March 1911.
Florida Fashion's, Inc., employ­
The next in line of Commanding ed more than 200 workers In three
Officers was Captain Otho P. hmldings including the prrsent StaSmoot, USN, who reported from I tion Supply Building; the dispen­
the Fourth Naval Fleet a few days sary was in operation as the Ferprior to Captain Johnson's detach­ nald-Laughton Memorial Hospital,
ment.
employing 19 nurses and averaging
Captain It. I). Foote, UKMCIt, 34 patients a day. The prrsent Ad-

(VEEKEND FISHING trips to the various lakes In and
around Sanford, rate high with the men at the NAAS. Here,
iThomax Her#, USN, (left) a n d Ulley Speara, aviation melal*
am ilh third claaa, USN, look o v e r dlffarent type* of roda and
a
reeli th a t may ha checked-out of the athletic "fear-locker*'
*
sr of (he Station Hobh.v Shop. Don B etty aviation machlnlat’a
m ale third claaa, USN, (rig h t) aervea aa one of the Hobby
a i
Shop attendants. (Official US Navy Photo)

ministration Building was known
as Castle
Apartment*, hoio.ng
about 4o persons.
Show alter Aero School gave In
structlons In flying to about 15 stu­
dents and the Boy Browning Avia­
tion School oflerrd flight Invtruc
lions tu its students under the G. I
Bill
A Homntet was opcratt\1 at the
ROQ with Its 110 rooms filled to
capacity and its dining room ac­
commodating 2oo persons More
than 250 persons occupied living
space In the present barracks and
the Mess Hall was used as the cm
tral dining room
Completing the little -Ity” weir
such concerns as Central Florida
Foods. Sanford Scale C o . P M
Campbell Shop, Dunbar Industries
and a small restaurant, which was
located In the old Gatehouse
Just as the origin of thp Naval
Air Station has hren attnnuted to
Pearl Harbor, the reactivation ot
the Station can definitely be attri­
buted to the Korean War.
After the Korean outbreak. the
Secretary of thi Navy found once
again that U. S facilities for trsin
n* jml supporting Niva: aiirraft
were inadequate Notice if reacti­
vation of the Naval Station was re
reived In Sanford on Jan 13. 1931
from the Navy Department amt the
following day. Captain D T Day
USN. Commander of the Stxtli Na
val District Air ttsses Command,
arrived here with his stall for an
Inspection of the facilities.
On March 1, 1931, the reactiva­
tion procedures began aa tho Navy
took occupancy of the barrarka
and Mess Hall. By late April, the
civilian concerns had turnrd all
the buildings bark uver In the
Navy.
On May I. 1931 the official rr
commissioning ceremonies l o o k
place and the Air Station was re­
activated as a Naval Auxiliary
Air Station to be used for the
training and conditioning of exper­
ienced pilots for a fleet umt of a
carrier air group
Captain Day rea&lt;’ the reactiva­
tion orders and Beer Admiral Al­
fred K. Montgomery. USN, Com­
mander, Fleet Air Wing, Jackson­
ville. officially turned the Station
over to Captain John L Chitten­
den. USN. as 310 enlisted men,
23 officers and 200 civilians wit­
nessed the impressive ceremony.
Mayor Fred A Dyson welcomed
the Navy to Sanford and the San­
ford Naval Auxiliary Air Station
was in operation. That samp day,
the Station became the home port
for Fleet Aircraft Service Squad­
ron 821 and Die squadrons of Car­
rier Air Group 'three.
In the months that followed, a
concentrated rehabilitation p r ngram began and the buildings were
once again converted to meet the
needs of the Navy.
The squadrons of Carrier Air
Group Three remained at Sanford
until Aug. 1952, when they were
transferred to NAS Cecil Field,
Jacksonville. Two months later,
Pliotngraphir Squadron Sixty-Two,
one of the two pr-cision and re­
connaissance mapping squadrons of
the Navy, was assigned home port
at the NAAS.
In Nov. 1952. Faslton 821 was
ordered to Ihe NAAS Oceana. Va.,
and Fleet Aircraft Service Squad­
ron 51 assumed the duties of the
local service squadron.
The Station's first heavy-attack
squadron, C o m p c a i t e Squadron
Nina, was commissioned here on
January 1$, I9U In April, Compo­
site Squadron Five, another unit
of the heavy-attack program, was
transferred to the NAAS, thui
rounding out the roster of fleet
units attached here.
Captain Chittenden received or­
ders transferring him to the U.
S. Naval War College, Newport,
R. I., on July IS, 1951, and the fol­
lowing month. Captain James E.

TTfE SANTOED TTTEAT.D

Fosgate Citrus C oncentrate Located
Operations j n y ery Heart O f Great Citrus Belt
See. K. I’n g c 5)

Called Hub
At Station

operatise to carry on an almost ine season the variety of fresh rit- mg responsibility He was eleetesj
ltd i : \ 4 l 5 N 4 t'SIIING
\ . Florida - giant citrus indu« continuous expansion am) huilding r n s concentrate* marketed under general manager in 1948
The new cold .storage warehouse
In 1953 this program Ihe trade name of Are High, in
i r &gt; glows, so grows F'osgaie Citrus program
Concentrate Cooperative at Forest | brought additional facilities valued eluding orange, orange and grape- is a .spacious huilding 243 by 120 ft.
City, in Ihe very hrarl of the great at approximately $500,000 into full fruit blend, and grapefruit. The with a 32 ft high inside ceiling
l co-operative Is also sole packer of which allows for storage concern
citrus belt.
operation.
The yeas 1954 was a memorable
Other expansion programs In Duncan Hines premium brand con trate cases 28 high The facility
The Operations Department of one for this sound and solid Mid elude a new esapoiator, citrus centrated Iruil Other packs are will handle one and a half million
Hie Naval Auxiliary Air Station Florida industry which during the pulp, cattle feed mill and new, made on order for other leading casei of 24-6 or cans.
here in Sanford, a* with any air peak of Us widespread operations larger fruit truck scales
produel chains, svith private labDie warehouse construction waa
station thruughoul the country. I* ■airies more ih»n 2 000 persons on
accompanied by installation of tha
N&gt;w facilities incline also a els
the huh, the ren in of alt air ac Ihe pasioil Bill 1933 holds even cold storage svarrhnuse unlike any
President of Fosgate Citrus Con­ remarkable "palette hatch", an in­
Uvllles
grealer promise for officers and other in the entire U S and which centrate Cooperative is Chester C. vention of Jim Fi.ske. plant proThrough (he Operations Depart growei members of this majestic | because of a unique “ palette hatch" Fosgatr native of Boston, who dti -tion manager, which ha* won
mrm and it* many divisions, the enterprise
I conserves labor and reduces loss first became Interested In Florida the enthusiastic interest of other
NAAS fulfills lor the most part it« Fosgatr buildings. 20 in all. ran- of temperature to froien, warehou- citrus as a youngster of 6 when he citrus plant officials.
Ollier improvements at Fosgate
primary ml-*ion. wbirh is Ihe ■
(r0m packing house to ware *fd Juiee In transfer from ware- wot asanclated with hit father on
include* addition to Ihe modern
Ihe Boston commission market.
support of the (Ircl aircraft based houses to the majestic concentrale house to truck or railroad car.
F'arly in his career Mr Fo»gale’ fire equipment as well a* general
here
plant itself spread over 40 acres
Ko„ ,(tr c |tru , Concentrate Co
improvement*. Also other
Heading the Operations Depait *et in the midst ot rolling miles of „p«.r,|,v e operation Is a big one learned all phase* of Ihe then
ment Is .Mr J It Wilson. USN well tended grines ThU inttuwtrl*! i And inrlurfra. an inseeliride depart- young business, and In 1919 began facilities were converted to co­
irprc.onts an Investment of n,fnj complete gnne care a giant operation In the state as Chester 1-irge ami improve Ihe adback fa o
who earlier this month assumed giant irprc.ent*
the duties of tin* integral brunch some $5 million
fleet of trucks for picking and l’. F'osgaie Co Thi* company soon ; dity. that operation which involF’osgaie draws its fruit from IS.- hauling a well equipped soil lab developed Into the leading packing vo&lt; holding back juice in procesa
of the Station l.cdr C A Parker.
&lt;'* addition to other run* In order
USN. a natDc Floridian. serve* isx&gt; acres of groves owned hr grow- oratory, one of the finest In the and shipping house in FlorFla
F'rom thi* original company has ,0 stamlardlie Ihe blend,
as Asst Operations Officer, and ci member* scattered throughout stile.
grown Ihe vast industrial holdings
Fruit receiving farilltie* were ex­
aids Cdr Wilson tlnough various Central Florida In producing and
Die soils laboratory, which Is op­
division officer* chief* and lead |Cocr**ing it* own fruit it hereby erated by two full-time ehemlsls. now comprising the Forest City op- P-mded efficiently by Installation
ing petty officer* in carrying out excretes controlled picking so that runs all types of analysts of soli rratlon, one of the largest In the 'd truck weighing «calr* And rouni ding out the vast program was adthe functions of the department the complete facilities are kept amt coots, an Important phase of South
The
'&lt;n*thi|ltic* and oblica at maximum opi-Tiy"ina’, 3r\r)»
Dvr
F
n,«.te
Citrus
Concentrate
"! * ’me ! « • « » In lift truck*
In &gt;•
t.i Veep pace mill Ihe thi* operation designed to keep Ihe Cooperative i. a i mi ml 4 years old. )j a l ‘" m r equipment to streamIll'll* I'f I.IC Ope. jll'UI* Di'pwr*
vast
acreage
of
citrus
in
top
pro­
niciil are many and varied Brief irememloii- growth of the rltrus duction with finest fruit that can having been established in March. I
‘,,,rr‘l mi&lt;I), these Include the maintenance industry, it ha* been neressary be grown
1931, and ID products are merThe ca tie feed m il. one of tha
and servicing of Station and for F'osgaie Citrus Concentrate CoThe fresh fruit department of chamllsrd the nation over Are m'wesl additions to the Fosgate entransient aircraft, air *ra rescue
? ' *nnill,n? • “
Fosgate la one of the moil modrin High froren juice and the Duncan lpr|’tn ,p ‘ **
operations wrathrr briefing of all Bigger 'V G Chagnon. USN. also and best equipped in Ihe etate. and (line, park are Ihe leader*
i " ' 1''* *m P " 1 Prm,(m' s rp ,“IUn*
^
'
...
.
.
.
.
»n
byproduct!
manuf.irtun*
of catpilots, granting of tlight clearance* an enlisted pilot, fly Ihe .Station was Ihe first plant In Ihe slate to
Die Duncan Hines label alone ,|(,
. nd illier fertilizer or agriand the control of all aircraft with helicopter during air-tra rescue pack and ship one million boxes of
|'’r * ®ne million box pack, ctiltural compounds. The plant can
in the Station control io iic .
*ervirp missions.
fruit in a single season For yeara The Hines I ark* lo . for many handle 400 Ions of peel a day.
Maintenance and servicing nf
Weather briefing of all pilots, a thia plant held the most unique
Am, lh(&gt; ri,ncrntrnir p la n - it.
aircraft I* handled t&gt;&gt; the Mainten­ prime factor in flying. Is one of distinction nf being the largest vears mtrreyor. of fine foods seccted
Fosgate
to
do
their
packing
production
during season run* to
ance Division under the direction the Job* of the Aerology Division fruit shipping house In the entire
because of the new plant and the | W„ am| a |,aif carloads a day Tha
nf Id. F' F‘ Johnson. USN. He !» I t G. J Kekrrt, USN, Aerolgy citrus hell.
high standatd* of quality insisted manufacture of nearly four million
assisted by Chief Aviation Ordn Officer, Is assisted hv Chief Aer
With an estimated $30,000 a week
j gallons a year of froren eitroa
anceman It It F ife. USN, an en ogruphrts mate G. D Parham, payroll, Fosgate produces during upon by Fosgate
Man behind tho wheel of Ihe Fox- juice is not unreasonable with pre­
listed pilol. This division I* respon USN. ami the men allarhcd.
gate enterprise Is Claude C. Mer „ , nl
j,»s
sible for the parking, securing, re Vsiumd the clock, they maintain
F'osgaie Citrus Concentrate Co­
furling and other grncral a m Ic­ weather maps of the U. S. correct logs pilots' Bight hours; briefs shon. vice president sod general
ing of Station or visiting aircraft ed to the slightest change In order tham nn railln facilities and danger manager of the concentrate coop- operative has plans for continuing
.
. . . . . . .
expansion a n d growth, keeping
A* needed, they also check, repair lo give the pilots nn accurate pie- or warning areas on (light mules *rf.
Mt Mershnn Joined the Fosgate
Mitlv the industry and tha
Also Im-lmled In the Flight
or rhangr aircraft engine* ami lure of the area into which they
rompany In 19.12 upon graduation s(al(*
parts A complete file of records. U m (|y Advice on weather con Division is the Control Tower crew front Orlando High School. He rose,
jjlon j. the Fosgate story.
showing engine changes, hours anions locally Is available so that I* F. Kgula, air conlrolman first from gas hoy to truck driver, t o
' ________________
flown, equipment and parts order |„|„i* may utilize the best times class, USN, control tower super­ paymaster and through a number I
4 III lt( llll.l. HONORARY
ed. received and u*ed. Is main f«,r training exercises In an effort visor *nd his men have Ihe re of other Job. to become manager
MI’MIIKR
sponslhllily of all moving alrrraft
talnrd within the division.
to maintain ron«lant readiness.
of
the
packing
house
(lion
fcitiliNKIV YORK i.r— Prime Min­
1.1. Johnson and Chief Parachute
Flight rlram m cs and the eon and vehicles nn Ihe ramp, taxi rrr plant manager
way*, runway* and aircraft In the
ister Winston Churchill has be­
irol of aircraft i* the duly of ihe immediate vicinity of Ihe NAAS
He vva* spri-.lily p r o m o t e d come an honorary member of
Vose, J r , USN fhr Station’s pro Flight Division units'*’ Ihe supervt
In the event that in aircraft his I throuRl1 oilier Jobs gaming inrrca*. The Sons of Ihe American Revolu­
sent Commanding Officer look the *lmi of l.l W I. Barkley. USNR lost its way. they operate direr I
tion
Chief Av i.ition Mclalsmith F D lion finder equipment and guide ilep..rtmenl'» Leading Chief It
helm.
The organization, composed of
Mionc.
USN,
an
enlisted
lighter
A* a vital part of our national
the pilot lo Ihr field In ease of K Thompson Through Thompson, descendant* of men who fought for
defense, the future of tin* Station IIijii pilol tairship*) ss’rvcs a* hi* an emergency or crash landing. the men receive alt pediment in independenee of the Colonies from
will he govcilied by the future a *-1 i .i nt Mionc i* also in charge Ihe control tower directs the cm formation concerning the efficient Flnglaml, announced Sid Winston’*
need* of the country; lull wlialevei id tin- airship landing mast and ergency craw., alert* helicopter functioning of llicir division.
acceptance of the membership
need* are required the Sanford ground handling crew lor tin* type pilots .nd advises all necessary
The Operations Department is last night.
Naval Asix ilia i y Air Station will be erafl The division record* rhangr* department*
Flights departing, one of the ninny throughout the
fully prepared lo meet them.
I in flight publication* and chart*. arriving and all lorn' flight opera Navy that never closes its door*.
TAKI'S TO llll.lJi
tion* are recorded and maintained Twenty four hour watches are
LLANO, TEX. (tfM — Vlce-Adm.
by ranlrol tower personnel.
maintained and each division Is II It MeLean (Ret.) *|&gt;ent 37
The responsibility of assigning constantly alert to carry out Ihe year* at *ra with the Navy. Nave
personnel duties, regulating liberty departments Important job . . that iie's settled down here — In tha
and leave periods and musters of aiding and keeping Naval aria heart of what Is knnwn a* Texas’
Hill Country.
of the divisions is Ihe job of the tion flying.

A LINE OF WINNERS!

M

UMASpring-Toned f M l u d f t y i
DESIGNED FOR YOUR FLORIDA VACATION

SPORT SHIRTS

|,CI)K C. A. PARKER, USN. Ami. OpernllonH Officer of (h*
NAAS (rig h t) approves Ihe High! plan of ( L i n It) (.’dr J. A.
Goodwin USN. Commanding Officer of VJ-02 and Cdr P.
Sztian, USN, Training Officer ill NAATC Photographic
School, Pen*s,icolii. afler b riefin g them on Ihe m ule of tlielr
fllghtr*. (Official IJS Navy Photo)

By

MANHATTAN

•

SWIM TRUNKS
Ily

CA TA LIN A

UNDERWEAR

LOOKING FOR A BETTER PLACE TO LIV E?

By

COOPERS

You Will Find It In Sanford, Fla.!
STRAW HATS
By

MALLORY

FAVORITE

SPORT COATS
TROPICAL
By

•

LOOKING FOR A BETTER ,CAR TO D RIVE?

By

SUITS

Ily

CRICKETEER

N O R TH C O O L

SHOES

•

SLACKS

Hy

HUBBARD

F L O R S U E IM

YOU W ILL BE 8URE TO FIND IT AT '

and SON

R A Y -FIELD S LIN C O LN -M ER C U R Y C O M P A N Y
1M W. PALMETTO ATE.

SANFORD, FLA.

tyrti'UM OA.
PHONE 1129

«

*

�t
•y»

HgSgE

1. F m k F n d t D tp a d a n t
2. Citrus, Hanealade, JtOy P raaam a
t. Offleaa
4, Fartlliaar u l ( m e tld it D a^uiM M l
i . Garagaa

" 11

l Naw Cold Staraga Warahonaa
7. Cooaatrpta Plant
8. Naw Beak donna
I. Citraa Palp CatUa Fang Mil

Fosgate
Citrus Concentrate
is continually expanding
its facilities to meet the need of Its
grower members, who produce quality fruit
so necessary for top quality products. The latest
in machinery and laboratory technique assure you,
as a consumer, that Fosgate Citrus Concentrate
Cooperative Products are "TOPS"*

m o d e r n equipment,
and featuring quality
products.

§

■

»

EE-

'

'

«

rJ § l
■ . '■

im

s

®

»

&amp; a&gt;M M J
■ ■
■

m m \J

�H. E . SMITH, AD3. Ls preparing to bark up one of several “ mules” a t the FASIION SI line
shack a t SNAAS. (Official US Navy Photo)

Cdr. T. O. Murray Is
Fasron Commander
"The mission of this squadron
Is to provide logistic support, aircraft maintenance, and serving
facilities to other fleet squadrons
. based ashore in the Sanford area,"
f according to CDR T. O. Murray,
Fleet Aircraft Service Squadron
Commanding Officer. "At the preaent tim e," he continued, "this
means that Fasron-51 Is response
ble for the maintenance and sup­
port of VC-9 and VJ-62 aircraft.
The return of VC-5 from foreign
duty this month will add to these
responsibilities"
Since CDR Murray is the sen­
ior officer among fleet units sta) tiontd at NAAS, he also carries the
title of Commander, Fleet Air De­
tachment, Sanford.
A native of Williamsport, Md.,
CDR Murray was commissioned
22 yelra ago and bacame a naval
aviator In 1937. He married Anne
a McGraw of Hagerstown. Mary­
land on September 21, 1938 and
they are the parents of four child­
ren: Tom, Mike. Kathy and Pete.
Th# Murray* presently reside at
I Lake Mary.
,
CDR Murray took command or
Flsel Aircraft Service Squadron
Fifty-One and the Fleet Air Detachment ten months ago from CDR
B. W. Slye, USN.
His military c a rte r began In
1932. Upon completion of a three
year tour of duty at Luke Field In
Hawaii, now a U. S. Naval Air
Station, he entered the U. 8. Navy
, a t Anacostia, D. C., In 1935.
I Graduated from naval aviation
flight training M Pensacola in Nov­
ember 1937, CDR Murray wrai aaaigned to Squadron VT-5 as a na­
val aviator on the USS Yorktown.
From May 1939 to August 1942,
he spent aa Instructor and engin­
eering officer at the Naval Reserve
Air Base, Philadelphia, Pcnna.
During this period bo completed
a short course In Acronautlcsl En­
gineering a t Massachusetts InstlI tut* of Technology, Cambridge,
Maes.
His first command was Squsdron
VS-32, Atlantic Fleet, In September
1142, where he remained until May
of the following year. Ha then took
command of Composite Squadroa
SI which went aboard the aircraft
carrier USS Marcus Island. In the
lava stages of WWII, ho became
Aaefatant Director of Service Test
a t NAAS Patuxent River, Maryi land. Thla post was held from May
IMS until June 1947.
CDR Murray'* next aet of ordera
iced , "General Lino School, New­
port, R. 1.", and ho took up books
and pencil again for ono year.
From Newport, ha was ordered to
Adak, Alaska as executive officer
c f the U. 8. Naval Air Facility
there aa well aa Chief of Staff of
tho Naval Operating Base. On 27
May 1949 he succeeded (a comI mend of both.

It was back to the States and a
tour of duty as Director, Technical
Publications, Bureau of Aeronau­
tics, Washington. In September
1949. Tills position he maintained
until July 1951.
From Washinglon, he was trans
ferred to Hdqtrs, Commander, lla
waiian Sea Frontier and there he
became Operations and Assistant
Planning Officer. Orders were then
received by CDR Murray to re
port to Fasron-31 In February 1931.
While commanding Squsdron VC21, CDR Murray took part in the
largest naval action ever fought,
the Battle of Lcyto Gulf. It was in
October 19(4 that this battle took
place when the Japanese Empire
Fleet steamed south Intent on re­
taking the Philippines. CDR Mur
ray was awarded the Navy Cross,
second highest honor which can be
bestowed upon a member of the
U S. Navy for the sinking of a Jap
anese cruiser of the ATAGO class
during, this battle.
In addition to the Navy Cross,
CDR Murray also received tho Dis
tinguisbad Flying Cross for the
sinking of two destroyers and the
Atr Medal for sending four torpedo
boats to the bottom. Other decora
tions which have been awarded
to CDR Murray Include: one other
Distinguished Flying Cross, three
other Air Medals, a Navy Unit
Commendation, American Defense
Medal, Atlantic Area, Pacific Area,
Philippine Liberation, WWII Vic
lory and National Defense Medals.
The war record of CDR Murray,
In addition to participation in the
Battle of Leyte-Gulf, includes: At­
lantic patrol and preparation for
tha Casablanca campaign during
1942-1943. From 1943-1945 he was
in the Pacific and took part in the
Saipan-Tinlan, P.alau Islands. Min
doro, Lingayan and Manila, Philip­
pines campaign as well as the Sc
cond Battle of the Philippine Sea.

Sanford Sailor
Stationed Here
Usually when a young man
leaves home to join the armed
forces he finds the change a little
distracting for awhile. Rut Dun
Parlaln, SN, attached to Fleet Air­
craft Service Squadron 51 at NAAS
Sanford, is really at home in the
Navy.
t
In fact, he's at home In more
ways than one. It happens that
Sanford Is Partain's home town
and he's fortunate enough to have
been ordered to duty here.
Tho son of Mrs. Lucille Partaln,
2307 Magnolia Avc. Don attended
Scminolo High School before en­
listing in the Navy at Jacksonville
on Juno 4, *952. He went through
boot training at San Diego and was
assigned from there to Ilarbor De­
fense Unit. U. S Fleet Activities,
Sasebo, Japan where ho reported
in October, 1952. In September,
he reported to tho battleship U. 3.
5. New Jersey and served aboard
it four months before being order­
ed lo his present duty station, Fasron-51.
lie is presently assigned to the
First Licutapsnt's Depirtment at
Fasron-31.
During his two and one half
years of service. Don has earned
the Korean and U. N. Service Me­
dals as well as the Natioual De­
fense Medsl.
FARM PROJECT
HOUSTON, TEX. (UP)
(iff) - ThirtyT hirty
eight y e a n ago, Jatnei C. Shorte
graduated from Texaa A&amp;M ColCol­
lege aa a civil engineer. Now he’s
hc'a
back taking an agricultural coune,
after retiring aa a colonel In the
Army with 37 y e a n ' service. He
plans to operate a ranch.

Material Department Accounts
For Large Variety Of Stores

Florida is either the birthplace
or the legal icsidcncc of almost
20 per eent of the personnel at­
tached to Find Aircraft Service
Squadron Fifty-One, NAAS San­
ford.
Other stories in this section con-1
eern Chief William M. Brown and
Don Tartain, airmen, who are luc­
ky enough to be stationed right at
home in Sanford.
Some of those located nearby
are Franklin Nairn, aviation store­
keeper airman, Winter Park. Lt.
Robert Northridgc, Dcland, Jerry
Bailey, aviation ordanceman first
class, Orlando, and Gerald Har­
vey, aviation electronic technician
third class, also of Orlando. Pre­ IN THE MATER! At, Department of VC-B l«t N. Tnyinr. AK.1;
(’. Kistler. AK.1: K. I., Springninn, AKI; It. C. Heed, AN;
sently residing in Dcland, Jam es i
Redmond, yeoman first class, has II. N. Snlhicnt, AK3. (01 filial I'H Navy Photo)
lived in several parts of the state
since WWII.
Lt Rolland Dodson, squadron Spe­
cial Weapon Officer, lives in Lees-!
burg amt * * ■• v,.' n officers LTJG A. E. Waller, a graduate nf
Annapolis with the Class of 1950,
attended high school In St. Peters-:
burg.
Tampa is home to Jim Castano, I
aviation machinist's mate first
class, and Charles Kink, aviation
electrician third cists Robert Col­
lier, airman. Is a native of Okee­
chobee and Donald Betts, aviation
machinist s mate third class, hails
from Sarasota.
The strong Navy influence a-|
round Jacksonville was enough for
William L Smith, aviation elec­
tronics technician second class,
and John Kccnc, aviation electri­
cian third class, to decide soon af­
ter finishing high school lo leave
home and join the naval aviation
progrsm.
Madison Compton, aviation ma­
chinist's mate second class, is
from Bartow and Floyd Dobbins,
yeoman chief, a newcomer to Fas­
ron 51, ls a resident of Sebring.
Alexander Allred, aviation elec­
trician chief, who Is planning to re­
tire from active service next,
month, maintains a residence in
Miami.
St. Augustine Is the home of
Clyde Stafford, aviation machinist's
mate third class, and Cocoa boasts
of Allen Murrell, airman.
Any ex-UI will vouch for the
fact that s serviceman away from
home Is Die best possible advertis*
ing medium a Chamber of Com­
merce could have. But, even
though these men are near home COMMANDER \V. E. LentOH, romninmling officer of VC-5 In
now. they still do a great job o( shown presenting a (lootl Conduit Modal lo W. I). Pulver,
public relations, "selling" Florida IHI2 a fter u squadron inspection. (Official US Nuvy Photo)
lo the out-of-state men stationed
here.
IT S AN ART
la convention of toastmasters here.
RICHMOND. VA. (ill) -S What j j 0 „ £r,| an authentic British ac-!
BRIGHTENING THEIR LIVES
HOUSTON, TEG. (cP&gt; - At the does an after-dinnrr speaker speak rent to compare life In Yorkshire
too. 40 sun lamps have been instal­ about when speaking lo an audirn ami (he United States. He is an
ce of after-dinner speakers? MaJ.
led in the monkey eagci.
I*. K. A Todd won first prlxc at authentic Englishman too.

HOSPITAL TV BOOM
CHAMPAIGN. ILL. « * ) - Tele­
cast pleas for funds to be used in
TV sets for hospitals are getting
results.
Any individual or group donat­
ing $100 is allowed to name the
hospital In which the set Is instal­
led. Smaller donations are lumped
together and hospitals chosen by
the station.
Response bss been overwhelm­
ing, sponsors report, with $800
subscribed in a single day from
Chanule Air Force Base.
"The boys at Chanule are trying
to aee which squadron can donate
the moat," they aay.
Sixty lets havo been Installed In
30 town* Jn central Illinois and
western Indiana, They ape pur­
chased for $*00 each through co­ T-CDR. 3. D. W atson, Adm inistration Officer nf Vt%9 nnd
operation of wholesalers and deal­ I-CI)R. V. I.. Redfield, Electronics Officer of VC-'J ore shown
er*.
d
hare. (Official US N avy Photo)

P a*? l t , Sec. E

I THE SANFORD HERALD

Florida Birthplace
Or Legal Residence
Of Many Sailors

An aviation squadron in today's
Navy is a Complex unit. Obtaining
and accounting for the very large
variety of spare parts and stores
required to operate the Squadron
is the duly of the Material Depart­
ment.
The head of Material In this
Squadron is LCDIl II V. Dewitt,
Jr., assisting hint arc Aviation
Storekeepers (AK) who are train­
ed in the mechanics of the Navy's
aviation system.
The Material Department orders
and receives spare parts, inven-

lories equipment and administers
the operating allotment. Its duties
in the squadron arc indispensable
to efficient flight operations, lt
help* make national defenso a
bargain by eliminating waste and
improving efficiency.
POLICE PROTECTION?
FORT WORTH TEX. (IB) — Po­
lice are humiliated. While a hitch­
hiking youngster took advantage
of an offer to get a nap an a bench
in the police station, somebody
stole his suitcase.

Gifts Of Distinction
CAN ALWAYS BE
FOUND IN OUR
WONDERFUL SELECTION
Of

^

.

• DIAMONDS
• WATCHES
• JEW ELRY
• POTTERY
• CHIN A, CRYSTAL
• STERLING SILVER
AND

HUNDREDS OF NO VELTY
G IFT IDEAS

W IL LIA M E. K A D E R ,
JEW ELER
fgctttnek Q U aalaiiafl
rc m u m u n i
n» wont J
CmMjnpi

112 SO .

PARK

AVE.

PHONE 357-W

Every Day Is S U N - D A Y - *
IN B E A U T I F U L

SEMINOLE COUNTY
VACATION

HERE OFTEN

WE T H IN K YOU W ILL
ENJOY IT !

FOR HEALTH S
SAKE EAT M ORE
FLORIDA ORANGES
AND

GRAPEFRUIT
•

I

t

FLOOR SANDING •

FINISHING •

CLEANING •

____

—

•» -v.

•. *

•

PATRICK FRUIT CORP.

WAXING

H. M . GLEASON
■AST, FLOWDA

SUN SMACKED &amp; PARTNERSHIP BRANDS

GROWERS AND SH IPPERS
PHONE 1M2-W

SANFORD, FLORIDA

~ PHONE ItS

�.. a*-

^terijrujxl

J'howL

San^DhfL

S^wunjofa. £ minty.!

V

i'
■# ••

Eeminole County has a

Each' one o? tKe City,

charm .all its own with its

County and State Officials

many lakes and beautiful

listed below invites you to

St. Johns River—Hunting

visit this growing and in­

and fishing are prevalent

dustrial center . . and to

and popular as well as all of

consider making it your

the competitive out-of-door

permanent home . . .

sporta.

The following towns are
located in Seminole County:
Altamonte Springs, Bear
Lake, C’huluota, Cassel­

Seminole County is full of

berry. Fern Park, Forest

scenes like this to greet th t

City, Goldenrod, Geneva,

many visitors and prospec­

Lake Mary, Lake Monroe,

tive residents wlio prefer

Longwood, Oviedo, Paola,

Central Florida to all otEor

Slavia, and Sanford—the

sections of tKc state.

County Seat.
Each town extends you a
Nidial welcome.

CITY, COUNTY and STATE OFFICIALS
R. T. MILWEE
6U P T . o r

PU B LIC

M ACK N. CLEVELAND, JR.

INSTRUCTION

_

CO. A TTO RN E Y — ST A T E

REP.

JOHN L.
G A LLO W A Y
TAX COLLECTOR

VO LIE W ILLIAM S, JR.

SANFORD
F. DOUDNEY
.
TAX AISE8SOR

DOUGLAS
STENSTROM
STATE SENATOR

ERNEST COUNTY
HOUSHOLDER
JUDGE

JOHN
W . MEISCH
CHR. OF BOARD OF COUNTY COMIL

J. L.SHERIFF
HOBBY

OTIS COUNTY
E. FOURAKRE
COMMISSIONER

O.CLERK
P. OFHERNDON
CIRCUIT COURT

WCOUNTY
. B.COMMISSIONER
MILLER

STA TE

R E P R E S E N T A T IV E

I a1 *• r

_

COUNTY PROS. ATTORNEY

F.COUNTY
A. DYSON
COMMISSIONER

CAM
ILLA D. BRUCE
SUPERVISOR OP REGISTRATION

B.
C. DODD
COUNTY COMMISSIONER

AAACK N. CLEVELAND, SR

J. W CO.
. YARBO
RO UGH
ROAD SUPERINTENDENT

A

BETTER PLACE TOLIVEWORK. AND PLAY!'
'-

»**v -A

i____ :

+■*1''

-■*

■*

- _ _

�y fe c tfo n P

I

If You Are Eight Or Eighty You Can Enjoy Life A t Its
fu lle s t With Sanford , Seminole County M a n y Activities
f
W N W U l W '. ,&lt; m n v 1,1 1
,.* ^ r.‘V n ‘

in

[ i u k k i u j ? '*

u u \w

........
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The Municipal Zoo features Monkey Island. The St. John's River is shown in the back­
ground.

Many games arc enjoyed at the shufflehoard courts. The Tourist Club building is in the
same area.

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Here are two of the many lovely scenes that may be seen cruising down the bcautiiul St.John’s River. Green trees and intriguing cypress line the waters.

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A n aerial view shows the Sanford Naval Auxiliary Air Station,

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Paw t. PcHfou T

TH E SANFORD HERALD

Sanford A tlan tic
Serving Since 1928

The Sanford Atlantic Notional
Rank Jeclatcd a too per bent stock
dividend a* the annual meeting of
the stockholders which was held
recenti) This Increased the oank
capital from SIOQ.OOC to 1200,000
Bank president Robert J. Bau­
man teclared the past yeat an
extremely profitable one, and fore
east 19VI as a good year through
out the country.
He announced a change In the
par value of the stock from 1100
to 110 per share "This means
each storkhnlder will receive 10
shares of stock for aaeb one they
now hold.' he said.
In IM4. the Sanford Atlantic Na­
tional Bank was completely remod
tied within, and a tastefully moun
ted namr sign hung from the north­
east corner of the bank.
"We now feel that we are able
to give our customers even better
service than In the past," Baurrsr.
MARINES UNLOAD supplies and equipment from beached boa In. Thin In another func­ said, ••Iterating that, "It la the
tion which In being tau g h t Sanford Marine R eservists while they remain civilians. The trolley of the Sanford Atlantic Na-

nonal Bank to g ist our customers
the best service possible at all
•tmes.
“We appreciate the business of
Binlord in the past, and wilt be
ready io serve them in the future,"
he said
One announced change in the
tank a officers was the appoint­
ment of vice president R F Mann
•o the board ol directors.
Bank officers for the coming
year are. J W Shande, chairman
ol 'ha board. R I Bauman, presl
dent, R. F. Mann, vice-president,
R. W. Deane, eashier O. C. Mc­
Bride. assistant cashier and J. B
Roston vice president and mana­
ger of the installment loan depart­
ment.
Directors ol the Sanford Atlantic
National Bank are- R J Bauman,
George D Bishop. H If. Coleman.
L. I. Frailer, J C Hutchison, R.
A. Newman, H. B Pope, Ira E.
Southward all of Sanford, and J ,
W. Bhanda. Jacksonville

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

Severed Changes Have Been M ad e In Electronics
O P. SCHRODER ATI
e pait rear hai teen teveral
S
change* take place In the Electron
let Department of Fleer Aircraft
Service Squadron Fifty-One One
of the functloni of a Patron Elec
trunk* Division la the provision
and maintenance ol adequate thnp
facilities for repair of alroorne
electronic equipment To further
this end. thr ahop spaces have oeen
trloled in size and extensive pow
er facilities have oeen installed to
meet the demand ol more *qulp
men! la s' bench positions and as­
sociated teal equlpmenl was re­
arranged to provide maximum utilliU'on of the area.
With the shortage of men, rate
has become a more or leas Incon­
sequential thing am the work load
Is carried evenly by fed McDaniel,
aviatloe electrician first claaa of
Atlanta &lt; la, Charles King, avis
iron electrician third elaas of Tam
p«. and John Keene, aviation elec
trtrian of Jacksonville In the elec­
tric shot and battery locker.
Preventive matntmaaee check:

ironies technician third e la n . O r­
lando
U H Hollins who came lo S in
ford from NAS Glenview. Ill.. replaced Chrcle L R Cardwell aa
C.ectronlc* Ofllcci -ate tail year.
FEATHERS TAKENJ
-Oilman Thomas D.
Humphrey reported to police that
•ntruders entered the peacock pen
on hts estate and plucked the
plumes from the blrda.

DALLAS

training area utilised bp Central Florida’s Marine Reservists makes this type of training
possible

Alany Wonder
About Insignia
“By -----------“ MILLER,TDf
RUNNETH G
Many who hava passed llirough
the West doors of Building I,
NAAS, Ssnford have wondered
■bout the large circular Insignia
above their head.
The bolt of lightning shown sink
tng a submarine, overlaid with the
torch of knowledge, la the Insignia
of F l e e t Airborne Eleetronlca
Training Unit, Atlantic Fleet, and
It hangs outside the spaces oeeuled by a delaehmenl of that unit,
he men who make up this detach­
ment are training devices men,
rommonly known aa trademen or
TDs.
The TDs, aometlmes known aa
'pinball mechanics" in a joking
way, a rt assigned lo Fleet Air­
craft Servlca Squadron FIfly-one
from Fleet Airborne Electronics
Training Unit Detachment Two,
Jacksonville, and provide th e
ground training faclllliea for NAAS
and all fieri units aboard the base
"Training," "ATAB," " L i n *
8ILVER (.LISTENS In Seminole County's many lakes when Shack." 'Ground Training," "Avia­
tho full moon nhinea on bright d e a r nights. A local young tion Training," are among (hr
lady is seen silhoutted against the background as she is en­ names you might hear over the
phone if you should dial aatenaioa
joying R summer evening.
ttfl on tha baaa aachange.
Chief Floyd Dunlap'a boys pro

Growing families hove w way wf looking Sown a tow
towlI, oil of o euddenl Tbs wood for an osttro bed*
roost and gnsthsr bath.,, or at Issat a half hath, be*
comet Inaras singly urgent...but often the lack of toady
cash puts a damper aa plans to oapond the homo. Well,
It noodn'tmnot whan It la ao easy to wso our eonvon*
lent Budget Plus of Poyau nt. With tho Budget PI on,
you poy tor tho |ob la monthly turns, tailored to fit
your inceme, with up ta 9 full yarns to poy tho total

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ACCI JRATF COST [ S T I M A T E S

AN AERIAL WIRW of beautifal fl
Sparkling dear water, lush tropical
make thin park one of the eutatai

LUMBER COMPANY

ample gf bow maty M an ef radar
and controls of an aetua! air- air.
The Ultra-Bogie Trainer, a radar teterprataUca tea M provided aa
"Plying the range" la tba stmaUtiaa
trainer, la aaotkar as-1 Urn ground rather tkaa aML
provides many hours of laetnieUos an Mm ground that wouM
normally have ta M dona la EM

IN FLORIDA
YEAR ROUND

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PLANTATION ESTATES
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Advenlisf Church
Organized In 1917

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The Seventh-day Adventist church
of Sanford was organized on Sept
17. 1017 with Elder W II Heck­
man. President of the Florida Con­
ference of Seventh-day Adventists
in charge. For some months per­
vious lhi« group of 19 people, which
was made up of members of other
Adventist churches who had moved
into Sanford, met as a Sabbath
School. Other members were soon
added through study of Advent
truths.
Their first meeting place was
the Ohio House, then the Masonic
Hall. For the next twenty-one years
they met in th* Woman's Club.
In 1911 land was purchased at the
corner of 7th and Elm Streets. In
March the church building was be­
gun and in July the first church
sen ice was held in Die new build­
V1' #•% *{„&gt;■
ing. This building is now serving
the present membership of 55.
Adventists believe in Christian
education Their motto is “ train
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the head, heart and hand." In har­
mony with these beliefs a rhurch
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school was organized in September
h c .i i £ : ± 2 S t i ^ - . . • - . . i i t a
of 1952. That year the school with
i*&lt; seven pupils was held at the
ALL MARINES are equally adept nt comlmt readlnens. Here rlnc Instructors. Reservists of Central Florida will receive . home
of the Pastor. K. E MenMarine Reservists arc taught the operation of the .HO caliber, this training at their annual summer encampment at Camp I sing, and Mrs. Mensing was the
light machine gun under the watchful eyes of veteran Mn-1 Lejeune, North Carolina.
I teacher. The fallowing years two
rooms in the rear of the church
have served as schoolrooms. Mrs.
Elizabeth Carawan is the teacher.
The enrollment having outgrown
present accomodations, the mem
bers purchased more land at the
rear of the church for a school
building in 1955. and funds are
Seminole County U well repre- the command of Lieutenant Col now tiring raised for the construc­
i-cntrd in the rank, of the Marine oncl Warren It. Edward., a World tion of a modern two-room struc­
Reserve Leathernecks putting in War It Marine and presently an ture which is to be started in a feu
weeks One room will he used for
their reserve time at Central Flor­ Orlando attorney.
Major O. L. Uibb, regular Ma­ the school with grades one to
ida’* Marine Corps Reserve Train­
ing Center In Orlando. Marinrs rine assigned to the unit as In eight. The other room will serve
from Sanford, Oviedo and points .pectoc-lnstructor, serves in the as a welfare and recreational ern
east and west are landing— and rapacity suggested by his title as ter until such time !*nt it will be
will continue to land every other a liason man between the regular needed as another schoolroom
Sunday—on East Robinson Avc Marine Corps and the Reserve
in August. The training period Is
*uc in Orlando to learn the lore of unit.
actually an extended maneuver
10 soldiers of the sea.
At the present time six Sanford for the organization and it give*
Men in this area are attached tu men are serving with the unit.
hat is known as (hr Second Shore They are: Corporal Ronald S personnel an opixirtunity to put
into practice the things they have
irly Group Company— an organ- Colvin, Staff Sergeant Anthony J.
learned as a team in cooperation
alien trained in the most im- Rusal, rrlvat.,i First Class Ernest with other units.
rtant Job in any war— that of R. Canada, Alvin F. Thompson.
Recreation plays a major role
•plying food, ammunition and Ray C. Henderson and Jan M. in the lives of Marines and facili­
icr necessities to the men on Wallis.
ties are available for Reservists
o beach and in the midst of batAttesting to the quirk and com on the Marine Corps property. The
e.
plele training of the Reserve unit organization has softball, basket
America'* Minute Men carried is the record they've racked up hall, volleyball and other sports
heir own supplies— a powder in riHr and pistol mmpelion. walk­ for the promotion of physical well­
horn, a handful of home-poured ing off with first place in most.
being and health.
Members of Central Florida's
lead pellets and a good sired hunk
Congress has enacted two major
of dried beef with the makings of Devil Dogs receive training in laws which vitally effect each
tome johnny cake. As the coun­ highly specialized fields and in young man in the country today.
try grew older and the world be­ struction In a number of skills These laws have far-rrarhmg ef­
came older the problems of sup­ Each Reserve Marine (after his fect and require all young men
plying men In battle became more basic training) is given technical to spend a total ol eight full years
complicated. Wagons were u se d - training in some of the following in the service of their r mm try, be
whole convoys of them In the in­ specialties: Clerical, supply, auto ginning on the first day of their
DROP IN TO SEE US.
termediary wars of the nation— motive and.heavy equipment mec­ enlistment. It is possible for men.
hanics, weapons repairman, elec­ who enlist in the Marine Corps
and later trucks.
WE WILL BE GLAD TO
Wars across the sea require trical. photographic, crane, trac­ Reserve, to serve as much as
ships and planes for transport. tor or bulldozer operator and the three or even four years of their
SERVE YOU.
Military officials estimate each use of the pistol, rifle and mac- obligation before it becomes nec
man in modern battle requires two hinegun.
cssary for them to serve on active
One oi the highlights of a year of duty.
tons of supplies to maintain him
reserve training is llie opportunity
in action.
Some of the fightingest men in to spend two weeks on active duty
Next time you serve tamales,
the next war, If and when It comes, with regular Marines. This period pass a small Imwl of Parmesan
may well be supplied by Seminole is known a* annual field training, cheese to be sprinkled over them.
County men and men from other or summer camp, and Is held at Good!
Wholesale Confectioner
one of the vast training areas ol
parts of Central Florida.
The eagle, glohc and anchor the Marine Corps, rlthrr at Quan
100 SANFORD AVE.
SANFORD, FLA.
emblem flies proudly over an area tiro, Virginia, Little Creek, Vir
of the old Air Force Base on Fast ginla or Camp Lejurnr, North
SERVING SANFORD SINCE 1024
Robinson Avenue, where the Mar Carolina. Plans arc already being
ine unit 'meets for training under made for the trip to Camp Lejcune

Seminole County Is W ell Represented
In Marine Reserve Leatherneck Ranks
W E L C O M E TO S A N FO R D

H O W A R D BOTELER

THE SANFORD TTERAT.D

-----

MOVE SUPPLIES » - O n ! m l Florida's M nrhc Corps Reservists are loutrhf methods of
rapid movement of supplies from ship to sho e. In this phnlo students of (he Army's
Stnff and Command School watch the Marini Corps way of getlini; supplies and equip­
ment ashore. Marines arc world famous for their tactics

High School Band Association
Boasts Of Its Accomplishments

.SLINGSHOT MARKSMAN
SAN DIEGO. CALIF, (lit) - It
is no idle boast when Marine Mas­
ter Sgt. Frank O Freeman tells
recruits here at pistol practice
that he could do better with a sling
shot.
In one demonstration, he zrpped
expended .45 calibre slugs into
the target with his sling for a
marksman qualifying score.

After four years of organization ed by F. E. McCoy as president
(he Seminole High School Rand Mrs. R. F. Robison, vice-president
Association boasts ol many accom­ Mr*. II A. Fisher, Secretary, and
plishments to aid the High School Robert Rcely treasurer. The Board
Rand. Organizes! in 1951, Peter
llukur headed the group as presi­ of Directors includes the officers,
dent. Their main goal was to de­ Cowley, Bandmaster, H. E. Morris,
plenish a large debt against the principal ami Marvin Milam. The
hand. This was partly done by an Association sponsored " S m l n r v l |
auction sponsored h.v the asyocta-j .Skit Night" again this year mak­
tmn that first year During the *econd year, this group completed ing enough money lo provide the |
paying the debt try sponsoring an­ band a French Horn. The winner,
other auction and harbeque under of the best skit this year was the'
Howard C. Long
the leadership of Peter llukur Sanford Theatre Guild.
The S II. S. Rand Association is
again. Resides hrlping with small
Phone 388
items such a* letters for the hand a non profit orgamratinn formed
to
aid
the
Seminole
High
School
members, paying for the Salama207 E. Commercial
gumli picture amt music this group Rand troth financially and moral­
also provided Hie hand with a pair ly.
of cymbals, two parade drums, a
tenor saxophone, a set of tynpani
and two triumphal Irtimprts.
Martin Stinrcipher took over as
proxy hir the third. The school and
American flags were presented to
the color guard of the hand during
the first of this year hut the main
308 E. 1st S t
prelect for the association was to
send the band In Mardi Gras At
Ph. 417
first, it looked hopeless but after
a $500 contribution from L R
Mann the association started the
ball rolling by helping at the font-;
hall concession stand, the Elks
Barbeque and the Movieland spon­
sored show.
The "Sanford Skit Night" was
horn during this campaign. This'
helped lo raise some $.VX) for the
trip as well as create a unity be­
tween civic clubs. The Kiwanis
Club won first prize by presenting
the best skit. It was hojicd by the
Complete Service Facilities
Association the " janford S k i t
Night" would he an annual affair.
The Association did successfully j
WHIRL POOL
raise Hip money fur the trip and
the hand was oil for a gala time
AUTOMATIC WASHERS
in two Greyhound Russes headed
for New- Orleans, La.
SALES &amp; SERVICE
The Association this year is head-1

W ELL DRILLING

Winn T V &amp; Radio
PHILCO
MOTOROLA
ADMIRAL
G. E.

VISIT
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A IR CO N D ITIO N IN G

C o c k ta il

Lounge

D u rin g

S fu L Jta iA JL
and

R e sta u ra n t

Y o u r S t ay

In

SANFORD
ISN’T IT GREAT TO LIVE

Our unexcelled cocktails . . .delicious food . . . and
gracious atmosphere will make your evenings a truly
special occasion. Enjoy all the extras that make ours the
most popular spot in town.

IN FLORIDA!

LOBSTER A LL YO U CAN EAT

ROOFING AN D SHIFT MFTAL

$ 2.00

&amp; HEATING CO.
L.

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Section F, Pajr#

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TH E SANFORD HERALD
Page -I, Section F

Elks Wives
Organize
ForCharity

Railroad
Gives Much
To Citizens
The tremendous Importance of
the Atlantic Coast IJne Railroad
to Sanford and Seminole county la
emphaitied by the fact that during
the 1954 aeaion thousands of carloadi of produce grown In this
area were ahlpped to Northern
point*.
Seminole county I* one of the
itatc'i leader* In rail ihlpmenta
of vegetable* and citrui and the
1954 *ra»on ha* been no eiceplion.
Sanford ha* an important part
In Florida * ACL a* the headquar­
ter* for the Jacksonville division.
Its importance was emphasized
all the more when an entirely new
1800.000 railroad station, complete­
ly modernized and the state s only
air-conditioned one wa* placed in
ute here.
L. A Anderson, the district sup­
erintendent for ACL, ha* hi* home
hejn order to futhcr facilitate the
large movement of freight car* in
the Sanford area, the ACL in 1951
built a tlx-mile short cut freight
route from Rand'* Siding on the
We*t tide, to a point south of Sanfbrd and about three mile* north
of Like Mary.
Since 1939 the Coast Line ha*
acquired hundred* of unit* of Die
ael motive power of alt type*
lightweight pa»*enger train car*
and thousand* of freight cars.
The program of rehabilitating
and modernizing roadwny a n d
track structure began in late 1943,
when 131-pound rail wa* adopted
a* standard for principal main
line tracks.
The Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
comprise* some 5,500 mile* of
railroad tracks, extending from
Richmond throughout Jacksonville
Into the Florida peninsula, where
a network of branches Is operated.
It represent* the unification of
more than ion small separate rail­
roads.
•
The oldest constituent railroad in
the ACL as now formed la the
Petersburg Railroad, chartered by
act oi the General assembly of
Virginia on Feb 10, 1830, and by
special act of the North Carolina
legislature on Jan 1, 1831. It was
opened In ’833, and extended from
Petersburg to Blakely, N. C. along
the north bank of tho Roanoke

River.
In Florida, the ACL acquired
the Plant Rytlem in 1902. This
railroad was built by the late Hen­
ry B. Plant, pioneer developer of
Florida.
Champion McDavIs, president
of the Atlantir Coast Line Railroad
Co. in a recent pamphlet devoted
to fragments of history of the line.
Hated, “ In 1879 and 1880, Mr.
Plant acquired the Charleston and
Savannah and the Atlantie and
Gulf Railroad, and thereafter, be­
gan building a transportation sys­
tem which, at the time of Its ac­
quisition by the Coast Line in
1902 operated a network of rail­
road, a narrow guage road of the
and a l s o operate*, steamship
lines."
At Sanford the first railroad be­
gun wai the South Florida Rail­
road a narrow guage road of tho

■ANDIT LOSE! MONET
PHILADELPHIA OR) - 4 bio

HARRY CRIMM, of DeLnnrf, conducted a leadership train­
ing course In Hanford which included public speaking, group
dynamics, and parliamentary proceedure.
early Bo's which wa* later to be
replaced by the Atlantic Coast line.
President U S Grant turned the
first spadeful of earth for the
building of thl* railroad, according
to the writing* of Frederick II.
Rand, who at that time wa* presi­
dent o* the First National Hank
here and who had extensive land
holding* between Sanforvl and Or­
lando.
Mr. Rand was In Long wood when
the first trsln from Ssnford arriv­
ed there in June, 188(1 In October
of that year the first train reached
Orlando from Sanford. Dally op­
eration of trains began on Nov 13,
1180. According to the late W. R.
O’Neal of Orlando the population
of Orange county which then in­
cluded Sanford and what was later
to be Seminole County was 6,018.
In his "Memoirs of a Pioneer,"
Mr. O'Neal wrote, "The men who
had the vision of the Gate which
wai to be, built the South Florida,
tha Florida Midland, Jacksonville,
Tampa and Key West and Uic Or­
ange Belt, all now a part of the
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad. They
not only had the faith but they
contributed their time, money and
talents to the developing of the
state. Most of them were In middle
life when they began this work.
The men who had dreams of the
"days that were to be" were right
in every respect, for the ACL has
grown to be one of the biggest
names in Ihe Slate nf Florida and
will continue to grow as tong as
men have the initiative and the
will that made Ihe first railroad
track stretch to 5,500 miles.

Sanford Electric
Has Specialists
The Sanford Klcctric Co. was
ustsbhihcd In 1024 and Is owned
and operated by E. C. Harper,
master elcrtrician.
Specializing in general electrical
.-(instruction, maintenance and re­
pairs Sanford Electric has been
the franchlied dealer for G. E. ap­
pliances since 1938, and since that
time ha* maintained a complete
appliance service department, hav­
ing a well qualified group of elec­
trician* at all limei.
One of the other departments at
Sanford Electric Co. ii the T. V.
service repair shop, handled by a
factory trained expert.
The Sanford Electric Co. alio Is
one ol the dealera In Sanford hand­
ling G E. and Sylvanla T. V. acta.
I.ONGIIORNH IN ZOO
SAN DIEGO, CALIF. Git) —The
San Diego xoo count* two Texas
longhorn atccrs, named Villa and
Lobos, among its new attraction*.
They were brought here Vom
the federal government’s Wichita
Mountain refuge near Cache, Okla,
Zoo officials said the 230 there
represent about the last of the
sturdy breed, developed from catlie brought to the new world In
the 16th century by the Spaulard
Villa Lobos.
The too said It It tha only ona
in the west exhibiting longhorn*.

What's the name? You'll get
the same cut of meat—and • de­
lirious one — whether a steak
la railed Delmonlco, boneless dub
... ,n.

dlt lost mtney during $g attempt­
ed holdup at a clothing (tore. H«
purchased * $4 99 jacket and hand
ed Mrs Edna Rosen, S2, wife a
thl proprietor, a S3 bill. Aa ahs
turned to bend him the one cent,
change be pointed a paper bag a t'
bar demanded money. He said the
bag contained a pistol.

On Oct. 22, 1947 the Elks wives
met at the Club building to orga­
nise the Anna Miller Circle. Past
Exalted Ruler J. E. Rowland pre­
sided over the meeting and offic­
ers to serve until Jan. 1 were aletted a t follows: president, Mrs.
Leo nutner, vice • president. Mrs.
Tom llutner: secretary. Mr*. J. D.
McNeill, and treasurer, Mrs. J. E.
Rowland Jr.
The purpose of the circle is io
piomotr the Harry-Anua Crippled
Children's Home at Umatilla and
to help render better service to
those les* fortunate. Within the
first year, rummage sales, special
partir*, dances, and other activities
helped to raise a comfortable balnnrr in the tieasuiy for carrying
out the original purpose, making
tha 40 members proud of thair ef­
fort to benefit others.
During 1930 over $300 In dona­
tions was made to the Home aa
well a* additional money given for
benevolent reasons. Another pro­
ject of the club is to sponsor (&gt;
high school girl to attend Girl's
State In Tallahtssee each summer.
Members of tha circle raised over $9O0 In 1952 which was donated
t&lt; the Home for a steriliser and
an electric exerclie bed which ta
now being used to good advantage
by a 16-year-old boy.
One of the greatest pleasures c.f
the group Is the purchasing and
wrapping of presents which ar*
given to tlie children at Christmas
Present officers are: Mrs. Low­
ell Osier, president) Mrs. James
Rltkenshlp, vice-president; Mrs.
Marie David, second vice-president
Mrs. Richard Mapcs, recording
secretary; Mr*. Jamea Koolehan,
corresponding
secretary;
Mr*.
Wesley Flllmon, treasurer, and
Mrs. Harry Kant, chaplain.
Tho circle boast* a membership
of 71 ladies. Charter member* are
Mr*. Philip Goodspted, Mr*, ti.
J. Truluck, Mrs. J. E. Rowland
Jr., Mr*. Harry Kudell, Mrs. Ma­
rie David, M n. Leo llutner, bits.
Tom llutner, Mr*. Jcaa* Lodge
and Mr*. J. D. McNeill.
MARRIAGE PLANNED
HOLLYWOOD '^ -A ctress Mar­
ry Anders, 20 and television cast­
ing director John Stephens, 26.
plan to be married March 83. Sha
ia the actress who portrays tha
married daughter on Stuart Erwln'a TV show.

O. D. FarraU 110 ■. Pint
For to year* thl* itora bat
consistently oaaenrud th* tel
lowing yours:

Use* g*ya | * . a R Bill pm
S*tardavt 8 ate Is l &lt;38 p.tt
Closed trite |'M s m .

Saturday until 8 am Mos
CLARKS TOURIST Court in located on Highway 17-92 South.
YES MEASURE IT!
SAN FRANCISCO (IP) - This
city's famed Twin Peak* aren't
Identical The south peak It 190
feet above sea leva! — the north
6 feet lower.

FloriJa State Bank
Has Successful Year
At the recent annual stockhold­
ers meeting officers of the Florid*
State Bank were elected for the
coming year and the bank’s posi­
tion after what was termed as "its
most outstanding year’ wa* dis­
cussed.
Elected bank officials were: C.
||. McNulty, chairman of the
•ward T. E. Tucker, president;
W J. Pescock, Jr., cashier; Mrs.
M. R. Douglas, a*st. cashier; Ralph
Pezold asst, cashier; D. F. Loop,
personal loan officer; and Robert
Kilpatrick, asst, personal loan of­
fice;,
"The bank had its most outstand­
ing year, reaching peak deposits
of 87 800,000, pres. Tucker said.
Thl* snows a strong Increase over
deposits tact year totaling $6,300.
noo.

According to the bank's annual
report, ovr; 210.000 visits to the
nank have been made i&gt;y it* custo­
mer*. and accounts have Increased
by 1,423 onnging the total to 6,427 The report shows that $64,322,271 68 has been received In depo
sits, while the total amount paid
out in checks and cash come to
$62 833,006.’6.
TRAVEL TIME FLAGSTAFF. ARIZ. (IP) - E d i­
tors of the high school student
newspapers don't think their par­
ents had it so rough even if they
did have to ride horseback or walk
miles to school.
They noted that pupil* living in
dedona, 30 miles away, travel 43,200 mile* by bus going back and
tourth to school for four years.

"Many new additmns have been
aJded over 1954 reflecting growth,
expansion, education, progress, se­
curity and recreation,” he said.
"Among them arc a trust service
-rested through an affiliate, the
Bank of Melbourne and Trust
Company, tha personal loan de­
partment haa been moved to new
enlarged quarters an educational
program for employe* ha* been
instituted, two drive-ln and one
walk-up windows hava been added
to the bsnk'a facilities, Increased
insurance benefits have been pro­
vided for employes, a lounge with
restrooms and luncheon facilities
has been added for the employes
and music Installed throughout the
bank for the benefit of customer*
and employes."

Arcade Pkg.
Store

VACATION
IN
SANFORD, FLORIDA
AT

A R M IT A G E COURT
2500 PARK AVE.

UNCING

lU » S
a super lubricant

• KREHKY

PLUMBING

FA R R ELL'S

for outboards ,. •

HEATING

$
M. G. H O D G ES

better than oill

WELLS DRILLED — PUM PS
PAOLA ROAD

PHONB 7*0

Take It From Me

no spark plug fouling!

8M00THII PCRfOMMKS
*T Ml tPCEDI...

Dowlubr* eliminate* those dirty carbon Iry u lb
which impair spark plug efficiency!

attract Shu
fWe aoHT
wwv%*
THE CHCHKU SUCCCSS00
TOOK

. . . VISIT
SANFORD
Where Summer
Spend* The
Winter . . . .

sla w r trailing I
Ravolutieuary Dowtuhr
gin# to run at slower _
petroleum lubricant yoa

T H ER E IS LO TS O F
F U N FO R E V E R Y O N E

savas M l
Leaner mixtures ar* possible whoa
outboard motor* a n lubricated wish
Dowlube]

IIIEKT MKTAI, WORK
AND ROOKING

YOU CAN

Stafford fir English

PLAY

anginas lost hngarl

BASEBALL, TEN N IS

Roofin f f t Sheet
M etal Co.

Pistoa ring
ring wear, oaa
om major
cause a44 engine old afs, is

I by Dovlubd

OR GO SWIMMING AND
FISH IN G —

BUT

Stmtimac m i O m t^m i MrJ —

TH E BEST P U C E

W ELCO M E TO

TO

GO WHEN YO U W ANT T O

SANFORD, FLA

BE REFRESHED

LAND OP SUNSHINE

IS

WE INVITE YOU TO DROP

REYNOLDS

Warntr’s Golf Barrie*
Ml i M f t

------ D R U G S T O R E
.
PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS

coBNae

sms

ar.

Frabl* CHlaa Barrie*

a n d san po bd a vb .

Ayr

PHONE 81
*
___________________ -

1-*

__________

x

�-

the

Year 19515ecs
Big Improvement
In Cily Of Sanford

CAPT. J E. VOSE JR .

Capt. Vose Second To Hold Post
Since 19 51 RecommissionOf Base

•

Captain Jam ei E. Voir Jr..
USN, Sanford Naval Auxiliary
Air Station’a present Commandins Officer, ti the second Cap
tain to hold this highranking posi­
tion since the base was recommls•loned here as an Auxiliary on
May 1, 1951.
The forty-three year old Captain,
• holder of the Navy Cross, three
Flying Crosses and
Medals, took command of

BROWN MII.LBB
Const -------

B. T.

the NAAS on August 20, 1953. af­
ter completion of a two year as­
signment on the Staff of Command­
er, Air Force, Pacific Fleet.
Air Force. Pacific Fleet.
Captain Vose, a graduate of the
U. S. Naval Academy, class of '31,
is a veteran of more than 20 years
Naval service. Through subsequent
promotions, he attained the rank
of Captain on July 1, 1953.

o r r i s FOURAKRK
County CommUsio

J . L. EOBBT
County Sheriff

ef PnbHe
I

APPENDIX OPERATION
REVEALS THERMOMETER
4
WAYNESBURG. Pa. lit - Doe• t o r s operated on Lawrence Mylan,
•a, a retired coal minor, for appandldtto and removed a 4H*lneh
feiarmometer. MyUa said ha awallowed M » yeara ago. R atil!

f

PLUM WRONG
■tLEN A , MONT. (US) - Albert
L. Foster, M, took a bite out of
a plum white driving, decided he
did not like M and — without look­
ing — tossed M out. The plum
spattered against the windshield of
a ear, driven by Montana High­
way Patrolman Ernie DeDycker.
Charged with dumping garbage
on a public highway, Foster
forfeited a (10 court appearance
bond.

TALUABLE LIFT
TEX. «!*) awe
EDUCATIONAL DUMMY
• m glad I waa picked m&gt;,M said a gTATE COLLEGE. PA. ((ft) year-old Negro on lewd tor dummy U potting PbU Wcln, of
Sharon, Pa., through Pennaytvaa
I wne away nut la it U State University. Wetn, a junior,
and walktag into town." has been a ventriloquist since he
‘ tba UR waa worth «fa waa • yeara old and has appeared
on the stage, radio and television.

US

A. PA RK A T E.

sA x ro n n iikkalu
S ectio n F, P a g e i

Native Floridian
Marineland Guide

19.VI ha* proven to be the year
in which more improvements have
hern made to the utilltir* and
service* of the City of San'nrd
than at any time since the day*
of the boom over 30 years ago
The main portion of the public
work* improvements have been to
repair, extend. an.l improve our
water amt sewer utilities. This
was undertaken with the *ale of
$1,450,000 00 of Revenue t’crtlfic
ates. Such certificates are not a
burden to the general taxpayer in
the form of debt service, but are
carried solely on the revenue of
the two utilities. In this manner,
only the user* of the utilities pay
for the benefit* received. The cer­
tificate* were advertised for sale
in two portion* with the final re­
sult* being that $1,120,017.50 was
rcaiUed from the sale at an aver­
age Interest rate of 3.477. to 3.66%.
The improvement* to our water
system i&gt;ogan with the procure­
ment &gt;f additional well site areas
and the replacement uf well equip­
ment at a cost of $10,493 OO At the
Pumping Station, $14.631 00 was
spent for the construction ol a new
aerator and sinking an emergency
well The new aeratoi has proved;
highly effective in ridding our wa
ter of sulphur compounds. The lar
gest single improvement consisted
sr.-U iN ou: c o u n ty c o u n t h o u s e
if the erection of a new 200.000
gallon elevated storage tank on
Mellonvilie Avenue at a cost o r
$49,643 00. This installation has
just been com plete and should lo­
in operation within a very short
time. The distribution system of
our water department was extend
ed with the installation of tn new
fire hydrants and the addition of,
3 95 mdcs of 6" to to" cast iron
mains. The cost of this work was '
566,444 21 The water Improvement
progress reached an over all total
if $141,214 21.
The sewer project brought about
a major change in a city policy.
For years the sewer department
operated amt maintained the sys­
tem from general funds. This
meant that all taxpayers supiHirtnl
the system regardless of the fact
that they did or did not have sewer
services available to them. Under
the new policy, a monthly sewer
eharge is made to ail who have the
It r , DODD
It IV HI'ltNDON
P. A. DYSON
sewer system available to their
Count) Conran--.inner
County Clerk
County Commissioner
property. For resident, this charge
is s minimum of $t 65 up to $2 pt
S3! Al.l CHANGE CACHE
maximum monthly with rummer
cial users being charged 68 of
Mi l lio n Ml) — I’oliee counted
their water bill. The entire cost of
pomili ' quarters ami sliver dot
operation of both water and sower
tais lor seven hours alter (iiemeo
systems wili now be met from the
iound a hoard ol coins in a house
monthly service charges and there­
when- lluv wen* fighting a fir*. In
by furnish some tax relief.
half Im-ln-l baskets, boxes and pa
per
the coins totaled $3,119
The sewer project was under
65
taken for the purpose of furnish
ing service to areas that were for
riu* owner got himself arrested
ced to use septic tanks. Such areaf-r iiivc'tigathm when police found
are always a health menace as
his record showed 19 arrests and
septic tanks are never completely
nine conviction* as a number* ra
satisfactory In their operation.
ckei op, - .i.-r Rut the owner atuck
This is especially true during our
by hi* story that the silver was
rainy season and with our high
rolled ed over the years in a Im
water tabic.
bcnlshri v In- oper.iled
With this in mind, the City Com
mission undertook the task of in
M INING DUSTIN VI ION
Mating a project that will see the
HUNKS r lio t SIKH.I)| It
DALLAS, TUX. (dh — Entire
construction of over 26 5 miles of
County Ju d g e
JOHN MK!S( II
stopped a driver ami asked whero
sanitary sewers, ranging in size
Count) Commi' -inner
lie win going. Ilo vvlived bis luiml
from It Inches to 33 inches, and the
sidered
a
mils.mee
and
a
health
nml replied,
"A round mid v
installation of three pumping B il­
lions. The total cost of tills portion hazard With the installation uf a of Sanford We are n -t content to t o . I " Oil, is u g i i n l nml filed
of our public improvements will large pipe line, from 72 Inches to! say that we have done enough ilriv.iig vvii.ii* iutnxirnti-il ebnrgen
00 inches for 2.706 feet, these
reach $l,082.noo no
however. This present year I* a ngninst him.
All property owners ronnrrted faults will have been corrected beginning of a lim e quarters of a
to the sewer system will benefit The line, Initellcd at a r&gt; 't (ifI million dollar high ty prngiam
directly under the new system. One $114.164 45. will be capable of ear | witb the State
ting ovrr
third of the entire cost is in the ♦ylng storm drainage water frumj 2.5 miles of a C2 f - t sti -t on tin
this
area
at
tho
rate
uf
7,200,000
construction of a large Interceptor
i ranch Avenue ill# All thii
i
line on Second Street that serves gallons per hour.
and Improvements arc hrought a
The last portion of the piddle bout by the rapid growth and ex­
to collect all sewerage and carries
it to the Mill Creek lift station. At works Improvement has been the pansion of llie City of Sanford.
this point, tt Is pumped under pro- re paving of two of our most hea­
•sure for 620 feet Into Lake Mon­ vily traveled city st rets. During
ro# and dispersed into the channel the past year, the City Commis­
COFFEE VETERAN
at the lake bottom. This collection sion authorised the re-pavlug of
NORFOLK. VA
i - Coffct
system will go far towards clean­ Hast First Street and Sanford Ave­ Is Important in the Navy. Chief
nue.
Nine
blocks
of
these
streets
ing the lake front and making It
Armand II. Kirou.-e, chief lioai*
possible to use our water front fa­ were widened ptior to being re­ wain's mate s.iys it saved his lift
cilities to a much better advan­ paved. Tim resulting. Improvement at I'earl Harbor lie went Into tinhas been rlearly visible to all and galley early to pour some roffei
tage.
As a separate project, the City easily justifies the expenditure! of and seven others followed All men
of Sanford is also putting under­ $25.000 00 for this long awaited in tiie crew lounge they left were
ground a large drainage channel work.
killed hy a JapaiM • torpi lo which
in the east portion- of the city,
Such great stride* in publir struck tho old rru i'c r Helena Kirknown as Pump Branch Creek work Improvement! clesriy show ousc likes his coffee, especially on
For many years, this has been con- the.marks of progress for the City! December 7.

There's quite a difference h&lt;*tween guiding visitors at Marine*
land, near St Augustine, and work­
ing on aircraft engines for the U.
S Navy hut that's the story of
Clyde Stafford, aviation machin­
ist's mate third class, at Fleet Air­
craft Service Squadron Fifty-One,
NAAS Sanford.
Stafford, a native of St Augus­
tine, worked at .Marineland from
'949 until 1931. when tie enter** I
the Navy at Jacksonville, lie held
the position of Chief Guide when
he left, a job which placed him in
charge of five other guides. His
job also required that he do some
announcing over thr public address
system at feeding time.
Stafford does not agree with tho
oft-repeated story that a porpoiso
will eventually nudge a floating
survivor to shore lie says that
actually they are just playful at
heart anil they are as apt to push
a man out to sea ns not In tus
opinion, the barracuda is the fish
to be feared most.

KEEP IT
RUNNING
RIGHT!
SCHOLARSHIP FOR I’ROlMGY

KEARNY, N J. (lit) - K.irau
Helen Zdanoff 12 who was consul
ered a clidd prodigy at four, has
been awarded a scholarship to .stu
dy piano at 'lie Juttiai'.l School of
Music Mark Nevin of Maplewood,
the teacher who tested her eight
years ago. said:
"From the very beginning she
had demonstrated the unique traits
ol a child prodigy. She had an oar
for music, and could at once,
reproduce tunes A youngster with
such a flair for piano come* along
once in a great many years."
Use tile cooking water from
vegetable* in soups or grnvie*;
nr adit it tn a tomato juice rock(nil

J

-S V

WATCH REPAIR
All Mu (rite* rl«rt ronlrnll v timed
on our U .*itrl»inn*»l« r. &lt;ahim*e
from our wide ^election of
o fitch hand*. Com* In «nd
our u Ido variety of new
iitrhrs.

Walter H. Trapp
Jeweler
313 K. SECOND ST.

&gt;'VE BEEN
g e t t i n g

PLENTY OF
-

I

FI SHI NG AND
SUNSHINE!

WHILE IN SANFORD WE KNOW
YOU WILL ENJOY YOHKSELF!

FLORIDA HOT
SOUTH o r CLOCK

PM. *

Your Dreams won’t bo Just
“the big ones th a t got away”
when you fish in Florida’s
clear lakes and stream s where
the big ones are always bitingl

BURPEE SEEDS GROW

TELEVISION

Fertilizer
Garden Supplies

fW i (h i m ( of jm t aholgg while M r sto at is goatpMs.
Priced Frees 91M JS . T s . $1,171.00

AH you have to do to get
“SREVICE” with a capital is call

EASY TERMS
t M bs ru n

M ILLER RADIO
AND APPLIANCE

" a j

1444
H e n ry A . Russell Seed Store
PARK ATH.

BA N FO ni),

*

.v., .&gt;-»

FLA .

PHONB 41

\
t

Y E L L O W CAB CO.

i
*
- j

5k *7*

i
i

i

�*
ejn

T n E SANFORD I1ERALD

F n r r B. S e c tio n F
AMO

| ij, i A'.
/

v, •

f- '■.

New Hospital Finally Becomes Reality
A gual which took at least two
decades to be a reality Is speeding
toward Its finish— a new hospital
in Seminole County. The comple
tlon schedule is set for July 1,
1053 after which the II.IM.ooo.ou
hospital will be opened for service
In early fall.
This action coincs after much ef­
fort and hard work on thr part of
citizens of the county for modern
ricdical facilities. Time, energy
•ml money wa* unselfishly donat­
ed.
Definite plans In attempting a
new hospital in Seminole County
were started at a mass meeting
held in Scptcmbrr 1052, sponsored
by the Junior Chamber of ComBiorcL.
A committee was appointed to
atudy the situation which center­
ed primarily around a provision In
the will of Bert Fish.
Problem* arosa so tha commit­
tee decided (hat a bond issue
ahould be passed lo Insure the
construction of the hospital In the
•vent of difficulties.
. Reasons llstrd by the committee
■a lo having a hospital ware “( I &gt;
It Is vitally urgent that Seminole
County have • hospital. Our pre­
sent facilities are not only Inade­
quate but are deplorable. (2) In
the event tho Fish estate trusteca
find it Impossible lo build a boxIts! In the near future, we will
ave'n o means of constructing a
hospital unless the bond Issue Is
assed. (3) Several hundreds of
lousands of dollar* of Seminole
County money is going out of tha

(
S

cuunly each year for hospital and
medical care, which, if kept
In this county, would add ma
terialiy to the prosperity of the
people of Seminole County. (4)
Seminole County has only 15 doc­
tor! to care for approximately
30,000 persons. A modern up-todato hospital would not only keep
our present doctors here hut would
attract new doctors and surgeons."
Thr county board of Commission
rrs voted unanimously on Sept.
29, 1952 to place a proposal on the
ballot fur a general election.
After numerous other steps had
hern taken it was assured that a
total of $1,070,009 was available
for the project.
A sale of bonds was author­
ized for Nov. 17, 1953.
A preliminary sketch of (he pro­
posed structure preparrd by arch­
itect! E. J. Houghton Sr., Sanford,
and Janie* Gamble Rogers, II,
Winter Park, was *ent lo the Slate
Department o? Puhlie Health at
Tallahassee, and after numerous
delays and discussions, were ap­
proved.
Bid* went on Ocl. • and the tale
was held Nov. 17. Successful bid­
ders for the bonds wera Shieds
and Co. and New York Associated,
44 Wail St., NYC and Florida Se­
curities Co., at St. Petersburg.
Bond* wrre sold for $784,000 as
a $18,000 discount was allowed to
encourage bidding.
Rate of Interest set was S.M3S99
per cent with repayment on the
bonds to start la 1137 and con­
tinue 30 year*.

SPEND YOUR VACATION

CEN TRAL FLORIDA
For True Southern Comfort Stay A t

• BEAUTY REST MATTRESSES

Bid* were received by the hos­
pital truster* on May 20 and the
contract fur construction was
swarded June 14 to the Arnold
Construction Co., Palm Beach.
Harry M. Weir accepted Ihc posi­
tion of hospital administrator on
May 2(5, while at Pahokcc.
Tim cornerstone laying wa* held
on November 24. 19.14. The build­
ing I* being rnnslrucled of Roman
brick and *(tircn over reinforced
concrete structure. The first floor
will contain the kitchen facilities,
administration office.*, the exami­
nation room*, snack bar, con­
ference room* and a morgue. The
second floor will be set aside for
the Ncgrors with its own mater­
nity ward and delivery suite. The
third floor wilt be for white peo­
ple, with the same facilities. One
central operating roum will serve
both floors.
There will be 43 room* on the
third floor with seven private
rooms; one pediatric ward with
four brds; the delivery room and
maternity ward; while the other
rooms will he furnished with two
beds, thus making It possible lo
convert a semi-private room into
a private room by removing one
of the brds. On the second floor
will be 30 rooms, of which four
will be private; one Isolation
ward; one pedialrie ward for
children, and the delivery room.
The entire building will be air
conditioned end fire proofed, and,
as an added precaution, there will
be four fire escapes. The hospital
will face beautiful Lake Monroe
and occupy the block between the
Mellonville and San Carlo! Aves.
between First and Second St*.
One wing will be tille d "FishMemorial Wing" and the other
"The Femald-Leughton Wing".

"Seminole Memorial Hospital" to
distinguish it frum being a cuunty hospital. All dedicated rooms
will be rcslured.
Tho equipmeent (o lie used Is (he
must modern and up-to-date thal
U available, today. There will be
centrally piped oxygen, telephones
in private rooms, completely air
conditioned rooms, cystoscoptic
facilities, radiographic facilities,
two operating rooms, two delivery
rooms and a meals-on-wheels syastem will be used whereby food is
served centrally and brought to
the floor and served hot.
The Board of Trustees Includes
T. K- Tucker, chairman, Sanford;
A. R. Peterson, vice chairman,
Sanford; John Evans, secretarytreasurer, Oviedo; Victor Green,
Sanford; and Robert Bradford,
Altamonte Springs. The adminis­
trator Is Harry M. Weir and the
medical it«ff will be composed of
doctors practicing la Seminole
County.
The total number of employes
will be tfetween 73 and loo per­
sona and the estimated monthly
payroll, 114,000 to $16,000. The
estimated overall monthly ex­
penditure It $11,000 to $20,00.
Approval or accreditation by na­
tional approving board for hospi­
tal! la the goal of the Board of
Trustees and Medical Staff. Such
approval certifies that the hos­
pital and medical staff maintain
the highest quality of medical care
and alandardi.

Garden Club Works
On Mile Of Beauty
In 1926 a gai'l&gt;-n committee nag
formed in the Woman'* Club by
Ml*. Henry Wight, Mrs. E. M.
Galloway and Mi*. EmJor Curtelt
with this slogan "n palm, a I’ninirttin ami a hibiscus in each gar­
den."
llcfnrr the year wa* out thi*
l»crame a very popular committee
and it wo* decided to fnrm a Gar­
den Club independent of tho Wom­
an’* Club.
Meeting* wero h'dil at the For­
est Lake Hotel (Mayfair) with
Mr*. Henry Wight a* president.
It wasn’t long before It became
necessary to divide the club into
circle* a* the membership grew
so rapidly.
In 1923 four circle* were or­
ganized. Ro c, Central, Sanford
Heights, Mayfair Circle. The
meeting* wcie then held in home*
of mrmticr*.
The garden club becanio a mem­
ber of tho state federation in 1927
with fit member*. Tho Garden
Club in 1948 dedicated through
voluntary contribution* a room in
the Fcrnald lonighton Memorial
Hospital to Helen E. Curlctt who
so untiringly and unreservedly
gave her time, enthusiasm counsel
and deed to the hospital. Not only
serving her own community of
Geneva hut a ls o in physical need*
of Seminole County.
In 1944 plan* were drawn for
a much needed Garden Club

house. In 191(5 a Garden Center
was built on land donated by the
rity of Sanford adjacent to the
ladio station.
The Gardrn Club today work*
with the community In every way.
I* has plant sale*, flower shows,
clean up campaigns and numerous
other activities.
There are 1.1 circles anil another
or.e to be added later composed
e itlrely of Navy women. The Club
flower is the single scarlet Hi­
biscus and the purpose is "To pro­
mote such knowledge and love of
gardening a* wilt result in a more
beautiful community." The pro­
ject for the year I* the beautifi­
cation of the Lakcihorc Drive and
wayside Park.
The present officers are Mr*.
George McCall, president; Mrs.
Fred Ganas, vice-president; Mra.
O M, Flowers, recording secre­
tary; Mrs. Donald Jones, corres­
ponding tecretary; and Mrs. Zeb
Ratliff, treasurer.
The circles a rt a t follows
Azalea, Dirt Gardeners, Central,
Hemcrorallls, Camellia, Hibiscus,
Ixorn, Jacaranda, Magnolia, Mi­
mosa. Palm, Pioneer and Rosa.
T. E. TUCKER, left. chairm an of the hospital board, and M r,
The State Federation of Gar­ Arnold of th e Arnold C onslrurlion Co. look over th e bluo»
den Clubs Is working on Mile of prlnta for th e Sanford Memorial Hospital.
Beauty to beautify Florida'a high­
way*. Sanford It having t w o miles
of beauty starting a t Monroe
bridge and going along Seminole
Rlvd.

Reenlistment Pay
Adopted By Navy

A very liberal reenlistment bo­
nus program was adopted by the
Navy g short time ago and the
first m in to "ship over" in Fleet
Aircraft Service Squadron FiftyOne, NAAS Sanford since that time
is Robert H. Bramlett, parachute
rigger first class. Bramlett signed
for four more years on Januray
Under provisions of the new pro­
gram. men who are reenlisting for
(he first time since October 1949
will receive one month's salary
for each year of the new enlist­
ment. Those who reenlisted for the
days' pay for each year.
Even more recently, Thomas J.
Parker, yeoman second class, Ink­
ed an enlistment contract for six
years. Parker began his second en­
listment oa 31 January. His bonus
and muitaring out pay was al­
most 1300 morp than Bramlett,

SHOWN IN (he photo la Bill WicboMt bailiff checked out on
the new E astm an Type IV Roll Head p rin te r by Ray Bel*
iresentative. Thi a in th a
luche, E astm an Kodak Technical
• added to Wlcboldt'a
late st o f th e l e v equipment I
Cam era Shop,

TIIE PROCESS THAT
BRINGS BACK THE NEW
LOOK TO YOUR CLOTUKSt

P h ilip s
Colonial Cleaners
110 S. Palm etto

Ph. 481

I'V E C O T A S E C R E T !
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y IS
BEST

FOR

BO ATIN G I

M idget City- Is
Large Attraction
"Look, it's ao bigger thea a
minute".
That Is the sum tntnl dr*rrln-|
tlon of L. T. Crunk's Midget C ity ;
located In the Longwood area on
Highway 17-03.
The elty ii laid nut on a eoa-l
ereto fa tfo rm taking in 2,411
eouara feet of area and eurround* |
ed by a miniature railroad track
200 feet in length. Complete ta
every detail, it haa all the char*
acteristle of a metropolitan center.
A bank, stores, garages, houses,
shrube, pave (treats, tiny people,
bright eolorad autos, bams, busses
•nd ether attractions era viewed
by as many
MOO people a day.
Mr. Cmnk came lo Seminole PERSONNEL OP
Ceunty about 10 years age but to riffht ar* Mra.
tha aity was built In Ohte art*
finally a i a rock tard ea during

tha P in t Federal Baarlitfu and Loan Aaaodatten in Sanford
C. L. Powell. G aorft Touhy, oaacnUva vtca praaldant.

Burpee Co. Ships To Many Locales From Sanford
teas. If a dealer In Nerth Caraliae
wants a eartala eaipmeat at seed
he teletypes the iaaford effice sad
tha sand la oa Ua way la teas than
six hours. Many of tha aftds ship­
ped are east by air express.
Although tha Sanford office Is
asctealvgly wholesale thp W. .At*

N o Evening Is Complete
W ithout A V isit To:

phis, Pennsylvaala; CUaton. Iowa;
and Riveradate, Calif. Tha earn*
w * r th n o o r td .

.y;,;

I jn company wm tre t arganl
and te 8 5 , aad
torn B

s s a p a if e s

Penguin Dryer

lead Co. has froviag aad re­
search statlone ad Its awn;
- Employad at tha Barpaa Band
Ca. la Mr McCall manager; Tho­
mas George, assistant manager;
Mra. John JCeellag, head bookkeeper; Mrs. William Frank, aipl
Mian Freeds Calvin, secretaries
Mean Loegwefl. shipping clerk;
Oscar Merthte assistant dark, aad

SPORTING
GOODS

�•a x

Seminole High Band
Brings Fame To City
The Seminole High School UatrJ car (1st Lt) Ronnie Robison, Se­
item* from e long Une of bands in cretary 12nd Lt) Patsy Hauaht,
Sanford, (he first known communi Librarian (2nd Lt) Colleen Engety band wai directed by A. II. 'irctson. Publicity Officer. (1st Sgt)
Crippcn in IMS. Since then aeveral Bciiy Bryan, 1st Operations Asst
bandi have htlpcd to create the (1st Sgt) Larry Burney, tod Op­
public pride in Sanford. The pre erations Asst (S-sgt) Joe Fisher,
acut Seminolo High School Land Asst Librarian (S/Sgt) Olivia Gidwan reorganized by Bernard E. deni. 3rd Operations Asst (Sgt)
Black In 1847 when the member- Jimmy Brown, Drill Masters (Sgt*)
ahlp consisted ol 1ft pupil* that foe Fisher. Wayne McCoy and Bob
quickly grew to 80 member*. Uni­ Recly, Section Heads (Sgts) Colform* and im m inent* were ac­ icen Engebretson Joe Either, Mlequired during Mr. Black’* leader- key Durak, Fay* Beckham. Tom­
ahlp and the band entered It* first my Bower, Robert Newtom, Grace
contest In 194*. Making a first di­ Duggar and Robert Armstrong, and
vision rating at the District IV Cpl Leslie Smith.
Other members in the band a rt
Contest held in Cocoa, Florida. In
1MB the band went to Miami for Marilyn Calhoun, Gladys Hasty,
Barbara Lowe, Caye Stubbing*,
the State Contest.
Ernest Cowley, the present dir­ Wilbur Crouch, Faye Ashley, Marty
ector, came to Seminole High Cameron, Sue Hayes, Mary Pow
School in August of 1*51. He Im­ ell. Joyce MUam, Patricia Sykes.
mediately organized a booster club George Anderson. Bill Ilexamer,
consisting of band parents and per- Larry Payton. Richard Ti»on, M ar
tons interested la the welfare of garet Ellltoo, Carol Nutt, Billy
the band. Muck credit far the Bishop, Bobby Brumley, Byron
splendid spirit sad success of the Capehart, Cleitua Geiger. Tommy
band la due to this very active Ruteell. J. D. Stone, Evelte Bar­
Seminole High School Band Asso­ ron, Margaret Benhen, Eva Cociation and tbs principal Mr. Her­ ftcld. Irma Jean Corley, Peggy
man Morris. When the present dir­ Crouch, June Jennings, Delores
ector came tka student* wrote up Jones. Pauline Rant, Amoret Spcir,
a governing eonetHutlnn and reor­ Bruce McCoy, Wally Pope, Dickie
ganized s military student govern Rountree, Eddie Vance. Sidney
Vihlen, Teddy Welker, and the
ing staff.
The band program was accele­ color guard arc Neil Phillips, John
rated and by the end of that first Livock and At Phelps.
year the band and Its component
parts had performed M public and
MEMBERS OP THE Veterans* of Foreign W in* nnd nuxlllschool occasions. Wilh renewed In­
ary, are front row, left lo right, Mrs. L n u rrlln Mncek, Mrs.
terest and enthusiasm the band
Ruth Sm ith. Mre. Jeanette Jandoln. Mm. Mary Eplin, Mrs.
moved to greater height* the fol
Eater L av y , Mr*. M argaret Dillard, Mrs. Bernice Brown, M rs.
lowlag year (1952 1953), by per­
forming 1M time* during the school
year including achool assemblies,
six major concert*, ten parade*,
among them three atate parade*
(the governor’* lnauguaral parade
Husbands approve and wives im­ all of the Home Demonstration
tn Tailakaaaee, Urn Oaspartlla Pa
prove under the guidance of the dubs due to a change In Home De
One
of
the
moat
beautiful
icenic
rade In Tampa and the American
Home Demonstration P r o g r a m , ministration agents. Less clubs
Legion Convention Parade in O r drives from Sanford la ‘ the one which hat flourished In Seminole were recognized by the new agcnl.
Undo) During this year the ever that takes you through the old com­ County since 1*31.
The first agent appolntedvlo Se­
munities of Sylvan Lake and Paola
comical jug band waa organized.
Homemaking is a fin* art to minole County was Mian Josephine
in
the
western
part
of
Seminole
Then eame the big year for the
the 220 Seminole Counly women Boyditnn on August 1, 1931. She
Seminole High School Band. Dur- County. Being in the highest part who are Home Demonstration club was followed by Mrs. Gladys Kenof
the
county
there
are
boiling
the year a t 1852-1894 tha pride
members. Their dally achieve­ dell who began May 10, 193T, and
Sanford traveled lo New Or section* covered with orange trees. ment* In the wifely skills are con- ended her tenure the same year.
leans, Ll., to msrch in the Interns Paola Is approximately tlx miles sidcred so important that (he U. S. The post was held for a short time
tionslly famous Rax Parade of west of Sanford. One can see many agriculture department underwrites by Miss (lev* Andrews. In 1940
Mardl Qraa and upon return waa farms, ‘ranches, orange groves this program through the county the late Mrs. Ouida Wilson became
home agent and ah* wai succeed
aaked to givn a special marching sparkling lake*, beautiful hornet extension office.
ed in i9il by Miss Lila Woodward,
exposition while leading tha Festi­ and woodlands.
In
this
unique
movement
there
Prom the earliest recollection*
val of States Parade In St. Peters­
are it.* dues, or no specific mem­ who resigned In 1993.
and
records
tha
section
west
of
The present home agent, Miss
burg, Fla. Tht Mardl Oraa Parade
bership qualifications. Anyone may
televised (he Seminole High'School Sanford waa called Sylvan Lake Join ona of the eight elubi in the Wilson. Is assisted by Miss llattie
and
for
many
years
had
It's
own
Band through a national hookup
county: Hanford, Geneva, tak e Kirk who ha* served as secretary
In tha court house office for three
In every aUU In the union aa H peat office.
One of the first settlers, and Mary, Lake Monro*, Elder Springs, years.
marched through a throng at oao
Longwood, Chulouta and Upaala.
for
a
long
while
postmaster
et
million people in New Orlean*
Available to members Is a wealth
A history of the organization was
This parade alone haa given the Sanford, Thomas Emmet Wilton, of printed “how to' material, pub­ compiled recently by a group of
band a name aa one of Florida’* famous lawyer, lived In Paola, lished by the government, aad tha women meeting in the home aFinest high sehool bands. During then called Sylvan Lake. Mr. Wil­ services of a full-time county a- gent’a office. Of the group there
this achool year (1959-54) the band ton originally was from New York gent. Miss Myrtle WUaon, who ll were three with 21 years apiece of
mada 71 appearances and travel but came to Florida seeking a now counly home demonstration active membership.
favorable and healthful climate.
led a total of 1,500 mile*.
agent, meet* with clubs, advise*
Mrs. B. R. Gray of Longwood.
The band this present school year Coming to Sylvan Lake, he opened members on their home-msklnf who was Council president In 1937g
law
office
and
played
an
Import­
Baa already made a name for It­
problems and plans demonstrations 38. found in her lengthy record of
self by Joining with the Pep Club ant part in getting an extension on the latest methods In sewing, club servire that In 1939 she was
fbom
the
Orange
Bett
Railroad
to
to present outstanding pageants
food preparation, food preservation, able to upholster three chairs and
and extravaganzas at the high It. Petersburg and to Sanford. Ha home decorating and management, s aettee fur $1.50.
waa
president
of
the
Bar
Associa­
school football half-times. In Feb­
Normally, the work of the home
Mrs. S. E. Norwood of Elder
ruary, the band was again televla- tion in Orange and Bemlaok Coun­ demonstration clubs goes on quiet­
ty,
bank
director
of
Seminote
Springs recalled an early fad of
od aa they marched down tha
ly, the rewards garnered In the
taraeU of Tampa In tha annual County, and one of the largest pro- home. How*v*r, women are never making barrel chairs and weaving
Ihe bottoms from eat-lall blades.
rty owners in both eountlaa and
GaspariUa Pirate Parade. Thay
tha City of Sanford. Ha was also to be underestimated, even the un­ “ We also used wire great to
will attend the District IV Contest
assuming one* — ft I' the Beminote weave baskets and picture frames
In Dtland In March entering tea a member of the Sanford Herald. County Commission found out.
In
1900,
July
9,
ha
m
in
te
d
Dial*
and wa mada mattresses from
soloist and three aasemble groups.
In the fall of 1W* lh* Commission Spanish moss."
Other activities for the remaining Anna Fox a* Sylvan Lake. Mrs.
atill Uvea In the old bom* In thought they would lave som« mon­
Mrs. J . If. Tlndel pointed out that
ro a r w fl include the Leesburg Wilton
Paola.
ey by striking out an appropriation the Lake Monroe Club canned nine
Watermelon Postlval Parade and
For many years the community lo pay for the salary of a new barrels of kraut as their conlribua concert In the Million Dollar
cd Paola wai south of and adja- home agent, tile r a
tiff to World War Two. Also dur­
Baadsbell at Daytona Beaeb, Fla.
it to Syhrtn Lake, however, both created by tea resignation of Mist ing the war there were four can­
in May. This band hai tha distinc­
the Communities that once were Ula Woodward.
ning kitchens in the counly, under
tion of being the only band out*kla
called Sylvan Lake and Paola, are
Once tha word got out, telephones Uia supervision of the eztenslon of­
of the Daytona Beach Bands to now tailed Paola. It la believed
play annually in tha Daytona that Paola waa given it'a name crackled all over the county. There fice. At this time, there is just the
was an *«tra ru»h on the postnf- Oviedo Canning Kitchen in steady
Band shell eight year* In sueoaaby Dr. I, N. Bishop, formerly flee. Commissioner* found them- operation.
sian.
(ram Mow Vairfc City and who waa reives bombarded—telephone calls,
Seminole County now has tb»
Realising that tha Seminole High M among the Brat tertian.
postcards and riroet corner talks. distinction of hiving a member,
School Bihd la pari 4f the &lt;
Back k u s i famous health
In th tlr own goat)* fashion, tea Mra. George Otlo, Longwood, aa
munity as an ergsnliatloa they a rt
mart by tha u r n * of -pine ladles mid* It reugh .
president of the State Council of
always ready and willing to p m
Crnct I k ' waa (Rutted about
form at various civic occassiooa. Paola. On a SI a m path and adAa a final stroke of feminine geo- Home Demonstration Clubs.
Since 1951 this band has played Jainteg a Si a a n araagn grove In*, they worked up a covered dish
On ’he county level, Council of
the dedications of the farmers* Ula hotel waa tea famous meeting dlhner. Each fixed her favorite fleers are: president, Mrs. J. M.
Auction Market Building, Urn Ban- plant In ten winter for all touriets and moat tempting dish and the Dingman, Lake Mary; first vice
ford Tourist Club Building, tha
commissioners were Invited to din- president, Mra. ftlargaret Tlndel
American Legion Pair Exhibit
Boattef, howling on tea groan, bar. They ate and ate and ate, and BMer Spring*; second vice-presi
Building, the Memorial Stadium, h a m hack riding, hunting, awifo- afterwardi reinstated the appropri­ dent, Mre. Barney Guthaus, Chu
tee opening of foe Sanford Ball- ■ring and atear amuaemente m i ation.
luoU; secretary, Mrs. C. E. Wil
rood Depot Building and tha Con­ enjoyed by the guest*.
Miss Myrtle WUaon waa hired llama Sanford; treasurer, Mr*. E.
or atone laying at the Flab Mem­ A picture bulletin stated: "a In March, 1894.
L. Pulford, Geneva.
orial Hospital. To raise money and healthy and equable climate with
During the months the county
For the Aral time In the hlatory
also help m a te better civic dob continual broeari from tea OMf waa without a horn* ageat, clubs of Ihe organisation, a Seminole
■pity the hand aad the SHS Band or Atlantic, laden with tea fra- continued to meet and carry out County Chorus has been organised
Association sponsors a “Skit Night
aat aroma of pines and ora a te the aatension program as best An eighth club, the Upaala club,
Contest" each year. This Includ­
was recently started.
Mioms. the forest and prairie they could.
es entertainment given by each full game, the lakes abondtng la
AD
the
community
dubs
are
re­
The janlor home demonstration
d u b la eaateat with one another Ball, sparkling spring water, eeal
gpd o prise Is awarded the evt- tight* and In aooeoeo of trouble presented la tha Beminote County work, la which the school-age girls
Council of Home Demonstration Isara tha skill* of good home-mak­
•taadiag ahtt presented.
insects, will give the visitor unex­ dubs, which waa organtead In 183ft ing, constitutes the 4-11 program.
Meritorious awards are given to celled ckaacoa for healthy aaordoo with Mrs. Endor Curtett of Geneva After almost a complete lapse dur­
octetoadtng beadsmen c a n year. and enjoyable past tim et durian aa prtfttdenL This united ’he nine ing (he absence of bom* agent In
T in aovOfod award which la gle­ tea day aad quiet refiuihlag iU*p dubs active at that time: Altamon­ the county, lnteroat In 4-H work
an by Powtey oath year wont to duriag tha eig h t"
te, Forest City. Laka Mary, Long- le aow growing by leap* and
Boalrteo Bilbao In 1MI. CapUia
“ P lat Croat tan " U no tenser wood, Paola, Lake Monroe, San­ bound*. Since March, 1184, l l 4-11
Co m Wilkineon In lifts and Captain in Paete but tha pleasure enjoyed ford. Oviedo, Chulouta, Geneva,
cluba have been organised la eight
M onfo Ooombd la 1SS4 Tha bead by the vtattor of U te can atiD be
Duriag lttT-M the Oaunetl waa achoola with M members. They
la ran by it* own student aUK. enjoyed In this tax-free community inactive part af tea yaar, as waa la turn have formed a 4-H Council,
H i s year's officers include: Captalp Mickey D erek Head Girt al­
Paola la fortunate in having flat
t a r (id U ) Oarmdiae WUktasen,
Dram Mafor and Operations Otfti L •
1 1 ■»

BeautifuL
Scenery
In Paola

K

?

E

'Announcing
Whae you ask for e reply by wire, jroa
GET THE ANSWER
-G E T IT FASTER!

TH E OPENING OP RIDGLEY
REST HOME, CHULOTA,
FLORIDA.

WESTERN UNION

IIS W«M M

•

TELEGRAPH

WESTERN UNION

M M . HELEN M. RIDGLEY
OWNER AND OPERATOR.
HOME 18 NON - SECTARIAN.
RU AND LPN IN CHARGE
OPEN HOUSE AT ALL TIMES
DEDICATION SERVICES W E R l
HELD SUNDAY FEBRUARY ST.

•
•
•
•

|

M.

.i k .
• V. g

»

,

Ever Have An Urge
To Take Jeep Ride?

Dorothy Higgs nnd Mrs. llctly Smith. Hnrk row . left lo
r ig h t, Michael Jiin d o ln , Melvin S m ith , t ’hrsicr Mnrck,
Ernest l.n v y , Itn y m n n d Higgs, Hank T liu rsm n , Michael
Thomas an d G eo rg e llagan.

Home Demonstration Program Approved By All

y

DONT WRITS

Section F, Pag* T

TTIE SANTOTIT) ITER AT.!)

needed hy Retie Jean Robinson,
and their first meeting in January
of tills year was attended by over
HO. in the prrrcding year, 41
girls from this county attended
(’amp Mr()uarric 4-11 camp, and
six attended Ihe 4-11 short roursr
at rallahaxsec. Clothing, food and
nutrition are their principal pro­
tect*
Senior home demonstration work
theme this year I* “The Home."
In Ihe spring the Council roo|ierates with fair officials in contribu­
ting exhibits nod demonstration*
during Fair Week. Later In the
spring is Ihe annual dress revue,
Achievement Day, participation in
state competition and the elate
Council meeting.
Throughout Ihe year Ihe varioua
home economic projects occupy
members This is best explained
by survey figures based on an
right months period in 1951 Dur
ing this time there were 1,499 new
garment* made by inemliers for
their families; 450 Jars of celery
relish were made far Hie Sanford
Chamber of Commerce; 5oo pounds
of slaw for Navy Appreciation Day
There was also emphasis on health,
safely and fire prevention, Inter­
ior and exterior home improve­
ment and handicrafts.
Reviewing their work, home de­
monstration members believe “ on­
ly those whn have Ihe patience lo
do simple things perfectly, will uen Ire (he (kill to do difficult
lings easily."

a

M lirnifA ST COWRDT
SPRINGFIELD. S. C. ((*) -O ak lihontd cowboy Howard Watson
haa made the jump from the wide
open spare* to Orangeburg counly
wllhoui a hitch, draw * hy Ihe
South's Infant rattle raising indus­
try
He ran.e here from lending a
big Angua h*rd on a 7,500-arre
ranch to 1™k after joo Aberdeen
clugua cattle on the Longleaf plant­
ation farm.
Say* hr fed* right at home even
If he'* no longer on a horae 12
hour* a day at waa the ease on
the big spread near Stillwater,
Okla.

'

r

“

The Lake Mary of today first
began hark In 1870 when a man
named Rent settled In that vlrlnl
ly. Tlie town’s first name was his
own When the narrow gauge rail
road which later became the Allan
tic Coast Line was built, a sta
tinn was put where (he town now
stand* ami was named "Rents."
In the same decade which
brought Rents, came Judge Mc­
Donald t’aramoro, a civil engin­
eer. A townsile was surveyed. II
began where the present school
now stands and ran south along
the West shore of I-ike Mary. The
town wa* named Relic Fontaine
In about imho Dr W. II Kvans.
(he father of Frank Kvans. eame,
and the name was changed to
Lake Mary.
At about the same time Gener­
al Sanford started n grove develop­
ment which he railed llelalr about
two and one half miles south of
Sanford in Ihe direction of Lake
Mary. The railroad built a depot
there approximately twice the size
of Ihe Lake Mary station. Two!
miles south of llelair another sta-1
lion was built ami ii.illcd Crystal
Lake. Then eame Lake Mary. A
mile south of Lake Mary was Sold
ler Creek Stalion.
Lake Mary's first postmaster'
was named Webster. In addition;
to handling the town'* mail he was j
railroad agent and keeper of a
general store. He worked at alii
three of these tasks until 1013
when hu was killed by an express
train.
(lack in IHA0 a Dougherty haul
served as one of the town's mer­
chant* for many year*, he sold
out to Mr Sjoldoni. In 1918 Mr. |
Sjoblom platted the town's first
subdivision and railed it Modern1
Woodman's Homes The name was |
later changed tn Crystal Lake win
ler Homes. After that many xuh
divisions eame into being. The
town grew in leaps and bounds
and today is a thriving roinmunity
of beautiful homes ami spacious
living.

dump for needed piece* of furnlture Uke a w ithstand and a couple
of chairs.
Several hundred feet of damaged
electric wire was also on the dump
and it gave the boy* a brainstorm.
They spliced and patched it suffi­
ciently and ran It along the ground,
up tree*, and even under a dirt
road before hooking it tn with tha
elertrieal circuit at a nearby trail­
er camp The camp owner must
have been a poor businessman be­
cause he didn't even suspect the
"hitch hikers” who were sending
his electric bill up. The tent waa
blessed with electricity for two
months before the boys decided to
come home.
After five months in the Terri­
tory. they started back to the
state* Ute In October and arrived
in Grand Rapids about November
1st Since winter starts In Septem­
ber up there, they were forred to
drive through some bad snow­
storm* along the Alcan Highway,
Doug recalls. Asked If the pair had
any rinse rails with wild animals
or weather on the famous road, he
replied, “ No, nothing that wo
thought was a close call at the
time. Of course, now I doubt If
I'd even attempt to do the thing*
I did then.”
The whole idea of a trip to Alas­
ka. Doug says, had always been ex­
citing tn Marv and himself. They
were both avid and ouhioorsmrx
long before they were through with
school. While attending Grandville
High, the boys played only baseball
because “ there were no hunting
•nil fishing seasons during the
wlnler."
When asked for some of the trip'*
highlights which he remembered
most, Doug ram e up with: (1)
They had tn pay as much as 75
rents a gallon for gas nn the Alcan
Highway. Reason is that gas is
piped south from Anrhorage and
north from Edmonton, Canada,
making is very expensive a t you
near the half-way mark. (2) Usu­
ally met about 8 or 10 ears a day
on the Highway. Doug says you
always stop to hrlp if you see
someone with ear trouble. It's like
"one big happy family of travel­
er*.” (3) Mother was irared about
boys making trips; father thought
it wa* a good Idea. (4) Loti of
Grand Rapids boys did the same
thing after Doug and Mnrv broke
Ihe Ice. Mel several In Alaska af­
ter Doug's mother sent them
newspaper clippings. (5) Three
months of tha year the weather la
Anchorage la nice. The Japanese
Current* make the city warm.
During mid-day In summer, the
boys could wear T-shirts or no
shirts at all. Rut by I in the after­
noon It usually had cooled enough
tn require a Jacket.

RAYMOND M. BALL, Realtor
B.

II . IIIGIILKYMAN.

ASSOCIATE

IN SANFOUI) SINCE 1925

EVERYTHING IN REAL ESTATE
AND INSURANCE
201 PARK AVE. SOUTH

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V

Lake Mary Staff
Was Back In 1870

Ever have an urge when you
were a kid lo load up a jeep with
food, grab a rifle and a fishing rod,
and take off for Alaska? If you did.
you were no different than Doug
lloekzcma, disbursing clerk second
class, who is in charge nf the Fasron-51 payroll at NAAS Sanford
Disbursing Office.
Tiie difference is, Doug’s one of
the very few who didn’t change hi*
mind.
Doug and his buddy, Marvin
Markham, both 17 at the time,
finished high school in Grandville.
Michigan, a suburb of Grand Ra­
pids. on June 9, 1949 and three
days later began the 4700-mile
trip to Anchorage, Ala«ka. They
had made plans for the trip for
nearly a year, so after graduation
they didn't waste time getting
started for that “last frontier" they
had read so much about in out
door magazines.
Taking advantage of the wonder­
ful hunting and fishing opportuni­
ties in Canada and the northern
U. S along the way, the boys
slretehrd Ihe trip from a normal
8 days tn 14 days. After all, they
were in no hurry.
Rrtwrcn them they had started
with nearly $900. This was enough,
they thought, for their nrrds until
they rcariusl Anrhorage and Doug
could contact his uncle concern­
ing a Job. Rut when they arrived
and found that Job* were not very
plentiful, they were a little diienuraged. However, with true boy­
hood aplomb they met the setback
squarely and rame up with a cle­
ver selieme. They decided to go
fishiiiK! And so they did • • for the
next three weeks.
(Mien they finally realired that
Hiey were not going to tie able to
balance their diet much tonger
without a job, they act out to do
something about it. That's hour
they happened to become section
hands on Ihe Alaskan Railroad.
Imagine n couple of furzy cheek­
ed teen-ager* traveling around
Alaska on a converted troop train
with a pack of tough, hard-drink­
ing Eskimos an.I Americans, many
of whom had left the U. 8. for far
different reasons than had Doug
and fttarv.
"II wa* rough at the time” ,
Doug muses now, “ but we sure
learned a lot about the world in a
very short time."
After eight weeks of liark-breakIng work nn the railroad, word
came from Doug's tinrle that there
were a rouple of ground crew Jobs
open with Northwest Airlines In
Anchorage. Needless to say, they
grabbed them.
High rents and costly elcrtrieily
m Anchorage didn't faze the hoys.
They Just pitched their tenl out­
side of town rummaged the city

JAMES B. GUT

Moughton
Insurance Agency

H

601 Hanford At tea Ik National Bank
P. O. Box 111
•
PJm 111
SANFORD, FLORIDA

J

■m•; „ •

‘ _____
*
m

�t

T H E SANFORD HERAf.D

t j Pnge 8, Section F

MORTON FELDSTEIN. wtntioned a t Sanford NAAS, hW h
■ fine ppcrimnn of a fish **h!ch l.a offered In th e lakes of this
County

JAM ES R. Eldson and Ed Mlnlard, nUtloned aboard SNAAS.
proudly hold up a strin g of bass caught h e r e . _______

UDC

Named After Howard

United Daughter* of the Con­
federacy waa organized April 11th,
1021, The founder waa Dr. Nor­
man doVere Howard for whom tho
chapter la named.
U waa founded on the beautiful
gpirit of love and each year haa
put forth It* beat effort* In edu­
cation. historical, benevolent and
•octal work. The beauty of thia re­
membering la that time kill* all
Bitterness and hatred but It doe*

miter* of the Confederacy la not to
keep alive the ugllneaa and ill
' fasting of the war, but to cberlah
the memory of the gallant soldSen of the South and their loyal
wtvea, and hand It down, a prot dona heritage, In order that cou­
rage mar be kindled in their childraa's children by the remember
asce of the aaered flame.

‘ ;wF~M W mmm~

le w e f

n .i n f M e r

mi

Claude Herndon, Mrs. J. StClalr
White, Mra. A. K. ftoisctter, Mr*.
W P. Carter, Mra. A. B. Wallace,
and Mra. J. M. McCaskill.

Junior High
2nd Oldest
In County
The Sanford Junior High School
la the aecond oldeat school in Se­
minole ' ’.ounty. It waa built In 1910
and used as a high school for severa! veara At present It la being
used as a Junior High School with
15,1 children In the seventh grade
an .1 t.v In the eighth grade.
There are five seventh grade lea
chcrs and four eighth grade teach
era In the school The seventh
giadc teacher* arc Mrs. E'lzabeth
Guthrie. Mrs M a r y Elizabeth
Thompson. Mr. E W Roger*, Ml**
Adelaide Richter and Mr*. Anne
Samuel. The eighth grade teach­
er* are: Mr*. Ola Cochran. Mra.
Belle Rumblcy. Mrs. Virginia Bur­
ney and Miss Gcorgens Hart. Mrs.
Anabel Fleming teaches music,
Mr Howard P Gordie has boys
physical education, and Mr. Perry
Itrrmst is Ini'nictor in band.
The Student Council, made ui
of two representatives from eacl
room has charge of the extra cur­
ricula activities of the school. The
member* are president—Charmlon
MlUer. vice-president — Howard
Andrews; secretary—Janet Glenn;
and treasurer — Jimmy Graeey;
7tli grade Sec. 1 - Mra. Guthriefanet Glenn, Jimmy Graeey, Sec,
2 — Mr. Rogers Sharon Hervlah,
Ronnie Whitten; See. 3 — Mrs.
Thompson — Carol Stewart, Brook*
Adam*: Sec. 4— Mias Richter —
Marilyn McDaniel, Curtis Lee;
Sec S — Mrs. Samuel — Kather­
ine Carlos, Earl Summerill; 8Lh
grade - See. 1 —Mrs. Cochran —
Chris Case Gary Baker; Sec. Z—
Mr*. Rumblcy — Charmlon Miller,
Clifford McKibbio; Sec. 3 - Mra.
Burney — Joyce Benton, Gene
Smith; 8cc 4 — Miss Hart —Pat­
ricia Clark, Howard Anderson.
Each year tho studonti of the
junior High School sell subscrip­
tions to magazines and use their

E.

Sanford Boat, Ski Club Enjoys County's Lakes
In a land of many tropical lakes
and rivers, it la only natural that
we find an active and enthusias­
tic boat club. The Sanford Boat
and Ski Club was organized for
the purpose of enjoying the many
miles of waterways In and around
this beautiful city
Although young in years, the
organization has don* much to
create and further interest In wa­
ter skiing and boating in this area.
As a group centered around family
activity, the club waa Instrumen­
tal In the building of the first pub
Uc boatlanding ramp and picnic
area In Seminole County.
From the landing ramp, loca­
MRS. W. F. HOCK FORD d is p la y a Hiring of 17 nhad caught ted at the weit end of beautiful
Lake Monroe, the club launches
In Seminole County w atent
many of Its picturesque cruises.
share ot the proceeds to purchase serve* nutritious lunches to Z2S Starting at Sanford one can traequipment used In the school. Two children dally
recent purchases are an electric
This season tfcc Junior High bas­
water cooler and a high powered ketball team coached by Howard
CAT COMES BACK
mlcro*eope
P. Gordio scored 210 points to its
REARDAN, WASH. « * ) - Ho­
The school boasts a band of opponents 162 points.
mer the alley cat who wouldn't
young musicians who play for
Rehearsals are conducted for take no fot an answer Is back
school programs and other activi­ •he County Music Festival and the home and they're going to let him
ties.
Junior High Spring Frolics held stay.
Mrs. S. O. Chase Jr., assisted by each spring under the direction of
Homer showed up at the Lewis
mothers, handles library facilities Mra. W. G Fleming.
McKay house six months ago. The
for the students Helping her are:
The P-TA with Mr*. J. P. Wil­ family already bad a eouplt of
Mrs. Glenr Goember, Mra. L. P, son as president cooperates In cata but thay let him stay for aGarner, Mrs. C. E. Piercy, Mrs E. school activities and sponsors par­ while. Lait month, though, they
C. Williams, Mrs. J. P. Wilson, ties at the Youth Center. A visit gave him to a Garfield, Wash,
Mrs. Sol Gordon, Mrs. Henry to one of these parties would con­ couple.
Schumacher Jr., Mra Ira South­ vince anyone that the children are
Then Homer came back. He ap­
ward, Mra Ray W Herron, Mrs.
parently walked the 60 miles from
having
a
good
Ume
and
at
the
Robert Miller, Mrs. W. A. Kratzert, Mrs,' Leslie Clark, Mrs. Joe same time are learning approved Garfield. The McKays say they
will keep him now.
Moss, Mrs P. H. Colbert and Mrs. social behavior.
A. M. Remusat.
The school lunchroom, under the
supervision of Mrs. Irene Sewell,

$ S £ L Jo D iL tL .

ACCORDING TO PLAN
BOISE, IDAHO (iAt) - An un­
scheduled touch of realiim waa
added to a civic defense teat.
The script said three Snake Ri­
ver bridges were out, wrecked by
Imaginary bomba. But on the da*
o( the teat, one of the bridges real­
ly was knocked out. There was
nothing imaginary about the truck
that broke through It.

OUR SPECIALTY

SANFORD FISH
AND GROCERY
FISH ,

OYSTERS AND MEATS
219 SANFORD AVE
PIIONE 802

vei down the one nundred and. The cluo was formed In Kebru
torty mile* ot Flor.d- * Si Jd.ii)»iji&gt; iui&lt; and immediately began
river as It winds Its «•*&lt;• to Jai-V sn effort »o create more local in'
sonvllle, anc, empties Into tho At­ tercst, the members, with some
fine talent, put on a ski show for
lantic Ocean.
the benefit of the Seminole lligh( W
&lt;?rhi*ol band's trip «o the M ardl
DOUBLE DLSTRUtT'O.N
Gras in New Orleans.
MCKEESPORT PA UT) - In
Aflei this, the club began to
t963, the nearly complete residence grow and enjoy many outings on
which Mrs. Annabelle Fagan was the local waterways. As It grew,
having built next to h*i home burn the club gained recognition In Cen­
ed to the ground She ordered an
other house on the same site. Now tral Florida and was asked to Join
that house haa burned to the with other sueh clubs In promot­
ground, too.
ing several large erulses which
Origin of the blazps could not be have received publicity In sever­
determined
al national boating magaxines.

•

Relax over your favorite, ta s ty dish aw ay from

th e w eary w ork of your kitchen . . . . F o r • real tre a t
dine a t —

C ELER Y CITY G R ILL
215 Magnolia Avenue

FISHING IS IDEAL IN SEMINOLE COUNTY- ITS ONLY A
FEW MINUTES DRIVE FROM SANFORD TO THE FISH
CAMPS BELOW

Ik e

ffanlzatlon of which aho belong*
With the blood of aoulharn he roc*
coursing In her vein*, bone of their
at and fleah of their fleah, ahe
tarda the organisation which re­
ted from their noble and aacri• when tho South waa Imperiled,
• priceleaa heritage." aaya Mr*.
Yarbrough of Charlotte, N.

SEMINOLE
CAMP
SCHOL

CAMP

m
r 1%0 UDC seeka first to honor
'the memory of thoae who aerved

CROWES
CAMP

SANFORD

util thoae who fell la the aervlce of
^Ua^Ooofoderacy atatea; to prated
&lt;»aai: mark plaeea made historic;
'■'•0*collect and preaerve facta (or
truthful hlatory of the War between
thb'iUtaa: to aee that it la taught
aamctly In schools; to honor the
jadifoUam and courage of Southwomen during tho years of
’&amp; 3bii second point la to fulfill the
sUherod trust of beneroleect toW d tho aurrlvora and their de,d5She third point la aselat descend
I fourth objective la memorial,
aaaually days art observe
tha honored d u d a n rememl with tributes, music and
• fifth and final object Is to
into the membership of the
r all women eligible to this
laps privilege aad to promote
’ cherish link* of friendship
aoa n u t* ua In the great chain
U« mighty organization,
iapalty to tho Truth of GoofedS . Hlatory" la the watchwc &lt;!
jp. Daughters and their maj.:
Mve la the ptetenrsUon ol
H and reliable facta of that
i f Am eritu history made b*
ponthiathobaU ddgafU lM

l

•ford tha UDOaa

n r s u ia ,

CROWES CAMP

HUEY'S; CAMP
1
s

O m 4m
- mm ■

■•

sm I p j

B

11
Ml

�'

^mtfard Itmtld

Shop and Save
In Sanford

_____________ Adi INDEPEN D EN T DAILY NWWBPAPKE

BatahMahod IBM

j A N T O H ^ r L O R ip A ,

C i t y Museum.
Topic O f Meet

We a f her

~\

O enr tn psrtTy steady sod terntinned mild through Wednesday,
few showers extreme north Wed­
nesday, iowtat tonight gg-m,

*

TUESDAY, MAR. 1, 1955

Viet Nam Assured
Of Massive Support

Members of the committee seeking construction of the General
Sanford Library and Museum will further discuss ths project with the
City Commission Friday night.
The commissioners discussed the memorial among them selvae at
their regular meeting last night, but decided to adjourn until 7:30 pan.
Friday ao that they could hear
from the committee.
Randall Chase has been one of
the prominent figures In the mu­
seum campaign.
A site In Fort Mellon Park has
been designated for the memorial,
which would house the library and
effects of the late Gen. II. S. Sanfordfor whom the city was named.
INSPECTION—Shown inspecting the (squadron are, left to
During last night's light ses­
Suggestions Get
rig h t, Cdr. I. G. P e te r s Cdr. F. II. Speltz, nnd Cdr. Weidlein, sion, the commission was told that
An official of the Southern Bell
an additional 100 feet of 30-Inch
Executive Officers. (Official Photograph, U. S. N avy)
Cold Reception
pipe will be needed to complete Telephone Company said Friday
SAIGON.
Viet N*m jv-U .S. Sec­
that
one
principal
Issue
is
holding
the drainage project on the west
retary of State Dulles assured Pre­
side of French Ave., south of 27th up agreement on a new contract
mier Ngo Dinh Diem today ol
St. Including the extra pipe, the for the Company's 30,000 non-supmassive support from the Manili
ervisory employes.
line will be 1,340 fret long.
Pact powers and particularly th«
That
issue
is
Union
refusal
to
The County Commission has
United States if free South Viet
accept
a
clause
which
seeks
to
agreed unofficially to share the
Nam is attacked by the Commu
$1,030 added expense equally with protect the public against servlet
nists.
the city, according to J. C. Lavcn- disruptions caused by strikes dur­
In a meeting at Independence
ing the life of the contract, ac­
dar of Craggs Construction Co.
Palace, the Nationalist premier
cording
to
F.
M.
Malone,
person­
In other action, the commission
-'old Dulles he is completely satis­
voted to buy a water chlorinator nel vice-prcsldi nt of the company,
fied with arrangements drawn up
"The public k paying for unin­
Composite Squadron Five yes
at a cost of $1,800 from Wallace
by the eight Manila Pact powers at
terday conducted a change of com­ VC-3, Cdr- Peters expressed gra­ a-id Ticmsn, Inc., BellcvUlc, N. J. terrupted telephone service", Ma­
Bangkok last week for Viet Nam's
mand ceremony officially wcl titude for their devotion to duty The chlorinator will be Installed lone said, "and has a right to in­
defense.
and
willingness
to
work
which
sist
that
the
company
and
Its
em­
coming Its new skipper, Cdr. P.
at the main pumping station at
The American official. In his
jfi. Spelts, USN, who is replacing earned for Compron Five the re­ 13th St. and French Ave. The one ployes furnish It."
first visit to what is regarded as
putation
as
the
"Can
Do"
outfit
Mslone stated the addition of a
*” dr. I. O. Peters.
at
the
pump
station
will
be
trans­
the most sensitive area in South­
The ceremony opened with a during tha recent extended tour In ferred to the swimming pool no-strike clause to the contract
east Asia, expressed confidence tn
Is
vital
to
the
public
Interest
"spit *n polish" Inspection con the Mediterranean Area.
where the chlorinator ia worn o u t
Diem’s ability to solve the nation’s
"A
commander
Is
responsible
for
"Quickie"
strikes—
called
without
ducted by Cdr. Peters and Cdr.
The commission also:—autborlz
critical internal problems. Ho said
the
safety
of
the
air
craft,
the
advance
notice
to
the
com
panySpelts. Gleaming white hats,
ed a two-year agreement with
Britain, France and all other re­
sm art blues, and glossy shoes of training of the men In his outfit, Florida Light &amp; Power Co. to have occurred on 103 occasions
sponsible nations concerned share
the
readiness
of
the
Squadron
In
tbs men reflected the prldo of
supply power to sewage pumping since mld-1931, he asserted, aer
this feeling.
case of emergency and the wel­ sUtions at Fort Mellon Park and lously disrupting service in the
sharp sailors.
Diem described the two chief
fare
of
the
men.
His
duties
are
localities
involved.
Following the Inspection Cdr
Mills Creek.
problems facing his government as
"In every instance, these quic­
Peters read his official orders re numerous and the detslls that arise
—denied the application of Gus
the resettlement of some 700,000
having him of command and or- with these responsibilities are Stephens for a permit to operaU kie strikes have Ignored pro­ RED CROSS CAMPAIGN O PEN S—The Rev. Milton II. W yatf, chairm an of ih e Seminole refugees from the Communist
cedures established in tho eon- County Red Croon campaign, distributed campaign literatu re and supplies a t this* mom*
ring him to Norfolk, Vs. for just a few drops In the big Navy a taxicab to and from Midway.
North and the neutralisation of spe­
ty. The orders were then read bucket," stated Cdr. Peters.
—turned down a request by Her­ tract for the expressed purpose «f Ing’a kick-off m eeting a t City Hall. I!e is shown handing nuppliea to R. J . Bauman, chair­ cial interest groups which are hin­
Cdr.
Peters
Is
a
quiet-spoken
settling
differences
between
the
by Cdr. Spelts which relieved him
bert Cherry, barber shop operator
man for the outlying business districts. (S ta ff Photo)
dering the refugee program.
of staff duty and ordered him to man and has an attitude of getting and school bus driver, that the union and the company before they
An aide to Dulles threw cold
things
done
efficiently.
He
was
affect
the
service.
The
public
in­
torn mend Compron Five,
traffie light be replaced on 13th
water on Burmese suggestions the
terest demands that the new eonIn hie personal remarks dir- born in Minneapolis, Minn, and St. in the Goldsboro section
United States send an unofficial
tract between Southern Bell and
acted to tha officers and men of graduated with the class of 1940
mission to talk with Red Chinese
from the Annapolis Naval Aea
the Union recognise and correct
PrcmlerChou En-lal.
demy and took an active part in
this situation.*’
The aide said Burma had not yet
the Pacific War. Ha la married
Negotiations have been in pro­
relayed to Dulles Chou's offer ta
has no children, and resides at
gress since last July, and Malone
receive such a mission But tho
III Scott Ave.
said agreement has been reached
United Ststcs, he continued, most
Prior to being In charge of this
on many provisions of tha news
Sanford members of tho Central Florida Civil Air Patrol partici­
likely would lake the position ex­
bate Cdr. Patera waa with tha
contract
istent channels arc sufficient to
Instruction Bureau at Washington.
pated In tho search for an F-A0 Air Fore* Jet missing since F-ld»j* A wage ‘ proposal b r ibe
discuss tiie case of 13 Americans
After leaving this base ho will be
pany provides tor increases ia em­ whan It went Into a spin a t 26,u00 fie t ovwr Daytona Reach. D ip March
Suits asking $130,000 In damages Imprisoned by the Reds on espion­
on the staff of tha Heavy Attack
ployes' pay ranging up to M per waa ealled off last night.
as
a result of an automobile m i­ age charges and four oilier U.S.
Wing one In Norfolk, Va.
week,
depending
upon
location
and
s»
Suspension was ordered a t auntat by Cept. Georgs R. Bumford,
The Elks playground on E. 1st He has been In the Navy ever
Job classification. The increase 48th Air R e a c u e Squadron
llion were being heard In Seminole fliers held by Peiping.
A motion for a new trial for would keep telephone wages well
U. N. Secretary General Dag
■t- wBl bo doted Wednesday sad 20 years and upon commenting on
Circuit Court today, Judgo Vas­
Eglln Air Force Base, commander
Hammarskjold visited Peiping Just
Thursday for painting. It will re­ 8anford said that In all of those John Henry Patterson, suspended in line with prevailing community of
tha search mission.
sar Carlton Is on the bench.
after Christmas in an effort to se­
SO years he had never met people Sanford policeman convicted of pay levels. O thtr contract changes
open Friday.
The Jet was piloted by Capt.
Tho suits, a $73,000 clnlm, a cure the Americans' release. Since
who were as nice and friendly aa driving while Intoxicated was have shortened evening work
Karl
E.
Yohn,
31,
Needham,
these here. “Sanford's reputation denied yesterday by County Judge schedules, reclassified c e r t a i n
$30,000 counter-claim and a $5,ooo his return to the United States, ho
regarding the Navy is being beard Ernest Housholder.
towns to higher wage schedules Mess., as e part of the t9th Fight­
counter-claim, grew out of an ac­ has kept in touch with Chou on the
Judge Housholder, however, al and effected other Improvements, er Bomber Wing Reserve. The
questioa
by many of the men that have
cident Feb. 8, 1331, at llio inter
wing was on flight from Bedford,
never* been stationed here," he lowed a week for another motion
Burmese Prem ier U Nu told e
M ass, to West Palm Beach.
County Judge Ernest Houshold­ section of Stato Roads 430 and 431. news conference In Rangoon yes­
laid, "I am sorry to be leaving. after one of the attorney* repre­
Seven additional aircraft from er will participate In a panel dis­
Carl Pynn of Casselberry, terday he had told Dulles of Chou's
Cdr. P. H. Spelts was barn in senting Patterson said be bad a
WASHINGTON ( I t - In an effort Winona. Minn and was Interested newly-discovered witness whose
bases a t Plnocastle, Patrick, Mac- cussion at Florida'! first Traffic charging severe and permanent willingness to see an unofficial
to stabilize eoffee prices and pre­ In tha Navy right from the start testimony would Justify a retrial
personal Injuries, brought the ori­ American delegation, to discuss
Dill and Miami took part in yes
Attorney Voile Williams base:
vent a recurrence of last year's aa his father was also a Navy
tardatr’s search along with about Court Conference, to be held ginal suit against Pauline Bar­ oilier questions causing tension
upward price spiral, more coffee man. He graduated from the yesterday's motion on tha ground
33 Civil Air Patrol planes and Thursday through Saturday at the bara .Marshall and Robert \V. between the United States and
futures are going to be traded on Minneapolis Naval Air Reserve that the Jury was not polled by
a number of privato planes. They University of Florida, Gainesville. Walker of Parkslcy, Va. Miss Mar­ Peiping as well as the case of tbo
tha open market.
The Sanford Business and Pro­ covered an area from Lako Dora
training in 1840 at Pensacola, n e name when Patterson was eon
County Prosecutor Karlyle Hous­ shall nlso cites personal injuries prisoners. U Nu suggested such a
The Federal Trade Commission waa also active In tha Pacific vlcted January 14.
fessional Women's Club will spon on tha watt to the Atlantic coast, holder and Sheriff J. L. Hobby as of her complaintconference to Chou when he visited
announced yesterday that the New Theatre.
Prosecutor Karlyle Housholder sor classes In Leadership Train as far north as Green Cove will also attend.
I’ynn’s claim to $5 ooo Is h.is Peiping early In l)c ember.
W o rk Coffee Exchange end Clear­
Cdr. Spelts Is married and has and Judge Housholder admitted lng which will begin March 4, at Springs and extending south of
Traffic court procedure In the ed on loss of his ra r driven by
D.il!cs stopped in Rangoon Satur­
ing House has accepted a consent three children, Elaine nine, Ste­ the Jury was not polled, but Judge 7 p. m. at the recreation build Orlando.
county courts will be discussed Miss Marshal).
day as part of his i f ir of Southeast
order to broaden trading.
phen tlx, and Kataline three. Housholder, In denying tha retrial lng, directly East of ths Chamber
In court yesterday, J. C. God Asian capitals following the SKATO
According to Capt. Phillip J at 1:30 p. m eoturday by a panel
In tho past, only Brazilian cof­ The BpeUa’s reside at 2463 Pel- motion, said the variance waa not of Commerce, In Ft. Mellon Park. Goas, public information officer of compose! &lt;&gt;•
Housholder, dard asked for dismissal of his conference last week in Bangkok.
fee end lets than 10 per cent of metlo, Ave.
These classes will be instructed the Central Florida C. A. P. aqua Lake Con-.-. --••»•■* W. Troy Hall $50,000 damage suit against Roy
detrimental to Patterson.
The secretary's aide said tho
U. 8. Imports have been subjected
Attorney W. C. Hutchison, also by Barry Crimm. formerly d ir- dron, the failure to find any trace Jr., and .
An interesting fact Is that Cdr.
urson, Judge, A. Randall, a former mayor of Chinese Beds migth be trying to
to trading. Under the new agree- Spelts end his wife wera in San- representing Patterson, told the ector of adult education for Stet of the misting ersit over land Court of Crimes, Dade County. Altamonto Springs, Goddard had inveigle the United States into
Kent, coffee from four other La* ford In IMS for four months on an court of the newly-discovered son University and Florida South Indicates the Jet probably went The moderator will be James P accused Randall of malicious pro nuking a deal on Formosa lie
tin American countries will be in* Oparatjpoal Ttalnlng Course. Mrs. witness. Judge Housholder allow em College. He also organized and down in the ocean.
said the United Stales probably
Economos, director of tho Traf­ srcutlnn.
eluded, an expansion that FTC Spelts was a new bride and tha ad a week to file necessary In directed the cooperative educa
fic Court Program for Uie Ameri­
In filing Ihe motion, Attorney would take the position it would
Lt.
Col.
Forrest
Breckenrldge,
estimates will cover 70 to 78 per Commander remarked that al­ formation preliminary to another lion department at Stetson. He
can Bar Association.
Ernest Housholder said that God­ make no such deal behind Clilang
a t of imports.
was one of tha 23 adult education Sanford, commander of the Ccn
though people In Sanford were motion.
The
conference
Is
being
spon­
dard's
continual Illness makes it Kn! slick's back.
The tentative order, subject to friendly then, they era even more
Patterson was suspended by specialists in the United States tral Florida C. A. P. group, said sored by the General Extension Impossible for him to appear in
approval by tha full commission, so now.
Chief of Police Roy O. Williams who was invited to attend an ha waa alerted about the missing Division of Florida, the Florida court.
plana at 6 a. m. Saturday. He con
also would drop chargee of unlawHa spent the last two yeara la on November 11, the day ha was evaluation conference of tha Army taetad MaJ- Merle Warnor, group Bar and the University's College
After questioning 40 prosper Quotas Established*
ful restraint of trade against the London, England with hit family arrested by a deputy abortff for Engineer School at F t Belvolr,
operations officer, who ordered of Law. Darrey A. Davis, presi­ tlvo Jurors yesterday, Judge Carl­
exchange, which did not coocede and waa helping the U. S. Navy drunk driving while off duty.
Va. and assisted in writing
dent of tbo Florida Bar, will give ton ended with a panel of only 10 In Red Cross Fund
truth of tha charges.
The Civil Servlet Board return­ handbook on adult - education local C. A P . members into the tha addresa of welcome.
Staff there.
qualified to try seven cases.
starch.
Quotas were established at the
Under the order, e review every
Cdr. Spelts hat been in the ed Patterson to tha force condi­ prepared by tha State Department
kick-off meeting held this morn­
Two local pilots aided In the
six months will attempt to make Navy a little more than 18 years tionally pending settlement of his of Education for Florida Teachers.
ing to launch the 1935 Red Cr ss
euro that future market conditl* and expects to stay In Sanford case in co u rt Patterson was sus­ He ia the author of '*How to Put hunt They were MaJ. Earl Hlggln
rampaign in Scmln-le Countybotham, group esecutlve officer,
l e u reflect spot market activity. as commander for IS months.
pended again February SI and re­ Over Your Main Ideas In
i Th* mr-llng was h - l ! In the com­
The order Is an outgrowth of
Attending the ceremony were tained Hutchison to carry his new Speech", and a "Manual with who flew Saturday, and Lt. Henry
mission room at City Hall.
^ FTC investigation of the 1083- Cajt. E. O- Wegner, commanding appeal to the Civil Service Board. Lessons Plana in Business and McLsulln Jr., who waa in the
Coffee and doughnuts were serv­
search party Sunday.
‘Ok rise ia coffee prices to nearly Heavy Attack Wing One, Cdr.
Civil Service Director N. O. Civic Leadership Training".
ed to workers, and Instructions
11.30 a pound ia some cases, Lemoa, Commanding Officer of Garfield said he had received no
The classes start at 7 and last
Other Sanford men particlpat
and supplies were Issued. Red
prices hove
Compreu Nine, Mr. and Mrs. 0 . official notification of Patterson's until 10 p. m. Anyone Interested lag were Lt. Kenneth Sapp, com
Cross field representative T. II.
Narrowness of the coffee fu­ H. P r i m , parents of Cdr. Peters, last suspension, but has received please call Miss Betty Wolfram, munlcations officer; Lt. Robert
Kent gave campaign Instructions.
tures market has been cited by Mrs. Peters, Mrs. Speltz, and hit lawyer's request for a new pbooe 1040.
Geiger, assistant communications
The county campaign goal this
FTC as a major reason for last a e a y other friends of the com­ bearing. The board's next meet­
officer: end William Bennett and
year I* $8,750.
manders.
w a r's price Increases.
ing la March 10.
John Bennett, cadet officers.
Sanford quotas sre: business
Qelgar and John Bennett had
district, $2,000; industrial, $1,000,
mobUe radio units In their cars.
and residential, $1,300. The color­
Sanford C. A. P. members also
ed quota was set nt $730, and tha
supplied a largo amount of com
Dr. Lloyd L. King, chaplain of munlcations equipment for the
quotas for special groups was fix­
iar lor hoary Industry who war Utieal circlet, although all are vet­ tho Florida Peace Officers Assocla
ed at $C50. The rural quota is
circle of the Soviet 0U0 tamed minister of modium eran offlciali. Khrunlchav la a full tlnn, yesterday expressed his ap­ search‘300. A $2,400 goal was set for tha
lay and three otheri machiaa building; M. V. Khnml- member of the Soviet Communlit preciation for e miniature gold
incorporated towns of the county.
sown moved up tha char, o m alnlitor for tbo air- party'a Central Committee and badge presented to him by Sheriff
The workers will report onee a
craft Industry; V. A. Kucherenko, Earenyagln la a candidate mem­ J . L. Hobby and three deputies.
week. A program meeting will be
la tho first major government loraorty deputy alnlitor for con- ber.
" I shall proudly wear It in your
held March 15 at City Hall.
ahakanp f1* ^ Marshal Nikolai Bul­ ■tmtlon and machine-building on* None of the four la lilted In the territory." he said ia a letter to
ganin became premier throe weeks torprtaaa, and F. T. Lobiaor,
Sheriff Hobby.
l* -A n initnieago. the Presidium of the Supremo deputy nraaiar of tho Russian So­ S o r l a t Encyclopedia or other Tha badge was recently mailed torTALLAHASSEE
at a acbool for new Houie
itandard
biographical
reference!.
Soviet raised tame deputy prem­ cialist Soriot Bapublic tinea INI
to Dr. King, who Uvaa at 1414 S.
rm ben aayt there*! good argu­
iers to the rank of first deputies and haloid that a deputy ainlitar Weitern obiervera In Moscow Osceola St., Orlando. T t i front of m
(peculated that their eleratioo la tha badge carries the chaplain's ment for tha growing state of Flor­
, ind named four ether au a to bo of agriculture.
An Oviedo n u n was charged Sun­
line with tha Soviet govern­ name and the referee aide the ida to have annual instead of bi­
Tha Sorlat Uaioo'i fear other In
ennial legislative aesiions.
day with failing to have his ear
m
ent'!
new
itreia
on
heavy
in­
names of Sheriff Hobby end depu­ Dr. Wilton K. Doyle, dean of
deputy premier* are former Prem­
under control after the HHU Chcv
try, a t emphasised by Commit- ties O. Q. Owen, M. R. McClelland
ier Oaorgl Malenkov, L S. Teroa- due
roiet sedan ran off Road 419 into a
nlat
Party
P
in
t
Secretary
Nikita
and A C. Evans.
tan, A. H. Kaaygln and V JL
road sign and power pole at Wag
llalyahar. Of them, today*! aaner.
ARTIFICIAL SNOW
nmiBiaa ad Kgatiwud only Maly,
Damage to the automobile wa$
Westerners
paid
particular
at*
TRUCE SNOWBOUND
ahar It oaM ha r u glrlas ap
estimated at f t 30.
Ieotlon to tho odvaacemeat of Mi- ELY, Nev. uv—Wocters dag far
Deputy Sheriff H. R. Cooper
tiding to Xaveayagta keyan, a chief advocate of now. hours to free a big track snow­
said the driver, Jiles Price Bryant,
arid aopenrlse n gram discarded plant to step up produc­ bound by a blimard on Murray
was going too fast to make a
13W . L G. PETERS, right, la greeting Cdr. P. H. Speltz of 52.
tion of consumer goods. Ho re- Summit south of hers. The truck
*n g-«■
** - |,dn«trisM
turn.
w U lU X U lU U S U iC I .

Secretary
Satisfied
With Plan

Telephone Official
Tells Of Hold-Up
For New Contract

P eters Is R ep laced
B y Cdr. E. S p e ltz
Commander Relieved Of Duties
As Head Of Navy Squadron VC-5

«

CAP Participates $130,000 Damages
In Bomber Search Heard In Court

Housholder Denies
Patterson Retrial;
Witness Mentioned

Strolling
h Sanford

By Vassar Carlton

Judge To Attend
Panel Discussion

Consent Accepted
* o Broaden Trade
In Coffee Market

BPW To Sponsor
Leadership Course
By Barry Crimm

f

Badge Presented
To Dr. L. I. King

Annual Sessions
Good Arguments

Uncontrolled Auto
Charge Is Made

Y W an ho takas over aa commander of tho squadron. Cere* Some-^ower lines were knocked
naomiM took place at tho Sanford Naval Auxiliary A ir Sla* down and the pole was

signed as trade minister fan. M was loaded with g jm pounds of
■ov deputy premiers two weeks before Bulganin f*&gt; artificial snow on route to a movie,
set a t dm Valley, a fc fe
1

-

;v

_________

•4

.* * » - - H s i

;- A i

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Pnge 8, Section F

THE SANFORD IfERA l.P

MORTON FELDSTEIN. ntitlioned at Sanford N A A S, ntimva
a fine pnecimnn of a fish »*h!ch is offered in th e lakes of thin
County

JAMES R. Eldnon and Ed Mlnlard, Btatloned aboard SNAAS,
proudly hold up a string of barns caught here.
_ ______

UDC

Named After Howard

- The United Daughters of the Con- Claude Herndon, Mra. J. StClalr
rederacy waa organized April Ulh, while. Mra. A. K. Roaietter, Mrs.
IM l. The founder waa Dr. Nor- w p Car1er| U rl. A. b . Wallace,
man doVere Howard for whom the
M McCaiklll.
chapter la named.
•
It waa founded on the beautiful
■
spirit of love and each year hat
put forth Its best efforts In edu­
■ ■ ■ a ■
cation, historical, benevolent and
■■■ a
social work. The beauty of this reP
l f
I I I A id
numbering Is that time kills sll

bitterness and hatred but it does
not dim the clear white light of
.vCourcge.
,
. : The mission of the United DauMiters of the Confederacy la not to
keep alive the ugliness and III
fading of the war, but to cherish
the memory of the gallant sold­
iers of the South and their loyal
wives, and hand it down, a pre’ ctoua heritage, In order that cou­
rage may ba kindled In their childtea's children by the remember
. face of the sacred flams.
ETOBfery loyal Daughter af the
.- tCaafederaey personally feels that
there ti a ■acred end glorious res
ton for the preservation of the or
, gantretkm of which die belongs
With the blood of southern heroes
coursing in her veins, bone of their
••bene and flesh of their flesh, she
"Tigards the organize lion which re‘-wined from their noble and aacrlJltew hen the South waa Imperiled,
1 as h priceless heritage." aaya Mrs.
* A. Yarbrough of Charlotte, N.
r The UDC sacks first to honor
memory of thosa who served
hose who fall in the service of
Sonfederacy states; to prated
mark places made historic;
nUect end preserve facts for
hfnl history of tha War between
atatas; to aw that It Is taught
welly In schools; to honor the
IroUim and couraga of Southwomen during the years of
he second point la to fulfill the
i«d trust of benevolence to­
ri the survivors end their de­
le third point ta aaatst descendI fourth objective la memorial,
.SMUaliy days art observe
i the honored dead are remainI with tributes, must* end
a fifth and final object la to
l lain the membership of the
.all women eligible to this
sue privilege end to promote
eheriab Unka of friendship
act a n ts us In the great chain
lie mighty organization.
Bfalty to the Truth of Confedi ;History" la the watchwc i
p. Daughter* and their ma)*:
Bve U the preservation ol
■ «nd reliable facts at that
«f American history made tv

Junior High
2nd Oldest
In County
The Sanford Junior High School
Is the second oldest school In Se­
minole county. It was built In 1910
and used as a high school for sev­
eral rears At present It Is being
used as a Junior (Ugh School with
155 children in the seventh grade
an .1 t.V In ihe eighth grade.
There are five seventh grade tea­
chers and four eighth grade teach­
ers tn the school The seventh
giadc teachers arc Mrs. F.'liabclh
Guihnc, Mrs M a r y Elizabeth
Thompson. Mr. E W Itogcra, MIsi
Adelaide Itlchter and Mrs. Anne
Samuel. The eighth grade teach­
ers arc: Mrs. 01* Cochran. Mra.
Belle ilumblcy Mrs. Virginia Bur
ney and Miss Gcorgena Hart, Mrs.
Ansbel Fleming teaches music,
Mr Howard P Gordie has boys
physical education, and Mr. Perry
Itremst la instructor In band.
The Student Council, made up
of two representatives from each
room has charge of the extra cur­
ricula activities of the school. The
members are president—Charmlon
Miller, vice-president — Howard
Andrews; secretary—Janet Glenn;
and treasurer — Jimmy Graeey;
Jth grade See. 1 — Mra. GuthrieJanet Glenn, Jimmy Graeey, Sec.
2 — Mr. Rogera- Sharon Herviih,
Konnie Whitten; See. 3 — Mrs.
Thompson — Carol Stewart, Bruoks
Adam*: Sec. 4— Mlsa Richter —
Marilyn McDaniel, Curtla Lee;
Sec. 5 — Mrs. Samuel — Kather­
ine Carlos. Ear) Summerlll; fllh
grade - Sec. 1 —Mra. Cochran —
Chris Case Gary Raker; Sec. 3—
Mrs. Itumbicy — Charmlon Miller,
Clifford McKibblij; See. 3 - Mrs.
Rumey — Joyce Benton, Gene
Smith: Sec 4 — Mlaa Hart —Pat­
ricia Clark, Howard Anderson.
Each year the sludenta of the
lunior High School cell subscrip­
tions to magazines and uie their

{

in a land of many tropical lakes
and rivers, it la only natural that
we find an active and enthusias­
tic boat club. The Sanford Boat
and Ski Club was organised for
the purpose of enjoying the many
miles of waterways In and around
this beautiful city
Although young in years, the
organisation has dona mueh to
create and further Interest In wa­
ter skiing and boating in this area.
Aa a group centered around family
activity, the club was Instrumen­
tal In the building uf the first pub
He boatlanding ramp and picnic
area In Seminole County.
From the landing ramp, loca­
MRS. W. F. HOCK FORD d is p la y a Htrlnj? or 17 shad caught ted at the west end of beautiful
Lake Monroe, the club launches
in Seminole County w a lem
many of Its picturesque cruises.
share ol the proceedi to purchaie serves nutritious lunches to 223 Starting at Sanford one can Iraequipment used in the school. Two children daily
recent purchases are an electric
This season the Junior High bas­
water cooler and a high powered ketball team coached by Howard
CAT COMES BACK
microscope
P. Gordie scored 210 points to its
REARDAN, WASH. (UR) - Ho­
The school boasts a band of opponents 102 points.
mer the alley cat who wouldn't
young musicians who play for
Rehearsals are conducted (or lake no for an answer Is back
school programs and other activi­ the County Music Festival and the home and they're going to let him
ties.
Junior High Spring Frolica held stay,
Mra. S. O. Chase Jr., assisted by each spring under the direction of
Homer showed up at the Lewis
mothers, handles library facilities Mrs. W. G Fleming.
McKay house six months ago. Hie
for the atudents Helping her are;
The P-TA with Mrs. J. P. Wil­ family already had « eouple of
Mrs. Glenr Goember, Mrs. L. F. son as president cooperates In cats but thay lat him stay for ■Garner, Mra. C. E. Piercy, Mra E. school activities and sponsors par­ while. Last month, though, they
C. Williams, Sirs. J. P. Wilson, ties at the Youth Center. A visit gave him to a Garfield, Wash,
Mrs. Sol Gordon, Mrs. Henry to one of these parties would con­ eouple.
Schumacker Jr., Mra Ira South­ vince anyone that the children are
Then Homer came back. He ap­
ward, Mrs Ray W Herron, Mra.
parently
walked the 60 miles from
having
■
good
time
and
at
the
Robert Miller, Mrs. W. A. Kratsert, Mrs,1 Leslie Clark, Mra. Joe tam e time are learning approved Garfield. The McXaya say they
will keep him now.
Mon, Mrs P. II. Colbert end Mra. social behavior.
A. M. Remusat.
The school lunchroom, under the
supervision of Mra. Irene Sewell,
ACCORDING TO PLAN
BOISE, IDAHO (&lt;*) - An un­
scheduled touch of realism waa
added to a civic defense teat.
The script said three Snake Ri­
ver bridges were out, wrecked by
imaginary bombs. But on the day
ol the lest, one of the bridges real­
ty was knocked out. There was
nothing imaginary about the truck
that broke through It.

vet down the one nundrrd and
turty miles ui Floi . d . » St Juana
river as It winds Its «•?•• to Je«-tc
sonviUe, anc- empties Into the At­
lantic Ocean,
DOUBLE DKSTRlltT'ON
MCKEESPORT. PA t - f l - In
1953, the nearly complete residence
which Mrs. Annabelle Fagan was
having built next to h&gt;i home burn
ed to the ground She ordered an
idhcr house on the same site. Now
that home has burnH to the
ground, too.
Origin of the blazes could not be
determined.

•

P ip cluo
j i &gt; iuj( and

furmed In Februimmediately began
an effort *o create mote local in&gt;
tercet, the member*, with aome
fine talent, put nn a ski shots for
the benefit of the Seminole HJgh(
«rh&lt;tol band's trip to the M ardl
(Iras in New Orleans.
Aftei this, the club began, to
grow and enjoy many outings on
the local waterways. As It grew,
the club gained recognition in Cen­
tral Florida and was asked to join
with other such clubs In promot­
ing several large erulaei which
have received publicity In sever­
al national boating magaiinei.

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_____________ AN IN D EPEN D EN T DAILY NEW BPAPKE

_aANTORD1FLORIDA,

I &gt;08

VIVOLUMK XLVI

M useum
Of Meet
Members of the committee seeking construction ef the General
Sanford Library and Museum will further discuss the project with the
City Commission Friday night.
The commissioners discussed the memorial among them selves a t
their regular meeting last night, but decided to adjourn until 7:30 p.m,
Friday eo that they could hear
from the committee.
Randall Chaie has been one of
the prominent figures la the mu­
seum campaign.
A site In Fort Mellon Park hat
been designated for the memorial,
which would house the library and
effects of the late Gen. H. S. Santordfor whom the city was named.
During last night's light ses­
sion, the commission was told that
An official of the Southern Bell
an additional 100 feet of 30-inch
pipe will be needed to complete Telephone Company said Friday
the drainage project on the west that one principal Issue is holding
side of French Ave., south of 27th tip agreement on a new contract
St. Including the extra pipe, the for the Company’s 50,000 non-supcrvlsory employes.
line will be 1,340 feet long.
That iasun la Union refusal to
The County Commission has
agreed unofficially to share the accept a clause which seeks to
11,050 added expense equally with protect the public against service
the city, according to J. C. Javan- disruptions caused by strikes dur­
ing the life of the contract, ac­
dar of Craggi Construction Co,
In other action, the commission cording to F. M. Malone, perionvoted to buy a water rhlorlnator ncl vlce-prcsldt nt of the company.
“The public k paying for unin­
at a cost of 31,500 from Wallace
and Ticrnan, Inc., Belleville, X. J, terrupted telephone service", Ma­
The chtorinator will be Installed lone said, "and has a right to In­
at tha main pumping station at sist that the company and its em­
13th St. end French Ave. The one ployes furnish It."
Malone stated the addition of a
at the pump station will be trans­
ferred to the swimming pool no-strike clause to the contract
where the chlorinator is worn out. Is vital to the public Interest.
The commission also:—authorlz “Quickie" strikes— called without
ed a two-year agreement with advance notice to the com panyFlorida Light &amp; Power Co. to have occurred on 103 occasions
supply power to sewage pumping since mtd-1051, he asserted, ere
stations at Fort Mellon Park and lously disrupting service to the
localities Involved.
Mills Creek.
“ In every Instance, theta quic­
—denied the application of Gus
Stephens for a permit to operate kie atrikei have ignored pro­
cedures established in the con­
a taxicab to and from Midway.
—turned down e request by Her­ tract for the expressed purpose *f
bert Cherry, barber shop operator settling differences between the
and school bus driver, that the union and the company before they
traffic light be replaced on 13th affect the service. Tha public totereat demands that the new con­
St. in the Goldsboro sectiontract between Southern Bell and
the Union recognize and correct
this situation.”
Negotiations have been to pro­
gress since leal July, and Malone
said agreement haa been reached
on many provision of the
contract.
* A wage proposal by the
pany provides for increases la enfployre’ pay ranging up to 34 per
week, depending upon location sod
•w
job classification. Tha Increase
A motion for a new trial for would keep telephone wages well
John Henry Pattcrion, sutpended in Una with prevailing community
Sanford policeman convicted of ay level*. Other contract changes
driving while Intoxicated was ave shortened evening work
denied yeaterday by County Judge schedules, reclassified c e r t a i n
Ernest Housholder.
towns to higher wage schedules
Judge Housholder, however, al end effected other improvements.
lowed a week for another motloo
after one of the attorneys repre­
senting Patterson said he had a
newly-dlscovered witness whosa BPW To Sponsor
testimony would Justify a retrial.
Attorney Voile Williams based Leadership Course
yesterday’s motion on the ground
that the Jury wes not polled by By Barry Crimm
The Sanford Business and Pro­
name when Patterson was con
fessional Women’s Club will span
victed January 14.
Prosecutor Karlyle Housholder sor classes in Leadership Train
and Judge Housholder admitted tog which will begin March 4, at
the Jury was not polled, but Judge 7 p. m. at the recreation build­
Housholder, to denying the retrial ing, directly East of the Chamber
motion, said the variance wes not of Commerce, to Ft. Mellon Park.
These d u s e i wlU be instructed
detrimental to Patterson.
Attorney W. C. Hutchison, also by Barry Crimm. formerly d to
representing Patterson, told tha ector of adult education for Stet
court of the newly-discovered ton University end Florida South
witness. Judge Housholder allow­ cm College. He also organised end
ed • week to file necessary In­ directed the cooperative educs
formation preliminary to another tion department at Stetaon. He
was one of tha 33 adult education
Patterson was suspended by specialists to the United States
Chief of Police Roy G, William* who waa Invited to attend an
on November 11, the day ha waa evaluation conference of the Army
arretted by a deputy aburiff for Engineer School at F t Belvolr,
Va. and assisted In writing a
drunk driving while off duty.
The Civil Service Board return­ handbook on adult - education
ed Patterson to the force eondl prepared by the State Department
tlonilly pending settlement of bis of Education for Florida Teachers.
case to court. Patterson was sus He la the author of "How to Put
pended again February 31 end re­ Over Your Mato Ideal In a
tained Hutchison to carry bis new Speech”, and a “ Manual with
appeal to the Civil Service Board Lessons Plana to Business and
Civil Service Director N. O. Civic Leadership Training''.
The classea atari a t 7 and last
Garfield said ha had received no
official notification of Patteraon'a until 10 p. m. Anyone interested
last suspension, but has received please rail Miss Betty Wolfram,
Us lawyer's request for ■ new phone 3040.
bearing. The board's next meet­
ing to March 10.

B

TUESDAY, MAR. 1, 1955

A n o rta trt

Pna

Leased Wire

&lt;?
4

P e te rs Is R ep laced
B y Cdr. E. S p e itz
Commander Relieved O f Duties
As Head O f Navy Squadron VC-5
Composite Squadron Five yes
terday conducted a change of com
mand ceremony officially wcl
coming its new skipper, Cdr. P.
M . Speitz, USN, who is replacing
‘U d r. I. G. Peter*.
The ceremony opened with i
"spit *n polish” inspection con
ducted by Cdr. Peters and Cdr
8pelti. Gleaming white hats,
im ert blues, and glossy shoes of
the men reflected the prldo of
•harp sailor*.
Following the Inspection Cdr.
Peters read his official orders re
Having him of command and or­
d erin g him to Norfolk, Ve. for
nuty. The order* were then read
by Cdr. Spelts which relieved him
aI staff duty and ordered him to
eommtnd Compron Five.
la his personal remarks dir­
ected to the officers end men of

Strolling
h Sanford

VC-3, Cdr- Pclers expressed gra­
titude for their devotion to duly
and willingness to work which
earned for Compron Five the re­
putation a i the “ Can Do” outfit
during the recent extended tour In
the Mediterranean Area.
“A commander la responsible for
the safety of the air craft, the
training of the men In hla outfit,
the readlnesa of the Squadron In
case of emergency and the wel­
fare of the men. His duties are
numerous and the details that arise
with these responsibilities ere
Just a few drops In the big Navy
bucket,” stated Cdr, Peters.
Cdr. Peters Is a quiet-spoken
man and has an attitude of getting
things done efficiently. He was
born In Minneapolis, Minn, and
graduated with the class of 1040
from tha Annapolla Naval Aca
demy and took an active part in
the Pacific War. He U married
has no children, and resides at
121 Scott Ave.
Prior to being in chargu of this
base Cdr. Patera was with the
Instruction Bureau at Washington,
After leaving this base be will be
os the staff of the Heavy Attack
Wing one la Norfolk, Va.
He has been In the Navy over
M years and upon commenting on
Sanford said that In all of those
10 years he had never met people
who were as nice and friendly as
these here. “Sanford's reputation
regarding the Navy Is being heard
by many of the men that have
never* been stationed here,” he
said, “ I am sorry to be leaving.”
Cdr. P. H. Speitz was born in
Winona, Minn and was interested
in tha Navy right from the start
as hla father w et also a Navy
man. He graduated from the
Minneapolis Naval Air Reserve
training in 1940 at Pensacola. He
was also actlva In the Pacific
Theatre.
Cdr. Spelts la married end has
three children. Elaine nlna, Ste­
phen alx, and Kataline three.
The Bpelta’a reside at 1443 Pal­
metto, Are.
An Interesting fact is that Cdr.
Spelts and h it wife were in San­
ford In IMS for four months on an
Operational Training Course. Mrs.
Spelts wae a new bride and the
Commander remarked that al­
though people In Sanford were
friendly then, they are even more
so now.
He spent the last two years in
London, England with hla family
and was helping the U. I . Navy
Staff there.
Cdr. Spelts haa been to the
Navy a little more than 13 years
and expects to stay to Sanford
as commander for 11 months.
Attending the ceremony were
Cajt. E. O- Wagner, commanding
Heavy Attaek Wing One, Cdr.
Lemoa, Commanding Officer of
Compron Nine, Mr. and Mrs. G.
H. Peters, parents of Cdr. Peters,
Mrs. Peters, Mrs. Speitz, and
many other friends of the com­
manders.

Secretary
Satisfied
With Plan

For New Contract

Housholder Denies
Patterson Retrial;
Witness Mentioned

IS !

Viet Nam Assured
Of Massive Support

Telephone Official
Tells Of Hold-Up

INSPECTION— Shown inspection th e squadron are, left to
righ t, Cdr. I. G. P eters, Cdr. P. H. Speitz, and Cdr. Weidleln,
Executive O fficers. (O fficial Photograph, U. S. N avy)

"■* W eather
O ear »o psrtTy ttowdy apd w
tinaed mild through Wednesday,
f«w showers n t m u north Wart
nctdty, lo v e* tonight

Suggestions Get
Cold Reception

RED CROSS CAMPAIGN OPENS— The Rev. Milton II. W yaft, chairman o f the Seminole
County Red Cross campaign, distributed campaign literature and supplies nt Ihfa morn­
ing’s kick-off m eeting a l City Hall, lie to shown handing supplies to R. J . Raumnn, chair­
man for the outlying business districts. (S ta ff Photo)

C A P Participates

$130,000 Damages
Heard In Court
InBanferdBomber
Search
members ef the Central Florida Civil Air Patrol partici­
pated |a the se^reh for an P-S0 Air Fore* Jet missing vines Friday By Vassar Carlton

SAIGON. Viet N»m JV-U.S. Seerctary of State Dulles assured Pre­
mier Ngo Dtnh Diem today ol
massive support from the Manila
Pact powers and particularly th*
United States if tree South Viet
Nam !» attacked by the Commu­
nists.
In a meeting al Independent
I'alare. the Nationalist premier
Intel Dulles he Is completely satis­
fied with arrangements drawn up
by the eight Manila Pact powers al
Bangkok last week for Viet Nam's
defense.
The American official. In hi*
first visit to what is regarded as
the most sensitive area in South­
east Asia, expressed confidence In
Diem's ability to solve the nation’s
critical internal problems, lfo said
Britain, France and all other re­
sponsible nations concerned share
this feeling.
Diem described the two chief
problems facing his government as
the resettlement of some 700,000
refugees from the Communist
North and the neutralization of spe­
cial interest groups which are hin­
dering the refugee program.
An aide to Dulles threw cold
water on Burmese suggestions th*
United States send an unofficial
mission to talk with Red Chinese
PrcmlerChou En-lai.
The aide said Burma had not yet
relayed to Dullei Chou'a offer to
receive auch a mission Out the
United States, he continued, most
likely would take the position ex­
istent channel* arc sufficient to
dlsruss the case of IS Americana
imprisoned by the Reds on espion­
age charges and four other U.S.
fliers held by Peiping,
U. N. Secretary General D ig
lfammarskjold visited Peiping Just
after Christmas In an effort to se­
cure the Americans' release. Since
his return to the United Slates, ho
has kept in touch with Chou on the
question
nurmese Premier U Nu told a
news conference In Rangoon yes­
terday he had told Dulles of Chou'a
willingness to see an unofficial
American delegation, to illicuas
other questions causing tension
between the United States and
Peiping as well as the case of Itio
prisoners. U Nu suggested such a
conference to Chou when he visited
Peiping early In Dc ember.
Dulles stopped in Rangoon Satur­
day as port of his tf.ir of Soul least
Asian capitals following the SKATO
conference last week In Bangkok.
The secretary's aide said tha
Chinese Beds migtli be trying to
inveigle the United States into
making a deal on Formosa tfa
said the United Stales probably
would lake the position it would
make no such deal behind Chlang
KnI slick's bark.

when It went tote a spin et 25,oOO L e t over Daytona Ueauh. rim starch
Suits asking $130,000 to damages
waa called oft last night.
Suspension was ordered a t sunset by Capt. George R. Bumford, as a m u lt of an automobile col*
1W Elks playgrwred wa I . 1st
Ilson were being heard In Seminole
43th Air R e s c u e Squadron,
■4- wfU bo closed Wedaeeday aad
Circuit Court today. Judge VasEglln Air Foree Rase, commander
T benday far
h r patottog. U will reof tha search mission.
ta r Carlton Is on the bench,
•pea Friday.
The Jet wes piloted by Capt.
Tho suits, a $75,000 claim, a
Karl E. Yohn, 31, Needham,
$50,000
counter-claim end a $5,ooo
Consent Accepted
Maaa., aa • part of the Wth Fight­
counter-claim,
grew out of an ac­
er Bomber Wing Reserve. The
cident Feb. S, 1331, at the inter
l* o Broaden Trade
wing was on flight from Bedford,
Mesa, to West Palm BeachCounty Judge Ernest Houshold­ section of State Roads 435 and 431.
In Coffee M arket
Seven additional aircraft from e r will participate in a panel dis­
Carl Pynn of Casselberry,
WASHINGTON t i l - In on effort
bases at Ptoocaatle, Patrick, Mac- cussion at Florida's first Traffic charging severe and permanent
to stabilise coffee prices end pre­
personal Injuries, brought the ori­
DU1 and Miami took part In yes­
vent e recurrence of lest year's
terday's search along with about Court Conference, to be held ginal suit against Pauline Bar­
upward price spiral, more coffee
33 dvU Air Patrol planes and Thursday through Saturday at the bara .Marshall and Robert W,
futures are going to be traded on
a number of private planes. They University ol Florida, Gainesville. Walker of I’arks Icy, Va. Miss Mar­
the open market.
covered an area from Lake Dora
County Prosecutor Karlyle Hous- shall also cites personal Injuries
The Federal Trade Commtasion
on tha wait to the Atlantic coast, holder and Sheriff J. L. Hobby as of her complaintannounced yesterday that the New
as far north as Green Cove will also attend.
Pynn's elalm to 35 onq 1* has
W o rk Coffee Exchange and Clear­
Spring* and extending south of
Traffic court procedure in the ed on loss of his car driven by
ing House has accepted a consent
Orlando.
county courts will be discussed MU* Marshal).
eid er to broaden trading.
In court yesterday, J. C. God
Aecording to Capt. Phillip J at 1:30 p. m eaturday by a panel
In tha past, only Brazilian eofHousholder, dard asked for dismissal of his
Goal, public information officer of compose! u.
toe and leas than 10 per cent of
’c i W. Troy Hall $50,000 damage suit against Iloy
the Central Florida C. A. P. aqua Lake Con.. .
U. A Imports have been subjected
(arson, Judge, A. Randall, a former mayor of
dron, the failure to find any trace Jr., and .
to trading. Under the new agree­
of th* missing craft over land Court of Crimes, Dade County. Altamonte Springs. Goddard lud
ment, coffee from four other La­
indicates the Jet probably went Tho moderator will be James P accused Randall of malicious pro
tin American countries will bo In­
Economoi, director of tho Traf­ serution.
down to the ocean.
cluded, an expansion that FTC
fic
Court Program for the Ameri­
In filing the motion, Attorney
Lt. Col. Forrest Drcckenrldgo,
estimates will cover TO to 75 per
can Bar Association.
Ernest Housholder said that God­
Sanford,
commander
of
the
Ccn
a a a t cl Imparts,
The conference Is being spon­ dard's continual Illness makes it
tral Florida C. A. P. group, said
'V T b e tentative order, subject to
sored by the General Extension Impossible for him to appear in
be
wae
alerted
about
the
missing
approval by the full commission,
p l u s at I a. m. Saturday. He con Division of Florida, the Florida court.
also would drop chargee of unlaw­
After questioning 40 prosper Quotas Established*
tacted MaJ- Merle Warnor, group Bar and the University's College
ful restraint of trade against the
of Law. Darrey A. Davis, presi­ live Jurors yesterday, Judge Carl
operations
officer,
who
ordered
exchange, which did not concede
local C. A P . members Into the dent of tho Florida Bar, will give ton ended with a panel of only 10 In Red Cross Fund
truth of the charges.
the address of welcome.
qualified to try seven cases.
search.
Quotas were established at the
Under the order, a review every
kirk-nff meeting held this morn­
Two local pflota aided to the
atx months will attem pt to make
ing to launch the 1933 Red Cr ss
hunt They were Maj. Earl Higgln
■ure that future market condltlcampaign In Scmln-le County.
botham, group executive officer,
Iona reflect spot market activity.
Th- me-ttp'; was h1,1! in the com­
wbo flew Saturday, and Lt. Henry
I k e order Is an outgrowth of
mission room at City Hall.
McLaulto Jr., who waa in the
m
FTC iavesUgaUon of the 1M3Coffee and doughnuts were serv­
search party Sunday.
Ok rise la coffee prices to nearly
ed to workers, and Instructions
•130 a pound In aome cases,
Other Sanford men pertlclpat
and supplies wrre Issued. Bed
prices b a re elaee declined.
tog were Lt. Kenneth Sapp, com
Cross field representative T. II.
Narrowness of the coffee fu­
munlcatloni officer; Lt. Robert
Kent gave campaign Instructions.
to n s market has been cited by
Geiger, resistant communications
The county campaign goal this
FTC as a major reason for last
officer; and William Bennett and
year Is $«,750.
sear's price Increases,
John Bennett, cadet officers.
Sanford quota* are: business
Geiger aad John Bennett had
Badge Presented
district, 32.000; industrial, 31.000,
mobile radio units In their cars.
and residential, $1,300. The color­
Sanford C. A. P. members also
To Dr. L. I. King
ed quota was set at $750, and tha
supplied a large amount of com
Dr. Lloyd L. King, chaplain of munlcatlocu equipment tor the
quotas for special groups was fix­
^M OSCOW «I t - J o n r new men an-1 gar tor heavy Industry who west Utica! circles, although all are vat- the Florida Peace Officer* Assorts
ed at $050. The rural quota la
Marchtaxed the top circle af the Soviet also named minister of medium eran officials. Khrunlchev to a full tion, yesterday expressed his op*500. A $2,400 goal was set for tha
•mraremant today and three others machine building; M. V. Khrunl- num ber of the Soviet Communist red a tion for a miniature gold
incorporated town* of the county.
already wall known moved up the ebov, o m minister for the air- party's Central Committee end _adga presented to him by Sheriff
The workers will report once a
Annual Sessions
craft Industry; V. A. Kucherenko, Eaveoyagto to a candidate mem J. L. Hobby aod three deputies.
week. A program meeting will be
In tha Bret major government iormaviy deputy minister for
bar.
“ I shall proudly wear It to your
held March 13 at City Hall.
rtsakeup ft*1** Ipgrehfl Nikolai Bui- slruetloa and machine-building enNona of the four to listed to the territory,” he said to • Utter to Good Arguments
gaato became prem ier Hu m weeks tarpriaee. and P. T.
Sheriff Hobby.
TALLAHASSEE LTV-An Instruc­
ago, Urn Presidium af tha S o p reiu deputy premier ef tha Russian So- S o v i e t Encyclopedia or other
Uncontrolled Auto
The badge wae recently melted tor st a school for new Houre
standard blograpUcal references.
Soviet retoad Urea ftoputy prem­
iav tat. Republic
I
store i m
to Dr. King, who Uvea at 1414 A member* says there's good argu
Western observers to Moscow Oeeeots 8t., Orlande. Tbn front of
ie rs to the rank of E rst deputies aad batord that a deputy minister
Charge Is Made
speculated that their elevation to the badge carries tha chaplain's meat for the growing state of Flor­
' named tour other man to ha of agriculture.
ida
to
have
annual
Instead
of
UAn Oviedo man wss charged Sun­
to lino with the Soviet govern­
I h a Soviet Union’s tour other ment's new stress on heavy in­ name and the rev area elds the mial tagUlativa sessions.
day with failing In have hi* car
^ T h aaa ware tha
names of Sheriff Hobby end depu­ Dr. Wilson K. Doyle, dean of
deputy premiers are farmer Prem­
under control after the tiuo Chav
announced early tods
ier Georgi Malenkov, L S- Taros- dustry, aa emphasised by Commu­ ties O. Q. Owen, M. A McClelland tiw Florida State University School
roiet sedan ran off Read 419 info a
nist
Party
First
Secretary
Nikita
I k ba first
and A E. Evans.
of Business Administration, made
•a , A N. Eaeygto and V J l A Khrushchev in kto
road atgn and power pole at Wag
A I. Mlthe rem ark to answering questions
Of there, today's is ner.
ML. G. Pervukkln ami M. A
ARTIFICIAL ENOW
put to him by H oum members.
Jarem martIncisl only MalyDamage to the automobile waa
af tha ftato
Westerners paid particular atTRUCK SNOWBOUND
“ In a state growing aa rapidly
I t asM ha waa giving up
estimated at $150,
'
U tha advancement of Mi- ELY, Nav. UP—Workers dag far aa Florida, ft la difficult for a
of
Deputy Sheriff H. R. Cooper
a chief advucata of now- hours to free a Mg track snow­ Legislature to plan tha state's li­
to gavaayagta
said tha driver, Jiles Price Bryant*
discarded
plena
to
atop
up
produc­
bound by ■ blizzard oa Hurray
sa a year ahead, much tots
supervise a gfl
52, waa going too fast to make a
tion af eon*uiner scads. He re ­ Summit south at hare. The truck
tf —
---WHiUn
years,** ha said. “ And the CDR, L G. PETERS, rifh t, U great!nr Cdr. P. H. Speitz of turn.
wiVTiUBl
■VXKXEgBfMitefrUa
muIXJiJTCl,
ander of tha aqnadron. Cera- Some-fower lines ware knocked
signed as trade minister Jen. Sd wee toile d with MW pounds af
■rta that earn* a* In n ^ro w - V W m ha takas over aa w
now deputy premiers two weeks before Bulganin re- artificial anew eo route to a morl4
mlm took place at tha Sanford Naval Auxiliary Air SU* down and tha pole waa
to be settled Sonar
1art a t l w Valley,
ttoft ?«larfagr&gt; (B laff Phato)
•L

Judge To Attend

S

Panel Discussion

Four Men Enter Top Red Circle

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POWERED SAWS,CATERPILLAR
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VOUR WIFI PHONED
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THANKS

W H AT W IL L OLONOlE
SA V ? T H A T D UM P r -

SROCEP GAVE r-T

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TO M ATO ES
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PUNMNr
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CON'PETE
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AH KNOW AH

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BUT AH WAS
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"At" M ona" w ith W a g C o sh -

Unite* Nations

lt*o D encellm e
At H om e W ith Muale

Laymen's Call to Prayer
SIan Off
WKI1RKSDAV A.B.
Sign On
Dswa Breakers
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M nrnlna Bhow

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WRflNSMDAV A.W.

Rlgn Og
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W aathar • N a » a R rtafa

Legal Notice
m

w hom

r r m at c o sc a re si

T h e undersigned l i ne longi
connected w ilh
R e n d e ll R le c fr
C nm psny end are therefore no lo n|
e r reeponelbla fo r an y lia b ilit y i
i-nm mltmente, m id e by a fo ra « e i
llo n e * C om pany.

R O R T tr OAR 0 M BA I „
A torero m m slain i tor

iv ln g b * * s

flit *

s s s ln a )

dtrerre
you In

in cTmft Ceqrt to an* tor tonl-

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indent, thw* srerests •rein rem­
ind r*fdnfanare
*• aprear
*adnnfit**rreur
rlltos
strain
ba­
it* th* Itth day *f March. A. ft
III. or *tharwfa* a Dacra* Pro
anfaare will ha retored again!
in.
Tha Sanford Harold U doolnnat-d
i a aewanerer nf sanorel clranla■a la which (hi* elution nhnll ho
Mtilakad utroa areh wash for (our
tnomutlva wrehn.
WtTNBRS n r hand and offlelnl
at of tho Clark of «k* cfren^l
anrt. In (hi* tho 14th day of F*b-

&gt;ja K-UTHnVVa* g r o u t
U W“ *’ PtolalKta.

M &amp;R &amp;LS

atomic taats bring bald tbla
ipring.
Colonel Dyson li regularly ata
Honed at Fort Hood, Tea., aa com
minding officer of the 4th Armor
ed Division's 22nd Field Artillery
Battalion. A l i f t gradual* of tha
Sletion Unlveraity Law School, ba
entered the Army in June of that
year.

W BDNRIDAV A J L

John D aly R a w s
f.lh e ra *a
{.L o a d T b ra a IJ r a a
T w a n lr Uuaatlona
ftra a ld a T h a a ta r
T-M an In A ctio n
Rad ghaiton
lloaten R laeb le
W aath tr-N o w a D rlafa
T n w a r T h a a ta r
Rlgn O ff

rrir.m drivn. rAYirmmixa,

to ohienr* the 1H3 atomic tcita
In Nevada.
Colonel Dyaon participated In
Eierclt* Deicrt Rock VI and witneiied an atomle explosion from
a trench aboqt 4,000 yarda away.
Tha ozerclia li the Army'a part of
tha atomic Rnergy Commliiion’a
Operation Teapot, a aerlea of

STA N D A R D

a n t iq u e s f a t i o r r
OMAHA (IP) - John Bargquist,
University of Omaha Junior, baa
g iv u an aotiqua twist to th* rent*
a ear boalaaaa.
John rent* out hia IKS mod*l*
(or IIS a wreksnd or SIS a slxht,
plui gas and oil Ho say* buaiaaaa
la brisk.
i

Firing Cruisers
A
Completion Hoped

^ROBERT MARTIN
CHAPTUl TlUJtTV T1UUUE
T 'm sorry," 1 aald, "I was calling
ta t a t a ubi* Judy, and—"
drinking ooffea. Ha had taken off
The old, thin voice aald thrUly,
hla camera hair overcoat and un­ “Judith la not here."
buttoned the collar of hla flannel
"1 know. Cm aorry."
ahlrt. 1 aald, "Eileen went with
"1 w-iU have you know that II la
six o'clock in the morning here In
T heard. Kid* do erasy things. Ohio, 1 suppose you are calling
Bha and Earl figured on getting from Miami or Los Angelea, and
married, and then *om*thlng hap­ did not realise 7"
pened. Tha first thing I knew, ah*
"No, ma'am," I said. “1 did not
wa* engaged ta Ralph Hollis, reallae."
and—"
"In the future," the voice said
"I know." X aald.
coldly, “pleai* call Judith a t her
Ha aipped at his coffee. “I place on River road. She spends
didn't want to ha in there when very little time here."
John Marrlaay came. I've known
“ Yet, ma'am."
Earl sines ba waa n baby."
"What ta your name, elrT"
"Doakea." I aald. “Joseph."
"Yea," X aald dully.
"You must be Judith's writer
"Take off your coat," Fortune
said. "B|t down and tall ma about frtehd. J read your last book, air,
and found it moat objectionable.
I suppose It sold very well T"
1 poured soma coffe*. “It's a
“Five million copies," 1 aald.
long story, and It's been a long “And Metro bought tha movie
night."
rights."
"Far m*. too," ha mid. "After
“You wrttara would sell your
X rnw you at Dan's place, fanatr soul* for money, would you not 7“
asked aaa to coma out and look at
“Yea, ma'am. Body and soul.
a sick eow. I'm an amateur vet- I'm sorry to have disturbed you.
•rlaary." Ha smiled faintly. This Good by." J hung up, quickly.
eow waa having trouble dropping
"Wrong number," Jake Fortune
a calf, but old Dr. Fortuna pulled aald.
her through. Pretty little bull
1 grinned at him, and llfUd the
calf. Took mo moat of th* alghL" phone once more. Whan the oper­
“You cam* horn* just in time," I ator answered, 1 aald, “Silas Judy
aald, tipping th* hot, black coffm. Kirkland, on Bluer Rond, please.-'
“I halt it," ba mid, "about EarL
She said stiffly, “Tha number,
And Eileen. I didn’t know that air. ta—1*
aha cared about him any m ore..
“Never mind tha number. Just
Ha drank mare coffm. "Bub'I can t ring bar/* » •
interfere. SB* has to live k*r own
She rang her. No answer. I
Ilfs."
waited through innumerable rings
"Yea," I said, sad I carried my before I hung up. 1 looked blankly
coffe* to th* phone. "Excuse me," a t Jaka Fortune. T h a t'* funny.”
X said to Jaka Fortune. 1 ill a
"W hat?"
cigaret, and asked tor the Ridge
One* more 1 lined th* phone,
Center hospital. To tha female asked tor the Homer Hollis place.
who answered, I aald, “Is Miss Sandy answered right away. “Jim,
Doyl* busy?"
I knew It was you."
"Yea, aha Id—ok. Just a minute."
“Good news about Ralph," I
X heard her caU, "Mary Lou," and •aid.
then aba aald, “Bha waa just pass­
"You beard T"
ing th* dmk—here ah* la."
"Yes. 1 called the hospital. It's
A soft, cool vote* mid, "Tee."
wonderful news. Where's Judy 7“
“This Is Um Mead of Ralph Hoi“Or. Maaiinl cams and took her
Be."
away."
. “Who?"
“W heat"
“Oh, maybe a half hour ego."
"Waa aha awake T"
"Oh, ym." Them waa a lift ta
“No. H* wrapped her In a blan­
bar voice, and aha remembered ket and aald h« waa taking bar
me very welL
to the hospital, and carried her
"How la b a r X gripped th* re- out to hla car, and drove away.
aelver, prepared for tha worst.
X locked up her home and came
“Oh, much, much betlerl" Her home."
▼oic* reamed to sing. "We re all
"They're not a t the hospital."
•o happy about I t His tempera­
“Then whar* a rt thtyT Where
ture ta going down at last, and did th*y g o t"
he's breathing easier. Dr. Man­
"I don't know. Go to bod. Bandy.
u a l any* he’ll ba all right bow."
H I be out there pretty soon."
“Good. In Dr. Masrint there
“JLra, where are you T What
have you been doing T"
“Never mind, for now. Get soma
reet, sandy." And one* more X
hung up.
I stand at Jak* Fortune.
“You look like you Bead A
drink," ha aald.
"H a "
ja k jc f o r t u n e

N hW jsfM dAM Rf

at th* spot where Ralph had been
wounded. Bui even then my motlv*
had been largely curiosity, and
habit, resulting from years ot in­
vestigation work. I waa glad that
Ralph was going to live, but noth­
ing I had done had helped him.
Dr. Ataxxinj and modern median*
could Uk* th* credit for Ralph's
Ufa But old Rex Bishop waa dead,
and nothing could help him. May­
be he waa happier now, and J
hoped he was. Out he might have
lived a little longer, enjoyed the
small things tn life that pleased
him. I didn't know what tha old
man Uked; hla pipe, maybe, a good
dinner, a soft bed, a drink, mem­
ories of tha women he'd known
when he waa young, hla guna, the
alow talk of cronies around a Are,
j (Uow wheat waving tn a field,
tha rustling of tall corn (talks, tha
morning atm. . . .
But i Knew with a kind of
ashamed sadness that from the
moment the bullet had hit thr
beech ire* beside my head, my
motivsa for doing what I had done
had been eelflah. It had been a
silent hatred for an unknown ene­
my, and there had been fear, too,
but the hatred and the aclllah ragr,
had kept mo from running back
to Cleveland. And then 1 thought
suddenly and bitterly that U I had
gone back home and had let things
alone, Rex Ulahop would aiill be
alive. If I hadn't gone back to the
ravine, Earl Uellaman would never
have shot a t me; Rex Bishop would
never have aeon- Earl abbot at ma.
He would not have accused Earl
ot shooting a t me, and Ilex would
still be alive.
The taste of ashes waa very bit­
ter, and 1 said to Jake Fortuna,
“1 think r u bav* that drink, after

Ready By Next July
WASHINGTON UR- The Navy
expects to have the first of two
guided missile-firing cruisers ready
for antiaircraft duly wilh the B*et

OPPONENT CZ,

next July, (he second late this
&gt;e»r.
.
Complcion of the project lo con­
vert the chivy cruiarri Ration ind
Canberra presumably will make
the American fleet the first of any
world power to posses* opera­
tionally u s e f u l guided missile
ships.
Britain announced last week it
intends to begin building a fleet of
such warships hut It may he some
time before they are ready for use

In 191(5. the U. S. Navy an­
nounced that the uncompleted
hulls of the 45.000 ton battleship
Kentucky and thr 27,000.ton battle
cruiser Hawaii would be built into
guided missile ships. Conversion
work wa* started, then hailed
within a year Oise reason, actual­
ly the primary cause, was (hat the
Navy discovered the development
of practical guided missiles was
loo far In Ihe future lo allow- de­
sign nf ships for their use It was

not until 1952 that the Navy again
took up the project actively, lend­
ing the Boson and Canberra o
the New York Shipbuilding Corp.
yards at Camden, N. J., for ex­
tensive remodeling into r o b o t
weapon ships.
A Navy spokesman said, In an­
swer to a question today, that the
Boston Is rxperted to be ready in
July and Ihe Canberra probably
about Derember.
The two cruisers, at least Initial­

Ever try baking spareribs with
a mixture of »oy sauce, honey,
garlic ami dry mustard? Wonder­
ful flavor! Ure a slow oven for
the sparerib* and give them am­
ple lime — 2 In 2 1/2 hours.

"On looks, (Mercury) is slwk
enough to draw whistles . . . a
door.y to drive—quick, smooth,
and sure-footed. It is the kind of
car you would want as a good
companion on a long, fast trip."

"With its all-new atyltng and
hiRh speed, (the n ew Mercury
Montclair) may become 1055’«
most popular car . . . 1 love its
looks, visibility, s|iced and han­
dling . . . It's hot as a pistol."

"Performanavwi.v, nil thrro lines
(Custom, Monterey, and Mont­
clair) are bombs, triRRcrod by
biff 202 eubic-inch enRinos with
plenty of torque for spine-tingling
pickup when you want it."

TOM M cCAlIIU,
. Tree Magazine'i

FRANK ROWSOME, Jit.

HARVEY B. JANES
Auto Ag*

AUTO EDITORS

Popular Scitnft Monthly

LUCK.

ly. will be used entirely for antiair*
craft protection of Navy t a s k
forces, using the Terrier guided
missile weapon. The Terrier, in
mass production for more than a
year, is fire from launching racks.

"In my book, the 1955 Mercury
Montclair is the best-looking car
made in America regardless of
price. . . The *65 Mercury* have
nearly everything—looks, top
performance and roadability."
*

3000

OZAfK*

Mcrhanix JUtulraUd

••Aulomobilt Yearbook"

“(light behind you," ba said, aad
added. 'Til hav* one. too."
1 opened the cupboard, took out
a bottle ot bourbon that waa more
than halt full, and placed it on
the table Then I got two glaaers
and aat down.
Fortune eatd, "Ice? Water?"
1 shook my bead, poured wbtaky
into the glasses. Both of ua drank
It straight, and between drinks 1
stared at the amber lights on my
glass. I didn't talk, and neither did
Jake Fortune. It waa Uka a wake,
and It would not have been diffi­
cult for me to believe that the
corpse ot Rex Bishop waa in a
flower-banked coffin In tha next
room.
At last Jaka Fortuna spoke. "It's
morning," bo aald.
1 looked at him. There waa a
gray atubble on hia broad red
face and hia gray, wide-epaoed
•ye* were blood-shot. H* looked
old and tired and worn out, Um
way 1 would look ta another tea
or fifteen year*, maybe the way
1 looked now. "Go to bad, Jake,"
I aald. "Don't mind me."
H* gava me a Ught amU*. aad
ha aald, a litUe UUckly, "X gurea
I'm warn out"
“Ma, too." 1 pulled a hand down
over my fare, frit tha atubble ms
my own cheek*. "Why did ha do
that?" I mumbled wearily.
“Who da what?" Jaka Fortia*
away. Wrapped her la a blanket
aad whisked bar away. To th*
hospital, be aald. But tiuy didn't
go to Ut* hospital."
“Who did be arhlakr*
•Judy Kirkland."
•Ok. Judy."

IToBoOmikread/

riUuAftici tour cupa
I-purpere flour wake

Mm u t Mtshlhlr, Kantarey, CMSlai on tha toot track at
Dearborn, Michigan. All 10 models In Mercury's S now sari**
gre powered by m w Supar-Torqu* V-B anginas (1M boraspomr
in tha Montelaira, IBS horsepower in tbo MonUreys and
Custom*). Dual exhaust* art standard equipment on tha

IT PAYS TO OWN A MERCURY— FOR FUTURE STYLING, SUPER POWER

�*

7AMBB MARLOW

Sem inole County School Boaril
Works On Overcrowded Classes
Remember the nursery rhyme about the
eld woman who lived in a shoe and had so
many children she didn’t know what to do?
Well, the Seminole County school board
can sympathize with her position.
The board, however, knows what to do
and Is fast doing it.
More classrooms are scheduled to be
built and bids on the remainder of the new
Pine Crest elementary school on 27th Street

Eisenhower Plan Is Torn Apart
WASHINGTON ( * - President
Eisenhower's school aid plan, 17
days after ha offered it to Con
gress, already looks like a wreck.
He produced It Feb. S. He said
300,000 classrooms a rt needed and
unless tha federal government
helps the states, the emergency
will continue.
He suggested a three-year plan
under which the government would
give states and local communities

the State Chamber of Comm area. T h e ek arp
increase la readily apparent when It la point­
ed out that the 1050 -’ensua put the popu­
lation at 2,771,805.
Superintendent Mllwee aaya 6,216 ehlldren are presently studying in county
schools and enrollment la skyrocketing at
the rate of about 8 per cent a year.
School enrollment and population in­
creases are tied to prosperity, economic fore­
casters emphasize. More 'people naturally
need and use more things. Industry tends to
concentrate In areas offering a large "home”
market.
Hie trend certainly Indicates that Se­
minole County’s up-to-date educational Bys­
tem has been a deciding factor in influenc­
ing many new families to settle in the coun-

World's Oldest Village

The Sanford Herald

He found the world's oldest village and
now ho has found ono still older. This Is
Prof Robert J. Braldwood, who teaches Old
World archaeology at the University of
Chicago. Rome years ago In Iraq, the anci­
ent Bnbylonin, he discovered the village of
Jarmo, which he thought might go back to
5000 B. C. Now, on another University of
Chicago aichseotogical expedition, hs has
found, also in Iraq, a village even more pri­
mitive. He does not estimate the date.
The newly found village, has pits for
houses, with Poors and hearths but no walls.
Its dwellers had good flint tools and heavy
stone mortars, pestles ' rubbing stones and
axes They hud begun to mold clay figures,
but had not yet learned the art of pottery,
Foe the present the settlement will be called
by its modem name, M’Lefaat.
In the millions of years of the earth’s
history M’Lefaat is practically last year.
A as the Psalmist says, "A. thousand years
are In Thy eight but as yesterday when it
la past, and as a watch in the night.”

Birds Know Better

p tge

4

Tuesday, Mar. 1, 1955

*

TODAY'S BIBLE VERSE
I will scatter you among the nations, and
your land shall be desolate.— Exodus 26:88.
The strange prophecies about the Jews
were amaaingly fulfilled. It In more than a
tolncidence that they should Indeed be scat­
tered among the nations of the earth and
that after thousands of year* that they
ihould be reestablished In the home land aa
had also been foretold. Humanity owes a
debt to the Jews. Their failures and suefollowed an amaalng pattern.

Thle U the season of the year when that
segment of the population which cannot fol­
low the nun to the playgrounds of the world
tnke* snince In the conviction that battling
the winter’s hardships builds stronger char­
acter and Invigorates the body. However, as
the years pass, there has appeared a grow­
ing number of back-sliders who find that
during the month of February they are wil^
Ing to aettle for a little leas character and a
lot less physical exercise.
•
Lest these people falter and leave the
path of the strong who brave the elements,
a new and better argument agntnat winter
vacations will have to be developed by the
advertising profession. To Armgt Those who
hold the fort la winter need all the kelp they
ean g e t

SAM DAWSON

Private A-Industry 6 Months Old

I

NEW YORE UB - The baby slstor cI the A-bomb-the private
atomic Industry—la • months old
today
•he Isn’t walking yet But she’*
grown much more rapidly than
many expected when President EL
wnhewer signed the Atomic l a
e r a Act Aug. to, UM.
Re roes stag the atom to Bern*
mart cal ate la well under trey. An
•tomit-powered plant to toed stee­

ls a building oa the banks of the
Ohio, others are projected la the
Hudsoa Valley, la New England.
California, Illinois. Michigan sad
alia where
Use of Ike by-products of nuclear
fission hi many industrial proc­
esses s u wtbeipresd area before
Congress lowered somewhat the
hate to private eao of aaetear fU*

No Comment
By WALTER (HAMBLIN, Jr.
WASHINGTON- TVends in gov­
ernment develop slowly. Roman
history affords and excellent ex­
ample of this, it took aevtral
hundred years for a loosely-knit
republic of Roma to weld Itself
Into n strong federal itate.
There la considerable similarity
between Roman history and that
of tha United Stetea. As Roman
interests moved beyond Ha bord­
ers Into foreign affairs, the con­
centration of power In the city of
Rome Increased rapidly.
This Is somewhat true In the
history of this country, as the fed­
eral government In Washington
started exercising more and more
authority beginning wilh the na-

don’t participation in World War
Shortly after President Elarnhowerjook office ho publicly com­
mented upon the encroachment of
tha federal government Into
spheres of activity once occupied
solely by itrtea and private busi­
ness . . end requested the Con
gress to aet up two commissions
to study the situation.
One commission, known a i the
Hoover Commission, was assign­
ed to look Into the opera Uun of
the federal establishment with a
view to reducing Its size end Its
competition with private builnesa.
The other, known aa the Commis­
sion on Intergovernmental Rela
lions, was given the job of get­
ting the federal government nut

diition laboratory at Unden, N, J.,
to see what atomic energy can do
for lb# petroleum Industry.
Battalia Memorial Institute will
build a reactor near Columbus,
Ohio. A r m o u r Research Fotmda Uun of the DHwiia Institute of
Technology haa one planned for
the Chicago area, with cost
shared by several eorporatioaa.
Americas locomotive Is building
s package nuclear powsr nesetor
tor the Army. The Navy already
has oee atomic submarine. The
Air Farce has some privets com­
panies studying problems el i Bitclear powered sin less.

of activities tjiat could be per
formed hr the states,
These two commissions for well
over s year have funclioncd quiet
ly. There has been nothing specta
cular and many people have for­
gotten that they exist. But , . .to
repeat . . . It takes a long time to
shift trends la government.
Within the last ten days have
come the first definite indications
that the President's efforts are
bringing results. Hera are tome
Instances:
The Hoover Commission has Is
sued its first of a aeries of reports.
Among other things, It takes cog­
nisance of (he fact that the United
States is a large country and that
condition which prevail in one
area do not prevail in another . .
And, aa a result, standards for
otta area may not necessarily be
stai dards for another area.
In view of this, the Hoover Com­
mission called for "greater re­
cognition" of "prevailing wages"
in compensating federal em­
ployes to take Into consideration
the eost of living conditions In
various parts of the country. The
Commission found that In steno­
graphic and clerical positions the
government Is paying much high­
er wagei than those prevailing In
buslntsa snd Industry. As a re­
sult the federal salary policy has
caused business and Industry con­
siderable trouble, aa they cannot
compete with federal salarlei and
aaake ■ profit The noover Com­
mission pointed out that a ma­
terial saving In money could be
effected In the federal government
by adopting the prevailing wage
scale In various communities.

In addition, the Hoover Commission, through executive and de­
partmental aiders, la moving to
cut down government competition
with business. For example, the
government la going out of the
rape manufacturing bualneaa and
several like activities. You will
bear m e n about this b ier.
A number of Congressional Re­
publicans also point to the Presi­
dent's recommendation for eld to
education aa a significant atep to
keep the federal government from
expanding Us activities. Hereto­
fore, meet proposals for federal
aid to atfncatioe have ambodled
direct appropriations from the
federal government These would
necessitate a certain amount of
federal control, aa the Congress
ever the yean baa consistently

In Congress, Democrat! and
Mime Republican* jumped on the
plan. So did one educator after
another. Summed up, this wai the
criticism:
The 200-mlUlon-dollar gift was
far too small for school needs. And
by the Interest on Its loans, the
government would be making moo
ey at the states' expense.
Under the plan, itate* would
have to set up special agencies to
handle the loans. But some states'
constitutions forbid tuch an ar­
rangement. The three-year plan
would 1«.* too brief for some of
those corfstitutlons to be changed.
Some states would hava to pass
special legislation to get in on the
program. Some other stales right
now don’t know whellur they could
participate. About eight are In
position to take advantage of the
loan arrangement right now.
Powerful Democrali, particular­
ly Sen. HUI of Alabama, are for

Conservation
News
By JAM ED R. SARGENT
Soil Conservation Servlet
A dinner meeting wai held by
the Board of Supervisors of the
Seminole loll Conservation Dis­
trict Tuesday night. Attending
were Bonner Carter, George Har­
den, C. A. Wales, Henry Wight,
John Martin and myself. Visitors
present were Homer Osborne past
chairman of the board, E. J.
Cameron and R. F. Cooper past
board members. Mr. West, voca­
tional agriculture teacher from
Seminole High School, Al Swartz
Area Conservationist, from Or­
lando snd L. M. Hollingsworth,
eaecutlvc secretary to tha State
Sol) Conservation Board In GalncivlUc.
Immediately after dinner toe
meeting waa called to order by
chairman Carter AU buainets waa
quickly disposed of, and the meet­
ing was turned over to Mr. Holling­
sworth.
Mr. Hollingsworth explained to
the group what the job of Soil
Conservation District Supervisors
was I believe after the talk by

Humping Elsenhower's proposal
and substituting one which would
give states not the 200-millton-dollar gift suggested by the President
over three years but one billion in
two years.
And the segregation question
was raised. Since the Supreme
Court has banned segregation in
public schools, should the govern
ment give any state money for
new schols unless segregation in
them Is forbidden?
Then yesterday another develop
ment was leaked out but not by
anyone in the Eisenhower admin­
istration. This was it:
In ISM, at Elsenhower's request.
Congress set up a 25-man com
mission to study federal-state
problems,
That committee has IS mem
bers, Including Dr. Samuel U.
Brownell, commissioner of the
United Slates Office of Education
in the Department of Health, Edu­
cation and Welfare under Mrs,
Oveta Culp Hobby,
She has testified in favor of El*enhower'i plan, which almost cer
certainly waa drawn up in Brow
nell'i office or somewhere In Mrs
Hobby’s departm ent
The commission committee on
which Brownell served. It was
learned yesterday, made a secret
report last fall to the full, 23-man
commission. The com mission could
endorse the report or ignore it and
may have intended to do the lat­
ter. The report has not officially
been made public.
Yesterday a reporter got a look
at the 200-pagc document In an
office from which he waa not per­
mitted to remove It. There wee no
Indication/ this newaman related.

U N IT E D WE STAND,
DIVIDED WE FALL*
•(A u th o r's nam * b d a w t

Four professional groups
___
ire, “united”, in a great ef­
#ffort to keep you healthy
_________
w a y s_
Scientists are al l!~
searching for new discov­
eries and better methods
of treatment. Pharmaceuties) Chemists manufaeture the drugs. Physicians
prescribe them to their pa­
tients.
And we, your pharma­
cists, are proud to be the
fourth member of this un­
ited effort, because it is
our task, to compound
your prescriptions, that
are the final result of this
group strength.

TOUCHTON
DRUG C O .
Cer. lat A Hegaelta
PRESCRIPTION
CHEMISTS
'Q u o ta tio n by D ic kin so n 1T T I
C o p y rig h t S W S II

• • • • can use our Drive In Window for Just
about any hank transaction and be oa their
way In a few seconds. Why mot use K . . • K’s
there for your convenience . . , open from
9 to 4.

STEAK BURNED
BANGOR, Maine W - A pollee
dispatcher sent a patrol car last
night to a fire scene, giving this
address: " I Wingate Court."
From another cruiser ear, Fatrolman Bernard Welch spluttered,
•■I’ll taka that call. That's my
house."

Of course, we'rf always glad If yoo some hi
and chat, too.

Soon bia voice came ever the
radio:
"It's okay except the steak I
was going to get lor supper la
burned to a crisp."

'

i

�•a i

Wedding Told
For S. Radford ,
Carl D. Maihle

S o cia l £vcn lil

Calendar
TUESDAY

Special Evangelistic Service* at
First Methodist Church, with Dr.
P. M. Boyd of Jacksonville at
guest preacher.
T h en will be a board meeting
of tha Seminole High P-TA in
the library a t 7:30 p. m., and the
regular meeting in the auditorium
t i t S p. m.
V The Dependable Class and Judge
Ware’s Class will sponsor the
atu n d tn ce at the Evangelistic
Service at the First Methodist
Church a 7:30 p. m. with Dr. P. M
Boyd as speaker.
Circle No. Two of the First
Baptist Church is in charge of
tha program at 2 p. m. for the
Week of Prayer.
The F irst Baptist Concord Choir
f%ril! hold rehearsal a t 0:30 p.m.
The First Baptist Intermediate
Royal Ambassadors will meet a t
Y p.m.

I

j

The First Baptist Y.W.A’e. will
meet at the First Baptist Church
a t 7:10 Pjin.
The women of the First Presbytarian Church will have an all*
day meeting of prayer and praise
to close tha month of prayer and
r .^u lf-d en lal for World Missions,
s ta rtin g at 10:30 a.m.. In the edu*
national building. At 12:00 noon a
tovored dish luncheon will be sor­
ted. The program meeting will be
ft 1:1B p.m.
The board of managers of the
Woman's Club will meet at the
•tub at 9:30 a.m.
The Unity Class will meet at the
Veldes Rote) at 7:43 p. m. with
Carolyn Parsons as teacher. The
^ u d y will be continued. The public
invited.
The Ladles Society of BLFItE
will meet In the lOOF HiU at

T:M p. a .
The Sanford Tourist and Shuffleboard Club will have a covered
dish supper and meeting at 6 p. m
Tha WMU of the Central Bap
Met Church will hold a season of
prayer a t 7:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
A The Elsie Knight Circle of the
F irs t Baptist Church Is In charge
• f the program a t 7:30 p. m. for
the Week of Prayer.

The Mlesion Study Book at the
First Baptist Church will begin
• t 10 a. m. with the
topic
"Under the North Star” taught
by Mrs. D. 8. Stamps, former
missionary to China. A covered
dish luncheon la scheduled at I t
f e o n and there will be a nursery
lor email children.
The Men’s Club and Men'a
Class af the First Baptist Church,
will spSnsor the attendance at
tha Evangelistic Service with Dr.
F, M. Boyd as speaker at 7:30
f . m.
The business luncheon of the
Womaa’i Club will be held at the
•tub at 11:S0. Tha anmtal election
• f officers will bo held and also
.dfe market basket aale sponsored
by the American Rome Departwent. Hostesses are Mrs. I.. P.
Paytoi, Mrs. Raymond Bass, Mrs.
Joder Cameron, Mra. John L. Lee
and Mra. Joe Corley.
The First Baptist Junior Q.A'a
(11 ana I t year girls) will meet
• l 3:80 p.m.
The First Baptist Carol Choir
will hold rehearsal at 4:!B p.m.
The First Baptist Bunday School
Piperlnteodent'e cabinet meeting
will tafia at 7 p.m. in tha Chapel.
Tha First Baptist Prayer Meet­
ing Service will begin at 7:30 p.m.
th e program will he under dlraoMap t i the Elsie Knight Circle ad
the W.M.I. la observance af tha
weak of Prayer for Homo Mlaafons.
0
Choir practice will t a held a t
(be Central Baptist Church a t
conference aril] ta held
a t the Central Baptist Church at
TtM p.m. for the purpose of
adopting by-Iawa for the church.
All members are urged to attend.
The Sunbeams af tha Central
Biptlet Church will meet a t 7:90
The Bearden Am. Circle win
bald a covered dish luncheon at
the Chapel at U:S0 p a .
,m
THURSDAY
‘^ n . s FI ret Baptist Junior GA’a
(9 aad 19 year gtrla) will meet
• I the chareh at l:N
The Fleet Baptist
ta roars a v i t d tea

Baptist Carol Chair
will taU rahaaieal a t d ill s a
e m it Win bald rehearsal a t t t
gbareh a t I am .
a A a Fleet Baptist Chareh Chd
J n hold rahearaal a t TtM pas.
The Find Bapti st Juaioc Bap*

THURSDAY

Th* WMU of the Crntral Bap­
tist Church will hold a season of
prayer at 7:30 p.m.
Mrs. Stamp, a missionary, will
teach the WMU of th* Central
Baptist Church the study course
hook from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Luncheon will be served at th*
church for all attending. At 3:30
p.m. she will meet with th* GA
girl*.
There will be m meeting of the
church brotherhood and W31U of
the Central Baptist Church for a
film showing at 7:30 p.m.
The regular March meeting of
the South Side P-TA will bo
held at 8 p. m. Class rooms will
be opened at 7:30 and the board
meeting will be at 7 o'clock.
ritIDAY
The Duplicate Bridge Club will
meet at the Yacht Club with je st­
ing to start at 7:45 p. m and play
■o begin at 8 o'clock.
The Tr,ih«ecker’* C lan a n d
Daughter’s of Wesley Class will
sponsor the attendance at th
evangelistic services at the First
Methodist Chuch at 7:30 p. m
with Dr. P M. Boyd as speaker
Circle No. Four of the Firs'
Baptist Church is in charge of the
program at 2 p. m for loe Week
of Prayer.
The WMU of the Central Bap­
tist Church will hold a season of
prayer at 7:30 p.m.
SATURDAY
The Central Baptist Church will
lie open all day for prayer and
everyone is to assemble for prayer
a t 7:30 p.m. for the revival.

Southside P-TA
Program Revealed
The program for th* Southside P-TA meeting to ta held
Thursday night at 8 o'clock will
be held on the “Social Needs of
Children” and will consist of
panel discussion led by Mrs.
Margaret Colt, th* County i
ordlnator of Instruction.
Those taking part are Mra.
Maymle Sieg, South Side facul*
ty; Mr*. Rachael Brinson, Gram­
mar School faculty; Mrs. Ola
Cochran, Junior High faculty;
and John Angel, a member of
the Seminole High faculty. Mr*.
Colbert, P-TA president stated,
that the project of the South
•Ide will be discussed and voted
upon at the business meeting.

Refreshments will be served la
the lunchroom.

Happy Birthday
Fehrwary M
Peter Grelg Smith

Glva cola slew a flavor chango.
Grata a redskinned tweet-Urt ap­
ple into tha mayonnolsa you plan
In u*a on tha cabbaga salad. Don't
pact tha appla befora grating. If
Cflirw Tcial tour cream I* avail­
able in your neighborhood, you
mnv use one-third of the cream
and two-third* mayoanalaa for
uie appla-drculng.

m
w s .

Sue Ann Radford, daughter of
Mrs. Ted Burnett and th# late
Paul W. Radford j»nd Pail D.
Maihle of Butler, Pa. were mar­
ried Feb. 12 in Folkston. Ga.
Judge Cecil Connor performed th#
ceremony.
Miss Jessie Byrd, Sanford, ser­
ved as maid of honor; and Gene
Maihle, Miami, served as best
man for his brother.
Mrs. Maihle graduated from
Seminole High School In 1034,
where she was an honor student.
She was also a studrnt nurse at
•'range Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Maihle is attending Orlan­
do Junior Cotlrge. He served as a
Paratrooper In th* Armed Service
prior to entering college.
The young couple is residing in
Orlando at present, at 616 E.
Harwood Avenue,

Vocational School
Commercial Law
Class Ends Course
The members of the Commerrinl Law class of the Seminole
County Vocational School finished
their course with a skit entitled,
‘‘Pearl In the Oyster".
The action lakes place In a tea
food restaurant. One of the guests
in a party of three finds a pearl in
«r, oyster. The oyster containing
the pearl had been put on her
plate by on* of the other guest*.
Everyone, Including the three
truest*, the manager, and the
waitress claims the pearl. The
rase Is taken to court to settle
the dispute of the rightful owner
of tha pearl.
The class member* taking part
In the play wer* Betty Anne
Howard, Mossy Bateman, Tatty
Bell, Johnnie Davis, Herbert
Barefoot, and Herbert Asell. The
part of th* Judge was taken by
Fred C. Murray, director of th*
Vocational School.
The Commercial Law course Is
short, non-technlcal coursa deal­
ing with the principles of law in
every-day business transaction*.

Turkey Loaf Makes
Thrifty Main Dish
When there'* left-over turkey In
Ihe refrigerator, a homemaker
hi* a good start for a turkey
loaf substantial and thrifty enough
to be a main dish at a family
meal, *ay» Myrtle Wilson, Home
Demonstration Agent, yet easily
given festive touches for a com
pany dinner or supper.
Directions for a loaf yielding
eight generous servings, develop­
ed In the food laboratories of the
Agricultural Research S e r v i c e ,
have these special features: Egg
whiles folded In the mixture make
it light and delicate, and the eggs
—which are cutrently attractively
priced and plentiful in m a rk e tadd to nutritive value of the dish
Red and green colors, Intriguing
flavor, too, can be added by using
the chopped plmicnto and a
tablespoon of chopped green pep­
per In cream aauce to serve with
the loaf. The loaf can also be made
using meat from a ready-to-cook
chicken, 3 to 4 pound ilia.
Loaf Ingredients: 1 quart diced
cooked turkey or cooked chicken;
l t t cups soft bread crumbs; 1/2
cup cooked rice; 1 teaspoon salt;
1 tablespoon chopped pimento (if
desired); l t t cups turkey broth or
milk; 1 teaspoon minced onion;
9 egg yolks; 3 egg whites.
Sauce Ingredients: 1 1 /2 table
spoon* poultry fat, butler or mar­
garine; l t t tablespoon sifted flour;
1/4 teaspoon salt; 1 cup hot milk.
To make loaf: Combined all Ingredlenta except egg wbllea. Beat
egg whllea and fold Into tha tur­
key mixture. Placed in greased
loaf pan and bake at 373 F (mo­
derate oven) for 1 hour.
To make sauce: Melt the fat,
stir in flour and aalt. Add to bol
milk, attiring constantly and cook
over low beat until thick.

Jane Froman, Mate
Iron Out Problems
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. UP-SIngcr
Jana Froman. her fairytale mar­
riage to pilot John C. Burn threat­
ened by "persona! problems," rest­
ed tare today while her husband
vacationed in Mexico.
She announced that they had
"deckled to part for awhile" In
hope the “ very, very personal"
differences would Iron thamselvea
out.
When asked If she had any (dans
for a divorce, ahe quickly replied,
Absolutely none."
"We feel we can resolve oar
personal problem* more easily if
we’re apart," the told reporters
at a pres* conference.
The CBS television star took a
oak's leave from ta r Thursday
show to recover from an attack
•f bur*till. She said Bum would
remain In Mexico until the end of
March, the will return to New
York March 10.
"I will eee him then,** * e said.
Bum was copilot of a plane that
erashed in the Tagus River of Por­
tugal la 1841,1a which PI of 99 per­
iods died. Both he aad Miss Pre­
m ia were injured bat ta held tar
bead share tha water fur Marly
aa hour until they were reacued.
Mias Froman apeat Are painful
years recovering from bar injuries
and married her reenter at Miami
la March 1941 after divorcing ta r
husband. She «UB wanes *

In Ihe Pink at the Birthday Party I

J J E R F 8 th* pretty cake, alt pate-pink, dsliy-decked kina cn the
outside; all deep-dark chocolate chiffon richness on th* It'Id*.
Her* are the candle*, in varyina shade* of pink, graded In rise and
gathered Into a rnuuiid of Dickering light. The aural ot honor cannot
fall to blow them out with ona big "whoosh.” And hera'a the tradtllonsl
coffee to wsft Its usual, fragrant "Welcome to the party, everyone!”
Now. we don’t tty that this li
the easiest cake In the world to Orease and flour two R-jftch tay-r
make. It Isn't! But you'll And It well cske pan* *t least l t t inches de&gt; i
north the effort to produce. It's as Beat egg whiles until frothy. Gradu­
pretty aa a picture and light u a ally beat In a half-cup ot Ihe sugar.
cloud — a chocolate cloud that’* Continue beating until very itlft anil
faintly permeated with the subtle glotay. Sift remaining one cup of
flsvor ot almonds. And the texture, sugar, flour, baking soda and salt
for all It* light ness, pay* a velvety Into another bowl. Add oil and halftribute to the heap of good things cup buttermilk. Beat 1 minute at
medium speed on mixer or 150 vlg
that go Into th* cake's making.
stroke* by hand. Scrap* tide*
When you serve a cake rack as orou*
bottom ot bowl conetantly. Add
this, be sure that you bars plenty and
half-cup buttermilk, egg
of coffee In the pot for aecondi — remaining
yolk*, melted chocolate and flavor
anti maybe even third*. It'a going to Ing. Beat one minute more, a*
take many an appreciative cup of above. Fold meringue thoroughly
the steaming brew to keep It com­ Into baiter, cutting down genily
pany, right down to tbe very last, through baiter, acroa* bottom, up
lingered-over crumb.
and aver, turning bowl often. Tour
Into prepared pan*. Bake 10 to 33
Checetate Chiffon BlrthdiyCak#
minute*. Cool on cake rack*. Split
1 cup butler*
! * ‘ ft* .
,
each layer Into two layer*. Spread
tt p*rated
milk
I squares (lea.) pink • tinted, almond • flavored 1 unaweetenM
minute frosting between layer* and
ha f
chocolate,
on top and side* of cake. Gamlet
R teaspoon
melted
side* with "daisies" ot aalteg
baking eoda
tt tssspooa
Blmonl
V teaspoon aalt
almond* and irml-sweet chocoUtr
it cup aalad oU
Mtrmct
piece*. Cluster candles Its varied
Heat oven to 110 F*. (moderate).. ■hade* of pink on top.

lttissircy

Newlyweds Feted
By Truthseekers
A t McKinley Hall
The Truthseekers Cists of the
First Method 1st Church entertain­
ed Thursilay night at 7:30 o'clock
In McKinley Hall in honor of Mr,
■nd Mra. Peter MonJI and Mr. and
Mra, Hrnry Lumb who wer* re­
cently married. Bath ladles are
over 30 year* old.
Th* hall was beautifully decorated with pink asaleas, fern
and pink eamlllia*. Tall batketa
of white gladioli and plum bloarums wer* placed throughout the
room. At one end of th* room
atood a tong table covered with a
white lace cloth bearing an a r­
rangement of pink camellia* and
■nap dragoni on each end. Alto on
the tahle waa a aterllng allver cof­
fee service.
Mrs. H. F. Crenshaw waa In
charge of the program. She pre­
sented the bridei with a lovely
corsage mad* of orange hloaaoma
and pink camellia*, Mr*. W. P
Chapman gave a reading "F or­
ever Home" by Channlng Pollock,
“ Wo Gather Together" and “When
Wt All Get Together” wer* sung
by th* crowd. Mr*. Nelli* Vaughan
gav* a reading “Darby and Jo n tt”
which was enjoyed by all. Mra,
Chapman held a quit gamu In
which tha question* were taken
from til# Bible. “P* and the
Auto", a comedy reading, waa
given by Mra. Vaughan.
The choir wa* Invited to com* In
and ting song* for th* prides and
groom*. Th# flrat on# aung waa
“Let Me Call You Sweetheart",
than a oolo aung by Mrs. Robert
Bennatt, “I Leva You Truly", fol­
lowed by Dr. H. W. Rucker ting­
ing “Til the Sand* of tha Desert
Grow Cold".
At thla time Mra. R. W. Turner
Introduced to th# cU»» Mr. and
Mr*. Harry Dick who helped witl
the entertainment.
Mra. Turner and Mrs. Crenshaw
presented the couple* with gift*
from the Truthaeekera Cl*»a and
The Men's Bible Claoa,
Mr*. W. I . Thornton poured cof­
fee and Mr*. Crenshaw and Mrs
Turner served rake. Approximate­
ly 00 were present to enjoy th*
fretting,

Bridal Shower
Given In Honor
Of Miss Thomas
The recipient of many lovrl)
Kill*. 311st Mary Thomas was
honored with a mlircllsncmibridal shower Friday evening h)
her aunt, Mr*. 3I*bel Dees and
lire iiiler-ln-law, Mra. t'lurlc* E
Thomas, at lb* home of the lat
Icr.
Beautiful snap-dragons and ara
Iras of deep rich color* were
used In prolusion throughout the
entertaining rooms.
Several games were enjoyed
with prlies awarded lo tha win
n*ra.
After tha honor** opened the
gifts, delicious refreshment* of
punch and cake were served. Mis*
Thomas cut the miniature wed­
ding cak* Iced In while and cn
crusted with yellow and red roses
Topping tho cake was ■ tiny bri
dal couple.
Helping th* honor guest celc
brate the occasion were her mu
Ihcr, Mrs. W. H. Thomas Sr., Mra
Roy Britt, Mr*. Robert Thomas,
Mr*. Paul Cason, Mrs Lcslct
Thomas, Mrs. W. H. Green, Mra
L. C. Smith, Mrs. J. R. Dunaway,
Mr*. W. B. Webb, Mrs. Maybclle
Gay, Mrs. Ken Campbell, Mrs
Ea'.i Bronson.
Mr* W. K Thomas J r , Mrs
Chester Earner, Mrs. Ruth Dres
of Tampa, Mis. M. E. Webb, Mrs.
Winnie E. Jackson, Mis* 31el ha
Johnson, Miss Mary Ann Bukur,
■nd th* hoilesiea, Mrs. Dees and
Mra, Thomas,

Attendance Pins
Given A t Church

■unday morning at the Central
Baptist Church attendance pint
for tlx months and a year and a
half wore preaented to children
from tho Prim ary Department.
Thoao receiving year and a
half plae were Fay# Hayea,
Evelyn Cameron, and Jaunrtle
M»*a*r. Receiving six month pin*
wore Paul Kalth, Clifford Brown,
Brenda Benton, P at Sp**r, Roger
Todd, Beeky Lodge, Phil Rahn,
Brush sugar aookiaa, before Marilyn Todd, Bonny M e iu r aad
baking, with slightly beaten egg Jockio Bridge*.
whit* and sprinkle with finely
chopped walnuts or

\A

r Ik'M icl
RI DS IN

f c * i \ ' )i

STARTS TOMORROW

(pcAAonafot

Mr. and Mr*. J. I. Husk of MeMechcn. W. Va., who have been
Ry MRS. CHARLES FLOWERS visiting Mis* fiersie Long for the
On March 28. 1922, the chosen ; ast month, have returned to their
delegate* from the various orga­ home.
nization* of women in Seminole
Friends of H. 8. Duggnr of 2 tl
County met in the Woman's Club
House at Sanford to act upon Arcadia ltd. will be sorry to lcnrn
the suggestion of forming ■ coun­ that he underwent surgery Friday
ty-wide organization of woiyn. in the Florida Sanitarium in Or­
This question had been the /ib - lando.
ject of a former mevling. This
Mra. Nellie D. Jones, formerly
second meeting was held in con­ ol Sanford, bn* completed train­
junction with tile I-ouguc
of ing and is now a licensed practical
Women Voters, whose delibera­ nurse in the Woman's Hospital in
tions ocrupied the morning. After Baltimore, Md.
a delightful box luncheon, Mr*.
John Lconnrdy called the wom­
Mrs. Deal Jordan ha* returned
en to order, and stated the object to her home in Aittertcua, Ga. af­
of the meeting. The committee on ter spending two weeks with het
a constitution for s county orga­ sister, Mr*. Turner Lodge.
nization reported. Change* were
made that seemed advisable and
Mr*. D o t
Williamson o f
mutter was to be presented at Charleston, S C. spent a few dayi
the next meeting.
with her brother* and sister-inA motion to organise a county law, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Lodge
unit of Club Women wai carried and Mr. and Mra. Turner Lodge
unnnimouily. Voting by ballot
gave perference to ihe name of
Mr*. 1. V. Stenstrom of Tamps
"Seminole County Federation of spent Sunday with her aunt Mrs
Women'* Clubs." Due# were t obe Turner lardgc where she met he:
32 per year per club.
sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and
On May 25, the second meeting Mrs. E. D. Tylor. who wc*-e erof the Seminole County Federa- joule home to Alexandria, Vs,
lion ol Women's Club* was again
Clarence F. Crant ham wh« is
hew m the Woman'* Club of San­
ford will: Mrs- Leonardy, chair­ teaching in Clearwater High
man. The constitution and by­ School, and Jane Williams, a
leacher in Leesburg Jr. High, were
laws were adopted.
The object of this organization the week-end guests of Mr. and
is lo bring together the Club Mra. V. It. Grantham. They arc
Women of Seminole County for both graduates of Florida State
mutual benefit and cooperation. University.
It it nonscctnrtan and non-poliUMiss Mary Nell Blackmon of
eal.
A group of officers were elect­ St. Augustine spent the week end
ed at follows, Mra. John Leon­ with Mr. and Mr*. D. K. McNnb
ardy, president; Mra. Endor Cur- nnd Bobby McNnh. Miss Blackmon
left, vice-president; Mra. 11. G. is attending the Florida School for
Smith second vlce-prealdonl; Mra. Deaf and Blind.
J, A, lllstline, corresponding aecrelary; Mrs. W, B. Ballard, re­ fur Ihe publics, use sometime this
cording secretary; Miss Coral i# year. The natural beauty and lo­
Tillis, treasurer; and Mra. Dean# cation of this park will make it
Turner, auditor.
an ideal place for picnics. Mrs.
These Club* wer# the Charter Brinson is making plans for a
Clubs; Sanford Business and Pro­ dedication service in May.
fessional Club; Sanford Woman's
For the pasl several sears the
Club; Geneva Civic Club; Parent main projct of the Federation
and Teachers Assn, of Geneva; has been raising money In add
Oviedo Woman’s Club; l.ongwood to the Federation Scholarship
Civic League; Altamonte Springs fund, an annunl ailver ten is
Club; Osceola Woman's Club,and Jield with the various clubs tak­
Ihe Daughters of the American ing turn in acting as the hrstess
Revolution.
club. This interest- free fund is
Nearly 33 years have passed to help tcarhers of th County at
since the federation was organis­ tend summer ehool to further
ed, Now these clubs are members, their education. Mrs. Clyde Ram­
Altamonte Springs Woman's Club, sey of Sanford, is rhnirman and
Casselberry Woman’s Club, l.ong­ under her supervision the fund
wood Clvir League, Oviedo Wom­ is constantly inuse
an's Club, -rminole County Coun­
Club \vnmi|Larr usually busy in
cil of Home Demons! ration Clubs, services to ffieir community, such
Sanford Garden Club,
Sanford as aid to the handicapped, help
Woman's Club, Pilot Club of San­ srboola nnd recrentional facilities
ford, and the Busin**# and Pro­ to tbe slrk and (lie aged who «r#
fessional Woman'a Club of San­ for their children and for people
unable to help themselves. They
ford,
Several charter member# are ot all nges. They work for elfi
sill! active worker* in their vurl- dent modern rare ami treatment
out clubs; among those are Mra. of Ihe menially and physically ill
II. G. Smith, who provided sum# are Interested in having good
of the information for this a rti­ In tax supported hospitals
cle, Mr*. Endor Cnrlett Col# and
Mra. William Kilhc# of Geneva,
Mra. J. A. Ilistline and Mra. C
It. Searcy of Longwood.
All metnlier* of the I'hilts be­
longing lo the federation are
lumber* of th# County Federa­
tion.
*
Th prrsem officers of the Fed­
eration are; Mrs. J nines Partin,
president, Oviedo; Sirs. C. SI.
Flowers, vie# president, Sanford;
Mra. Ben Evans, second
vice
president, Casselberry; Mra. W.
S. Pro-ser, according secretary,
I,ongvmodj Mra. Don Ulrey, cor­
responding
secretary,
Oviedo;
Mrs. Ballard, treasurer, AltnmunGreen, auditor of Ixmi.wood.
The late Joe Cameron presented
to th# County Federation ten
acre* of land, located on the
north aid# of Highway 4(1, ad­
joining lh# Wcklva Ittver for thu
purpose of a public park, now
Highway Beautification chairman
Mra. W. B. Brinson, with th# eo.
operation of Ui# Seminole Coun­
ty Sportsmen'* Association l*
having this site developed into
a lovely park that will ba open

THE SANFOTIP HERAT D
Page 5

jTues. Mar. 1, 1955

Oscar Nomination
Role Turned Down
By Four Actresses
HOLLYWOOD " — Four, lop
actress#! may well he hatin r
themselves today
i •
down a role that won Jaa Sterling
in Oscat nomination
"1 don't blame them," savs Mixs
Sterling
"The part probably
wasn't big enough for th m.
That didn't bnlher her. Nor dhl
she mmd when she was told that
she would have to rtegtamnrlie her­
self In .in almost brulnl manner.
When she tried out for the role in
"The II h and the Mighty."
director William Wcliman warned
het about the scene She was to
remove her fall* oyelashis, pan­
rake makeup lipstick nnd *11 other
beauty trapping* right before the
camera.
“You might be loo good look­
ing." Wellman said. "We may not
he able to make you look bad
enough "
"Oh ves, you will." s 'r assured
him.
Jan even shaved off her eye­
brows |i&gt; i d 1 to the effect When
she did the scene It u is all thu
Mm makers wanted, ami then
some. It was one &gt;f ih -se attention
getting srenes that attracts Oscars.
Shr is now eon side red the favorite
to snag the supporting actress
award.
When I saw her at lunrh, sho
Had her glamor on ami looked
good. She is an attractive, wellproportioned blonde. At least sha
was a blonde then She said sne
was going home to darken her hair
in the shower Til* was for her
next rule in "The Deadly I’eacemaker" with Robert Mltchnni
"I play a madam," sho an­
nounced.
She went on (o explain why
she rchshi" such roles: "la-t's face
it — I'm mil the glamor type. 1
won't he able to get by on my
looks alone The only way I'm go­
ing to Iasi in this business is to
play role* with character."
I pooh-poohed her claim that she
larked glamor, but she insisted.
She said sin* knows what she lias
and makes ihe most of it. Her
hairline, for example. Like Rita
Hayworth and others, sho has
raised hot forehead.

N O T I C E

All Calendar
Listings And
Society News
Are Requested
By 5 i&gt;. m. The
Day Preceding
Publication

lhviwm.Know
The

sms w #n

to everyday

t o i n i u * problem#*
By ANDY CAHKAWAY
CLIFF MrKIBBEN

QUESTION! Will ■ "Gun
Floater" Insurance poller pay
for thaft of a xun by a parson
who “borrow#" k. aa than
laavaa tha country T

I HI A T Rf

■TARRING
BUXAHETM TATUM
T.-M . 1114
FLUB

Chosen Delegates
Organize Women
Into Federation

ANSWER: Gun F1oat#ra ara
so t standardized politic# but
most of them would not eovor
th# typ# of loa# you mention.

Our Bridal Registry Scrvico kes*p« a record of your
pattern and dashed pieces, so w« con help your
friends and relativoc select precisely what you ikvJ
Ito fill-in your service.
Our Bridal Registry Service also can Incliulu your
CHINA and CRYSTAL Tho EARLIER you choose
and register your patlem, lists more Silvt r you'll luso&gt;
by your Wadding data.
Prices shown are for 6-pk-c* Place-V-tttng,ctm-

*isUn| of 1 Knife 1 Pork, 1Teaspoon, f hut.

i* Spread#). 1 Soup Spout), 1 Salui I uzk^

p g U U ilM fl

•If fon’tt sd d rM
io s u r a a r *

q u rs liu a a

y m r own
lo

tk ll

office, wo‘41 try to Ilf# TOP Ita
ooeeoxl osawora snd ttar# will
t a pa (hare# or oM catloa of

W m . E. Kader, Jeweler
y « rU fl« » 03ra&gt;ol&gt;ql»l)

CARRAWAY 4k
McKIBBIN
M K V M lN ,

fi 4

U tm u il J litU l)
(

l i t So. Pork At *.

Phone S5T-W

r e ^ - r r '- '

�THE SANFORD HERALD i
page 6

Turn. Mar. 1, 19SS

S ports
Roundup
Bv GAYLE TALBOT
NEW YORK ur—To the public
a t large this U ju .l the day that
ha. been set a.Kle for 18 hig league
baseball clubs to start getting the
winter kinks ou*. of their muscle*,
but it means a whole lot more than
that tn a thousand or so hungrv
athletes
Their big moment came shortlv
after sunup, when Ihey were per
milled to charge into 16 hotel din­
ing rooma and order the works,
Including steaks, and Ihrn merely
acratch their names acrosi the
bottom of the cheek while reaching
for the toolhplcks. They figured to
be doubly ravenous this time, hav­
ing been on abort rations longer
than usual.
Through aomr mixup, for which
no one has yet admitted responaibilily, a hard and fast rule waa
laid down at a joint meeting last
year that no player whose name
appeared on a hig league roster
wmild be permitted to suit up be­
fore M anh 1 Ini' season. The play­
ers say they didn’t want It, and
the owners said thry didn't either,
but Commissioner Ford Frick de­
cided lo make II stick.
So far as we have been able te
ga'her, what happened was that
anme of the more affluent atari,
who had plenty of eating money
In ihrir pockets, did not wish to be
forced to report before today. They
got their wish, but Ihey Imposed
a terrible ordeal upon their leu
wril-healed teammalea. Many of
them have been hanging around
the camps for weeks, bored atlff
and waiting for Inday to dawn.
Not only does room and board
suddenly hecomn free, hut each
4 athlete draws the first installment
t of hia $23 weekly spending money,
i To many this !a an extremely
* Important Item, for they do not
* atari drawing their aalariea until
the playing season opens more
than a month from now, and they
are flat broke.
The $26 per week la a recent
thing, put over by the playera
since they formed (heir union.
Al any rate, this is the Iasi time
you will see practice starling thin
lata and the (tril exhibition gamea
Dot scheduled until March 10. The
playera have learned their lesson.

Ted Williams Absent As Training Begins
tual holdout*.
The atatua oT Williams, fish­
ing leisurely off the Florida key*,
rtmalndrd a question mark. Gen­
eral manager Joe Cronin of the
Rrd Sox said last night in Sara­
sota that William* promiaed “to
call me in the near future and giva
me a definite answer" whether
he'll play ball In 1056.
One report had William* reiter­
ating his retirement plan* while
another had him reluming for an­

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ted William* waa among the
atiM-nler* aa the major Irague
liaieball tram* officially began
their ■pring training routine to­
day with 34 other players still unsigned.
Ptayrra are rlasalfled aa hold­
out*, according to apring training
tradition, if thry haven't returnrd
their algnrd rontracta by March 1.
Hnwrver, only about half the re­
calcitrant* were regarded aa ac­

ARM OKAY N O W ?

S y A la n M o v e r

;
'

Legal Notice
"*iGw

j ; u !*T||« Tii t y .

o r i .ocal
I.K U U I.A T 1 0 W
*u
olvan Dial tha
Board of HiiparvUora of ntarlo
4 p iifilr. FI nr Itin, will of
nttnlr in ihi
*
»of ,h# PUU1of VlorlSn
j f ! , l u . r , «Vl"r
for lha year
',h: ?••••■• of lo ra lo j
'•nlototlai
authorising
Mid
!Board of Supervisors la risen out.
attalr and rn lm i l,y contract nr
tharwlaa any or all of tha drain.
M ratmli of »ald Rlavl* tiralnaya
Mslriri and tn aaaass th* r.»i “ f
a a /iM h in n out, rspalrtnc or ra- ptfknfitf Mifl flrit Iimkk i*i ma I ■
‘ H * Bit only the land. In •aid
Ml* Dl..
Plt(Hit henrfitad by aald rltaainn
rlaanlna
•ut, rtpslrliif «ip rtitofinar,
*■
- - - hr
hV'ia..
fc* 2f*w»lw*4
*ald ftoard
, of dupervuoM, aftar
notlca
to
tha
after Imllo ...
r r / * ; - ""7 ■lanera of »I4 land*
, , i M ,t « dMarmln# Ilia meaner af
" " ■ '• K *

B a S e lN lll S lH ltS

tO B B V

SHANTX
.
\

IS N 'T E X A C T L Y
C R YSTA L B A L L .
G A T IN G
B U T N tS L E F T
A RM HO LDS
'
TH E H E /
TO H tS
B A SEB A LL
•v
FU TU R E;
/F/TH A S
c o m p letely

R EC O V ERED
KANSAS C IT Y ’S
FU T U R E W/U
PRISHTtH,
TOO.

ru e p o c s a y *
m c ir r r t t o u y *
v a r m /* o k * y
,.V \ a m p we I

More
*o- .

Mo»r

JJ
HALllAfiL f
^ ri4
CEP FLAYER IN / 9f Z
wen me wav Z4. to*
T * o u n e * p e o A fi w h e n
He w a s H ir e i t h e it f r A A M
P Y A n r c H lO BALL TH A T
v e A R -A R A A R e w riy o k a y
/Y r t f f . * M o N iV s p e c a p u
A R M T R O U P ifP N /M a /
M A Y - THEN LA S T * { A * o.Y s e e M e p tv p e o n c o m /P A C K T R A IL P U rp e/M Jd R C H
A R M O A fN iN O P A /, A M i W !/ j

Bout Set Tonight
Between Mueller
And Giardello
MILWAUKEE UB-Joey GUrdello and Refer .Mueller, each looking
for a »hot al a middleweight title
bout, meet here tonight in ■
Scheduled to round, non-televlied
affair that could attract 140,000
worth of fight fans.
Giardello, of Philadelphia, a
rated challenger for (he 160-pound
crown worn by Bobo Olson, la
picked ai the winner. Ife’a won 11
of his last 13 starts. Ills victims
include Ernie Durando, Gil Turner,
Waller C a r t i e r , Ralph (Tiger)
Jones and Willie Troy.
Mueller, of Germany, but fighttng out of Milwaukee, beat Jones,
Joe Mlccli, Durando, but tn hla
1x1 bout lost a decision lo Carn e n Ha uljo.
Proipccts of a title bout tn Milvaukaa hang mostly on Mueller's
success. Sid Flaherty, Olaon'a man­
ager, la reported on record In fa­
vor of a tills match here ir Muel­
ler wina Should Giardello win, lo­
cal fight followers aay there la a
chance he could hook up with Ol­
son in a till* match hern.

other season.
The Cleveland Indian* were
having the biggest holdout woes
with 10 members of laat season's
American League pennant win­
ner* still unsigned. All told, th*
American Leagu* had 30 holdouti
aa compared to only five in the
National Leagu*.
The New York Giants, St. Louis
Cardinali, Chicago Cuba, Cincin­
nati Radlegs, Philadelphia Phlla

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. W)—Tim Flock of Atlanta, loser of U (t
yesr'a NASCAR liraml National rara because of an altered engine,
today turned up winner of thla yrar'a event because of the aamo rale.
Tha National Aaan. for Slock Car Automoblla Raring disqualified
(ilrnn Fireball Roberta, tha firal-place flnuhar Sunday, when inapretora found that the puali lod
of hla car had been made ahorter.
Flrat place—and tha $2,350 win*
Frick Expected
ner'a prise—waa awarded to Flock
who finiahrd the IUO-mlla grind I
To Crack Down
minute and 14 seconds behind
Roliel U,
On Other Clubs
Flock'a average aperd of 02.06(1
BRADENTON, Tin. (fl - Com­
missioner Ford F r i c k ,
who m.p.h. in the 1P55 Chrysler 300
cracked down on the Milwaukee wai declared the new record for
club and 14 of ita Bravca for vio­ t h e event. Roberta • averaged
lating the March 1 aprlng train­ 03,168 m.p.h. in n 1955 * 8ulck
ing rule, waa expected today to Century.
Flock, who flnlthed flrat In the
mete out almllar punlahmant to
1054 race but wai dlaquallflcd for
other major Irague dubs.
Frick Monday fined the Milwau­ en altered carburetor, remarked
kee club 1500 and Impoaed a total before Monday’* ruling 'T il abide
of SOU on 14 of Ita playera for by any d a e I a I n n made by
holding workouta at the Bravaa' NASCAR."

training eamp hare prior to the
March 1 opening. A rule adopted
by the major league duba at the
request of the playera themaelvea
barred earlier drllla.
The commluloner also hinted
broadly that the Brevee may not
have been the only flolatora of the
rule. Frick did not mention name*
of playera or teama but it waa
learned he waa checking on reK rta that ntembera of the Do*
tit lldera bad been working at
Lakeland and that aevaral Brook­
lyn Dodger* had undergone pre­
liminary conditioning at V a r o
Beach.
'Tha commlfiloeer'a office la
very much alert tn what la going
on and kaa Investigated a good

Long, Hard Grind
Toward Series
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. IE The citrui and cactus season —
haseban'sNpring training— got un
der way t.xlay on widely scattered
fronts in Florida and Arizona.
This ti the day baseball nffj
daily opens the long grind that
will lead to the World Series sev­
en months hence. Thirteen clubs
will go through their paces here
In Florida while three more—the
world champion New York Giants,
Cleveland Indiana and the Chicago
Cubs—are in Arizona.
The clubs will have 10 days to
get into shape for the exhibition
season beginning March 10. This
late opening of training, put
through by the players themselves,
has proved unpopular and it
wouldn't surprise anyone if the rule
were changed tn the near future.
In fact, only yesterday Commis­
sioner Ford Frick fined the Mil­
waukee Braves S500 and 14 of the
club a players lesser amounts for
nre&lt;- ring the rule.
“This March 1 deadline was im­
posed by the players themselves,"
said Frirk. "I think it's a bad
rule I think spring training should
be governed by the clubs them­
selves. But aa It'a a baseball law
my office will enforce it."
Attracting almost aa much at­
tention at the start of training arc
the efforts of the Indiana to get
(heir players under contract and
the big question of whether Ted
Williams la going to return to the
Boston Red Sox.
The American League champi­
ons still have 10 playera outside
the fold and General Manager
Hank Greenberg aaid: “Someone*!
being unreasonable, and It'a not
me."
All totd, 33 major leaguera atilt
have not signed contracts.
Ai for tha raeei, the National
League appears to be the better
balanced, although virtually all
clubs are rirpendlng un one or two
key men who could make or braak
the team.
The big three In th* National
League are th* Glanta, th* Brook­
lyn Dodgers and the Braves. St.
Louia, Philadelphia and Cincinnati
also could come through and. In
fact, only the Pittsburgh Plratca
and the Chicago Cuba seem to ba
out of It.
Tha American League rare again
shapes up aa strictly a two-team
affair between the Indians and
New York Yankees, who finished
one-two leat year aa far 4h*ad of
lha reat of the loop they couldn't
be teen with a epy-glaaa by the
alao-rani

Florida State,

E.VLV' *.

called tha club dfflclaia and play- trict II NAIA baikalball playoff.,
era “equally culpable."
matt tonight for the right to represent tha a n a In tha National
Southpaw IU1 Waria, who will bf NAIA Tournament at Kaniaa City.
gunning for a berth with tha Cin­ Last night, Florida Stats bast
cinnati Bedlega la IMS, domnn* Stetson M-TT nod Georgia Teachers
atrated remarkable centre! with downed Mercer, Urn deteading
LouiivlUt to tha Amtriena Ataocli- champion, gg-Tf.
line in 1M4. In IT InnInga of pUeh* Guard Jimmy Olcr set a now
lag, lha veteran aoulfcp«w yielded FlU m i i m aeoriag record by bit*
only eight ha m i on belli while ting 11 petota to puib hla total to
striking out M. That’* on avenge M4. Tha oM record of m waa
of ooo walk pec is Innings.
set by Bob Hartman la IM1.

,h* ^

,

By VERNON BUTLER
Associated Press Sports Writer
Kentucky had a firm grip on
the Southeastern Conference bas­
ketball lead today, needing only
a Saturday victory over arch •
rival Tennesiee for the league title
and a berth in the NCAA tourna­
ment.
Adolph Rupp's Wildcats took a
big stride towards their 16th SEC
championship laat night by beat­
ing Alabama 66-62 and breaking a
deadlock of two weeks.
Vanderbilt, back on the tracks
after a brief mld-aeaaon derail­
ment, stayed in third place with
a 78-57 triumph over Georgia. Ten­
nessee and Tut an* remained to a

tie for fourth, Tennessee by de­
feating Auburn 66-77 and Tulane
by routing Mississippi Slate 78-59.
Georgia Tech climbed from eighth
to sixth by closing out the 1061-66
scafon with an 66-68 victory over
Florida. Louisiana Stale surprlicd
Mississippi 88-66.
The heralded battle of the back­
board! featuring Alabama's 6-foot8 Jerry Harper and 6-foot-7 Bob
Burrow of Kentucky turned out to
be no conteit. Burrow racked up
26 points, high for tha game, and
grabbed 26 rebounds. Harper had
to settle for 12 points and 11 re­
bounds

Kenucky got fin

KrEu °y rUm,UA* &gt;"
"IIO U

m

a

IT

»k ? RwSPbtjriss ita

EJf *15** Wiwrt
Admlnlatratrls
Tw U m M tirr Ann#i* of Hit
f"* MHI "ml Testament of Kiln
llnean, iteceasart; that aha rtlM
h»r petition for final Slu-baraa,
wl" »t*ntr to th*
HonorabU BtlNKUT MOL'flHOt.li.
Kit. .t-oonty Juris* of Kamlnoln
rounty, riorlria, on lha ssth day af
Xfarrh, A. D.. ISIS, for approval
of aama and for final rilsrharaa aa
AdmlMlatratrlz Cum Testamentary
Annaxo of lha Iji M Will snA
Txtaw ant of tha tatata of K U .W
HOUAjr. dtcaatMl. on thi&gt; sun
d»&gt; uf February. A. D.. ISIS.
MAJJM HOGAN
FAttKKR
Arimlnlstratrlx C u m
Tastamsntary Annsio
or tha Lait Will and
Trslamant of D LL A
llrviAN. ritetaasd.
OEO. A. FPKKR. JR.
Altornsy at Law
r. n Bos iss «
Hanford, Florida.

H,D GLORY WINNER—Very Dninty, Fr*d

Bob Emrick Sets
Scoring Record
ATLANTA tlt-Bob Emrick, $■
InoU aopbomore from Aaktond.
Kjr.. became the Unlveirity of
Florida’s highest scoring bnaketbaU player tor • ilngW wasoo
last right when he f W J *
prints agatoit Georgia Tadh wrick

WtWWTW MACS— B /la Tlkaa K .I

* C‘»}« lJ»ea,

^•.vjrssr
4 Karly Oala

I

1T.4S

!I SMlddiahoro
LW *

1 print Oun
44wlMala (1*4) 111.44

awronn warn - * i * ( M IW 4 H a lf M l y

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I 1)1*1* Dm

(Trr.T^(».n

I4-40 **«• a.«a

{ Palka Otr*
1.40 a n*
b atnrmy Dollar
T.40
Qalnlala &lt;t-»&gt; Ilia #
y i j r n a u n - a/in — n » # a u

*•«* ««•
a.**

T K kT ai HACK— B/IO— T l a a 81.8
!

I D M Marlin
ILM
B Black Crnbar
4 T*d»r‘a B**f
Qnlnfala (1*1) f4t.*a
n a ia w w ans —a /ia —
f rhuck'a Mrmnry 8.88
t Bedford Hlrdat
I Prill'*,, Daley
Qalalala (l-ll Mi l*
P waa cat by Harry Hamlltoa rornTM
BACK—S /1*—
1060-61.

NOW*VSI O N I

v

rick posted 21 points and a new
Florida individual record with 385
for thr season. Florid* completes
the season Friday at Georgia.
Tennessee, which could throw th |
race back into a lie by healing
Kentucky at Lexington Saturday
'assuming Alabama wtU beat Au­
burn), beat off a late Auburn rally
aTter taking a 18-point lead. Tha
Vols enjoyed a rsre height advan?
tage over speedy but short A u b u r#
Ed Wiener collected 24 point* for
Tennessee, Jim O'Donnell tod Auburn with 20.
Jim Ashmore, the SEC's second
best scorer, had 27 paints for Mis­
sissippi State, but Tulane had morn
weapons. Five Grecnies hit In tha
weapons. Five Grecnies hit la lha
■kowskl led with 19. |Tultne and
Louisiana State wind up the sea­
son Saturday at New Orleans.
LSU brought its dismal S E 9
slat* lo 3-10 with the narrow ver­
dict over Mississippi. Mississippi
had the edge in field goal accuracy,
32.9 per cent to 29.3, but the Rebela
couldn't get the ball often enough.
Roger Sigler topped the LSU pointmakers with 17.
Mississippi's Denver Braekten,
league leading scorer, was high for
the game with 19 points, but a
tight LSU defense limited the Reto
el center to five field goal*. MiR
slsslppi and Mississippi Stats fir*
lih the season Saturday at Oxford

IN UK Til K KHTATK OK
KU.A UOUAN,

w ^

- . r i

from aenlor guard Gayle Rote and
•ophomorc forward John Brewer.
Early In the second half Alabama
rallied for 16 points lo Kentucky's
two and snatched a short • lived
48-47 lead. At this point Rose and
Brewer found the range and fired
Kentucky a five-point lead. The
Wildcats never trailed again.
Vanderbilt closed ita season by
shaking off stubborn Georgia in
the second half to win handily.
The acore was knotted eight times
before Intermission, but Vandy got
rolling un a Gurry of baskets by
George Nordhaus and Bobby Thym.
Thym was high scorer with 20
polnti. Sophomore center Bill Em­

Legal Notice

&gt; * w k ilW f a had two
on rim. Ho had to loam to
■a prif haB otto too mu*

'|rtRf #f

Law.
(g
Detroit—pitcher Bob Cruie.
w
Cleveland—pitcher Bob Hoopper, Bill Wight, Hank Aguirre;
outfielders Dave Phllley, tta lly
Westlake; infielder Rudy Regala­
do: catcher Hank Foilea.
Boston — pitcher* Al Schroll,
George Sutce Jr.; catcher Sammy
White; Inflelder Ted Lepclo.
Baltimore — pitcher* Jim Mc­
Donald, Lou Kretlow; outfielder
Cal Abrams.________________
fc

Kentucky Trims
A
l 66
To Get Firm Grip O n SEC Lead

Bobby Klmmri led the Tack at­
tack with SI poiria. The victory
gave too F egjooora, tiering tbolr

ru m i d a .
/r‘

hutu l*«r

Pittsburgh Pirat**^ have two stub*
Ixjrn holdout* in outfielders Min­
nie Minoso and Frank Thomas.
Five member* of the Milwaukee
Braves—including Eddie Mathews
nnd Gene Conley—came to term*
last night leaving only Inftelders
George Crowe and William Caro
uuaigned.
Others unsigned;
Brooklyn—pitcher Ron Negray.
Pittsburgh — pitcher Vernon

WtiKcheafa brinrfto bitch, poam very
nlatUy M m 4 sfln r wlaafcg the Old Glory Handicap at Sanford-OrUndo Kennel Club
httrMUiy night* Left te right are O, E. Weaver, Marion G. McClain, Mrs. Pauline Slevenn
reaentlng trophy radio te Ike Tinker, trniner of the dog} and D. T. Warren. All except
'Inker represent Old Glory Pool No. I S3, American Legion, with member* from Longwood,
tUamonte Spring* Fern Park and Canoelberry, communities clones! to thotrack, Tke
In the caia of the Bravaa, Frick to n to Uin flrat round of tha Dis­ •a t rocelvoda donation of HOLS* from goto receipts for their building fund.

*P. doctor# auuh aaaaaa*

i^ u w r .

Kaniae City and Washington
also were having their holdout
woirle* with '.ach miming five
contracts. The unsigned Athletic*
were John Gray, Cloyd Boyer, Ed
Hurtachy, Jim Finlgan and Forest
Jacoha. The Senators had not re­
ceived the signed contracts of
Mickey Vernon, Eddie Yoat, Bob
Porterfield, Jim Buiby and Roy
Sievers.
,
Th* Chicago White Sax and the

many cam pi," declared Frick,
who la vacationing at nearby Balia* Georgia Teachers
air “The Investigation* am not
rinfahed. U we find there la a vio­ To Meet Tonight
lation in other campi the com- TALLAHASSEE IS - Florid*
mlnioner will taka action.”
State and Georgia Teaehen, vie-

.. a f f a b la n *;lil a»»*Miu»nl* and p i t .
V t c r*^.1¥V h °w lb# M m * afcall ha

' i apaatatiVRfiAlifi dike

and tha New York Yankee* had
all their playera signed.
Hank Greenberg. Cleveland Gen­
eral Manager had three of hi* key
performer*—pitcher Early Wynn,
second baseman Bobby Avila nad
outfielder Larry Doby—to contend
with.
Wynn, usually one of the last
tin agree to term*, was reported
to he asking for $40,000 and Avila
and Doby around $30,000.

[
• »

“ •
»

” ( » • , H i.,*

:
»•

1.11,1.IK MAK BOWI.IN
i
a r n n K M i i axis a u u b m i i n
K.VOWX.
You are hereby nntltua thaa Dan
C. Uowlln. ha* filed ault tar di­
vorce ana Inst you la th* Clreolt
Court for nsmlaoln County, at Ha a.
lord. Vlurida, and you are ksrsbr
required to rile, parannatly or by
attorney, with tha Clark «r our
aaid Court your written dafanaa,
and a copy thsraor to the undtr•toned attorney, l( aay dofanae
&gt;uu nave, in tha bill of roasalatat
rilad la said causa hr tha la ih d a r
of March. A. D. t i l l ; Haroia fill
not or Judgmaat will he y*adar*4
Bgatoat you liy default.
■
WITHERS my head and aoal o f
oald Court at Hanford. Hoatnola
County. Kim Ido. ihlo i ha tlth day
at February A, D. t i l l .
O. r . K orndno. O e i k
Attorn** for U* Plalntlffi
R. W. War*.
Woodruff-Parklaa BuUdlag
Banford, Florida.

t
j
*

�f

W A N T AD
RATES

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ARTICLES FOR SALK - I 14ESTATE FOR RALE-4 f FHA
F in an cial
Used furniture, apptlincev. tools,
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221 East 1st St Phone 1631
Nothing Down—Small Monthly
RAMFLE 1-LINE AD ________ Real Estate — Gen. Inseraoce
Payments
201 Edwards' Bldg Ph. 16 or 2*7*
RESTON1C
« GET extra cash (or articles too J. R. Alexander
Sherman Concrete Co.
T. M Stringer
Triple Cushion Mattress
no longer use Place tout an to
Out West I3th
rhone 2M»
Reg Real Estate Brokers
" Made Smooth to Soot) e"
day Phone ’P I _____________
Furniture Center
HALL'S GARAGE tor general Auto
A Mine ad, aucb aa the one above
repairing Also Wrecker Service
Phone 1423
S i- J J v*
Cmymxp 116 West 1st St
• l a only 36c per day on our low A
402 Celery Ph I09O M - ia
— nay earned rate economy plan, 45c Phone 1129 A. B. Peterson.Broker
USED TRACTORS
Nights
per day (or 1 day* and Me foi Associates
Britt
Tractor
Co.
A. B Peterson Jr..
See
Us for quotations nil Millwork
day.
Hlway
IT-tf
South
Phoue
M
U
P. J. Chesterson. Albert N. Fit's
and Hardwarr items before you
Garfield
Willetts
John
Meiscb
A little rpace like this wiD get
buy and be pleasantly surprised
PAINT ...................... 12 50 gal.
your message before our more
25 lb. Roaxlrrs
12.49 ea.
CAMPBELL’S CABINET
$7,900
«
than 10.000 readers TeU ’em to
Boy’s Undershirts
4 for 1.00 Hi-way 17-92 South
Phone 1441
2 bedroom masonry nome In A-l
day I Phone I t a .
ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS
comlition, furred walls, ceramic 310 Sanford
Ave.
Phone
1321
Complete TELEVISION SERVICE
Tbe above 4-llne ad
ne run
tiled bath and sills, including
on all maxes snd models
range and refrigerator, situated PALI. KHW-J for Porch Jalousies,
9 full days for only 12 to 1 days
ler only $1.10 and one day (or^72c on nicely landscaped lot In good j Contract or hour. Free estl SAN KOBO ELECTRIC CO.
tin Magnolia Ave.
Fboue 442
section of city. Priced below re­
males.
ell. Rent. Hire ^riih want
placement costl Heady fur oc­
the busiest salesman tn cupancy. Terms.
For
QUAKER Circulating Heaters
__
Put one to work for you
T V SERVICE
$59.95 up
9iiS
g
phone m l We will be glad to 2bcdroom country home on 3
Evenings A Sunday
B. B. POPE CO.. INC
charge It.
acres mostly cleared (fertile iOO South p*rk Ave
Phone M2
Phone
1444
land. |d ,500. good terms.
Evenings 6 in A Sundays 1-5
j For only 13 00 the above Mine ad
WINN T V A RADIO
*af is on the Job for you or 5 full 3-bedroom surburbsn hnme_ brand
ECHOLS REDOING CO.
Ph. UT
K. 1st
i days. Only $2.23 keeps It working
i’h. 1232
new. spacious excellent plan Corner 2nd A Magnolia
J for you for I days l day Is only
(Bud Bamberger, Mgr.)
Price 19,500. 11,000 down.
FLOOR SANDINQ n Finishing.
Oik floors furnished, laid A fin
5 1 ------------------------- -------- —
— Factory to You —
Seminole Realty
lilted Reasonable terms. In bus
* call us about our business rates
Iness since 1920 Old floors made
A lum inum
W. DIETRICHS
T. W. HERO
like new. E F. Stevens; Route
. . The Want Ad Department is IMI Park Avenue
Phone 27
Venetian Blind*
2, Bo* 227. Phone 716- R-4.
in from 1:30 a m until 5:30^p
Enclosed head. Sag-proof bottom
nv each business day except Sat
WE Need Your Listings—
rail with plactic ends Plastic or UPHOLSTERY- Slip covers made
today afternoon. Deadline for
rsyon tapes. Cotton or nylon
L.
M. PASSONS REALTY
to order at
week-day insertions la 2 :oo p m
cords.
at
&amp;
Points,
Jets.
411
A
17-12.
the day preceding publication.
NIX
REDOING MFG. CO.
Senkarik G lim and Paint Co. 1301 Sanford
Any ads coming In later than
Ave.
rhone $01 J
Monthly Paym ents $44.00
112 114 West 2nd bt.
Phone 320
2:00 p. m. will be published under
Only Two attractive two Bedroom
•"■
*
*
*
X*te
To
Classify.
SEWING MACHINES- Repaired
s
homes completed, ready In SMITH * CORONA Porta hie Type­ or rebuilt. Also machines for
requested
flU&gt;
Advilertiiers
*»u, unvi m are
view ■
w'*
™ to no
writer. Perfect condition. Phone
move in. Beautiful Kitchens and
vjj. tify the Want-Ad Department tm
sale. $13.00 up. Phone Hougaard
1667-W alter 6 p m.
Baths with Showers, Automatic
mediately of any 6nora In U i£
1777-X-M. Box 249, Lake Mary
water
heaters,
Utility
room
ads. aa The Sanford Herald will be
Carporle,
Aluminum
Windows.
INCOME TAX SERVICE
responsible h " only one incorrect
JALOUSIES &amp; AWNINGS
Vinyl Tile Floors In kitchens and Life time
Wm. Hi Murray
Insertion
and
Aluminum
baths. Only 1350. down. Thev
1111 Celery Ave.
Tel. 184I-X-M
ft
It's So Eu*y
—Free
Estimatea—Free
Instnl
are the best values In small
I
lalion—
Telephone
1425.
Furnl
To Pise# A Want Ad
LARGE supply of Orangeburg fi
homes that we have offered.
lure Center, Its W. Find St.
brr pipe and fittings for your
Sec these home today at
I * Just Call 1821 and ask (or
2513
'•rinerton
A*
’e
sewer needs.
the Want Ad department
UNDEnWOOD Typewriter perfeet
LOWELL E. OZIER
condition $30 00; Winchester 22
I .
Sanford Herald
Rifle practically new, $15.00;
Builder — Phone 1331
M
U
Custom Humes and Florida
Kerosene Automatic Hot Water
t" ~ F o it b e n t
-)
Builder low cost homes
heater, $13 00 ; 9 x 12 Linoleum
H J ^ f l II.'I.W
Rugs choice colors, $fl.50; A
WELAKA APARTMENTS: rooms,
C A. WHIDDON, SR.
Phone 1113
New double Wardrobe 3 mirrors, 1007 Sanford Ave.
private baths. 114 W. First BL
Erg. Real Estate Broker
$35.00; Mahogany dresser with
good mirror. $14.50; Dinette Plowing, discing, grading Trees
F U R N I S H E D kitchenette apt 119 S Park
Ph I2tt
and shrubbery moved Dewtll
set. extention. * chairs, $26.00 ;
A Slumbertand Court Hlway »■ «
Hunter 601 E 26th St.
Concrete block 1 bed room bouse,
A Nice Kiddle aUolier, $7 50;
• South. Phone 1SH-W.
living room and kitchen.-equip­
Copper screen doors, $3.00:
ped. 2 car garage lot 65' x 140'
Beautiful Walnut dining room RANDALL ELECTRIC CO.
Rodawm y s a d B ab y B ed s
close
in,
house
tn
good
condi­
T V SERVICE CENTER
suite,
$73.00; Wagner 3 If. P.
■y, Week or month—Tel. 1*25
tion. Price 13,000.00. 11.000.000
Electric motor, single phase
• Factory Supervised Service
US Wee* F ln t
rash, balance monthly.
with 2" centrifugal pump. Hun­
• House calls 9 a. m. till I p i
dreds of other Itema priced very
(All makes and models 1
Avalon Apts. Efficiency. Phone W. B. WILLIAMS, Realtor
low.
Ruby E. Williams, Associate
112 Mag Ave
Phone MOO
l i t N. Park Ave. Sanford, Florida The Super Trading* Post, IT 92
^
mile
So.
Phone
Z212-R._______
i Realty --lor Deatr- _________ rhone 1126
Stanley's Bike Shop
b t _____________3
able Homaa asd
s a t Apia.
Apts. Phone n
310 K. 4th St. Tel 2431
ARTICLES
WANTED
W. H. “BILL" 8TEMPER
Bicycle &amp; General Repair. Keys
T r a i l e r s p a c e - AvaUabie. s u
Highest CASH and TRADE-IN
Lawnmower sharpen A Ser
Realtor—General Insurance
— per month. Children Welcome.
prices paid for used FURNI­ vice.
GERTRUDE IHNGKELDER,
^ Lake Honrae Trailer Court
TURE.
Call
906,
Wllson-Malcr
ASSOCIATE
nllure cV-W t-B. tat
SanTWH
Phone aaao.
2122.
112 NR Park Ave.
Vacuum
Cleaner Berrien
7— P ek c-U v e'eth -H e^H— —7
1 ROOM furnished Apartment
rhone 714 X J
U N HnlkmvtDn.
Fo r "* SALE— German Shrppani Parts and Supplies for AU Mak&lt;
I
3 Bedroom Horn*
Puppies. Phone 756-R.
—Rentals—
•TORE ROOM. 16x49. 4th and
40
P IG S - Good breed. Will sell
Sanford. Inquire Jacobson's De­
PLUMBING
147 a month Including all
or all. Call 161-R.
partm ent Store.______
_____ ONLY
Contract and rcpvir work. Free
payments. This is a lovely homa
EEIJ* WANTED
-1 9
estimates. K I. Harvey l»:
Including full Dining Room, Kit­ 1 9 UNFURNISHED cottage with kit­
Sanford Ave Phnne 1B2*
chen, 2 Bedrooms and spacious "MAKE $20.00 Dally. Sell I^tmlnchen equipment snd Venetian
Living Room. Inquire at
oui Name Plates. Write Reeves
blinds. SU Kim Are.__________
P .M .C A M I’BELL
Co., Attleboro, Mata., Free
General Contractor
Ozier-Weller
*•-^4 Room Apartment 500 Perk.
Sample and Details."
"Homes of Distinction"
Phone 14*1
APT. rnrnlshed. 1714
While Man for light Truck driv* Bl-Way 17-92
Homes Inc:
re . Phone 429-R. Couple
ing. Apply in perion. Berry's ENVELOPES, letterheads, state­
1991 Bays—2121-M nights
Warehouse Furniture Co. 901
ments, Invoices, hand bills, and
W. 1st St.
2
BEDROOM
Home,
by
owner
p r o g r a m a. etc. Progressive
ROOM Fam ished Apartment
Terms can be arranged- M il 2 aggretslvr Public Relations Wo­
Printing Co., Phone 406-401
with bath. $20.00 Inquire 410
Elm.Ava, Phona Z290-X-W.
West J3Lb Bt.
men tn solicit by telephone ami
Bsnford A re ._________ ________
personal coni a it. Good propostpersonal contact. Good proposi­ FLOOR sanding and finishing
ARTICLES FOR SALE - »
DOWNSTAIR! Apartment. Lerge,
Cleaning, wising. Serving Seir.i
tion for live wires. See Mr. Casa
clean rooms. Son room. «U Perk
note County since U P H. M
SPECIAL
9:20 to 11:00 a. m. only.
Ave.
Gleason, Lafca Mar?.
NEW WesUnghouxe Freezer. 9.9
Cu. FL Froxen Storage capacity
® A PT — t Bedroom, private en­
—297 pounds. Original Price, 10A HELP WANTED (Female) »A 14 E—
trance. ,U M P a r t Ave. Phone
INSURANCE
-4 4 R
$369.95— S pecial- izb.QO Easy BEAUTY DEMONSTRATOR- Up
M 5J.
Terms,
’ 'O U ljH TI IN IN',i ih
[
to $3 an hour dam onitratini
Miltnr Radio A Appliance
g IT STORE Bunding Ideal
famous Hollywood cosmetics.
I
MONf
811
or small business. R. A. earner* HI S. Park
Your neighborhood. Free sarn­
n. Oviedo. Phone 4014.
ies and details sunp
supplied. Write
¥ lei
A f l a n T1C Ba n k Bl IK TOP CASH prices paid for Furni­
^hrima^DeBerry, Bosis 454, Fern
ture, Antiques, Jewelry, Hand
w n c i u M 9 BMrooms • imi ocb,
reds of items for sale cheap.
GIRLS!
GIRLS)
GIRLS!
V e ry je e ro n e b l^ lt. A. Cameron,
Good nours, Good Wages: Ap­
ply in person at Seminole Drive
M S S A .'
MAICO Hearing Aid, factory in­
jn ^ iOl East First SL_________
John WRHunn la s . A rm ey
spected, guaranteed jaoo. modal
417 Saaferd AOnaMc ■ « -'
175.00. Phone Mrs. Garner, &lt;ti
“
M
Of 999-M.
openIng for laltim an in established
RED-MdX CONKRETE
loeaf area. Truck
Grease Traps - Septl# TankaDeposit for merchandise
mereha
reWindow Sills* • Lintali.
I uired. Write W. J . Straub. 1106
Mntaalise Aa4
S m A Rock, Cemant. Steel, Mortar
!. Hillsboro, Tampa 4, Fla.

V—RBAl

V

1

22—EIJCCTKICAI

$ ) .I ) 1 C R U C

GORM LY IN C .
"Your Hot Point D ealrr"
21* Palmetto Ave.
Pb. 775
S a n fo rd E lect H r Cn.
l i t INagnotla Ave.
Phone s c
SEE Yr.ur General Electric dealer
(or TV and Amdinnees.
FKIGIDAIKK appliances
sales
and service G. 11 High, Oviedo.
Fla. Phone 4151 or Sanford
1642 W alter 6 p m
R a n d a ll E le c tric Co.
Bendii and Crosity AppUsncea
VoungstovL Kitchen
Klectnral co-traetlne and ren.nr*
112 M agnolia Ave. P h n n e 113

THE SANFORD HERALD

OFFICE KOU1FMEN1 —23
BEAUTY P A R M I R S —21 Tuc*. Mar. 1, 195.1
Page 7
HAYNKS Office Machine Co., SPECIALIZING In Personality
PIANO SERVICE
—T7
Typewriters, adding macunes,
Hair Cuts. Lillian McDonald's n Sales Rentals. 114 Magnolia. Pb
Beauty Studio in Casselberry. L. I* Sill—Piano Technician.
S4
Ill-way 17 92 South. Phone W. P
Phona 2t6t Route 1. Sanford.
27 21N2 (Closed all day Monday)
24— BEAUTY PARLORS -24
RESTAURANTS
-2 f
Drop In— Free Parking
SANFORD’S Mori Modem Beauty
YOU! YOU! YOU!
Snlnn SHAPING and STYLING
Home rooked Mcala
M1INDKY HERVVICE —23
our Specially One block Wedl
Real Pit Bar-llQ
and around the corner from the n One hour &gt; Waxn and Damp
Chill, Hot Dogs
clock.
Dry
AU Kinds of Sandwiches
HARRIETT’S BEAUTY NOOK a One hour VI Wash and Dry
Good Coffee
Fold
105 So Oak
Phone 971
at Clydes Grill
a Finished Laundry
206 Sanfenl \vc.
ARK YOU bored with your looks? n Sanllnno Dry Cleaning
Try OUR AMERICANA (’UT
Southwide
la u n d r o m a t
m i s SPACE AVAILABLE
which can Ik* set tn a variety
CAM 1571
South Side Food mart Bldg.
of ways to renew your charm.
AND INQUIRK
IM E a s t 23lb K L
EVA RrlSK SHOP
Phone M3

CALL

*

AND B U n O tN D N E E D S

THE

LUM BER
% # » /

h i

SHERMAN CONCRETE
PIPE CO.
Out Wral 1.1th SI.

■%
#* ■a4

Plum* 2189

CALI.
CALL

THE

LUMBER

TODAY!

NUM BER

NUMBER

for s u d d e n

83
s e r v ic e

HILL LUMBER Cr SUPPLY YARD
21.1

W.

THIRD

ST.

J

I

LOVELY

$350 DOWN

ft

•*•*** w &amp; n s :

# . •srsuctt&amp;'ssur-

MIRACLt CONCRETE C a OUTSIDE APPLIANCE SALES
1235

909 Elm A n

MAN. Apply in person to Baa
Appliance Center, 119 S.
[ignuiia Ave.

J trly

____

wtlk H
J t O B U pi M m
grove. Easy terms.

* tarsia.'

Maytag Washers
111 MagnaHa Am.
“

Boyd - W allace
"Tear M rtm l rH eads”
IM

1797 U RU»«NKM OrrOWTUWmES u

Salt: COSMETIC Route, for U — NeUees and Pern— )« —15
$ s U MOHAWK and Gulliatan For
all Seminole County: "Starlight"
Rasa. 27 X M Wool Scatter
Una. E adutlva colored line. WANTED— Ride tn and from Or4 U f M jd l g U t i w W
Runs.
Undo dally. i:45 a. m. tn
Write P. O. Rna MR, Winter
$ p. m. Contract Mrs. Meredith
SANFORD'
IRD LINO!
LINOLEUM***
f 7i
Fraley. Phona 9-2575 Orlando.
• Furnished, ronau. and hath in
- « . TILE CO
m oha
tiiitlfiAoo nl&amp;cfa
Phofift
127
V
.
P
i
n
t
8L
1917
C v . w ia teke IteU er as part
IT—AUTOMORmUt-TRAIUlRa
BARGAINS!
JE E P Station Wagon, |51S.0U. 1105
.CLIP ME OUT
Summerlin Ave.
r a worth
off. On an
FOR
SALE— *42 Plymouth dub
’^ j S T
f m
s s
coupe. 1100.00. T ern s if dealr
ad. Call 153-W.
FOR
SALE— Modern House Trail
M i d i h r a l l a n Cn.
n
•r. Good condition. 21 Ft. Fif
MS s e s Motorola ‘ ‘ H
•«. v
teen Hundred dollars. Call morn
I M m j m alii-tags between 9 and 2 P. m. Mrs
GnM 'i T m
Lopsi, Park Ave. Trailer Court.
U H k H M iih
ar
*
U l m . Km i
Monty
SERVICE 1$—-AUTOMOBILE DEALERS—la
SWAIN’S BATTERY IE
. t m n u s bunh
(Nationally Adv Roll a Heed) • Battery • Geanrator • Starter
BELL Y O U * CAB TO ~
Road service. Phone 117.
i
402
a Saafnrf
"

r ^ n .REAf, m

n

^ K f f lS iK r

| mammoth laid.
a3cnl” ateTl

ssftjreysxsai

&lt; 3mtt*T

s*

Os

Ray Red's Hand (ten

Saaiord Are I 11th St

H
i

X

J
W
J

f

• ^ '
H

�1
*

n

!

M j 11

#k...
. 14
V

Engineering Technicians Behind
, BOSTON UR - The United State* Un'ted States graduated 23,DUO en­
may be falling seriously behind gineers and 13,000 technicians.
In some fields, particularly the
Russia in a race which many
Americans don't even know they're automobile Industry, five techni­
cians are needed for eaeh engi­
« in this swift-changing atomic- neer.
This situation is causing deep
•lectrnnlc agn, educator* **y that
this country may aoon be handl- concern among educators and gov­
gapped In reaearen and develop- ernment officials alike.
w a n t by a shortage of engineering
Secretary of Commerce Sinclair
technicians — the men who turn Weeks warns that without techni­
plans into production.
cians tho efficiency and progress
* Unofficial figures show that U .i of the engineer and the scientist
vest Russia graduated about SO, would be critically curtailed or utPOO engineers and 'he same mim tetly lost.
per of engineering technicians. The
What la this field which la being
comparatively neglected by Amer» THE SANFORD HERALD lean youth, despite the scarcity of
T u rn , Mar. 1, 1956* workers and the promise of good

in-

talsridk?
Dr. H. Russell Beatty, president
of Wentworth Institute, a top Bos­
ton technics! school, says the tech­
nician combines the points of view
of the scientist and the skilled
craftsman
“ Here is a field definitely be­
tween the trades and the engi­
neering field," says Dr. Beatty.
"It Is a field for the doer, the

builder."
“ The engineer plans; the tech­
nologist makes and does. Tho en­
gineer creates and projects; the
technologist operates. The engi­
neer la concerned with the why of
a lob. (he technologist principally
with how to do it."

There a r t about 60 technical !aitltut«« In this country
One of their intemlve two-year
cuurici come engineering team
specialists. iu:h a i draftsmen, de­
signers. coit eilim atori, produc­
tion lupervliors, chemlaU, taster*,
research technologiita, control su­
pervisors, time study men, technical saleimen and plannen of
production and conitruction.
“ The warrant officers of .indutry.’ Dr Beatty ealli them Often
they oecome contractor! and own
era of buiinenei.
Starting .jla rie i are not far be­
low those of engineer! and, lays
Dr. Beatty, “ We have no place­
ment problem!.”

■nuwTTO* n o u n
MODBKNITT
BENTON HARBOR, MICH. (UR)
The ileek new Card Elementary
School U ultra modem in every
respect and the weather-worn old
bell looka out of place.
The bell waa cast at West Tray,
N. Y„ in 1156 and has been calling
Benton Hsrbor school children to
classes for U years. Everyone
knew, that it didn’t fit the new
building but tradition won the day.

Thty're yourn—valuable Lucky Bucks that you can use just like money at
our Lucky Buck Auction Sole! You net one Lucky Buck for every dollar
you spend here—extra Lucky Bucks on some Items— and every Lucky Buck
you save helps you get the prize you want! Remember, you gel lots more
for your money with our top-quality foods plus Lucky Bucks, so shop her*
to get that extra value!

DEADLY SAWDUST
HELENA. MONT. (UP) -Seven
ty cows broke into an old shed on
Peter Suta’a reach and ate some
iswdust stored there. Thirty-five
of them di«d. Suta said arsenic
Mash cream cheese with e little had been mixed with the sawdust
anchovy or kipper for a savory as erssshopper bait 20 year* be­
sandwich spread.
fore.

SPECIALS GOOD THRU SAT. MARCH 5th

U. S. GOOD WESTERN

WILSON’S SLICED

M

=

BACON

FRESHLY GROUND

4 5 ‘
HAMS

’

rnpi!,f

HAMBURGER
^
Lbs. 9 9 c

*
4 to 6 Lb. A

39t

■■

AN EXTRA LU CKY BUCK
WILSON’S

E
C A R R IED O V ER

MUST

FROM

BE

FEBR U A R Y

SOLD

SAUSAGE

CHASE 4k SANBORN

IN

COFFEE

M ARCH!!

TERMS

TO

G ET SET
lN - U P

FIT

NOW

FOR

PR ICES O N

YOUR
SUM M ER

TH E

OLEOMARGARINE

NEEDS

TOMATOES

U N IT S

*

Ford Victoria
2,245.00
Chev. Tudor
1,595.00
Ford Rch. Wagon SO LD 1,895.00
Fib. pricp

Stude. Champ. 4-dr
Ford 4-dr. 6-cyl.
Ford Clb. Cpe.
Ford 4-dr.
Ford 4-dr.
Ford 8-cyl. Viet.

1.195.00
1.395.00
1.295.00
1.295.00
1.295.00

1949

Zephyr 4-dr.
Pontiac 4-dr.
Mercury 4-dr.

Tall Can.

&lt;Jf

*

10c

J r . ' s .
B

ww

- __

★

10 1

Lba

★

39C

YORK COOlONi

m k«

Ford Custom 2-dr.
Ford Victoria
S
Stude. Fordor
Consul 4-dr.
Font 4-dr.
Consul
SC

DURKEETS
TU PLE WHIPPED

m u

LUCKY BUCK
WITH BACH JAK

2.995.00
995.00
1.495.00
695.00
HI
H

I
■]

V
L,
_ _? j 1 - IV*

J

ONIONS 1 1 3 c APPLEs £ 3 3 c

1951

TRUCKS

4

&lt;

4

Fresh Product

*

YELLOW GLOBE

S

Ford Tudor

1952 Ford 3 ton Tractbr
1947 Infl. 3 ton Tr.
1950 Ford 3 ton Tr.
1952 Stude. 6-cyl. P/U
1949 Infl. % ten
1941 Ford 44 T Express
(new body)

MV

POTATOES

1950

Ford 4-dr.

19«

-

8UNI4TE

D R IV IN G

FO LLO W IN G

EVAPORATED
U
| | | f
M IL IV

ALL
BRANDS

3 9 '

5 -

WITH OKDCT OF U M OK MOM

—
FLAVOR SWEET

CAR!

WITH ORDKM
M

SU G AR

FOR Y O U R

8 9 '

-

MAXWELL HOUSE
HERSHEVS

B IG A L L O W A N C E

3 9 *

Lb

WITH EACH POUND

1
■
■

�Shop and Save

#m tfnrd SferaUk

In Sanford

■ _______________________AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER
VOLUME XLV1

8ANFORO, FLORIDA,

ERUbH nM ISM

Strolling
In Sanford

Red Nominees
Snowed Under

I V loading and unloading ramp
NEW DELHI, India UPh-Prim e Minister Nehru's Congress party
a t Monroe Bridge will be eloaed
for re p a ln until further notice. and Its allies snowed under Communlit nominees In first returns todsy
\
Bnata will go to the other aide la from a key election in Andhra slate.
load or unload.
The Reds, once so confident of victory they announced plans for
•
*
*
taking over the south Indian state's government, won only two of tho
The USO junior hostesses and
first 62 state legislative seals so
servicemen arc In for a pleasant
far decided.
treat tonight as the Starllghtcrs
Unofficial newspspe- tabula­
will play fur the dance from I
tions of early results gavs victory
til 11 o'clock. Tho orchestra has
to 38 candidates of the United
'ade quite a number of perfor­
Front which la led by the Con*
mance! In this locality. Tonight'!
gress party.
event Is free of charge.
Among the defeated Communist
• • •
candidates were some of the state
The concert scheduled by the
party’s h’erarchy. Red leaders
Seminole High School Band for
immediately complained voting
Sunday afternoon, March 6, hat
was unfair.
been postponed until n later date.
Forrest Breckemidge, manager
Of the other 12 seats decided,
• • •
of the Chamber of Commerce, and the Praja (People's) Socialist par­
Theregular
monthly meeting A. W. Lee attended a meeting on ty (PSPi won 4 and independent
of the Sanford Boat and Ski Club the proposed Sanford-Tltusvlllc candidates 8.
ill be held In the room above canal in DcLand last night. The
The counting is expected to con­
ouchtoo'a Friday night at 8 meeting was sponsored by the tinue for several day*.
o'clock. All members are urged Volusia Wildlife Association.
The soling among Andhra’*
to be present.
Brcckcnridgc was a member of marly 21 million people, held over
a panel which discussed the canal a 17-day period, ended Sunday,
and the cffccls upon wildlife In With the Communist* making
the upper St. Johns River area.
their pre-election forecasts gave
The 100 or more sportsmen and tnem a good chance of winning
conservationists attending t h c control of the new Legislature.
meeting were assured by Richard
Red leaders have long regarded
SI a comber of the l). S. Fish and Andhra, one of the poorest of In­
Wild Life Service and others ihsl dia’s 29 slates, as a likely prite
everything possible will be done to and have rnnrenlrated on building
protect wildlife.
up a strong grasa-roots organisa­
The meeting featured a talk by tion there.
Oscar Rawls, chief of the technical
Early Communist confidence
Seminole County and Sanford liaison branch of Ihe office of Ihr
law enforcement officers are in Corps of U. S. Engineers, Jack was based partly on apparent
the running for the title of Florl sonvillc. He spoke on “ Flood Con­ widespread dissatisfaction among
the peasants with what they con­
da’s Most Courteous Cop.
trol, Navigation and Wildlife In the
The third annual conlest, spon­ Upper SL Johns and Indian River sidered ths Congress party's fail­
ure lo achieve social and land re­
sored by the American Automobile Area* "
forms. The Congress’ nations! pro­
Association, tha Florida State
Another special guests was Gene
Chamber of Commerce and the Wallace, representative of the hibition policy also brought hot
£ to rid a Peace Officers Associa­ Florida Game and Fresh Water criticism.
The primary Issues wers social
tio n , will continue through March Fish Department.
and economic with each faction
XL
Macomber and Wallace are en­ pledging much-needed reforms.
It It designed to stimulate tour*
ism and to give recognition to gaged In a full-time study of the
the courteous acta of uniformed Rood control 1 plan In Us ralation
to conservation.
law enforcement officers.
The meeting was held at the
Got. LeRoy Collins, in a pro­
clamation, noted that “ much good Chamber of Commerce building
can be realised by continued deve­
lopment of more courtesy and
true aouthern hospitality extended Free Steak Dinner
This year's Outstanding Jaycee
Mo our residenta and our rapidly
of the World will apeak at the
increasing Influx of visiting tour- Offered To Donors weekly luncheon meeting of tba
iM V.
isU.” ' 7* i
*J
Junior Chamber uf-Commere*.,to­
Arty, mmitclpal police min! state O f El ks Blood Bonk morrow at tba T*cht Club.
highway patrolman, uniformed
He I* H orret Henderson, who
Persona planning to give Wood
sheriff or deputy and federal re­ ■luring the visit of the Central Is due to arrive today for a vielt
gistry, customs and immigration Florida Blood Bank's mobile unit wilh his parents, Dr. and Mr*.
men may be nominated. Winners to Sanford Thursday were urged Brantley Henderson, of Row Lake.
will be chosen In each of seven to eat or drink nothing for four
Henderson wai national Jaycee
classifications based on size of the hours before donating blood.
president two year* ago and be­
be announced April 10.
The mobile unit will be located cause of his work In spreading the
Ballots on which Uie name of at the Elks Club at 1006 E. 2nd doctrine of American Democracy
Mho officer and the courteous act St. Hours will be trom 1:30 to waa given a 123.000 award by the
"p e rfo rm e d may be registered are 6:30 p. m.
American Heritage Foundation.
available at Um Chamber of Com­
He used tha grant to make a
R. W- Cassube, chairman of the
merce.
Elks Club blood bank committee, goodwill tour of tha world and to
said donors will be given ■ free organize Jaycee clubt outside the
dinner at the club at 6:30. United Slates. He received the lop
Two Request Court steak
Up lo 10 donors ran be handled, honur at a recent Jaycee InWnaha said, In Issuing a call for more. tlonal conference In Mexico City.
To Define Rights
Henderson, who rose In the Jay­
Each donor will crntrlbuta * pint
cee organization from tha William­
JACKSONVILLE IB— Two per* at 6:30.
gone tinder Inm U gatlon for poiThe blood win contribute a pint sburg, Va., club, la coordinator
for the National Automobile Deal­
alble Communist Party activity of blood.
A n d an alleged racketeer asked
The blood will be used for Elks er*' Association,
the U. S. Fifth Circut Court of and their families.
REPUBLICANS MAT
Appeals yesterday to define theli
BACK DEMOCRATS
rights la denaturalisation proceedAKMT ANNOUNCES
WASHINGTON •— Sen. Lon­
ATOMIC — POWERED TANK
a*Id today 1966
“ f t . Immigration and Naturali­
DETROIT IB—Tha Army baa ger (R-ND)
zation Service had subpoenaed announced It has an atomic- might find him campaigning for
them to testify a t hearings, and powered tank in the experimental President EUenhowar on a nation­
they asked the U- S. District Court stage a t Us research aantar a t tha al level and for a Democratic

Two Sanford Men
Confer In Deland
On Proposed Canal

«

f

'Courteous Cop'
Contest Is Begun;
To Run This Month

Richmond Players
To Begin Training
In Sanford Monday
Jam es Arbaugh, new trainer for
tha Richmond Virginians, arrived
in Sanford today, inspected the
baseball facilities and sired up
the weather, and said: “ Every­
thing looks fins far us.’*
The Richmond club will begin
training Monday at the old sta­
dium. Players will drift into the
city over the weekend.
Leonard Luke Appling, managar,
and Harry Siebold, owner, are
scheduled to arrive at noon to­
morrow by train.
Arbaugh, of Charlottesville, Va.,
was formerly assistant trainer In
all sports at the University of
Virginia, This is his first visit to
Sanford, although hr has been In
other parts of Florida.
He Inspected both the new and
old stadiums this morning in com­
pany with City Manager Warren
Knowles, Jim Dunn. City Park
Superintendent; Forrest Hreckrnridge, manager of Ihe Chamber of
Commerce, and J. C. Davis,
chairman of Ihe chamber’s base­
ball committee.
Arbaugh first visited tha City
Managrr's office to look over the
standard contract between Uit
City and the baseball club. *
He said he planned tn get to
work right away cleaning up the
clubhouse at the old stadium In
preparation for the tram 'a arrival.
Arbaugh arrived wearing a coat,
but, after feeling the hot sun fur
a while, declared: “ Looks like
the first thing I'm going tn have to
do Is get some sports shirts.''
Ha did.

Marianna Project
Is Discussed Today

Most Outstanding At Kiwanis Meet
Club of Sanford
Jaycee To Speak heldTheItsKlwanla
regular weekly meeting

ticket In North Dakota.

In the Yacht Club today at 12 noon.
Dinner was served banquet style
after which tha meeting wav call
ed lo order by M, it. C f i R f
president. Guests were intioducd
and songs were sung by the
group. Announcement* were made
and the program was presented.
The topic of the program wav
the relating of a continuous Ki
wanian project in Seminole Coun­
ty, the Marianna Plan. This plan
is to help each boy that U «e
leased from Marianna who comrs
to Seminole County to live and
work Guidance is given him and
Marion Harman tuld of exper­
iences and way* to continue to
to help these boys.
Harman stated that th* Klwanlans could start a wave In Sanford
that would spread over the entire
stale of Florida and eventually
aver th* entire world In which the
family altar could be started in
the home. “ If you havt ever seen
a boy who has never said ' I love
Jesus' or had a mother's love
then you know what the Marianna
Plan Is" he aald. “ Let us strive
to help theta boys la any wsy
possible'*.
Th* Rev. MUton Wyatt IhVn in­
troduced the Rev. P. M. Boyd nf
Jacksonville who spoka on “ the
old faabloned religion''. He went
on to say that a m in eouid not
fulfill hia duty to tha ohurch play
Ing golf oa Sunday mornings or
sitting on a river bank with
fishing pola in his band. “ His
duty U to be In church sitting in
the pew giving others help by
Just being there." he sold.
Guests Included Roy Foster, DeLand. P. M. Boyd, Jacksonville;
C, M Patterson, Beaver Falls,
Pa.; Julian Stenstrom and Eddy
Czajka of California; Coleen En
gebrotaon and Betty Bryan. Semi
nole High; Bill Worth, Orlando;
Harold Mots, Jacksonville; Jim
Hkbaugh, Abe UenioU, Allentown.
Pa.; Floyd Palmer announced
(bat Leon Cornell was mystery
man for the week and would be
treated to a chicken dinner at
Elmer's.

ets May Consult
State Service Head

(M l), I n t e r far th*
w ith
a ty

• f th e

Vlr-

Veterans of this* area who need
assistance in obtaining benefits pro­
vided by law may recalve guid
ance from Tom B. Deen, Assis­
tant Stale Service Officer.
Veterans or their dependents may
coasult Deen while be is in ibis
area and may receive assistance
la filling applications for hospital!'
ration, compensation, pension. In­
surance problem*, toon benefits,
educational training, burial ben
•fita and miscellaneous aobjecta,
where legal aatilkm aat is Involv
ad.
. Dean has bees tavitod to this
area as a special consultant by
Karlyl* llouikolder. County Ser­
vice O f f i c e r , Rrltoley-Puleatoo
Bldg, gad may be contacted as
follows: March t. 6:10 p. m. Ovie­
do at tho Poet Office; March U l
0:00 a.m. l a t e a t t e C t e

»

WEDNESDAY, MAR. 2, 1955

lto .w d W in

NO. 1*4

King Reportedly
Abdicates Throne
Accuses
Opposing
Politico
Move Is Made
To Favor Father

KIW ANIANS AND T1IEIK GUESTS enjoy th e weekly luncheon nl (he Yacht t’luh today.
In the foreground are MInm Hetty llryanl and Mltw Colleen Knitclirctsun, Seminole High
School Kev Club aweethearU , SHS hand director Krneal Cowley, and I’eler J. Ilukur,
(S ta ff I'holo)

District 6
To Meet In City

Hit-Run Charges
Placed On Airman

IIwv. Ptmn. Jerry Hrllsrh has
In accordance with tha third object of the Nutiuunl Congiexa of idenlitied Sgt. Robert William
Parent* and Teachers, “To teeur* adequate laws fur Ihn cur* and pro- Caveney, 30. as driver of the car
tevtioa of children and youth" rsrb of th# ten d u irirU of ths Florida that hit 18 month-old Barbara
l l n i t r f P anola a-r«♦ Tra&gt;h«*ra ’rill rta d y sl.e PT .A . Iw-glslaimn I ynn Graham Sunday morning on
Ailion Program whi n they assemble for then annual uteri mga in Stnte Road 328-A a mile south of
Conway KI. in Orlando.
March. ThU Action Program cov­
Sgt. Caveney is stationed si
ers ull legislation affecting the
Pinrraslle AFIt and lives at
Imalth, welfare, education, end Hospital Facilities
J i l l 's Conway Gardens ltd.
protection of rhildn-n and youth,
Hrll.-rh was investigating on the
and we* oet up to conform to th* Said Inadequate
base when he Imnul the ear an­
platform adopted by the Florida
swering the description given hy
For State's Vets
Congress in November.
witnesses. Approaching the driv­
Mrs. D. Hales Jack-on, Orlando,
WASHINGTON &lt;*— A House er, llnl-ch staled that he seeinril
president of Dlstrirt Six. announces subcommittee was Inld jrslerilny to be nervous and when hr asked
that the annual meeting for Dis­ that existing veterans hospital (lit- airman why he had hit Ihe
trict Six will he hrhl in Sanford facilities in Florid* "are hopeless­ girl and left the scene Caveney
at the be mi nole High School on ly Inadequate.
said he “just got excited''.
Tlie testimony came from Rep.
Friday, March 18. Registration
The Sergeant was laded on
will start i t 910 a m. under the Matthews I D Fla &gt; and a l*rgn del­ charges of reckless driving and
direction of Mr*. K. L Parker, egation of Floridians urging ap­ leaving Ihe scene of an accident
Sanford, president of the West proval of a hill tn authorize con­ Rail was set at 3330 for Ihe two
struction of * f.OCahrd veterans
Side Prim ary P. T. A.
charges plus $M» for improper
Mr*. Ellen Dell Rieler, Chicago, hospital at Gainesville.
license tag.
However, a vrtetans administra­
field consultant fur (he National
The child, daughter of Mr. and
tion
official,
T.
F.
Daley,
told
the
Congress, will be the featured
Mrs. Wdlinm Graham, rural Or­
rummilte*
his
agrncy
is
opposed
speaker. She will clarify pulnlx
lando, was reported in good con­
on policies, procedure*, and lechnl- tn Ihe bill.
dition at the Orange Memorial
gue*,« stressing the Importance
Th* bill, Inlrodurrd by Mat­ Hospital. Mrs. Giahani is the form­
of pa rent-teacher work being done thews has the unanimous support er Miss Martha Jones of Sanford.
in local communities. Mrs. Bieler uf Florida’s congressional delega­
haa traveled thousands of miles tion. Kens. Holland and Sntalhnrs
EXTENSIVE BOUNCE
all across Hie country and shared hav* Introduced identical legisla­
EAST ORANGE, N. J. (leiJ-Tsytha plans and problems of many tion In the slate lo auUurlxe Ihr
neuropxyrhlatrlc hospital, estimat­ tng traffic fines with rubber checks
thousand P. T. A. workers.
can be more expensive than double
Opportunity for general discis­ ed tn cost 23 million dollars.
Witnesses tuld the rommltte* parking Magistrate Luke M. Mesion of th* Legislation Program
many Florida veterans mint go Kenny fined an offender 623 be­
will be given when it is presented
uutslde
the slate fur treatment ahd cause his 34 check bounced
by Mrs. George Hanford, Lees­ that stunt
of the veterans requir­ The Judg* got tough when th*
burg, slate membership chairman. ing medical treatment are being number of had checks coming n
Bringing reports from the count­ ronfined tn jails until bed space lilts mill with traffic tickets In­
ies which compos* th* district will becomes available in veterans hos­ creased lo an average of 10 a
be: Mrs. Fred llertel. Eau Gallic, pitals el.sew here.
month.
president, Brevard County Coun­
cil of P- T. A.'a; Mr*. Herbert
Trrnham, Tavares, president, Lake
County Council; Mr*. Gray A.
Strain, Jr., president. Orange
County Council; Mr*. W. E, Giles,
l-ske Monroe, president, Seminole
County Council; Mrs. G. M. Keene,
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .reive under tneir compromise legDaytona Reach, president, VolusiaCongress, by voting its mem­ isluliim. New Jersey's guhcrtiator
Flagler County Council; Mrs. E. bers a 17,MW pay raise, has de­ u l salary lx $:iO,u&lt;X). California, lilt
E. McGonlgal. Ktssimtnre, and creed that the taxpayers pay their nois, Pennsylvania and Texas each
Mr*. J. Howard Young, SI. Cloud, senators and representatives sal­ pay (23.00U
local presidents form Osceola aries larger than are drawn by
■flic governor of Michigan draws
County.
322,.Mat, the same as the new scale
governors of 41 states.
Following liinrh which will be
Hut a number of those governors for rongressmrn.
served In the school cafeteria, the who are receiving smaller pay­ All nlhct Rates pay their chief
delegates will form three discus checks actually are on a higher executives lets in salary.
sion groups to study parent-tesch rnnuil financial level than Ihe con­ In Nevada, the salary is nnl&gt;
cr procedure, with Mr*. Hicler gressmen by virtue of mure liberal 37.000 a year. Rut the Nevada
acting a* general consultant Other expense allowances.
chief executive rereivei (1,300 in
The House passed and sent to pay for other duties lo run hi
consultant* will be: Mrs. Opal
Johnson Orlando, principal of l-ake President Eisenhower yesterday total lo (9.100. His salary would
Como School and alate P. T. A. fur his expected signature a bill be upped tu 313,000 under a bill
chairman of the committee on increasing Ihr yearly congressional pending in the Legislature.
The govnnor uf Ohio has ex
preschool service; Mrs. C. N. Pra salary from 113.000 to (22,300. The
ther, Orlando, state I*. T. A. rhair measure permits rongressmrn a pressed opposition lo a bill which
man of the committee on proce­ (3,01X1 annual tax deduction to off­ would boost his pay and defeat
dures and bylaws; Mrs. George set living costs and 20 cents a of the meaiure seems likely.
Gubernatorial raise* also are be
llanford; Mrs. D. Hales Jackson; mile travel expense tor one round
fore legislature* of Arizona, Cali
Mrs. A. G. Wagner, Orlando, dir­ trip home each year.
An Associated Press survey furnia, Maine and Montana. The
ector of office and field tervice
for the Florida Congress; and Mrs. showed that salaries of the gov­ West Virginia Legislators has
L H. Gibbs, Orlando, editor of the ernors range from (S.OOO a year In raised the governor's salary from
North Dakota to (30.000 in New (12.300 to (17,300, effective In 1MT.
Florida Parent-Teacher.
York. Personal expenses allowed
Increases went into effect for
governors vary widely from none governors uf soma states this year.
JOHNSON REPORTED
or bar* travel reimbursement to Notable among these waa the hike
IN GOOD CONDITION
allowinrcs fur just about svery* from (23,000 to (30,000 In New
ROCHESTER. Minn. (B -S eisto thing, Including bousing, food, York.
Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson t r a v e l , entertaining, chauffeurs Gubernatorial salaries hav* goo*
up at Wait 30 state* sines 1646,
(D-T**), hero for a rheclnip after ■nd unspecified items.
In addition to New York, only when Congress last approved a
s kidney operation lata in January,
pa* their governors raise lor
Is rap a r m Is “ vary good aaadi-

Congress To Draw Higher Pay
Than Governors Of 41 States

»
• /•» Jl-

Wtathgr

D * » to yerffy iTwIy and m »
t l n f ( w»rm through Thm-tAay
M ir to, tow tonight M M.

Hu a t*

.

PARIS
King Norodom Sihan.ink ahdicatt-d Cambodia's throna
today in fat nr nf his father, Prince
Norodom Suramarit, ihe French
News Agency reported. He accused
opposition politico parties of hamstringing his reforms in the Indo­
chinese kingdom.
The 33-year-ohl monarch, host
only Monday to U.S. Secretary of
State Dulles at a luncheon is
Phnom Penh, was quoted as saving
he intends to retire to Ihe country
and live a humble life “ like that
of my subjects."
A music-writing leader of tha
fight for Cambodian independent*
from the Frrnrh, though their ally
in the war against Communist
rebels, Sihanouk has used withdrausl taclic* before In win his
points. In those eases he retained
his royal aitlhorily.
Hi* French News Agency *aM
the King announced hia decision in
a radio broadcast. It quoted him
m part:
' My people are not unaware &lt;4
tb* work accomplished by thelr
Kiog in lit* past three year., nor
of the imports nee of toe enniUtwHonal reforms which I envisaged
lo avoid a return to chao*.
“ ( ertain political parties, among
them the Democratic party of Son
Ngoc Thanh, have Intervened with
the Inleiiir'ional (Ajrmi. tin -&gt; Con*rnl LonimU*Jo*-*lo prcvrnj m#
from carrying mil my work That
is wh), today, I announce publicly
my intention to abandon power and
to step down front the limine in
order lo live among my people a
Jdr Ihat will hereafter he humid*
like that of my subjects, | will reuie lo Ihe country and I will refuse
palace, I give lip my power in
favor of my father. Prince
Suramarit."
Son Ngoc Thanh It a former Ns
tionallal Premier whose followers
have been rlaitning credit for the
independence victories, though
most nf Camhudia'i I 'j million
ltropic harked the King
The French account iaid the eontrot eoniinlixton recently opposed
a royal plan for political reform as
contrary lo Ihe Geneva armistice
agreement*,
The French Foreign Ministry
•aid it had no information on the
rase.
Serretary Dulles, now in Manila
on his way back from Ihe Manila
Part powers' conference in Rangkok, Thailand, declined comment.

12 County Schools
Plan To Take Part
In Spelling Bee
Twelve trhnole will participate
In the aonual Seminole County
spelling t&gt;**, which will be held
at Sanford Junior High the totter
part of March or early In April,
H t ’ Steele, spelling bee director
’aid today. A definite date has
nut been vet.
Seminole County It one of &gt;4
counties partieipating in Ihe an­
imal spelling event sponsored hy
Ihe Miami Herald. The winner
and runner up from each rounly
will go to the finals in Miami
April 29.
Participating in th* county event
will be these schools:
Sanford Junior High, Sinfnrd
Grammar. The Advenlist Church
School, 7ih and Ehn; All Soul*
Parochial School, 9th and Oak;
Lake Monroe, Wil-on, Lake Mary,
Lyman, Forest Lake Academy,
Oviedo, St. Luke's Christian Day
School of Sis via, and Geneva.
A practice match will be held
at radio station WTKit.

Apopka Man Fined
For Killing Buck
A fine of 6171 and costa nr 6R
days in jell w si Imposed in Cou»ty Court yesterday n* an Apopka
atsn convicted of illegally hi Ring
a buck deer.
Judge Ernest Hou*holder k z s j
ad dowa th* scalene* to tha ca st
nf L H Ihepard, convicted * »
ccnrty of killing a deer Nav. ■
gear tfca fw w tw tesr a
t

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                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 01, 1955.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
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*

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M j 11

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. 14
V

Engineering Technicians Behind

There art about 60 technical !aitltut«« In this country
One of their intemlve two-year
cuurici come engineering team
specialists. iu:h ai draftsmen, de­
signers. coit eilimatori, produc­
tion lupervliors, chemlaU, taster*,
research technologiita, control su­
pervisors, time study men, technical saleimen and plannen of
production and conitruction.
“ The warrant officers of .indutry.’ Dr Beatty ealli them Often
they oecome contractor! and own
era of buiinenei.
Starting .jlariei are not far be­
low those of engineer! and, lays
Dr. Beatty, “ We have no place­
ment problem!.”

talsridk?
Dr. H. Russell Beatty, president
of Wentworth Institute, a top Bos­
ton technics! school, says the tech­
nician combines the points of view
of the scientist and the skilled
craftsman
“ Here is a field definitely be­
tween the trades and the engi­
neering field," says Dr. Beatty.
"It Is a field for the doer, the
builder."
“ The engineer plans; the tech­
nologist makes and does. Tho en­
gineer creates and projects; the
technologist operates. The engi­
Mash cream cheese with e little
neer la concerned with the why of
» THE SANFORD HERALD lean youth, despite the scarcity of a lob. (he technologist principally anchovy or kipper for a savory
sandwich spread.
Turn, Mar. 1, 1956* workers and the promise of good with how to do it."

, BOSTON UR - The United State* Un'ted States graduated 23,DUO en­
may be falling seriously behind gineers and 13,000 technicians.
In some fields, particularly the
Russia in a race which many
Americans don't even know they're automobile Industry, five techni­
cians are needed for eaeh engi­
« in this swift-changing atomic- neer.
This situation is causing deep
•lectrnnlc agn, educator* **y that
this country may aoon be handl- concern among educators and gov­
gapped In reaearen and develop- ernment officials alike.
want by a shortage of engineering
Secretary of Commerce Sinclair
technicians — the men who turn Weeks warns that without techni­
plans into production.
cians tho efficiency and progress
* Unofficial figures show that U.i of the engineer and the scientist
vest Russia graduated about SO, would be critically curtailed or utPOO engineers and 'he same mim tetly lost.
per of engineering technicians. The
What la this field which la being
comparatively neglected by Amer-

in-

■nuwTTO*noun
MODBKNITT

BENTON HARBOR, MICH. (UR)
The ileek new Card Elementary
School U ultra modem in every
respect and the weather-worn old
bell looka out of place.
The bell waa cast at West Tray,
N. Y„ in 1156 and has been calling
Benton Hsrbor school children to
classes for U years. Everyone
knew, that it didn’t fit the new
building but tradition won the day.

Thty're yourn—valuable Lucky Bucks that you can use just like money at
our Lucky Buck Auction Sole! You net one Lucky Buck for every dollar
you spend here—extra Lucky Bucks on some Items— and every Lucky Buck
you save helps you get the prize you want! Remember, you gel lots more
for your money with our top-quality foods plus Lucky Bucks, so shop her*
to get that extra value!

DEADLY SAWDUST
HELENA. MONT. (UP) -Seven
ty cows broke into an old shed on
Peter Suta’a reach and ate some
iswdust stored there. Thirty-five
of them di«d. Suta said arsenic
had been mixed with the sawdust
as erssshopper bait 20 year* be­
fore.

SPECIALS GOOD THRU SAT. MARCH 5th

U. S. GOOD WESTERN

WILSON’S SLICED

M

= BACON
FRESHLY GROUND

HAMS
39t

rnpi!,f

HAMBURGER
99c
^

45‘

’

*

Lbs.

4 to 6Lb. A
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AN EXTRA LU CKY BUCK
WILSON’S

39 *
89 '
COFFEE
SUGAR 5 - 39 '
S A UWITHSEA
GE
ACHPOUND

E

C A R R IED O V ER

M U ST

FROM

BE

CHASE 4kSANBORN

FEBR U A R Y

SO LD

IN

M A R C H !!

-

MAXWELL HOUSE
HERSHEVS

BIG

ALLOW ANCE

TERM S

TO

G ET SET
lN

-U P

FOR

FIT

NOW

FOR

PR ICES O N

YOUR

YOUR
SUM M ER

TH E

— FLAVOR SWEET

CAR!

Stude. Champ. 4-dr
Ford 4-dr. 6-cyl.
Ford Clb. Cpe.
Ford 4-dr.
Ford 4-dr.
Ford 8-cyl. Viet.

1.195.00
1.395.00
1.295.00
1.295.00
1.295.00

1949

1951
m k«

Ford Custom 2-dr.
Ford Victoria
S
Stude. Fordor
Consul 4-dr.
Font 4-dr.
Consul
SC

J

Tall Can.

&lt;Jf

*

10c

J r . 's .

ww - __

YORK COOlONi

DURKEETS
TUPLE WHIPPED

m u LUCKY BUCK
WITH BACHJAK

2.995.00
995.00
1.495.00
695.00

HI
H

I
■]

V
L,
_ _? j 1 - IV*

&lt;
4

Fresh ProductB

*

YELLOWGLOBE

S

TRUCKS

4

MV

★

1 Lba

Ford Tudor

1952 Ford 3 ton Tractbr
1947 In fl. 3 ton Tr.
1950 Ford 3 ton Tr.
1952 Stude. 6-cyl. P/U
1949 In fl. % ten
1941 Ford 44 T Express
(new body)

19«

-

★

POTATOES
10 39C
ONIONS 113c APPLEs£33c

1950

Ford 4-dr.

WITHOKDCTOFUM OKMOM

TOMATOES

U N IT S

*

Fib. pricp

M

EVAPORATED
ALL
U |||f
BRANDS M I L I V
8UNI4TE

D R IV IN G

Zephyr 4-dr.
Pontiac 4-dr.
Mercury 4-dr.

WITHORDKM

OLEOMARGARINE

N EED S

FO LLO W IN G

Ford Victoria
2,245.00
Chev. Tudor
1,595.00
Ford Rch. Wagon SO LD 1,895.00

Lb

1
■
■

�Shop and Save
In Sanford

Wtathgr

#

m

t f n r d

S fe r a U k

■ ________________________ AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER
»
8ANFORO, FLORIDA, WEDNESDAY, MAR. 2, 1955
ERUbHnM ISM

VOLUME XLV1

Strolling
In Sanford

Red Nominees
Snowed Under

I V loading and unloading ramp
NEW DELHI, India UPh-Prime Minister Nehru's Congress party
at Monroe Bridge will be eloaed
for repaln until further notice. and Its allies snowed under Communlit nominees In first returns todsy
\
Bnata will go to the other aide la from a key election in Andhra slate.
load or unload.
The Reds, once so confident of victory they announced plans for
• * *
taking over the south Indian state's government, won only two of tho
The USO junior hostesses and
first 62 state legislative seals so
servicemen arc In for a pleasant
far decided.
treat tonight as the Starllghtcrs
Unofficial newspspe- tabula­
will play fur the dance from I
tions of early results gavs victory
til 11 o'clock. Tho orchestra has
to 38 candidates of the United
'ade quite a number of perfor­
Front which la led by the Con*
mance! In this locality. Tonight'!
gress party.
event Is free of charge.
Among the defeated Communist
•• •
candidates were some of the state
The concert scheduled by the
party’s h’erarchy. Red leaders
Seminole High School Band for
immediately complained voting
Sunday afternoon, March 6, hat
was unfair.
been postponed until n later date.
Forrest Breckemidge, manager
Of the other 12 seats decided,
• • •
of the Chamber of Commerce, and the Praja (People's) Socialist par­
Theregular monthly meeting A. W. Lee attended a meeting on ty (PSPi won 4 and independent
of the Sanford Boat and Ski Club the proposed Sanford-Tltusvlllc candidates 8.
ill be held In the room above canal in DcLand last night. The
The counting is expected to con­
ouchtoo'a Friday night at 8 meeting was sponsored by the tinue for several day*.
o'clock. All members are urged Volusia Wildlife Association.
The soling among Andhra’*
to be present.
Brcckcnridgc was a member of marly 21 million people, held over
a panel which discussed the canal a 17-day period, ended Sunday,
and the cffccls upon wildlife In With the Communist* making
the upper St. Johns River area.
their pre-election forecasts gave
The 100 or more sportsmen and tnem a good chance of winning
conservationists attending t h c control of the new Legislature.
meeting were assured by Richard
Red leaders have long regarded
SIacomber of the l). S. Fish and Andhra, one of the poorest of In­
Wild Life Service and others ihsl dia’s 29 slates, as a likely prite
everything possible will be done to and have rnnrenlrated on building
protect wildlife.
up a strong grasa-roots organisa­
The meeting featured a talk by tion there.
Oscar Rawls, chief of the technical
Early Communist confidence
Seminole County and Sanford liaison branch of Ihe office of Ihr
law enforcement officers are in Corps of U. S. Engineers, Jack was based partly on apparent
the running for the title of Florl sonvillc. He spoke on “ Flood Con­ widespread dissatisfaction among
the peasants with what they con­
da’s Most Courteous Cop.
trol, Navigation and Wildlife In the
The third annual conlest, spon­ Upper SL Johns and Indian River sidered ths Congress party's fail­
ure lo achieve social and land re­
sored by the American Automobile Area* "
forms. The Congress’ nations! pro­
Association, tha Florida State
Another special guests was Gene
Chamber of Commerce and the Wallace, representative of the hibition policy also brought hot
£torida Peace Officers Associa­ Florida Game and Fresh Water criticism.
The primary Issues wers social
tion, will continue through March Fish Department.
and economic with each faction
XL
Macomber and Wallace are en­ pledging much-needed reforms.
It It designed to stimulate tour*
ism and to give recognition to gaged In a full-time study of the
the courteous acta of uniformed Rood control 1 plan In Us ralation
to conservation.
law enforcement officers.
The meeting was held at the
Got. LeRoy Collins, in a pro­
clamation, noted that “ much good Chamber of Commerce building
can be realised by continued deve­
lopment of more courtesy and
true aouthern hospitality extended Free Steak Dinner
This year's Outstanding Jaycee
Mo our residenta and our rapidly
of the World will apeak at the
increasing Influx of visiting tour- Offered To Donors weekly luncheon meeting of tba
iM V .
isU.” ' 7* i
*J
Junior Chamber uf-Commere*.,to­
Arty, mmitclpal police min! state O f El ks Blood Bonk morrow at tba T*cht Club.
highway patrolman, uniformed
He I* Horret Henderson, who
Persona planning to give Wood
sheriff or deputy and federal re­ ■luring the visit of the Central Is due to arrive today for a vielt
gistry, customs and immigration Florida Blood Bank's mobile unit wilh his parents, Dr. and Mr*.
men may be nominated. Winners to Sanford Thursday were urged Brantley Henderson, of Row Lake.
will be chosen In each of seven to eat or drink nothing for four
Henderson wai national Jaycee
classifications based on size of the hours before donating blood.
president two year* ago and be­
be announced April 10.
The mobile unit will be located cause of his work In spreading the
Ballots on which Uie name of at the Elks Club at 1006 E. 2nd doctrine of American Democracy
Mho officer and the courteous act St. Hours will be trom 1:30 to waa given a 123.000 award by the
"performed may be registered are 6:30 p. m.
American Heritage Foundation.
available at Um Chamber of Com­
He used tha grant to make a
R. W- Cassube, chairman of the
merce.
Elks Club blood bank committee, goodwill tour of tha world and to
said donors will be given ■ free organize Jaycee clubt outside the
dinner at the club at 6:30. United Slates. He received the lop
Two Request Court steak
Up lo 10 donors ran be handled, honur at a recent Jaycee InWnaha said, In Issuing a call for more. tlonal conference In Mexico City.
To Define Rights
Henderson, who rose In the Jay­
Each donor will crntrlbuta * pint
cee organization from tha William­
JACKSONVILLE IB— Two per* at 6:30.
gone tinder InmUgatlon for poiThe blood win contribute a pint sburg, Va., club, la coordinator
for the National Automobile Deal­
alble Communist Party activity of blood.
A n d an alleged racketeer asked
The blood will be used for Elks er*' Association,
the U. S. Fifth Circut Court of and their families.
REPUBLICANS MAT
Appeals yesterday to define theli
BACK DEMOCRATS
rights la denaturalisation proceedAKMT ANNOUNCES
WASHINGTON •— Sen. Lon­
ATOMIC — POWERED TANK
a*Id today 1966
“ f t . Immigration and Naturali­
DETROIT IB—Tha Army baa ger (R-ND)
zation Service had subpoenaed announced It has an atomic- might find him campaigning for
them to testify at hearings, and powered tank in the experimental President EUenhowar on a nation­
they asked the U- S. District Court stage at Us research aantar at tha al level and for a Democratic
ticket In North Dakota.

Two Sanford Men
Confer In Deland
On Proposed Canal

«

f

'Courteous Cop'
Contest Is Begun;
To Run This Month

Richmond Players
To Begin Training
In Sanford Monday
James Arbaugh, new trainer for
tha Richmond Virginians, arrived
in Sanford today, inspected the
baseball facilities and sired up
the weather, and said: “ Every­
thing looks fins far us.’ *
The Richmond club will begin
training Monday at the old sta­
dium. Players will drift into the
city over the weekend.
Leonard Luke Appling, managar,
and Harry Siebold, owner, are
scheduled to arrive at noon to­
morrow by train.
Arbaugh, of Charlottesville, Va.,
was formerly assistant trainer In
all sports at the University of
Virginia, This is his first visit to
Sanford, although hr has been In
other parts of Florida.
He Inspected both the new and
old stadiums this morning in com­
pany with City Manager Warren
Knowles, Jim Dunn. City Park
Superintendent; Forrest Hreckrnridge, manager of Ihe Chamber of
Commerce, and J. C. Davis,
chairman of Ihe chamber’s base­
ball committee.
Arbaugh first visited tha City
Managrr's office to look over the
standard contract between Uit
City and the baseball club. *
He said he planned tn get to
work right away cleaning up the
clubhouse at the old stadium In
preparation for the tram'a arrival.
Arbaugh arrived wearing a coat,
but, after feeling the hot sun fur
a while, declared: “ Looks like
the first thing I'm going tn have to
do Is get some sports shirts.''
Ha did.

ets May Consult
State Service Head

( M l ) , I n t e r fa r th *

a ty

•/•» Jl-

•f the

Veterans of this* area who need
assistance in obtaining benefits pro­
vided by law may recalve guid
ance from Tom B. Deen, Assis­
tant Stale Service Officer.
Veterans or their dependents may
coasult Deen while be is in ibis
area and may receive assistance
la filling applications for hospital!'
ration, compensation, pension. In­
surance problem*, toon benefits,
educational training, burial ben
•fita and miscellaneous aobjecta,
where legal aatilkmaat is Involv
ad.
. Dean has bees tavitod to this
area as a special consultant by
Karlyl* llouikolder. County Ser­
vice O f f i c e r , Rrltoley-Puleatoo
Bldg, gad may be contacted as
Vlr- follows:
March t. 6:10 p. m. Ovie­
do at tho Poet Office; March Ul
0:00 a.m. l a t e at t e C te

NO. 1*4

Accuses
Opposing
Politico
Move Is Made
To Favor Father
PARIS
King Norodom Sihan.ink ahdicatt-d Cambodia's throna
today in fat nr nf his father, Prince
Norodom Suramarit, ihe French
News Agency reported. He accused
opposition politico parties of hamstringing his reforms in the Indo­
chinese kingdom.
The 33-year-ohl monarch, host
only Monday to U.S. Secretary of
State Dulles at a luncheon is
Phnom Penh, was quoted as saving
he intends to retire to Ihe country
and live a humble life “ like that
of my subjects."
A music-writing leader of tha
fight for Cambodian independent*
from the Frrnrh, though their ally
in the war against Communist
rebels, Sihanouk has used withKIWANIANS AND T1IEIK GUESTS enjoy the weekly luncheon nl (he Yacht t’ luh today. drausl taclic* before In win his
In the foreground are MInm Hetty llryanl and Mltw Colleen Knitclirctsun, Seminole High points. In those eases he retained
School Kev Club aweethearU, SHS hand director Krneal Cowley, and I’eler J. Ilukur, his royal aitlhorily.

(Staff I'holo)

The Klwanla Club of Sanford
held Its regular weekly meeting
In the Yacht Club today at 12 noon.
Dinner was served banquet style
after which tha meeting wav call
ed lo order by M, it. C f i R f
president. Guests were intioducd
and songs were sung by the
group. Announcement* were made
and the program was presented.
The topic of the program wav
the relating of a continuous Ki
wanian project in Seminole Coun­
ty, the Marianna Plan. This plan
is to help each boy that U «e
leased from Marianna who comrs
to Seminole County to live and
work Guidance is given him and
Marion Harman tuld of exper­
iences and way* to continue to
to help these boys.
Harman stated that th* Klwanlans could start a wave In Sanford
that would spread over the entire
stale of Florida and eventually
aver th* entire world In which the
family altar could be started in
the home. “ If you havt ever seen
a boy who has never said ' I love
Jesus' or had a mother's love
then you know what the Marianna
Plan Is" he aald. “ Let us strive
to help theta boys la any wsy
possible'*.
Th* Rev. MUton Wyatt IhVn in­
troduced the Rev. P. M. Boyd nf
Jacksonville who spoka on “ the
old faabloned religion''. He went
on to say that a min eouid not
fulfill hia duty to tha ohurch play
Ing golf oa Sunday mornings or
sitting on a river bank with
fishing pola in his band. “ His
duty U to be In church sitting in
the pew giving others help by
Just being there." he sold.
Guests Included Roy Foster, DeLand. P. M. Boyd, Jacksonville;
C, M Patterson, Beaver Falls,
Pa.; Julian Stenstrom and Eddy
Czajka of California; Coleen En
gebrotaon and Betty Bryan. Semi
nole High; Bill Worth, Orlando;
Harold Mots, Jacksonville; Jim
Hkbaugh, Abe UenioU, Allentown.
Pa.; Floyd Palmer announced
(bat Leon Cornell was mystery
man for the week and would be
treated to a chicken dinner at
Elmer's.

m»

t l n f ( w»rm through Thm-tAay
Mir to, tow tonight M M.

King R eportedly
Abdicates Throne

Marianna Project
Is Discussed Today D istrict 6
Most Outstanding At Kiwanis Meet
To M eet In City
Jaycee To Speak

with

lto.w d W in

D * » to yerffy iTwIy and

Hi* French News Agency *aM

the King announced hia decision in

Hit-Run Charges
Placed On Airman

IIwv. Ptmn. Jerry Hrllsrh has
In accordance with tha third object of the Nutiuunl Congiexa of idenlitied Sgt. Robert William
Parent* and Teachers, “To teeur* adequate laws fur Ihn cur* and pro- Caveney, 30. as driver of the car
tevtioa of children and youth" rsrb of th# ten duirirU of ths Florida that hit 18 month-old Barbara
l l n i t rf Panola a-r«♦ Tra&gt;h«*ra ’ rill rtadysl.e PT.A. Iw-glslaimn I ynn Graham Sunday morning on
Ailion Program whin they assemble for then annual uteri mga in Stnte Road 328-A a mile south of
Conway KI. in Orlando.
March. ThU Action Program cov­
Sgt. Caveney is stationed si
ers ull legislation affecting the
Pinrraslle AFIt and lives at
Imalth, welfare, education, end
Jill's Conway Gardens ltd.
protection of rhildn-n and youth,
Hrll.-rh was investigating on the
and we* oet up to conform to th* Said
base when he Imnul the ear an­
platform adopted by the Florida
swering the description given hy
Congress in November.
witnesses. Approaching the driv­
Mrs. D. Hales Jack-on, Orlando,
WASHINGTON &lt;*— A House er, llnl-ch staled that he seeinril
president of Dlstrirt Six. announces subcommittee was Inld jrslerilny to be nervous and when hr asked
that the annual meeting for Dis­ that existing veterans hospital (lit- airman why he had hit Ihe
trict Six will he hrhl in Sanford facilities in Florid* "are hopeless­ girl and left the scene Caveney
at the be mi nole High School on ly Inadequate.
said he “ just got excited''.
Tlie testimony came from Rep.
Friday, March 18. Registration
The Sergeant was laded on
will start it 910 a m. under the Matthews I D Fla &gt;and a l*rgn del­ charges of reckless driving and
direction of Mr*. K. L Parker, egation of Floridians urging ap­ leaving Ihe scene of an accident
Sanford, president of the West proval of a hill tn authorize con­ Rail was set at 3330 for Ihe two
struction of * f.OCahrd veterans
Side Primary P. T. A.
charges plus $M» for improper
Mr*. Ellen Dell Rieler, Chicago, hospital at Gainesville.
license tag.
However, a vrtetans administra­
field consultant fur (he National
The child, daughter of Mr. and
tion
official,
T.
F.
Daley,
told
the
Congress, will be the featured
Mrs. Wdlinm Graham, rural Or­
rummilte*
his
agrncy
is
opposed
speaker. She will clarify pulnlx
lando, was reported in good con­
on policies, procedure*, and lechnl- tn Ihe bill.
dition at the Orange Memorial
gue*,« stressing the Importance
Th* bill, Inlrodurrd by Mat­ Hospital. Mrs. Giahani is the form­
of parent-teacher work being done thews has the unanimous support er Miss Martha Jones of Sanford.
in local communities. Mrs. Bieler uf Florida’s congressional delega­
haa traveled thousands of miles tion. Kens. Holland and Sntalhnrs
EXTENSIVE BOUNCE
all across Hie country and shared hav* Introduced identical legisla­
EAST ORANGE, N. J. (leiJ-Tsytha plans and problems of many tion In the slate lo auUurlxe Ihr
neuropxyrhlatrlc hospital, estimat­ tng t r a f f ic fines with rubber checks
thousand P. T. A. workers.
can be more expensive than double
Opportunity for general discis­ ed tn cost 23 million dollars.
Witnesses tuld the rommltte* parking Magistrate Luke M. Mesion of th* Legislation Program
many Florida veterans mint go Kenny fined an offender 623 be­
will be given when it is presented
uutslde
the slate fur treatment ahd cause his 34 check bounced
by Mrs. George Hanford, Lees­ that stunt
of the veterans requir­ The Judg* got tough when th*
burg, slate membership chairman. ing medical treatment are being number of had checks coming n
Bringing reports from the count­ ronfined tn jails until bed space lilts mill with traffic tickets In­
ies which compos* th* district will becomes available in veterans hos­ creased lo an average of 10 a
be: Mrs. Fred llertel. Eau Gallic, pitals el.sew here.
month.
president, Brevard County Coun­
cil of P- T. A.'a; Mr*. Herbert
Trrnham, Tavares, president, Lake
County Council; Mr*. Gray A.
Strain, Jr., president. Orange
County Council; Mr*. W. E, Giles,
l-ske Monroe, president, Seminole
County Council; Mrs. G. M. Keene,
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .reive under tneir compromise legDaytona Reach, president, VolusiaCongress, by voting its mem­ isluliim. New Jersey's guhcrtiator
Flagler County Council; Mrs. E. bers a 17,MW pay raise, has de­ ul salary lx $:iO,u&lt;X). California, lilt
E. McGonlgal. Ktssimtnre, and creed that the taxpayers pay their nois, Pennsylvania and Texas each
Mr*. J. Howard Young, SI. Cloud, senators and representatives sal­ pay (23.00U
local presidents form Osceola aries larger than are drawn by ■flic governor of Michigan draws
County.
322,.Mat, the same as the new scale
governors of 41 states.
Following liinrh which will be
Hut a number of those governors for rongressmrn.
served In the school cafeteria, the who are receiving smaller pay­ All nlhct Rates pay their chief
delegates will form three discus checks actually are on a higher executives lets in salary.
sion groups to study parent-tesch rnnuil financial level than Ihe con­ In Nevada, the salary is nnl&gt;
cr procedure, with Mr*. Hicler gressmen by virtue of mure liberal 37.000 a year. Rut the Nevada
acting a* general consultant Other expense allowances.
chief executive rereivei (1,300 in
The House passed and sent to pay for other duties lo run hi
consultant* will be: Mrs. Opal
Johnson Orlando, principal of l-ake President Eisenhower yesterday total lo (9.100. His salary would
Como School and alate P. T. A. fur his expected signature a bill be upped tu 313,000 under a bill
chairman of the committee on increasing Ihr yearly congressional pending in the Legislature.
The govnnor uf Ohio has ex
preschool service; Mrs. C. N. Pra salary from 113.000 to (22,300. The
ther, Orlando, state I*. T. A. rhair measure permits rongressmrn a pressed opposition lo a bill which
man of the committee on proce­ (3,01X1 annual tax deduction to off­ would boost his pay and defeat
dures and bylaws; Mrs. George set living costs and 20 cents a of the meaiure seems likely.
Gubernatorial raise* also are be
llanford; Mrs. D. Hales Jackson; mile travel expense tor one round
fore legislature* of Arizona, Cali
Mrs. A. G. Wagner, Orlando, dir­ trip home each year.
An Associated Press survey furnia, Maine and Montana. The
ector of office and field tervice
for the Florida Congress; and Mrs. showed that salaries of the gov­ West Virginia Legislators has
L H. Gibbs, Orlando, editor of the ernors range from (S.OOO a year In raised the governor's salary from
North Dakota to (30.000 in New (12.300 to (17,300, effective In 1MT.
Florida Parent-Teacher.
York. Personal expenses allowed
Increases went into effect for
governors vary widely from none governors uf soma states this year.
JOHNSON REPORTED
or bar* travel reimbursement to Notable among these waa the hike
IN GOOD CONDITION
allowinrcs fur just about svery* from (23,000 to (30,000 In New
ROCHESTER. Minn. (B-Seisto thing, Including bousing, food, York.
Gubernatorial salaries hav* goo*
Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson t r a v e l , entertaining, chauffeurs
up at Wait 30 state* sines 1646,
(D-T**), hero for a rheclnip after ■nd unspecified items.
In addition to New York, only when Congress last approved a
s kidney operation lata in January,
pa* their governors raise lor
Is raparm Is “ vary good aaadi»
Hu a t*
.

Hospital Facilities
Inadequate
For State's Vets

Congress To Draw Higher Pay
Than Governors Of 41 States

a radio broadcast. It quoted him

m part:
' My people are not unaware &lt;4
tb* work accomplished by thelr
Kiog in lit* past three year., nor
of the imports nee of toe enniUtwHonal reforms which I envisaged
lo avoid a return to chao*.
“ ( ertain political parties, among
them the Democratic party of Son
Ngoc Thanh, have Intervened with
the Inleiiir'ional (Ajrmi. tin-&gt; Con*rnl LonimU*Jo*-*lo prcvrnj m#
from carrying mil my work That
is wh), today, I announce publicly
my intention to abandon power and
to step down front the limine in
order lo live among my people a
Jdr Ihat will hereafter he humid*
like that of my subjects, | will reuie lo Ihe country and I will refuse
palace, I give lip my power in
favor of my father. Prince
Suramarit."
Son Ngoc Thanh It a former Ns
tionallal Premier whose followers
have been rlaitning credit for the
independence victories, though
most nf Camhudia'i I 'j million
ltropic harked the King
The French account iaid the eontrot eoniinlixton recently opposed
a royal plan for political reform as
contrary lo Ihe Geneva armistice
agreement*,
The French Foreign Ministry
•aid it had no information on the
rase.
Serretary Dulles, now in Manila
on his way back from Ihe Manila
Part powers' conference in Rangkok, Thailand, declined comment.

12 County Schools
Plan To Take Part
In Spelling Bee
Twelve trhnole will participate
In the aonual Seminole County
spelling t&gt;**, which will be held
at Sanford Junior High the totter
part of March or early In April,
H t’ Steele, spelling bee director
’ aid today. A definite date has
nut been vet.
Seminole County It one of &gt;4
counties partieipating in Ihe an­
imal sp ellin g event sponsored hy
Ihe Miami Herald. The winner
and runner up from each rounly
will go to the finals in Miami
April 29.
Participating in th* county event
will be these schools:
Sanford Junior High, Sinfnrd
Grammar. The Advenlist Church
School, 7ih and Ehn; All Soul*
Parochial School, 9th and Oak;
Lake Monroe, Wil-on, Lake Mary,
Lyman, Forest Lake Academy,
Oviedo, St. Luke's Christian Day
School of Sis via, and Geneva.
A practice match will be held
at radio station WTKit.

Apopka Man Fined
For Killing Buck
A fine of 6171 and costa nr 6R
days in jell wsi Imposed in Cou»ty Court yesterday n* an Apopka
atsn convicted of illegally hiRing
a buck deer.
Judge Ernest Hou*holder k z s j
ad dowa th* scalene* to tha cast
nf L H Ihepard, convicted * »
ccnrty of killing a deer Nav. ■
gear tfca fwwtwtesr a
t

�*

Here's Good News For Students

Some States Could Find Dificulties
By HERMAN R. ALLEN
W A S H IN G T O N , UP - At
lent git itatea might run Into
cegatjtutlwiel difficulties If they
•ttemped to operate itate schoolbullding agenda!, a key feature ol
President Eisenhowar’s federal fid
to education plan.
. An Aiaodatod Preti poll of Hate
nttorneya genaral, itate ichool of*
ficlell and other qualified pereons
ehowi that conitltutioni of theie
-establishment of aucli egenclaa or
limited bonded indabtednen ao a»
to make it queatioiuble whether
they could function.
In nine other itate* the AP
questionnaire dlrcloied, constituUonality of an authority or iti
bonding power baa not been fully
toveaUgated.
However, eight itatea already
btve ichool bunding authoritlei,
or other aiendei Which already
do or could egerclM aimilar powIn 11 state* official* believe
guch an authority would be legal
tinder both constitution and stab
ctes right now. la 13 others, Ugis-

Latino of come -kind would be
Mceasary.

The tally included all toates ex­
cept Delaware.
Under the President's plan to
attack the nation's shortage of
more than 100,000 classrooms, the
federal government would help
•t«t* budding agencies establish
c reserve fund to cover bond*
Which the aganclei would Issue.
The agencies would build school*
artth the bond money, and local
•cbool dJatrteta would buy (ham
under a leas* • purchase plan exBaling up to 30 pairs.
Under another i«etlan of the Eleenhower proposal, now before
Congraas, the government would
hoy part of bond fames from
•cbool districts which could not
Baikal them elggwher* at interest
rate* under H i par cgpt

to the AP survey, although milcellsntom typea of restrictions are
impoitd by tome itatea. Georgia
diitrldi. fo r example, could not
do so if intiiegregation itrlngi
were attached to the government
offer.
A third phase of the Eisenhower
plan would offer outright grants
to itatea, on in averagl SO-SO
matching b u ll, to help impover­
ished district* accept either of die
other two offer*.
Again, moit atalei apparently
could taka advantage Of Mill, with­
in bonding limiti. although a few
have laws which wou}d reitriet
(hem. Nevada aa a state could not
accept such federal funds, although
individual dJatrlcta could.
Thla would mean that most
itatea eould alio make use of fed­
eral grant* proposed In several
othtr emergency aehool aid bills
befom Congress. These bill* are
confined to grant*, on some state
matching bails, for actual school
construction.
It la the constitutionality of itate
building agencies that gives rise
to moat of the nneerslnty.
Secretary of Welfare Hobby said
at a news conference last week
the Department of Health, Educetion and Welfare had legal adviee
that such agendas would be conititutloaal In every state, although
ahe acknowledged some itatea
would have to pata law* to put
them In builnesi.
Yet report* from both Oregon
and Wisconsin aay that ichool
building agencies would be uncon­
stitutional there, and the report
from Nebraska aaya bonded in&lt;

ST. LOUIS i*—Buck up, Junior!
If you tot an r on your aehool
report card laat month, perbapa it
shouldn't be there.
A group of educitori here for e
regional meeting of the American
Aaan. of School AdminJatratori aay
it shouldn’t".
But, the group admitted is an
interview, it will take time to coa
vine* your either, your father,
and even your ichool board.
"We don't have to have failures
in our classroom*," said Mr*. New
ton p. Leonard, of Providence,
»■ I . president of the National
Ceagreai of Parent* and Teacher*.
With her In the diicuision were
J. C. Wright, Iowa superintendent

debtedneii is cooitltutionally pro­
hibited "at the state level." ,
In Oregon a constitutions!
amendment could not be adopted
before November IMS. In Wiscon­
sin &lt;an amendment can be adopted
only after It hia been pasted on
by two sessions of the Legisla­
ture, which meet* every two year*
—after which there must be a vote
of the people. An amendment could
go into effect in Nebriaka in Jan­
uary 19ST.
The Eisenhower plan would cover three fiscal years, beginning
next July 1, so these 'hree states
apparently would be out In the
cold for a good deal of the time
if they sought to come under the
budding agency provisions.

FRESH
PORK

DAMASCUS, Byrie (A— A year
ago Syria waa ridding itself of a
rightist military dictatorship. To.
day this country has the moat ae&gt;
tiva left wing In the Arab world.
Syria la he only Arab state to
elect an admitted Communist to
Pralliment. A third of its saw*,
papers are leftist And Syrian
Communist leaders have emerged
aa leaden of all Arab Reds.
Comm unlit a here got their b]g
chance in March I#M after mili­
tary dictator Adtb Bhlihekjy was
overthrown- Bhiehekly had auppressed communism with ■ heavy
hand. He also had suppressed all
olher parlies. Accustomed to work­
ing underground, the Commupiste
weathered the dictatorship in bettor form than n w « conservative
partlas wjti» so underground #p»

plaudit* of the crowd in tract eg the City Hall during colorful panda
highlighting the factive
King at the Krwwe at Bex to Darwin
r. Fanner, an Investment broker. A m u -tW at ttoa tout eg the
amttvtttoe resulted ha the amto eg » p e w s
ffetorwettoeel)

the Syrian Parliament. &lt;Somm*
n|i a running a* independent*
polled a relatively heavy vote la
Damaaeua. Throughout the eeun*ry, the total Communist vote waa
(round 43,000. In a population of
vbout Mb million.
All that* aj.apo are gat Commuof iourse- Many voted (ev
the left limply In protest egalaat
'He Wait. Other* supported £om-

Drills ne'ikborhood,
» Mrs. Mryborn admits a
lor animal* (bar pets Inc

TENDER — TASTY

PORK

Omnibus Serves
TV Programs
Buffet Style

STEAK
T A 8 T -1 U T E

w ROUND — SIRLOIN.
%
CLUB

By WAYNE OLIVER
NEW YORK ID-TM Ford foun­
dation's Omnibus serves up tele­
vision program buffet style. If «
viewer doesn’t like on* offering,
be may find another to his taste.
Sunday’* CBS-TV show, for examyl* was in O n * Nris- First
was a disserteUen eft how the bu*
min brain N «tie»s- f t t n l was
a lira telecast from as Air »••
fans# Command poet La

C O PELAN D P U R E PO R K

LB. C E L L O
fK E S H T E X D E R SLIC E S

A L t M EAT

Umata glimpse of the workings M
the nation's «lr defense system

DALLAS &lt;H- When the cook
•Jojod a tick possum |n the giri f ' c»P J»*t SPftat, Mr*. Jed

rellv Blodgett, superintended Of
schools it Wheaton, til.; and Mrs.
Irma Detjen, of Webster Groves,
head of the Missouri Congress of
Parents and Teacher*.
Wright said griding children by
arbitrary standards, whether the
grades are good or bad. Is unfair.
ChJef objection to the present
Jay report, said Dr. Cornell, la
that it teQa only what happened
the put aameiter and give* to
Indication of what the child can Of
will do in the future.
Some communities, the educe•ora said, have replaced grade re-

port card* with the follow ins:
A pirent - teicher cooftreuti
about each child at tb« end rf
each lameatar (more often if ate*
»»«ry&gt;
A narrative-type report ca rl ci
which the teacher dieeuise* e*ct&gt;
of the child’! subject!.
A (roup meeting with both pu
enta and children prior to each
semester to diacuia the goat for
that aemeiterFor treater beneflta, the educaion said, the child should have
the aame teacher two or three
conaeeutive year* rather (An
chaste each ccmeitar or year

ashow.&amp; t r s S T W
Most of the telecast came from
eg underground Air Defense Cammend post on Lent Island, but

MAXWFL
HOURS

w it h

nlannlni and organisation must be
dog* now, to everything will b* In "pepujer frogt” with the Secletlatrodlntii u t)ia vaccine It ffeenlem Brotherhood. Those Urea can
Hi*, ot the nation's top medical pull together potent mob strength
and health groups have agreed on tor widespread demonetratione at
a wortrip" blueprint for administer,
tag vaccine supplied by * « N»ti&lt;mal FeenMtlen. ft wiU be offered to W l t n e s M i C f r
*.000,000 eligible children, should
the report be favorable. Addition­ Hyno Needle
al vaccine will be available to phyaielena for uae among other group*.
Used In A ttack
Official representatives atteed
favaw
ah , a*. im-A m eg
Ing IfiMena *q administration at
V * * FM arr*st#d Uat
vacelna were from the Amsrieeo Medical Asaeelatjon, the Am­ n|M and charged with aesaulfiag
mother
m
u with a hypodermic rear-old mother M
erican Academy of Pcdielrfce, the
»«gd Macrae- Ha’
Association of Mate and Territor- woifl#.
Edmund Babel told police hs waa
w * ? ‘hfw tlja* || tka era aid

MM

oh

BfOME F O O f • * ? * *

Sftfetfe.flF -iW .$• ««•

v eefttvif isiftg ■ifter up, ■uuuiir
pick possum arrived with eevea
•fftspring.
' The mothers weren't the devoted
Mad, howevejsrrtbev ran off short*
f t and left Erl. Mayhem with id
•mall paeauau. Thee one of the
Itolghbon brought la another hurt
ponum end she bed 17.
f CM .bp oft*, the wae eM* to

h

&amp; e who S S d S t them * $ 1

Km**7, untE she ksd only ttl?
left. Twc ware female* she could
•to place, ewe waa the hurt one
•ad the otheMtla pjms'sptob

CATSUP

B O TTLES
L f M ^ h u i&lt; k f u w n 2 9 c

fare and (be National
or Infantile Paralysis,
agreed that: I If and
d bp the National in-

LAME 40 OE.

iig iim

anftt* sufficient to prwvide for

M s F ? * aas a

I I l ILL! .

.i.U -

ddal eebools in
J

rvr end will be

touft to • B ttw J "" « f
MR \ m \ fp * k tstp

fH fta F

Our New Utetien

um - '• :

t M t o t r N » * i n it®

I :&lt;k r\'\ i
to

m A

�..

.U j-

THE 0 LCTFR5ME TOW N

IU t h M t l t o

By STANLEY

THE RANTORD HERALD

Wed., March S, 198S P a n &gt;

TH ER E'S STILL TIME
TO START S A V IN G

PESCA D O RES A R E K EY TO FO RM O SA

LUCKY

BUCKS

They’re your*— valuable Lucky Bucks that you can use Just like money at
our Lucky Ruck Auction Sale! You get one Lucky Buck for every dollar
you spend here—extra Lucky Bucks on some items— and every Lucky Buck
you save helps you Ret the prize you want! Remember, you Ret lots more
fdr your money with our top-quality foods plus I.ucky Bucks, so shop here
to Ret that extra value!

£FttNOBOMD TO POMBOSA, the Peecadorva form the Ust natural

SPECIALS GOOD THRU SAT. MARCH 5th

O protection of the Nationalist otronghold against any invading

force from the Chinese mainland. Forming a defense triangle with
the Islands of Matsu and Quctnoy, the Pescadores have become the
anchor in ChUng Kai-shek'* eftahorw guardian chain of Islands.
Radar net* on Matsu and Quemoy would give Uie first warning of
approaching danger from the air, end Nationalist troops there might
hamper a oca force, but It would fall on the Pescadores to stand aa
tbs closed door to on advance an Formosa.
(Central Prtu)

P E S C A D O R E S IS L A N D S
~i ~nr ~ n rtfci ~ ~Li ~w^-—
i ~i ~ *■~
-— *.

PESCADORES GUARD
FORMOSA APPROACH

¥ *ln Our Meat Dept. ★ ★
U. S. GOOD WESTERN r t * ■

State Road Maps Have Big Demand

------------------- —
- - i ------ them," he remarked.
TALLAHASSEE
Ift — «Chairman
His comments came In announc­
Rrtlbur E. Jones of the State Road
Department says he la finding an ing yesterday that the department
bsstisble demand for official Flor- was placing an order for printing
100,000 new maps.
da road £ p s .
The Johns road board had 1,*
“ I believe we could distribute
fere* million a year If we printed 078.900 printed in IBM. Purchasing

CORN
KING

FRESHLY GROUND

SO sgu ere
miles end lie ebewt
80 miles west ef Oew&gt;
erellsslm e Chinn*

HAMBURGER

vwwv^e^^y^vtoven.

3 ik 99c

telelivetv selm we*
tars eilst between the
Islands, tkeeeb the
enslrslint sees ere

PV&gt; "!• *» er rein,
•wept In the winter.

I B

NATIONALIST NAVY
NAS ISLAND RASE
N e lle n e lls t ehlps
s s s l f ten n et I#
strike geUkly el Cemmvnlst genbents In
the Nrmese (tsell nr
ntlnsk treep-leden
•mneperts frem the
t e d Chinese m einlend which Is elmest
100 Billet dla ta et.

*

bettorthan oill

t

no tparlc plug foulingI
Dowlube* eliminates tboee dirty carbon depoaite
which impair spark plug eSdencyi

ifow cr trollingI
Revolutionary Dowlube permits vour en­
gine to run at slower speeds than any
petroleum lubricant yon con buy.

saves

fu o ll

leaner mixtures are possible whew
outboard motors me lubricated with
Dowlube! '

Im s hit hngorl
Piston ring wear, one major
causa of rtupne old ag*1a
reduced by Dowlube!
Yean of intensive research In tlie technics! laborstones
of Tha Dow Chemical Company have lad to the develop,
ment of this omaiing chemical super lubricant. Designed
for use in outboard engines, it u recommended for mlt
where the lubricant is added to the gasoline.

Ntw moHskls at Uatof tanks StstiSM aai Ostkswd Dsshn
y o u can d epen d o n D O W CHEMICALS

Snford

Dealers

Smitty*s Snsppln Turtle
■ — a—*.

BM .

8l l

B uford Boat Works
CilT Am
W ul P. Smith

GoneV Texaco Service

for Dowlubo
Don Howerd
1101 Oak A m

Gulf Service
4S1 E., l i t St,

Motor’s Inn
b art M b* BM.
Frable Cities Service

u
L b.

COPELAND
SMOKED
PICNIC

0 7
4 5
HAM S

39c

Lb.
i to 6 Lb. A vr .

WILSON’S
LEAN
ROLL
PORK

SAUSAGE

39

Lb.

WITH EACH POUND

CHASE A SANBORN

COFFEE
SUGAR 5

Lb.
8

MAXWELL HOUSE

HERSHEY’S

a suner
for
outboards
...
t%r *****
•**Jf
\

M

AN EXTRA LU CKY BUCK

UNCING
U

M M

BACON

WILSON'S SLICED

to -t .k .L t.

agent L. K. Ireland said this was
a normal two-year supply.
Ireland said the new order will
call for pictures of Gov. Collins
and chairman Jones on the maps.
All the road maps purchased by
the Johns' board carried plcturea
and messages from Johns and his
road board chairman, Cecil M
Webb.

M

STEAK

ROUND

N* Invader ef Berimm ever edtWved
Micros* whkevt K t v
syl«f the Feesederes,
&lt;jVkt&gt; tatal eppteal.

H

Jet Bomber Leaves Fiery Path
Crashing Into Residential Area
LAKE CHARLES. La. til — A
crippled BIT Jet bomber smashed
into ■ suburban residential area
last night, killing five at it cut a
fiery iwath into a trailer park.
The dead included the three
crewmen and a young couple
whose house waa demolished by
flaming debris.
The six-engine Stratojet was try­
ing to land at Lake Charles Air
Force Base when It hit a power
line, crashed and exploded In a
Bald. Heavy metal places hurtled
Into the residential area,
The air base aakl the plana re­
ported one engine bad failed.
Capt. Clarence Wilson, 84. pilot
public information officer, identi­
fied the dead crewman i f :
Capt. Clarence Wilton, I , pilot,
California, Pa.; Capt. Mark M.
Vsck, SI. co-pilot, DownJevtile
Calif.; and Capt. Elwyn B. MeBaa, IS, observer, Fort Worth
Tax.
The Calcasieu Parish (CountyV
sheriffs office Identified the dead
civilians as Albert Morgan, SI,
and bis wife Kate, SO.
T. Sgt Jamas C. Sspp, at Lake
Charles AFB, was burned when
debris Ignited his trailer home. His
condition waa termed not critics!.
His wife wee uninjured.
Wreckage of the plane was
scattered over an area more than
XSO yards long and TS yards wide.
The main part ct the plana
core toed Into the Motgans* house,
carrying the bodies of the pilot and
the copilot. The body of the ob­
server was found In the Bald.
Cole Olen, a resident of the area,
said be saw the wreckage hit the
Morgan house and be ran do it.
He kicked In the front doof, but
was driven back by searing beat
The impact of the eraab appar­
ently hurled the sleeping couple
from their beds into the bathroom.
Several unoccupied houses and
several trailers also wen burned.
Spotswood said evidence Indies!
ed the plane waa coming la for a
landing when an engine went out,
causing it to iota altitude Quickly.
"The fltmei must have gone
IBM feet into the air," reported
William Denton, of Houma, La.,
who waa a mile away when the

Review Is Refused
By Supreme Court
WASHINGTON UB-lbe lopreme
Court baa refused to review an
appeal by Daniel S. Vincent o
Tampa, Fla., from lower court
rulings that be waa not entitled to

paton
(run

plane hJt, then hurried to the
scene.
“ The people were running in
every direction around the tourist
court The wreckage appeared to
be all In one fiery heap down to­
ward the back of the court,"

Accusations Made
In Letter Received
By Red Newspaper
MOSCOW tg»—Bruno pontbeorvo,
the Italian-born British scientist
who disappeared from the Wert
in 1990, said In a letter to Soviet
newspapers today be hai been
working on “ peaceful" atomic
rejects In the Soviet Union since
t*l Baa.
Tha letters accused Britain and
the United States of “ using atomic
snd nuclear weapons ss a means
of achieving world domination"
and appealed to Western scientists
to protest against the use of atom­
ic eaergy for military purposes.
Poataconro took part in BritishAmerican work on the first atomic
bomb. Tha UA. Joint Congression­
al Atoinic Energy Committee in
1951 rated him aa a “ first • class
scientific brain’’ and “ a store­
house at knowledge about AngloAmerican • Canadian atomic proj­
ects.” U said ha also had knowl­
edge of later hydrogen bomb davelopmanta.
Pontacorvo’i Identical letter*,
the flrat definite word of him lines
his disappearance, appeared in
Pravda end Isvestia, tha Soviet
Communist party and government
newspapers. Without saying so
specifically, they Indicated ha Is
working In Moscow.
1

5

State Inspectors
Will Check Juice
LAKELANP lit—State Inspectors
will begin checking the new chilled
orange Juice next week to see that
It conforms to standards adopted
for the first Unto.
The rtandards were worked out
by the producer* and other indus­
try leaders. Regulations were
adopted yesterday by tba Florida
CUrus Commission despite the ob­
jections of one producer, Golden
Gift Inc. at DsLsnd.
-The regulations stale that
“ chilled fresh orange Juice” can­
not have any processing except
removal at seeds and undesirable

pulp- Treetaunt with rays, addi­
V. i . D istrict Const In tion at iweenaUtated frasen non*
Tampa n n i the U. C. Cfccxtt Cent tartrate ec ether processing allow
in New Orleans had held that the it to he rated er advertised only
tpen to a]L
aa “ chiliad orange Juice.**

OeidM Oifl contended Ha
is fresh even though it
• IW I

w

9

WITH ORDER

M

-WITH ORDER OF

39

Lbs.'

Oft MORE

FLAVOR SWEET

OLEOM ARGARINE
EVAPORATED

Lb.

3

BRANDS M ILK

Tall Cana

19.
37

8UNLITE

TOMATOES
¥
r . s.

no

80S Cna
Limit 8 Cana

10
Fresh Produce ★ ★

¥

. l

10

POTATOES
YELLOW GLOBB

ONIONS

l

m ^

YORK COOKING

l

13 c APPLES

F u c n v

r

Lbs.

39
^

33c

e v ts t^

n i T o m r 'o
DURKEE’S

r.F
vinvpGENUINE
FREEZER
JAR

TRIPLE WHIPPED

SALAD DRESSING A Q
EXTRA LUCKY BUCK
WITH EACH JAR

Beechnat

Green GUat

Cereals r i | 9 (

Peas
No. 303 Cm

Del Monte

Sliced
Peaches
No. I Vi Cen

31c

E-Z
Starch
Q ta .

24 Oz

21c

M
m

“

Zero
Cleaner
Pints

19c

Sunshine

«

Hi-Ho

1 7 7 -

CrockersLb. &lt;#«JC

FO O D M A R T
PARK AYE. AT 2Sth STREET
S P E C IA L S G O O D T H R U S A T . M A R C H 5th
q u a n t it y

n a n

-a

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�*

Four-Laning O f Highway 17-9 2
Would Help County Prosperity
People ^re fond of tho gnma of "auppostag-'*
in thnt vein let's suppose n little.
Suppose someone handed you $800,000 and
told you to upend It on the one thing Semin­
ole County most needs. You might devote
quite a bit of time ta study before you set­
tled on that solitary Item.
Or you might hit it right away. You
might decide, ns the Chamber of Com*
mcrce'n long-range road* planning commit­
tee decided, that four-laning of U. St High*
Way 17-02 is the project meriting the
money.
Let's look at the facts.
Good roads are essential to the develop­
ment of the ecunrrmic life of any area. Fourlaning of 17 92 will help make Seminole a
itronger and moro prosperous county.
Florida, and Seminole County in no ex*
ccption, Is to a large degreo dependent upon
tourism. It ia the lifeblood of nome area*.
Where tourieta come, money flows. New
business, nourished, springs up overnight.
While towns live or die on the strength of
tho touriat dollar.
Four-Ianinw of 17-92 will bring tourists
to Seminole County In ever-increasing num­
bers. An already inriving county will feath­
er Its nest with new-found wealth.
K*s not a pleasant a!ghl to witness death.
The Grim Reaper's favorito playground Is
tho highway, nnd his toys are mangled
bodies and smashed cars. He swings hU
Scythe most vigorously on undeveloped
roads where a smooth flow of traffic is im­
possible.
Highway 17-92 has one of the highest
traffic accident couhta' Of any road in Flor-

The Sanford Harold

Mir MNtl iitiH tr ■■* taw*

Page 4

Wednesday, Mnr. 2,1955

"F
t o d X y ’8
b ib l k
y u R a is
; It ffl not fo r you to know the*times or
tha eaiaona.— A cts 1:7, It la our business to
tfo tho best we enn every day. God will take
core o f his responsibilities, w t should do

likewise.

HAL BOYLE

Move To Cosf About $7 Million
batb

FROMim *R

ida. Four-laning would materially decrease
tha death toll.
Allocation of $800,000 by the State Roai
Board for the project is not a "big thing*
for tho county. It is a tremendous thing, a
memorable thing opening up unrealized op­
portunities.
The money will cover construction from
the Orange County line north to Big Tree
Road, approximately eight miles south n:'
Sanford. Plans call for the later linking of
Sanford. Co«t of the entire project from
Sanford to the Orange County line would bo
an estimated $1,500,000.

S lD ftl

VtllKHOWL

fcUTCAN
HE HIT?

WASHINGTON CM— Congrats U
almoit finished votlag a pay raise
for Itself—$7,500 a year—sod raiaea
for federal Judge* and diitriat at
torneys. Total colt to the taxpay­
er* will ran around seven million
dollars.
The Senate approved tha Idas
yeiterday. With the House almost
certain to do the same, the pay
booit thee will be efftciv* si of
today. Congrtta had a let of aup­
port for thla move.
President Elsenhower gave it kla
Mailing beforehand, without nam­
ing an amount. So did a ipecial
commliiion which be appointed In
IBS] to study the problem of pay

M y New York

Seminole Count Ians, it goes without say­
ing, greatly appreciate the work of the roads
planning committee, the legislative delega­
tion, and other public-spirited citizens in
carrying out tha 17-92 improvement cam­
paign. It has required vigorous and con
addition* eftort, but the drive has not
slackened since being Initiated.
These people have passed to us the key
to Seminole County's future greatness.

A Political Conscience
Pierre Mendea-France has been called tho
political v.dce of the French conscience.
He knew that’ the fighting in Indo-Chlnn
had to bo otopi&gt;ed, that the French blood and
treasure being there was sapping his coun
try's strength to the danger point He knew
that tho rest of tho world did not want to
get involved. So he mude concessions, un­
popular concessions that left himself open
to tlie 'accusation that he had given IndoChlna to the Reds,
He studied the present world crisis and
concluded thnt European security demand
ed nn alliance of western nations that would
Include a rearmed West Germany. He knew
that with or without hla country's approval
that rearming would take place. Once again
ha risked public disfavor by leading in an
unpopular direction because he believed it to
he the right direction.
He know that any government must pay
ita own way and that it can do so only by
collecting tuxes. He instituted reforms de­
signed to increase the flow of taxaa and to
put an end to traditional tax evasion prac­
tices He spoke out for a realistic approach
to the problems in North Africa.
He made mistakes—but they were hon­
est mistakes. He got things doen even when
it would have been smart politics to leave
them undone. For all these reasons he finds
himself out of office. Hla opponents have
won this round.
Yet he is a young man as politicians go,
with a tot of fight left in him. The elections
to be held next year will disclose whether
tha faith ha has shown in his countrymen
was justified, whether, given a fret ehoiee,
the people do not prefer a real leader to poli­
ticians who ere blown about on every wind
of expediency.

JAMES MARLOW

SWITCH HITTER

WASHINGTON- Democialic
party leader* admit ruefully
lhat they have failed so far to un
earth any real vote-getting luues
to spring in the 1000 presidential
election— but they have not given
up hope. They concede that the
trouble la that President Elsen­
hower ha* stolen much of their
thunder with hie own propoaali
for social legislationThe Democratic chief* egret,
too, than any attempt to attack Mr.
Eisenhower for bis military man­
power cuta might backfire, ilnce
the American people are likely to
depend on the former general's
long-time military background
Army.
Ai for the alleged "giveaway" of
the nation’s natural resources,
Democrats admit that thla le an
Itaue which would appeal only to
scattered region*, and not to the
voting publle at large.
However, the Democratic lead­
ers are astute politician*. They
realite lhat anything can happen
between now and November, 1IM.
end lhat what happens la likely
to furnish them with ■ number
of burning Issue* on which to ban*
thalr campaign.
In the Senate, Democrats al­
ready are attacking the Preal*
dent'i proposed federal atd-toachoola program. Senator Robert
Kerr, of Oklahoma, charged that
It waa "conceived by the invest­
ment bankers and inspired by tba
money lenders." in lb* process,

President personally.

* * a

Broken Spelt- A good hick
piece which fienatar Joseph C.
O'Mahoney ha* kept for M years
haa finally let him down. It eoutd
not heat the Senate's sawrtttsa
rule of reslevity.
’ Tha Wyoming Democrat haa had
Granting the Mtoptlona listed by One man I know even blames tke key to itom na In tha Senate
Office building slnee ISM. How
Mrs. It. Gauge, don't women by Ms baldness on hi* chivalry,
ever, that waa not enough to win
both custom and the actual work- “ u * mother taught me at the him back the office be occupied
Ini of the law anJov vail advan5 lo remova my bat In the for IS of Iboee years. Instead, the
Kite bag beea a**lined to Utah's
Watkins, wbe outranks him In
They have special privilege! in I . , *}!..!?
everything from getting a seat In J i n a n nfv h i!? of/Vndw hat U
a crowded bus to gelling away with ^
“ K
^
O'Mabonoy Brat worked In room
ns from m i to tan, when it war
marital murder. A man who Mils S ' ? w#r-t
allocated to the late Senator John
yeanMM ^Asasn^atnu* bmi
T1’fr#
tb# Uttte legal mat- B. Ecadrieh, al*e a Democrat
from Wyomlag- When Hendrick
'J fltS b o M ? p ? i o ? 5 i f f ffS wr 01 illmoa'- A
•
m i i t o t a Z T ■ » now c,n m ,rty *
into- died end O'Mabeaey was appoint­
/h u .sT u i
e#" ‘
■**. tarn hla boyish ed to succeed him la MM. the door
K w k kim
» “ * bet rlebee, and thee- key he bad taken borne with him
thSk^S to axnUln^Slv^Mtu?
b# give# her the beet yoara to Wyoming In INI atin ftt.
uM have an eArfita ekaiL
m ^ bl* Ufe loe* kUU Slide pennUai
S i r e u i i b M d m a t ! m ? * ! 2 and ge an I* another meg. If be
talar
trie* to iu* her for a fair there of
ffr « S 7 jiy W
" h ^^boodle, ^he, la laughed eat of

■tonal approval of President Blaao
howcr'a armed force* reierva and
modified ualveraal military train
Inf program.
Thera was virtually do opposi­
tion to the President's request for
a four-year eateniioti of the draft,
but hit propoiata on the reierve*
and civilian tralaim drew fire In
both the Home and Senate.
In a aurpriae move, the Defame
department made public itate
menu from three of America’*
top military leader* to aupport
Mr. Elsenhower's program.
Can. Alfred M. Orueather, aup
r i m e Allied commander In
Europe: Gen. John E. Hull, Par
Eait commander, and Sen. Max
well D. Taylor, Army command­
er In the Par Beat, all toaaed In
their argumenU on behalf of the
Pmideot'a plana
The Preeltfent want* to expend
the reserve* from leu thee three
million to more than five million
men and to provide for compul­
sory civilian training.
Thla would Include giving eia
month*' training to 100,000 youth*
■ year and would then commit
them to the,reierve* for nine end
one-half year*.
Hull maintained that If aome
lucb ayitem were not worked out
it would mean that even In a
“ vert pocket" war the United
States would have to depend on
eombat veteran* to fight future
battles.

Bj MEL HEIM HR
NEW YORK - Third avenue is
street that looks as if It had the
pox long ago Cheap little taloona
and musty pawnshops scar its
dark, cellar-smelling length. Here
and there a bright, anhtlteptic new
building studs Its booty scene, wait.ng Impatiently fot the elevated to
be torn down, but moiUy It la a
street that doesn't change charac
ter aa It dribbles from downtown
to up. It la a rundown tana, loved
only by the kind of people who**
hearts go out to muddy, beat-up,
tail-betweeo-lhe-legs dogs.
In the forties and Plftles, anti­
que shop* iptll along Third for a
stretch and if you drift past them
of an afternoon, you c*n see eotUy
limousines parked at the metiers
and furred fat ladlea haggling ov­
er the cost of urns or sofas. Some
of them, though, Jinl can't be call­
ed aallque shop* "Juak iterea" la
closer to It.
la front of one you atop and
think for a while on the grandeur
that wai Greece, furniture la
crowded aroued tha alar* (real en
the sldew.lk and there are a couple
of ornate chairs la thick wood and
dusty leather that you see an selllog for $4.40 each.
What Ethel Barrymore type sat
in tham and said with ealm assur­
ance to the serving maid, "Mary,
you may begin now'*T or what fat
old gent with mutton chop whis­
per* wriggled hla bulk around hi
on* of them Impatiently and ex­
claimed, "Demmit all, gentlemen,
If thla company, U to go on aa H
haa In the past, we must merger
A couple of rickety table* are
outside too, holding a spat* of
becks by Harold Bell Wright and
Rex Beach and E. Phillips Oppenheim, their cavers faded by the
sun and buckled by the rain. You
opea one. "To Leslie on her birth­
day January It, 1M ," roada the
spidery legend, Id brown lak. Thai
would mek* Leslie 44.
Where is Leslie oo this February
afternoon? Hat she made R to
44 safely, with i handful of kids
around kor, or kai she, ai Erfeh
Maria Ramarqu* put 1L com* faro
to face with tha wild maostar,
death?
The hronse boat In tha crowded,
dirty, window la of a yousi man
hi* hair parted in the middle. Vaaand eulgJsae bowls pOo around
Mm in eeofuslaa, Bat ha peer* aw

increases for Coagren, the Judgaa
and the district attoneyi.
The salary of 330 mtmberi of
Congress—to senators, 4M rept
sentalives—goes from 411,000 a
yea* to 4O.M0 That of the re­
maining House member, Speaker
Rayburn &lt;D-Tex), goes from $40.
000 tc 415.000.
So does that of Vie* President
Nixon. The bill does not affect the
President who gets 1150,000 la aalery end an expense fund.
The IT.500 inertsse for all memoars except the speaker I* ■ M
per rent ral»e. The last Increase
Congress voted Itself, In 1444, was
from 410.000 to 415,000. Tba presi­
dential commission last year rec­
ommended a raise to $37,400.
Thla is what happens lo the pay
of about 400 federal Judges:
Chief Justice Warren—*25,000 to
435,000; the eight Supreme Court
associate Justicei—413,000 to III,ooo Judges of tha United States
Court of Appeal—417,500 to 415,000
Lower court Judges' pay wlU Jump
•rom 415 000 to 401,500.
United State* district attorneys
and assistant district attorneys
were permitted a pay boost by
Conxress too. hut now much aach
gets depends &lt;M how much Atty.

C o m m o n M o u th D iso rc
•ylHMUMIL
1 THINE all of you will admit
that your mouth can easily get
you Into a lot of trouble. Maybe
you oak your husband for a new
hat at toe wrong time—or saas
a traffic oop at any time - and
you find out you’ve bitten off
more than you can chew
Well, your mouth can cause
you trouble In other ways, too.
Stomatitis, Which haa nothing to
do with your stomach, but la an
Inflammation of your mouth, can
be pretty botbereom*.
Several thlnaa can cause u»t»
Inflammation. Maybe you're
smoking too much or eating hot
and spicy food* too frequently.
Jagged teeth or poorly-fitting
dantum might be tha cause, or
maybe you*ve "

The energy men burn up In cut- The Seths Centurv baa- bean a
worn form* of gallantry-running one-way KreeTfor the lastteTtoS
orranda for women, lighting thafy long. In T a d im b on U f T « !

S P - S S f l- 5 3 a

Avoid all citrus fruits, chocolate,
coffee, wine, vinegar, tomatoes
and melons. It's probably a good
Idea to taka milk of magnesia.
In any ease of stomatitis, you
should have your doctor take
mouth cultural so ha can defi­
nitely rule out diphtheria aa the
cause, and determine the beat
treatment.
But, no matter what the cause.
It's Important to keep your mouth
dean. Throw away your old tooth­
brush and n t a new one. Don’t

axconlYily*

Month Waahee Helpful
Mouth washes will be belpfuL
Any simple cleansing wash will
help soothe an Inflamed mucous

You eaa attx a good mouth
wash yourself by adding onequartar Uaapoonlul of aalt ta
many
about half a glassful of warm
Lock of
water. If you wish, you can also
Lack of the B vitamins or of mix In a quarter teaapoonful of
vitamin C or aevere anemia might ■odium
Bulledlarint tablets or penicil­
alee he factor*.
On* tom ef this ailment, lin loeengea may also be useful in
stnsuettlle ephthoue. to moot ecwi- treating jour tufacted mouth.
mow la children and eaa paealhty
a* laid to too much chocolate and
-ltrus frill ta In thaee ease*, the M. B.t What would caaae kernouth ta ulcerated and may he* eato to coma under tha arma?
Answer: This Might be due lo
om* so painful that It to difficult
enlarged lymph gtanda. it might
0 speak or |o chew.
alio M duato tnfeettaa of the
hair roots each a condition reTha diet 'to thla Instance, ef
careful Invert'
“o by

ra re

ha

itaw
'POSSUM TROT
GREENVILLE, 8. C. (UR) "There's a thief la the kitchen try­
ing to maka off with the aUvtrl"
Mrs. William Nelson nudged her
husband awake.
He slipped cautiously Into tha
■lichen where Hi* noises were com­
ing from the silverware drawer.
Opening it cautiously, he dlseover-f
ad aa ippBwuto maktag free wlthv
the tableware.
Ntlaon dispatched tha critter
with blows frem kla shoe and a
piece of pipe.

Congress Misses On Men's Rights

ILSUSUf

Oca. Brownell wanu to give Mm.
Congress 'eft that up to Brownell.
He can raise district attorneys
&lt;ny amount from tha present max­
imum ol $15,000 to the new maxi
mum of 420,000 and assistant at
torneys from the present mask
mum at 412.500 to tha new maxl-V
mum of (14,000.
In addition to his pay each
member of Congress gets official
office spec* in Washington (in tha
House and Senile office buildings)
and in Ms home district He Is
allowed a minimum of 413,500 a
year for clerical hire, 43,500 In
mechanical equipment, taoo a year
to buy aUtionery, unlimited free
mailing privileges.
For travel to and from Wash-V
ingtoo (or aach union of Congresa—one round trip—he Is al­
lowed to deduct $4,000 of hla sal­
ary as expense* for Income tax
purpotet.
The presidential commission es­
timated It costs the average mem­
ber of Congress 43,000 a year more
than bis old fis.ooo salary, and
‘ hat «0 per cent of the members
must depend on some private ln-_
come. Many members maintaiaw
two residences, one here, the other
at boma.

$ A ll
3 0 0
L$*f 9bm

SPORT SHIRTS

£*"Elt5 NHfPinfUl aSnTS
Netknallr

A ffw ttoai

1r e tie

I m a D - M e d i u m - U r g e - E x t r a Large.

•
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�&lt; S o jc ia L fc v fw iA ,
Citv Represented
By Two Delegates
A t Leesburg Meet
Mr*. L. G. Hunter, president o!
the local Women of the Church
and Mrs. If. II. McCa'Un. dele
Kate, represented the First Pres
byterlan Church of Sanford at thr
organizational meeting of the SI
John's Prcsbyterlal, which was
held at the First Presbyterian
Church in Leesburg on Monday.
Mrs. Ilalph Austin Smith was
elected historian and Mrs. P. T.
Piety chairman of Church Exlen
sion for the newly organized pres
byterial.
Others from Sanford who attend­
ed this important meeting were
Mrs. A. G. Mclnnis, Mrs W. D.
Simpson, Miss Letlic Caldwell,
Mrs, V. M. Greene, Mrs. R. A.
King, Mn. Henry McLaulin, Mrs.
Ora Stryker, Mrs. Louise Carman.
Mrs. L. 1. Frazier, Mrs. W. D
Meeds, Mrs. Benjamin Beach.
Mrs. R. C. Maxwell, Mrs. J. C.
Hutchison. Mrs. Charles Morrison,
Mrs. J. N. Gillon, Mrs K. W. Fite.
Mrs. F. W. Bender. Mrs. Mary
Bolly, Miss Nella Ranks, Miss
Lol Banks, and Mrs. li. C. Hctzel.

(pBAAonaU
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Tisher have
returned to their home in East
Liverpool, Ohio, after visiting
with Mr. and Mrs. W. L. ltocbe
on Laurel Avenue.
Mrs. Edmond Cox and daugh­
ter, Deborah have returned
to
Manchester, Conn., after visiting
her parent*. Mr. and Mrs. N. H.
Brewer on Silver Lake.

Kitchen Shower
Given In Honor
Of J. Cameron
Miss Jackie Cameron, popularbride-cicct, was honored with a
kitchen shower at the home of
Mrs. John E. Gradick Monday
night.
The home was beautifully decor­
ated with cala llllies and orange
blossoms. The refreshment tabic
was overlaid with a madicra
cloth and the center decorations
were of orange blossoms and white
azatcas surrounding white can­
dles. Refreshments consisted of
party sandwiches, cakes, mint* and
nuts.
Invited guests were Mrs J. M
Cameron, mother of the Iwldctobe, Mrs. Richard Bass, Mra. Har­
ry Kent, Mrs. Carl Williams, Mrs
Ray Ozier, Mrs. Paul Pezold, Mrs.
Ralph Pezold, Mrs. Vernon Har
din, Mrs. Marcel Faille, Mr*. Cliff
Inghram. Mr*. Charles -Lin'ing.
Mrs. Lloyd Swain, Mrs. Walter
Mcrlwcincr, Mrs. Robert Hodges.
Mrs. Leon Swain, Mrs. James
lloolohan, Mrs John Keeling. Miss
Betty Rose lloolehan, Mis* Tom
myo Mclhvin and Mbs Marty
Cameron.
Mrs. Harold It. Kastner will
leave lomormw for Jacksonville
where she will represent the Har
old II. Kastner ft Co. at the Wa
Icrmclon convention held in the
George Washington Hotel on Thurs­
day, Friday and Saturday March
3. 4 and S.
Friends of Mra. Russell Tran sue
will be sorry to hear that the has
entered the Fernald Laughton
Memorial Hospital to undergo
treatment.

TO WOMEN
who are watching helplessly
as their skins dry up and
. age prematurely
M f f f c itifimwt by i i c p l i i Ctdrai wytilrig I—

% * Hineta tnpmtim, FIOWWC VfLKT, km restored tbe frafe
Many people think of me aa an
aviation axpert only. Yet, f
alarted mr career aa a beauty
operator before becoming the
head of my coametic company.
And I bare constantly sought to
create a limited number of
aimple corrective preparations,
baaed on natural Ingredient*,
that are easy to use - and abort
everything else—affective.

Dry, sensitive skin la
the major problem of
millions of America
women. Greasy, heavy
preparations only
“ butter" faces super((icially. Tbs logical
answer is moisture. . .
Not surface moisture,
but moi Aura (a tba
tissue. Several yean
•go, aftsr long and
r iim i.liiig research,
succeeded in finding 0 way to
thu beneficial.N
penetrate into the skin.
Tba result? A on* p rod *
was born: flowing velvet, the

will transfer bearficial moiitur* Into parched,
prematurely aging tissues. A big
promise, true — but one lbat
has been kept over and over
again. Floods of letters from
grateful users — from the four
comen of the world — tell us
that they will never again be
“ hym oun”

without FLOWING VELVET. A n d

it does not contain hormones!

NOW TO IM IV
Apply it at night, attar
cTeanaiag. •
your akin cleansing.
Jt disappears instant­
ly, leaving no trace of
grease on your face or
upon your pillow.
Apply it ageusia
the morning, under
rour foundation. It
icepc your ikln dewy*
soft and beautiful all
through the dav.
Apply It often, os
/reefy aa yon with,
rLOWINC VELVET la in-

■taatly absorbed by tha thirsty
ddn. It i* ao rich and concaa*
(rated that only a few drape ere
watwma u n

it

• W -.-r u .m .c v .t m .-W
nt delighted women eli
the world who swear by k.
what m

fiowiMi vtLvm
FLOWtNO VtLVET Is e triple*
action, peeezlesi, flowing for­
m a! a containing a revole*
lionary, exclusive Ingredient —
■nm ouN, that works 3 ways*
I . It faraisbee moisture that
•dually sinks into tbs akia.

2.11

(I consider them acompliment)
But-ao ONECANSUCCESSFULLY
IMITATE tT—since its miraculous
element, b t m o u n , was devel­
oped and la exclusively con­
trolled, by my own laboratories
" flo w in g velvet "^ is

unique, end the only ,
moisturising preparation
will actually do more lor
akin (baa you could ever 4__
possible —in so short a time,
make this TEST! Meet ear
•peeiilly-trsined Jacqueline
Cochran eeaesdtsat Watch bar

pear % lew drops of flowing
VEIVit ea your wrist And see k
sink instantly into jour sU*

Q &amp; m ^ (aahat'j

FlOWIIt
. YILVIT
fin k if sadpimsaii i pi gi i
fee
eaatMep m
i ^

u

Rouattat &amp; Anderson

IT 3.J . .

&lt;-1X. . "j-.VTi

..

•«

"

"■
„

-■

1

Rainbow Officers
Installed Monday
4t Masonic Hall
The Inslallatlon meeting of the
Rainbow Girls was held Monday
night at 8 o’clock. The ceremony
was open, to the public with a
number of friends and relatives
attending the event.
Installing officers were Mrs. Joe
Corley, president; Mrs, II. E. An­
derson. recorder: Mrs. J Shmidt
marshall, Mrs. Ellison, chaplain;
and Mrs. Eba Harkcy, musician
The officers were installed In
regular form as follows; Worthy
Advisor Harriet Redding; Asso­
ciate Advisor, Elizabeth Woodruff;
Charily, Mary Tanner; Hope, Ir­
ma Jean Corley; Faith. Margaret
Eliison; Chaplain. June Jennings;
t.ove. Elizabeth Russo; Religion,
Sandra Monforlon; Nature, Amoret hpeir; Immortality, Shirley
Wall; Fidelity, Duttie Williams;
Patriotism, Marilyn Calhoun; Ser­
vice, Shirley Tyre; Confidential
Observer, Verna Ann MacGillli;
and Outer Observer, Sonja Mon
forton.
Mrs. Kaihllne Reynolds was In­
stalled as Mother Advisor.
The advisory board members
were composed of Eastern Star and
Masons; Mrs- Joe Corley, Mr. and
Mr*. Phil Wyatt, Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie Sheppard, and Mrs. Grace
Cordell.
Harriett Redding, Worthy Advizor, introduced her mother apd
presented her with an orchid. Re­
freshments were served after­
wards by the advisory board com­
mittee.

Miss M. Warmoth
Honored At Coffee
By Mrs. W. Morgan
Mis* Margie Warmoth wa* honoicd at a coffee given by Mr*.
Walter Morgan at her home, 3535
Magnolia Ave., Monday afternoon.
Miss 7.illah Welsh and Mis* Ernes­
tine Weatphal icrvcd as co-hos­
tesses.
The color scheme fnr the decor­
ations was silver and red and an
arrangement of Dogwood and
white asateaa. While candelabra
accentuated the bexuty of the
serving table. The table was laid
with a red linen cloth and the ser­
vice was of silver. Open faced
sandwiches, and small cakes cen­
tered with a heart were served.
Mrs. Robert Brown presided at
the coffee table.
Miss Warmoth and Mra. Morgan
received the guests at the door of
Iha Florida room while Miss
Westphal and Miss Welsh uihered
the guests to the serving table.
The honoree was presented by
the hostesses with crystal in her
chosen pattern. She wore for the
occasion a two-piece divas of
dusty pink orlon,
Approximately 40 guests called
during the afternoon.
Party Tip: Spread red caviar
on buttered rounds or square* of
fresh bread; top with minced
parsley and a tiny cocktail onion.
The onlona coma pickled la 4ounra Jar.,

Calendar
WEDNESDAY
The Elsie Knight Circle of the
First Baptiit Church is In charge
of the program at 7:30 p. m. for
the Week of Prayer.
The Men's Club and Men's
Class of the First Baptist Church,
will sponsor the attendance at
the Evangelistic Service with Dr.
P, 31. Boyd as speaker at 7:30
p. m.
The First Baptist Carol Choir
will hold rehearsal at 4:15 p.m.
The First Baptist Sunday School
Superintendent'* cabinet meeting
will begin at 7 p.m. In the Chapel.
The First Baptist Prayer Meet­
ing service will begin at 7:30 p.m.
The program will be under direc­
tion of the Elsie Knight Circle of
the W.M.S. in' observance of the
Week of Prayer for Home Miaelons.
Choir practice will be held at
the Central Baptist Church at
6.30 p.m.
A church conference will be held
at the Central Baptist Church at
7:30 p.m. fur the purpose of
adopting by-lawa for the church.
All members are urged to attend.
The Sunbeams of the Central
Baptiit Church will meet at 7:30
p.m.
THURSDAY
The First Baptist Junior G.A’a
(B and 10 year girls) will meet
at (he church at 3:30 p.m.
The First Baptist Intermediate
1» qwnqa aqt 1" l**tu U|M i.VO
4 p.m.
.The First Baptist Carol Choir
will hold rehearsal at 4:15 p.m.
Tho Fir»t Baptist Crutador
Choir will hold rehearsal at the
church at 6 p.m.
The First Baptist Church Choir
will hold rehearsal at 7:30 p.m.
The First Baptist Junior Royal
Ambassador* will meet at 7 p.m.
The junior and senior depart­
ments of the MYF of the First
Methodist Church, will sponsor the
altrndnanre at the evangelistic
services at 7:30 p.m. with Dr. P.
At Boyd as speaker.
Circle No. Three of the First
Baptist Chuich is in charge of
the program at 2 p.m. for tbs
Week of Prayer.
Central circle of the Garden
Club will visit the Eustis Garden
Barn at 1»:45 a.in. Sponsor of the
program of flowering trees is
Mrs. Wurt Warner. Hostesses will
be Mrs. G. McCall, Mrs. B. C.
Moore, and Mrs. Zcb Ratliff.
The rsgular monthly meeting
of the Seminole County Minis­
terial Assn, will lie in the First
Presbyterian Church at 12:3(1 p.m.
Thr W.MU of the Central Bap­
tist Church wilt hold a season of
prayer at 7:30 p.m.
Airs. Stamp, a missionary, will
teach the WMU of tha Central
Baptiit Church the'study course
Look from 10 a.in. to 3;3U p.m.
Luncheon will lie aervrd at the
church for all attending. At 3:30
p.m, she will meet with tha GA
girls.
There will ha a mreling of the
church brotherhood and WAtU of
tha Central Baptist Churth fur a
film showing at 7:30 p.m.

THURSDAY
The regular Match meeting of
the South Side P-TA will he
held at 8 p. m. Class rooms will
be opened at 7:30 and thr board
meeting will be ft 7 o'clock.
FRIDAY
The Duplicate Bridge Club will
meet at the Yacht Club with rest
ing to start at 7:45 p. m and play
(o begin at 8 o'clock.
Tli.* Trj‘ii»ecker's Clan and
Daughter's of Wesley Class wip
sponsor the attendance at !h
evangelistic services at the Flirt
Methodist Chuch at 7:30 p. m
with Ur. P At. Boyd as speaker
Circle No. Four of the Firs'
Baptist Church is in charge of the
prog rim at 2 p. m. for Ine Week
of Praver.
The W.MU of the Central Bap­
tist Church will hold a season of
prayer at 7:30 p.m.
SATURDAY
The Central Baptist Church will
lie open all day for prayer and
everyone I* to assemble for prayer
at 7:30 p.m. fnr the revival.
The Pilot Club will hold a rum­
mage sale on Sanford Ave., be­
tween Fourth and Fifth Streets
from 0 a. m. until fl p. m. Cloth­
ing is to be brought to the Stine
Machine Shop on East Second
Street on or before Friday for
ma&gt;king,
MONDAY
The Executive Hoard of the
Women of the Church will meet
in the session room of the First
Picsbylei ian Church nt 10 a. nr.
The First Baptist Sunbeams
will meet at the church at 3:30
p. m.
Tha First Baptist Sunday
School Welker's Council meeting
will begin at 7 p. nr. with a cover­
ed dish supper in the Mrmorial
Educational Building. The regular
meeting will begin at 7:30 p. m.

Garden Nook

THE SANFORD HERALD Wed.. March 2, T955 Page 5

By SADIE B. GIT
The Sanfnrd Garden Club of
Florida Federation of Garden
Cltihs

Blooming In our gardens these
early spring days arc many love­
ly flowers, Including azaleas, ca­
mellias, rnlliandra (the powder
puff
Idsh),
primrose
jas­
mine, flame vine, linuhinia (or­
chid tree),
dogwood, redbud,
plums, pears, peaches and also
the many snunl* nod perennials.
Even with all this lieanty, wc
still hope ysm have not been miss­
ing the native shrubs and plants
in bloom along the highway*.
Many wild plums arc to be seen
in open fields as well as in our
gardens. Then in low mens you
may come across a small upright
tree literally covered with clus­
ters of small pure white flowers
all along its branches, reminding
you of bridal wreath. This is
Waller* small vibumam (Vibutrnm olxwntum Walt.) It I* love­
ly in tlie garden and many plants
hnvp been brought in amt esta­
blished there.
Red chokebrrry (Aron!* arbutifolia) n small shrub four to
eight feet high is also found in
low place* along the roadside,
it has flat topped cluster* of
white or pinkish white flower*
at branch tips, along with the
leaves, which arc gray backed and
about two incite* long.
The
(lower* are followed by brillianl
ml, wintei-persisting bciiie* and
red foliage in fall. They are u. «ful in the garden lircnu*e of Iht
early flowet* and for the color­
ful leave* and berries *s well
Propagation i» easy by seed*,
rutting or laying.
There ate
also purple and black berried
chokeberries, but they would not
hate the appeal of the red one.
Another native flower that
make* a show beside roadside
ditches is (be blue (lag (Iris
versicolor). It does well in gar­
den* if given a location near n
pool or dripping faurot, but it
can get out of bounds when con
liilion* are really to it* liking.
Tho drying wind* of the last
few day* have Item very hard
on the garden ami the whole area
should be well watered. Khallnw
rooted plants *uch at camellias
am! nralrn* ate especially in need
of moisture if they are not to
suffer. Amaryllis, glads and dayIdle* that are about to eonie into
flower will also benefit greatly
fmm a good watering now, and
a mulch of leaves will help re­
tain the moisture provided.
Belter lay in a supply of camel­
lia and azalea fertilizer to car­
ry you Ihloiigli the feeding sea­
son. March thru June, Azaleas
arc usually given time feedings
during this time, and camellias
can taka the same, or if you pre­
fer you may give n •mull feed­
ing each month, until the last of
Julie, when they start to *et buds
for tlie coming *rason. It is not
nere.-'ary In remove mulch, ju*t
sprinkle fertilizer on surface and
water in well.

TUESDAY
Tha Gleaners Clast will have
a monthly meeting at the First
Baptist Church’s annex . at 7:30
p. m. Mrs, V. P. Hasty will be
hostess.
The Daughter* of Wesley Sun­
day School Class of the First
Methodist Church, will meet nt
7:30 p. nt. in McKinley Hall,
with Mrs. Robert Coir, Mrs. Don­
ald Dunn, Airs. Grace Gregory,
Mrs. Louise Knowles, Mrs. J, M.
MrCnskill and Mrs. M, R. Smith
as ro-ho*tr»sc*.
Tlie First
Baptiit
Concord
Choir will hold tt'hcaisal at 6:30
P. nt.
The First ltapti't Intermedi­
ate Atuba.-sailors will meet at
7 p. rn.
Anna Miller Circle will meet at
the Elks Club at 8 p. m.
The Unity Class will meet at llie
Valdez Hotel at 7:45 p. m. with
Carolyn Parsons as teacher. The
study book will he continued and
the public is Invited.
Circle No. 5 of the Melhndlst
Church will meet at the home of
Afrs. !,. A. Anderson, 2U17 Hibi­
7:3ft p m. at the home of Air*.
scus Ct., at 10 a. m.
R. W. A. circle of the First J. IV. Knight Jr., 2U7 Poin.setttc
Christian Chureh will meet at Drive.

2-Pc. Bolero Suit in Viscose
Rayon and Raw Silk
Sheer luxury at an everyday price! Tailored
in nubby, viscose rayon nntl raw silk, guar*
anteod complotcly washable nntl color fast or
your money refunded. Georg intins sleeveless
•heath with lowered neckline. Short bolero
ha* cap, Dolman alcoves, piped lapel*
accented with gold, pearl centered button.
Suet: 12 to 20, 38 to 10
Colon: Beige, Pink, Blue, Green

4K
"Us* Our Convenient
Lav-Away Plan'*

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Pape II
*

W ( f « W bttV l l H I

TWE RAN TOM I H ERALD
- ■-

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—*■••— ■■
*■—

'

Friscc Again Tops
By TUB ARiOCIATfa) PRE8R
For tha fourth straight week the University of Ian Francisco today ta i named the No. 1 college baikelball team tn the weekly A*aoelated Pre»» poll with Kentucky and LaSalle atlll In cloan pursuit
of the (lefrnee-mlnded Dona.
Of the 104 aporta writers and aporU caatera votlpg, 43 named San
Francisco aa the top tram. The
Dona, boaatlng tha beat defenae
among major college*, amaaaaded
888 vole*. The balloting waa baaed
or record* of game* through laat
Saturday, with point* on the uaual
Imaia of 10 for each flrat-place
Junior Bowling vote, 9 for second, etc.
Duquetne, seeded No. 1 In the
Tr.aw STAUDHVOS
Hot Shota
National
Invitation Tournament,
Dowllna Urns
aaperlenced the biggest drop when
Termite*
Klrlkera
it fell from fourth to eighth after
Tlstrs
bowing to Dayton. The Flyer*
BulMnai
if inti lanrvmoALa
sealed No, S in the NIT, moved
Jr&gt;tmnr Rmernoa
up from 11th to 10th.
ohn Taylor
iHutch
Marquette, N o r t h Carolina
Ilk* Itohort*
rs**uba
State, Minnesota and Utah all
I.odrf McCoy
climbed on* notch In the rankings
m il.D o e s
ohn Tsylor
aa a reault of Duquesnr’a setback.
J
Immi Termlllsesr
UCLA held ninth place.
Billy Hotels*
Nick Conitsntlit
The leaders, with first—place
immy Ifallleas
votes la parenthear*:
lohbv Anlbos
STRIKERS
1. San Francisco (43)
BBS
Roast iiimi«**
1. Kentucky (15)
723
Johnny Knyll-fc
Jack Pstrunlr
I USalle (9)
040
Stanley WMUnk
4. Marquette &lt;H)
400
ellan Russo
laltsr Toaauo
I. N. C. State (1)
425
Tree mi tics
B. Minnesota (1)
309
niyan llndsso
grtss ^Cllc'iusnsot
7 Utah (4)
359
B Duquetne
348
John Mann
I. UCLA (5)
297
tliilch Ca**ub*
Rruee MoMurrny
10 Dayton (6)
Z02
l.adrf McCoy
11, Alabama (4)
153
0*or*s Porlrfoe
Kosnolh Oustsvssoa
12. Iowa (3)
120
iiowi.tivo b r o t h e r s
18. G. Washington
115
Jon Cash
Hilly Johnson
14. Oregon Stata (I)
77
Johnny Kmsraoa
Iff Tulsa (1)
08
Hilly Wall
Bobby Hue kiss
IB. Vanderbilt
ff5
TIOKna
IT Illinois
42
Hoanle Gslmaa
John Wrltht
IB. Maryland
40
jsrry Rosso
19. Memphis SUte (1)
37
Hoy id Wllsna
20. Missouri (1)
35
Henvsr Itoyoo

J

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Gory gold*
lloan Hit
ockl* Wlldor
Glynn Smith

S

maw shots

Moo Sslvld**
P u l Kirk
Bobby Kendrlrk
Mike Roberts
John Duntfaoo

Girl's Bowling
THAW

BTARDIHUF

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4.
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Rstnro
Striker*
Tlulldogs
T le m

h i g h la D tv to u A ia
Bllaea Mrsra
frlaclllo lawhoaS
Linda llamllloa
Candy Avrell
aiarr K. Vanes
S IT O II
Gwynno WltilaaM
Solly Klas
I.lnda Er lints
Jo Ann* Nswburr
antra andarson
IIeon Mx&gt;ra
star Hmlth
PACNR*
lorole cievataad
'■in Mwksstf
arsis gaiter
larihe Hniid
lloonor Byks*

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books on sport* humor— "I'll
Go quietly", 'Til Try Anything
Twice" end "Funny Thing* About Bporta".
Russell la a gradual# of Van­
derbilt University, Claaa of '27.
A lawyer - turned - newspaper­
man, he turned to tha sports
writing field in 1929.
At crmclualon of the banquet,
which I* to be held In the student
Service Center on the Florida
campus, there will be a dance

Member* of ths North Carolina
swimming team hall from five
states plus Turkey.

p|lrher Hank Afuim |„tn line,
laaving an even half-doien Tribe*M(n outald* the fold. All told,
tbfr# tr, on]y M holdout* la the
maj 0ra and most are expected to
rapiUilato ehortly.
|Ua {Tbi ) ( aa) Kl|lUl u
Jackie

Roland LaStarzo(
Julio Mondorot
To Fight Tonight

o r enore

aH right. He limped noticeably
yesterday, the Brat day af trainlag, and admitttd be waa favortag
the teg.
"There's no nee denying the
dam thins has mo worried, aald
Fata. "But doctors tall me M'a go­
ing to he okay. V 1 didn't feel
they on right 1 wouldn't bo tore
Hi eoanp."
He revealed he aggravated the
Injury twice during tha winter—
once while pheasant hunting and
again when ha toppled throe feet
off a etaffoM.
Meanwhile, Ssnttal Maneges
Ran': Greenberg of tha Americas
League's ehamploa Cleveland In­
diana, peeved at Itos anttes af
some of hit players who how ro­
tated to aigm, cracked the whip
and brought outflaldaa Larry Doby
tato Una.

B or

MIAMI, Fla. UR - RoUnd LaStarxa, tha Bronx boner who twice
fought heavyweight ehamptoa Boo­
by Marciano, w&gt; moot M ie Modtroa of Havana tonight to the

Sports
Roundup

i M£tSt

v»»

Hand Is O k a y ,
Campanella Says
VERO BEACH, Fla. (A^—Catcher Roy Campanella, who plunged
from the Moat Valuable Player in the National League in 1961 to a
meek .107 hitter last year, today proclaimed that his injured right hand
la all right.
Twlct last year ht underwent autgery. Moat Brooklyn Dodger of­
ficial* thought Campanella'a trou­
bles coat them the pennant.
Titusville Tides
Yesterday, In the first day of
spring training, he took nine prac­
TODAY
tice twinge and wae eompletly
satisfied with the reiulte.
"My hand feel* good," he an-

la hie ring finger ha* disap­
peared and that the muaele be­
tween the thumb and tha, Indea
finger ia rebuilding, although it
ta not quite normal.
, *T never felt right laat teaeon,"
he aald tarioualy. "1 couldn't grip
the bat properly, lura, I kit asm*
long ball* but I sever bad that
feeling af having hit n good orovtaidt.
**A right-handed hitter can’
whip the bat around with hla righ
hand. Ton do K with tha left hand
and 1 couldn't do H at aH laat
year. 1 kit tha M0-foot alga yes­
terday by whipping the bat around
on an outaida pitch.
"I even hit ana off the Ret. No,
air, R didn't hurt a hit"
■a eeld he had been doing aomo
•etching too.
"And I'm been receiving m u
pretty hard pttchea already had I
dual even tua n sponge ta the'
glow. I want to got need to t #
pounding, It's great to ha a who'
ballplayer again."
nest

BIK Norman, aaw scout lor the
Detroit Tiger*, worked aa a sooth

tb.37c

with • if a the hick alas.

WA * TOR
tCORBR.

w l/t o w r *

up by its bootstraps, Manager Bucky Harris of the Detroit
Tigers today turned his httenllon to worrying about Ferris
Fain.
The two-time American League
betting king Jammed hla right
knea tn a game Uat eeaaon when
he wae playing with the Chicago
White Sox. The Tig"it took a
ehence on klra and obtained him
ta a trade during the winter ta
hopes, the knee would earn*

recfi w/H9
OTfiR
fcf/truaol

IfiAQ/rfO

By THE ABHOC1ATED PRERR

BSPJSifAr

vU D oaa
iarr K. Vance

A T S '9/*m
fie w a z
™MAH
* ti*OM
*r

9CORCR , BUT
THAT'9 HOTALL
A 9K KeN rO cK T

Ait If he didn’t have problems enough trying to pull a

oonlo darrlsoa
rants Auroin

lann* Toner
hrlts Rpenear

GAINESVILLE — Florida’a
1954 football team will be honored
with an annual hanquot on Tues­
day nijtht, March 8, at Bill,
Coach Hob Woodruff haa an­
nounced.
Feature of the banquet will he
an addreaa hy Fred Ruaaell, noted
aporta editor of the Naahville
Banner and author of the “ Plyakin Preview" for the Saturday
Kvrnlny Pont.
Other featurea of the banquet
will he the awarding of varalty
lettera and freahman numeral! to
the 1054 playera. There will alao
be a repreirntatlon of an award
to the Gator** "Moat Valuable
Senior**, along with the naming

Ferris Fai ns
Injured Knee

'at Dutton

oil ado V rMarr
•tl Ah,r»rhl
Arbars Toulty
aatrm Batrtdn*
arbors Brsdloi
teles Fltlard
■raa Crabtroa

Florida's 1954
Football Team

Lb. 59c

o t n c u L R K grm rnoN
BETTENDORF, LA. ( « ) -WhaB
acbool official! pleaded for tha re­
turn of U4 hooka overdue at tha
Junior High School library, a mem­
ber of tha aehaol board thawed up
with (wo of tham.

Lake Mary will play Lyman's
B Team in tha first gam* ef the
Seminole County Junior
High
School
basktball
tournament,
which opena at I p. m. today in
the High School gym here.
In tha second game, beginning
at 1:45 p. m., Sanford Junior
High (1) will M et Oviedo Junior
High. The third geme will see
Sanford Junior High (2) facing
Lake Monro* at 8:30 p. m. tn the
fourth game at 7:16 p. tn., All
Souls School will taka on Lyman's
A Team. The fifth and last gams
will pit fllavta against Sanford
Junior High (3).
Teems taking part in the Tour­
nament are Lake Mary, Lyman
has two teams (A) end (B),
Sanford Junior High hat three
•strie* (1) (2) end (8), Sisvia.
All Soule, Oviedo and Lake Mary.
1 Second round playoffs will be
held Thursday night at tha High
School.
la tha word* of Hugh Carlton,
Principal at Laha Mary School,
"It Is the idea of the principals
and teachers of chlldrsn In the
junior high schools to develop
the child into woll-rounded Indi­
viduals, both physically, emotionally and mentally.
"For this reason w* havs orga­
nised our Junior high program
this year to taka In many moro
students than over before.
"More than fifty atudapta In tha
county will have an opportunity
to play la tha tournament than in
previous yaara.
"It la not our Idea to develop
athlete*. Our goal la much higher.
We are itreaalng good eitlsca•hip, aportomanship and aplrit
If nothing mors, these young
people will bettor bo ablo
to
undoratand tha gsmo of baakotball, havs a bettor relationship
with other children and other
schools as well as learning enough
about tha game to ho good ■poe­
ts tors.
"The tourney will bo free in­
stead ef tha usual ten cents ad­
mission charge and wo would ap­
preciate your efforts
of forte to make
predicts
this otto of the beet .toore
that BCHitnnia County ha
had."

By OAYLK TALBOT
NEW TORE UR—Being of a
suspicious turn of mind, wo gat
to wondsring if this ftOow Mika
Souchsk could bars gottsn bold of
some new breed of golf ban which
might revolutionise the game and
turn ths best eouraei ta tha coun­
try Into shoot traps.
Souchsk is the husky young
tarnation from Durham, N.C., who
In tha past two wsoks shot such
ridiculous 71-hole scores as 1ST and
gn la tanning away with tha
Texas upon at Son Antonie and
the Houston Open. Ho shot one
round at San Antonio in SO strokes,

W« aaked Jot Day Jr., Who la
W te tln director at the UJ, Oelf
A u i. and a aort of pririta eye hr
the ruling M y , if ho M heard
of aay b»w guided missile type of
ball wfcieh Bight account hr such
• craiy burit eg icnritg by a torn*
parities unknown. Would * b»

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Quintals (l-S ) SMS
■k v k s t m b a c h — a/IS *
( B-Xavamtsaa
T.4S I
1 Lena's Bake
I
I tpsak Hasp
Qulnlsla It-SI IM S
EIGHTH S.4CB — S/lS — It
I Brady
M l I
S Bust Court
&gt;1
I Ksrtnsl Kandy
Quintals (4-d) IM S
MIRTH HACH —A /IS — V
t Erf's Dsols*
11.IS I
I Woraldo Mory
i

J
r

Ifg R
Comstock
-

a a c o H H S M ia

KEYSTO N E
CUSTODIAN
FUND
AN SH STO

Allen S Co

�•a j

n r e H A N F fm n h e r a l d 11
W ed , March 2, 1955 Page 7 '

BKlivo

Radio

REAL LIVE

t Id N*w•

E

1 IS

Halt “J” F«r J u s

1: IS

Hen Club

warns:
But Drybrough u
_ _ _____
g simple
"T___
h ere'*
nothing

aba__
running a lot It may look easy but
R'a a tremendous management
challenge. You had better know
what^oed eperattoa la nr atay out

He lists tricks of the trade ■■
convenient location of tha lot,
proper arrangement of parking
spaces, location of control stations
and the relationship between at­
tendant* and customers.
Tha alert attendant know* hi*
regular parkars by name. Ha leima
them by noting license numbers
and referring ta registration lilts
from tha license bureau.
la addition, there at* lollipops
for children, napkins to ckan the
windshield end steering wheel, free
ice scrapers, book matches *and
many other courtesies. The trend la toward chain own­
ership, and Drybrough believes the
small operator will find it an In­
creasingly tough buainssa to enter.

Family Dog Wins
Divorce For Man
DENVER
—Joseph J. Fried
won o divorco
Monday after
testifying that every time he put
hie arm around hie wife, a man
Ibring with thun would “slek” the
family dog on him.
Fried said ha and hi* wife took
In tha man 10 years ago and also
hava sheltered another man the
laat two years "because we frit
sorry for them.” He aaid his wife
paints pictures and tha two naan
sell them.
The

Frieda had b w t

For, although it’s much lets ex­
pensive than building, the setting
up of a modern parting lot still
lakes a substantial amount of capi­
tal.
A good lot, asy 1M by M feel,
at the proper location in Louisville
might cost $300,000. Another $30,000 would be needed for surfacing,
lighting, fencing and olher improve­
ments necessary to maka the va­
cant lot suitable for multiple park­
ing.
This type of lot could reasonably
expect to park 13,000 cars a month
at an average cost of 50 lo 6] ceota.
Pricing, lays Drybrough, la the
key lo aurrcM Whether the lot
may eater to the all day trade or
the more profitable stop and go
motorist will depend on its location.
Loultville'i $7 lota Involve a total
of to different pricing ayalemi.
The cost of parking all day ranges
from $5 cents on some lots to $1.60
where meters are Involved.
"Having to pay to park sUU
eauaes grumbling,” Drybrough ob­
served, "but the public Is waking
up to the necessity of parking lot*.
They are just learning that in
Louisvilir, for example, 45 miles
of curb spare would be necessary
bo park lhe cars our lota handle.”

Helicopter Comes
In Ambulance Call

married

St years.

Nebraskan Fights
For Doves Lives
LINCOLN, Neb. (/P&gt;-Mre. Jehn
luethen waa before the Nebraska
legislative subcommittee yester­
day fighting ta keep the dove ea
the state's aongame bird Hat.
When a proponent of dove
shooting commented that carrier
pigeons are extinct, as oelalmad,
"Pameager pigeons, not carrier
pigeons, art extinct. Man who
don’t know the difference between
carrier pigeons and p*«oongsr pi­
geons shouldn’t carry a goat"
The'dovo hunting bill waa killed.

| on

World At HI*
Telllslit H-nxi
Hnnrt* Boon
SIS Mutlrll Program
T on Prlftlns On A Cloud
T IS Ron* Cor A Ledv

IMS

*.10

PHI - s r For MutU

T:l«
t no

M ih i Edition
t'Mt#d Nation*
Stuale for Ledtro
It* l&gt;*ne*ilm»
At Home With Uuele
Nee*

SilS
IIS

» 1"
into

I jtm m 'i Cali to Prefer

II «d

Blen orr
m in s n a v

ipos

a.

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( oe ■tan On
Pawn Dreakere
*:«l
k lo Ne—*
S SI Wfttera Jamboree
Ills K i r i
t.oo H»i«n O'clock Ctek
n s Ktwr
.
00 Bt-ort* At A diene*
1*1 JorWer'a Choice
■ 10 Morning Pevoilnne
I t s Mornlnx Utlndle*
ton World « . nine
» ts Ilium Tim*

{

I* on
in ti
IM S

n*dlo Perm Plarol
II 10 Thur*d*r Matin**
I 10 Nee-*
1:11 ni*| “J” For Jeea
I on P*r Non* Ranch
|:00 n nriit At Throe

to t h a m . WlihoMl Netlcel ,
WF.IIVP.MI41 r.w .
Thlo !.and of Otir*
Ytoliori Q. l.fHia
"Sir. end Mr» “
VI •tier* PI (M l
Chnrm Chet
t'ortnnn t'arnl-al
Film Feel nnd Feerr
Adventure with L'nrl* Welt
W'tathor. Ntw*. learte
Art Pnvlc
PUn»rland
All flier Theater
Cndfror and rneefla
Tim Million*:-*
I've Qnt A H»cr*t
Puppio* Out With Weedy
Air For--* pis**t
xiadlton Sinara, Oerdie
Tow*r Th**t*r
max Off
TMPMSOAf A.W.
Blen On
Prnsrom R*oum*
Wfsthor • Notra Brlsf*
tlr*skr**t Club
Film Faro
T*»t P*l!ore

a tt

1 so
1 tt
4:11

4:10

4:11
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1.10
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1:00

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10:00
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THin*DAV F.W.

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Now* -Weather
Unlit mood Now eefi Th»e
Die Payoff

1:00

w w a n -T T

jA r R ia x v n .ii

flkhjrrt t* ('he see Wriheel n*ttee)
w ponksdat

r ja

4:0# (trlshler Per
4:11 H*cr*t Storm
4:10 On Tour Arcnuel
1:04 Portia Fere* U fa
a: i a Rond af Life
1:10 Starry Moore
lire New*, Weather. I
1:30 Wild Hill llirkob
TA* Admiral Byrd
til* J untie gfaratirn
T 10 CBfl-TF New*
Ti4I Perry Com*
soo Arthur Oodfrey
*:0S The Mllllenalr*
iiia I’ ve Hot A Feore*
tmno B*&gt;t ef Brnedwey
11:0* New* n Weather
11:11 Wr*#tll n*
11:41 Bias 0(4

S candals o s a h +
Rte Hi

1:0* T*«t Pallora
1:00 Morel ns flhow
0:0* Hoh croit-r

Hhoppera (Julde
N«w»
Arthur O odlrtf
■ trike II Rich
Valient U ilr

iiiia
11:1*

L «»* of U f l
■•arch for Tomorrow
Oiildlne Light
'trh*o •hew
•Iron* Trevolero

. T N lR flllA V y

geberl

J:0«
li,f

Q. f-ewt*

3:30 Houae Parly

•ioo Bis rnyorr
t i l l Open Rouae

Scores Direct Hit
With Chocolate Pie
WESTERVILLE, Ohle &lt;/P)-E»r
$5, Walter Bonnett discovered, be
rould have the privilege of throw­
ing a chocolate pie in the face ad
tha Ottrrbrin College librarian.
Seem* the Student Council re­
cently came up with the Idea of
holding an auction, with all aorta
uf privileges to the highest bid­
der, to raise money fur four orCknlsatlona which help studcut*
go abroad ta college.
Bonnett, a junior from Dayton,
tossed the pie at Otterbein Ubrsriaa John Becker. Bonnett
•cored a hlL The profeaeor grin­
ned.

Y
ADVBHTTJBBB,

BO G U S.

osb

p N N IBUOraUf

pau o n eg a 1* sins

&lt;

G A M B L E S . LOFBB1

$0
TAYLO M

'limlwmamvi

•UNDERW ATER”

F a m e 's

Mens P. %.
7 » -V

■W

D ra g

S ta rt

P EA S

301 CAN

19c

TEXIZE LIQUID

2

Full Pints
(LIMIT 1)

ftW # ! •

DEL MONTE
CLING

Bacon

PEACHES
19c

4 3

LB.

203 CAN

U. 8. GOOD GUADB HEAVY BREr

ROUN D

S T EA K

S IR L O IN

69c

LB.

LIBBY’S

Tomato Juice

H A M B U R G ER

3

lbs8

5c

3

(13'/i OZ.)
CANS

^ Q #
X # C

TARNOW

COPELANDS LEAN PURE PORK

SCOTT TOILET

TISSUE

R O LL S A U S A G E ■45c

10c

BETTY CROCKER

HONEY SPICE

SMALL LEAN FRESH GA.

Blue Plate

Cashmere Bouquet

Barbara Scott

Okra

Soap

Chocolata

303 Can | f c

3 Reg. 2 9 s
Cashmere Bouquet

Jelly

Soap

12 Ox. I’kg.

. 2 Beth 29*

Baby Food
9 Jar* 2 1 *

L f- 9 0 *
Giant ] 2 &lt;

»

P r e a c h '!

I

^

Carne

4 Ox. Box

ST*

2S*

Peanut Buffer

Mushroom
Sauce

Catsup

1 Ox. Cana

14 Ox. Bottle ||e

2 For 2 ( *

DIXIE CRYSTAL

11 Ox. Jar

Moaarrh

Monarch

Del Moat*

29c

Pineapple

1 »* 9 »

Block A
Pepper

h o . a Cea

Hillsdale Sliced

15 Ox. Can

Spic and Spa*

Cleanser

M 0 &gt; .n * .

Chile Con

Mazola Oil

2 °“ *

C AK E M IX

99*
Lykea

T id e

4 &lt;*“ 2$*

SWANSDOWN
YELLOW or WHITE

Thin Mints

Beech-Nut Strained

Pint ||e

10 Oa. 1*1( 2 .

Covered

For* Apple
24 Ox. Jar 2 9 *

C A K E M IX
35c

u 49c

S P A R E RIBS

39c

Plllshury 13-Oa. Choc-Chip

37c

Cookie Mix
Vaa Camp’*— 1$
*

Oe.

Pork &amp; Beans 2 cans 29c
CLOVER BLOOM CREAMY

SUGAR

BUTTER

5 -3 9 .

1 -6 5 *

limit One With J M t Or Mere Fsrcheee

SUNDAY

DEI. MONTE
EARLY GARDEN

a r m o u r s b a n n e r s l ic e d

r « • u tu
—-

C O R N
2 (sm) cans 29c

Picnic H am s35‘

Cleanser

tJ tita z O s iz

GOLDEN CREAM

D ETERG ENT

SMALL AND LEAN TRU • FLAVOR

Ajax

jit c s iH pow’U find if aaw
p h a s i s a d hern* i a a u r

»

nitUKH TO BETTER SERVE OUR CUSTOMERS AND GIVE THEM
MEATS OF THEIR CHOICE, WE HAVE INSTALLED A SERVICE UNIT
MAKING OUK MARKET A COMBINATION OF SERVICE AND SELF
SERVICE.____________________________________________________________

Dog Food

S*MW*

GREEN GIANT

im

Pag

l

29c

Wieners^ 39c Wieners -55c

to:**
in:|i
10:11
11:10
tt:0S

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Whip
Pt.

29

Cnna

ARMOUR STAR ALL MEAT

nSSSS

•••&lt;

Wha Waa BOLDIBB, FO R ,

su n I

2

12 Ot.

TNIRIOAV

of a gelatin-liquid mixture.

LAST TO O TONIGHT
•M

NIBLET CORN

10c

TELEVISION
w n n n .rv o n u s n a

Miracle

S03 Can

1««* Club

IIS

meats, hard-cookba added to

NOW SHOWING

!

Kraflii

GREEN GIANT

CU T
BEETS

TIIVJteiMT r.w.

T i l l - I lid

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StoU fly’a

lie# Cloh

11 II

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Chunk Iu n a 2 9 ‘

VP to tire cups o f diced

FEATURE TTMB
I .-to - l.-M • BtIB
►
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CHICKEN OF THE SEA (LIGHT M EAT)

ritll Retd At presa
l-et men * rail Te Fearer
World At Noon

II 00

T O M A T O ES
3 t3n;,&gt; cans 35c

(Pl.l ft ROTTI.K HEPOSlT)
LIMIT ONE WITH $5.0# OR MORE FUHCHAgF. (C1HAUKTTKS NOT INCl.tlHKIl)

IM&gt;4 Club

Util

STANDARD

Coca Cola 1 0 c

|e:ln Nrw*

HOUSTON (AV-When a first
lieutenant received Injuries in an
automobila wreck near hero, a
patrolman called for an ambulance
and received a helicopter.
The craft dropped between pow­
er Uaee, settled near the accident
scene, end eorpemra had I at Lt
llanehel Williams, *7, Mobile,
Ala. at a base hospital in 10 min­
Ibere are about 130,000 milk
utes.
trucks la Usa Unilad tu ts*.
"Williams needed an ambulance
aad oar reacua teams needed prac­
tice," aaid a ■pokesmaa at EUiagton Air Fore* Baas.
fruits,
may

PONY SATURDAY

tue N m
t is nos cine
i t s Claude H Wsire Pam.
| no Th* llhvthm Hour

3:00

L O U I S V I L L E , Ky., tft Ona of America’* newest trends
Is a building boom in reverse;
tearing down offlea and apartment
building* ta make room (or down­
town parking Iota.
Already in Louisville, parking
lota cover an*-fourth of tha down­
town ara*. In Detroit they cover
one-half. Washington, D. C. Is put­
ting in 3,000 new offstreet parking
placet a year.
P, W. Drybrough of Louisville
can tall why. He own* five parking
lota and la vice president and foun­
der of the National Parkin Asia.
“ I’d rather have my five lot*
than two big office building*,'* Dry­
brough aald in an Interview. “ From
an invoatment atandpolnt they are
worth more.”
An authority on real eitate, he
often this eomperison:
"It costa about $2,000 a. month
to tight Louiavllle'i largest offtce
building, the H-*tory Heyburn. I
light all my five lota for $75
month and two atay open around
the eloek.
..
"It take* another $2,000 a month
to baat tha Haytmrn. My heating
costs for a small control building
on aaeh lot ara nagllglble.
"A big building with eight ek
valors costs $25,000 a year in labor
■Iona. Tha cleaning bill la tremendou*. Tha Heyburn Budding re­
quires a minimum of « person*
when a parking lot. properly man­
aged, can often be handled by one
man to the control station.
"T h a there are taxes. Assess­
ments on a big office building ara
hugt but on a parking lot there
ti only tha land Ux plus a email
tax lor any ImprovsmenU abovt
ground.”
It wouldn't ba emait to rate the
(teyhuni BuOdtog for the one park­
ing lot it would provide, Drybrough
■aid. Bat *n older epertment build­
ing oa the seme block la being
torn down for a parking lot aad
dnki the movt a amart

n

SEE TH E

} &lt;M
) n»r Mon* Ranrh
] "0 World at Throe

k.;

Building Boom Going In Reverse

UNGSTERS

iu

OUT TO

H TR R - ltee Kilocycles
M I.D IK IIU v i*.as.

CRAFT ICR t i u k t v f o u r
mg at a Key. and at a liny yellow gave me until tomorrow. Bert ewd
1 MUSI nmve doled, tor 1 heard Deck on the inside of the ring end be would give me the money, U 1
Jake Fortune saying, "Wake up. ot Die key. All ot the events from would talk Eileen into marrying
Fndsy evening until now, this cold him. 1 Uunk she likea Earl well
Bennett"
bright Sunday morning, seemed enough, but it waa a punk thing
t regarded him through halfto swirl wildly, like Lhe enow ui an (or a father to da 1 did it ar tried
closed eye*. I knew now that I
old-ume glass paper weight, and to. But women are tunny. She
had dosed oil, that 1 had hoen
everything drilled down and settled refused to break off with Ralph
dreaming, and I tried ta remem­
and all of it was there for me to Hollis, but the did say that if tt
ber when I'd slept last
weren't foe Ralph, she'd marry
see.
i
t opened my eyea ends, tt was
It bad been there all the time, EarL 1 got tha idea then, but I
an effort, but I kept them open. but 1 nad let my anger and my went the limit end told her about
Jake Fortune eat easily, a loose tear blind me, and 1 had gone on the money jam. and she said it 1
smile on his neavy mouth. 1 said, the prod tor the obvious one, the had sinned. 1 would have to pay
"Jake, now did you make out ta one who in my mind had the most for my situ. Me, ncr father. And
ICleveland yesterday T"
to gain. 1 bad been all wrong, and she said tt cool and prim. Maybe
He lifted nls thick shoulders. 1 was sorry. This was my day tor ah* waa right hut K rocked m i*
"N ot so good. A bask there ta regrets. 1 didn't have tt all. hut 1 lie paused, gazed out ot the win­
bail most of it, and the knowledge dow, and then back at me. "Bo you
putting the aqueexa on me."
see what I had to do then."
"W e all nave troublea," 1 said. made me a Lille sick.
1 said. "Jake, It was you, and
"Get rid ot Ralph,” 1 said.
'•Too bad you had to. leave the
Ibunting party yesterday morning. not Earl 8c Iteman, but you were
He Hooded slowly, T thought
IMl bet you were pretty surprised willing to let him take the blame about it all Friday night and 1
wnen you got boms last night and for tt."
couldn't see any other way out
He gated at me for a long mo­ 1 thought about it so much, 1
ibeard about Ralph Hollis and Res
ment, and then he smiled, the most guess i went a little cracy. The
IBishop.**
Haturday morning nunung party
He stopped smiling, and some- humorless smile I’d ever seen.
The tun bad climbed higher and seemed to be ths answer to every­
ng seemed ta shirt and move
Und his eyea "Y e a 1 was," he now a abaft ot It (ell across tha thing, but when 1 learned that
Uhls between ua Lke a glittering you ware a detective 1 got scared
d.
"Let's see,** 1 said. "It was while blade. Jake Fortune's gray and almost gave tt up. Then t got
iaround atght-thlrty last night eyea held a vacant faraway look, brave again and figured I could
|when you cams to the hospital, u It m were musing over the get away with it So, after we
years guns by and all the mistakes went out yesterday morning. I
-wasn't It?"
suggested that we split up, figur­
"Around there.” He stirred in that ma., up every man’s life.
1 said, ‘Tell me about It, Jaka ing I could weak away and get a
tela chair.
"And you'd Just got back troa —or would you rather wait and shot at Ralph. With so many
tell tha sheriff T"
&gt; hunters around, it would be eailrd
(Cleveland T"
He swung bis slow gaxe toward an accident especially II nobody
I “That’s right. But what— T"
"W hat's that farmer's name?" me. "What difference does M could tell who fired the shot With
Ralph guns. Klleen would marry
broke in. T h e one with the cow makeT"
"Not much," 1 said. "Tour alibis Dari, and I'd have tbs money. It
wnsra you spent moat of the
are no guod; you were not in would have worked, too, If It
might r
Cleveland at all yesterday, and you hadn't been (or you.” He gaaed at
. "Albert McGrory."
were not with n cow last night me steadily, and something ugly
| "H as ha got n phone T"
"H a ne hasn't. What're you get­ One of thoee farmers In tha bar began to build up in Ms eyes
"Yea,” 1 said. "So you faked a
last night spiked your Cleveland
ting at, Bennett T"
"Let's taka a nde out to AJpert story by saying be had seen you telephone call, sneaked back out
(McCrary's and have a talk with at Earl Bcltxmaa'a farm around saw ua heading far the ravine,
■upper time. And you left traoka. planted yourself on the hill, and
turn," 1 suggested.
get It," he said. There There'll ha tngcrprlnta, aome- when Ralph showed, you let loose.
I T don’t
dot
•weat on his forehead. Ha whare, and tha rtfia you used. It'll Judy Kirkland happened to ba
down below, in the thicket, and
one o&lt; the yellow pencils make It eastsc If you talk."
hi* pocket and began to tap
T t went be easier for me,” be that helped—"
"Don’t hash tt all over," ho said
on the table top.
■aid.
T Just want to ask Albert Me"H o ," I admitted, “K won't wearily. T heard what you told
EarL I followed you around to­
Crory if you were really there," I Murder Is murder."
■aid.
Ua sighed. "This— nans of this night not Bail, aad after you
"W hat's wrong with youT Ton would have happened, If Earl bad ■topped hero 1 parked down below
mast be eragy."
loaned me tha money I seed. I'm the hill and came Into the kitchen
"Only a Utile, Jake," 1 mid. t la a Jam with a stock syndicate In and 1 heard It all. Then I went
waa looking at the pencil la his Cleveland. 1 sold a herd nad I back out to my car, drove up to
hand, and In my mind I waa again didn't pay off. I needed the money tha house, and came In."
(To Hu t'oafkmod)
In Judy Kirkland's bedroom pccr- for—for other obligations. They
OoevTtatrt. u h to Robert Martin. OHM
hr Kina Feature* firwtkata.

• i iL

nU C M flOOD R O M MARCH M

THRU MARCH Mh — QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

* *•

2906 SOUTH PARK AVENUE

•Tr
r -4

J
•.

F &lt;1

�»

W ed. Mareh 1 1§55

DAILY CROSSWdRb

DeBary Has High Representation
By KAY HENNINGER
It is safe to say that the resi­
dents of De Bary represent near­
ly every state in the United States.
To be sure, some of the states
such as New Jersey, New York,
Ohio, Michigan have sent more
than others. It is evident that De­
Bary has an appeal for these peo­
ple, or else they wouldn’t be here.
What we are Interested in primari­
ly, is what they have to contri­
bute to De Bary and to the state
of Florida which they have adop­
ted for their new home.
Someone said recently, "I have­
n't retired.” And so it Is with many
of them. They left their homes and
their chosen occupation at which
they bad been busy for many
years, and came to Florida to re­
tire. Here they got themselves set­
tled in their new homes and, after
the first few months of adjust­
ment had passed, the habits of a
lifetime began to assert themselves
and they found themselves looking
around for something to do.
Many of them made gardening
their hobby and found that new
skills had to be laarned and not
a few of the old ones had to be
unlearned. Others are learning to
use their hands and are taking an
interest in some sort of craft.
Many joined clubs of all sorts and
a few painted or wrote. Let us
tall you about a few of the many
who have been outstanding In the
community.
There is Laura Platt Brown, a
musician, from New York, where
iha was born and where she stud­
ied music. She began her study of
music when she was eight years
old, and at the age of fourteen,
she played piano for the public
schools. At eighteen, she was the
Assistant Choir Director of a Jun­
ior Boys' Choir. She is a graduate
of the Institute of Musical Art of
New York and of the Jullllard
School of Musical Art. During her
frethmon year in high school she
frlo+d the Sigma Cappa Society
which had a limited membership
of thirty. She Is proud and happy
to be one of the nineteen mem­
bers who are still active in this
group. She has studied at differant times with Gertrude Clarke
Edwards, Edwin Hughts and Angala DUlar.
Her eareer was interrupted for
g Una when she married and had
keg daughter and son. The latter,
Charles Canfield Brown, la at pre­
sent in La Rochelle, France, with
tog music his eareer and plays
tha 179th Army Band. Ha Is mak­
ing mule his career and plays
tjto^lxuo, tha organ and tha bass
Daring tha years Mr*. Brown
Rved la White Plains, sha taught
piaao, was tha organist and choir
director of several Westcbastsr
County churches, waa the aeeomsanlM tor the Westchester Philkinitoin Chorus tor the Kaatent
•tar tor twenty years.
Siaae coming to De Bary to Uve,
iha haa contributed much to cul
tarsi Uto ef the community. She
wed as chairman of tha entertainmast committee of the De Bary
Civla Association aad la teaching
flaaa to a limited number ef pu­
pil*. |he directs a choral group
tor toe Homo Demonstration Oube
to VotesIa County. Iha played tor
vtA la Enterprise until aha
toe De Bary Baptist Church
Meats Musk Leader and
Director of toe first ahure't
ggaalsod in De Bary.
kar De Baryito who to well
to Iha civic loaders ef las-

iQ tows la Southern Get many,
was graduated from tha Engtnag College la Stuttgart, Gar­
iy, aa a O vll and Structural

jfiiaer. la 1994 he aad hk wife
a aaaer to leave Oenpaay he­
l l to the deplorable poet-war

fttkaa. Ha accepted aa lavi* to come to the United *sto t

Columbus, Ohio; a special waste foremoit bullderi, !i a native of
treatment plant for the Owens- Canada. Ilia father was a lumber
Corning Fiberglas Corporation at man and builder, to young Sillier
Anderson, S. C. These projects grew up in the atmoiphere of the
have been Inspected by engineers building trade. He worked for only
a very ahort time with hla father,
from all over the country
Since coming to DeBary, Mr after which he went off on hit own
Uhlmaun has been consulted by and In 1918 he came to the United
the city of Sanford in regard to States.
During World War II he terved
sewage problems there.
James Komney, also a native in the U. S. Navy and was one of
of New York, came to DeBary In the men who landed on the Afri­
the early days, about five years can beach with Gen. Patton. He
ago. He had served In the U. «. waa Chief Carpenter's Mate on a
Army for three years and in the Transport which was torpedoed.
After the war waa over, he work­
U. S. Navy for thirty-five years.
In the Navy, he achieved the rank ed for a number of years at Ft.
of Master, in charge of Camou­ Lauderdale, Hollywood and Miami.
flage. Upon his retirement in 1949. In 1948 he came to DeBary and
he came to Florida to live. All will built hornet here on a contract
agree that he had earned the right basis, In Plantation Estates. After
really to retire. But he didn't do a few months he transferred hla
that. He Interested himself in civic activities to a new section of De*
affairs and was elected to the Bary which was named Miller
presidency of the DeBary Civic Acres. Since May of 1049 he has
Association of which he Is now been busy developing this section
and the atill newer Lake Marie
vice-president.
He sold his first home here and Estates adjoining Miller Acres.
built another to own liking. Soon During the time from 1948 to the
after the completion of his new present he has built approximate­
home, he opened It for the organi­ ly 150 homes and Is now complet­
sation of the DeBary Ground Ob ing the 100th home sinco May 1949.
That sounds like a large enough
servers' Post and bccamo the Post
Director. Under his enthusiastic program for anyone but he has
leadership, this group has done its still other accomplishments to his
part in every operation of the credit. In 1932 he built Dr. Starkes
Civil Defense Department of the Professional Building, a clinic for
Air Force. It was also named as colored people in Sanford. He act­
“ Post of the Month" last July and ed as advisor on the building of
haa been cited by Washington, D. the Community Building in De­
Bary. He built the Administration
C. for Its fine work.
Mr. Romney's patriotism is un­ Building for Lake Marie Estates,
impeachable as evidenced by his the Shell Gas Station, Dr. Fris­
speech to the Post members last son's Building and a large store
September. After pointing out the which is as yet unoccupied. He is
seriousness of the situation In the now building the DeBary Bap­
United States today, he said, "H tist Church, the first sanctuary
any of you can do a better job to be built in this community.
He haa been recognised aa one
than I am doing, 1 shall be hap­
py to step aside and I shall work of the outstanding bulldera In
under his leadership and with him Florida. On January 28-27-28 of
until I die or am no longer able.” this year, the State Industrial
Commission met In Gainesville In
Need we say more?
One of the most successful busi­ the Engineering Building of the
ness man in this community is Florida State University. Mr. Mill­
Ray E. Peck, DeBary’s first Real­ er was one of the seventy builders
tor. He was born la e lumber Invited to attend the Conference
camp in East Waterford, Pe. on Accident Prevention Engineer­
where his father was a lumber­ ing to Insure greater safety In the
man. There were eight children homes of the future. Such problems
In tha family so, when the father as the number of steps In the
was badly injured by n falling log, home, heating of tha borne, the
It became necessary for the eight height of ovens etc. etc. were dis­
year old Ray to contribute to his cussed, and plans were made to
own support. His first job, carry­ build better homes for retired peo­
ing water to the men, netted him ple. DeBaryites are fortunate In
fifty cents a week. This waa fol­ having the benefit of such dis­
lowed by work on n farm in a steel cussions and In having an up-tomill.
In his early twenties, he was giv­
en his first chance at a selling job.
For five years he sold musical in­
struments for a firm in Pittsburgh.
During the last of these years he
married and his wife traveled
around the country with him.
Neither of them liked his homeless
sort of existence aad so, in 19)0
he resigned and want into tha insuraiee business. From then until
1940 be sold Insurance for tha Lift
Insurtnee Company of Richmond
A Pkotographie Squadron 6S
Virginia in their otfico in Cincinn­ man has been selected to attend
ati. In 1913 ha became Associate the Navy's Officer Candidate
Manager .and held that position School at Newport, Rhode Island.
for fifteen years. It was at a com­
Eugene M. Rice, Photographer’s
pany coovenlion in Miami that ha Mato First Claaa, was ona of 217
was to overwhelmed by the beau­ Navy men who Ust year partici­
ty of Florida that all future vaca­ pated In taking a written rxamlntions were spent somewhere in the elJon and who has now boon selec­
state, aad whan ha resigned Irom ted by tjik Bureau of Naval Pethis peeitloa In 1941 be esme to •onnel to receive the four month
DeBary to Uve.
officer’s training porgrnm- Upon
For about two and a half years successful completion of this
be was a salesman for the Planta­ course, Rice will bn commissioned
tion Batata Corporation. On June Ensign in the UR. Navy, Some
1. W
1811.
*1
J. ha wen
wen in
u to business
Dullness for
lor 1900 Naval men competed to the
himself aad opened the first real Navy wtda teat
estate office la DeBary. ^ t Sept­
RUa la one of VJ-8t*s three
ember 1 be waa invited te join the fully qualified enlisted Photo­
DeLaad Realtors. Ha is a member graphic Navigator*, flying in tha
of the DeLaad, Seminole and De­ PHotoRen 83 AJ-ST aircraft. Ha U
Bary Chambers of Commerce.
also a camera repairman.
His success may bo attributed
At present, Rico U overseas with
te hard work aad perserveranco; tha a q u a d r o a 'a Detachment
te puttiag first things first As a "King''. He hue alee eerved ea
youth he was unable to obtain three previous VJ-83 detachments,
formal education because ef finan­ “Baker”, “ Fox" and "Item" for
cial difficulties at home. Neverthe­ periods of three te els months
less ha took a course la salesman­
ship, too Dak Carnegk Course,
He la married te the former
two semesters to Real Estate Law Jean Caldwell of Joliet, 111. and
aad Practice la the University of baa two clldroa, a ton, Jlnuny, 4,
and n daughter, Barham Jean, SO
months. Tha Rices reside at 1904
Washington Are. in Sanford.

E. M. Rice Chosen
To Attend School
In Newport, R. I.

Ford Co. Receives
letter Of Praise

ACROSS
J. To take
faint or fi*h
Hlefally
S Radio
detectlnf
device
11. Harmonize
1 2. airl'e name
13. Lucid
14. Article of
furniture
15. Plague
If. stands up
IT. City (Oer.)
10. Mimicked
22. Excl*mation
23 Feline

3.Eyo
3. Region
4. Stopped
S. An heir
(Civil Law)
S. Go back
7. At full
epeed
S. LeU bait
bob lightly
River (Olr.)
10. Cereal
grate
(poaa.1
IS. Discharge
a gun
10. Conetel*
iatlon
20. KetUe

li
.1 .V ill j
■1 . II.-, 4
i* »”
•;IIMU If.t V*. 17 ki
li'.'u i;-:-): :i'_* v .
(1 •.
j ;-j wn -.
: im*. 'j f:i ; mi
l l l l i r -u u
n '.n '-r -r .
'-MUj ’J :
x - j’.Vii
n o : - h i .* -.i’ ll •:
I&lt; JliM 1 •j :-: ii; ii

u . j 'i i a i

chance
31. Tie
32. Pale
33. Accumu­
late
34. A failure
(alang)

33. Price
38. Man'enama
38. An exchange
of goods
for money

39. Duration

Tomato Juice
MILD
MELLOW

EIGHT
O'CLOCK
CO FFEE

46 oz.

A&amp;P Fancy

N o.!

Pineapple Chunks 2 for
A&amp;P Short Held

Cheese
Wesson Oil

lb.
qt.

Morton Fruit Frozen Pie

Apple, Peach, Cherry
WA Oz. 4 for 99c

ANN PAGE

u MAYONNAISE
VJ-62 Personnel
Aid In Mission
Aboard Carrier
For the first time in the history
of Photographic Squardon 83, a
group of squadron personnel par­
ticipated In a photographic)* train­
ing mission from aa aircraft car­
rier.
Th# VJ-83 unit, consisting of
one of the squadron’s photo
planes, (AJ-3P), three pilots and
an eleven man crow, successfully
completed a ten day exercise from
the deck of the USB Intrepid la
Carribtan waters. The operations
were carried on in conjunction
with tha ships regularly schedul­
ed activities and consisted of eateu!t launchings, normal take-offs
and earrler landings In addition te
the aerial photographic work.
LL J- H. Roche eerved aa Offlcer-in-Charga of tha unit and
divided the plane commander du­
ties as plolt with LL W. Carrier.
Doth pilots had previously quali­
fied in carrier operations, but had
to re-qualify for tha exercise.
The detachment returned to tha
NAA8 Sanford th# Utter part of
lest week. Other personnel who
contributed te tha mlaslon's auccesa were LL (Jg) J. L. Milter) D.
Hamilton, ADC) R. P. McCann,
AEI; R. O. McEnUre, AMI) E.
Hammock, ADJj O. R. Yates, AN)
R- J- Strong, ATS; J. E. Cradle,
AN) W. B. Todd, PH1| R. P.
Reynolds, THO) E. D. Updsgratf,
PHI and B, N. Lang, PBS.

Birdaeye French Fried

Potatoes

9oz. 2 for

Birdseye

Midget Celebrates
70th Birthday

Strawberries 10 oz. 2 for

DRUMMOND, Okie. (/P&gt;—Nicu
DeBaracy, who ssya he’a tha EXTRA
world's oldest-living midget, cele­ SPECIAL
brated his 70th birthday Monday,
as a guest of the Lions Club.
DeBaracy, a native of Hungary, Pure Vegetable Shortsnine
stands three feet in cowboy boots
and weighs around 35 pounds.
The cigar-smoking midget has
been a familiar sight on Drum­
mond streets for 43 years. He re­ AAP Tudor
tired from show business la 1983.

A&amp;P Fancy

Ale

in rwa c e n v or tww cocjttt
r u K ir , axMinoLW

c x u x t t

n .on iD A , in p x o h a t h .

,

IN nr.: k s t a t r o r
GUNDA B. COMPTON.

(x Beer

bon? kavino claims o r

DEf

MANDM AO AI NIT SAID KSTATR.

Iona Cut Green •

Turkeys

Beans

Super Right Fully Cooked

Picnics
Super Right Extra Lean Pork

Black Pepper

Spare Ribs

Ketchup

Super Right Haavy Waiter

Tomatoes

Super Right Lain Freshly

Round Steak

Toe eed eech ef yon are hereby
■otl(l*4 end required te preeeat
any claim* aad 4*M ad* which vex,

g r a h r s n a u 'K t g f e !
f fS .I S t S .T r f&amp; 'C T A S S ja

County, Florida, at hla eKhe In

£ v m r » r t £ ^ t ft ;n w i

calandar month* from tha time ef
th* ftret publication ef thla notice.
Kerb claim or demand eheU be |a
writing, nnd ehell atate the pleee
of realdenoe and peat atflee addreaa af tha elalmaat. aad shall he

Battens Flakes

Ground Beef

Tuna

Super Right Young Tender

AAP I went

Calf Liver

i

Potatoes

Allgood Brand Fancy Sliced

AAP Daily

Dog Food

46 oz.

D&amp;D Gr. A. Quick F r o m Hen

Ann Page Tomato

TO ALL CltBOtTpita AND PfR -

'

Tomato Juice

Ann Page Pure Ground

Legal Notice

3 for 25c

Bacon
Super R ight Sugar Cured

White Henae Evaporated

Bupar Right AH Mast

Dawson

Construetibn
D esigner*

4

Co.f

Inc

B u lld eri

GUT

8 ox. 35c

Salad Dressing pt. 25c

General Insurance
H . JAMES

Block Pepper
Aim F ile

914 Atlantis National Bank Building

AGENCY

BtrichUad-Morrisoa. Isa, to
Bssford, wm notified yaotordoy
hy the Ford Meter Company that
H has barn designated aa a fourletter dealer for 1914. t it it f'
The Jacksonville uir-rict office
to the Ford Company, to n tetter

♦ MS*r * x

[.Tra*-

Libbys Fancy

-

Deviled Ham J T "
19c
Corned Beef H oihfjrS.29c
Beef Stow
te**"
35c
Potted Meet Ur*" 3 for 23c
Corned Beef J T "
45c
A-Jax Cleonier 2 for 25c
Vol f t r
30c S&amp;*
72c
Fob ter
30c SS?
72c
Crisco
t
S
i, 31b. 1
Soil i C
23c
49c
Instant Desserts 3 for 29c
D kl Soap Jg"
2 for 35c
Diol Soap J r 1*'
2 for 25c
Unit Starch
2 for 27c

�SARTICLES FOR 8ALB
Used furniture, appnancae, i
etc. Bought—sold- Larry’r I
U1 Cut lit ftt Pboce lOL
Real Estate — G**. Iiioraaca
r article* you Ml Edwardi' Bldi. Pb. 18 or 2474
ice your ad to J. R. Alexander
T. M. Strwier
Reg. Real Eitate Broken
A 3-llnt ad, such a* the one above
U onlv 3Ac per day on our low 4
day earned rate economy plan. *3e
per day for a days end 54c for
1 day.
________
A little (pace like thli will jet
our message before our more
no lO.flOO readers Tell 'em to­
day! Phone 1*21.____________
i« above
full days
fer only *1

S

r

town. Put
Phone i u
chime IL
Tor only O « tha «bova NUnes
is on tha kb for you or s fu'
day*. Only *2 25 Veeps It worldi)
for you for * day*- 1 d*y U onl

»c.

____

Call us about our buslaes* rates
The Wapt Ad Department is
open from *:M *- m. until Sik pm. each bu*ii&gt;»»* day eA«Pt 5«t.
urdsy altojn^rtn. DaiiLne kr
weekday inierttons is T W »- n
the day preceding Bublieat onAny ads coining In later than
1:00 n. m. will be published under
Too Late To Classify.
Advwtiiers *re requested to no­
tify the Want-Ad DepeTtmept tmmediately of any error* ip t h *
ads. as The Ssnkrd Herald will be
responsible fer only ope incorrect

BESTONIC

Triple Cushion Mattraai
H Made Smooth to Soothe”

Furniture Center

1 - __ BEAUTY PARLORS

HALL'S GARAGE lor geoexal Auto
mpiiinj- Alio Wrecker Service

wfstai r vnts

- :ii

YOU! YOU! YOU!

THE SANFORD HER A El)
H'pfE, March 2, lHVi

nttNESr- Repilrel
Alt* machines for
jp. Ph»ne Houiatrd
tk 219. ta k e Mary
iRfik Gla*p tnd Paint Co. LARGE supply of Oranjeburc fl
4 West 2nd Sk
rbone 330
bre pipe and fittings for your
seiver needs.
CORONA Ptyfable TypePerfect ceprijlmn. fhoRe
w|tp piaetto ends Pl|*flc or
lists Cation or nyleo

Slbera li under ern-tructicn.
The Japanese estimate that the
r'puja'ion of Pjotov*-, former caf*
ita! of Inner Moogelia had mcreated IMold since the Red;
look over to about . 00,003.

CALL THE
LUMHER
NUMBER
CALL

w

sTsnean

f f i f i l i

53U B

for su d d e n

s e r v ic e

21.1 W . THIRD ST.

WGrCF tfi

H'.etffTi.e ■
Lt*dY 'd7U
BC'NO U
7 C-iT.' j

Sanrnpj
Vgeuum Cleaner Serrtcw
Phone 711 X J
t* and Supplies for All Mai
—Rentals—

SlMCLV liV'ECT'/POO/ »M
rOVVM KMOWS TW&amp;Y77Z
SECRETLY iM love -

KEVEO

U)JAT UAC'CTK'EC
&amp;£n*’EE*-' 039-BV
AvD w*R

rvccfjtjvb JMM. Winchester 22 RANDALL ELECTRIC CO.
Ult practtealJy new, luno;
T V SERVICE CENTER
AulemaUt Re* Water
• Kartor7 Supervljed Service
leattf. JlSM. A * Jf I
• House calls 3 a m - till 9 p n
lull ehotee cokn, j
(All makes and models)
i*w &lt;3iib]e Wardrobe 3
HI Mag. Ave
Phone 3400
ASM. Mlhojanv rtrej
004 mirrof, » l l k ;
Stanley's Bike Shop
et. eUentjou. 4 r*atn
516 E. 4th $' Tel 2431
Bicvfle A General Repair Keys
Lmnisowar sharpen A Set
vice.

Rfficiepcy. Phone

NUMBER

H ILL LUMBER b SUPPLY YARD
rhnne :i«*t

JALOUSIES 4 AWNIppS

RMl**r
lariate..

THE LUMBER

CALL TODAY!

after 4 * p._________

*1.(WO000

Pntje f)

NEW pg.sEKT METROPOLIS
MAIZURU, JAPAN « n - r * »
low. viuch sltidi on the east edsi
of the Gobi fdejert) m Inner Moo
colli, i) being transformed into i
large industrial city, «ay Japan
e*e repUnpe) just bark front
Pot i‘ h;na
They oitim.ito tbit
mve Cun -toovi enmeeri amt
laborers iro being sent nvathlj
to the old drier! terminal o f .the
rill'* ay leading up from Fc pm*
Mitoritl ii rmhed bv truck uj
luo nor upb^l' rotdi Soviet tertv
ajoiiaj have named ut Tito oh
net it to uj* iron oro .ind foil u
the ro*:ion, the repatriate;- »ay. A

Hose eeekM Meal*
Hoi Pit Ssr-RQ
Chili. Hot Doji
All Kindi of Sind withes
Good C'ollee
it Cl)dpi Grill
20* Sinfpfd tve.

Venetian Blind*
*»d head Bajpreot bettcun

Bfnfdrd

TV? U-'CVN DOC.
I OcXItWY Q£*
___O DATE

YOtlVf &gt;
EEfM
Dhwciwa
wWu ns?
WJLWOMT*

PI.UJIBING

Besdv, ffi*ed Cnnrr»it Centred
Lika Mania#
fhoo* *390-

ARE YOU bored &lt;iti*h vntjr looks?
Try OCR AMERICANA CUT
«hifh cm b* ipi in i variety
of u j)s to renew jour rh.irm
cvA b i s * m idp
rbone m i
SANTOKP'S Most Modem Beauty
Salon. SHAPING and STYLING
nur Specialty. One block Weil
and around the corner from the
clock.
HARRIETTS BEAUTY NOOK
IPS So. Oak
Phone 371
LAUNDRY SERVV1CE —11
• One hour • Wasn and Damp
Dry
• One Sour H - Wash and Dry
Fold
• Finished Laundry
• Samtone Pr&gt; Cleaning

U« Feat lit St
Phone 1423
CAMPBELL’S CABINET
FRJGLDAIXE amiUinees
sales
Hi-war 11-93 South
Phone 14
USED TRACTORS
and urvire. G H Hlsb. Oviedo.
Phone 1129 A. B. Petewn,Broker
Britt Tractor Co.
Complete TELEVlflON SERVICE
Ft*. Phone 41M or Sanford
UKcletci
A. B. Peterion Jr.. B * « 1T J2 South
Phew Ml on all makes and model*
1M2-W after * p m
P. J. Cheiternon. Albert N. rtf*
SANFORD ELECTRIC CO.
Garfield Willette. John Melach
u « Miroolli Ave.
rhea* 442 frt- OPriCK EQUIPMENT - t i
s lb Reuter;
HAYNF.S frtOre Machine C o,
ley'I Undershirt
For
ARMY-NAV
Seminole Realty
Tvpewnteri, adding raichinci.
T V SERVICE
Sales RenUlj. 31* Magnolia, I'll
V. DIETBICU
T. V. MERO
Evemnji
A
Sunday
ttoi peril Avenue
Phene rt CALL Itvts-J for Porch Jalousie*
Phone 111
Contract or box. free esu
IBt.^LH'Y 1‘AKLUllS - ; t
Esenin
S id A Sundav* 1-3
WE Need Your U ltlncsmaiei.
South Aide Laundromat
T V 4 RADIO
pkciALIZING"
JlnJi 'persoaalltv
L. 51. PASSONB REALT1
South Side Pnndniait Bldg.
Ph. U»
H|tr •*«!.* Ui^ro McD ' hiH's
QUAKER nmiltUax Heater*
at » Point*, Jcfe. 419 A V -n
IMt F.ail :sth St.
Eejuty
Studio
in
Ciuelberrv.
SHU up
floor " SANtoimf &gt;
rrrii-v o se r v ic e
s i
Hj
«
»v
it
3»
South
Phone
W
p
Monthly P *y m «»t» 144.00
Oak floors furnlPbed. laid A Bn
a . a POPE CO., rNC.
1-. Sill -Piano Technician
ished. Reasonable terms. In bus­ 37-2182 (Cloied all day Monday!.
Only Two attractive two Redroom JM South Park Ave. Phone 144*
Phone 2164 Route 1, Sanford
Drop In— Free Talking
iness since 1030 OM floors mide
homes competed, ready to
like
new.
E
F.
Stnveni;
Route
ECHOLS BIDDING CO.
2, Bo* 227; Phone 71*.R-4
Cer«*r 2nd * Mmqolla
Pb. 1232
(pud Bamberjer, Mjr.)
UPHOLSTERY Slip cowrs mrit
to order a*
— Factory to You —
NIX BEDpING MFG. CO.
Aluminum
IMl Sanford Me. ’
rbone mh j
A N D B U U O tN G # C £ D S

4fe Ume dr*** aod Aluminum JOftT Saqford ive.
Phone 1113
Plowing, disrtpg. grading Trees
and shrubbery moved. Dewitt
Hunter, soi r. 24th fit.

Aval** Art*

GORMLY INC

"Your Hot Point Deilfw"
4flJ CaIv t . Ph- 1P0O.N - llM-R ;i» PilmMlo Ave.
Ph. 77*
NUbU.
Sanford Electric Co.
t'hone it;
See Ui for quotations all Mlllwork lit Majtinlla Ave.
and Harduirn Hem* before you SEE Your General Electric dealer
for TV *nd Appliances.
lurorui
buy and be pleasantly surprised.

-? l

Contract and rap^lr work. Free
Btork. Sand. Gravel, Cenien*
estlmatee R L, Haewey lot
Concrete ripe to Meet All QuailSanford Ave Phone 1*2*.

lYfflar Court
__________ __

« ...

P. M. CAMPBELL

:u l
Pipe C a

Y H66RJ furnished
2^00 MeUonvllle.

Jacobson * De-

U *4 r*I*4. Aapeeia
Atlantic &gt;«hk »!di

General Contrartpr
"Homes of DlsUpction
Bi-Way 17-92
Phone
VtsLAjr
fcJUBUlCdm.
bNVELOPES.
latterbeads, Bt4iw
ital
eflt*. invoioes. hand bull, and
r o g r a m s , ate. Pengresslv*
rtntini Co. P h w Ati—4M
sanding and finishing
jg. waxing. Serving Semi
raunty since 1925. H. U

&lt;5$ ^
^w/cou m fi'VE
S’
v J us T&gt;-t rooo
ptcei t '
saTKtw. \
T«e
acuta S?tav5/ Me lsrceg-oust'
*U&gt;t *CWt94W TH-S&gt;S—______
ttv
sAwiwt 1
is
s-iac x'W sow / F
BA

tm£ rAMivg WUL £bty
VCJ C*sr OJT Tk-e 4l'5&gt;i S* g
A&gt;P ASA'U 04/ Hr/45£ TO
txe Misery b* i u ^ w- o
was 5CT
V"Jl*S U"£»! t 3 f

)T9, itravwsc ..« ( cat&gt;
a
«vjt t«6m, ***•(
5SS L’Vt T-t BL'VO

»CVJ*u5C
*'4*1 IS S.
MVOfi*.

AearttReat
lMiUre4I0
H

' c v a iiB c *

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Shop and Save
In Sanford
•
^VOLUME XLVI

Ezrtahlinhed 1908

AN INDEPENDENT
DAILY NEWSPAPER
INDEPENDENT_________________________

1934.

S M c c u s c British Co.
O f Satirical Show

school building, Goldsboro elemen­
tary, $190,233; ope private garage, tlOOi one electric sign, $435;
three commercial sepaire, $405;
and 18 home additions and repairs,
$8,185.
Permits Issued this month in­
clude one for an office building
at 1101 2nd BL, valued at $25,500,
ftand ana for £ commercial repair
^sLop, valued at $8,000.
The office building, located di­
rectly behind the new hospital, la
being constructed by Dr, A. W.
Epps and Dr. John Morgan. Of
oua-story masonry conatrnction, it
will have two office rooms and a
lobby. Lowell E. Oiisr la the con­
tractor.

f Prospects Taken
On Tour O f Route
WEST PALM BEACH VP) —
Prospoctivo buyers for Florida’a
turnpike bonds were taken on a
bos tour of tho upper end of the
proposed pay-aa-you-ro route to
let them inspect traffic on exist­
ing highways.
Thirty - seven representatives
luge banking and insurance
rere inspecting
the
Fort Pierce area whleh
iked by the toll road.
Tho venture la to be financed
with a 74 million dollar bond Iso*
•ow awalttng validation before
the State Supreme Court.

LONDON UR— Outraged tele­
viewers accused the British Broad­
casting Corjx last night of satlrli
ing Queen Mother Elizabeth In a
comedy skit. The BBC quickly de­
nied the ebarge.
The skit depleted e ship launch­
ing, and many viewers complained
that comedian Pearl Hackney in
the lead role dreised and talked
like the Queen Mother.
The program's climax came
when Mlaa Hackney broke the bot­
tle on the bow of the ship. The
vessel slid down the ways into the
water, then Bank. Miss Hackney
inquired In a high pitched voice:
"Should It not have floated?" A
B B C apokesman acknowledged
there were a "number" of indig­
nant phone calls, but said:
"Miss Hackney was impersonat­
ing ■ member of the aristocracy.
Making fan of the Queen Mother
la tha last thing she would aver
think of doing.”

rn roN B b u y p r o p e r t y
IN OAK PARK
Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus F. Fitton
recently purchased a house and
garage apartment at 808 W. 15th
St. from Mrs. Myrtles C. Henley
far 880,000, according to a deed
filed with the County Clerk.
The property la located In the
Oak Park subdivision.

Nn, 135

Sources
Project Sites Topic
Give Hint
O f Meeting Tonight Of Release

Strolling
In Sanford

Permit Value Has
$125, 828 Increase
#0ver First Month

AMorialtd Prwa l ^ x w l Wire

Dulles Says Islands
W o n t Hit Bargains

^
A Seminole Circuit Court Jury waa expected today to decide aulta
asking $130,OCO in damages a* a result of an automobile collision in
Final arguments of attorneys wete to bo heard early this after­
noon.
Mr*. Paulina Marshall, co-defendant in a $75,000 suit growing out
of the collision, took the stand this
morning us the last of 11 wit­
nesses.
Mrs. Marshall, Orlando, was
driving a car which collided with
one driven by Carl Pynn, Cassel­
berry, o rnlcsman, at Forest City
Feb. 8, 1954.
Pynn brought suit against Mrs.
Marshall and Rohcrt W. Malker,
Orlando, her employer and owner
Tie Fifth Handley Tournament of the ear she was driving.
will be held at the Tourist and
Mrs. Marshall has a $60,000
Shuffleboard Club Friday from 9 counter-suit against Pynn, and
a. m. and will last all day. Mrs. Walker has a $5,000 suit against
Roberta Gatchel will serve lunches Tynn.
f t o r • small fee in the club house.
Pynn was the first witness to
There will be about 300 people
take the stand yesterday for exa­
attending from all over this dis­ mination
by his attorneys, Ma­
trict
guire, Voorhis and Wells, Orlan­
a a •
do, and cross-examination by
In answer to many Inquiries as Parker McDonald, Orlando, and
to why "Old Glory” Is waving In Voile Williams Jr., Sanford, counthe warm Florida breeze today, ael for tha defendants.
Florida Statehood is being re­
Dr. DeWitt Stanford, Orlando,
cognized. The Land of Sunshine
state Is celehrating Its 110th year and Mr*. Pynn concluded testi­
In the Union to which it was ad- mony for the plantiff. Mrs. John
Haake, Orlando, ■ passenger in
•mltted in 1S45.
Mrs. Marshall’s car, and Walker,
took tha stand for tha defense yes­
terday.
Another damage suit, scheduled
to open today, was reset until
March 15, because of Illness of
one of the plaintiffs.
Judge Vaasar Carlton granted
the extension of time at the re­
quest of Attorney George A.
Speer, representing Mr. and Mrs.
Samuel M. Pickens, the plaintiffs.
Fewer building permits were is- Pickens is ill, Speer said,
aured during February than hi
Pickens has brought suit for
January, but the value of author­ $5,000 damages against Dolan R.
ised work showed a $125,328 In­ Rowe, and hta wife, Maybelia J.
crease. City Building Inspector Pickens, seeks $10,000 In the same
John U. Glllon reported today,
suit for Injuries incurred in an
Gillon said 80 permits were is­ automobile accident here in Sep­
sued in February for construction tember, 1058.
•nd repairs valued, at $243,081
compared &amp; 42 permits and $117,the previous month.
Outraged T V Fans

*

SANFORD. FLORIDA. THURSDAY/MAR. a T issT

Jur y Expects
Verdict foday

Clear to partly elnady and con*
tinu-d virm through Friday ex­
cept for .1 few isolated brief parly
morning -hower* along southeast
roast; highr-t this after 75■8J, low
tonight ftfl-70.

Possible sites for tho Negro hnurlng project proposed by ilrallcy
Oiiham will be discussed at a meeting today in the City Commission
Room at City Hail. The meeting will begin nt 7:30 p.m.
Convening jointly to debate the question will be the City Zoning
and Planning Commission, the City Commission, and the County Cam- ( TAIPEI, Formosa, LP— U S
mission, along with real estate Secretary of State Dulles told
brokers and building contractors. C h i n e s e Nationalist President
Odham's bid to build the projrct Chiang Kat-shek today that Que
on the vacant land across from the moy and the .Maim is were not on
Memorial Stadium was rejected the bargaining table for a cease­
Feb. 18 by Hie Zoning Commission fire in the Chinese civil war.
But sources close to the secre­
following angry protests against
putting a “colored section in the tary hinted the offshore islands
center of the white section of might be abandoned to the Reds
Sanford.” At that time, tonight'* on two conditions:
meeting u-a* set to solve the prob­
1. That the abandonment would
lem of a suitable site.
bring a guaranteed peace to Asia,
Gordon J. Rothermel. group
Several other possible sites were and,
manager for Southern Bell Tele­
2. That Nationalist China would
phone Company, today made pub discussed »t the February meet­
lie the 33-work Clause over which ing. including land belonging to agree to the move.
The Nationalists may not agree
the telephone Union has threaten­ the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad,
ed a Southwide strike and reveal but City Manager Warren Know­ under any circumstances. The Is­
told the group that the A.C.I.. lands arc the last Important out
ed haw Its provisions would af­ les
is acquiring land and will not tell posts they hold off the Red main­
fect telephone users.
under any circumstances.
land.
The clause proposed by the
Regarded with most favor was
Dulles reaffirmed U. S. deter­
Company rends as follows, "As a 90-acre tract belonging to the
the Parties have agreed on pro- American Fruit Growers, located mination to defend Formosa and
cecdurcs fur handling employe nt the end of west 13th St., acres* tha Pescadores, as pledged In Ihe
complaints and grievances, they from Crnom* Academy in tha mutual defense pact ratified ear­
lier today.
further agree that there wilt be Goldsboro district.
Dulles left for Washington late
nn lockouts, slowdowns, or other
In Ihe afternoon, winding up a
work stoppages during the life
whirlwind tour of Thailand, Bur­
of this Agreement/Contract/."
ma, Laos, Cambodia, South Viet­
The purpose of the clause Is to
nam, tho Philippines and Formosa.
assure uninterrupted service to the
Thirty-seven minutes after he
public, Hothrrmcl said, and to end
arrived today he signed the docu­
walkouts without warning which
ments that brought into force Ihe
are &lt;called to bring pressure to
mutual defense pact between the
bear on the Company. There have
United States and Nationalist
been 105 such walkouts since midChina. Nationalist Foreign Minister
1951, he said. At the time present
George Ych signed for China.
bargaining started they were oc­
Tho treaty itself was signed in
curring in Southern Bell at the
BIRMINGHAM 0V) — An Ala­ Washington Dee. 2. It commits the
rate of one every 10 day*.
bama highway patrolman iwore United States to defend Formosa
Jbo-tay (hut Albert Fuller, on tri-l and the Pescadores, gives Tho
"Tn wcrkirY
ftp I'ntro
eliminate these quickie strikes,” ' for the murder of vice foe A. L. United States the right to dispose
Rothermel continued, "The Com­ Patterson at Phrnix City, was In land, air and sea force* In and
pany has been patient and has the county Jail office when the about the area, and hinds the two
exhausted every other approarh. •hooting occurred.
countries to art against an armed
For several years wo have tried
Thi* testimony w*» tho first on attack in the west Pacific.
to solve this problem short of add what the defense had called nn
In his airport statement, Dulles
ing a contract clause.
“ Impregnable alibi" for the 35said (he United States is com­
year-old
former
chief
deputy
sher­
"This clause does not in any
mitted to "closer and more ef­
way affect the right of the Union iff.
fective cooperation for the defense
Fuller, former chief prosecutor, of Ihe treaty area.”
to strike at the expiration of the
contract," Rothermel went on. Arch Ferrell and SI Garrett, for­
He emphasized the lack of com­
"What it docs la to recognize that mer Alabama attomry general, mit merit to Quemoy and (he Mat(he public which la paying for un­ alt are charged with tho Patter- sus In thrso words:
interrupted telephone service has ■on alnylng.
"It Is not possible at this lime
The prosecution contend* Pat­
a right to Insist that tho company
In
stale explicitly how that defense
terson wu* killed 17 day* aftur
and its employes furnish it."
will
he conducted "
The public relies on uninterrupt­ hi* election as attorney general
That leaves open the question of
because
he
hail
jJc
Iged
to
smash
ed telephone service now as never Phcnix City'* multi-million dollar whether the United States actively
before, Rothermel stated, point­ racket* empire.
would defend the offshore oulpoMa
ing out that In Sanford 31,G5o local
if
that becomes necessary to the
Gcorgn
Phillip*,
patrolman
telephone calls aro made a day, stationed at Phrnix City, testified defense of Formosa and the Pcs
plus 1,845 daily long distance calls. he was with Fuller In Russell eadorrs.
"Many involve the public health County Jail for neurly an hour be­
Dulles did not go Into the con­
and safety- In this day is surh fore the time fixed for the Patter­ troversial question of the creation
reliance on the telephone, the son shooting. Phillip* added that of "two Chinas" if an ultimate
service Is too vital to be at the Fuller remained in the jail con­ cease-fire is attained— Formosa
mercy of Union Leaders who can tinuously until another officer and the mainland.
Ignore orderly methods of settling came in to report tha Patterson
Both the Communists and the
differences and call workers off •hooting.
Nationalists have declared there
the job."
The patrolman named several can bn only one China. Both in­
Rothermel said the company has other person* a* having been at sist they represent the only legal
taken many steps In current bar­ tha Jail during tha time in quea- government for all of China.
Observers felt Chiang would in
gaining trying to reach an agree tion.
Only former Sheriff Ralph Mat- ■1st on active U. S. support In in­
ment, such as,
1. Offered increases to employes hew* and a Jailer identified a* vading the mainland if he agreed
ranging up to $4 a week. A wage Ben Clark were there all tho time, to the evacuation of Quemoy and
Ihe Matsus.
Increase was one of the Union however, Phillip* told tha Jury.
objectives In the bargaining.
2. Streamlined the grievance proceedures so settlements can be
reached more quickly.
W .V i*
*'
w*'-1. \ •V-rt1. Reclassified certain rilles and
towns to higher wage schedules
4. Shortened evening and work
schedules.
"In a labor contract, the com­
pany guarantees the good working
conditions and to pay the increas­
ed wages. It Is certainly not too
much to ask that the Union, in
return, guarantee to respect the
Contract and not engage in strikes
while the contract Is In force,"
Rothermel concluded.

AbandonmentMay Spell Peace

INSPECTS DAMAGE TO CAR—Fred Marion Ford. Sanford,
Inspects the dnmngc to his 1953 Pontiac sedan nflcr (he car's
windshield was smashed and the top haticred by a piece of
steel which fell from a truck today: (Staff Pho(o)

Two Sanford Men
Escape Falling Steel
Fred Ford, Roy Kelly Showered
With Glass From Smashed Window

State Scholarship
Tests To Be Given
Here On March 22
Competitive exomlnatlnm (or
state scholarshipa will be given in
Seminole County at Seminole Uigh
JMarch
S g 22
A beginning
2 S Z Tat ?8.30
8 ^a. 7m.l
College students who are away
dram home mey take the test in
the nearest examination center,
General scholarships (or the
preparation of teachers have a
value of $400 a year and may be
held for four years or until the
holder receives the Bachelor's de­
gree. A winner of general schol­
arship must promise to begin
teaching in. the public schools of
Florldi immediately following gra
duallon from college and will be
expected to teach consecutively
for at least as many years as he
received scholarship aid.
High school seniors, high school
graduates, and college students
are eligible if they are residents
of Florida and arc registered or
intend to register, in the school of
education of an approved instituIon of higher learning In Florida
to prepare for teaching in Florida's
elemantary or secondary schools.
— Approved institutions are the
Florida state-supported institutions
of higher learning and the junior
colleges and the following private
Institutions located la Florida:
Barry College, Miami; BethuneCookman College, Daytona Beach;
Florida Normal and Industrial
Memorial College, St. Augustine;
Florida Southern College, Lake­
land; Jacksonville Junior College,
Jacksonville; John B, Stetson
University, DeLand; Rollins Col­
lege, Winter Park; University of
Miami, Corat Gables, and the Uni­
versity of Tampa, Tampa.
Any student may take the schol­
arship examination regardless of
whether or not a vacancy exists
in his county. Scholarships not
used will be placed in a state
pool end awarded to the highest
scoring applicants from the state
at large who do not receive a
wards in their home counties due
to an insufficiency of vacancies.

Foreign Secretary
Asks Renunciation

Two Sanford men narrowly
escaped Injury today when a
piece of steel fell from a passing
truck nn U. S. Highway 17-92
am) badly damaged the cer in
which they were riding
Showered with glass from a
smashed windshield were Fred
Marion Ford, 48, of 1428 Park
Ave., district manager for Amcri
can National Foods, and Roy
Kelly, Route 1, farm manager for
American Fruit Growers. Ford
was driving the 1953 Pontiac tc
dan.
Impound Piece* f
metal rebounded from n,*
tho wind­
shield and landed on top of the
car, denting it severly.
Damage to the automobile was
estimated at $600.
Seven pieces of steel In all fell
from the loaded truck after a
standard Jumped from its slot In
the bed. Tires on another truck
and car were punctured when the
vehicles hit two of the pieces lying
on the highwsy,
The accident occurred at 10:10
a. m., about five miles south of
Sanford, across from Campbell's
Cabinet Shop.
The 1937 GMC truck, owned by
Bruce Stcrl Co., Orlando, was
driven by C. J. Roberts, 37, of
212 Grace St., Orlando.
The truck was going north and
the car in which Ford and Kelly
were riding was going south.
One piece of steel on the high­
way punctured the left rear tire
of a Gulf Oil Co. truck driven
by U. S. Boyd, 1114 E. 7th St.,
Sanford. The tiro was valued at
$80. Also punctured was a front
tire, valued at $40, on an automo­
bile driven by James If. Crofford,
418 N. Ky. Ave. Lakeland. Fla.
Investigating the accident were
Deputy Sheriffs O. G. Owens, Jack
Evans and 51. R. McClelland.

Post Yule Slump
Hits Little Harder
TALLAHASSEE (It- The postChristmas slump in citrus picking
and retail sales businesses hit FlnrIda a little harder than usual this
year, the Industrial Commission
reported today.
Though the January employment
level In nan-agricultural industries
•nd business was one per cent
abovo the ilka month last year,
there were 52,000 workers nut of
jobs In comparison with 53,800 in
January last year.
"Slower citrus movements fol­
lowed the holiday season and re­
sulted In a 1,600 drop from the
December citrus packing employ­
ment estimate,” the commission
said.
"Layoffs of retail sales people
nired only for the holiday period
more (ban offset gains made by
eating and drinking establish­
ments Hotels, while not yet to the
level of last January, increased
1,800 from the previous month."

NEW DELm. Indie &lt; * - British
Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden
appealed today for a renunciation
of force by both sldea as the first
step toward solution of tha For
■hose crisis.
“ We are trying to establish con­
dition! In which a settlement can
be obtained by conciliation and dis
cun Ion," ha told a newa confer­
HEREFORD ASSOCIATION
ence. "It would certainly help us
ELECTS OFFICERS
In this task If some Indication were
OCALA IK—The Florida Here­
given of a willingness to renounce ford Assn, yesterday elected Lov­
the use of force."
ett* Jackson, Gainesville, presi­
dent; r. A. CockriU, McIntosh,
CAMPBELL’S STORE SOLD
view president; and A. E. Mellon,
Campbell's Security Feed and Gsloes villa, treasurer.
Seed More located at Ml W. let Tho Florida Shorthorn Breeders
St has been told to J. D. Wood­ Ann. named Austin Davis, Odes­
ruff. The store was opened It sa, president; W. Y. Duyek, plant
by P. P. Campbell and City, vie* president; and reelect­
E rat eago
a operated by
ed Col. E. H. Wilkaraon, Euetis,

Telephone Clause
Made Public Today
By Group Manager

Patrolman Swears
Fuller Is Jailed
During Shooting

Senators Disagree
On Ike's Assertion
WASHINGTON UP— Senators dis
agreed today over the probable ef­
fect of President Eisenhower's aslertlon that the United Slates will
fight no "aggressive war" In the
Far Eait or elsewhere.
Sen Humphrey (D-Minnl Inter­
preted Eisenhower's declaration
as tacit admission of the existence
of "two Chinas." Sen. Sparkman
(D-Ala) said be thinks "we can
now write off any possibility of
Chines* Nationalist return to the
mainland."
Disagreeing, Ben. H. Alexander
Smith (R-NJ) said the President
was merely telling the world that
the Nationalist army la being held
In readiness to strike U the Com
zmmlits brack the true* In
Koran or

STR EET BEING W ID E N E D — A crew In nhown at work
widening Palmetto A t * . 14 feet from 2nd to 3rd St. The
afreet will be 34 or 36 foci wide when completed. The crow
will Inter widen 3rd BL from Magnolia A ve. to Ssuiford Ave.

(S taff Photo).

HORACE HENDERSON
(Staff Photo)

Young Generation
Highlight Of Talk
By H. Henderson
The young people of the world
held the key to peace and under­
standing, Horace Henderson told
the Junior Chamber of Commerce
at its weekly luncheon meeting to­
day at the Yacht Club.
"We are facing the most critical
period In the history of mankind,"
he declared. "We known how to
fight wars, but this time we are
unprepared. We have no defense
as yet. For this is a war of ideas,
and we arc fighting for the mlndi
of men."
Henderson, recently named the
"Outstanding Jaycce o f th e
World," said the answer to the
global prohtem is not guns or dol­
lars The people in Europe and
Asia, he said, want friendship and
coopiratlon, not a handout from
America.
•
The only way tha United State*
can win in tho "cold war" is
through “ the enlightened leader
ship that must come from the
young people of today," Henderson
continued.
Henderson, of Williamsburg. Va.,
received a $25.QUO American Heri­
tage Foundation award as a result
of his work in the Jaycrc* and
usrd the grant to make a world
tour In Ihe interests of tho organi­
zation His talk today dealt with
his experiences
Chuckles echoed around the
room as Henderson told how
"some rntcrprlsing young man"
had taken tho punch out of Com­
munist propaganda signs in
Eui ope.
"The signs are all over Europe,"
ho said. "They read: ‘Americans
Go Home.' Well, some enterprising
young man added ‘Via TWA' to
the bottom of all the signs he came
across."
He told how the paralysis of
Communism had gripped Russia
satellite nations. In Guatemala
City, for instance, he said he was
confronted by closed shops and de­
serted streets. On the walls of
buildings were large posters of
Uncle Sam with bloody hands.
Communism thrives on poverty,
Henderson emphasized. He describ­
ed the confusion over the world ai
a propaganda popularity contest
between Communism and Demo­
cracy.
He said the Communists lake
joung turn and wouirn nut uf
communities, rndoetrinatc (hem to
Communism in Russia, and then
place them hack in their communi­
ties.
"At the present time." Hender­
son declared, "we are losing the
contest, hut we can still overcome
the lead held by the Communists."
Henderson received the "Oul»
standing Jaycce of of the World"
title at the urganization'a Interna­
tiona' conference in Mexico City
recently.
He Is visiting his parents. Dr.
and 5!rs. Brantley Henderson, who
live on Ross Lake, tt-ven milea
west of Sanford. His father was
present at the meeting today.
He once lived for about six
months with his parents near
here and later spent a year in
A)tamunte Springs, during which
time he worked as a real citato
salesman for Marlle Williams in
Orlando.
U was during that time that
Henderson attended hi* first Jaycee meeting in Orlando When h*
returned to his native Williams­
burg in 1847, he organized ■ Jaycee unit there and became its
president.
He held various district and
state offices In the Jaycees In
Virginia and became national vicepresident In 1850. inter-national
vice-president In 1858 and national
preside** I* u u .
«

‘

U
i

J
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^VO LU M E XLVI

AN INDEPENDENT
DAILY NEWSPAPER
INDEPENDENT__________________________
SANFORD. FLORIDA. THURSDAY/M AR. a T is s T

Jury Expects
Verdict foday
A Seminole Circuit Court Jury waa expected today to decide aulta
asking $130,OCO in damages a* a result o f an automobile collision in
1934.
Final arguments o f attorneys wete to bo heard early this after­
noon.
Mr*. Paulina Marshall, co-defendant in a $75,000 suit growing out
o f the collision, took the stand this
morning us the last of 11 wit­
nesses.
Mrs. Marshall, Orlando, was
driving a car which collided with
one driven by Carl Pynn, Cassel­
berry, o rnlcsman, at Forest City
Feb. 8, 1954.
Pynn brought suit against Mrs.
Marshall and Rohcrt W. Malker,
Orlando, her employer and owner
T ie Fifth Handley Tournament o f the ear she was driving.
will be held at the Tourist and
Mrs. Marshall has a $60,000
Shuffleboard Club Friday from 9 counter-suit against Pynn, and
a. m. and will last all day. Mrs. Walker has a $5,000 suit against
Roberta Gatchel will serve lunches Tynn.
f t o r • small fee in the club house.
Pynn was the first witness to
There will be about 300 people
take the stand yesterday for exa­
attending from all over this dis­
mination by his attorneys, Ma­
trict
guire, Voorhis and Wells, Orlan­
a a •
do, and cross-examination by
In answer to many Inquiries as Parker McDonald, Orlando, and
to why "Old Glory” Is waving In Voile Williams Jr., Sanford, counthe warm Florida breeze today, ael fo r tha defendants.
Florida Statehood is being re­
Dr. DeWitt Stanford, Orlando,
cognized. The Land of Sunshine
state Is celehrating Its 110th year and Mr*. Pynn concluded testi­
In the Union to which it was ad- mony for the plantiff. Mrs. John
Haake, Orlando, ■ passenger in
•mltted in 1S45.
Mrs. Marshall’s car, and Walker,
took tha stand for tha defense yes­
terday.
Another damage suit, scheduled
to open today, was reset until
March 15, because o f Illness of
one o f the plaintiffs.
Judge Vaasar Carlton granted
the extension of time at the re­
quest of Attorney George A.
Speer, representing Mr. and Mrs.
Samuel M. Pickens, the plaintiffs.
Fewer building permits were is- Pickens is ill, Speer said,
aured during February than hi
Pickens has brought suit for
January, but the value of author­ $5,000 damages against Dolan R.
ised work showed a $125,328 In­ Rowe, and hta wife, Maybelia J.
crease. City Building Inspector Pickens, seeks $10,000 In the same
John U . Glllon reported today,
suit for Injuries incurred in an
Gillon said 80 permits were is­ automobile accident here in Sep­
sued in February for construction tember, 1058.

Outraged T V Fans
S M c c u s c British Co.
school building, Goldsboro elemen­
tary, $190,233; ope private gar- O f Satirical Show

age, tlOOi one electric sign, $435;
three commercial sepaire, $405;
and 18 home additions and repairs,
$8,185.
Permits Issued this month in­
clude one for an office building
at 1101 2nd BL, valued at $25,500,
ftand ana for £ commercial repair
^sLop, valued at $8,000.
The office building, located di­
rectly behind the new hospital, la
being constructed by Dr, A. W.
Epps and Dr. John Morgan. Of
oua-story masonry conatrnction, it
will have two office rooms and a
lobby. Lowell E. Oiisr la the con­
tractor.

f Prospects Taken
On Tour O f Route
WEST PALM BEACH VP) —
Prospoctivo buyers for Florida’a
turnpike bonds were taken on a
bos tour of tho upper end o f the
proposed pay-aa-you-ro route to
let them inspect traffic on exist­
ing highways.
Thirty - seven representatives
lu g e banking and insurance
rere inspecting
the
Fort Pierce area whleh
iked by the toll road.
Tho venture la to be financed
with a 74 million dollar bond Iso*
•ow awalttng validation before
the State Supreme Court.

LONDON UR— Outraged tele­
viewers accused the British Broad­
casting Corjx last night of satlrli
ing Queen Mother Elizabeth In a
comedy skit. The BBC quickly de­
nied the ebarge.
The skit depleted e ship launch­
ing, and many viewers complained
that comedian Pearl Hackney in
the lead role dreised and talked
like the Queen Mother.
The program's climax came
when Mlaa Hackney broke the bot­
tle on the bow of the ship. The
vessel slid down the ways into the
water, then Bank. Miss Hackney
inquired In a high pitched voice:
"Should It not have floated?" A
B B C apokesman acknowledged
there were a "number" of indig­
nant phone calls, but said:
"Miss Hackney was impersonat­
ing ■ member of the aristocracy.
Making fan of the Queen Mother
la tha last thing she would aver
think of doing.”
rn ro N B b u y property
IN OAK PARK
Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus F. Fitton
recently purchased a house and
garage apartment at 808 W. 15th
St. from Mrs. Myrtles C. Henley
far 880,000, according to a deed
filed with the County Clerk.
The property la located In the
Oak Park subdivision.

A M o r ia lt d

P rw a

l^ x w l

W ire

Nn, 135

Sources
Project Sites Topic
Give Hint
Of Meeting Tonight Of Release

Strolling
In Sanford

•nd repairs valued, at $243,081
compared &amp; 42 permits and $117,the previous month.

*

Dulles Says Islands
W ont Hit Bargains

^

Permit Value Has
$125, 828 Increase
#0ver First Month

Clear to partly elnady and con*
tinu-d v irm through Friday ex­
cept for .1 few isolated brief parly
morning -hower* along southeast
roast; highr-t this after 75 ■8J, low
tonight ftfl-70.

Possible sites for tho Negro hnurlng project proposed by ilrallcy
Oiiham will be discussed at a meeting today in the City Commission
Room at City Hail. The meeting will begin nt 7:30 p.m.
Convening jointly to debate the question will be the City Zoning
and Planning Commission, the City Commission, and the County Cam- ( TAIPEI, Formosa, LP— U S
mission, along with real estate Secretary of State Dulles told
brokers and building contractors. C h i n e s e Nationalist President
Odham's bid to build the projrct Chiang Kat-shek today that Que
on the vacant land across from the moy and the .Maimis were not on
Memorial Stadium was rejected the bargaining table for a cease­
Feb. 18 by Hie Zoning Commission fire in the Chinese civil war.
But sources close to the secre­
following angry protests against
putting a “ colored section in the tary hinted the offshore islands
center of the white section of might be abandoned to the Reds
Sanford.” At that time, tonight'* on two conditions:
meeting u-a* set to solve the prob­
1. That the abandonment would
lem of a suitable site.
bring a guaranteed peace to Asia,
Gordon J. Rothermel. group
Several other possible sites were and,
manager for Southern Bell Tele­
2. That Nationalist China would
phone Company, today made pub discussed »t the February meet­
lie the 33-work Clause over which ing. including land belonging to agree to the move.
the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad,
The Nationalists may not agree
the telephone Union has threaten­
but City Manager Warren Know­ under any circumstances. The Is­
ed a Southwide strike and reveal
les told the group that the A.C.I.. lands arc the last Important out
ed haw Its provisions would af­
is acquiring land and will not tell posts they hold off the Red main­
fect telephone users.
under any circumstances.
land.
The clause proposed by the
Regarded with most favor was
Dulles reaffirmed U. S. deter­
Company rends as follows, "As
a 90-acre tract belonging to the
the Parties have agreed on pro- American Fruit Growers, located mination to defend Formosa and
cecdurcs fur handling employe nt the end of west 13th St., acres* tha Pescadores, as pledged In Ihe
complaints and grievances, they from Crnom* Academy in tha mutual defense pact ratified ear­
lier today.
further agree that there wilt be Goldsboro district.
Dulles left for Washington late
nn lockouts, slowdowns, or other
In Ihe afternoon, winding up a
work stoppages during the life
whirlwind tour of Thailand, Bur­
of this Agreement/Contract/."
ma, Laos, Cambodia, South Viet­
The purpose of the clause Is to
nam, tho Philippines and Formosa.
assure uninterrupted service to the
Thirty-seven minutes after he
public, Hothrrmcl said, and to end
arrived today he signed the docu­
walkouts without warning which
ments that brought into force Ihe
are &lt;called to bring pressure to
mutual defense pact between the
bear on the Company. There have
United States and Nationalist
been 105 such walkouts since midChina. Nationalist Foreign Minister
1951, he said. At the time present
George Ych signed for China.
bargaining started they were oc­
Tho treaty itself was signed in
curring in Southern Bell at the
BIRMINGHAM 0V) — An Ala­ Washington Dee. 2. It commits the
rate of one every 10 day*.
bama highway patrolman iwore United States to defend Formosa
J bo-tay (hut Albert Fuller, on tri-l and the Pescadores, gives Tho
"Tn wcrkirY
f t p I'ntro
eliminate these quickie strikes,” ' for the murder of vice foe A. L. United States the right to dispose
Rothermel continued, "The Com­ Patterson at Phrnix City, was In land, air and sea force* In and
pany has been patient and has the county Jail office when the about the area, and hinds the two
exhausted every other approarh. •hooting occurred.
countries to art against an armed
For several years wo have tried
Thi* testimony w*» tho first on attack in the west Pacific.
to solve this problem short of add what the defense had called nn
In his airport statement, Dulles
ing a contract clause.
“ Impregnable alibi" for the 35said (he United States is com­
year-old
former
chief
deputy
sher­
"This clause does not in any
mitted to "closer and more ef­
way affect the right of the Union iff.
fective cooperation for the defense
Fuller, former chief prosecutor, of Ihe treaty area.”
to strike at the expiration of the
contract," Rothermel went on. Arch Ferrell and SI Garrett, for­
He emphasized the lack of com­
"What it docs la to recognize that mer Alabama attomry general, mit merit to Quemoy and (he Mat(he public which la paying for un­ alt are charged with tho Patter- sus In thrso words:
interrupted telephone service has ■on alnylng.
"It Is not possible at this lime
The prosecution contend* Pat­
a right to Insist that tho company
In stale explicitly how that defense
terson wu* killed 17 day* aftur
and its employes furnish it."
will he conducted "
hi* election as attorney general
The public relies on uninterrupt­
That leaves open the question of
because he hail jJc Iged to smash
ed telephone service now as never
Phcnix City'* multi-million dollar whether the United States actively
before, Rothermel stated, point­
would defend the offshore oulpoMa
racket* empire.
ing out that In Sanford 31,G5o local
if
that becomes necessary to the
Gcorgn
Phillip*,
patrolman
telephone calls aro made a day,
stationed at Phrnix City, testified defense of Formosa and the Pcs
plus 1,845 daily long distance calls. he was with Fuller In Russell eadorrs.
"Many involve the public health County Jail for neurly an hour be­
Dulles did not go Into the con­
and safety- In this day is surh fore the time fixed for the Patter­ troversial question of the creation
reliance on the telephone, the son shooting. Phillip* added that of "two Chinas" if an ultimate
service Is too vital to be at the Fuller remained in the jail con­ cease-fire is attained— Formosa
mercy of Union Leaders who can tinuously until another officer and the mainland.
Ignore orderly methods of settling came in to report tha Patterson
Both the Communists and the
differences and call workers off •hooting.
Nationalists have declared there
the job ."
The patrolman named several can bn only one China. Both in­
Rothermel said the company has other person* a* having been at sist they represent the only legal
taken many steps In current bar­ tha Jail during tha time in quea- government for all of China.
Observers felt Chiang would in
gaining trying to reach an agree tion.
Only former Sheriff Ralph Mat- ■1st on active U. S. support In in­
ment, such as,
1. Offered increases to employes hew* and a Jailer identified a* vading the mainland if he agreed
ranging up to $4 a week. A wage Ben Clark were there all tho time, to the evacuation of Quemoy and
Ihe Matsus.
Increase was one of the Union however, Phillip* told tha Jury.
objectives In the bargaining.
2. Streamlined the grievance proceedures so settlements can be
reached more quickly.
W .V i*
*'
w*'-1. \ •V-rt1. Reclassified certain rilles and
towns to higher wage schedules
4. Shortened evening and work
schedules.
"In a labor contract, the com­
pany guarantees the good working
conditions and to pay the increas­
ed wages. It Is certainly not too
much to ask that the Union, in
return, guarantee to respect the
Contract and not engage in strikes
while the contract Is In force,"
Rothermel concluded.

AbandonmentM ay Spell Peace

INSPECTS DAMAGE TO CAR— Fred Marion Ford. Sanford,
Inspects the dnmngc to his 1953 Pontiac sedan nflcr (he car's
windshield was smashed and the top haticred b y a piece of
steel which fell from a truck today: (Staff Pho(o)

Two Sanford Men
Escape Falling Steel
Fred Ford, Roy Kelly Showered
With Glass From Smashed Window
Two Sanford men narrowly
escaped Injury today when a
piece o f steel fell from a passing
truck nn U. S. Highway 17-92
am) badly damaged the cer in
which they were riding
Showered with glass from a
smashed windshield were Fred
Marion Ford, 48, of 1428 Park
Ave., district manager for Amcri
can National Foods, and Roy
Kelly, Route 1, farm manager for
Competitive exomlnatlnm (or American Fruit Growers. Ford
state scholarshipa will be given in was driving the 1953 Pontiac tc
Seminole County at Seminole Uigh dan.

State Scholarship
Tests To Be Given
Here On March 22

JMarch
S g A
2 S Z Tat ?8.30
8 ^a. 7m.l
22 beginning

College students who are away
dram home mey take the test in
the nearest examination center,
General scholarships (or the
preparation of teachers have a
value of $400 a year and may be
held for four years or until the
holder receives the Bachelor's de­
gree. A winner of general schol­
arship must promise to begin
teaching in. the public schools of
Florldi immediately following gra
duallon from college and will be
expected to teach consecutively
for at least as many years as he
received scholarship aid.
High school seniors, high school
graduates, and college students
are eligible if they are residents
of Florida and arc registered or
intend to register, in the school of
education of an approved instituIon of higher learning In Florida
to prepare for teaching in Florida's
elemantary or secondary schools.
— Approved institutions are the
Florida state-supported institutions
of higher learning and the junior
colleges and the following private
Institutions located la Florida:
Barry College, Miami; BethuneCookman College, Daytona Beach;
Florida Normal and Industrial
Memorial College, St. Augustine;
Florida Southern College, Lake­
land; Jacksonville Junior College,
Jacksonville; John B, Stetson
University, DeLand; Rollins Col­
lege, Winter Park; University of
Miami, Corat Gables, and the Uni­
versity of Tampa, Tampa.
Any student may take the schol­
arship examination regardless of
whether or not a vacancy exists
in his county. Scholarships not
used will be placed in a state
pool end awarded to the highest
scoring applicants from the state
at large who do not receive a
wards in their home counties due
to an insufficiency of vacancies.

Foreign Secretary
Asks Renunciation

Impoundn,*Piece* f
metal rebounded from tho wind­
shield and landed on top of the
car, denting it severly.
Damage to the automobile was
estimated at $600.
Seven pieces of steel In all fell
from the loaded truck after a
standard Jumped from its slot In
the bed. Tires on another truck
and car were punctured when the
vehicles hit two of the pieces lying
on the highwsy,
The accident occurred at 10:10
a. m., about five miles south of
Sanford, across from Campbell's
Cabinet Shop.
The 1937 GMC truck, owned by
Bruce Stcrl Co., Orlando, was
driven by C. J. Roberts, 37, of
212 Grace St., Orlando.
The truck was going north and
the car in which Ford and Kelly
were riding was going south.
One piece of steel on the high­
way punctured the left rear tire
of a Gulf Oil Co. truck driven
by U. S. Boyd, 1114 E. 7th St.,
Sanford. The tiro was valued at
$80. Also punctured was a front
tire, valued at $40, on an automo­
bile driven by James If. Crofford,
418 N. Ky. Ave. Lakeland. Fla.
Investigating the accident were
Deputy Sheriffs O. G. Owens, Jack
Evans and 51. R. McClelland.

Post Yule Slump
Hits Little Harder
TALLAHASSEE (It- The postChristmas slump in citrus picking
and retail sales businesses hit FlnrIda a little harder than usual this
year, the Industrial Commission
reported today.
Though the January employment
level In nan-agricultural industries
•nd business was one per cent
abovo the ilka month last year,
there were 52,000 workers nut of
jobs In comparison with 53,800 in
January last year.
"Slower citrus movements fol­
lowed the holiday season and re­
sulted In a 1,600 drop from the
December citrus packing employ­
ment estimate,” the commission
said.
"Layoffs of retail sales people
nired only for the holiday period
more (ban offset gains made by
eating and drinking establish­
ments Hotels, while not yet to the
level of last January, increased
1,800 from the previous month."

NEW DELm. Indie &lt; * - British
Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden
appealed today for a renunciation
of force by both sldea as the first
step toward solution of tha For
■hose crisis.
“ We are trying to establish con­
dition! In which a settlement can
be obtained by conciliation and dis
cun Ion," ha told a newa confer­
HEREFORD ASSOCIATION
ence. "It would certainly help us
ELECTS OFFICERS
In this task If some Indication were
OCALA IK—The Florida Here­
given of a willingness to renounce ford Assn, yesterday elected Lov­
the use of force."
ett* Jackson, Gainesville, presi­
dent; r. A. CockriU, McIntosh,
CAMPBELL’S STORE SOLD
view president; and A. E. Mellon,
Campbell's Security Feed and Gsloes villa, treasurer.
Seed More located at Ml W. let
Tho Florida Shorthorn Breeders
St has been told to J. D. Wood­ Ann. named Austin Davis, Odes­
ruff. The store was opened It sa, president; W. Y. Duyek, plant
ra ago by P. P. Campbell and City, vie* president; and reelect­
t e a operated by
ed Col. E. H. Wilkaraon, Euetis,

E

Telephone Clause
Made Public Today
By Group Manager

Patrolman Swears
Fuller Is Jailed
During Shooting

Senators Disagree
On Ike's Assertion
WASHINGTON UP— Senators dis
agreed today over the probable ef­
fect of President Eisenhower's aslertlon that the United Slates will
fight no "aggressive war" In the
Far Eait or elsewhere.
Sen Humphrey (D-Minnl Inter­
preted Eisenhower's declaration
as tacit admission of the existence
of "two Chinas." Sen. Sparkman
(D-Ala) said be thinks "we can
now write off any possibility of
Chines* Nationalist return to the
mainland."
Disagreeing, Ben. H. Alexander
Smith (R-NJ) said the President
was merely telling the world that
the Nationalist army la being held
In readiness to strike U the Com
zmmlits brack the true* In
Koran or

STREET BEING WIDENED — A crew In nhown at work
widening Palmetto A t*. 14 feet from 2nd to 3rd St. The
afreet will be 34 or 36 foci wide when completed. The crow
will Inter widen 3rd BL from Magnolia Ave. to Ssuiford Ave.
(Staff Photo).

HORACE HENDERSON
(Staff Photo)

Young Generation
Highlight Of Talk
By H. Henderson
The young people of the world
held the key to peace and under­
standing, Horace Henderson told
the Junior Chamber of Commerce
at its weekly luncheon meeting to­
day at the Yacht Club.
"We are facing the most critical
period In the history of mankind,"
he declared. "W e known how to
fight wars, but this time we are
unprepared. We have no defense
as yet. For this is a war of ideas,
and we arc fighting for the mlndi
of men."
Henderson, recently named the
"Outstanding Jaycce o f t h e
World," said the answer to the
global prohtem is not guns or dol­
lars The people in Europe and
Asia, he said, want friendship and
coopiratlon, not a handout from
America.
•
The only way tha United State*
can win in tho "cold war" is
through “ the enlightened leader
ship that must come from the
young people of today," Henderson
continued.
Henderson, of Williamsburg. Va.,
received a $25.QUO American Heri­
tage Foundation award as a result
of his work in the Jaycrc* and
usrd the grant to make a world
tour In Ihe interests of tho organi­
zation His talk today dealt with
his experiences
Chuckles echoed around the
room as Henderson told how
"some rntcrprlsing young man"
had taken tho punch out of Com­
munist propaganda
signs
in
Eui ope.
"The signs are all over Europe,"
ho said. "They read: ‘Americans
Go Home.' Well, some enterprising
young man added ‘ Via TWA' to
the bottom of all the signs he came
across."
He told how the paralysis of
Communism had gripped Russia
satellite nations. In Guatemala
City, for instance, he said he was
confronted by closed shops and de­
serted streets. On the walls of
buildings were large posters of
Uncle Sam with bloody hands.
Communism thrives on poverty,
Henderson emphasized. He describ­
ed the confusion over the world ai
a propaganda popularity contest
between Communism and Demo­
cracy.
He said the Communists lake
joung turn and wouirn nut uf
communities, rndoetrinatc (hem to
Communism in Russia, and then
place them hack in their communi­
ties.
"At the present time." Hender­
son declared, "w e are losing the
contest, hut we can still overcome
the lead held by the Communists."
Henderson received the "Oul»
standing Jaycce of of the World"
title at the urganization'a Interna­
tiona' conference in Mexico City
recently.
He Is visiting his parents. Dr.
and 5!rs. Brantley Henderson, who
live on Ross Lake, tt-ven milea
west of Sanford. His father was
present at the meeting today.
He once lived for about six
months with his parents near
here and later spent a year in
A)tamunte Springs, during which
time he worked as a real citato
salesman for Marlle Williams in
Orlando.
U was during that time that
Henderson attended hi* first Jaycee meeting in Orlando When h*
returned to his native Williams­
burg in 1847, he organized ■ Jaycee unit there and became its
president.

He held various district and
state offices In the Jaycees In
Virginia and became national vicepresident In 1850. inter-national
vice-president In 1858 and national
preside** I* u u .
«

‘

U
i

J
w

e

�*

.

.

•

.

SAM DAWSON

Rush Developing For Commodities
Vou’vu seen it many times. You haven’t champion will he boring In fur the kill.
forgotten it.
Will the champ win by a knockout?
The young pug is up against the ropes,
Tha issue Is location of a suitable site for
glassy-eyed, bleeding, breathing hard, and the Negro hounlng project which Bralley
Odhnm proposes to build.
the champ is moving in for the kill.
* our ciguretlo hangs dead between your
In this bout, the champion will be a com­
teeth nnd you edge forward in your seat, posite figure, made up of the City Zoning
but lha scrap is over In nothing fiat. The and Planning Commission, the City Com­
battered fighter lies crumpled beneath the mission, the County Commission, real estate
hnrsli ring lights. You look at him, andI brokers and building contractors.
something makes you think o f the old rag
The Zoning Commission last month turn­
doll in Urn dusty box in your attic.
ed down Mr. Odhnm’n bid to build the pro­
And then you realise aomething. He ject on the vacant land across from the
couldn't have won. He had risked his neck Memorial Stadium. The action followed
for an unattainable dream, and now the angry protest! against putting a "colored
dream is gone and he is yesterday's boxing section in the middle of the white section o f
wonder. Tomorrow he will go home, maybe Sanford.”
Location o f the project on the site would
hack to the folka on the farm, and he will
hang up his gloves and look at his bruised have extended the east eud o f the Negro
section of Georgetown. Some of the most
face, and aay ruefully: "If only—.”
Ho couldn't have won. You know that aa expensive homes in Sanford are in the white
you size up the champ, confident, polished, Mayfair district six blocks away.
Several other possible sites ware discusunflinching, his gloves gleaming like cold
steel. The kid had bnltled a robot, a fighting awl, including land belonging to the Atlan­
machine, nnd he had been whipped from the tic Coast Lina Railroad, but City Manager
Warren Knowles said that the A. C. L. ia JAMES MARLOW
beginning.
Tonight, at City Hall, an Important iasus acquiring land and will not sell under any
will be up agnlnet the ropes and another dreumatances.
Kegardcd with most favor w h s a 90acre tract belonging to the American Fruit
The Son ford Herald
WASHINGTON tm-Any lime In
Growers, located at the end of west 13th St.,
recent years this country probably
across from Crooma Academy in the Golds­ rould have crushed Russia In a
boro district. This site will be further discus­ preventive war Intended to destroy
sed tonight and may prove to be tha answer the Communists before they were
strong enough to attack the United
to the situation.
States.
The need is undoubtedly great for a Ne­
That the war wasn't made, while
gro subdivision meeting tha requirements of uni country had atomic superiorF. H. A. financing. As Mr. Odham hsa lly, was avidence the United Stalea
pointed out: "There are many Negro citi­ Intended to try to sweat it out
with the Russians In (he hope war
zens of Sanford.who arc financially able to might never be necessary.
own a home on V. A. or F- II. A. terms, but
This may have been a fatal pol­
they are unable to find land acceptable to icy and in (he end prove the un­
these agencies except In a few rare in- doing ol tho United Slates. No one
can be sure tbc Russians, once
its aces.”
they're sufficiently armed, won't
Good housing Is a principal sign of • make a sudden overpowering atcommunity’s well-being- Visitors view It ss '■rk on thil country.
Sir Winston Churchill yesterday,
s token of what the city has to offer and,
while saying the United Slain*
h t lm M b e
in
soma
cases,
basa
their
decisions
to
sett!*
wfclrti to Fttlitol i
vast superiority over Ruisio
here entirely on this one factor. Sanford ia holds
•n hydrogen bombs right now, pre­
growing rapidly and its housing facilities dicted Russia may have enough of
'.hem tn two to four year* to try
Thursday, Mar. 9,1956 must grow at an equal |&gt;ac«.
Ilia Negro housing Issue is being consid­ an attack oa North America.
The aweallng-lt-oot policy ll
ered none too soon, Perhaps, aa so me main­
TODAY’S BIBLE VKBSB
therefore one of the obvious Incal­
Mine eyas have seen thy salvation,— tain, It ahoiltd have been taken up ten years culable* of history. Bo wart soma
Luka 2:50. Right and truth gradually ago. But the iwint to note ia that action la recent major decisions whose out­
emerge. Wa should be active In all good at last near on what Is apparently one of the come couldn't be predicted either:
defense of Korea, Berlin airlift,
ally’s dominant needs.
works and patient too.

NEW YuRK 1ft—A rush to buy—
something moat industries haven't
seen for several months—ia devel­
oping today in a number of Indus­
trial cum modltles.
Users of copper were among the
first to put on the pressure. Now
steal makers report a rush for
some of Uieir products. Bo do lha
ayntlietie lubber planta, still gov­
ernment owned. And the prospect
for another big spurt in home
building this spring Is bringing
orders for lumber mills and for
makari of noma appliances.
Eseept perbape for eopper, there
Is no real shortage as in lha aarly
postwar years The urge to order,
which apparently struck ■ number
of purchasing agents at once, ap
pears to item In part from fears
labor troubles may meaa work
stoppage* late in the spring.
But producers also cite another
reason:
Hand-to-mouth buying policies,
common from mid-lMJ on, brought
down inventories, ai planned. The

iry started ordering metal for Iti
big production race two month!
ahead of normal—itretched the
time between ordering and receiv­
ing delivery. Companiee which had
been jperaling happily on a raw
material eupply sufficient for 30
jr 43 day* production, luddcnly
found thli leeway too small for
comfort
Thii teems to be especially true
.n the case of moit metala. Price
rises in Irilf ore and iteel scrap,
and upcoming labor negotiations,
also are Interpreted by aome iteel
users as meaning higher prieea
ahead
A rush to stock up on synthetic
lubber ia reported by government
agencies preparing to close lha
sale of the plants to private indus­
try—barring congressional disaporoval.
Some of the rush ii believed
eased on fears that prices may
rise under the new ownerahlps, or
that the companies buying the
plant* might abiorb most of the
output for themselves.
Tba home-building boom—the
vigor of which ha* surprised many
observers—seems set for atill an­
other spurt with tba coming of open

weather

foundation
MUSIC FROM TTHHE GRAVE
KNOXVILLE. TINN. (UW loohn OaMarcui was Mat b&gt; the
Knoxville Utilities Board to tha

New Orev cemetery to find a wa.
•cr leak Placing his sensitive am­
plifier among the tombstone, he
nicked up not the gurgle of escap­
ing water but music, music, mus­
ic.
Ghostly hcpcatsT No, said De*
Marcus lusl a freak of radio ro•rptinn Bu* he added:
'T il tell you this, if the front ol
one of thosu tombstones bad light- %
ed up with a television picture,
Fd nave been long gone."
PITCHING MACHINE
FOR PHILLIES
PHILADELPHIA «*• The
Phiilles wiil face a pitching machine this iprin during training at
Clearwater Fla. Mayo Smith, new
Phillie manager, bellevei the ma­
chines are e big help especially In
'caching bunts. “ They aave the
•rms of «i&gt; regular pitchers, too,"
claim* Smith.

Evidence Points To U. S. Hopes
But eves tf they were afraid to
start a hydro*** war, for fear of
what might happen to them In re­
turn, the Russians might tradei m
tha whole world’s fear of inch a

M. G. HODGES

Wife

They might do tt by trying to
pressure their neighbors Into submillion since the Weit would have
to be careful about starting any
defensive action which might load
to hydrogen war.
Any one of these possibilities la
a guess but the Western states­
men, Including Churchill, are ia
exactly the aame position xa any
man In tha street: they can only
wonder what Russia will do when
she baa the power and meantime
atay prepared.
Rut Churchill's statements about
Rusala's present inferiority In hy­
drogen weapons goes far to explain
why the Communists have been
careful so far not to begin an ag­
gression which might bring a hy­
drogen rain on their haadi.

W ELL8
PAOLA

aid la Greece and Turkey.
There are elleraitlea hope* la
let beside the dismal proapeettho

HAL BOYLE

BigrFortune,U«s In .Competition
Anybody cep

R tt ■ 1 1a a e may aprlng on tha
United Stalea when they are able;
1. That tha Rueilan leadership
may be civilised enough not la
make war or force one.
I. That the two glanla, ones
they’re fairly equal in their ability
:« annihilate eech other—perhaps
ooth at the iwne time—end most
if mankind too, will then be con­
tent not to fight but live aid* by
aide.
•
Churchill expressed some belief
m hope No 2, but not too vigor­
ously, when he said: "A curious
paradox ha* omorged. After a ecr'ain point has been passed It may
be said that the worn things get,
the better."
Churchill did aay he didn't think
the Russian* cold win a hydro­
gen war if Ihev started one—but
he didn’t predict any winner in
such a struggle—since Use West,
because of Its head atari on bombs,

ajsd the real market still Uei him doing half the cooking.”

S &amp; 1?
Swing "**

B,Ch,1W* W|W hl" ki»d
** sliaandl- ian UM (hf broilers to cooh their

Bngiteia himself w u amtiod al
ret to learn from surveys that
•a brollara had won aa much faor with husbands ai with wives.
‘ ‘But lt la easy la a** why ” he
ild. "Man hats to band down,
hat'a on* reason they don't like
oval. Also thay waat a foolproof
« * • » * * !* » &amp;
,
. „ .
'Bgt they do like to cook, If It
n't toe much trouble and they
J* I kava a man to efoan up

bara luraed
out to be another surprise market,
” A bachelor now doesn't have to
depend on hia euhlnga-ho can lavitw hi* girl to come up and see
hit ahleb kebab,” said Bragststo
smiling. "Ha ran broil htr a meal
m the living room wbUo aUtiag oa
tho sofa holding bar band*—that Is,
U ha can keep nla mind oa 1L After
*u, the way to a glrl’a haart Is
through htr #tomae£"

NEW CF.I.EBV COTTEB
BY RUN CENTER MICH. ( * - —
lha Lubber Brothers— Garrett,
Jay and Bernard - get tired of
the tedious Job of cutting celery,
and invented what they claim la
the first machine-operated celery
picker They aaed to harvest threequarters of an acre a day from
their 70 acres af celery. Now, Jay
says, they can cover Jto acres dal­
ly.
Tha Garretl machlaa shear* tha
celery pleats with two hydraulical­
ly operated V-shaped cutting blad­
es. Tha forward motion of the ma­
chine forces tha salary ap Into a
chute. Conveyo n carry tha plant*
lo workers who trim ezeeas foliage.
The celery then Is thrown to an-

U S*

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W'Wt|F

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HOAD

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D RILLED -

PUMPS
PHONE TOO

�SojciaL fcvsw iA.

Miss Cameron
Tells O f Plans
Mist Jacqueline Cameron today
revealed the final plant for her
wedding to take place at the All
Soul’a Catholic Church Saturday
afternoon at 5:30 o'clock. Father
Richard Lyons will perform, tha
ceremony which will unite in mar­
riage o f William John Sullivan Jr.
son o f Mr. and Mr*.
W.
J.
Sullivan of Decatur, Ga.. to (he
bride-elect, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John McLean Carnet on.
Misa Martha Ann Cantrion, sis­
ter o f the bride, will he her only
attendant. The
groom's father
will serve as best man, while
Robert McLfllan. and Edwin Class
o f Atlanta and Kirby Kite Jr., of
Sanford will act as usher*. Mrs.
F. E. Rountillat, soloist and or­
ganist, wilt render the tiaditioual
music.
Following the wedding a recep­
tion will be held at thr Wninan'i
Club, All friends of the couple
are cordially invited.

Mrs* Harper Talks
On Church Mission
Affairs In India

VIOLINIST TOSSY 8PIVAKOV8KY will be presented by
(X the Florida Symphony Orchestra in concert i at 8:30 p.m. to­
day at the Municipal Auditorium In Orlando and at 8:30 p.m.
tomorrow at Peabody Auditorium In Daytona Beach.

World Prayer Day
Observed By Group
A t Lake Mary

fisA &amp; o n a h

MI*s Retly Billhlmer 1* Intern­
ing in the first grade o f Stephen
Foster School in Gainesville. This
The World Day of Prayer wai is a new school with the latest
observed at the Presbyterian typo o f equipment.

Church In Lake Mary, Friday
evening, with the women of the
three charehea taking part.
The program, prepared by the
United Church Women was used.
The theme "Abide In Ma", was
divided into aectiona dealing with
"Adoration,** '•Meditation". "Penltenet", "Tbankegtving" and "In­
tercession", with a reader for avch
portion, who led the congregation
in the responsive service. Readers
were Mrs- Eugene Seaman, Mrs.
Frank Evans. Mr*.' H. M. Coch­
ran, Mrs. Robert Gelgtr, Mrs.
Dempsey s Hamilton, Mrs. F. L.
Mason, Mra. William Class, Mrs,
Glenn Cochran, and Mrs. R. W.
Keogh. Making individual prayers
were M n. Walter !. Piper. Mrs.
L- A. Peterson and Mrs. George
X. Patterson and Bra. Ted Brook­
lyn aeng a aolo.
Mra. L» E. Lewis was the guest
speaker. She described graphi­
cally the world struggle of Christ­
ianity versus Communism and de­
clared that "the truth, which shall
make ell peoples y et, la Uie wea­
pon we must use against all op­
position. She showed how the old
idea of Missions must be Broaden­
ed. The people who do nqt know
God muit be taught, spiritually,
menially end physically. They
must be taught to read in their
own language and then they must
be furnished literature that con­
tains the truth. The final step will
be their spiritual training. In
other words, Christian education
is the answer."
,
Instead of pessimism, Mr*. Lewla urged all to remombor that it

Mr. and Mra. M. L. Rahorn Sr.
have had as their guests Mrs. Raborn'i father, Dick Holman of
Springfield, Tcnn. and brother-inlaw and sister, Mr, and Mrs. Har­
per G, Smith o f Tallahassee; also
her brother and sister-in-law Mr.
and Mt*. Charles Holman of
Springfield, who havi been spend­
ing a vacation in Cuba. They visit­
ed here with Mr. and Mrs. Reborn
yesterday cnroulc to thrir home
in Springfield. Dick Holman re­
turned with them.

is God's task and "all of ua are
God’s tools, each, one of a great
army. With God's help, we can
not fail. As indication of this
world awakening, she spoke of
tha Billy Graham Revival in Lon
don, of the World Council of
Churches and of Ihe example our
own President Elsenhower la set
ting by opening his Cabinet
Meetings with prayer." She urg­
ed us "to redcdlcate our live* to
Christianity, to bear In mind that
prayer la our communication with
God, our Christian Outreach, our
Being One with Him” In con
elusion, Mrs. Lewis summed up
her remarks into three phases;
rededicatJpn of ourselves, rededlcatlon of our prayers and rededication of oqr sharing with others.
In accepting'the offering, which
was taken up by Mrs. Ralph Wil­
liams and Mrs. Marshall Smith.
Mrs. Lewis led the congregation
in a pledge of dedication.
The singing of "Now the Day la
Over" and the benediction
eluded the service.

Coraieaa Ctanhrxyt male* aportawear history1

Sunday the Lake Mary Presby­
terian Church was the scene of one
of the World Affairs Assemblies,
arranged by the Synod of Florida.
The speaker at (hr morning scr
vice was Mrs. Arthur E. Harper,
who, with hrr husband, spent 4(1
years in India. She began her re
mark* with the statement that a
new day has come In (lie mission
of the church, describing Ihe new,
worldwide fellowship of thr church,
which is combating the tensions
and anxieties of the world situa­
tion. She reminded her hearers
lhat every Christian is a Mission
ary and that all arc partner* with
the missionaries.
She divided Ihcir .scar* of work
into two parts, the 33 years before
India had independence and the
seven y ea n aince, and pointed
out the changes. In the years be­
fore independence, the missionar­
ies had shared the sorrow and the
hunger and Ihe outeastc station
of the Untouchables This caste has
now been outlawed and all men
are equal before (lie law. Mrs.
Harper said there hod been four
definite changes In the seven years.
The climate of opinion about the
Christian religion has changed.
Formerly, il was looked upon as
the religion of the ronqueror,
against whom they were rebelling.
Now it Is acknowledged and thou­
sands are hungry for Christianity.
There has been a change in the
altitude of peopla In the villages.
The Moga Training School, which
the Harpers founded and whose
enlightened curiculum and project
method has been officially adopt­
ed by the Indian government, was
the first school in Asia to train
villagers for their village life.
It is now the accepted pattern.
The third change lies in the fact
that India has become a demo­
cracy and from that stems, In
part the fourth change which is the
growth and prestige of the Christ­
ian Church. It Is one of the four
religions guaranteed by the na­
tional constitution. One In every
thirty six is Christian and most of
them are Prostestant, with some

Calendar

[PTay Presented
By SHS Students
Mr*. At P-TA Session

First Presbyterian Church,
C. W, Johnson, Chairman,
will
meet with Mrs. John A, Button,
I50U Palmetto Ave., Mrs. Henry
D'Amico and Mrs. D.' P. Lanier
co-hostesses.
The First Baptist Sunbeam*
will meet at the church at 3:30
p. rn.
Circle* of the Fir*t Methodist
Church will meet a* follows: Cir­
cle 1 at McKinley Hall, 3 p.m.,
with Mrs. Clyde Ramsey and Mrs.
l.ioa Stall: Circle 2 with Mr*. A.
F. Collum. 200 \V. IB St. at 3 p.m.;
Circle 3 with Mrs. J. C. Meriweth­
er, Celery Ave. at 3 p.m.; Circle 4
with Mr*. J. M. Have*. IIP \V t«
SATURDAY
St. at 3 p.m.; Circle 0 with Mrs.
Thr Centra! Baptist Churrh will John Garrison, 1023 W. 25 St., at
t»’ open all day for prayer and 10 a m.; Circle 7 with Mrs. James
everyone is to assemble for prayer Williamson, 204 W. 18th St. S
at 7:30 p.m. for thr revival.
p.m.
The Pilot Club will hold a rumTUESDAY
magp *a!e on Sanford A v * , be­
The Gleaners Class will have
tween Fourth and Fifth Sheets
from 9 a. m. until ti p. m. Cloth­ a monthly meeting at the First
ing is to he brought to the tftine Baptist Church’* annex at 7:30
Machine Shop on East Second p. m. Mr*. V. P. Hasty will be
Street on or before Friday for hostess.
The Daughter* of Wesley Sun­
mat king,
day School Class of the First
MONDAY
Methodist Church, will meet at
The Executive Board of the 7:30 p. m. in McKinley Hall,
Women o f the Church will meet with Mrs, Robert Cole, Mrs. Ponin the
room o.
of in*
the rir.v
First l](| p unn Mr(&lt; Grace Gregory,
cue session .uum
Presbyterian Church at 10 a. m. Mr,. UllIS0 Know| „, Mr„. j . M.
c Th* tv "c*1 • B" p li,t. Sumjty i McCasklll amt Mrs. M. B. Smith
School
W oiktr*
Council
rncrtm;; a* co-hoslcsses.
hi i
. ... meeting
will begin at 7 p. nt. with a cover­
The Eirit
Raptist
Conrnrd
ed dish supper in the Memorial
Educational Building, The regular Choir will hold tcheat sal at 6:30
meeting will begin at 7:30 p, m. p. nt.
The
First Baptist Intermedi­
Evening Circle No. 2, of the
ate Ambassador* will meet at
7 p. m,
Anna Miller Circle will meet at
the Elks Club at 8 p. nt.
The Unity Class will meet at Ihe
Valdes Hotel at 7:45 p. m. with
The Norman de V. Howard chap* Carolyn Parsons as teacher. The
tei of the United Daughters o f the study book will he continued and
Confederacy met at the home o f Ihe public is invited.
Mi*. M. It. Strickland wllh Mr*.
Cirrlc No. 5 of Ihe Methodist
I,. A. Brumley as ro-hosless on Church will meet at thr home of
Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock.
Mr*. L. A. Anderson, 2017 Hibi­
The president, Mrs, Zeh. Ratliff scus CL, at 10 a. m.
led the group In repeating the
R. W. A. circle of Ihe First
Lord’s Prayrr. The member* gave- Christian Church will meet at
the pledge to the Amerlran flag
Circle* of the F'irst Methodist
anil then the salute to the Con­ Churrh will tnerl as follow*« Cir­
federate flag with Mrs, A. K. cle 8 with Mrs. Waller Clapp,
Rosseter offering the devotional. 2412 Decott* Ave. at 8 p.m.; Cir­
Mis. B. L. I’rrkins read the cle !&gt; with Mis. J. M. Blanton, 402
minutes of thr previous meeting W. 20 St., at 0:30 a.m.
and Mr*. J. M. tlayes gave the
The Horticulture Chalrmrn of
treasurer's irport. Mr*. F. K. the Sanford Gardrn Clot* will
Rountillat presented an interest­ meet at tha home o f Mrs. II.
ing paper on the life of Sydney James Gut 1924 Palmetto Ave. at
Lanlf r.
if) a.m.
Refreshments were served to 17
WEDNESDAY
member* and visitors.
The First Baptist Carol Choir
will hold rehearsal at 3:30 p.m.
The First Baptist Prayer MeetThe Sanford Business and Pro­
fessions! Woman’s Club held its
board meeting Feh. 28 at the home
of. Mrs O. T. Pearson at 2543
South Palmetto Ave. at &gt; p. m.
Members present were Mr*. O
T. Pearson, Atlas Gene Nunnelly,
presidenl, Miss Myrtle Wilson.
Mrs. E. B. Carter. Mrs. E. J.
Ftnuth, Mrs. I. I. IVyor. Mrs. R
W Graham, and Mra. Harold II
Kaslner.

FRIDAY

The Duplicate Bridge Club will
meet at the Yacht Club with seat
mg to start at 745 p. m and play
&lt;o begin at 8 o'clock.
Tli- Tr.i incekcr's C lan a n d
Daughter’s of Wesley Class wip
sponsor the attendance at lit
evangelistic services at tha First
Methodist Churh at 7:30 p. m
with Dr. P M. Boyd as speaker
Circle No. Four of the Firs'
Baptist Church ti in rharge or the
program at 2 p. m. for tits Week
of Praver.
Thr WMU of thr Crntral Bap­
tist Church will hold a season of
prayer at 7:30 p.m.

Strickland Home
Scene Of Meeting

BPW Club Meets

Catholic and Eastern Catholics.
India asks that we be their par
Inrvs until all India is Christian
Verily, a new day has come and
a great opportunity which we
Chrlatiani must not neglect.

tttt: S A v r n n n ttetiat,n
Thurs. Mar. 3, 1953
Pane 3

Miss Hoolehan

Mrs. Ella Nila Hearne, Gaines­
ville, is soloist.
A reception will follow at tha
Final wedding plins are being Woman’s Club No invitation* urn
announced for tile wedding of being sent but ail friends are in­
Mi** Hetty Rose Hoolehan, daugh­ vited to attend.
ter o f Mr. and Mrs. J. R. lloolehan, to Milton Slubh*. Gainesville,
ton of Mr. and Mrs.
Walter
Stubbs. •
The cot oniony will ho perform­
ed Sunday, March 6. at the F'irst
Mr. snd Mr*. R. A. F.lliott of
Methodist Church at 3:30 p. m Jacksonville are the proud parent*
with the Rev. Milton H. Wyatt o( a B lh fi n*. son, Ralph Atden
officiating.
Elliot H. born Fob. 28 in JackMias Betty Sue Alderman of jonville. Mrs. F.lliott Is the former
l-ako City will he the only at­ Mis* I.ouise Benton, daughter of
tendant of the hride. Joe Good Mr. sad Mrs. J. I- Benton, o f
of Gainesville will act as best Sanford.
man ami ushers are Charles Dav­
is, Valdosta, tia., and Jack McGuinly of McRae, Ga.
Mra, Albert Hickson, organist,
will render the nuptial music and

To W ed Sunday

The Srminle High School P-TA
met in Ihe High School Tuesday
at 8 p m. for its regular meeting.
Before the session began several
selections were played on the
piano by Miss Dana Rankin.
Mr*. J. B. St. John, president,
called Ihe meeting to ordrr after
which Mrs. W. B Wray introduced
the east of "The Blue Teapot",
a one-act play, under Ihe direc­
tion of Mrs. Bnvd Coleman They
were Nancy Cushing. Kathleen
Bauman. Randall Robbins, and
Bill Kirchhoff. The production,
which laslcsl about 35 minutes,
was enjoyed by everyone and
many comments were nude on the
talent of Iht group.
The devotional was given by
Mis. Erglc and plans were made
for a dant-p to he held sometime
in the future to raise funds for the
J. C. Bennett. Mrs. Claude How­
P-TA and its projects. Room count
ard. Mrs. Richard TrnEyck. Mr*
was won by ihe Freshman Class.
V. M. Greene, Mrs. H S. Brown.
Meeting was adjourned and re­
Mr*. C. R. Dawson, Mrs. A. E
freshments were served in the
• Yes. this is &lt;hc place to
r*!m cr.
Home Economics Room.
bring them! Ample stock*
Mrs W D Simpson, Mrs. John
George, Mrs. R. C. Long, Mr* J
make il possible for us to
N. Gillon. Mrs P. T Piety. Mr*
com pound cvrn the most
II. H. McCaslin, Mrs, Arthur
Moore, Mr« H. C. Ilelrel, Mr*
C o m p l e x p r e s c r ip t io n
K W. Fite, Mrs. M. W. Oner.
promptly, and precisely
Mr*. 'A. B. Wallace, Mr*. L. G
as the d on or directs. Amt j
Hunter, Mrs. R A, King, Mrs
"World Missions” was Ihe theme
Charlrs Morrison, Mrs. L. A.
our prices are uniformly!
of an all-day meeting of Ihe Wo­
Brutnley, Miss Katherine Brown.
(air. Try us next timcl (
men of the Church, which was held
Mrs. C. L, Redding, Mrs. I) C.
in the Educational Building of the
How nrd.
First Presbyterian Church on
Mrs. William Anderson, Mrs
Tuesday lo close the month of
Anthony Bardello, Mr* Victor
prayer and self-drni.il The entire
Brown, Miss I » i Rank*. Miss Nel
program was under tUe direction
la Banks, Mrs. A. G. Mrlnnis,
of Mrs. J. E Nicholas, chairman
Mrs. May B Maxwell. Mrs. F.
of World Missions. Short talks
t). Lirskr, Mrs. Robert Herndon,
were given on mission work In
Mrs Carrie Stnllh, Mrs. Charles
Africa. Bratil, Ecuador, India,
Lawson, Mr*. M
Swankhmis,
Mexico, Formosa, Japan and Ko­
Mrs. W. L. Roche. Mrs R. J. Hoi
rea. An offering was taken which,
ly, Mrs. May Dickens, Mrs, J. K
under the General Assembly plan,
Nlchnlds, Mrs J. L. Wilkinson,
will br used toward sending out
Mrs Bernard Wilke. Mrs Lillie II
new mls-ionaries.
June* of Orlando. Mrs. H. J. l.eh
A delirious luncheon was serv­
ed at noon, with Mrs. Harry man of Winter Park, Mrs. A. C.
rhone IDS
Furl and the Rev, A. ti. Mclnnis, Near P. O.
Woodruff, Mrs. Earle lawcks, Mrs.
lunrhcon guests.
M. W. Osier, Mrs. Carrie Smith,
ami Mrs A. B. Wallace acting av
hostesses.
Those present were Mrs. B C
Srlvidge, Mrs. George Touhy, Mr*.
Henry McLaulln, Mis. F, W. Bend
er, Mrs, lauiistv It. Carman, Mrs.
L. I. Frnxlrr, Miss Zola l\ Davi­
ALWAYS
FIRS!
O U A l l TY l
son. Ml*s Leltle Caldwell, Mr:
Ora Stryker. Mrs. Earle I-nueks,
Mrs. Harry Woodruff, Mr*. Mary
Bidly, Mr* Benjamin Beach, Mrs.

B I RT HS

PRESCRIPTIONS

World Missions
Theme Of Meeting
Of Presbyterians

Faust's Drug Store

Penney’s

ing service will begin at 7:30 p.m,
We continue with the study of tha
book "A Winning Witness."

FRANCISAN
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2 WEEKS ONLY

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X INJURY

[ Baseball Vets Seek
Fountain Of Youth

\

Z" J a ft t r
•* |

iT t. « * Idwtrdi- » . could
J* ” ■ Pert time catcher
With Washington if his throwing
J 2 L P 2 T * &amp; « • » * * Dros.ro
^ f '5 0dler ,nd c “ l&gt; to

tw’K'.s&amp; 'r* •" b*“ »
Qaerge KeU to not ae spry as

/•art

m

Ut abova

joo.

la at

tome he had hero that tow sinca
with the Athletic*. Kali ia

J !!7 L ? t .n )ffl“ M w“l toar»
w5*to hot to Tampa.
. MMtesl, to, hit naly .Ml to
to toBros to 1004. Cavarrotta will
* ■ to M y hto ha still tarries
■ roaM hat Ha hit .m to 71

toopae to manage er
•day.
ex-catcher wha would
tob* to ettot to the game to Andy
Beadatoh, Record boohs say he’a
f*'
Wbo Ut .itf la at atmai
to 1004, win always be romamhm
^ to haring played out the eeaero
WIU a broke* aakla boat for tk#
ealebers on toe Cincinnati rotter,
Maweahet iaat year and at U
ghrtog It another whirl desalte
M
*Bd* 1/ M tantags of

Mederos Scores
Knockout Victory
Over LaSfarza

By GAYLK TALBOT

NEW YORK 101—It is a strange
situation which confronts Leo Duroeber as the manager at the New
York (Hints bJglns cranking up
for another National League cam­
paign out at Phoenix.
The record says Leo has tfcs beat
ball alub ta Ilia game, a team
which ia "sat" at ovary position.
Ha saya ho Intends to play the
•ame lineup that put the boots to
CUvaland to the World Series. Bo
wbal’a Leo gotT Nothing bat prob­
lems.
la has no eChar ahotee than to
_ again with a club which did an
amatlng Job aI falling on Its face
the plate tost year—except for
i regulars and one pinch Utter.
The ehampa badly seed some plas­
ma at toe dish, bat non# la ta
sight
Outfielder Monte Irvin’s average
fell off from .8M ta 10U to JB3
last season. First baseman Whiter
bookman plunged trpm .me to
0611 second baseman Davey Wil­
liams from r n to JH ; third base
man Hank Thompson from J0I to
J U ; shortstop Alvin Dark from
JM M JH ; catcher Was Waatrum
from JM ta an apmalHag .UT.
was right fielder Doa Mueller.
M WUUo Maya had not returned
Worn too Army ta Mast Ma grant
-040. and Dusty Bodes had i
driven across M runs, mainly as a
pinch batter, one aan only surmise
the Qlanla would hero wound up
■bout sixth.

Philadelphia last year bat be
Oto to Tucson, Eddla Joort and to
bit JM Westlake batted only JH
Weatlaha toted mimbarad to M games with Cleveland. He’a
tolUty toayro,. Joo£ %
to

Mm, get to only II ga

W A TC H T H IS
SPA CE
roe

•r

listin g s

GOOD C U M

dud

ran

W ELSH T I M

OUTgrANptHG
t PERFORMAHCt

i

YORK

Sh

WHO A T 2 /
/ s one o h
TUB UP-ANP’ CCM/NQ
YOUNG JO C K EY S —
RECBNTLY JO IN ED

U

Thme'a no telling how much
longer Knot Slaughter, fid Gordon
mid Jim XonaUaty wttt be around.
Bros will be M in April rod hid
JM mark lar M games didn't help
DM Yankees. Gordon hit J M ta
Ut game* tor Pittsburgh hut at
M be Isn't getting any tester. And
Cmutoity, star af tea W PhDalto, to with toe Yankee* and to.

• iS i.M *•* k,|
to ll

m
HtHTUCHY

WILSON’S SLICED

d erby

CORN
KING

OH Hi* Bar

Tr Y •
RO PE

Hir s t gray
eyen k

A. D. Hammond rolled the top In­
dividual 0 gam* series mark ot |
558.

In the learn divisions, tha fourth
running Allay Cats walked oil with
both high team aeries and single
laurels by scoring 0750 and Ml
raspec lively.

T r a c a r a ll*

4 R scrip t
S nid rllnrs

S SS

1.1 0

rtao an
S i! ii's
1,10

MARION TAKER
NUMBER FOUR
CHICAGO (uru - White Sox unllorm with the number four on
back la coming out of retirement.
II waa Iaat worn in 1049 by Luka I
Appling. Now It will be worn by]
new manager Marty Marlon.

Titusville Tides
TOD A T

■ Slab

IB.

TOMMUSOW

S88
— *
a S S l"

69

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Lb.

COPELAND
SMOKED
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WILSON’S
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MAXWELL HOUSE

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Legal Notice
in thm cozniT e r tism r e r m
j id d r . BMMinoi.R c o c n t t ,
STATK o r KLOHIDA,
in pnooATR.

IN RK TilK RKTATR O rt
OKHTIE A. WILSON
DacssaoS.
w
n n A i. n o n ce :
Malle* I# ht-rabp elvan lhat th*
unilrrilenad will, on lb* Itlh ear
of March, A. D. t ill, prerant tu
lha Ilnnnrabls County Judea a t
Kam.nola Counts. Florida, her (Inal
ralura, account and vouchors, aa
Kxaculrla of tho Btlala of O.rlla
A. Wilton, daconrad, and at aald
lima, than and thara, maka appli­
cation ta tha said Judea tor a Final
■rtllrmml of bar ad mini aIrat Ion of
aald salats, and for an ordsr dlscharelne har aa auoh Admlnlatra-

Irtx.

Dalad Hite lha 14th dap at Fakraary, A. U. m i
AellCI
Luctttr
r tiltr
R itcuirli ad tha
V .lata af flcrtl* A.
win
.yllaon. Dacaaaad.
R. W. War*. Attara*r

fo r R ia c u lr la .
W o u d ru ff-P a rk la e
■ aa ford. Florida

WITH
FLAVOR SWEET

OLEOMARGARINE!
EVAPORATED

MILK
TEXlZE

aix
r a r n r r o a i a x iT V m .
n o n e r a v i n d c i . a iw b o r d r .
H A N D e A 44AINBT ■ AID KOTATMl
T oy and aaeh of you a r * haraby
notified and roqulrad lo praaanl
an y claim * and d tm s a d s w h ich you,
or a lth rr o f yon, m ay b a r s s e a l n it
to e
a a U ta ot
IB M
T R l K&gt;RD
(lO O nW IN . dacaaaad, 1s t * or m id
C ou n ty, So the C ou n ty J u d e s a t
earaln ol* C ou n ty, rio rld a . a t hta
o fflc a la (ba court houaa a f aald
0 »»n«F «t OoBford, r io r ld a . w ith la
s ig h t calen d a r m aatha from th e
U aia o f the fir s t p abllcatloa o f th is
aotlc*. K arh claim o r dem and a b a ll
ha In w r ltla e . s a d sh a ll s ta te th e
■ Jsfe
/ “ tasnoa end post e fflo e
addraaa a f tb a claim ant, e n d sh a ll he
alm an t, hta a g e n t
my aurh c laim ay
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Tol

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FRESHLY GROUND

De t e r m in e .

vJON THE G EO RG E

WOOLF MEMORIAL
AWARD

QuinIala (4-71 007M
i s V b i t h a s m — * / ia ll.S t
Officer* and director* ad l ~ a C a lls * Oat
l l a r m n n y T-------aaoh
Lake-Ora nga Baseball League will
meat at I p m. Tueeday, March
I, to toe Florida Power Lounge,
Buotta.

Leagoo (day wM gst under way
tor too IIM season an Monday
April U, with home games at
Mount Dora, RnsMa and Tavares.
Mrtiripattag stab
Laaabnrg, Mount

ro u n d

"m
M

rue e/cLUs/ve comhyh/
OH THOSB M OVE

1 n ab b lln g l^aks
Q u in tals 41-SI IS 4 4*
s ix t h a t c a — a /ia —

f

f Y RAY

*A*
W/NHiNG

I

M

U. S. GOOD WESTERN

a Ho t h er

It was a sensational victory for
Mederos, a 4-1 underdog who had
Photographic Sqaadron 62'a ta­
been outpointed by Bob Satterfield lar-squadron bowling league clos­
of Chicago and Harold Johnson of ed their 1954-55 seison last week
Philadelphia In hi* only two earil- at tha Sanford Bowling Alleys
ar fights with well-known oppo­ after a 60 game meet.
nent*. Otherwise, he wae cam­
The Lofters from VJ-«3'i Opepaigned mostly in Cuba.
ratlnifk Department finished eight
La Starts, once a top-ranking games ahead of tha pack with a
title contender who twice fought 44-16 win-loai record to grab the
Rocky Marciano, took a savage loop rrown. The Lofters cinched
beating before • toeping right to the (he tilla three weeks ago on Feb­
Jew from Mederos knocked him ruary 10th. PhotoRon 62's Main
unconscious at 1:37 of th* fifth. Ha lenanca Department keglers, the
took the 10 count flat on his back. Raiders, were tha closest team
M was the third straight tfe-| to the champions with a 56-14 sea­
faat for th* Bronx battler since son record.
Marciano slopped him In the
The rest of the Meld finished
lllk round of a heavyweight at follows: Kodakars lg third
championship fight ta New York ta place, 35-25; Alley Cats fourth, 341053. In two other fights since then, M; Pencil Pushers fifth, 10-41 and
be was outpointed by Don Cockall I Avmata ta tha cellar with a 15-40
and Charley Narkus.
countB. J. GDI of th* Kodakera fin­
Mederos dropped La It area to
m s knee with a right to the Jaw ished the season with the highest
ia the bell sounded ending tha first seasons average of 109.•High In­
dividual gams honors went to
round.
Early ta tea third, another I. B. Stevens of The Lofters tar
■mashing right by Mederos dump kie 0M effort end The Raiders'
ed La Starxa on tha seat at hlx
pants. He got up quickly but after
be hed taken the mandatory eight
count, Mederos went after Mm
furiously.
r in r r n s r r — ■/«■— t i - » an
(K ir*I W all m a t D a a k lrl
As La SUrsa reeled aimless­ I Mr.
H urlln
IS .is 4 ns a sn
ly away toora him, the Cuban I N r * llrlnclla
S.SO ( In
nerl'a p a l
drove Homo 10 rights to tha head. 7 QAuintals
( 1 - 4) | 1T e t
The game New Yorker took them s s u - o x n WAI'W— •/!■ — T im a SI.S
( l n a &gt;4 Hair D alit ItaaM a)
all end the end of tha round saw
llartnnny l*rak S.IS t IS l.in
him allll on Ms feet end Mederos II Itnti'a
D a n rsr
4. 4* 4.in
■ imnia Han
4 in
arm weary irom throwing h
Q u ln lels i a -11 014.44
punches.
Da Hr IhHihlr
) | | | SS
La Starxa rallied beautifully to TIIIRII RACM —*/ia— TIm S3.I
Aadjr
S.4I 4 SS S.an
hold his owe to toe fourth but to 7a Mr
Paaca P a st
I II l l &lt;
the fifth Mederos uailed him with 1 B ta ra lla
S.I0
Q uintals 47- 1 ) I II .I S
five consecutive rights, the Iaat ana KOI
NTH * * » '■ — ■/&gt;■— Tiara M l
dropping him tar tha oount
7 I'ro tae sa
14,SS 11 SS ISA
7.so 4 (n
Moderns weighed 10614, La |I n ia t r y Xklae
1 Qamax
■tana IN.
Q u intals ( 1- 7) A I M
PIKTW H A C K — ■ /!•— 1nata at,4
Snob ar
JS.4S | SS 1.40
1 Tlluliby
un ibltne Q urba
7.4* Me

Baseball League
Officials Slate
EusHs Meeting
&lt;

£•

* *ln Our Meat Dept. ★ ★

Lofters Take
Inter-Squadron
Bowling Crown

'

BUCKS

SP EC IA LS GO O D TH R U SA T. M ARCH 5th

GAINESVILLE — Thirty-two of Florida's top high school bas­
ketball teams will be ia action on Wednesday and Thursday (March 0|
and 10) in the opening rounds of the 1055 Slate Basketball Tourna­
ment.
The championships, held annually In Florida Gymnasium, climax |
the high achool basketball seasons j
'-------in the AA, A, B, and C divisions.
All afternoon sessions begin at
3:00 p.m., with evening sessions
starting at 7:30 p.m.
Opening round gamra are as fol­
lows:
Wednesday— 0:00 p.m., Tate vs.
Beebreete (A), and Sopchoppy vs.
Trenton (C ); 4:16 p.m., P. K.
Yonge vn. Leesburg (A ), and Wewahitchka vs. Oviedo ( C ) 7:30
MIAMI, Fla. W— Julio Mcderoi,
p.m., Miami Senior vs. Imndnn an unheralded Cuban Negro whe
(A A ), and Chattahoochre vs. had flunked his two previous tests
OL.P.M. (B ); 8:45 p.m., Pensa­ ■gainst American "name" fight­
cola vs. Hillsborough (A A ), and ers, moved strongly into tha heavy,
Tltusvllla vs. Callahan (B ).
weight picture today after a
Thursday—8:00 p.m., Ft. Imud- smashing knockout victory over
enisle vs. St Petersburg (A A ), Roland LaStarza.
and Wllliston vs. Mayo (B ); 4:16
The powerful Medians gave La­
p.m., Robert E. Lee vs. Miami Edi­ Starza the worst healing of his
son (A A ), and Baker va. B8. Pet­ career before knocking the New
er A Paul (B ); 7:30 p.m., Fletcher Yorker unconscious with a boom
vs Auhurndale (A ), and Paxton Ing right to the Jaw in the fifth
vs. Hilliard (C|; 8:46 p.m., North round of ■ scheduled 10-rounder
Miami va. Wlmauma (A ), and La- Wednesday night at Miami Sta­
Bells vs. We'iredale.
dium.

Sports
Roundup

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r # nrwwV A

Players Trying
State Cage Tourney
To Get Kinks Out
Of Aging Muscles To Open Wednesday
By PRANK ECK
DATTONA BEACH. Pla.— If
&lt;he Fountain of Youth Ponca rfe
I-*os laid he discovered ia St.
Augustine actually existed we
wouldn't haye so many baseball
players worrying.
It’a the same every spring The
veteran players feci (hat maybe
they ean get the kinks out of aging
muscles ahd give the majors one
last fling.
• Hie Baltimore Orioles— now
Oiere’a a spring h ird- have a
■umber of players who might make
good two-platoon men In Manager
Pan! Richards’ setup
Three 35-year-oMa are here hop
tag to play some part of third
base. They are Johnny Pesky,
Blllf Cot and Vern Stephens.
Pesky, who broke in with Boston
to 1MI, played only M games In
1W4. Cox was In 77 and Stephens
hit MS in tot games.
Also hoping to help the Birds
ta relief pltehing la Alpha Brazle
» e former Cardinal star who was
released by Eddie Stanky. Brasle,
40. had a 5 4 record for 84 Innings.
F y t j f R « «t M wanta to stick
With BtlUmort.
However, these Orioles are not
the only ones facing the end of a
tang playing career. Out In Phoenix
Pitcher Larry Jansen is trying for
* *P°t with the Giants, A winner
,n ,M1- C o«h Jansen
win be 35 In July.
At Yero Beach. Joe Black.
Brooklyn's 1951 relief hero with
•
record and many games
aavm , m bktk at 31 from a sojourn
With Montreal where he had a 15M record and four shutouts.
Tommy Byrne, with a 10-10 re•prdI at Seattle, Is back with the
Taakeea with whom be won 15
{■nee both to 1B4B and '00. He's

*

THERE'S STILL -TIME
TO START SA V IN G

DRESSING

•-M

LUCKT BOCK

B is

EACH JAR

U

• 4.*s

&gt;»A

ROMAN

SFR ■
'
CLfANSFR
BLEACH

1

J

aoMx
H SAU

E-Z
Starch

arr u n

WARDS
WAX PAPERO Ei
TIP TOP BREAD I S P». iu n "

�W A N T AD
RATES

v- rras

■

ARTICLES FOR SALE

VENETIAN BUNDS
(Nationally Adv
Rotla-lleadi
Manufactured in Sanford

* 7 * 6 f tf c a l R t U if

|SAMPLE JUNE AD

I.

Real Estate — Gen. Insurance Seminole Venetian Blind O .
I GET extra cash (or articles you 201 Edwards' Rldg Ph. IS or 2474 620 Wesi 3rd St
Phone 2*5
no longer use Plica tour ad to J R. Alexander
T. M Wringer Used furniture, apptlaneen, tools,
day Phone 'OH.
Reg Reel Estate Brokers
etc Bought—sold. Larry'c Mart.
U1 East 1st St Phona MSI
I tea-lint ad. aueb at the one above
|(T only Me par day on our low 5
S .
f£m/ty ( sa y s s| U S E D WASHING MACHINE—
v i w iu ; . p i a u . w
I day earned rataI cv
economy.plan.
« ct
Good condition. Only $40.00. See
r day (or I days and Me (or Phone 1129 A B Petrrson,Broker
Al Lyon at Sanford Electric Co
Associate*
A. B Peterson Jr..
day.
116 .Magnolia Ave.
P. J Chcsterson. Albert N FiUa
A llttla ipaet Uke this will Ret
Garfield WlUetU. John UeUcb
RESTONIC
our message before our more
Triple Cushion Mattress
ian 10.000 readers Tall ‘am to Robert A. Williams, Realtov
M Made Smooth to Soot*#*’
__________ Raymond E. Luodqaisl, Aaeecls day I Pnone Mil.
Furniture Center
The abota 4-llnt ad can ba run Phone 1673 Atlantic Bank Bldg IM West 1st St
Phone 1425
fiil! days for only $2.40, I days
USED TRACTORS
r only It JO and one day (or Tic MODERN New Home with 10
acres bearing gruve. Easy terms.
Britt rrsetnr Co.
tiy. Sell. Rant, Hire with want
Phone 1393-J.
Hiway 17 /2 South
Phooe Ml
ads. Uta busiest salesman to
town. Put one to work far you
PAINT ....................... I2M gal.
Phone MU Wo will be glad to
25 lb. Roasters
$2 49 ea.
charge IL
__________ W. (llKTRimS
4 for 1.00
T. w. HERO Roy'* Undershirts
ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS
INI Park Aveaue
Pbope 27
For only 13.00 tba abota S-Uae ad
310 Saniurd Ave.
Phone 1321
is oa the lob (or you or I full
WE Need Your Listings—
WESTINGHOUSE LAUNDROMAT
day* Only *2 25 keeps It working
L. M. I’ ASSONS REALTY
Only $50.00
far you (or &gt; days l day U only
at 5 Points. Jets. 419 A IT-92.
Sanford Electric Cn.
00c.
___________
114 Magnolia Ave.
Call us about our business ratna
Monthly Payments $44.00
CALL
10M-J
for Porch Jalousieii.
Only
Two
attractive
two
Bedroom
te b e Want Ad Department la
Contract or hour. Free eatl
homes completed, ready to
^re i___from
0:50
a
m.
until
5:50
p
a_ a__Aononl day
Gel. eicepi Sat
muve in. Beautiful Kitchens and
mates.
ST ea'cb"business
Baths with Showers. Automatic
irday afternoon. Deadline foi
QUAKER Circulating Heaters
water heaters, Utility room.
veek-day Insertions is 2:00 p in
$59 95 up
Carpurtc, Aluminum Windows.
the dsy preceding publication
Vinyl
Tile
Floor'
In
kitchens
and
H. B. POPE CO„ INC.
Any ads coming In .later than
baths.
Only
$350
down.
They
g ;00 a. m will be published under
roo Heath Park Ave. Phone I4ie
are tha best values in small
,ata To Classify.
Too Lata
homes
that
wo
have
offered.
n r^uenva
w no
w
USED Refrigerator. II Runs—and
requested to
Adv.. TearsI iart
Sec these home today al
ant‘ Ad Department
Jm
refrigerator YOURS For Only
Wai
*
2515
Princeton
Ave
$50.00
mediately
of
any
errora
le
their
edlItaly i
LOWELL E. OZIER
ada, ai ITia Sanford Herald will be
Sanford Electric Co.
f c “ onfy 'wVToeoirrec'
Builder - Phone 1351
respond!
Ill Magnolia Ave.
Custom Homes and Florida
insertion
—
Factory to You —
Builder
low
coal
home*
W
If* So Eaay
Aluminum
T o PIacs A Want Ad
A SENSATION ON FRENCH AVE.
Venetian (Hinds
Juat Call 1821 and aak for 4 large bed rooms, living room,
dining room, finest hard wood Enclosed bead Sag-proof bottom
tha Want Ad department
rail with placUc ends Plastic ot
floors, bath, hollow tile construc­
Sanford Herald
rayon tope* Cotton or nylon
tion. walking distance tn clock.
cord*.
Owner was here says sell at
—i
Senkartk Glaan and Paint Co.
once.
Phone 120
RAYMOND M. BALL, REALTOR 112114 West 2nd S’
WBLAKA APARTMENTS: room*,
S. D Highicyman. Associate
GOOD
Used
O.
E.
Refrigerator.
private baths 114 W First St
104 South Park Ave
Phone I
Excellent Condition. OnlyJ123,on.
fcU RN tB H E D kilcbeoeUe epL
Sea Al Lyon, Sanford Electric
C
A.
W111DDON,
SR.
•siumbertand Court. Hiway tT-M
Co 116 Magnolia Ave.
Reg. Real Estate Broker
South. Phooe MM-W.
IU H Park
Ph INI SMITH CORONA Portable Type

r

S

t

Seminole Realty

'SSJB

7ST

Rollaway and Baby Boda
lay, Week or month—Tal 1425.
--------------ev 1M Went First
Avtloa

kits. ~

SEE Semlaole Realty (or Desir
' “
and Apia. Phone IT

W. H. “BILL” 8TEMPER

.1 Bedroom Home

DOWN

VtUklLEE SPACE- Available. $12
r»r u a l k , children Welcome. ONLY $47 a month Including all
paymenla. This Ia n lovely home
Lake Jfowree TraUer C ow l
including foil Dining Room. Kit­
chen, 3 Bedrooms and spacious
Living Room. Inquire at
pertinent Blow.

k;

_________

___ D cotta gn with kit-

fa
.R oom ApertmaoL KO Park.

Oxier-Weller
Homes Inc.
Mil daye—21I1-M eights
Whether buying or seOlag. M will

p,V°wu *Sa*L ll REALTOR
to Bank BuUdlni
Florida State
ROOM Farnished Apartment
Phase
with bath. SM.OO faquirs 410 ■Cell HaU
Sanford Ave. ______________ _ Open for Inspection, 2422 Holly
Ave. Two Quality Built 3 Bit
DOWNSTAIRS Apartraent.Large.
masonry-eonatructed n o n e i
clean rooau. Sub room. &gt;11 Park
Ceramic Bath, vinyl lile or oak
Ave.
“ oors, screened porch, Carport*
rge lota, Terms, L. J. Rlsner,
Ideal
SO* x « ' STORE Building.
Buildl
ullder, a t o Holly Ave.
“ &lt;
A. Camarfor amalfbusiness. R.
0B, Ovfodo. Phone 4954.
4 Room Pram* House t MU*.
South of Hanford. Kitchen furn­
XARQE APT. on Lake Charm,
.................
ish
ihcd,
Hot water, Space Heater
“ includes I Bedrooms and deo.
nd 2 Large Lot*. Call 1003-J.
Verypea^onable. R. A. Cemeroa,
,»k for Mr. Franklin._________
I

* SHOO!

1667-W after fl p. m.

Realtor—Genrral Insurance
GERTRUDE DINGFELDER,
JALOUSIES A AWNINGS
ASSOCIATE
Life time Glas* and Aluminum
Phone 2122
112 NB Par* Ave.
—Free EMimsIe*—Free Instollal ion—Tel r phone 1425. Furnl
LOVELY
ture Center. 118 W. First HI.

$350

T a w s t . 1! i s j a

wriler. Perfect condition. Phone

SPECIAL

ORLANDO Morning Sentinel, Or Watch found In car. Owner may
nave same by paying for ad al
Undo Evening Star Call Ralph
Herald Office.
Ray. M65J
Special — TV and Radio
FOUND- Keys with Initials D.
S ervice and He pal re
E. F. Call at Sweeney’s.
RCA Motorola Sales snd Service
LOST—Tan and White Chihuahua
Geite’a T ex aco Service
6 months old. Tan collar.
I lie Ssnford Ave.
Phrie* ISM
Child* pel. REWARD. 516 West
DOMESTIC SEWING MAOTL4ES
1st St.
Sales • Rental* Service
GARRITT8
PIIONE 1422
22—ELECTRICAL SERVICES—22

INCOME TAX

Randall Electric l a

Tax Return* prep*n't! while YOU liendli and Crostoy ApptUnee*
wall. Room 2Ut&gt; above B. L.
Youngston. KttchenPerkins, First St. Phone MM. Ktri'inral
en-&gt;trartlna »nd ren*'*112 Magnolia Ave. Phone IIS
SWAIN’S BATTERY SERVICE
0 Battery • Generator • Starter
Road service, l’ hone SIT. 402
GORMLY INC
E. 2nd St.
“ Your Hot Point Dealrr”
Ph. 776
HALL’S GARAGE for general Auto 216 Palmetto Axe.
Hanford Electric Co.
repairing Also Wrecker Service
Phene 442
402 Celery Ph 1090-M - laaa-K Ill Magnolia Ave.
SEE Your General Electric dealer
Nights
for TV and Anollancea.
See Us for quotations *11 Millwort
and Hardware item* before you
buy and be pleasantly surprised

TH E S A N F O R D H E R A L D
4—
BEAUTY PARLORS
-2 4
Thurs. Mar. .1, H)r&gt;5
P n c« 3
FKIGIUAIHB. appliance*
sales ARE YOU bored with vnur looks'
Try OUR AMERICANA a iT
and service G II High. Oviedo,
TYPEWRITER FOIl HIRE
which can he set In a variety
Fla
Phone 4151 or Sanford
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH. (tP) —
of ways to renew your charm.
1642 W after 4 p m.
KVA BESS SHOP
Phone 563 Ever go to a lihrary and wind up
utlh wrllcr’s cramp while yuu’ra
2 ,- OFFICE EQUIPMENT -1 3
EASTER SPECIALS On Pcrman taking notes?
HAYNES Office Machine Co..
ents. $6 50 and
50 Includes
The public lihrary has installed
Typewriters, *ddln« msenmes,
Shaping and Styling for YOU a coin typewriter, and for a dim*
Sales Rentals. 114 Magnolia. Ph
Air conditioned, Soli Water and you can type all the notes you want
44.
Penguin llcnlless Dryers.
fur a half hour.
3 Senior Operators
Ha r r ie t t 's b e a u t y nook
14BEAim f PARI-ORS___-24
RESTAURANTS
-2 9
We give United Trading S t a m p s 2 9 SPECIALIZING
In Personality 1U5 South Oak
Phone 971
YOU! YOU! YOUI
Hair Cuts. Lillian McDonald’s
Home cooked Meal*
Beauty Sluiltn tn Casselberry,
III.way 17-92 South, Phone W P 25- LAUNDRY SERVVH’ K -25
Real Pit Bar R Q
27 2182 (Closed all day Monday) • One hour
Chill, Hot Dogs
Wasn and Damp
Drop‘ In— Free Parking
All Kind* of Sandwiches
Dry
Good Coffee
• One hour H
Wash and Dry
SANFORD’S Most Modern Beauty
Fold
at ftvdcs Grill
Salon. SHAPING and STYLING • Finished laundry
206 S a n fo rd Xve
our Specially One block West • Sanitone Dry Cleaning
I’ I.v t O SERVICE
—21
17—
and around tht corner from the
Bouthnide
lau n drom at
rlock.
1..
L
Sill—Piano
technician.
South Side Poodmarl Rldg.
HARRIETT’S BEAUTY NOOK
Phone 2164 ilout&lt; 1. Sanford.
I*a East 55th HL
105 So Oak
Thone 971

CALL THE
# LUMBER
NlIMBER

CAMPBELL’S CABINET

Hi way 17-02 South

Phone I44&lt;

Complete TELEVISION SERVICE
on all msars and model*
S A N F O R D ELE C TR IC CO.
Ill Magnolia 4ve.
Phone 442
FLOOR SAND INa A Finishing
Oak Onors furnished, laid A fin
tshed Reasonable term* In bus
Ines* since 1820 Old floors mide
like new. E F Stevens; Route
1, Box 227; Phone 716 H-4.
UPHOLSTERY- Slip coven made
tn order at

xk^

AND BUILDING N EEDS

SHERMAN CONCRETE
PIPE CO.
Out West 1.1th SI.

Phimc 24H9

CALL

THE

. 4, -

LUMHKK

CJALT* TODAY!

H IL L

NUMIIER

fo r s u d d e n

83

s e r v ic e

LU M BER b SUPPLY Y A R D
W.

THIRD

ST.

NIX REDDING MFG. CO.

1201 Hanford Ave.

Phone sw-J

SEWING MACHINES- Repaired
or rebuilt. Alto machine* for
sale. $15 00 up Phone llougaard
1777-X-M Rox 219. Lake Mary
LARGE supply of Orangeburg fi
bre pipe snd fitting* for vou
sewer need*.

ftouW dl
A 3 / 1’ 1 l l *1’ *
1007 Sanford Ave
Phone 1113
Plowing, discing, grading Tree*
and shrubbery moved Dewitt
Hunter 601 E 26lh St.

RANDALL ELECTRIC CO
T V SERVICE CENTER

O Factory Supervised Service
O House calls 9 a. m. Ill) ■ p i
(All makes and models I
WESTINGHOUSE Laundromat- tit Mag Ave
Thone 14tLet* than 2 years old. A BAR
BAIN at $100 00
St an ley’ii Rika Rhop
Sanford Electric Co.
J1D E. 4lh St. Tel 2434
Bicycle A General Repair. Key*
US .Magnolia Ave.
La winnower sharpen A Ser
UNDERWOOD T) pew»Her perfect
flee.
condition $30 00; Winchester 22
Rifle practically new, $1500;
Hanford
Kemene Autnmallc Hot Walcr
Vacuum Cleaner Berrieu
heater, 115 00; 9 x 12 Linoleum
Phone TI4-X-J
Rugs choice colors, $6.50: A Parts and Supplies for All Makas
New double Wardrobe S mirrors,
—Rentals—
$35 00; Mahogany dresser with
good mirror, $11.50; Dinette “
PLUMBING
set, ealenlinn, 4 chair*, lui.ixi;
A Nice Kiddle stroller, 17.50; Contract and repair work Free
estimate*. R L. Harvey KM
Copper screen doors. $5.00:
Sanford Ave Phone 1*26.
Beautiful Walnut dintng room
■uite, $75 00; Wagner I H. P.
P. M. CAMPBELL
Electric motor, single phase
General Coatractor
with g" eenlrlfuga! pump. Hun.
“ Home* of DisUnctluo'’
,
dreds of other Items priced very
HI Way 17 92
Fhow# 144. fa
low.
The Super Trading Post, lT-$a ENVELOPES, totterbead*, state
1 mUe So. Phone a il-R ,
ments. Invoices, hand btiia, and
p r o g r a m s , etc. Progreealve
CONCRETE
Printing Co., Phooe
“
Ready Mixed Concrete. Conrrele
Weal 13th St
Block. Rand. Gravel, Cement
Concrete ripe to Meet All Quali­ FIJTOR landing and flnlahlng
Cleaning, waxing Serving Seen
fication*.
note County slnra IMS. H M
Phone 2U1
Gleason. Like Mary
Shaman Concrete Pipe Co.
Out We*t 12th ML
INCOME TAX SERVICE
Win. II. Murray
USED. Washlnj^^ Marhtqo that till Celery
Ave.
Tel. 1941X M
110.00 and you

Westlnghouse Fraeser. I S
MARCH T - I mom Apt with NEW
Cu. FL Proien Storaaa eaparlly
Si.ooo kitchen. Front eou-anco
—|9T pound*. Original Price.
on Palmetto and back entrance.
FHA
Special- ON.OO Easy
Hot A Cold water (rea. Ground
D ELECTRIC CO.
Fat Remodeling and repairs
I lf Megaelie Ave.
floor. Cone and get It. I l l PalNothing Down—SmaU Moothly
Millar Radio A Applianrw
netto Ave.
Payments
UI 8. Park
Phone »
ABTlOXa WANTED
Kltehen, $40.00 oer
Hherwaaa Concroto Cn.
% A pt
DP CASH price* paid for Furnl Highest CASH end TRADE-IN
Blow apace, ApWert Ufa
lee* peid for used PURNI
turn, Antiques. Jewelry. Hund
’ a oor.
RE. Call 9H, Wilson-Mstor
reds ot Items for sale cheap.
tor. Ph. 1TM.
urnitura Co III E. 1st St.
14 E INRURANCE
The Super Trading Port, t mile
Two bedroom torch ed apartSouth ot Sanford on 17-02.
MeaL Ctoee la. UT Oak A m
m O U Ii M IU N
MSI 11. a m C 1
arias Aid. factory tax
Phoae CIA
_________ MAICO Heart*
I’ MOMl h 11
m etod. fuan
uraaleed $200. model
IskMrs. Garnar. a a
A I I A M I I t l- A ’ .l- I I I ' .
SaSi-M “*
40 FIG S- Good brood. Will eofl
oao or ell. Call tll.R.
RID-MCIX C O N K U n
ties
t t = ____
P reten d Sales to 1
&amp;
£ r . iffir ^
•lie Rolatkma
Relations WoI aggreaslve Public
PoUcyhoidere
r IOOM Modern House furnished^ Sand. Rock. Cement, steel. Mortar
by
telephone
and
men to solicit
lo k a W dliam a I m
arge rowh. On
T MIRACLE CONCREtE CO.
propo* I
ct. Good pro
persooal contact
417 Seated Ada te e
Phew IMS
Mile* East al Oviedo. $40^0 a 509 Elm Ave
tlon ter live wires, _ . Mr.
_ Case
a$
Writo Oaratd U
at Brown’* TV, tOS W. 1st St.
Bactarit AMhaaca Cawti
ar tall MU.
9:10 to U:00 a. m. only.
“ Your wpattoghouse Dealer’
Maytag W uhan
IQA WEI F WANTED (Ft■ale) 18A
US
“ A ft.
GIRLS!
GIRLSI
O lE U !
Ivated. I I i U MOHAVE and Gulliiton
wUH
Good llouri, Good Wage*. Ap
. toe umber■
Ruga. IT a M Wool Scatter
ply
la
person
at
Seminole
Drive
10.000, I r** iA L E
S 4 t«
_Jueod |U.N&gt; cash for it aoao
*Towr Mwrite
SANFORD LINOLEUM A
^ tm a VO, Enown or
TILE
CO.
'teg * •' V p&gt;ws M W—M
r - -Phone lttT
Also M ic’rci'good_isrden Sand 127 W. First St,
MAN. Apply la person to Bag
- iar tha above. f o r t a l i
V r f e e t , '^ ^ oa eu m b ew a ee
ifaem Ua PA nC* C*st*r’ 111 *
ui
O.
Ave.
tslde Salesmen far
Brown’s TV
5 p. m. Contract Mrs. Meredith
Fraley. Phone 5-2375 Orlando.

u

°T S3£

-K itu m i
"■------w m m sssn m

■ •W ifSW 'iSSW

tSSSmSa

17—AUTbMOEILEH-TEAlLEMa

•1 VARIETIES
Native and Foreign Woods.
See Them At

Bktnaaa Caarrtta Pipe C».

Out Waal Ufa SL

‘BTSStoTU

“

Now la&gt;iRp«k. $

I n m if y

Boyd - Wallace

FOR S A L E - '41 Plymouth club
coupe. 9I00.U, Terms if desir
ed. Cell 153-W,____________ u
1046 House Trailer. SO IL $230 00 M
Phone S30-X-J.
a

-J M

&gt;

Ori all Your rdbflag needs at
BJtonaaa CawcreU Pfpa C a
Out Wou JSIIi HL
Phone im

SELL YOUR CAR TO
Boy Em T* Date Cars
Sanford At* $ Ufa IL

1-4

■ R O D IN O o a
- a

--------------------* n , »f'rirEJrig'1!

-

J

�i

ICompany

TTTF SANFORD TTFRAT.D
Page 6
Thura. Mnr. 3, 1055

Radio
P.

*4.

4:10 Nawa
4:11 Organ Interlude
4:41 C lau de II W o lt e Pent.
l:n n T h e R h y th m Houy
• :8o AA'orld At Ml*
0:11 T w i l i g h t Monga
(.1 8 Spoyta R oo k
A.41 Mualc P rog r am
7i88 D r ift in g o n A C loud
7:11 E v e n in g Mualo
7 18 Eddie Klrher
7:41 Dial " M " f o r Mualo
1:80 Night Edition
1:11 t 'n ll e d Nation*
0 18 ll'a D i r i r i l m r
j o in At Ho m e W it h Mualo
| 0 ;H Nawa
11:00 Iji y m an'a Call T o P ra y er
11:04 H Sign O f f
K H I D 4 V A. *4.
| 88 Mlgn On
t i 8 l l . i y m o n a Call to P r a y e r
0:01 Da w n llrenkera
8:1" N'ewa
«:lf
Waatarn Ja m bor aa
0:11 Nawa
Tin.
i r v r n O'Clork Club
t i l l Nawa
|:oo Sport* At A G lan ca
1:01 Jocka y'a Cho lr a
*:&gt;&gt; Morn ing Darot lnna
1:11 Morn ing Malndlei
l :n o W orld Al Nina
1:11 Mualc For Ladlee
l:lo
Hymn Tima
*41
For Ijidlaa On ly
10:00 I4»8 Club
10:10 Nawa

ioiir

1J:18
1*00
11:11
11-18
1 in
1:11
I on
| on
I 'll

H. L. AVERT
Vice-President In Charge
Jacksonville Division,
W in n &amp; l.o v r l l fir o r r r y Co.

1100 CTriti

Gama o f M el od y
W orld At Noon
R ad io Farm Dlgaal
F riday llntlnee
Nawa
Dial " J “ F o r Joaa
liar Nona Ran ch
AVorld At ’I b r a e
Mualcal P rog r am

Lovctt'i, one of the 10 largest
retail food service organizations
In the country, began celebration
of it* 36th year in business yei
lerilay
The event H celebrated by aspcc
9
lal vale in all the 73 super-market*
in more than SO cities in Florida
and Georgia and was Introduced
with newspaper advertising an­
nouncing the occasion.
IN T H E I i n n IT r n l llT , NINTH
The present Company was found
41 I I I I I AI. C I I K I ’ IT IN AND POM c.i 36 years ago, arcording to If
RI-.RINOl.i: COIINTY. FI.CIIIIDA.
L. Avery, vice president in charge
IN l.-IIAXl'EHV NO. rrroc
DAN STEVENS.
of the Jacksonville division. It was
P laintiff
formed from the Tyler Grocery
•**•

Legal Notice

EI.IZ A nKT II
Y ENS.

PATTERSON

STE

Defendant
NOTICE TO D E P E N D
S T A T E O F FLO RIDA T o EI.L
EAIIETII P A T T E R S O N ST EV ENS,
w b oa a raaldanra la un kn own .
You will l a k e nollr a that a ewnrn
hill o f complain t haa bean filed
Rgalnet you In Ilia C ir cu it C ou rt In
and fnr Se min ole C ou n ty , Florid a
In C h a n c e ry ; that the na ture o f
aald ault la an ac tion fn r dlvnrre
tha ab ort title o f w h ic h la DAN
STEVENS.
P lain tiff.
V
EL IZA JIETII P A T T E R S O N S T E V E N S . D e ­
fenda nt.
T H E S E P R ES E N T S a r e In c o m ­
mand y ou In file y o u r a n a w r r nr
o t h e r pleading wllh lha Clark nf
tha Circuit Court n f Sem in ol e C o u n ­
ty ol Kniifnrd, Florida, and aerve
g c o p y o f tha eama on P l a l n t l f f r
at tor n ey, on o r before tha H a t day
o f March A. D.. 1111.
Herein fall not o r a d e c r e e pro
eonf ea ao will be entered agalnat
y o u . f o r default.
WITNEFX my hand and eeal at
San ford. Seminole C ou n ty . F l o r i ­
da thla I t t h day o f F e b r u a r y A. D..

BUYING
A CAR?
It* Bure
Your

to

Legal Notice
IN IIE T H E R O T A T E O F
FLOMMIK M A E 1*111011

Dealer

R*raa *»d
TO A M . W HO M I T 44 AY (O N C F IIN r
N otic e la h er eb y nlven that 0(111DON V. F R E D E R I C K filed hie final
re po rt •&lt; A d m ln le t r a t o r o f tha eelata o f FI.OMMli; M A E P R I O R . dor e u s e d ; that he filed tile petition
fu r final d leaharae, and that he will
a p p ly to the
llonn ra hla Erneal
llo u t h old er . C ou n ty Judxn o f Hemlnote C ou n ty , F lorid a, on the let
d ay o f April. ISIS, f o r ap p ro v al
o f aaina and f o r final d le rh a r x a aa
A d m ln let r at or o f tha aetata o f Flo*ala Maa Prior, dere aeed, on thla
let day o f March, l i l t .
/ a / G or d on V. F re d e r ick
A d m ln let r a t or o f tha eeinta
o f FI.OMH1K M A E PR IO R ,
deceaaad.

to Finance
through
i

-ftSA N E O R D

1111.

O. P. H E R N D O N
Clark o f lha Circuit
Court
lly E. U B u r d ick
Dep uty C lark
W . C llut nh leon . Jr.
A t t o r n e y f o r P la in t iff
101 North P ark A venua
S a n fo r d . F lo r i d a

tllANTICKAIICaNAl BANK
MEMBER

TV HURTS WRITING?
DETROIT (t*) - Tcachesr of
creative writing considers televis­
ion a barrier to good writing, says
Thomas Cauiey head of the Dcnby
High School English Department.
“ What we stress tn writing is
simplicity, and you don't learn any­
thing about simplicity from tele­
vision " he says
“ TV programs, he said, are com­
plex ar».1 Involved.”
"W e tell the students to write
about their own experiences,'' CauIcy said. "But very few of them
think 'hey have anything interest­
ing to write about. So many are
used &gt;o the tangled plots of tele­
vision the constant action on the
screen and the frequent hurts* of
callous burtalily They fail to un­
derstand there is beauty in writing
about a quiet day In the country.”

IN 1*01 R T O F T H E
COUNTY
Jt 11(11’ , N E t l l S o l . E C O I I N T Y .
S T A T E O F F L O R I D A . IN 1*11(1-

ohW

FDIC

Fond Memories O f O ld Days
Leave Oldtimers Misty Eyed
KANSAS CITY oR-They play U
sweet and they play It cute, hut
It'a seldom now that they play tho
really hot note in this town of the
"Twelfth Street Rag" — the one­
time hotbed of swing.
Some of the cats who used to
nit the hottest licks are delivering
milk now or laying bricks fust
about all of them can get misty
eyed thinking about the old days.
"This city used to be the jumpingest,” says Chet Stamps, an
artist * agent who has been around
a long time.
"Today you have to read be­
tween the lines of fine print to
find a Joint that'a selling jazz on
a rommerclal basis."
He shook his head. “ And yet, we
really had it Benny Motcn, The
great Count Basie, Hot Lips Page,
Andy Kirk. That fine sax man Ben
Webster.
"Webster, by the way, came
back to Kansai City a while ago
and almost starved to death look­
ing for a job. All he could find
here was some two-bit engage
ments Naturally, he beat It."
Herb Six, a professor at the
Kansas City Conservatory and him­
self an accomplished jazz planlit,
was aa gloomy as Stamps.
“ There's plenty of potential Jan
material left in Kansas City," Six
saM, "but It doesn't find any out­
let here So the young musicians
either lose Interest and originality
or move elsewhere."
Historians of local jazz generally
date Its decline from the downfall
of the late Tom Pendergait, the
colorful political boss who kept
Kansas City wide open until the
late 1930s.
Some deduce that political re­
form however, desirable In mejor
respccti. has proved no unmlxed
blessing for Jazz. “ Things get too
quiet, things get square," one exmusician said.
Others contend that Jazz and
Jazzmen have long since outgrown
their gaudy otiglna.
The booker* put a major share
of the blame on the 20 per cent
entertainment tax and ' the early
closing hours — 2 a.m. week
nights and 12 midnight on Satur­
day.
"During the Pendergait d ayi,"
said John Tamino, partner In

6 PC.

ROCK

11:80
H ill

“ Mr. and Mr»."
V l i M n D lx .it
B r n w i l n v A round w it h E U ln
("a n o o n C arniv al
Film fa cia A F a n c y
A d v o n t o r o wit h Enel# W i l l
W aa ihar. Nawa. Puorta
In d ustr y on r a r a d a
l l u n t l n c and F D h l n x with
Don
Mualca] Varlatlca
Austin Praaanta
Jo h n Daly Nawa
Luna I tancer
Amos 'a 1 Andy
Cllm at
llurna and Allan
lllnaalda with tha Raaalars
N aw a-H p or ta -W aal har
T o w a r T ha ata r

1:10
1:SS
1:00
1:11

Rtcn On P r o a r a m Ilasuma
N a w a -W a a t h * r
H o l l y w o o d Tha n and N ow
Thla Land o f Oura

0:08

C :t l
CiSO
1:41
T:0«
Till
T:I4
1.80
1:18
tilO

18:00

tiiis aim off

FRIDAY P.R.

W M I R -T V

J A r K a n N V I l .I . y i

I f a b l a a t la Chaawa W l l h a a i Nat lrai
4:04
HIS

T H i n a tlA T

P .M .

p r la h t a r Day
Bacrrt S t o r m .
4:1a On Y our A c c o u n t '
1 :00 P or tia Karat Llfa
t : l ! Markina Itaart
1:10 Clary M»nra
1 :0 0
twa. SVcathor. Bporta
Citn
ina R a n a a r
T :00
Clam T a lk
Y*I&amp; Draom T im e
T:18 C D S -T V Nawa
T:44 Ja na Kr oman
IlOO lln n a r m o o n H o lid a y
0:00
Clim a x
» :!0
Oiale A H a rr iott
10:00 Rtu E rw in Hhow
10:10 Mr
D lt tr lc i A t l o r a a y
11:08 Nawa and W e a t h e r
i i i i i N am e T h a t Tuna

ROOM

Unfinished

Monro* Chapter
No. 15 R. A. M.

Mar. 4

Vnlee ll.M, New Oety

$989

I V L )a £ g \ ju ’ H &amp; i c n c 4 j
si
100 ASPIRIN •439$.... 19
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drug

tomorrow

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$16595

Aspirin

COMING vSUNDAY

Aspirin

Hardwood

17.89

- 2 “

Utility Cabinet 1249
Ia n Br Mail f Bava TIm

-A

:* . v

1
* a. V , ,.

as ? MW

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IMS

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C h i l d r e n ’s

U liB fM C lM ilD fu lB fifl

to .O a S fln - : r -

2 1 2 *

GET ACQUAINTED OFFER!
W alqreon

CEN TER

ore

• ? j&amp; £ t t ..2 1 9 4

Uga oftlooal vales to IL50

FU R N IT U R E

!

“ On the Corner by the Clock*

AD kindn of Desks, finished or nnfialshed Step, Em
Corner and Cocktail Tables, Floor and Table Lamp
ClothesJUmpon. 'Porch Furniture, Dinette Salto
U yIbc Room Balias.

Dinette Set

i SCOT

7 P. M.

F. L. Miller
Secretary

HollywoodBods4889

]69 to995

w ?\

BAD FOP EACH OTMEP

Full aad Rcfular-Twla Slat

Throw Rims

-M K tM tl

Royal Arch Degree
Refreshments

or more o ff

OOJ ot Mabegiay, Frame

THURSDAY — FRIDAY
Burt* 6*0
COUMMN..
**

Feature 7:1* — 10:30
PLUS

Friday

Hundreds o f discontinued numbers In
stock, to close out at

Mirrors

1:01

T A M P A AA 0 T .A -T V
T i l l Hall AV
0 00 a. m. T »at Patteyn
1:11 Golden W in d o w s
1 1 0 Child Guidan ce
1:41 Con rcrn ln K Mlaa l l a r l o w a
1:00 lla w k ln a Kalla
4:11 Klrat L o r e
4:10 T h e W o r ld o f Mr. S w eeney
4:41 Modern Rnmancoa
1:00 L itt le H a r r e ll
1:10 AVIlmo tha C lo w n
1:10 H o w d y Dood y

Chestof Drawers1489

$319

1 :00

Roumillat &amp; Anderson

...

S U IT E

finished

4:40

_ SHOP HOWJ f f WHAT YOU S A ¥ if

NOTICE TO PUBLIC

LAST TIME TODAY

STARTS

lie*
4:10

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

Maa*ly Faa»ral H*a&gt;* ( i m n t j
Mostly A M l u i will H I *• **■
•y o o .ik l. tmr s i r S l l t i H r * t» k *
M i l by Jofca W lllla Moooly.
Mrm. Mary Mo**ly
R i m n IH i
Ratal* M. C.
Msooly,

BRUMMELl

U fa TTr Ytm
„
H om o E d it ion— N ew *
Hom o Edition— Sporta
H om e E d it ion — W a a i h a r
4 :1 0
T :00 S her loc k Holtnea
Dinah Shore S h o w
7.10
Nawa Carav an
7 :4 1
t:0 0 Cr ou cho M a r s
1:70 Jd at lce
*100 Dragnet
*:S0 Ford T haatar
I &gt;:vo Lux Ylado T ha ata r
11:00 Klnc*a C rot ar oa da
II SO T nn lrh t

Rim Off

FR IDAY A.W.
(lOO Teat P alla fia
T:oo Mornlna s h o w
0:00 Dob Croaby
0:10 Shoppara Clulda
10:00 HPnpparo Clulua
10:11 Nawa
11:10 S tr ik e It Itlili
O'HIDAY P.M.
11:00 Va'lant I..**11:10 Kaarrh l o r T o m o r r o w
11:41 G o l d i n s L laht
I:li0 Kltrh en Show
1:10 W e lc o m e T r a r a lo r o
1:00 Hobart (4 Lewie
1:10 Houaepartv
10 0 Ilia Parnt r
1:10 Upon ll ou a e

E

FEATURE TIME

BEAU

I t 'l l

MINERAL OIL

Includes Sofa, 2 Side Chairs, 2 End Tables,
1 C offee Table. Regular prices $199.95
now only

i a

M l
I .I J
&lt;:!•
4:11
I:**
1:11

SA TU R D A Y

M APLE L IV IN G

Peeled Cane
Chain

Stamps' booking agency, "the
Joints stayed open all night. Oh,
the midnight clotlng law’s been on
the books since 1933, but nobody
used to enforce it. Club owners
couH afford more live entertain­
ment. Where an operator used to
hire a large band, he now uses a
small combo, or maybe a single
guy with a piano."
Similar thoughts came . from
Dave and Tom Reiser, a brother
piano and guitar team featured
at one of Kansai City's awankier
establishments.
"Tbere'a the obvloui economic
angle,” Dave said. "The operatori
don’t make the profits they did In
the old days and they don't like
to take chancei with now thlngi.
Add to this a general lack of show­
manship. You’ ve got to have aome
idea -&gt;f presentation, to put your
stuff across. That seemi almost a
lost art here abouta.
"Maybe audiences don't.really
care much for Individual expres­
sion any more. They want to see
funny facei, they want the guy
blowing the horn to do haodsprings
besides."
But some of the catj who had
taken to masonry and letter carry­
ing couldn't keep from their Instru­
ments Indefinitely.
Three veterans — George Salis­
bury, piano; J. Jackson, tenor
ssx; bandleader and bassist Roy
Johnson — plus Bob Hopkins, a
young drummer, recently formed
a band because, as Johnson ex­
plained, "w e Just couldn't stand
not playing any more. We'd rather
play than eaV" They aet up ahop
in a place called the Trocadero.
Johnson proclaimed his Jazz
man's cred for dark times. "Man,
things may be dragging, but it
only takes a little spark to set you
goln'," be said.* "And ain't nobody
can say where the next spark will
come from ."

W D R O - T T O R ! . AW D O
( ■ ■ k j r r f tm C t u n R ' l l k n l X &lt; N m I
T i l l N a llA V r .n .

1:00 • 3:00 • 1:11
7:10 • 0:14

FURNITURE CENTER
SALE CONTINUES
TH R U

TELEVISION

by W. It. Lovett, who

headed the company until 1B40. ,
In that year it was taken over
by the four Davis Brothers of
Tampa and Miami. A. D. Davis,
Jacksonville, Is president; James
E. Davis, Jacksonville, Is vice
president and chairman of the
board; M. Austin Davis, Miami,
is executive vice president and
T. W. Davis, also vice president,
lives in Louisville and hcadj ope
rations of the Winn A Lovett Gro
eery Company in the Louisvilie,
Ky. and Montgomery, Ala. areas
Lovett's was among the first to
sense the trend to super fo&lt;rJ mar
kets. offering complete service,
opening the first store of this type
in 1931 at Eighth and Main streets
in Jacksonville. The store was
more than double the size of the
traditions! grocery store at that
lime and its success started the
trend to the departmentalized sup­
er market of the modern era, ac­
cording to Avery.
All of the stores in the chain
arc ready for the biggest anniver
sary celebration in the company's
history and officials and sales per
sonnel cf the stores Join id extend­
ing to the public an invatatlon 'o
participate in the event.

Winn, Lovett Co.
Celebrates 36th.
Year In Business

WTRR - 1400 Kflocyclen
TIILHIIIAA

\

P M I -.J

$ $ f :f
&gt; r £ ‘A

—

iSSO^

B flM I

�’JU

Shop and Save
In Sanford

(E ire §&gt; tm fa tb S m a l l *
•

I

AN INDEPENDENT DAII.T NEWSPAPED

SANFORD. FLORIDA.

Established 1908

PLUME XLVI

Location Cited
For Proj ect
The general area adjacent to the Goldsboro tertian, outside the
City limit*, was cited last night as the most suitable location for a
Negro housing development
In recommending the area, tha City Zoning and Planning Commis­
sion also recommended that tha City assist any builder to tha limit of
its financial ability in bringing
inter and sewer facilities to such
a development.
The recommendations were pro­
posed by A. W. Lee and seconded
by Tom Vaughn.
Meeting with the board at City
ilall were members of the city
and county commissions, realtors,
and Hrailey Odham. whose bid to
construct a Negro project acrosa
tenm the Memorial Stadium was
A vesper service opening the rejected Feb. 18 by the Zoning
county observance of Girl Scout Commission.
Week will be held from 4 lo 5
The board went on record as re­
p. m. Sunday at Soulhslde prim cognising tha definite need for a
ary schoo.l AU Girl Scout troop: Negro development, but aald
In the county have been Invited there is apparently no tract of
along with parents and persons In land o f sufficient sise and suitable
(crested tn the Girl Scout move­ location in tha city,
ment.
Odham had proposed to build
The program for the service was a subdivision on the vacant land
announced today by Mrs. F. E. at the corner of Celery and MelScott, chalrmtn for special events lonville Avei.,but his request waa
for the Girl Scout leaders' organ turned down following a storm
(ration of Seminole County. Miss af protest against putting •
Francei Cobb it president of the "colored section In the center of
orginUatlon&lt;
the white section of Sanford."
The crowd that collected at last
A number of songs, Including
"America,” "The Hymn of Scout night's meeting waa small Indeed
Ing", "Uirl Scout* Together". compared to the more than 100
"The Golden Sun", and "When the persona who gathered two weeks
Campfire's Flame Ascends", will ago to object to Odham’ a pro­
posed project.
highlight the eventThe effect of the Zoning Com­
Mrs. J. B. St. John will be the
mission's action la to limit Negro
speaker.
expansion to the southwest aide
The Invocation will be given by
o
the Rev. Lucian Scott end the f the city.
Discussion o f possible sites last
benediction by the Rev. David S.
Carncfix. The candlelight service night centered around a 100-acra
will be conducted by Miss Cobb. tract belonging to American Fruit
The color guard will be active in Growers, located at tha end o f
weat 13th St., acroaa from Crooms
the ceremony.
Academy In Goldsboro district.
Girl Scout Week will be observ­
Mayor Denver Cordell and two
ed (larch 6-13.
city commissioner*, F. D. Bcott
and Earl Higginbotham, were pre­
sent at the meeting. Representing
the county commission were John
W, Melsch, chairman, and Fred
Dyson. A number o f realtors also
attended.

»

GRAMMAR SCHOOL STUDENTS or Mrs. Roberta Rich­
ards’ room were taken qn a tour of The Sanford Herald com
posing room and business office this morning. Here they
watch linotype operators setting up the day's news In the
pressroom. (S taff P h oto)_________________________________

‘ Florida Road Board
Adopts 55 Schedule
Final Budget Approved By Group
Adds $1,587,000 To Tentative Plan

Strolling
In Sanford
»

1W room above Trachten'a win
W tha trenc of the meeting togot aadenray at A o'clock with
q j?
Dm Smith, president, to conduct
hta first meeting since be has been
started as head of the group. Mem­
bers am urged In be present,
a a a

County Judge Ernest Hnusholder
County Prosecutor Karlyle Houabolder, and Sheriff J. L. Hobby
ara attending Ftorids’a first TrafJ fie Court Conference at the Uni­
versity of Florida, Gainesville,
The conference will continue
through Saturday. Judga Houaholder will participate in a panel
discussion on traffic court proce­
dure in tha county courts,
o

o

o

The Samtable County Vocation•1 School la allowing tha film.
T ilin g Procedures In Buataesa"
•v by tha Globa-Wamlcke Company.
"* The film witl ba shown on Mon­
day at I p. m. and on Wednesday
It It a. m. Anyone laterceted In
nooiag tkla film in cordially invit­
ed to oee H at the school at either
data. Office workers may ha aai nedally latereated in tha film,
o a a
A demonstration an “ Safety la
Da Marne'* waa ta ba give* at l:M
» as. taday at ■ meeting of the
% ID Grade 4-H Club at Saafaed
■ ■»— Ugh School. Janet Glean
a( tha dab. Mlaa Mit -

/
v

ALIBI FAILS
AFTER GREETING
TRINIDAD. Colo. UP) — The
■an told Peaeo Juatleo Tony Bar­
ton yesterday ha was sorry but
Fate SantlsUven, charged with
running a stop sign, had bean
galled out of team to tend an niltag relative.
He was a “ good friand" of tha
‘‘ defendant, tha man said,
and
aouldn't tha earn be continued.

TALLAHASSEE IB-A final 1955
work schedule authorising 106 mil
lion dollars in primary construction
has been adopted by the State
Road Board.
The final budget approved by
Jie board yesterday added $1,587,
000 to the tentative budget ap
proved Jan 2S.
An additional ta million dollara
to permit the four lining of SR 600
from Tampa to Plant City waa the
most significant addition. The road
is the main artery between TMupa
and Lakeland and has thf h^dvirst
traffic count in' the tut*.
,
The tentative budget carried ta
million dollrrs to four lane SR 600
from SR 43 to a point 6th miles
east. The flnil budget carries one
million dollars to four lane the
road all the way Into Plant City,
an added distance of about aeven
miles.

Both tentative and final budgets
include the four lining of SR 600
from Plant City to the Polk County
line from the Hillsborough line to
Lakeland.
When the program ta completed
tiie entire stretch between Tampa
and Lakeland will be fourlaned.
The final budget also provides
(£46,500 for paving at state lnstltu
Mens and (33,056.000 in bond pro­
jects This mikes total primary
construction budget $141,100,100.
Under state law, the Road De­
partment Is not permitted to do
any primary work during the year
that Is not Included in the final
budget
The tentative secondary budget
uf $33,063,600 was approved with
only a few minor changes In th*
protect priorities.
V'bite '06 million dollars In pri­
mary work hai been budgeted,
only about 66 million dollari will
be available for spending. Of thla
at million dollars will go to pay
for Jobs which were put under
construction last year and carried
over Into 1$55.
That leaves about 30 million do!tan for new primary constructing
but the board aald this amount
could ba spent only by matching
about U million dollan available
in federal aid funds,

Casselberry Man
Awarded $22,500
In -Damage Suit

After deliberating slightly more
than two hours, a Seminole Cir­
cuit Court Jury last night awarded
$22,500 to Carl Pynn, 32, Caaaelbeny salesman, for Injuries re­
ceived In an automobile collision
last year.
The verdict followed three daya
of trial.
Pynn claimed 50 per cent dis­
ability In bringing a (76,000 suit
against Mrs. Pauline R. Marshall
and Robert William Walker, both
of Orlando.
Mr*. Marshall was the driver
and Walker the owner of the car
that collided with Pynn's at the
Intersection of State Roads 436
and 434 at Foreat City on Feb. 8,
1054.
Tha defendant* lost counter
claims against Pynn. Mrs. Mar­
shall waa suing for $60,000 and
Walker for $5,000.
The law firm of Maguire, Voorhis and Wells, Orlando, repre­
sented Pynn. Parker McDonald,
Orlando, and Voile Will lama Jr.,
Sanford, were counsel for Mrs.
Marshall and Walker.

lib ra ry , Museum
Come Up Tonight

The proposed General Sanford
Library end Museum will come
up for further discussion at an
adjourned meeting of the City
Commission tonight. The meeting
will -begin at 7:30.
Present will be members of the
committee .seeking construction
of th* memorial, which would
STOWAWAYS FOUND
GENOA, Italy UB—Nina stow, house the library and effects of
•waps were aboard the Argentina th* late Gen. H S. Sanford for
■hip Corrientes when it docked yes whom the city wae named.
A site In Ft. Mellon Park has
terdav. They atl eald they boarded
designated for the museum.
the anlp at fUo da Janeiro.

^Council Turns To Egyptian Charges
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., m i U N. Security Council turned
ay to S o rite s charges and to­
il eouat .ebargaa touched *0
Monday night's Moody border
near Gaga.
japtariw tnaion resulting
the dachasi - to which a
Uana and alghl tore«Us war*
m u te d kiltod-was brightened *
militant ati l f f a I r e * Da
and Israeli premiers and
__ p in —m toward a new
afliUry Unset against toThere waa aoa* expectations th*
noundl would Metpene He disensstoo ef Da rival charges until after
e report ( n a the Egypt • Israel U N. Mined A
tn Palest! e*.
I the PgvpMarnri border, is
cled to meet Sunday an the
i fighting.
Wednesday charged to-

meditated aggression" In th* eomite-loug Gaa« coastal strip occu­
pied by the Egyptians.
Egypt charged Israel's troops
with attacking a military camp
the ancient ally of Oaxa,
two miles inside the territory, and
wUk ambushing a truckload of rotsfdrcements Egypt termed this
the “ moat brutal act ef aggrossen" sine* Urn 1841 armistice.
torael'e countereomplalnt, filed
yesterday mada no mention of the
Case battle but accused Egypt of
"continuous violations” of tha arimsnt and council resagreen
otetiona. It charged:
(I) armed attacks an Israeli
im ps, (I) raid* on Israeli eltimaa, (I) Egyptian failure la pre­
vent tech acta, (4) assertion of ■
state ef war and exercise af ac­
tive bofllpsraney against Israel,
teetedtag a Mockids, (I) “ warlike
propaganda and threats," and (•)
tefuaal tn negotiate a

The complaint waa In line with
Israel’s usual strategy ot trying
to ahift such council debates from
particular incidents to the general
Arab-Israell situation and the need
for an ovel, long-term solution.
Earlier Israeli statements In Jer­
usalem on the Oaxa fighting
charged the Egyptians attacked
first inside Israel and were chased
back Into Egypt
la Damascus yesterday, Egypt
and Syria announced they had
signed a new defense part which
Syrian Prime Minister Sabri As­
sail said resulted from Do need
for “ practical and decisive meas­
ures to safeguard th* Arab coun­
tries from repealed Israeli aggrwa

Child Labor Law
Charge % Placed
A gainst Foreman
A field fo. :mu&gt; at Zellwood
Orange County, waa charged yes­
terday with violation of the child
labor law by hiring four minors,
(wo from Sanford, to pull radishes
while public schools arc in session.
The children are under 14 ycari of
age.
B. E Lee, Winter Park, field
agent for the Florida Industrial
Commission, signed an affidavit
for a warrant against Pedro Clrllo, Zellwood, yesterday with
Peace Justice Johnnie A. McLeod,
Apopka, which was to be served
by the constable. Bond I* to be act
at $300, l-ee laid.
Mrs. Gwyndnlyn Mann, Orange
County school attendance officer.
Is witness and had warned Clrilo
on several occasion!, Lee said.

Leadership Classes
To Start Tonight
A t Recreation Hall
Classes In Leadership Training
will begin here tonight under the
sponsorship ot the Sanford Dull­
ness and Professional Womsn'a
Club. Barry Crtmm will be De In­
structor.
The classes will be held et the
recreation building, directly east of
of the Chamber of Commerce, in
Ft. Mellon Park. They will begin
at 7 and continue until to p. m
Crimm, farmerly dirrrDr of
adult education for Striven llnl
verslty and Florida Southern Col
lege, li De auDor of "How to
Put Over Your Mate Ideas In
Speech" and a butiness and civic
leadership training manual.
Anyone Dterestcd in attending
De classes should contact Miss
Betty Wolfram, telephone 8040.

300 Pound Owner
Asks For Comfort’
PIKEVILLE, Ky. UP) — A 806
pound motel owner, who felt jail
would ba more comfortable wID
warm showers, a roomy bed and
better food, la beck for 30 days.
Hiram Bailey was sentenced
yesterday for selling liquor In
dry territery. He pleaded guilty
after being warned a jury trf«*
might cost him a year in Jail.
During c 60 - day atey on a
similar charge teat year, Bailey
weat all the way to the Court uf
Appeals la an effort to have a
shower and a had more suited te
hie 6-foot-l frame Installed
jail — at his own expense.

said all oDar
JAPANESE ORGANISED
Arab nattaus would ba invited ta TOKYO lit—Nearly six million
fata the new sOtenc*. which u Japanese—364 per cent of the
designed to replace the noofune- labor forrw—ere organised te labor
ttoning Arab LetfM collective dea Labor Ministry
$

1

No. 138

Associated Press li««wd Wire

FRIDAY, MAR. 4, 195r&gt;

M issing Scien tist
At News Meeting
Soviets
Surprise
Outsiders

Girl Scout Week
Will Be Opened
Af Vesper Service

1

Weather
Clear tn partly tloudv aiti
continued « i r m through Saturday, highr-t this afternoon
75*
83, lew eat tonight 60-70.

Pontecorvo Has
Center Of Stage

THE HANDLEY SILVER Cup Tournnmenl Marled thin morning n» the Sanford Tourist
and Shufflcboard Court. 13 town* were represented and 52 team* were registered. (Staff
Photo)

Large Turnout Sees
Skuffleboard Play

Florida Symphony
Brought To Sanford
By Local Sponsors

Excitement ren high es 52 ehuffleboerd teems began the Handler
Silver Cup Toumnment under a biasing Florida sun this morning at
the Sanford Tourist and Shuffleboerd Courts.
Joseph Murrey, official end director of the tourney, stated that
A concert by the renowned
of Orlando,
the event would probably run up until lets evening with the winner to Florida Symphony
have hi* name Inscribed on the was given In the Seminole High
tup donated, by Handley lo cveale School auditorium this afternoon
for (ha high school student* o f
InUroit In shuffle board.
Urn county who warmly welcomed
Thla contest Is also the scene the excellently played program
baton of
for th* meeting o f all the presi­ presented under the
dents of l he northern shuffle hoard Frank Miller,
district* with J. M. Holier, presiProgram notes for th* special
dent of tha entire district, acting educational concert were given by
n* announcer.
the manager of the orchestra,
Thomas Virtue, head ref err*, Bub Craig, and added much to the
and Mrs. Ada Hedges, head scor­ enjoyment and appreciation of the
ORLANDO UT—The Board of er, arc from Eiistl* while the offerings.
Control seeking a president of De teams themselves conm from
For a majority of (he audience
University of Florida has cut the Winter I’nik, I'rnlmdy o f Day- It was an introduction to Mr. Milfield of candidates to Dree mon­ Iona, Sanford, Umitnlla, Coronado ler who has had the capable mu­
ths heads of the universities of Club of New Smyrna, DeLand, sical group In rhnrge this year
Arizona, Mississippi and Wyoming. Clermont, Orlando, City Island of anil wlu&gt; has delighted many au­
Dr. Ralph L. Miller, Orlando Daytona, Mt. flora, Eustis, end diences in addition to the one
member of the board, confirmed Leesburg. Four teams ere allowed this afternoon with his effective
D ll last night and added:
ing a well knit hour of harmony,
lrom each town.
"A telephone vole was taken and
monitratcd their skill In present­
Benches
were
full
to
over-flow­
a majority favored one man and
ing with spectators end those ing a wellknlt hour of hnrimmy.
that man has been contacted."
The exceptional and privileged
lie declined lo Identify the man awaiting ■ turn et one o f the 12 opportunity for the high school
but acknowledged that the choice courts. Cold lunches were served group to hear the orchestra was
lies between Dr. R. A. Ilarvlll of by Mrs. Gstelirl in the main club­ made possible by it. T. Mil wee,
Arizona. Dr. George D. Humphrey house to prevent too much inter­ SupL of Public Instruction, end
of Wyoming «nd Dr. J. D. Williams ference with the player*.
several sponsors listed as
the
J. R. Ball, president of the Sanford Atlantic National Hank,
of Mississippi.
Sanford
Tourist
end
Shufflrbonrd
Miller made the disclosure when
First Federal Havings and Loan
■iked for comment on ■ Jackson- club said that tha organisation Assn., Finn.In Slate Hank, Citi­
villa Journal slnry that Harvill was had made a gain o f 32 member* zens Hank of Oviedo, Lee BroDo choice of the seven-man board since last year and la growing all thers, Inc., Hill Hardware Co.,
but that a minority favored Hum­ th* time. "In ahufflebonrd play­ Randall
Chase,
Mrs.
Louise
ing itself, Sanford I* 'way ahrad Touhy and the Remlnnle County
phrey end Williams.
The Jourral said "D e pros' e of the other*. Whenever we go Board of Public Instruction.
was Dal the board would not do out of town to play we usually
The program was Overturn* to
able te resch e unanimous de­ win” he said Mr*. Crenshaw is "The Flying Dutchman" (Wagcision."
vice-president o f the club end ner), “ Blue
Danube
Waltz",
Other members of De board- will take llall'e place when he (Strauss), ‘‘TIi* Funeral March of
which will make Us nomination tv leaves in two months.
a Marionette",
(Gounod),
ami
the Cabinet Board of EducationThe winners will be announced “ Circumstance
March,
No 1"
refused to say who was being con tonight es well as the official! (Elgar) and "Spanish Caprice"
aidered or whether ■ decision bsd and referees.
(Itimsky • Korsakoff),

I'cfF Candidate*
For College Head
Narrowed To Three

been made

MOSCOW (jv— Prof. Bruno pon­
tecorvo field D e renter of the
stage for an hour and 40 minutes
at a new* conference today. He
disclosed little except that he has
been a Soviet citizen since 1952.
He declared he is working only on
peaceful atomic projects.
The scientist was born In Italy
but fled the West In J950, His
whereabouts had been a mystery,
hut Pravada last weekend reveal­
ed his presence in D c Soviet
Union. What prompted Soviet of­
ficial* to arrange today's newa
conference—a rare thing in thla
country— was not exactly clear.
Asked hy a Western correspond­
ent if he would change over In
atomic military work in ease of a
direct threat to De Soviet Union,
Pontecorvo ansewered:
“ I am a Soviet citizen and to­
gether with all Soviet people I am
ready to serve De people to De
bed of my ability."
This teemed to be an elaborate
way of saying yes.
His voice broke and words eame
slowly as he sent greetings to the
physicists with whom he had
worked in England.
"I must say 1 have feelings of
great friendship and respect for
them, especially the director of
D e laboratory where I worked,
Prof. Sir John D. Cockcroft."
Tontccorvo said that many nf
Deie physicists are "honest, cap­
able people who ore blinded by the
yellow press. Only thus can t ex­
plain their opinion-about tbe-Rovlet
Union "
Pontecorvo, who was given Brit­
ish citizenship for hi* work In
World War It, disappeared in 1030
while m irking at England's top
secret Harwell Atomic Research
Station, lie Is now about 43 years
old.
The dark ha Ired scientist an­
swered questions of 75 reporters
from both (he Communist and noncommunist world at the confer­
ence, arranged hy the U. S. S. R.
Academy of Science In lls white
marble hall on the outskirts of
Moscow.
He proclaimed firmly hi* belief
that "Soviet science and Soviet
physics hold the first place In the
world."
He cited ns proof the creation
In the Soviet Union nf what he
railed the world's first atomic
powered electric station. But he
added he was not connected with
work on the station, which Rus­
sia said was established fur in­
dustrial purposes.
Pontecorvo, speaking In Italian,
said he had been in Russia four
yrnrs,
“ Today It I* Impossible to stand
aaldu from life," ho said. "Tha
reactionary yellow press in capi­
talist countries tries to damper
the bruin o f the common people,
but there are things which ars
rlenr even lo children.
“ For instance, how is It possible
to believe that th* Hoviet Union
threatens the United States while
American lures are situated mar
the Soviet Union?"
Pontecorvo
remarks
wer*

trumlntrd

Couple Asks Court
For Child's Custody
AKRON, Ohio
— Armed
wID truit In Got) end support
from their neighbors, ■ blind end
deaf couple tried Monday to con­
vince ■ Juvenile Court judge that,
In spit* of their handicap, they
should be allowed to rear their
normal 11-day-old son.
“ Whet Is best for the baby Is
our only concern," said the head
of De Summit County Welfare
Department, which left ■ note for
Harold Hathaway, 63, end his
wife, Georgia, 32, suggesting
Detr baby, Clarence, be pieced in
a foster home.
“ They cant take my baby eway
from me," arid Mrs. Uathewey.
“ Clarence 1s the only thing I ever
had of my own In my whole life."
A tiny woman of only 6 feet 2,
Mr*. Hathaway was born In South
Dakota and grew up as an or­
phan. Bha became acquainted wID
her husband through a Braille
correspondence.

TO REACH AGREEMENT
TOKYO UR — Private Japanese
interests and Rad Chine will reach
a basic fishing agreement about
March IS, it wee predicted here
today. Talks have been undor way

k Frifiag r im Jon. i t

Danger Point Has Not Been Hit
In Stock Market, Head Testifies
WASHINGTON I * -

Edward T
McCormick president of (he Amcr
lean Stock Exchange, testified to
diy that in spite of record-high
and still rising stock prices "wo
nave not reached a danger point
In De stock market."
McCormick was Invited before
the Senate Banking Committee in
its inquiry into De stock market—
an Inquiry that seemed for De
moment to be focusing on efforts
af the financial community D draw
millions of new investor! Into De
market
Like yesterday's leadoff witness,
President G Keith Funston of Do
New York Stock Exchange, Mc­
Cormick said current high prices
■re based on such sound factors
■a strong business activity and con­
fidence of investors.
McCormick on Da whole voiced
a firmer degree of confidence In
De market outlook than did Fun­
ston, who said De possibility of a
1928-type clash can't be ruled ouL
Funston sate ba himself, however,
t* continuing to buy stocks.
The American Stock Exchange,
which McCormick heads, is one of
De two securities exchange* In
Dig gouatqr with nationwide le­

eilitlei. It has 1,600 members In
447 cities end Its trading volume
i« second only to that uf the Now
York exchange
McCormick said In his prepared
statement he sees no Indication of
"excessive or unsound use of cred­
it" In the market today.
And hr said De fact that market
price indices “ have risen above
De peak* which they attained in
September nf 1D29 should not In
.(self be accorded too much sig­
nificance "
"Where** De stock market av­
erage show* in Increase from 1929
of 13 per cent." McCormick said,
"cost of living It up 56 per cent,
term Income 133 per cent, Insur­
ance premium collections 190 per
cent, hourly wages 3 3 per cent,
bank deposi.s 33 per cent, personal
income 234 per cent, gross national
product 143 per cent, and mort­
gage debt 284 per cent."
Chilrman Fulbrlght (D-Ark) of
De' banking committee quiaaed
yesterday's witness closely about
• campaign by De New York exchsnge and its members to bring
many moir Investors late lb*
stock market.

from

Italian

lot*

English, hut ho interrupted on o o
casino in correct the translator.

Dress Revue Plans
Discussed Today
Plans for the annual Dress Re­
vue ami Achlcvemenl flay programs were discussed this morn­
ing at a meeting of the executive
board of the county Home Demon­
stration Council.
Miss Myrtle Wilson, Home Dem­
onstration Agent, said the Drcsi
Rrvue will be held April 21 at
Lake Monroe Reboot.
Achievement Day will he held
May 8, In observance of Home
Demonstration Week, at the Can­
ning Kitchen nn 251h St. Each club
will furnish an exhibit of handi­
work. The event will be open lo
the public and will run from 10
a. m. to 10 p. m

POLICE CHARGE MAN
ROCHESTER, N.Y. in-Pote*
today held • man who they said
struck a Sl-year-old cripple over
De bead with a hammer, robbed
aim of $30 and Den atola hia
'•rutrhes to pawn them.
Ilcbart Dorsey, bleeding from
nead wounds, crawled two blocks
from his aprrtment to a rritaurant
far help. Hr was reported in poor
toodlltofl it G «M ru Hospital.

I j

a **

J
Sc-s^U-v

m *

*

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TTTF SANFORD TTFRAT.D
Page 6
Thura. Mnr. 3, 1055

Radio

WTRR - 1400 Kflocyclen
T IIL H IIIA A

P.

*4 .

4:10

Nawa

4 :1 1
4 :4 1

O rga n In terlu d e
C l a u d e II
W o lt e P en t.
The R hythm H ouy
AA'orld A t Ml*
T w ilig h t
Monga
Spoy ta R o o k
M ualc
Program
D riftin g o n A C loud
E v e n in g M ualo
E d die
K lrh er
D ial " M "
f o r M ualo
N ig h t E d ition
t'n lle d N ation *
ll'a
D iririlm r
At
H om e
W ith
M ualo

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7 i 88
7 :1 1
7 18
7 :4 1
1:8 0
1 :1 1
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\

ICompany

Winn, Lovett Co.
Celebrates 36th.
Year In Business

Nawa

1 1 :0 0 I j i y m a n ' a C a l l
1 1 :0 4 H
Sign
O ff

To

Prayer

KHID4V A. *4.
| 88

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W aatarn
Jam boraa
Nawa
i r v r n O 'C lo r k C lu b

ti8l
0:01
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t i ll

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l.iymon a Call to Prayer
Dawn llrenkera
N'ewa

Nawa

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S p o r t* At A G l a n c a
J o ck a y 'a C h o lra
M orn in g
D arotln n a
M orn in g
M alndlei
W o r l d A l N ina
Mualc
For
L a d lee
H ym n Tim a
F o r Ijidlaa O n ly
I 4»8 C l u b
Nawa

H. L. AVERT
Vice-President In Charge
Jacksonville Division,
W inn &amp; l . o v r l l f ir o r r r y Co.

1100 CTriti

Gam a o f M elod y
W o r ld At N o o n
R a d io F a rm D lgaa l
F riday
lln tln ee
Nawa
D ial " J “ F o r Joaa
liar N o n a R a n c h
A V o r ld
At ’I b r a e
M ualcal P ro g ra m

Lovctt'i, one of the 10 largest
retail food service organizations
In the country, began celebration
of it* 36th year in business yei
lerilay
The event H celebrated by aspcc
lal vale in all the 73 super-market*
in more than SO cities in Florida
and Georgia and was Introduced
with newspaper advertising an­
nouncing the occasion.
The present Company was found
c.i 36 years ago, arcording to If
L. Avery, vice president in charge
of the Jacksonville division. It was
formed from the Tyler Grocery

9

Legal Notice
IN

T H E I i n n I T r n l l l T , N IN T H
41 I I I I I A I. C I I K I ’ I T IN AND POM
R I -.R I N O l.i: C O IIN T Y . FI.C IIIID A .
IN l.-I I A X l'E H V NO. rrro c

DAN

STEVENS.

•**•
EI.IZ AnKTII
YENS.

Plaintiff

PATTERSON

STE

Defendant

N O T IC E

TO

by W. It. Lovett, who

headed the company until 1B40. ,
In that year it was taken over
by the four Davis Brothers of
Tampa and Miami. A. D. Davis,
Jacksonville, Is president; James
E. Davis, Jacksonville, Is vice
president and chairman of the
board; M. Austin Davis, Miami,
is executive vice president and
T. W. Davis, also vice president,
lives in Louisville and hcadj ope
rations of the Winn A Lovett Gro
eery Company in the Louisvilie,
Ky. and Montgomery, Ala. areas
Lovett's was among the first to
sense the trend to super fo&lt;rJ mar
kets. offering complete service,
opening the first store of this type
in 1931 at Eighth and Main streets
in Jacksonville. The store was
more than double the size of the
traditions! grocery store at that
lime and its success started the
trend to the departmentalized sup­
er market of the modern era, ac­
cording to Avery.
All of the stores in the chain
arc ready for the biggest anniver
sary celebration in the company's
history and officials and sales per
sonnel cf the stores Join id extend­
ing to the public an invatatlon 'o
participate in the event.

DEPEND

STATE OF FLORIDA T o EI.L
EAIIETII PATTERSON STEVENS,
wboaa raaldanra la unknown.
You will lake nollra that a ewnrn
hill o f complaint haa bean filed
Rgalnet you In Ilia Circuit Court In
and fnr Seminole County, Florida
In Chancery; that the nature of
aald ault la an action fnr dlvnrre
tha abort title o f which la DAN
STEVENS.
Plaintiff.
V ELIZAJIETII PATTERSON STEVENS. De­
fendant.
TH ESE PRESENTS are In c o m ­
mand you In file your anawrr nr
other pleading wllh lha Clark nf
tha Circuit Court nf Seminole Coun­
ty ol Kniifnrd, Florida, and aerve
g copy o f tha eama on Pla lntlffr
attorney, on or before tha Hat day
o f March A. D.. 1111.
Herein fall not or a decree pro
eonfeaao will be entered agalnat
you. for default.
WITNEFX my hand and eeal at
Sanford. Seminole County. Flori­
da thla Itth day o f February A. D..

BUYING

Legal Notice

A CA R ?
It* Bure
Your

to

IN 1*01 RT OF T H E
COUNTY
Jt 11(11’ , N E tllSo l.E C O I I N T Y .
STATE OF FLORIDA. IN 1*11(1-

ohW

IN IIE THE ROTATE OF
FLOMMIK MAE 1*111011

Dealer

R*raa*»d
TO A M . WHOM IT 44 AY (ONCFIINr
Notice la hereby nlven that 0(111DON V. FRE DE RICK filed hie final
report •&lt; Admlnletrator o f tha eelata o f FI.OMMli; MAE PRIOR. doreused; that he filed tile petition
fur final dleaharae, and that he will
apply to the llonnrahla Erneal
lloutholder. County Judxn o f Hemlnote County, Florida, on the let
day o f April. ISIS, for approval
o f aaina and for final dlerharxa aa
Admlnletrator o f tha aetata of Flo*ala Maa Prior, dereaeed, on thla
let day of March, l i l t .
/ a / Gordon V. Frederick
Admlnletrator o f tha eeinta
o f FI.OMH1K MAE PRIOR,
deceaaad.

to Finance
through
i

-ftS A N E O R D

1111.

O. P. HERNDON
Clark o f lha Circuit
Court
lly E. U Burdick
Deputy Clark
W . C llutnhleon. Jr.
Attorn ey fo r Plaintiff
101 North Park Avenua
Sanford. Florida

tllA N TIC K A IIC a N A l B ANK
MEMBER

TV HURTS WRITING?
DETROIT (t*) - Tcachesr of
creative writing considers televis­
ion a barrier to good writing, says
Thomas Cauiey head of the Dcnby
High School English Department.
“ What we stress tn writing is
simplicity, and you don't learn any­
thing about simplicity from tele­
vision " he says
“ TV programs, he said, are com­
plex ar».1 Involved.”
"W e tell the students to write
about their own experiences,'' CauIcy said. "But very few of them
think 'hey have anything interest­
ing to write about. So many are
used &gt;o the tangled plots of tele­
vision the constant action on the
screen and the frequent hurts* of
callous burtalily They fail to un­
derstand there is beauty in writing
about a quiet day In the country.”

FDIC

Fond Memories O f O ld Days
Leave Oldtimers Misty Eyed
KANSAS CITY oR-They play U
sweet and they play It cute, hut
It'a seldom now that they play tho
really hot note in this town of the
"Twelfth Street Rag" — the one­
time hotbed of swing.
Some of the cats who used to
nit the hottest licks are delivering
milk now or laying bricks fust
about all of them can get misty
eyed thinking about the old days.
"This city used to be the jumpingest,” says Chet Stamps, an
artist * agent who has been around
a long time.
"Today you have to read be­
tween the lines of fine print to
find a Joint that'a selling jazz on
a rommerclal basis."
He shook his head. “ And yet, we
really had it Benny Motcn, The
great Count Basie, Hot Lips Page,
Andy Kirk. That fine sax man Ben
Webster.
"Webster, by the way, came
back to Kansai City a while ago
and almost starved to death look­
ing for a job. All he could find
here was some two-bit engage
ments Naturally, he beat It."
Herb Six, a professor at the
Kansas City Conservatory and him­
self an accomplished jazz planlit,
was aa gloomy as Stamps.
“ There's plenty of potential Jan
material left in Kansas City," Six
saM, "but It doesn't find any out­
let here So the young musicians
either lose Interest and originality
or move elsewhere."
Historians of local jazz generally
date Its decline from the downfall
of the late Tom Pendergait, the
colorful political boss who kept
Kansas City wide open until the
late 1930s.
Some deduce that political re­
form however, desirable In mejor
respccti. has proved no unmlxed
blessing for Jazz. “ Things get too
quiet, things get square," one exmusician said.
Others contend that Jazz and
Jazzmen have long since outgrown
their gaudy otiglna.
The booker* put a major share
of the blame on the 20 per cent
entertainment tax and ' the early
closing hours — 2 a.m. week
nights and 12 midnight on Satur­
day.
"During the Pendergait d ayi,"
said John Tamino, partner In

Stamps' booking agency, "the
Joints stayed open all night. Oh,
the midnight clotlng law’s been on
the books since 1933, but nobody
used to enforce it. Club owners
couH afford more live entertain­
ment. Where an operator used to
hire a large band, he now uses a
small combo, or maybe a single
guy with a piano."
Similar thoughts came . from
Dave and Tom Reiser, a brother
piano and guitar team featured
at one of Kansai City's awankier
establishments.
"Tbere'a the obvloui economic
angle,” Dave said. "The operatori
don’t make the profits they did In
the old days and they don't like
to take chancei with now thlngi.
Add to this a general lack of show­
manship. You’ ve got to have aome
idea -&gt;f presentation, to put your
stuff across. That seemi almost a
lost art here abouta.
"Maybe audiences don't.really
care much for Individual expres­
sion any more. They want to see
funny facei, they want the guy
blowing the horn to do haodsprings
besides."
But some of the catj who had
taken to masonry and letter carry­
ing couldn't keep from their Instru­
ments Indefinitely.
Three veterans — George Salis­
bury, piano; J. Jackson, tenor
ssx; bandleader and bassist Roy
Johnson — plus Bob Hopkins, a
young drummer, recently formed
a band because, as Johnson ex­
plained, "w e Just couldn't stand
not playing any more. We'd rather
play than eaV" They aet up ahop
in a place called the Trocadero.
Johnson proclaimed his Jazz
man's cred for dark times. "Man,
things may be dragging, but it
only takes a little spark to set you
goln'," be said.* "And ain't nobody
can say where the next spark will
come from ."

TELEVISION
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Film facia A Fancy
Advontoro with Enel# W ill
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Industry on rarada
lluntlnc and FDhlnx with
Don
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Austin Praaanta
John Daly Nawa
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Amos 'a1 Andy
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F. L. Miller
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AD kindn of Desks, finished or nnfialshed Step, Em
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U yIbc Room Balias.

Dinette Set

- M K tM tl

Feature 7:1* — 10:30
PLUS

Friday
Mar. 4

THURSDAY — FRIDAY
Burt* 6 * 0
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Hundreds o f discontinued numbers In
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FEATURE TIME

THRU SATURDAY
6 PC. ROCK MAPLE LIVIN G

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Homo Edition— New*
Homo Edition— Sporta
Home Edition— Waaihar
Sherlock Holtnea
Dinah Shore Show
Nawa Caravan
Croucho Mars
Jdatlce
Dragnet
Ford Thaatar
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_ SHOP HOWJ f f WHAT YOU S A ¥ if

NOTICE TO PUBLIC

1:00 • 3:00 • 1:11
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FURNITURE CENTER
SALE CONTINUES

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Maa*ly Faa»ral H*a&gt;* ( i m n t j
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M i l by Jofca Wlllla Moooly.
Mrm. Mary Mo**ly
R i m n IH i Ratal* M. C.
Msooly,

BEAU BRUMMELl

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Shop and Save
In Sanford

(Eire §&gt;tmfatb Sm all*

PLUME XLVI

Established 1908

•

AN INDEPENDENT DAII.T NEWSPAPED

SANFORD. FLORIDA.

Location Cited
For Project
The general area adjacent to the Goldsboro tertian, outside the
City limit*, was cited last night as the most suitable location for a
Negro housing development
In recommending the area, tha City Zoning and Planning Commis­
sion also recommended that tha City assist any builder to tha limit of
its financial ability in bringing
inter and sewer facilities to such
a development.
The recommendations were pro­
posed by A. W. Lee and seconded
by Tom Vaughn.
Meeting with the board at City
ilall were members of the city
and county commissions, realtors,
and Hrailey Odham. whose bid to
construct a Negro project acrosa
tenm the Memorial Stadium was
A vesper service opening the rejected Feb. 18 by the Zoning
county observance of Girl Scout Commission.
Week will be held from 4 lo 5
The board went on record as re­
p. m. Sunday at Soulhslde prim cognising tha definite need for a
ary schoo.l AU Girl Scout troop: Negro
development, but aald
In the county have been Invited there is apparently no tract of
along with parents and persons In land o f sufficient sise and suitable
(crested tn the Girl Scout move­ location in tha city,
ment.
Odham had proposed to build
The program for the service was a subdivision on the vacant land
announced today by Mrs. F. E. at the corner of Celery and MelScott, chalrmtn for special events lonville Avei.,but his request waa
for the Girl Scout leaders' organ turned down following a storm
(ration of Seminole County. Miss af protest against putting •
Francei Cobb it president of the "colored section In the center of
orginUatlon&lt;
the white section of Sanford."
The crowd that collected at last
A number of songs, Including
"America,” "The Hymn of Scout night's meeting waa small Indeed
Ing", "Uirl Scout* Together". compared to the more than 100
"The Golden Sun", and "When the persona who gathered two weeks
Campfire's Flame Ascends", will ago to object to Odham’ a pro­
posed project.
highlight the eventThe effect of the Zoning Com­
Mrs. J. B. St. John will be the
mission's action la to limit Negro
speaker.
expansion to the southwest aide
The Invocation will be given by
o
the Rev. Lucian Scott end the f the city.
Discussion o f possible sites last
benediction by the Rev. David S.
Carncfix. The candlelight service night centered around a 100-acra
will be conducted by Miss Cobb. tract belonging to American Fruit
Growers, located at tha end o f
The color guard will be active in
weat 13th St., acroaa from Crooms
the ceremony.
Academy In Goldsboro district.
Girl Scout Week will be observ­
Mayor Denver Cordell and two
ed (larch 6-13.
city commissioner*, F. D. Bcott
and Earl Higginbotham, were pre­
sent at the meeting. Representing
the county commission were John
W, Melsch, chairman, and Fred
Dyson. A number o f realtors also
attended.

FRIDAY, MAR. 4, 195r&gt;

»

Associated Press li««w d Wire

GRAMMAR SCHOOL STUDENTS or Mrs. Roberta Rich­
ards’ room were taken qn a tour of The Sanford Herald com
posing room and business office this morning. Here they
watch linotype operators setting up the day's news In the
pressroom. (S taff P h oto)_________________________________

‘ Florida Road Board
Adopts 55 Schedule
Final Budget Approved By Group
Adds $1,587,000 To Tentative Plan

Strolling
In Sanford
»

1 W room above Trachten'a win
W tha trenc of the meeting togot aadenray at A o'clock with
q j?

Dm Smith, president, to conduct
hta first meeting since be has been
started as head of the group. Mem­
bers am urged In be present,
a a a

J

County Judge Ernest Hnusholder
County Prosecutor Karlyle Houabolder, and Sheriff J. L. Hobby
ara attending Ftorids’a first Traffie Court Conference at the Uni­
versity of Florida, Gainesville,
The conference
will continue
through Saturday. Judga Houaholder will participate in a panel
discussion on traffic court proce­
dure in tha county courts,
o o o

The Samtable County Vocation•1 School la allowing tha film.
T ilin g Procedures In Buataesa"
•v by tha Globa-Wamlcke Company.
"* The film witl ba shown on Mon­
day at I p. m. and on Wednesday
It It a. m. Anyone laterceted In
nooiag tkla film in cordially invit­
ed to oee H at the school at either
data. Office workers may ha aai nedally latereated in tha film,
o a a
A demonstration an “ Safety la
Da Marne'* waa ta ba give* at l:M
» as. taday at ■ meeting of the
% ID Grade 4-H Club at Saafaed
■ ■»— Ugh School. Janet Glean
a( tha dab. Mlaa Mit -

/
v

ALIBI FAILS
AFTER GREETING
TRINIDAD. Colo. UP) — The
■an told Peaeo Juatleo Tony Bar­
ton yesterday ha was sorry but
Fate SantlsUven, charged with
running a stop sign, had bean
galled out of team to tend an niltag relative.
He was a “ good friand" of tha
‘‘ defendant, tha man said,
and
aouldn't tha earn be continued.

TALLAHASSEE IB -A final 1955
work schedule authorising 106 mil
lion dollars in primary construction
has been adopted by the State
Road Board.
The final budget approved by
Jie board yesterday added $1,587,
000 to the tentative budget ap
proved Jan 2S.
An additional ta million dollara
to permit the four lining of SR 600
from Tampa to Plant City waa the
most significant addition. The road
is the main artery between TMupa
and Lakeland and has thf h^dvirst
traffic count in' the tu t* .
,
The tentative budget carried ta
million dollrrs to four lane SR 600
from SR 43 to a point 6th miles
east. The flnil budget carries one
million dollars to four lane the
road all the way Into Plant City,
an added distance of about aeven
miles.
Both tentative and final budgets
include the four lining of SR 600
from Plant City to the Polk County
line from the Hillsborough line to
Lakeland.
When the program ta completed
tiie entire stretch between Tampa
and Lakeland will be fourlaned.
The final budget also provides
(£46,500 for paving at state lnstltu
Mens and (33,056.000 in bond pro­
jects This mikes total primary
construction budget $141,100,100.
Under state law, the Road De­
partment Is not permitted to do
any primary work during the year
that Is not Included in the final
budget
The tentative secondary budget
uf $33,063,600 was approved with
only a few minor changes In th*
protect priorities.
V'bite '06 million dollars In pri­
mary work hai been budgeted,
only about 66 million dollari will
be available for spending. Of thla
at million dollars will go to pay
for Jobs which were put under
construction last year and carried
over Into 1$55.
That leaves about 30 million do!ta n for new primary constructing
but the board aald this amount
could ba spent only by matching
about U million dollan available
in federal aid funds,

Casselberry Man
Awarded $22,500
In -Damage Suit

After deliberating slightly more
than two hours, a Seminole Cir­
cuit Court Jury last night awarded
$22,500 to Carl Pynn, 32, Caaaelben y salesman, for Injuries re­
ceived In an automobile collision
last year.
The verdict followed three daya
of trial.
Pynn claimed 50 per cent dis­
ability In bringing a (76,000 suit
against Mrs. Pauline R. Marshall
and Robert William Walker, both
of Orlando.
Mr*. Marshall was the driver
and Walker the owner o f the car
that collided with Pynn's at the
Intersection of State Roads 436
and 434 at Foreat City on Feb. 8,
1054.
Tha defendant* lost counter
claims against Pynn. Mrs. Mar­
shall waa suing for $60,000 and
Walker for $5,000.
The law firm o f Maguire, Voorhis and Wells, Orlando, repre­
sented Pynn. Parker McDonald,
Orlando, and Voile Will lama Jr.,
Sanford, were counsel for Mrs.
Marshall and Walker.

library, Museum
Come Up Tonight

The proposed General Sanford
Library end Museum will come
up for further discussion at an
adjourned meeting of the City
Commission tonight. The meeting
will -begin at 7:30.
Present will be members of the
committee .seeking construction
of th* memorial, which would
STOWAWAYS FOUND
GENOA, Italy UB—Nina stow, house the library and effects of
•waps were aboard the Argentina th* late Gen. H S. Sanford for
■hip Corrientes when it docked yes whom the city wae named.
A site In Ft. Mellon Park has
terdav. They atl eald they boarded
designated for the museum.
the anlp at fUo da Janeiro.

^Council Turns To Egyptian Charges
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., m i U N. Security Council turned
ay to S o rite s charges and to­
il eouat .ebargaa touched *0
Monday night's Moody border
near Gaga.
japtariw tnaion resulting

the dachasi - to which a
Uana and alghl tore«Us war*
m uted kiltod-was brightened *
militant ati l f f a I r e * Da
and Israeli premiers and
___ p in —m toward a new
afliUry Unset

against to-

There waa aoa* expectations th*
noundl would Metpene He disensstoo ef Da rival charges until after
e report (n a the Egypt • Israel U N. Mined A
tn Palest!e*.
I the PgvpMarnri border, is
cled to meet Sunday an the
i fighting.
Wednesday charged to-

meditated aggression" In th* eomite-loug Gaa« coastal strip occu­
pied by the Egyptians.
Egypt charged Israel's troops
with attacking a military camp
the ancient ally of Oaxa,
two miles inside the territory, and
wUk ambushing a truckload of rotsfdrcements Egypt termed this
the “ moat brutal act ef aggrossen" sine* Urn 1841 armistice.
torael'e countereomplalnt, filed
yesterday mada no mention of the
Case battle but accused Egypt of
"continuous violations” of tha arimsnt and council resagreen
otetiona. It charged:
(I) armed attacks an Israeli
im p s , (I) raid* on Israeli eltimaa, (I ) Egyptian failure la pre­
vent tech acta, (4) assertion of ■
state ef war and exercise af ac­
tive bofllpsraney against Israel,
teetedtag a Mockids, (I) “ warlike
propaganda and threats," and (•)
tefuaal tn negotiate a

The complaint waa In line with
Israel’s usual strategy ot trying
to ahift such council debates from
particular incidents to the general
Arab-Israell situation and the need
for an ovel, long-term solution.
Earlier Israeli statements In Jer­
usalem on the Oaxa fighting
charged the Egyptians attacked
first inside Israel and were chased
back Into Egypt
la Damascus yesterday, Egypt
and Syria announced they had
signed a new defense part which
Syrian Prime Minister Sabri As­
sail said resulted from Do need
for “ practical and decisive meas­
ures to safeguard th* Arab coun­
tries from repealed Israeli aggrwa

Child Labor Law
Charge % Placed
Against Foreman
A field fo. :mu&gt; at Zellwood
Orange County, waa charged yes­
terday with violation of the child
labor law by hiring four minors,
(wo from Sanford, to pull radishes
while public schools arc in session.
The children are under 14 ycari of
age.
B. E Lee, Winter Park, field
agent for the Florida Industrial
Commission, signed an affidavit
for a warrant against Pedro Clrllo, Zellwood, yesterday
with
Peace Justice Johnnie A. McLeod,
Apopka, which was to be served
by the constable. Bond I* to be act
at $300, l-ee laid.
Mrs. Gwyndnlyn Mann, Orange
County school attendance officer.
Is witness and had warned Clrilo
on several occasion!, Lee said.

Leadership Classes
To Start Tonight
At Recreation Hall
Classes In Leadership Training
will begin here tonight under the
sponsorship ot the Sanford Dull­
ness and Professional Womsn'a
Club. Barry Crtmm will be D e In­
structor.
The classes will be held et the
recreation building, directly east of
of the Chamber of Commerce, in
Ft. Mellon Park. They will begin
at 7 and continue until to p. m
Crimm, farmerly dirrrDr of
adult education for Striven llnl
verslty and Florida Southern Col
lege, li De auDor of "How to
Put Over Your Mate Ideas In
Speech" and a butiness and civic
leadership training manual.
Anyone Dterestcd in attending
D e classes should contact Miss
Betty Wolfram, telephone 8040.

300 Pound Owner
Asks For Comfort’
PIKEVILLE, Ky. UP) — A 806
pound motel owner, who felt jail
would ba more comfortable wID
warm showers, a roomy bed and
better food, la beck for 30 days.
Hiram Bailey was sentenced
yesterday for selling liquor In
dry territery. He pleaded guilty
after being warned a jury trf«*
might cost him a year in Jail.
During c 60 - day atey on a
similar charge teat year, Bailey
weat all the way to the Court uf
Appeals la an effort to have a
shower and a had more suited te
hie 6-foot-l frame Installed
jail — at his own expense.

said all oDar
JAPANESE ORGANISED
Arab nattaus would ba invited ta TOKYO lit—Nearly six million
fata the new sOtenc*. which u Japanese—364 per cent of the
designed to replace the noofune- labor forrw—ere organised te labor
ttoning Arab L etfM collective dea Labor Ministry
$

1

N o. 138

Missing Scientist
At News Meeting
Soviets
Surprise
Outsiders

Girl Scout Week
Will Be Opened
Af Vesper Service

1

Weather
Clear tn partly tloudv aiti
continued « ir m through Saturday, highr-t this afternoon
75*
83, lew eat tonight 60-70.

Pontecorvo Has
Center Of Stage

THE HANDLEY SILVER Cup Tournnmenl Marled thin morning n» the Sanford Tourist
and Shufflcboard Court. 13 town* were represented and 52 team* were registered. (Staff
Photo)

Large Turnout Sees
Skuffleboard Play
Excitement ren high es 52 ehuffleboerd teems began the Handler
Silver Cup Toumnment under a biasing Florida sun this morning at
the Sanford Tourist and Shuffleboerd Courts.
Joseph Murrey, official end director of the tourney, stated that
the event would probably run up until lets evening with the winner to
have hi* name Inscribed on the
tup donated, by Handley lo cveale
InUroit In shuffle board.
Thla contest Is also the scene
for th* meeting o f all the presi­
dents of l he northern shuffle hoard
district* with J. M. Holier, president of tha entire district, acting
n* announcer.
Thomas Virtue, head ref err*,
and Mrs. Ada Hedges, head scor­
ORLANDO UT—The Board of er, arc from Eiistl* while the
Control seeking a president of De teams
themselves conm
from
University of Florida has cut the Winter I’nik, I'rnlmdy o f Dayfield of candidates to Dree mon­ Iona, Sanford, Umitnlla, Coronado
ths heads of the universities of Club of New Smyrna, DeLand,
Arizona, Mississippi and Wyoming. Clermont, Orlando, City Island of
Dr. Ralph L. Miller, Orlando Daytona, Mt. flora, Eustis, end
member of the board, confirmed Leesburg. Four teams ere allowed
D ll last night and added:
lrom each town.
"A telephone vole was taken and
Benches were full to over-flow­
a majority favored one man and
ing with spectators end those
that man has been contacted."
lie declined lo Identify the man awaiting ■ turn et one o f the 12
but acknowledged that the choice courts. Cold lunches were served
lies between Dr. R. A. Ilarvlll of by Mrs. Gstelirl in the main club­
Arizona. Dr. George D. Humphrey house to prevent too much inter­
of Wyoming «nd Dr. J. D. Williams ference with the player*.
J. R. Ball, president of the
of Mississippi.
Miller made the disclosure when Sanford Tourist end Shufflrbonrd
■iked for comment on ■ Jackson- club said that tha organisation
villa Journal slnry that Harvill was had made a gain o f 32 member*
Do choice of the seven-man board since last year and la growing all
but that a minority favored Hum­ th* time. "In ahufflebonrd play­
ing itself, Sanford I* 'way ahrad
phrey end Williams.
The Jourral said "D e pros' e of the other*. Whenever we go
was Dal the board would not do out of town to play we usually
able te resch e unanimous de­ win” he said Mr*. Crenshaw is
cision."
vice-president o f the club end
Other members of De board- will take llall'e place when he
which will make Us nomination tv leaves in two months.
the Cabinet Board of EducationThe winners will be announced
refused to say who was being con tonight es well as the official!
aidered or whether ■ decision bsd and referees.
been made

I'cfF Candidate*
For College Head
Narrowed To Three

Florida Symphony
Brought To Sanford
By Local Sponsors
A concert by the renowned
Florida Symphony
of Orlando,
was given In the Seminole High
School auditorium this afternoon
for (ha high school student* o f
Urn county who warmly welcomed
the excellently played program
presented under the
baton of
Frank Miller,
Program notes for th* special
educational concert were given by
the manager of the orchestra,
Bub Craig, and added much to the
enjoyment and appreciation of the
offerings.
For a majority of (he audience
It was an introduction to Mr. Miller who has had the capable mu­
sical group In rhnrge this year
anil wlu&gt; has delighted many au­
diences in addition to the one
this afternoon with his effective
ing a well knit hour of harmony,
monitratcd their skill In present­
ing a wellknlt hour of hnrimmy.
The exceptional and privileged
opportunity for the high school
group to hear the orchestra was
made possible by it. T. Mil wee,
SupL of Public Instruction, end
several sponsors listed as
the
Sanford Atlantic National Hank,
First Federal Havings and Loan
Assn., Finn.In Slate Hank, Citi­
zens Hank of Oviedo, Lee Brothers, Inc., Hill Hardware Co.,
Randall
Chase,
Mrs.
Louise
Touhy and the Remlnnle County
Board of Public Instruction.
The program was Overturn* to
"The Flying Dutchman" (Wagner), “ Blue
Danube
Waltz",
(Strauss), ‘‘TIi* Funeral March of
a Marionette",
(Gounod),
ami
“ Circumstance
March,
No 1"
(Elgar) and "Spanish
Caprice"
(Itimsky • Korsakoff),

Couple Asks Court Danger Point Has Not Been Hit
For Child's Custody In Stock Market, Head Testifies
AKRON, Ohio
— Armed
wID truit In Got) end support
from their neighbors, ■ blind end
deaf couple tried Monday to con­
vince ■ Juvenile Court judge that,
In spit* of their handicap, they
should be allowed to rear their
normal 11-day-old son.
“ Whet Is best for the baby Is
our only concern," said the head
of D e Summit County Welfare
Department, which left ■ note for
Harold Hathaway, 63, end his
wife, Georgia,
32,
suggesting
Detr baby, Clarence, be pieced in
a foster home.
“ They can t take my baby eway
from me," arid Mrs. Uathewey.
“ Clarence 1s the only thing I ever
had of my own In my whole life."
A tiny woman of only 6 feet 2,
Mr*. Hathaway was born In South
Dakota and grew up as an or­
phan. Bha became acquainted wID
her husband through a Braille
correspondence.

TO REACH AGREEMENT
TOKYO UR — Private Japanese
interests and Rad Chine will reach
a basic fishing agreement about
March IS, it wee predicted here
today. Talks have been undor way

k Frifiag rim Jon. i t

WASHINGTON I* - Edward T
McCormick president of (he Amcr
lean Stock Exchange, testified to
diy that in spite of record-high
and still rising stock prices "wo
nave not reached a danger point
In De stock market."
McCormick was Invited before
the Senate Banking Committee in
its inquiry into De stock market—
an Inquiry that seemed for De
moment to be focusing on efforts
af the financial community D draw
millions of new investor! Into De
market
Like yesterday's leadoff witness,
President G Keith Funston of Do
New York Stock Exchange, Mc­
Cormick said current high prices
■re based on such sound factors
■a strong business activity and con­
fidence of investors.
McCormick on Da whole voiced
a firmer degree of confidence In
D e market outlook than did Fun­
ston, who said De possibility of a
1928-type clash can't be ruled ouL
Funston sate ba himself, however,
t* continuing to buy stocks.
The American Stock Exchange,
which McCormick heads, is one of
De two securities exchange* In
Dig gouatqr with nationwide le­

eilitlei. It has 1,600 members In
447 cities end Its trading volume
i« second only to that uf the Now
York exchange
McCormick said In his prepared
statement he sees no Indication of
"excessive or unsound use of cred­
it" In the market today.
And hr said De fact that market
price indices “ have risen above
De peak* which they attained in
September nf 1D29 should not In
.(self be accorded too much sig­
nificance "
"Where** De stock market av­
erage show* in Increase from 1929
of 13 per cent." McCormick said,
"cost of living It up 56 per cent,
term Income 133 per cent, Insur­
ance premium collections 190 per
cent, hourly wages 3 3 per cent,
bank deposi.s 33 per cent, personal
income 234 per cent, gross national
product 143 per cent, and mort­
gage debt 284 per cent."
Chilrman Fulbrlght (D-Ark) of
De' banking committee quiaaed
yesterday's witness closely about
• campaign by De New York exchsnge and its members to bring
many moir Investors late lb*
stock market.

MOSCOW (jv— Prof. Bruno pon­
tecorvo field D e renter of the
stage for an hour and 40 minutes
at a new* conference today. He
disclosed little except that he has
been a Soviet citizen since 1952.
He declared he is working only on
peaceful atomic projects.
The scientist was born In Italy
but fled the West In J950, His
whereabouts had been a mystery,
hut Pravada last weekend reveal­
ed his presence in D c Soviet
Union. What prompted Soviet of­
ficial* to arrange today's newa
conference—a rare thing in thla
country— was not exactly clear.
Asked hy a Western correspond­
ent if he would change over In
atomic military work in ease of a
direct threat to De Soviet Union,
Pontecorvo ansewered:
“ I am a Soviet citizen and to­
gether with all Soviet people I am
ready to serve De people to D e
bed of my ability."
This teemed to be an elaborate
way of saying yes.
His voice broke and words eame
slowly as he sent greetings to the
physicists with whom he had
worked in England.
"I must say 1 have feelings of
great friendship and respect for
them, especially the director of
D e laboratory where I worked,
Prof. Sir John D. Cockcroft."
Tontccorvo said that many nf
Deie physicists are "honest, cap­
able people who ore blinded by the
yellow press. Only thus can t ex­
plain their opinion-about tbe-Rovlet
Union "
Pontecorvo, who was given Brit­
ish citizenship for hi* work In
World War It, disappeared in 1030
while m irking at England's top
secret Harwell Atomic Research
Station, lie Is now about 43 years
old.
The dark ha Ired scientist an­
swered questions of 75 reporters
from both (he Communist and noncommunist world at the confer­
ence, arranged hy the U. S. S. R.
Academy of Science In lls white
marble hall on the outskirts of
Moscow.
He proclaimed firmly hi* belief
that "Soviet science and Soviet
physics hold the first place In the
world."
He cited ns proof the creation
In the Soviet Union nf what he
railed the world's first atomic
powered electric station. But he
added he was not connected with
work on the station, which Rus­
sia said was established fur in­
dustrial purposes.
Pontecorvo, speaking In Italian,
said he had been in Russia four
yrnrs,
“ Today It I* Impossible to stand
aaldu from life," ho said. "Tha
reactionary yellow press in capi­
talist countries tries to damper
the bruin o f the common people,
but there are things which ars
rlenr even lo children.
“ For instance, how is It possible
to believe that th* Hoviet Union
threatens the United States while
American lures are situated mar
the Soviet Union?"
Pontecorvo
remarks
wer*
trumlntrd
from
Italian
lot*
English, hut ho interrupted on o o
casino in correct the translator.

Dress Revue Plans
Discussed Today
Plans for the annual Dress Re­
vue ami Achlcvemenl flay programs were discussed this morn­
ing at a meeting of the executive
board of the county Home Demon­
stration Council.
Miss Myrtle Wilson, Home Dem­
onstration Agent, said the Drcsi
Rrvue will be held April 21 at
Lake Monroe Reboot.
Achievement Day will he held
May 8, In observance of Home
Demonstration Week, at the Can­
ning Kitchen nn 251h St. Each club
will furnish an exhibit of handi­
work. The event will be open lo
the public and will run from 10
a. m. to 10 p. m
POLICE CHARGE MAN
ROCHESTER, N.Y. in -P ote*
today held • man who they said
struck a Sl-year-old cripple over
De bead with a hammer, robbed
aim of $30 and Den atola hia
'•rutrhes to pawn them.
Ilcbart Dorsey, bleeding from
nead wounds, crawled two blocks
from his aprrtment to a rritaurant
far help. Hr was reported in poor
toodlltofl i t G «M ru Hospital.

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CHURCH NEWS
All Church Notice* muit be presented at
10 a. m on the day before publlca-Uon.
CENTHA1. BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. i W Parham, pastor.
Cor, Fourteenth fit, Oak Ave.
Sunday School 8:45 a. m.
Morning Worship Service 11:00

Tha

Central Baptists
To Have Revival
Series At Church

Training Union 1:30 p. m. It's a
{family affair.
Evening Worship ‘7iJ0 p. m.
"Come thou with us and wo will
do that good.”

A eerlee o f revival aervieea
will he ronducted at the Central
Baptist Church, March 6-20. The
Paetor, J. W, Parham, will do
the preaching and Services will
be at 10:00 a. m. and 7:30 p. m.
THE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
The muele will constat o f con*
OF OVIEDO
gregatlonal singing, special num­
Rev. Louis jjtay, MIsMer
bers hy the eholr, trio, and hy
1:13 a.m. Sunday*6&lt;hoaJ.
the Juniors and Primaries. Miss
Mildred Boepple will play
her
Marimba each evening.
This meeting la In cooperation
with tha Simultaneous Crusade for
Chriet in which over 20,500 Bap­
tist Churches
will
participate
from Maryland to California, and
from Florida
to the state o f
Washington.
The members, with tha pastor,
cordially Invite the public to attend theee services
THE CHRISTIAN AND MBMION

ART ALLIANCE CHURCH
Park Ava. al Fourteenth St
Pallor, David S. Caraeflt
Sunday School and Morning
Worship Combined Service 8:43 a.
m. to 11:30 a. m. "Worship Period
begins at 10:40 a. m ."
Alliance Youth Fellowship 8:80
p. m.
Evening Service 7:41 p. m.
Wednesday Mid-Week B i b l e
Study 7:43 p. m.

Ladles' Bibla clan 8:30 p. m.
Wednesday
Prayer meeting T i» p. m.
L.

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■ &gt; U n BIDE BAPTIST CHURCH
• east I7th Street
W. L. Stephens, Pastar

LAKE MARY BAPTIST
CHAPEL
Lake Mary, Fla.
Pastor — Rev, H. A. Frith Jr.
Sunday School 8:46 a.m,
Morning Worship 11:00.
Training Union 8:80 p.m.
Evening Worahlp 7:30.
Prayer Meeting Wed. 7:10 p.m.

[tnUtbam

CHULUOTA BAPTIST CHURCH
Walter A. Routh Jr., Paetor
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Morning Worahlp 8crvlca 11 a.m
Morning Worahlp It a.m.
Sermon by tha pastor.
Evening Worship 8 p.m.
Evening Worship Service 7:80
Prayer Meeting Wednesday &gt;
p.m. Sermon by the paator.
Prayer Meeting Wednesday T ill
p.m.
FIRST
&gt;raise worahlp
lion oroade**t
ORE (740 he);

1a; t j s

luadav School 1:13 a.m.
a u r a Service io:io a.m.

nMjm s &amp; am

ISM Elm AVO.
Bishay A. W. Stover. Pash
i:4l a.m. Sunday School.
1 a.m. Morning Worship,
i hy A. W. Stover.
'ISO p.m Evangelistic Hoar

PRESBYTERIAN

CHURCH
Oak Avauue aad Third Street
Rev. A, O. Melania, Minister
0:45 a. in. Sunday School
10:60 a. m. The Session meets for
Prayer In the Session Room
11:00 a. tn. Morning Worship (Ta
be broadcast over WTRR)
Solo—" 0
Divine
Redeemer"
Gounod
Mr*. Charles Wilke
Anthem — "O Lord Most Hely"
Bruckner
Chancel Choir
Sermon
Rev. Helnnla
6:00 p, m. Pioneer Fellowship —
Sandwich Night
8:00 p. m. Senior High Fellow­
ship — Covered dish supper
7:30 p. m. Evening Worahlp
Anthem—” 8lng To Tha Lord A
Joyful Song"
Da rat
Sermon
Rev. Mclimls
CONGREGATIONAL
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Comer Park Ave, and I4th Bt.
J. Bernard Root
Minister
Sunday School
8:10
Classes for ell ages from
NURSERY to NONAGENARIAN
Young People's
Group Prank
Thomas

Adult Discussion
For Enemies"
Morning Worship
Sermon Subject:

Group: "Love
11:00

“ Plot** Hero

Htrald office hr

FIHST MKTHOD18T CHURCH
Milton If. Wyatt, Minister
Richard
(&gt;. Knight, Atxociale
Mini* ter
0:46 a. m. Church School — A
Clait for every age.
11:00 a. m. Morning Worahlp
Holy Communion — Meditation—
"Shoe* of Peace"
0:30 p. m. Methodlat Youth F#l*
Iowa hip
7:30 p. m. Evening Worthip
Sermon — "Keeping Life Freeh*
(Qroadcaet over WTRR)

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FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST,
SCIENTIST
(too East Second Street
Sunday School
0:30 a. m.
Sunday Church Services 11: e. m.
Wednesday Testimonial Meetings
8:00 p. m.
Free reading room— 104 S. Perk
Avenue.
Second Floor
Open Monday through Friday
from 12:30 to 4:30 p. m.
Men's God-given dominion ever
fear, disease, and discord will be
brought out at Christian Science
services Sunday.
Tha Scriptural aelectlona In the
Lesson • Sermon entitled "M an"
will include the folowlpg from
Psalms (3 :4 ,6 )i "W hat Is man,
that thou arc mindful o f hlmt
and the son of man, that thou
vlsltaet him ?—Thou madast him
to have dominion over the work’s
o f thy hands; thou hast put all
things under his feet."
From "Science and Health with
Key to the Scripture*" by Mary
Baker Eddy tha following pas­
sage will be among those read
(228:11-15): “ The enslavement o f
man Is not legitimate. It will
cease when man enters iyto hi*
harltaga o f freedom, his Godgiven dominion over the material
senses. Mortals will soma day
assert their freedom in the name
o f Almighty God."
Tha Golden Teat is from Ec­
clesiastes (7:20): "Lo, this only
have I found, that God
hath
made msji upright."

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FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Park Avenue at Slstk Street
W, P. Brook*, Jr„
Pastor
John L. Miller, MlaUler of Edu­
cation
Rulh E, Archer, Director of Mu“ Wa'v* Saved A Place For You"
Early Morning Worship 8:45 a. m.
Sermon
W. P. Brooks, Jr. ]
Sunday School
8:45 a. m.
"Come With Your Family To
Sunday Bfhool. Wa Provide for
Every Member of Tha Fsm dy—V
Evan the Baby."
Morning Worahlp
11:00 a, m.
Sermon
W. P. Brooks, Jr. |
Training Union
8:18 p. m.
"Training Unionla A Family
A ffair". Bring all the Family
to Training Union.”
Evening Worship
7:80 p. m.
An Evening of Song
Fellowship Hour after the Ev&gt;'
enlng Service in the Memorial,
Educational building. The Motion
picture "Day o f March" will be
shown by the Visual Alda Com­
mittee.
Wednesday Evening Service
7:30 p. m. *
W* continue with the etudy of
tha book "A Winning Witnoea."
Wa Invito you to attend.
Nursery Open A t All Service*, j
Earphones for tha hard-of-hadrItti*.

From the time they w*r« married Marlon and Jim aspired to own their
own home, but Jim was a struggling young postal clerk and Marion gave up
her job when the babiea started to arrive. During the yeare they clung to
their dream even whan It teemed an Impossibility. They moved from apart­
ment to duplex to ranted house and always the unuied home plans tp oysd
with ttiiim.
.
Marlon and Jim wars not blttar, for while thalr material dreams wart
postponed, others were realised. They raitad three bouncing girls and
one boy to maturity with a serenity not all parent* know. Thelra was a
church-going family and their youngsters took to the good way o f life
like ducks take to water. There were the customary childrens’ dieeasat
but no casualties on the spiritual front.
Now Jim and Marion are established In that long awaited home o f
their own. The children are grown and gone, but they do not feel that
fulfillm ent has com a too late. In calm assurance o f a jo b w ell dona th ey
take deligh t la th eir rew ard—* happy, contented Ufa o f accom plishm ent.

WJCLCOMK

HOLY CROSS CHURCH
(Bolero pel)
Her, H. LyUletea Ztmmormua
FIRST CHURCH OF THE
B. D. Harter
NAZARKNE
Sad Sunday la Lent
''Corner of Second sad Me pie"
1:00 a. m. Hely Eucharist
t i l l Family Service and Chunk
School
j
A spiritual "spring tonic" awaits you la Sunday-School this 11:00 Choral Eucharist and S0rSuaday at 840 a, at. Clauoe for
Servian through the Week:
Monday through Thursday aad
Saturday — Holy Oemmaalm
—'1:80 a. bl
I
Wednesday — Evening Prayor
and Beeman — 1:00 p. m,
j
Pilgrim Fellowship

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This Series is Being: Published Each Week in the Sanford Herald with the Approval o f the Seminole County
Ministerial Association, and is Sponsored by the Following: Business Establishments:

T rvw ,

t a a
Church Of Christ

IM M O t lU m
K in O S A L BAK E

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TTTT: SANPORn HERALD Pn. Mar. 4. 1!»55

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Page S

PICTURE F3CA\
WHERE I ^ * 3 - 1

General Insurance
H. JAMES GUT AGENCY
312 EAST FIRST STREET
PHONE 78
H. JAMES GUT

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J A M E S B. G U T
Aaane.

Sanford Electric Co.

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BRINGS YOU THE BUY OF THE YEAR I I 1

T E L E V IS IO N

Station H 1IR —KCO Kiiujclcs
it*

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Now*

r.m.

»:n

1140 Clnb

IO:*-n Mimic fur Tou

lo-i v 11--) d u b
. i-.l’i New a
l«.Jl lino Club i ! :0ft O 't d r a n 'a Claaalc Hour
• ;4 4
l l . j e Varltltea
M ilt Tuwn A Country
0:11
liiti
II i l U y m a n ' i Call to Prayer
• ill
Ii.au World Al. Noon
m t i h D i i p .h
T: 0»
T.H
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1=34 S.H unlay 31a 11lit*
T tll
I 04
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0:11
1:11 Per Nor* Rin rh
•it*
l.oo World At Thrt*
»•:»•
* 1 1 National Guard Show
1* It
1 lo Hull Club
[ j- aymen’a Colt to Pra/ar
11
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l i l t m*n orr
I in Oia*n Intrrliiilr
■ OTI R D A f A .* .
t i l l Claud* II. Wniro
•:** ■ion On
1 IIU I'ti* liliyihm Ilnur
« ;» l lenmen 'e r* lt T o I’ rayar
1:11 All bl*r Jubilee
ana World Al n il
• c; l » « n Brtaktra
• il S r o i
4:11 Mualcal Program
i : t Woo torl Jambura*
».31- Hliurll llunk
■ lit \ * w t
4 11 ' In»ii oi Prunrum
Iron Grinina On A Cloud
I 01 Sot on (/C lo ck Club
f i i t Non*
f i l l Sunday Bvboul l . r n o a
■ Oil Mport* At A n i i i t t
7.SO Jtika Ilux nil. Nila
■ Hit J ocktr 'a Choir*
a no Main Cdulon
I to llornln* imvollono
( : l l I f a lu nca tlm *
*.11 Horaln* Urlodlo*
14.14 At Horn* With Muala
•lllll World AI Nino
111:11 Now*
•HI 81. Laika'a Choool
11:4* Th* Lavman'* Call to Pray at
II 01 •l«n Off
ItfNDAT A.M.
Tida Men tin
* •«1 »i-*lc t’ l'.-arnm
J : l l Hymn Tim*
I t i m c i it c m b t n r n in th
•: -&gt;•* i mi (Jtitncl Hour
j i ntriA i. n » r t i T
or n u n tI i-fl Hunrlty Murnlna Aluolcal*
t»*. I K K I M I I R t o l t n . CH AN 1.14 J. II. Colo
rrn t,
»;0fl W.It|.l *1 M m
Chart I* XT. O'lhlold*
4:11 hymphunrlte
riataiirr
0:34 Miiinar Morning Mu*lc
-VO*
in.ya Hnepri hlnacra
11:00 Chun h bervlura
Dooirtca Garlrud* O'ShMd*
tiortndonl. 13:11 ■uoday gtranad*
N O T icr t o t m : i R
■ L.NUAt P.M.
Th* 81*1* o f Florid* to: Itritrlr*
II ST Nawa
Garlrud* O lh lo ld * . who** 1&gt;I*&lt;* of
1:41 8*r*n*d* In Blu*
roildonr* lo No. !•** Flat* titraat.
Sioo Hund*y Mntine*
Chorlolt* J. North Carolina!
3:0* Freednm Story
You or* horthy notlflrd Hut a
1:11 Dial "J" For JaM
anil ha* bran bronchi apalort you
3:34 Franrli Muelo
In Hi* abova anlltltd Court by
1:44 Guait Kditnr
4:14 Muelc Lover* P r o grA a
Chart!* tV. Odhlald*. and that th*
tint A r* Marl* Hour
ratlaf aoutht to • rilvorc*. and you
1:34 Forward March
art harvby required and lutnienned
to aarva upon Rrnaat tlouahotder,
*:•« World At *1*
4:11 Safely program
ilalntlfra attornay, whoa* aitdraaa
1:34 Concert nn tha Potomaa
a P. (V Boa JtO. Sanford. Florida,
and flit with th* Clerk o f th* ( i l l d m . Hmatbrra
7:00 fiiieel titer
abova Court, at Sanford. Florida, an
T il l Church Serrlc#
a nan ay lo Iba lilll o f roinplalnl
*:lin Helen I n :. . n u l l Show
which la herewith aervtd upon
f : l * H*r*‘a in Volt
you, oa o r btfar* th* K l h day o f
Proudly W * 11*11
•larch,.A. D. l i f t . I f you fall t* do
*:*• Dial - i f " For M iibIo
•o, daera* pen cenfatao will b*
anterad a fa ln e t you for tha ratlaf l*:0* A t Homo w ith Uu*lo
demanded In th* bill o f complaint. i n t o Midnight Mlalalor
T h * till* o f aald anil la a* abova 11:04 N*w*
atatad and la dtalbnalad aa Chan* 11:0* Sign Off
eery No. ITI1.
, MONDAT A.M.
4 44 Sign on
W'ltnaea my hand and official
•l0| l . i r m i n ' i Coll To P r i M r
**at o f oold Court, at Sanford,
4 01 p a w n llriakar*
Florid*, (hit th* t l l h day o f F e b ­
4:30 New*
ruary, l it * .
•i l l Waatarp Jamboree
O. P. itorndon
1:11 Now*
Aa Clark of aald Cir­
T:«0 Seven O Clock Club
cuit Court,
,
7 It Nawa
(Baoll
1:0* Spurt* Al A (llaor*
l : 0v Jorkev'a Chnlra
NOTICK TO DBFCNU
l i l o Morning Davollona
TOi
I 11 Morning Malodloa
I- C. I.INOSRT and N. P. BAKRR.
3:00 World At Nina
and aath o f tham. If llvlna. ana If
»
- l l Mualn For Lodloa
■ tad, Ihalr raapanl** unknown
0 10 Hymn Tim*
hal-a, davlaaa*. lrtateee. or aran*
OH*
traa: all partita rlalm lnc lutaraat*. 10;4o Fur ljullre Only
by, Ihruurh, linrler nr aaaltiai lb » 14:11 Mimlr For Tou
114" Club
• a ll I- C. LINDSEY and K P. 14; JO Now#
f t . K l i n nr either o f Ihtm: dOUTH*
II.
tt
1400
Club
rrtv
w o rn *
c o m PANT
OF
Gem* of Melndy
O R E R W U X E . I S C , a ilaaolvod l11:11
l
i
l
l
La&gt;
man's
Call to D u l *
corporation under ilia low* o f
South Carolina] all parllaa bavin* 13:M W orld AI Noon
_
MONOAT
r.M.
nr claiming to hav* any rldlit. Illla IM I
nr Intaraai In and In land* In P*ml* If:** Radio Farm Dlgaot
Monday
Mallnaa
ante Connlv. Florida, datcrlliad aa
1:1* N*wa
Tha poiitnaotl Quarter f P H 'i )
1:11 Dial -J - r o r Jaaa
of
th*
Pnuthnaat
Quarter
M l Bar Non* Ranch
V ( » t v i . i o f th* (euihaaat Quart­
iO*
e r ( I t U i a f lacilnn 1 *. T o n n n V Thp*#
III tl iftz*r iClub
•hip t l . Sauth, Rant* *&lt;*. Caat.
You, and each nf you. ar* hare*
By notified In defend a autt that
hat bean flltd aaalnat you In tha
Circuit Court o f kamlnola County,
Florida, Iba abhravlattd lilt* nf
N ir rity. t o t h P K t b
which la H. C. PARK Hit and KATF.
"•
KIHKL-P.
allay
A. PARKER- lit* wife, plalalltfa,
K l l l k l SLH: —
ya. r . B- I.TSCH. at a l, dafandaat*.
ORifETINUS: Tbl* la tn give you
Chaacarr No. *T0». ataklna to quiet hollco that un Hie iJrd d a y ' o f
a n i confirm th* till* a f plaintiff* ?U "Lh* l U l . a u l t tea* commenced
to th* ob o vo land*, and you or* ro e,.hf .c ).r,^',l,. c “ ufl nf tha Ninth
iiit*d lo fll* you r onawar or other Judicial
Circuit nl Florida In and
arena* with th* d a r k o f aald
o
S
t # I S f , 1 ,12 , , .eC#u! ,,r&gt; H " r l d a . at
Court at dan ford. Florid*, and _l# Panford.
Florida, by Afar/ l.u. ill*
aarv* a m p y tharaof upon th* plainf l i r a aitarnaj-, w . A.. Pil tt a b iU ^ a t • I « p *T Tou. J i b 5 w T W lr V u . r alia,
M l
----- .. balaW. on p f &gt;#• Klrhuaay. a* daftndant. Th* pur*
fa rt tba l l t b da r a f March, t i l l . PM* af Iba ault la fo r dlvwrc* and
In daiaiilf iti which, a idem * i n properiy aaulrmant and occouhtlVg
rnnfavao1 will ba aatarod
W * flf*- U*1*
pandin* at Sanford.
Florid*. Tou *r* hereby raqulrad
**TfcH Notlto (b oll ba pahllfh.J. in appear and fll* whatavar wrlltan
a* raqulrad by law, in U * Paw* £•;*■••• K h a v a i o tha . . i d full
with th* Clark «r lha abova agmad
co u rt on ar baforo ih* ( t b d * y
•f, April. 1 *1 * a«d fll* a c o p y o f
*wiTt?BBS*ik* ba«a af Iba ClaVk Mid dofania upon th* attornay far
*■4 tk# Baal o f aald Court. Oil* U o pialnllff. lL F. M .h r. whoaa ad*
IB* ITtk
draaa l* I t* Conway Road. Orlando.
Florida, on or before Ih* laat man*
Clark o f cTrrult Court ttaia* dal*. Fail you not banc* a
•y a U Hunt O. C.
Dacrea p r o Conf*»*o will bo aatar*
ed again tt » o u and tha Mid caua*
I aeparia.
my hand and official
—— fCircuit Court. Pemlnol*
***l «*
o f ,th*
County, plain o f Florida, at San*
4:1*
III
a imi
till

O rio n Interlml*
Clauoa II. « olio
I'ha lth&gt;itim Ilnur
All l i a r Jubllaa
U'nrM At Hit
Twlllcht tjonga
Uttorte Bnuh
Uuolral 1‘ ruiram
K r lf llm On A cloud
ll»ooo Vnr A LaUr
niot "11" For Hurl*
Nlr.H Ititlllnn
Unlltd Notion*
1 1 1 Daneatlm*
At Homo With Mutlo

*

Legal Notice

r

J

Legal Notice

3

St asffiA'saissr a us:

" « O f •ip‘rl"

W d i o . t t om .a N D o
(•ahjert ■* l h a a o e W llk .a l Nailer I
PH ID A T P.M.
14', "Mr. ami Aire."
I.
11 Vltwere D lg tit
I Jn i haim Chat
I 11 Carii-un Carnival
* .*U Fun.Fact and henry
i:3u Advanlur# with I m l* Wall
s o n Wealhar-Newe-brioM*
4:11 Srnatnr Smatheie Report*
* So Mutlcal Vann!*-*
4:11 m e Play IU.I
7 44 " l '* i luylve"— f u llo n L*wla
7:11 John ijj I) N*we
7:14 Dollar A *«cond
I "0 Mama
I l « Topper
&gt;:&lt;&gt;(■ Play bn u *a o f atari
* 1 0 Tb* Vl«*
|H;»» The Lineup
14:34 I'erMon in Person
II. no Innet Panclum
I I ;3o \e»**S|&gt;nrlii-W*alhar
11:11 Tower Theater
13:34 New■ - eathcr
H .Ji t-lgn Off
■ ATtlt U AT A.M.
»:in trlgn nn
9:11 New *-Weal her
I»: on Mr. Wltard
10 In llop alont Cateldy
11:«« Wlnky-V’lnk and Tou
l l . l o dmlllii* I d * (Jana
13 01 Th* Bla Top
■ A T i RDAT r.M.
l:no Film Kar*
I in s-.MIer Par ad*
3 40 Whal In The Wotld
1:14 Volilh Take A Stand
J.
nn Pm BaeVetball
..111 Deng emit* A x lg n m r n t
I J* Art R»vl*
4:110 1a**l*
I to Canlral Fla. Shnwca**
l.oo Imrrlla Vnuna «how
: In Life nf llllev
4 *0 Jai-kle Ulce-on
9:«4 ifomedy Hour
In no pervlve le uur Bualntei
in .14 llll P*rede
11 nu l.ddle Cantor Show
l t : l o Chronvcnpe
II 1! Tower Theeler
I an New*.Weather
1:01 Sign o f f
t l M l AT P.M.
I:S4 Sign On
l 11 Weather-New ■ Rrlele
1:04 Tbl* le Tli* l.lf*
3:1(1 r a ce Th# Nation
3 an Klim f a r *
3:11 Mret tit* OrchMUA
3.1* Advenlur*
‘
I no tulle nf Ivy
I In Th* bean h
1:44 Abbott A Cn-t*llo
1:14 Victory at heo
#‘ 44 Pt*r Shnive**#
* 1 0 Waterfront
7:00 People At* Funny
7:1') Ja- k It-iiny
I en T o e , i nf tb* Town
» "ii (I E Theater
* 14 Father Know** Belt
I* : 44 llieek Ih* Hank
in in Whal* M- l.ln*
11:10 Gnmtyear-I’bllco T V FU ybmie#
I f nn New*-Weather
u i o i s ig n o r r
MONIIAT A.M.
t;«4 Teet Pattern
t.nu H om in g b h -w
e.n* Hreakfaet Club
t:3n Itnh &lt; rue by
10:1* Arthur Godfrey
10:31 New ■
1114 Strlko II Bleb
11:41 Valient I adr
MONDAT P.M.
13*11 Lo t * o f Lit*
i3 :l* Faarrh for Tom orrow
11:11 Guiding Light
l i « ( Kltcban Bhow
l : l e Welcome Tra-alar*
3 *1* Robert U -L ew is
III
Itouiepariy
l:» 4 Big I 'a r o ff
I IT (lpe* Haul*
* 1 4 sign o n
4:11 ll o m im a k ln g I* Fun
• M I I - T T J A C K tO N V IIL R
I ta b lo e t to r h o o p o W i t h * . I N.Ueol
FMIOAT F.M.
4:*a Rrlghlar Day
4:11 Seeret Storm
4 *4 On Tuiir Accnuni
4:0* P n r lla F a r c e Life
1:11 Sacking lle e rt
A 34 Derry Mnor*
■ :*4 New*. W*«lh*r. Sport*
* 34 Wtetyrn l'I*yhnu*a
Tint My M t t li Margie
7:»• CBS-TV Nawa
7:1* Ferry Como
* :(■ Memo
U i Topper
( :* * i-i.ivhi. it* o f a u r a
T:*4 lilt* Brooke
* :** Tha
•
r n i iI,ln*up
“
~er*on
to Paraon
•it*
reran
1:04 Kate a and Weather
. .1:1
. . A U .l aj Show— Winner*
H i l l SlBn Off
■ ATI H fia T A.M.
•■•• Teel I’aitern
■ t i l lodualry on Pargdo
1:11 Rlw Tin Tin, Jr.
* id* Story Tima
• i l l Barker Bill C a r t o o n
U t M Circle F Bench
10.14 Wlnky-D lnk. A
‘ Tou
il| M Capt
ili .Midnight
Captain
‘ . . ______
. . . . . Abbott
.
11:11
AbkolJ tand
Coelallo
Big T o p
ford, Florida, thia Ird day af
Marrh. t n t .
IClark a heal I
O. F. Ilerndon
l.ia lb . Circuit Cnurl

• ATI It DAT F.M.
13:11 Super Clr, tie
,
l:3n Sunday S. hn.,| L * * --n
t : II KLi. M ai. I n iv - i - l i y
l.nn Rig Ten ll«&gt;keih.ill
1:1) Hnlfar a St-olid
♦ Mpludln i7
1 ;11 Stn-rte Review
1:34 New* A diincte
S i l l Sinclair Weather
•i l l Community Cheat
4-mi Storle- of Century
*:34 Captain Rraddm-k
7 no Pateport To Danger
7i3n l ie n tb* Clock
1 no Jerkin G|e**ou
T:on Tw o For Tb# Money
9:34 My Knvnrll* lliivhand
14: mj I'rnfr-ftluhel Father
IO:S0 Where** flaymnml
11:04 i*brnm*»cope
11:1- Sl-ip 1lie Mu-14
II t l AlmoM 1 Urldi
13(11 rign m i
• I Ml A T A.M.
4:11 T#»t Fellern
10 ;on i j i i i p l uto My F**l
10 311 ll-lirr Home* fur lien ee
l.lv I-l*
ItiOo A S I'reebyltrn Church
13:00 Lat-lo
■ I M1AT F.M.
13 JO Thla le The Ufa
•l:*'i Renter o f Ih* Jungle
1 11 Tour lloma Today
3 i-n "Future o f America*
3:14 Mull,.n &lt; Movie
3:00 Xoi Hi w e - 1
3 74 s u m p e d e
I 04 ■*nplain I**11not
I in Itemer nf Ih* Jutlgl*
1 44 Oiniill'Ut
*.1« Vnit I n Tber*
/:* « Ford Theater
1.14 Pvt berrelery
* nn T-'HI o f the T o w s
yn o H i: Theater
9 in Slat,- 7
l« : o » Father Know* Beal
|nm W hat'« My Line
M:nn Snndev New* special
I I I " . Th- t'hrl-lropher
l l l l l Thle Ii The Llln
TAMPA AA I T . 4 . 1 V
ITIIIIAV
4 on | ... Teel Pellern
3:11 Holden W Irnluwe
3 vi Campue
3:1- t'niirernlne M lii Mellow*
I no Daw kin* Falle
1:H. P in t L-ive
1:34 The wotld o f Mr, Sweeney
I t - Modern llumnncta
1,44 1,111 Ir Re-tnl*
1 7 il W lltno the Clown
1:5» Dowdy Dundy
4.no T e j r,rvrtlv Shnw
4:3n ll-ilne, FdltloO— Now*
e.Hi |l*m. Kdlllnn— Sport*
4:14 hum* Fdltlud Weather
7 no pride nf the Family
7.34 I'ddi* Fleher
7:11 New# i ' , u n u n
v 44 Red llulloii. Show
*:J4 I.lfe nf Hlley
4 :4-i Th* HI* Miiry
* 34 Dear I'hoeli*
14:04 ( 'a v a l , adr of Sport*
14:11 Jan Murray Tim*
It on M i n 1- Croeniuada
ll:S'i Tonight
i m i New. end Weather
l . o l sig n o f f
D T I HIIAV
1:0* T#&gt;t Pattern
l:»n NIIA
»kwtl&gt;aII Gam*
1:44 Sky King
1 1 4 I ell;. Quarter
* 44 Srlenc t Speak*
r. 34 D - m r R-l tlort—New*
IP ,
Inme edit io n—'Spill 1*
7 on TV Sp-.ri- ■Tub
Tt|4 lloea, * lleldl Show W e go I
1 4b Mlikev P nnn.v Show
1:14 So Tbl- I* Hollywood
1:00 M i l Llehman Sperlacular
10 34 Your lilt IGrode
11 nrf lli.llyvio'.d W'-ertllna
I3-U4 Now- »ud Weather
11,01—Sign Off
•I n n a r
1104 T#-t Pattern
3 1« Amerl-an Forum
«:04 luvenll# Jury
4:34 Znn Pared*
I ni Hallmark 11*11 nf Fame
l : i n i-apialn Gallant
• no Mayor nf the Tnwrn
g :30 lli.y It rig e i « Show
____
Tin* Meet i*,ir|l-e Arvhrr
7 30 Mr. Per |i«-r*
»iOO t 'o lg e i* Comedr l i m y
9 *4 Televlelnn Play hnuie
14 no |.nrtt|* Tnung Show
10 30 Parla PracIncA
11:04 New#
11:47 Sunday Theater
l l i l l Nawrn
13.14 Sign Off

II. J. G1IJ-. left, and T. H Ktlcy, Imth PHI and nttnrhrd tn
t'hntiiRiin
himrd one of thp nquadnin AJ-2P nlrcraft tn
perform their duties ns phnlniirnphir technicians. Roth men
hme volunteered for duty on the forthcoming Nawil Antarctic expedition. (Official U. S. Navy Photo)
★

*

★

★

★

★

Two PhotoRon 6 2 Men Volunteer
For Navy Antarctic Expedition
Two Photographic Squadron 6?
men ha\c answered a request by
Ihc Bureau of Naval Personnel
(or ynluntceri (or photographic
duty nn the forthcoming Naval
e.\pedition to the Antarctic area.
The pair, Billy J- Gill and
Thomas It Kilry. Photographers
Males First L'lan virtually turn­
ed (heir hacks on a transfer in a
shore stalton is Kiley w»» first
and Gill second nn the Navy shore
duty
11 st
for
Pholographcn
Males.
In order to sotunleer for the
Antarctic duly they aUn had In
request their names be deleted
from this list.
Both men had to undergo rigid
physical and mental culminations
lo quality for the rigorous livinu
and work in Ihe sgb-irro weather
ol Antarctica. They successfully
passed Ihcse and other require
ment.v originated by Ihe Navy
tor this mission. They are now
•wailing final approval and orders
to proceed lo NAS latuxent River.
Mil., where the «pedtlinn will
form. It Is staled for Its first trip
In Ihe Pole in November Both have
requested tn he assigned as fllghl
crew memhris on Ihe mission.
In a personal letter tn llte PhotoRon « Photocraphle Department.
!.cdr. C. C Shirley, former Photo
Officer of Ihe squadron and future
Photo Officer of the 'T-illlc Ameri­
ca” operation, spccitirally request­
ed Gill and Kiley (nr Ihe expedi­
tion If they would volunteer.
Gill, a veteran nf almnsl ten
years Naval servier, Began hi*|
career In August nl l!HS Since
lha lime of hi* original enlist­
ment he has served al San Plegn,
Calif.; Whidlry Island. Washing­
ton: Jacksonville, I ' r n u r n l s .
aboard Ihc L'SK Wright (CVL-491
and finally VJ f&lt;2
He wa» Ihe first rated photo­
grapher's Male tn report to VJ-U,
checking Into Ihe squadron short­
ly aftrr il was commissioned In
Jarksonvillr
Whito with Phulnmn RJ. Gill
served on Iwn oversea* detach­
The 42nd annual Eastern Dog
Show will lake place al Mechanics
Building, Boston, on Feb. 21 and
23.

Winn TV
SM K Iat BT.

★

ments. “ Able" and "Pox'* for
three months and six months re­
spectively.
He is attached tn the Camera
Installation Division and is also
a flight crewman, flyine In Ihe
squadron's photo planes as First
Photo Technician
4ilU and his wife. Fllraheth. re­
side at 2Mfi Sanford Ave. with
then two children, a son, Jare Al­
fred, 3, and daughter, Mary Ann,
3 months.
Kiley begin his service career in
Ihe Army Air Force in I94fi and
then changed tn Ihe Navy a year
later Since entering the Navy,
Kiley has seen duly at San lliegn.
Corpus Chrlsli, Texas; Pensacola
and with VS 22 at Norfolk, Virginia
an anti-iuhmarlne squadron oper­
ating at times Irnm aircraft car­
riers.
Kiley repiclrd lo VJ 62 in June
of 1932 and, like Gill, has hern as­
signed to Camera Installation and
•orved as a Photo Techi-Qnn.
Kiley and his wife. Belly, re­
cently moved lo Sanford from Do­
ha ml and are now living on South
Sanford Avr.

LIMITED
QUANTITY
•Fail-Saf* Alarm Sy»t«m • Counterbalanced Lid
• Poiltiva Action Latch •Rtm ovabU Baskets
•Salactlva Tamparatura Control
5 f f Vf (IHDV/ V (&gt;W

Sanford Electric Co.
T h n n * 442

I t 8 M b* . A v e .

The Following Laundry Prices Effective March 7
SHIRTS, COTTON ......................

21c

SPREADS. CHENILLE «

— _50c

SHIRTS, RAYON DELUXE ......

33c

SPREADS. PLAIN .........

___ 25c

PANTS. WORK, KllAKI ...........

33c

SHEETS ..........................

15c

OVERALLS ................... ..............

10c

UNION ALLS ....... ........................

Rflc

OVERALL JACKETS ................

33c

TABLE CLOTHS....... .....

23r up

DRESSES. COTTON ...................

fide

TAftLE TOPS .................

...... ISe

UNIFORMS, N U R S E ........ .........

fiOc

NAPKINS ................... ....

....

SKIRTS, PLAIN ___ __________

30c

SHOWER CURTAINS ...

...... 2,)C

BLOUSES, COTTON.... ..............

23c

1ILANKETS —

SLACKS, COTTON ___________

35c

SHORTS. PI-AY .................. ........

23c

UI ill T S

73c

PILLOW CASKS ............

.....

6c

FACE TOWELS .............

__

3c

HATH TOWEI-S ..............

...... 5c

3c

SINGLE COTTON ..

__ 40c

SINGLE W O O L ___

___50C

DOUBLE COTTON

..... 75c

DOUBLE WOOL .....

— l.oo

DAMP WASH— WASHED AND RETURNED DAMP 6c LB. — MIN 60c
DRY WASH— WASHED AND RETURNED DRY 10c Lib— MIN. L O O -

PH. 41T

SHIRTS IRONED 20c

PHILCO

FLUFF DRY

— WEARING

APPAREL

DRIED — FLAT

IRONED

12c LB. — MIN. 1.50 — SHIRTS IRONED lfic

TELEVISION
SALES A SERVICE
PRICES START AT SISRM

‘ ‘vr C/ AM VW CU r W f / f f S

PHILCO 400*

FAMILY

F I N I S H —all pieces ironed- min. 2jio- fi-at

21-kwh TV

12c i.n.—

WEARING APPAREL 32c LB.—SHIRTS 5c— DRESSES
LOc — ADDITIONAL

WELL DRILLING
Howard C. Long

Wt M.

M U ffA IU S T
N r lw r C S t M

RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION
SEALED BID SALE
INVITATION TO BID FOR COMMERCIAL PROPERTY"

THRIFTY WASH

— w e a r in g

apparel

returned

damp

6c—

FLAT WORK IRONED 12c LB.— MIN. 1.25

ALL FLAT

-F IR S T 10 POUNDS — 12c LB.
NEXT 10 POUNDS — 10c LB.

(FORMERLY KNOWN AS SANFORD BUS STATION)
SANFORD, FLORIDA

NEXT 10 POUNDS —

8c LB.

ALL OVER 30 POUNDS —

6c LB.

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
Hs»onitfuctton Pint net Corporation Invites bids for th* purchAsrof property formerly own»d by Sanford Bus
SUtJon, Inc. lorated oa Commercial Street, Sanford, Florida, described aa follows:
Lots 88, 86, 87 and 88, less the East 20 feet o f Lot 38, o f Lake View Park, In the City of Sanford, Se­
minole County, Florida, according to plat o f Lake View Park, o f record in Plat Book 3, Page 41 of the
Public]Record* o f Smtinol* County, Florida. Improvement! consist of concrete block building with stucco
finish formerly used aa bus atatkm and cafe. Bid* will be considered on the property in its entirety.
Anyone interested In tha purchase o f this property may obtain bid forma and statement o f termn end condi­
tions relating thereto at the Atlanta Field Office. Room 310, 441 W. Peachtree St. N. E., Atlanta, Georgia,
hone walnut 4131, Extension 810. Bids for tha property will bo considered only if made in accordance
and subject to the terms and ceadltkma eat forth in said statement All bide must be presented et tha
‘ Atlanta FM d Office e f RPC by 8:00 P. M- Eastern Standard Time on March 17.1966.

S EM IN O LE C O U N TY LA U N D R Y
PHONE 475

819 W. THIRD ST.

Downtown Cleaners &amp; Laundry
PHONE 914

US PALMETTO AVE.
*
■ ■ »d. - r —

—* - - -

4;

�*
%

pofe from th« rffer, eBptama If itrfl W,000
troops. Singapore bad been thought the key
to all tho Britlah possessions in Southeast
Asia nml the Pacific, No wonder ChurehiU
called this the worst disaster and k r g w t
capitulation in British history."
Who was to blame? No one (mow* for
certain. No post-war Investigation was held,
as we did after Pearl Harbor.
Why was there no inquest? No one
knows, but the old school tie may have been
a factor.
An investigation might have revealed
shameful incompetence on the part o f high
figures social and political. Some have nam­
ed the late Sir Robert Brooke-Popham viceadmiral of the Air Force and commander in
the Far East. He at least was in a position
to fircsce the catastrophe, and either pre­
vent it or demand help.

Attack On Ike

One element of the Republican Party
has never reconciled Itself to the triumph
o f the EUcnhnwer forces nt the last Repub­
lican nntlonnl convention. At n Lincoln Day
celebration In Chicago members of this fac­
tion heard speeches assailing the foreign aid
nprogrnm and other aspects o f tho adminis­
tration. The Republican governor of Utah
said thnt the country has traveled further
to the left in the Inst two years than it haa
In any other two-year period.
The Into Senator Taft was nble, while he
lived, to lend this segment o f the party to
supcort the administration. Since his
death, however, the group has raised no
spokesman who could take Taft's place in
maintaining party hnrmony.
Strife within political parties Is not new
nor is it confined to the GOP. The Demo­
crats disagree on many Important issues and
in the pnnt this disagreement hasn't kept The Initiative
them from political victories. Splits in tho
The reformers o f 40 years ago must b«
ynnks of the party controlling the White giving cheers. One o f their favorite cause*
llouse are mure apparent Ilian splits in ths is showing new life. The New York Demo­
opposition.
crats are backing a constitutional amend­
It was ironic that ths speeches assailing ment, providing that on occasion * popular
Iks should have been made at a ceremony vote may bypass the legislature and enact
honoring Lincoln, who In his day was the law* which Imve been bottled up. This pro­
target for a great many mcmliers of his own vision is known as the ''initiative'' A supple­
party. Lincoln never responded to criticism mentary provision sets up the "referendum,"
hastily. Ha did his job in the best fashion which permits the people to reject new laws
he could and his success is a matter o f his­ to which they object
tory. It would be well fur President Eisen­
Originally known as the "Oregon Idea,"
hower to remember this when ho is weigh­ the inltiativo and referendum were adopted
ing the importance of ths criticism leveled by some 18 or 20 states. Including such largs
•gainst him by members of his own purty.
ones as California, Michigan and Ohio. Every
section of the country was represented in
the list, even conservative New England,
Britain's Worst Defeat
where Maine and Massachusetts both have
One anniversary that the British did not
the Initiative and referendum.
gelebrate and probably never wilt, passed
About 1020 the country turned conser­
without notice elsewhere. This was the
vative,
and *he drive for direct legislation
Japanese capture of Binirupore, the British
died
down.
There is, however, Just as much
fortress in Malaya, on Feb 15, 1942. Singa­
pore had been considered impregnable, and reason for it as ever. Many state legislatures
are so districted by outworn constitutional
•0 perhaps It was to frontal attacks.
The British commanders forgot thnt rules that a small minority o f the state ran
thero was a rear approach through tho govern the rest. This is partly true of New
jungle. Perhups they did think of it, but York, where also an extreme gerrymander
assumed that ths Jungle was impassable. makes It possible for the Republicans to con­
The Japanese did not, and entering Slnga- trol the legislature even when they loss ths
state by 500,000 votes.
Only a d'splay of public wrath, contin­
The Sanford Herald
uously exhibited, can persuade our legisla­
tive autocrats to lossen their grip. The ini­
tiative and referendum would weaken their
power. Unfortunately in New York and else­
where no surh scheme can i»e adopted with­
out the consent of the very legislative bossea
•t whom it la aimed.

n o w m m y m m m m » int e e »
THIS 15
THIUFC

TODAY'S BIBI.B VERSE
A tnan'a Ufa eonaiatath not In the abund•AM of tha thinga which ha poaaewteth.—
Luka 12:16. Thera are no pockate In a

•hroud.

jam es w a r l o w '

.'vM'Cj Sw eet Relationship Turning Tart
(
J ] ’ v—
v
H Z v .V iV
m o m
' \\ t
j
f e J L ' / 11
f i t
r /
m L

WASHINGTON &lt;* — President
B iteobow er'r relationship with the
D " " 0" 11* - »»* * t •• *tt* " c ,n
dy in his first two White House
yesrs— is developing tart taste.
In those first two yesrs, when
the Republicans ran the show, the
Democrats saved parts of Elsen
bower's program for him mor*
than once. Mostly they witebed
ind waited, a policy which paid

Thl* Inevitably m e tis conflict
with Elsenhower, who has an un* « * « * ■ « • desire la make a roe&gt;rd of bis own.
The Democrats wifl probably
eontlnue to treat him politely. He’s
still immensely popular.
But bow they treat him personally and bow they treat his pm-

give a J20 Ux cut to everyone
whan Eisenhower surprisingly—
h#., ^
cirtfu | * * to m ik« ^
^ —. j
h, _
. r,^,
&gt; 7 * ,d
y_Cr,e|
irresponsibility,
the Democrats
taunted him.
They charted his Bepofalican-run
Congress last year put through a

off.
The Republicans, with their Intraparty fighting, made a spec­
tacle j f themselves. It was prob­
ably that, more than any fervor
for the Democrats, which Induced
the voters in 19M to turn Congress
over to the Democrats.
The '0SC elections are 21 months
sway. Elsenhower looks like a
good bet to run again. If he doea
■nd wim, he may do what be did
la 1932: pull enoush Republican*
along with him to give hla party
control of Congreaa.
The Democrata between now and
Iben, If thay hope to have any vot­
er apoeal. must establlih a record
of their own. They’ ve already be­
gun work on It.

SAM DAWSON

Industry W onders About Squalls
NEW YOBK (H—March roars in quick and peaceful settlements or
NEW YORK tel—March rosed in
yesterday with ieadars of industry
and trad* wondaring Just how
•evere coma.
The month start* with some U.
8. senators set to take a curious
look *• what's going on In Wall
Sreet ft's billed a* a “ friendly
study" But stock brokers and
traders turn nervous whoa sen*
tors start poking around. And tea
Street ts aware too that there is
considerable publle curiosity aa to
what has been causing the big bull
market and where it might be
heading.
March may alio sea tho cur­
rently fairly placid labor nIaUoni
water* start to stir. Labor-man­
agement negotiators are ret in
the coming week* In some top in
dustriea Tbs outcomo — whether

long and bitter strife—could de­
termine whether the u p w a r d
course of business wUl be dis­
rupted.
A&gt; iba month starts, a some­
what unexpected rise in commod­
ity prices is reported by tbo Na­
tional Assn, of Purchasing Agents.
Competition and the fully ade
-juste production eapaeily of most
Industries were supposed te hold
prices down. T b o
purchasing
sgenls, in fact, do report dl»counts on many Items. But many
metals, and products mada from
metal* have tended higher.
Part of this Is duo to demanJ
Iron Europe, where stock prices
art also booming. March should

Mumps, a Common 111
M ay Be Very Serious

Foolish Drivers

Friday, Mar. 4, 1955

w o m bs

A render suggests:
"There need only be one Inw of the high­
way. a law against foolish driving. When
somebody Is convicted o f foolish driving
there noed be only one penalty. Confiscate
the fool's car, «el! It nt public auction, give
him the price less fees and exoenses, and
hope he either brightens up or dies by some
other foolish means before he gets another
car."
There’s one trouble with this Idea. Who
Is going to decide, and by what standards,
exactly when driving la foolish? Seeing a
thing Is foolish, thinking It’s foolish, being
quite auro it’s foolish is one thing. Proving
it is quite another. These matters art never
ao easy aa they look.

Doctor Hopes To Help Alcoholics
M W YORK UR—The Lord wBUag |u straighten oet hla own drinking wives who are, however, aaowj
. Dr. Frank Humphrey hopes at 70 problem, will be stocked with m. test fronds tod sr" be re
la Build aa Bdoa for alcobotica.
cattle, sheep, and hoga. It will have Cllled ..Wh,_ ,
i* i tha elderly Virginia veterinarian, a vegetable garden.
, V**" ‘ / V ®
^
ate** sobering up 20 year* ago eft" i don't know of anything quit* wlltr# * kBtw *
*lv# m
ar a «f-y*ar bout with the bottle, Uka this that Is now being done rithormy veterinary practice m
■ 'haa heiped reform hundreds of ott- anywhere also," said Dr. Humph- liquor, I gave up my practice—4w
« r AteeboUcs since then.
my. "The men will work under u rea rs"
. Often he has driven hundreds of tea supervision of a skilled farmer.
. ... .
.
&gt;
Hdte* te bring hope to a liquor- Well be able lo take about 10 men
a|° »lck *
*
I- - jMdaa man liven up a* hopeless at a Ume and 1 feel well ha able «» a d # d a •••Uni of Alcoholic)

Installment buying baa been ris­
ing in this country too. This has
been one oi the chief reasons that
total retail sales have been ad­
vancing Aulo buyln ghas been the
prime faelor.
Most merchants are convinced
that March will see no Interrup­
tion and that total retail sales for
'he first three months of the year
will ret an all-time record high.
With Easter coming April 10, trade
should stay (at for tee next six
weeks.
But Congress eould blow up
some worrisome storms (or buiiness in March.
As Congress and te* Whit* House
bat'le over the tax bill, business­
men will be watching eloaaly. The
income tax cut proposal theoreti­
cally could give many persons t20
more to use In buying industry's
products, ft could also throw tea
U.S. Treasury a little further into
the red. Both result* eould exert
some inflationary pressure.
But the tax eut proposal la tied
to a continued high rate of corpo­
rate Income taxes, and that will
hold down business profits. Also
involved is a continued high ex­
cise levy on a number of prod­
ucts and that could
discourage
consumer buying of these items.
Most buslnesimon are resigned to
the continuation of there tax rates.
Many of them are convinced,
however, teat the March wlada will
blow them more good than i l l more orders, more production,
more sates.

man ling again.
I wai sitting down over a lateafternoon clgaret ysiterday with
Dan Terry, ■ permeable, •»•&gt;-go­
ing Pennsylvania! and onetime
Marine, who owns what I guess
ean be called the hottest new
danee band in tbs baaletsa. Dan
has a fine hand, which rails sad
rumbles along la the Count Baal*
ityla (and yon don’t hardly see
them no more), but being the hot­
test new outfit in ths bualneia It
no great eempllaeaL Users *ren’t
six danee bands making enffoo
money there days.
Dan, who looks Ilk* Das DaOoy
or Joan Crawford's Sx-bnaband.
PhU Terry (maybe be te Dsn Dailay or PhU Tarry), put it ts mo
blunUy: “ Aren't yon Just a lit­
tle weary of alngarsT Haven't you
bad it up to bore, with vocal
group*? Tell me honestly, don’t
you somaUmoa feel yen’re got
swooning crooners sad limpid-voi­
ced dame itngsra earning out of
your ears?"
He was right Perry Come, Vic
Damone, Roste Clooney, Eddie
Fisher, Bay Star — they'rS all tevaly people, but then arp as many
of them right now, I east tell them
apart 1 gueii tho bums* voice Is
song Is all right . . but enough is
enough. Won't somebody bring
back tha bands?

tea jab of Jogging them with new
ihveitigaUer^QI sew opposition.
White they SM be expected to go
slesg with Elsenhower's foreign
policy so long aa K suffers no re,
y ttltt, they'll here plenty to ■ * /
abunt It
hut M's tough an team. I got good
man. They sonld mal* a happy
living o« record dates. What bavn
I done far team lately?"
The ana tktag that may hoop Ter­
ry's bend together Is hU all-lmportent eenvletiou that tea buiim m tan some baek. "People a re# '

ref
rnmlmrn U
** kn
.I# &lt;
a t going
te a4nm
atop slamalaw
daaclag."
bo .said.
“ 1 think tkU thing eould happen
again, fast like wits Goodman and
Milter II yatra age. However, tho
agene tea got te got behind us. They
must soil the baada with that littte
halo of glamor around team. Tho
music isn't enough. It's never been
enough."
It didn’t cost Daa Terry *&gt;, a*
thousand te put hla band togethar,
the way aatea claim It does.
&lt;

Thau whaU irritating Dsn Ter­
ry teas* days. Nobody now Is In­
terested In bunding op M*a big
swing bands tho way Bonny Goodman and Gtena Miller end tea Dee­
reys were built up te tee late IM a.
"Nobody's selling team, te what
1 mean," Daa moerned to aaa. *T
don't ears how good a band U, It's
got to be given a glamor build-up
to go over Mg. I Marne Ike keek­
ing agencies myself.
AO the booker* He for beads
these days is take pkaaa arden.
“ Yon west a bead?" theyTL say
to a ballroom operator. ’All right,
I got ao-aad-re at m b sad wash a
price. . .and re aw."
Dan's frustration I* aot s i de­
tached and clinical. He te hurting
personally, bote from a flaaaclM
and artlatle standpoint. He Mew
into Blrdlaad, the Times ftnara
cavern of fare, Sad flattened the
TALLAHASSEE Ite-Th* Florida eaah customer* a tew weeks ago.
personnel survey is recommend­
The theatrical weekly, variety,
ing that tee Legislature authorise
a uniform pay and vacation policy
for all state employes.
The survey, undertaken at the
direction ad the Cabinet Budget
Commission, found that workers
performing similar Jobs but amployed by different departments
nave widely varying pay scales
and holidays,
Tho attrvayora, Florida State
University economic* professor
Royal Mattie* and Joka Medlgan,

Personal Survey
Seeks Uniformity

FINANCE YOUk
NEW

SHOP &amp; SA

BANK AUTO LOAN!
a

L”
1
1 •&gt;

.

M-

M

i

�.

Socia L fcvsw iA.
Lt. A. E. Rozon
O fficers W ives
# Weds M. McMillan
Set Benefit Tea
In Tennessee Rites
to i tartly double-ring candleUlht ceremony performed by Capt.
Charles A. Meeks, Miss Mary
Lou McMlllian, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs C. M. McMlllian, of
Tennessee Ridge, Tcnn. was wad
to Lt Alan Edward Roznn, son
of Mr. and Mra. Victor Pickering
Boson of Indian Mound Village
a
Feb. IT at 3:30 p. m. In the Fort
w
Campbell chapel.
The chapel was beautifully de­
corated with fare, white gladioli,
white camelliai and burning tapart. On aach aide of the altar were
baaketa of gladioli and fern and on
the ehaneel rail behind the altar
was a bank of whlta camellias and
tern.
The organist, Corp. Robert W
m Furls, rendered the nuptisl music
V
While vocalist, Jenny Greenhill,
fang **1 Lore You Truly” and
“ Oh, Promise Me” .
Tbe bride, given in marriage by
bar father, waa radiant in a full
akirted nylon not gown overlaid
with cbantilly lacc accented by
long eleevei which cams to points
at the wrists and an Elisabeth
•oQar. Che wore a Juliet cap an
m e ted with pearls and a finger
_
A
tip veil. In her hands the carried
^
“
a bouquet of lililea of the val1
ley topped with a white orchid
wrapped in talln streamers.
j
Miaa Edith Ann Blanflll, maid of
honor, wore a drait of yellow net
fashioned similar to tha bride’s
as ware tha brldemaida' Faye
Miller and Gail Smith. All carried
bouquets of yellow and blue iris
Victor Piekcrlng Roson, father
ef the groom, served as best man
and ushers were Capt. William K,
M am , end LL Hubert S. White
bead.
Lina Ann McMillan, nleca of
• a bride. waa flower girl, wearing
a gown of white nylon net
The bride's mother chose for her
daughter's wedding a yellow and
blue printed suit with navy acceasoriea. She wore a corsage of
white carnations on her left should­
er
•
Mra. Roson waa dressed In a
powder blue street length dress
with matching accessories and a
eoriage of pink camellias,
A reception was held in the
borne at Lawreace McMillisn, the
bride’s brother. Red roses aod
fern were used as decorations and
the attendants of tha bride served
as floating hoateasea. The bride’ s
tabla waa overlaid with a white
laca cloth and held a three-tiered
9
wedding eake.
The bride chose for the wedding
, trio to the northern- part of the
•trie a navy biua ault trimmed
wilh lighter shade* of blue and
navy accessorial. She wore tbe
orchid from her bouquet.
i
Returning home Sunday the cou­
ple will reside at 203 Meadow
Circle Clarksville, Tend.
Out of town guests Included
Curtis Davis, Paris, Teon.; Billy
0
Miller, Memphis, Tenn-; Mr. end
Mrs. Eugene Avrritte and Mr. and
Mrs. Jo* Boone from Erin, Tenn.;
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Mobley, Mr.
and Mrs. Vernon Mobley and Miss
Fay Huff from Tennesiea Ridge,
Tenn.
The bride waa born hi Erin,
Tens, end attended school there,
•he is a junior In Austin Peay
•tata College la Clarksville.
The (room
attended grad*
0
achoel In Sanford and Ukh school
at Carlialt Unitary School M
Bamberg, Sooth Carolina. Re was
carolled la Ctemaoa College be­
fore entering Barrie*. He graduat• d fro m
Offlcera Candidate
•apt a . ISM.

•

A
^

Waal lo top that caaaerota disk
with bettered breed crumbs. One
way lo prepare the arumbe ie to
ateh about o third of a cop af
!■**■ er margarine in a akillat
ad well with a cup ef
tat end crumra but-e taola

With Style Show

A benefit tea and fashion show
sponsored by the Naval Auxiliary
Air .Station Officer* Wive* Club
will be held Friday. March It.
All profit from ticket sales will
be given to the Forest Tark
School for Exceptional Children.
This school la the only one of its
kind in the Orlando area.
The tea and fashion show will
b* held at Sanford’a Woman’s
Club building and will commence
promptly at 1:30 p.m. A full two
hour schedule haa been arranged
and the putdic la invited to attend.
Gibb* Louis of Orlando will
have an array o f spring and sum­
mer faihloua to display to those
ettending.
Members o f the Officer* Wive*
Club will model the season’s fash­
ions and other* will pour the tea
upon th* conclusion o f tha fashion
show.
Mr*. Walter Bailey will play
(elected tunes on the piano during
the showing and Mr*. R. Fletchrr
will be th* fashion commentator.
Mra. Flatchir ha* presided at
several fashion shows in the Cen­
tral Florida area and has given
interesting and enjoyable com
mentary at the** show*. She li
a former Power’* model and soon
dans to open n charm school in
Inter Park.
Mr*. Robarta Gatchel will b# the
caterer for th* ten at th* show’*
conclusion.
Models for the fashion show will
ba Mr*. C. E. Myara; Mr*. J. E.
Dyer; Mr*. H. S. Roller; Mr*.
0 . S. make; Mra. H. M. Walker:
Mra. W. R. Edwards; Mr*. D. W,
Linker; Mr*. A. E. Waller; Mr*,
J. C. Vogel; Mra. J. W. Olson;
Mr*. R. G. Layser; Mr*. H. Little;
Mr*. F. F. Jobn*on and Mr*. T. A
Nash.
„
An attendance prii* will be
■warded and ticket* may be ob
tamed from several source*. Tie
keta will b# It for the combined
fashion ahow ana tea.
Mrs. Harold A . Appleby, Appleby’ a Restaurant in Sanford, will
have tickets available.
Mr*. Appleby la also a vice-pre­
sident o f the board o f director* o f
th* Forest Park School far Excep­
tional Children.
Navy wive* from whom ticket*
may also be obtained are Mra.
T. O. Murray! Mr*. J. A, Good­
win; Mr*. H. A. Hall; Mr*. G. I.
Blake and Mr*. J. E. Dyer.

USO Activities ,
Many For Weekend
Saturday night there will be o
“ Welcome Home** dance at tha
USO for the fellow* In VC-B.
Everyone I* welcome to come on
down and Join the fun.
This dance 1* a aurpria* and Ik
is rumored that there will be an
extra special treat on hand. Mia*
Pat Cneaube and Ml** Barbara
GIU nr* th* Junior hoateasea for
th* evening and the women o f th#
Christian Church will act as
Senior hoateasea.
Sunday night la TV lig h t with
Miaa Dot Tealo and Mias Margaret
Von Kertrulla serving oa Junior
Host***#*. Th* ladle* o f th# Con­
gregational Beth Israel win b#
Senior hostesses. Refreshment*
will be eervod.___________

Extra-rich mushroom sane* t*
quickly made If you add canned
mushrooms to condensed cream
of mushroom soup. Use about o
quarter cup of the liquid from the
muahraoma for diluting Uw coup
and a little soy sauce for extra
seasoning. On* excellent way lo
nse the sauce for • lunch er, sup­
per disk ie t* pour it over haivne
of hard • cooked oggs, eprinkl*
with battered erunsbe and paprika
and beat la a moderate oven until
bubbly and topping ie lightly

Dinner Will Honor
Story League
Prof. S. P. Mizwa
Has Beginning
In Casselberry
A dinner honoring Professor
Stephen P. Mixwi. president of the
Koscluszko Foundation of Ameri­
ca, will be given by Madame Jo­
anna Kuplszcwnki at her Azalea
Lodge located in Casselberry
Saturday evening starting at 6:30
o ’clockThe program consists of Invoca­
tion by the Rev. Daniel C. Hagerty; Introductions of Toast Mast­
er the Hon. Voile Williams Jr., and
Hon. Mayor of Casselberry. Julius
Allen; Welcome lo Florida by Hib­
bard Casselberry: Address by F.
E. Breckcnrldge, Manager of San­
ford Chamber of Commerce;
Dances from the Nut Cracker
Suite by the Ebson School of
Dancing, directed by Miss Doris
Ferguson and Mis* Norma Abbelts; Address by Mrs. Joseph Lcs
ter, president of the Polonaise
Society of Florida; Piano solo, Mr.
Michael Horka who will play
Polonaise by Chopin and Mazurka
also by Chopin.
Address by Mra. Stephanie Ka­
llas, president of the largest Wo­
man's Club of the Polish National
Alliance of Chicago, 111. Mrs. KaIlsz is the wife of a prominent
physician of the city of Chicago
plus being a great organizer and
civic worker; three Concert ar­
tists rendition including Aria, Les
Darrncs and Ave Maria, by 31a
dame Joanna Kupiszcwskl, vocal­
ist, Mrs. Harvey Dobbs, violinist,
and Ruth Pollard, accompanist;
and Address by the guest of bon
or, Professor Mizwa.
Professor Mizwa is a lecturer,
educator, writer and trustee of
International Collegiate Associattion of America.

Officers Elected
By Woman's Club
At Luncheon Meet
Election of officer* took pine*
at the business luncheon of the
Sanford Woman'* Club Wednesday
at the elub house. Mrs. F. T. Meri­
wether presided over the meeting
In the absence o f th# president,
Mra. Clara Ginn.
The newly elected officer* are
aa follows: first vice-president,
Mr*. Jo# Corley; third vice-presi­
dent, Mr*. Bill Kirk; recording
secretary, Mr*. John I*- Lee; trea­
surer, Mra. Barot Ellerbe; and
corresponding accretary, Mr*, D.
B Watkins.
Departmental offlcera who were
ratified were: Fine Art* Depart­
ment! chairman, Mra. Grorga
Wells, vice-chairman, Mra. C. L.
Redding; secretary, Mra. E. C.
Harper; finance, Mrs. L. E.
Thompson; membership, Mra. W.
D Hofmann; and program, Mra,
ti. 0 . Ilarriman.
American Home Department:
chairman, Mr*. M. W. Osier; vicechairman, Mra. John Kadcr; sec­
retary, Mra. Jamea Ekern; fin­
ance, Mra. James H. Le# Jr.;
membership, Mrs. Douglas Stenatrorn; and program, Mr*. F. E.
Brrckenrhlg*.
Civic Department:
chairman,
Mra. B. C. Moore; vice-chairman,
•eeretary, Mr*. B, It. Crumley;
finance, Mr*. W. C. Wiley; mem­
bership, Mra. II. A. Mnntcith; and
program, Mr*. F. E. Bol*.
Social Department: chairman,
Mr*. J. A. Young; vice-chairman,
Mra. J. R. Jonas; secretary, Mr*.
J. O. Huff; finance, Mra. 8. G.
Ilarriman; membership, Mrs. S.
D. Hlghlejrman; and program,
Mr*. W . R. Jennings.
Mr*. M-riwather, Mrs. John
Lee, and Mr*. Corlay ware also
elected as delegates to attend tha
Bt*t* Federation Convention to be
held In Tampa In April. Alternates
ware Mr*. Crumley, Mr*. Oiler,
and Mrs. Laura P. Brown.
Mrs. Blanche Terhorat was In­
troduced and welcomed Into the
club aa a new member.
A market basket sail, sponsored
by th* American Home Depart­
ment rounded out th* porgram,
with Mrs. Watkins and Mra. Lea
serving ■■ auctioneer* to **11 the
baked good*, handsome article*,
jams, and Jtlllea to the approxi­
mately 40 members who were
present.
The elub was decorated with ■
profusion o f spring flower*, with

A t Luncheon
The Sanford Story League was
organized Oct. 25, 1947 at
a
luncheon held at the
Mayfair
inn. Members from th* Aladdin
Longue of Tampa were present,
and helped with the organisation­
al meeting. Sanford women in­
strumental in the formation of
the Sanford League were: 5trs.
E. D. Brownlee. Mrs. Elvira Gar­
ner, and Mrs. E. C. Williams.
The Sanford organization has
from the beginning been * mem­
ber o f the Eastern District of the
National Story League.
The local league is a service
organization, dedicated to the lovs
o f thr good, the true, and the
beautiful, whn*e atm ll to study
the art of story Interpretation,
ami to
serve the
community
through the use of stories.
Members have for a number of
yeers told
stories in
schools
throughout the county, and for
four years worked with the local
broadcasting station and the pub­
lic library by giving book reviews,
thus stimulating good reading aniong children, Storiei have been
told at children's parties, Brow­
nie meetings, Sunday schools, P*
T. A. groups, civic and other or­
ganizations, The league sponsors
Brownie Troop Number Five, and
has given abort coursca in story­
telling to Itrownfe troop*. Slorytctling eourscs and work shops
have been held for story lenguo
member*. The league has a re­
presentative
on the
Children's
Committee of Seminole County.
An annual Christmas party It
given for children, and a spring
book review for the public.
1’ait presidents of the league
are: Mrs. E. C. Williams, Mr*.
Fred Robb, Sir*. S. J. Nix, Mr*.
C. C. Welsh, and Mra. II. W.
Tench. Mr*. W, L. Roche is now
serving her sreond year as presi­
dent of the Sanford Story League,
Membership ia not limited. Any­
one interested In the art of story­
telling and working in this field
of endeavor ia Invited to attend
the meetings and to join. Meet­
ings are held on the fourth Mon­
day o f each mouth at eight o'clock
at tile Yacht Clult,

Future Events Told
At Tourist Club
Tuesday evening a covered dish
supper and meeting was held after
which games were played, There
were about 75 persent. The club
was attractively decorated by Mr».
W. J. Jennings o f f ne of tha garden
circle*. With 29 guest* present
from out of town a special table
wa» rcpresanteii by Rushville, N.

By YVONNE CULLEN
Everyone is sorry to hear of
Sir. Morris’ and Mr. Ganas’ ill­
nesses, but are very happy to hear
that Mr. Ganaa ia well on the rood
to recovery and that Mr. Morris
will be back with u* on Monday.
Girls, let’s don’t forget to grab
us a boy for the big Girl-Rrcnk
dance Friday night at tbe Crate.
We’ve all . been hoping for a date
with that certain nne all year,
and now’s the chance, so don’t
miss It.
Some cheery news kids: six
week* test* start this week. I
imagine there will be some pretty
glum faces around for awhile.
Now for some gossip: They say
Larry Reel’s bringing s really
good-looking .boy home with him
front Tampa, so nil you girls had
better be keeping a keen look out
foi Larry over the week-end. PUS
srnds Its heartiest congratulations
to Bid Jennings and Martha Jo
Carr (Jennings), our newlyweds.
We wish them the best of lurk
and happiness all through life.
Minnie Lee Metis and Joe Hunt
are becoming a couple seen moro
and more around school.
Patti Witte is still writing to
Tommy Brown every day and
Donnie is still the sciftv. isimeo,
tut in my book it’s still Patti and
Donnie. What’a happened to Son­
ora Monforton and Freddie Wil*
ron? Rand**’ * been dating several
ether boys, and Freddie's dating
Mary Ann Wright. Mary Rose
Speer and Grady Johnson are still
"a fussln' and a Fumin' " , but are
an Inseparable pair. Marty Came­
ron’ s long distnnre romance with
the boy from Cocoa has gone
“ p fft" and Marty is now back In
circulation.
In case some o f you girl* esn’t
decide on who to Invite to the
hig girl break dance, here’s n list
of a few of the eligible bachelors.
Jamra McKre, 1-ntry
Burney,
Floyd
Dosssy, Stiles
Hudson,
T erry'f’ mlth. Ernie Morris, Larry
Rrodui.
Eddie Barber,
Larry
Bates, Kenneth Ramsey, A1 Stan­
ley, and Hilly Robinson.
Mary Ann Hoxton and Joe Davis
are a cut couple now-a-days. If
any trirt ran trap Howard Allred
sbe’ll be getting one of the best
oil around boya In SHS.
Couple o f tho week: Tom Nortls and Shirley Wall. Congratu­
lations you two.
That’s all for now kids, be see­
ing ya!

.

fis /iM n a h
H. B. Herr o f Wellston. Ohio,
and Mra. A. fh MeCnllum o f Naddenfield, N. J. are visiting Mrs. G.
W Anderson o f Iladdcnfleld, Mrs.
MrCallum'a daughter and Mra.
Roy Holler o f Sanford.

.

branch** o f whit* plum blossoms
and nasturtiums in tail baaketa
flanking th* stag*. Arrangements
o f gladioli wara used on tha
speakers' tabla and at vantage
points almut th* room.
Hostesses were Mrs. L. P. Payton, chairman, Mra. Joder Camer­
on, Mrs. Joa Corlay, Mrs. John
Lee and Mra. Raymond Baaa.

C alend ar
FRIDAY
aa eo-hostrssrs.
Th# First
Baptist
Concord
The Duplicate Bridge Club will
meet at the Yacht Club with teat Choir will hold rehearsal st 6:30
mg to atari at 7 45 p. m and play p. m.
'o begin at 8 o’clock
Th#
First Baptist Intermedi­
Tii* Tr.rh'Crkor’ a Clata a n d ate Ambassadors will meet at
Daughter's of Wesley Class wil* 7 p. m.
sponsoi the attendance at th
Anna Miller Circle will meet at
evangelistic services at the First the Etka Club at 8 p. m.
Methodist Churh at T:M p m
The Unity Clan will meet at the
wilh Dr P M. Itayd as speaker
Vaidrx Hotel at 7:45 p. m. with
The WMU o f the Cpntrnl Bap­ Carolyn Parsons as teacher. The
tist Church will hold a season of study book will be continued and
prayer at 7:30 p.m.
the public is invited.
SATURDAY
Circle No. 5 of the Methodist
The Central Baptist Church will Church will meet at the homo of
be oprn all day for prayer and Mrs. L. A. Anderson, 2017 lliba
rtcrynne is to assemble for prayer scus CL, at lo a. m.
at 7:30 p.m. for the revival.
R. W. A. circle of tha First
The Pilot Club will hold a rum­ Christian Church will meet at
mage sal* on Sanford Ave., be­
Circles of the First Methodist
tween Fourth and Fifth Streets Church will meet a* follows: Cir­
from 9 a, m. until 6 p. m. Cloth­ cle 8 with Mr*. Walter Clapp.
ing is to he brought to the Stine 2412 Derails Ave, st 8 p.m.; Cir­
Machine Shop on East Fecund cle 9 with .Mrs. J. 51. Blanton, 402
Street on or before Friday for W. 20 St., at 9:30 a.m.
marking.
Th# Horticulture Chairmen of
MONDAY
th# Sanford Garden Club will
Th# Executive Board of the meet at the home of Mrs. H.
Women of the Church will meet James Gut 1924 Palmetto Ave. at
in the session room o f tho First
10 a.m,
Presbyterian Church at 10 a. m.
WEDNESDAY
1 lie
First
Baptist
Sunday
Th# First Baptist Carol Choir
School Worker’s Council meeting
will hold rehearsal at 5:30 p.m.
will begin at 7 p. m. with a cover­
Th# First Baptist Prayer Mceted dish supper in the Memorial .ng service will begin at 7:30 p m.
Educational Building. Tbe regular We continue with the study of the
meeting will begin at 7:30 p. m. book “ A Winning Witness.”
Evening Circle No. 2, of the
THURSDAY
First Presbyterian Church, Mr*
The First Baptist Carol Choir
C. W. Johnson, Chairman,
will
meet with Mrs. John A, Bui ton, will hold rehearsal at 3:30 p.m.
The First Baptist Crusader
Iftb’.l Palmetto A vr„ at 8 p.m. Mr*.
Henry D'Amico and Mr*. 1). P. Choir will hold rehearsal at 6 p.m.
The Junior Royal Amhassadors
Lanier co-hostesses.
Hie First Baptist Sunbeams will meet at the First Baptist
will meet at the church at 3:30 Church at 7 p.m.
The First Baptist Church Choir
p. m.
Circle* o f the First Methodist will hold rehearsal at 7:30 p ut.
Church will meet as follows: Cir­
cle 1 at McKinley Hall, 3 p.m.,
wilh Mrs. Clyde Ramsey and Mr*.
Lids Stall; Circle 2 wilh Mrs. A.
Ever see so many features
F. Collum, 200 W. Ifl St. at a p.m.;
Circle 3 with Mra. J. C. Meriweth­
a . footer!
er. Celery Ave. at 3 p.m.; Circle 4
&lt; !.!« . I
with Mrs, J. M. Hayes, Hit W ifl
St. at 3 p.m.; Circle 0 with 51r*.
IbU « wlte M lo tfoo
John Garrison, 1023 W 16 St., at
frm mmof Uo m l
telHjOSte— fno Out buyt
10 a m.; Circle 7 with Mrs. James
Williamson, 304 W. 18th St. 8
p.m.
Beta Sigma Phi will meet at S
p.m. at the home of Mr*. W. G.
Fleming. 2017 Melionvllle Ave.,
with Mrs. L. Hawkins Connelly as
ru-hostess.

It*i easy to nvrr-harbeeue chi­
cken. Just quarter the broiler or
fryer and arrange It in a baking
pan. Mis up your favorite bar­
becue sauce and drizzle some of
It over the chicken. Bake in a
moderate oven, adding more barbecus sauce at regular Intervals,
until thicken Is browned and ten

L. |
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S g fS ftf
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ruu anon n u t to q in

Bedroom,

Florida

ru * m

PLUS
6:10

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taika SCOTT,

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ll mmt tenn act e. Z ' t». T •»„ ■.* hritof.
WUJMI IVW •
* St. ** wmi

CARTOON and NEWS

SATURDAY ONLY
STARTS 6:50

“Yellow
Tomahawk”
STARRING
RORY CALHOUN

“Mr. Belvedere
Goes To College”
STARRING
CLIFTON 5YEB3
CARTOON
"MVN HUNT IN VFRICAN
JUNGLE" CHAP. NO. 9

SUNDAY — MONDAY
STARTS 6 50

v

Holds thoae amalWr porkitgew',
Calais urrtaiot m t« -n
Gold Uim*239 ^

BROWN'S T V
SALEH k SERVICE
108 W. FIRST

Room

B

tom e; also solid colon , , a

— - J i f f . -IM r t P
Reg.

10:10

camio

72" and 00" aultabla for Living

Salt

Price

P r ic g

6.95

3.49

8.95

that». a

Feature 7:13 -

a oooa wwvn

6.95 .......................... 3.99

Fowl's Drag Storo

• H TECHN ICO LOR

Wonderful for quick eiiilJingi

and Kitchen, pretty floral pat*

COMING SUNDAY
FILMED AT SILVER SPRINGS

Starts 6:59
•Ciowns neTum t i u n

IwiMOl cats**

UCAtDO MOKTALBAI

PIESCIIPIIONS9

LAST TIME TONIGHT

Clear plaslia crianer bold*
fruits aod vegetable*,

aracen
lade

Romano cheese, usd widely ia
Italian dlshe*, may now be ob­
tained In six-ounce wcdgc-jlmpcJ
portions. Grate only ns much
of the eheeso ns you are planning
to servo nt the time; cover tha
rest tightly with rclljphnr.e wrap­
ping or aluminum foil and re­
frigerate until needed.

Pll. I73T-J

,

JCKI " ’ StIUJt

WM-HAYW
ARD
1 ut
matrix V
I
IWILANDGODDARD/^,^
snuMcuannua

iW a S

CARTOON — NEWS

SATURDAY SPECIAL

Room,

S

Mr. and 5tr*. Ralph R. Ray an­
nounce th# birth of an 8 lb. 12 oz.
son on March 1 in the Fcmald
Laughton 5tcmorial Hospitnl. Mrs,
Ray is the former Catherine Mo*
Neil of Sanford,

llolilt 45 pounds of ftu tu
foods at correct tenipmUiraf

Window drapen In lenjfthi o f Bi",

ALSO

P age 5

anom m u * to c xra

dju

W
BTXm *
NOW iHOWING
ROT ROGERS

herald

I, IP'.-*

B I R T H S

n

Tha Gleaners Class will have
a monthly meeting at tbe First
Baptist Church’s annex at 7:80
p. m. Mrs. V, P. Hasty will be
hostess.
The Pilot Ctiih will hold its re­
gular business meeting In tbe
Ynrlit Club at R p.m. The hoard
will meet at 7:30 p.m.
St. Moidra Chapter o f Holy
Cross Episcopal Church will meet
with Mr*. J. E. Anderson, 804
East "0th S t, at 8 p.m.
The regular monthly meeting o f
Congregational Beth Israel will
hi held at the Jewish Center, Mag­
nolia Ave. and 10th St. at 8 p.m.
St. Mary's Chapter of Holy
Cross Episcopal Churrh will meet
at the home uf Mrs. A. It. Pinker­
ton. 1911 Magnolia Ave., at 8 p.m.
Tho Daughter* o f Wesley Sun­
day School Class of the First
Methodist Churrh, will meet at
7:.’to p. m. In MrKInlry Hall,
with Mrs. Robert Cole, Mra. Don­
ald Dunn, Mr*, (irac# Gregory,
Mrs. Louise Knowles, Mrs. J. M.
McCaskill and Mrs. M. B. Smith

SA N F onn

F ri. M ar.

TUESDAY

Mr*. Waller Meed* Smith and
baity, Brett, and F. L. Maury, her
An announcement waa wade father, from Mobll^, Ala. are visit­
that on March 11 at 7:30 p. m. ing Mrs, Ralph Austin Smith.
there will be entertainment with
Friend* o f Mr*. W. S. Bromley
special rmpathisla on Jose Car­
doso of Stetson University 1peak­ will bo aorry to Irarn that she Is
ing on “ What Are Flying Sauc­ confined to the Orange Mrmuriut
ers'*. Also on March IS at 1:30 Hospital,
p. m. there will be a ipeclal game
Frlenda o f Col. Paul Chest erson
night while on March 25 there
will be a one act play, "The will be glad to learn that h* ll
aids to be out again.
Boor*’, by the Stetson Flayers.

Y.

h ie

Seminole Hi

�♦

F r t M ir. 4, 1955 TIIE SANFORD IIERALD

GETS GOPHERS GOING

COWLES,
M IN N E S O T A C A 6 E
/
CO A C H . H *S THE
(
Oo PHEP4 PPEAM lN C /
O F A &amp;/&lt;S TEN
(
Tit l e , w hich r u e /
HAVEN'T WON OUTR/EHT
S IN C E !9&gt;?•

J /

\ THIS

&gt; / HATNE SON WHO'S

Graham And Vejar
Slated To Meet
^
NEW YOUK (/PI — Two or
the rintr’* real gentlemen, aKintr
Hilly Graham and eager young
Chico Vejar, tattle It out tonight
in a bout regarded at a tonup
at Madison Square Garden.
They are friend* and reapect
each other hilt will prove once
again In their ID-rounder that
there la no place in the ring for
aentiment.
Thia la a big nne for both. It
rnuid be the laat for the 33-yearold Graham, who ia deaperately
trying to get lack In the running
"for four or more fight*.” The
veteran of 14 year* and 121 pro
bout* wants to pile up aanit extra
rath to go into busioets.
” 1 guess this I* the teat,” said
the New Yorker. " I ’ve never lost
three in a row before and if I
can't heat Vejar I might just as

\ |
T

E l EH MlNHtSOT.A CO *cH v
f/ r ic e / ? A 8 H A S HEW ER

Fans Confused

Tourney
Managers Look
For '
Sleep
Among Rookies
Hy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

There Isn’ t n major Irnjftie manBircr who doesn't hop*
that a sleeper, such as Mickey Mantle, Bob Grim, Wally Moon
Willie Mays, turns up among the rookies striving to make
baseball's big time.
Thnt's the reason Manager Birdie Tcbbctla o f Cincinnati

NEW YORK ifi - You can’t
blame New York boslng fans
if they are slightly confused to is taking &gt; long and good look at
day. Billy Graham appeared In bob Thurman, Chuck Dressen of
Madison Square Garden last night Washington thinks highly o f Bob
and he’ll be on hand again to Kline and Walt Alston wouldn't
night. The difference Is that last lie surprised if Bert llsmric made
night it was nilly Graham lh- the Brooklyn varaity.
evangelist. Tonight It It Billy
You'll rtrall that Mantle Jumped
Graham the fighter, who meets nil the way from C lan C into the
Chlro Vejar.
Yankee*' center field, Grim had

Lymam, Oviedo
In Semi-Finals
O f Tourney Today
Lyman will meet Mt. Dorn hI 5 p.m nml Oviedo will tnko
on Tivirea i t 9 p.m. in today’s semi-finals o f tho Ccntrnl
Florida Conference hitch school bsskcll&gt;a]l tournament at
Umatilln.
Girla' semi-finals also ire slated today with Mt. Dora

S p o r t S'

playing Oviedo at 3:30 p.m. and
Umatilla engaging Clermont at
7:30 p.m.
In yesterday's second round
ploy, top-seeded Oviedo racked

R ou n d u p

r,

r

/
f,

&gt;

\

l
*,
7

By GAYLE TALBOT
NEW YORK OP) — Por the
first lima since his knee buckled
under him while he was racing
for I fly ball in the 11*51 World
Series, Mickey Manila ia back in
complete physical trim for the
■tart of o big league campaign.
It t* an important item to keep In
mind in assessing tho Yonkers’
ahsnret of raturnlng to thalr ac­
customed spot ovtrlooking lb* rest
Of the American League.
Although a cluster of years
hive sped post sines tho Oklaho­
ma phrenom broke In smll *
■lira of superlatives and he has
four full seasons behind him, ha
•till Is only 23. Thsrs Is yet time
for Mickey to livo up to his lurid
billing as tho new Jos DiMaggio,
pad If this is the year ha does It
(ha Cleveland Indian* may find
(heir reign cut short.
A Mantle hltlng around .340,
Which was tonsldered his paten(tel in the mildest of estimates a
. few years back, and coming up
hook to hack with catcher Yogi
•errs, would give the Bombers
tho most deadly stuck In either
league. Given that, Casey Rtengel
eould largely forget about ths re(Worneat of pitcher Allis Reynolds
and the stowing legs of shortstop
m i Bissuto.
After undergoing two operatieaa an his right knee, Manila
reported late last spring and got
away to a alow and uncertain
start. Tha fans at tks Stadium
pads him- hard and Stengel grow
antramely coal toward tho boy,

well park 't in. lie hat nothing to
licet me with. He’s easy to hit,
has a push-button chin, and can't
punch hard enough to liother mr.”
But Billy will he fighting Pather time as well as an aggressive,
ambitious 23-year-old. In losing
his last two to Chris Christensen,
s nothing lighter, and Itamon
Puentes, Graham showed how far
he had slipped from tho lofty
days of several yrara ago. Then
he was the No. 1 controller who
hail come within a shade nf taking
the welterweight crown from Kid
Gavilan.
Of his 124 fights, Graham has
won 102, lost 13 and tied in 9.
He never has been stopped.
Vejar, a TV favorite before he
went Into the Army two years ago, is bursting with ambition to
get back to the top. His record
Is 63-4-1.
NBC will broadcast and tele­
cast tonlght'a fight at 10 p. m.
(KST).

r m « T B U T —a 'IS — Time t i l

(Tlr*! Hair nails Hankie)
I IU»ty rirnly
I.to I II I SS
1 Tstnn Tansn
I I I * }.sn
I Cokey Sinker
1.10
Qnlnlela 17*1 I t s *
UM IIM I M i l ' S - S IO— Time SI.I
INerwoU Hair tlallr Dooklel
I Annv II.
M e i nn I In
I llrasnsrl
110
ill
1 Kunny llrllrheo
111
QUInlela (l-S ) IT IS
lullv ftnnl.le &lt;n.I * ISI S*
t h i ni» N trre— a /i * — Tim# ai.1
* lluliy !,ynn
1.00 Jo* 7.so
I Yukon l.lklt
4.OS SI*
Quintet* ( l - l l 4 4*
r o i NTH NAi’K— S/IO— Ttm* I U
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UuInTels (f-T) I f 7*

KITTH NAcm—S /l S Time OSS

I tn&lt;tl* Ivory
M l
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7 Mllll* r .
T.tS 4 4«
I Moll Away
III
Quintet* ( l i t l»Z *
sixth m r - a/ia— Ttm* ai.i
1 ran* nun*
4.11 1 .1* IS*
t John'* ntft
a is 4tu
I Mle* Marquette
It*
Quintet* 47-11 ISA*
4KVH1TH PACK— t / l i Time SO*
1 I.ate lleturn
10 no • no 4 ««
1 John flun
M S 4 »&lt;'
4 Teal Trial
M*
ulnlel* ||.I) II.**
htii n a t r —o /i * —'rim* ai.4
S llelenlnr
4.4* IS * 1.4*
* Joey'* Tomahawk
M t 14*
I Tiny (7*1
Me
Quint*!* ( t . l ) I I I * *
SIXTH N I C K - S/IO— Ttm* I M

played only one year of organised
I,all before eonipiling a 20-11 record
fur the Yankees and winning
Rookie nf the Year honor* in
1U54. Moon wasn't even on the
Cardinals' roller until the opening
lay last year and Maya was *o
lightly regarded he wasn't in the
Giants camp In 1051 — the year
he mad* his debut.
Tehbetts, already Messed with
plenty o f long hall hitters, figures
too Redlegs have another in Thur­
man, 32-year-old Negro outfielder
who admits he has "just about
given up on ever getting into the
major leagues.”
Thurman, signed a* a free agent
after Tehbetts watched him pound
the ball in the Purrto Rican win­
ter league, also ran play first
i-aso and pitch, if necessary. He
hit .323 and had a 2-0 pitching
record In Puerto Rico.
The Senators' high command
thinks "we may have landed a
bargain” in Kline, who hit .SIP as
a Yankee farm hand with Bir­
mingham last season. He Is given
a good chance o f making tba
grade at shortstop.
Hamric harn't much rhanre o f
breaking into ths Dodgers’ Randy
, A mo rot, Duke Bnlder-Carl Furilio
outfield Vomhlne. but he figure# to
make a battle o f It for one o f the
roaerve spot*. The Randy Fork,
Va., native, who hits from either
side o f the plate, has power as
attested by a doten homers la O
half season at 8t. Paul last year.
Before a fractured hand put him
out o f rommlsslon, he hit .350.
The news was good from a num­
ber of camps where holdouts had
been causing concern.
Minnie Mlnoso, the No. 1 White
Sox holdout who had asked for a
100 per cent boost, finally aettlad

Basketball Finals
Set For Tonight
Slavla and Baafard Junior
High School team ona will meet
each other in the basketball fin­
al* far Junior blgb grads In Beminole County tonight following
Ibke Lyman and Oviodo glrla*
final which will bo at 7:30
o'clock at the Seminole High
School auditoriam.
Slavla gninad a berth In the
finale by defeating Lyman hy n
orore of 19-19 lao4 night In n
clooely played content, Sanford
Junior Hjgh Ona topped Sanford
Junior High Two hy 12 points
to win • cbanco to tako to Rtarla
for the County championship.

■y ED WILKS
The Associated Press •
A couple of rebels have popped
up down in Dixie, where lire At­
lantic Coast and Southern confer­
ences are picking their entries In
tho NCAA Baiketball Tournament
by the simple process of elimina­
tion.
Three of the ACC's top-seeded
teams rolled through their first
round games in the title tourney
yesterday, but Virginia dumped
third-ranked Maryland 61-87 in
overtime.
There wasn't a genuine upset In
ihe Southern get-together, but
Wasnington and Lee's ambitious
sophomores proved they were in
the scrap to stay by humbling Fur­
man and All America Darrell
Floyd 97-67.
Virginia finished sixth during the
regular ACC seasons race and lost
two meetings with the Terps. But
Bill Miller, a S I sophomore guard,
ended all that by sinking two foul
shots with IT seconds left in the
extra period alter tying the score
at 59-all In regulation time.
In other ACC games, which
went as expected:
Favored North Carolina State,
fifth ranked in the Associated Press
poll, set a tourney record with a
101-78 victory over Clemson. The
Wolfpack called back their regulars
to salt It away with 32 points in
the final 10 minutes. Ron Shavlik,
second team All America, scored
77 for the winners while Clemsoo's
Bill Yarborough hit for 34.
If NCAA-Ineligible NCS (on pro­
bation on a "tryout” charge) wins
the tourney, incidentally, the run­
ner-up will head for tba NCAA
play.
Second-seeded Duke had no trou­
ble beating South Carolina 6f67
and lefty Davis and Dick Hemric
carried Wake Forest past North
Carolina 13-12. Davis, (-2 and 131
pounds, slipped through the Tar
Heels for 22 points, one less than
totaled by second-team All Ameri­
can Hemric.
Tonight's semifinals pair Wake
Forest-North Carolina State and
Duka-Virginia.
In tha Southern, Washington and
Lea's youngsters stayed hot after
a fast dosa In the regular season
race and Qualified as tba title dark
horse. 1&gt;e Generals clamped down
on Floyd, the nation's top scorer
for a lean tetal of 20 poiots while
leaving tha top aflrnaire team la
major colters history fhr behind.
While Floyd hit on just six of
31 field attempts, WAL's Lee

Marshall and Dominic Flora gathereda total of 47 points. Tne &gt;mierals' total set a Southern Con­
ference tourney record.
Tre other games: Rod Hundley
scored 27 as West Virginia defeat­
ed VMI 73-66, George Washington
defeated Davidson 74-36 after shak­
ing off a first half freeze; and War­
ren Mills hit at crucial moments
for 22 points in Richmond's *0-73

to

success over William and Mary.
In the semifinals tonight. We*
Virginia meets Washington and Lw
jnd Richmond plays Georgs Wash
ington.
ns
Elsewhere last night, WiclMi
greeted Oklahoma City University
named earlier as an NCAA at-largi
entry, with a *8-39 defeat, an!
Dayton bopped Seton Hall 1347 M
a game between two NIT entries.

jr o k g i

Planning .
To Remodel?

Titusville Tides
TODAY

for o $7,100 lucre***. That raiaad
his salary to o reported $32,500,
Baltimore ended IU holdout
troubles with tha signing of pitch­
er Lou Kretlow for $10,000.

use their new $410,000 payk In
Clearwater, Fie. for exhibition
games only this spring. Other
workouts will lake piece i t their
old park, a soupie of block* iwky,

a

■l. Cluud __________

S 14

7

I IT

MUST HKRVR TERM
FOB BREAKING, ENTERING
TALLAHASSEE OB Alvin
Charles Davis, 30-year-old . North
Miami Beach nurseryman, must
serve e 13-year prison term for
breaking and entering homes at
Hillsborough Beech.
The Supreme Court upheld his
sentence yesterday la p unanimous
decision affirming Broward Coun­
ty Court of Record.

I Mt&gt; lemark

4 41 4 4* S t*

I I'erlrn
I f * 4.1*
I » a n w tf*
ill
.Quintet* l l - l ) l i t *
TKXTM NAt-m— I d Tim* 4 1 *
I Keno n..lrt
II OS T IS I I *

t

nock

Cr**l

7 (U n ify
Quintet* ( l - l )

IM S 1144

lit .* *

9.4»

Furmsn's starting baekfleld r#
turns this fall. Th* baekfleld 111
cludei quarter-back Jimmy Boyle,

■ S O F A R E D S 1!
SECTIO N A L
INNERSPRING

1

3

5

9

. 9

up

5

[PLATFORM
■ROCKERS
$

1

3

. 9

INETTES
1

|&lt;
I!

$

3

9

. 9

5

up

5

PLASTIC “
HEADBOARD
$

3

. 9

5

ij p
H H IB

T. V. CHAIRS
$ 8 .9 5

SB

*11
r

• t
•Ua^tediJr

f|0VtV iS

$
iffllr *•

•

\

\

\
%

. *

�W A N T AD
RATES
f

I—ItBA t rtSTATt BOW SALX—»

INVESTMENT

IN V E S T M E N T

BAMPLK I-LINK AD

8-

A R TH U R FOR BALE

-8

. INVESTMENT

A little spaee Uka this wfl) yet
your messafe before our more
than to.ooo readers Tell 'em to
dayl Phone 1821.

»•
X

7.

mm.

house in excellent condition and
OARgerly Appliance Center
conveniently located. All com­
"Your We.vtinghouse Dosler"
pletely furnished. Could make
Maytag Washers
someone a fine home plus In­ Ilk Magnolia Ave.
Phone 1757
come. Price $25,000. Terms can
be arranged.
8 x 12 MOHAWK and Gulllstan
Rugs. 27 x 54 Wool Scatter
* J * 6 fU o a l
Rugs.
Real Estate — Gen. Insaranre
SALE
.............. 549 85
201 Edwards’ Bldg. Pb. 16 or 2474
SANFORD LINOLEUM A
J. R. Alexander
T. M Stringer
TILF CO
Reg. Real Estate Broken
127 W. First S t/
Phone 1917

The above 4-lln# ad can be run
5 full days for only 52.40. 1 days S Furnished rooms, and bath In SEWING MACHINES 525 00 up
frr only $180 and one day for Tie
good business block. Phone BERT'S 104 8. Park rim e 1782
25-W. Will take Trailer at part
Buy. Setl. Rent. Hire with want
payment.
The Florida Times Union.
ads the busiest salesman in
Your Morning Paper.
town Put one to wort for you Two b e d r o o m house, large lot.
For Home Delivery
Phone 1821 We will be glad to
beautiful location, Oak floors.
Phone Jack Benton. 822 M.
charge it
510.800.00. Financed.
J W. Hall. Realtor
Florida State Bank Building
For only 53.00 the above Ulne ad
"Call
Hall"
Phone 1758
la on the Job for you or 5 full

day* Only 52.28 beeps It working
for you for 5 days 1 day Is only
e«t

Sherman Concrete Co.

fio M

F U R N I S H E D kitchenette apt.
Slumberland Court. Hlway XT-81
South. Phono 1864-W
Rollaw ay and Baby M j
Day, Week or month-Tel 143*
Fermitare Center 111 Wert Firm
Avalon ApU.
485.

Efficiency!

Seminole Realty tor Deair
■bl« Homes tod ApU. Phooe IT

bee

**afhpr Of ^anfnr/l

Seminole

WE Need Your Liitlnge-

L. M. PARSONS REALTY

C .O O I ) a n d B A D
Phone 127

LADIES— Tired of routine work?
Like a career and to be inde­
pendent? Avon has thousands of
Boy's Undershirt* ____4 for LOO
women today enjoying business
ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS
sucres*. Mr*. Juanita Russell.
310 Sanford Ave.
Phone 1321
P. O. Box 875. Orlando

Santard
Vacuum Cleaner Service

PLUMBING
Contract and rep*lr work. Free
estimates K L Harvey. 104
Sanford Ave Phone 1828.

P. M. CAMPBELL

General Contractor
“ Homes of Distinction"
Hi Way 17 82
PIm m 1447

FLOOR sanding and finishing
Cleaning, waxing Serving Semi
nolo County since 1925. U. M
Gleason, Lake Mary.

W. H. "B ILL" STEMPER
Realtor—General Insurance
GERTRUDE D1NGFKLOFR,
ASSOCIATE
«W

tu NR Part Atm

LOVELY

iH ir*

PhMM IM

8 Inside and Outside Salesmen f&lt;&gt;
TV A Appliances Brown’s T\
|Service, 106 West 1st Sl g e t

-1 1

EXPERT Typist desires part lima
work. Knowledge of Shorthand
also do typing at home. P. O.
Box 14(7, hanfurd, Fla.
COOK to work daya. Experience.
^ftefersjicer Phone 54-J.______

HUBBUBS oppoBTUNirm »
For Sale; COSMETIC Route. 1i
all Seminole County: "Starllahi
line. Exclusive colored lit:
Write P. O. Box 1080, Wirt.
PMk. Fla.____________________

gPECIAL I M W C « f
CARPENTER WORE

-

rt a s ? m M w k * " '

SMITH CORONA Portable Type
writer. Perfect condition. Phone
1867-W after 8 p. m.__________ ORLANDO Me
Undo Evening
Ray. 11444.
JALOUSIES A AWNINGS
Life time Glass and Aluminum
—Free Estimates—Free Instal
Servlet
lation—Telephone 1425. Furni
RCAMoto
tore Center. 118 W. First SL

,

t BadrtWR Hon

_

Beautiful f ____ ____

m

Ave.H

F M ijW a p w

masonr y H
a a as
Caramia Bath, vinyl tlia or oak
floors, screened perch,
pomtertCarporte

kas^Wias L.Ave.J.

.

C :S ;

phase

’M rs. s s s w r -»

* w

IW

an aU makea and models
Ready Mixed Concrete. Cewcrate SANFORD u
m
a
Block. Band, Gravel, Cement
Concrete Pipe to Meat AU Quailflcatlooa.
Ftetektai.

*title
515.BH ca

rbWM 1400

4 c f lr

laid * u

Comrrata Pipe Co.

Waal IMh BL
Bouti
Rattan Sofa Bad, Cheap. Modem
House Trailer with hath. Priced
UPHOLSTERY— Blip covers made ,
reduced lor quick ante. 207*4.

* T

&gt; KAUM.
w
Chapaun Ave.

m

MFC. c a

» Brnmtey rJamnn B fc Item H i
g -&lt; t B
i

m

W

Ml J
with Glass

WJATM

m

Term*.

Bt—tey*e Bike SlMp

210 E. 4th BL Tel. 2424
pteycU A ^ene^G Repair Keys
MM.

with

•Jmm Met eel

Ozier-Weller
Homes Inc.

,

LOST AND FOUND

—21

I7e

Fold
Finished laundry

27-

r»/%?vO SEE VICK

•

-*

PER GALLON
AT YOl'It

IMPERIAL
SERVICE STATION

Sanltnne Dry Cleaning
S m ith rid e
la u n d r o m a t
South Side Foodmari Bldg.
IM East 25tk Mt.

1201

g.

PARK

AVE.

—21

Keys with initials D
E. F. Call at Sweeney’s. _____

SMA1X BUSINESS
If you have a tmxll buslneaa In a
secluded part of town and arc

LOST—Tan and While Chihuahua
8 months old. Tan collar.
Childs pet. REWARD. 318 West
1st SL__________________________

Interested in getting customers,
list the service you offer la the
Classified column of the Sanford
Herald CeU tail

FOUND— Sterling silver bracelet
near Yowell's. Owner may have
bv identifying and paying for
adv.

112 MairmnlUi Ave. Phene US

SH ER M A N

CO N CRETE

GORMLY IN C

P IP E

"Your Hot Point Dealer"

515 Palmetto Ave.

Ph. 775

Ofttce Machine Co
Typewriters, adding machines.
Sales- RwUla, 814 Magnolia. Ph
44.

HAYNES

Boyd * Wallace

14R—SALESMEN WANTED—14B
BliWlDE A P^tiA kdk SALKS
MAN. Apply in person to Bag
gerly Appliance Center, 11$ S
Magnolia Ava.

Excellent Condition. Only 1125 00. 1 4 Sea Al Lyon, Sanford Electric
Co t it Magnolia Ava.

Copper

M ar

21-

•

KEROSENE

Wash and Dry

Watch found In car. Owner may L.
f^
Sill—1'iano Technici an
nave same by paying for ad at
Phone 2164 Routs 1, Sanford
Herald Office________________

INCOME TAX SERVICE

SSiKVfltf

T

Roy Reel'* ,U»ed Cars
Saniord Ave A llth 8t.

ENVELOPES, letterheads, state­ m - ELECTRICAL SERVICER - C
ments, Invoices, hand bills, and
Randall Btectrte Cm
p r o g r a m a, etc. Progressiva Beadls and C ro il» AppUieees
ng Co., Phone 404—4*8
Printing
Youngslom. KitchenWest 13th SL
Etretnral contracting and repair*

WESTING HOUSE Laundromat- t m
Less than 2 year* old. A BARDOMESTIC I EWING MACMINRr
BAIN at $100 00
ONLY 142 a month including all
Balts • Rental* Service
payments. This is a lovely noma
Sanford Electric Co.
B A t u t . O.I«lo
GARRK'T**
PHONE 107
including full Dining Room, Kit­
month. Witte Oar aId L Beer,
Ilf Magnella Ava.
chen, gRedrooma and I N
Oviedo, er eaU 4BSL
INCOME TAX
Living Room. Inquira at
UNDERWOOD Typewriter perfect
condition 83000; Winchester 22 Tan Returns prepared while YOU
wait. Room 200 aboya B. L
apartment,
Rifle practically u v , 111.00;
, First BL
Kerosene Automatic Hot Watar
garage. PI B i n d .
garage.
heater, 815 00; I t U Linoleum
SWAIN’S
BATTERY SERVICE
I room furnished apartment,
Ruga choice color*, 10-50; A
New double Wardrobe 2 mirrors, • Battery • Generator • Starter
~ d service. Phono 117. m
835.00; Mahocaur
~labogaar dreasar
draaai with
center. Water,
' rror/
-or, I14J0;
$14.50; Dinette
good mirror,
HO mo. BITS Palmetto, Phone
' hairs. 828 00;
•cl extent'
IBO-W evening*.
A Nice “

W H A ***
■s s b w k *

SELL YOUR CAR TO

Phone 714 X J
Part* and Supplies for All Make*
FOUNDentals

M utulii* Am4

GIRLS1
GIRLS!
GIRLS!
Good Hours, Good Wages. Ap­
ply In person at Seminole Drive
In. 801 East First St.

WORE WARrhCD

Dry
One hour H

CO .
Phong 2489

Out West ISth SL

CALL THE
LUMBER
NUMBER

U - OFFICK EOUIPMENI - P

I8A HELP WANTED (Female) I8A

iT -

35- I^UNDRY BERWICK -21
One hour
Wain and Damp
•

PAINT ....................... 52 50 gal.
25 lb. Roasters ............ $2 48 aa.

$350 DOWN

mci •

II-AUTCrMOBlMCSTRAILR—
FOR S A L E - '43 Plymouth club
coupe. $10000. Terms If deslr
cd. Call 153 W.

charming sections of Sanford.
Hanford Electric Cm
Win. II. Murray
Triple Cushion Mattreee
It is an outstanding buy at |15,.
BOOKKEEPER
Phew* 441
III! Celery Ave.
Tel 1141 X M MS MagnoUe Ave.
" Made Smooth to Sootl *"
*^~~wrw
*
8*n
________
i
~
w
b
c
soo.oo, ( 2,000.00 down will handExperienced— Keep books, art as
SKE Your General Electric dealer
Furniture Center
la.
14
R
INSURANCE
—14
■
cashier. Meet public. Must have
for TV and Appliance*.
111 West 1st St
PhoM 1425
Wc hava many othar outstanding
Year 'round. EslahFKIOIDAIHK
aMilsnee* sales
lit
m
OUC
i
H
TO
n
i
n
s
u
R
a
n
(.
{
local
company.
Reply
giv­
values in 2 and 3 Bedroom
USED TRACTORS
and service G. H (Ugh. Oviedo
homes, down payments as low
ing experience to BOX MP c /o
TM
ON
l
811
RrlU
Traetar
Co.
Fla. PhoM 4181 or ~
as 11,000.00.
The Herald.
Hlway I7-S2 Beete
Phew HI
1842-W after 8 p m
A 11 AH 1 1C Ba n k l*L r*( *

Rag. Real Relate I n k w
u » s Part
Ph. u n

•eg sstr

417 Sanford Atlantic
H

SEWING MACHINES- Repaired
or rebuilt. Also machine* for
sale. $15 00 up Phone llougaard
1777 X M Box 249. Lake Mary

RE8T0NIC

C. A. WHIDDON, SR.

• ^ M V S kS T S S S

John WIHiamn In*.

THE SANFORD HERALD

4—
BEAUTY PARIDRS
-2 4
Fri. Mur. 4, 19S5
Page T
SPECIALIZING
tn
Pcrsonalii)
Hair Cuts. Lillian McDonald's
Beauty Studio in Casselberry. 2 9 RESTAURANTS
Ill-wav 17 92 South. Phone W P
27-2182. (Closed all day Monday)
YOU! YOU! YOU!
Drop In— Free Parking
Home cooked Meals
. Real Pit Dar R Q
ARE Y’Ol) b&gt;ire&lt;t with vmir look*’
Chill, Hot Dogs
Try OUR AMERICANA CUT
AU Kinds of Ssndwlchea
which can be set in a variety
Good Coffee
of ways to renew your charm.
al Clydes Grin
LVA BEKS SHOP
Phone 563
206 Sanferd Ave.
EASTER SPECIALS On Perman­
ents. $6.50 and $8 50 Include*
Shaping and Sty lire: for YOU
It will par YOU to see US
Air conditioned, Soft Water and
before
you buy. Open Evenings
Penguin Hcatlrss Dryers.
and Sundaya.
3 Senior Operator*
HARRIETTS BEAUTY NOOK
Kx*l*ide Trailer f l ir t ,
We give United Trading stamp*
I’alatka, Fla.
105 South Oak
Phone 971

T V SERVICE CENTER
1019 Ford V-8, 4-door, A ! condi­ •
e eactory Supervised Service
tion.
extra
clean,
sacrifice
• House calls 9 a. m. till I p m
$395 00, Phone 1725 R.
•
(All makes and models)
M2 Mag Ave.
Phone 3400 18—AUTOMOBILE DEALERS—18

USED Washing
work* for ONLY' *10 00 and you
METAL’ llOOFLNG
haul II
Now In Stock. S-V Crimp —l * i "
SANFOBD Kt.EtTHIC CO.
Corrugated— I S " Corrugated.
118 Magnolia Ave.
Gel all Your rnofini* need* -I

WEST1NGIIOUSE LAUNDRUMA1
TRAILER S P A ^ AvallabJrflJ
Only 550.00
per month. ChUdsan Welcome.
Monthly Payment* 144.00
Sanford Electric Co.
Lake 'Monroe Trailer Coon. Only Two attractive two Bedroom
IIS Magnella Are.
Phone 5380.
____
home* completed, ready to
mova in. Beautiful Kitchens and CALL 1086-J for Porch Jalouslea.
■TORE ROOM. IBi 4Iv 4th and
Batha with Shower*. Automatic
Contract or hour. Free esti
StnfonL Inquire Jaeobeaaa De­
watar heaters. Utility room.
mates.
partment Store.
Carporte, Aluminum windows.
n y l'Tile Floors _________
Vinyl
in kitchens___
ana
QUAKER Circulating Beaters
UNFURNISHED eotttie wM&gt;hitbatha. Only 8250. down., The;
$10.05 up
chen equipment and vanetiaa
are the best value* In am.3
home* that we have offered.
blinda. I ll Elm Art.________
R. R POPE CO-INC.
See these home today at
m South Part Ave. Ftomo 1448
4 Room Apartment IBB Park.
1515 Princeton Ava.
OPEN HOUSE
USED Refrigerator. II Runt—and
I ROOM Furnlahed Apartment
SATURDAY AND SUNDAY
refrigerator YOURS For Only
AFTTERNOONS
with bath. 530.00 Inquire 410
Sanford Ava.______________
LOWELL E. OZIER
Sanford Electric Co.
118 Magaslla Ava.
DOWNSTAIRS Apartment U iW .
Custom Homes and Florida
clean rooma. Sun room. Bll Park
Builder low cost homes
- Factory to You —
Ava.
Aluminum
A SENSATION ON FRENCH AVE.
IB BuUdtasIdeal 4 large bed rooms, living room,
Venetian UUndn
B’ a 44*.STORE
1
dining room, finest hard wood Enclosed bead Sag-proof bottom
for small buitneea. R. A. Camerfloors, bath, hollow Ula construc­
on, Oviedo. Phone
rail with ptactlc ends. Plastic or
tion, walking distance to clock.
rayon Upas. Cottea or ayloo
L a r g e APT. op Lake Charm
Owner was hero says sell at
cords
once.
Includes S Bedrooms sod den
geakarik Gtnaa and Paint Co.
Vepr^ssaousblCJ^, A. Cameron. RAYMOND M. ■ALL. REALTOR 112 114 West 2nd 8h
Phone 220
g D. Righir ymsa. Associate
884 South Part Avg
Phono tea GOOD Used Cl. E. Refrigerator.

I ROOM Furnlahed or Unfumiahed Apartment Phono IMS.

to

e O E E F
100) Sanford Ava.
Fhona 1113 1918 House Trailer. 23 ft. $230 00
Phone 639-X-J.
Plowing, discing, grading Trees
and shrubbery moved Dewitt FOR SALE— Army 8 x 6 Banjo
t\pc Truck. Good condition.
Hunter 601 E 26th St.
Write Box 101, Osteen. Phone
RANDALL ELECTRIC CO. Saniord 1357-R-4.

Phone 24X8

■I I Poieta, J cto. 418 A J7-02.

tw o M r o o n
ment. Close In. 217 Oak Ave.
Phone 818.

-1 4 1

Rate*
Polieyboldart

Phone 7489

LARGE supply of Orangeburg fi
nre pipe and fittings for your
sewer needs.

Phuoe 1128 A. B. Peteraon,Broker
Associates
A. B Peterson ir
The Want Ad Department Is P. J Cheiterson Albert N Fit»a
Garfield WilletU John Maiscb
open from 8:30 a m. until 5:30 p
Sherman Concrete Pipe Co. 8—
m each business day except Rat
ARTICLES WANTED - 4
urday afternoon. Deadline for
Out West 13th St.
Phone
Loch Arbor
week-day Insertions Is 2:00 p m TWO Lake Front Lot* with Trees
Highest CASH and TRADE-IN
the day preceding publication
price* paid for u*eil FllltNI
Priced $2,500. for troth.
~ECIIO L8 BEDDING CO Any ads coming In . lwler than
TUBE Call 938. WIUon-Maler
Corner
2nd
A
Magnolia
l*h.
1232
5:00 p. m will be published under TWO Inside lot* with Irtes on
Furniture Co 311 E 1*1 Sl.
(Bud Bamberger, Mgr.)
Too Late To Classify.
paved St. 150 ft. frontage priced
Advertisers are requested to no
I7
^
7
at only (ooo. for both.
VENETIAN BUNDS
tlfy the Want-Ad Department tm
i Nationally Adv
Kolia-Head i 40 P IG S - Good breed. Will sell
ono nr all. Call 181-R.
Robert A. Willlaran, Realtor
Manufactured in Sanford
responsible fc* only one Incorrect Raymond E. LundquiaL Assorts . Seminole VenetUa Riled Ca.
IS
HELP WANTED
—II
Phone tB72 Atlantic Bank Bldg 830 West Srd St
Insertion
_
Phoee 285
2
aggressive
Public
Relations
Wo­
It's So Easy
MODERN New Home with 10 Used furniture, appliances, tools
men to solicit by telephone and
to Ptoca A Want Ad
acres bearing grove. Easy terms.
personal contact. Good pronosl
etc Bought—sold Larry'r Mart.
Just Cali 1821 and ask for I'hont 1333-J.
tion fir live wires Sec Mr. Ca*a
121 East 1st 84 Phooa 1831
the Want Ad department
at llrown's TV. 108 W. 1st St.
8:34) to 11:(M) a. m only.
THREE BEDROOM—2 BATH
Sanford Herald
U S E D WASHING MACHINE—
New. spacious and distinctive plan,
Good condition Only 140.00 See
outstanding quality of construe,
A1 Lyon at Sanford Eleetris Co. WANTED: Retired cr semi retired
TOR RENT
couple to manage to unit apart,
lion throughout, this daluxe
116 Maggolia Ave.
t
ment house, rent free. Phone
home has Just been completed
WEI-AKA APARTMENTS: rooma,
1292-J evenings.
and is located In ona of the most

private hatha 114 W Flrat SL

INSURANCE

14 1

Financial

Out Weal 13th

Sherman Concrete Pipe Co.
Out Weal 13th 8t.

S l J J uu t Z . f i ,

Call us about our business rates

«
u
a.
«

5A YEARS OF SATISFIED
SERVICE AND VALUES TO
OUR CUSTOMERS
WAS
NOW
6 85 Utility Tables
4 50
8.50 each Modern Table
Lamps
2 for 8 50
10 05 each Plastic Cocktail
Chairs
2 for 15 00
49.50 Simmon* Box Spring
or Mattrc»*
38 50
49 93 Platform Bockcr
38 50
54 95 Club Chair
38.50
59.50 5 pc. Wrought Iron
Dinettes
41.50
69.50 9 x 12 Axminttrr
Wool Bo r ............
50 00
69 50 Sofa B e d ................ 52.50
79.50 Studio Courh ...
58 50
89 50 Contour Chair
68 50
69 50 Simmon* Sofa Bed 77.50
249 50 Simmon*
Hlde-a-Bed
198.5o

201 01 E- 1st Sl.

-1

For Remodeling *nd repairs
Nothing rVwn—Small Monthly
Payments

Golden Jubliee

61 VARIETIES
Native and Foreign Woods
Sec Them AI

SPEC1A1 SERY8TR

n u

ttED-l-MIX CONKRETE*
C!reave Traps
Septl# Tanks
Window Sills • • Lintels.
Sand. Ruck. Cement. Steel. Mnrtsr

MIRACLE CONCRETE CO.
GET extra eath (or articles you
308 Elm Ave
Phons 1335
bo longer use Place four ad to
A trucly nice 4 unit Apartment
day. Phone 1821.
3-llne ad. sack as the one above
u only Me per day on oar low I
£
day earned rate economy plan, 45c
per day for * days and 54c for
I day.

14-

ARTICLES FOR SALE

P YOUk AD WERR IN Till!
SPACE IT WOULD ATTRACT
EVERYONE'S ATTENTION AS
T fTi HAS ATTRACTED YOU!

CALL

THB

LUMBER

CALL TODAY!

NUMBER

fo r su dden

83
s e r v ic e

H ILL LUMBER Cr SUPPLY YARD
21S

W. THIRD

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Frt. Mar. 4. 19.15

TTIE SANFORD HERALD

warm-tip* for their season which man School P-TA will meet on

will open on April 12. The hoy*
are working very hard in effort
to make first string team. Man­
ager Elgin ha* been giving the
lioys a real work-out and the boys
have come Ihrough so well that
Johnson, and Marie Elgin. Also 3istline, corresponding secretary; picking first-string will be quit*
John Karina, Samuel Johnson, Mrs. S, ft. Johnson, re-elected, a task. Longwood apparently
Claude I j i v o , Don Ilitsman and t.-casurer; and House and Grounds ha* In the making some fine
I It) MKS. MEliKKLY EATON
young hnli-playcr*.
The Longwood Chamber of Coin* D J. Scrccncy. Also two Girl Chairman, Mrs. Ilencll. Also all
William DeRosa will take up
merer will he able to contribute Scouts, Dianna Karina and Susan trustees again took the oath to
approximately 1350.90 to the French.
the league, Mrs. J. A, (iistline, the duties of managing the Form
In charge of Finance was Chair­ Mr*. S. L. Tupper ami Mrs. Hallic Club this year.
building fund from the proceeds
The J-adiea Auxiliary o f the
ftceivrd fiom their ham dinner man Maurice Rudolph and assist­ 1-aVigne.
that wax held !a*t Mat unlay even­ ant*, l.inton Cox, Paul Coultier,
Prreceding the meeting Dr. T, Longwood Fihr Department will
ing. A portion of this amount Limy Jones and Kuss'l Grunt.
Pud, Seminole County llculth O f­ have their monthly meeting on
The Longwood Women's Civic ficer, presented a very instructive March 7 at 8 p.m. at the home
v o received from Ihe anetion held
"I Mr*. Lillian Scrccncy on Grant
nfter the dinner anil conducted by League installed their officers for movie on cancer to the group
Street,
Larry June*.
the coming year at their meeting
Refreshments were served by i The mothers o f the Little
Co-choir man l.illinn Cox and last Tuesday afternoon a t the this months hostess, Mrs. italph
league llan.-hall Club will hold
Ttnth Rudolph wire assisted l&gt;y Library,
Stevens, assisted |,y Mmrs. Don a hake food sale on Saturday
Mis. George Otto, ronducted the ll.tsman,
the following. Aimes. Katherine
Maurice
Rudolph,
C.irhaM. Nan Duming. It. It Gray. impicssive installations, taking George Ginr.ger, Leroy Neuman, March 12 at the corner of Church
and K. Lake Streets, Longwood,
Paul Coultier, ituth Kayo, Lassie the offices were, Mrs. It, C. Carl­
Edith Ayers, Flora Willis, Irving
Mr*. William Hudson is chair­
Aiaiers, Grace
Jtaddin,
Italph son, re-elected, president; Mis. L. Towers, W. E. Shellig and Flor­
man o f Diis event. The sale will
Hammond Lillian .Scrccncy, Gerrl I.. Cox, i e-elec ted. 1st vice-presi­ ence Stindi-rlln.
get under way at 10 a.m. Anyone
Jfttsninn, John
Dauber, Mary dent; Mrs. A. C. Mniers, 2nd vireTheir were nliout -10 members caring to donate to this sale may
Mobley, flalpii Steven*, laitiixe president; Mrs, It. R. Gray, re­
ot Die Longwood Tourist Club at­ do so and Die mothers will lie
June*, Mary Itenmx, Horenee cording secretary: Mrs. F. W.
tending their regular monthly rov- grateful. The proceeds of this sale
en d dish dinner lit Sunshine Park I will go to buy nrressnry equip­
on Wednesday nfternoon.
ment for the Little League Rail
After partaking of all the do. |Club.
Unions foods the President, Mr. (L
Miss Carol Carpenter was hon­
Lewis, called the meeting to order. ored with a shower on Wednesday
A motion was made that new rules |given by Mrs. J. W. Hicks.
aril requirements for the members
(for your homo)
Among the guests present were,
He diawn up Sect. J. linker was I Misses Nina Harrington Phytisg
named as rhairmnn for the draw­ Creamer, Loretta Holly and Ma.
ing of the new by-laws. Also on lion Carpenter, Also the Mmes.
the committee will he Mrs. M.
I&lt;oia Howard, Kay Frey, Grace
f
Warrern and Mrs. Ellery Ruddin. Rocck, Ann Trout and Florence
The committee was instructed to Carpenter.
How old it your home?
vo into the history of the Club and
H o molter what Ihe o n iw e i is —“ 4 0 y e a rs " or “ still under
Miss Carpenter will lie married
in rotnply all the data they could to Alfied R. Stuckey early in
,construction"—the magic o l BARRETT* Asbeslos-Cemenl
1ollect.
^Siding Shingles can give it beauty that will not fad e.
March.
Mr. D. Mcnihill Suggested Dint
Tiie Lyman P-TA held n study
Beautiful when they go o n -b e o u tifu l a generation loter —
-igris be erected on the shuffle- group meeting on Tuesday even­
Asbestos-Cem ent Shingles defy old oge.
honnl colitis stating, a request, ing at Ih" home o f Mr. and Mis.
They're alw ays young—in oppearance os well os perform ance.
that one should not walk on the Clement llnllrt.
"Hurts. This was agreed to by tho
lAnd they'll keep your house young, loo, because they
On Inst Sunday afternoon a
members and a committee was in­ piano recital was presented at
^orm on Impenetrable shield against w eather,, ^
structed to make the necessary the home of Mrs. Ira Wilson by
C a ll us for deloils.
arrange menu.
her students.
Those participating included,
There will he another covered
dish dinner at Die April meeting Sandro and Hetty Sue Prosser,
on the (ilh to he held at 112:00 Tom Mllwrr, Donna Lou Ilnrncs,
Call I lie l.timhcr Number
Lucy and Kathleen Moon, Cnrol
noon.
The gtotip that is readying the Kchlmming, Glenda Payne and
Antique iiinl Curio Exhibition, to Patricia DeRosa.
The Executive Board of the Ly­
be held on Friday and Saturday,
March Jrt and Hi are proceeding
far Sudden Service
rapidly with their plans. Mrs. Paul
llurmnstrr, rhairmnn, and her
committer met lust Tuesday even­
ing at Dip Library and many exhihilom were announced.
At the present time we have Ihr
H J West Third St.
1‘ hune 83 following who will present their
exhibits. Old World Collection,
Hr, Topsick; Early American,
Mrs L'pdrgrof; Swiss, Mr*, llurmaster; White Elephant, Mr*.
Italph Hammond; Country Store,
Mrs. J. Carhnrt; Early Longwood,
Mrs. Itohhlr Joe Hunt; Antiques
and Music, Mr. V. Whccles; Mra.
Pauline Steven* will be in charge
o f costume*.
The exhibit will be open from
2 p.m. thru 9 pan. anil refreshrtent* will lie served. Tlrkela are
25 cents and may be purchased
from any of the committee or at
the door during the exhibition.
Serving as gutrd* during the
show will lie, Mauries Rudolph
ami Linton Cox,
Iam gw nod's Little League Base­
ball Club, under Ihe supervision of
Sylvester Elgin, has been out go­
ing
through
the
preliminary

County Personals

Longwood News

a beauty treatment1
that lasts a lifetime!

Tuesday evening, March 8 at 8
o'clock. This meeting will be at
the home of Mrs. Lonsrd Wagner
on Altamonte Springs Road.
We have received word that Mr.
Dan Lcigthan has returned to his
home after being a patient at the
Winter Park Hospital. Mr. Leigh­
ton arrived home on Wednesday
jnd is feeling greatly Improved.
Donald Largent, son o f Mr.
and Mrs. Attcli Largent Is now at
home after serving over a year
with the tT.S. Army overseas. Don
recently received hi* discharge
Pont the Army.
Miss Grace Harthoner, who has
been the guest o f Mr*. Catsie
Majors at the home of Mrs. Sel­
ma Larrom on Wild me re Street,
has gone to Sarasota for a few
weeks before returning to her
home in Massachusetts.
Mr. and Mr*. E. II. May, who
Hnvi been spending th* winter In
town left (hi* week for their home
m White Plains, Kentucky.
Mr. and Mrs. E. It. Moore of
Gianhy, Connecticut, hnvn hern
callers in town this week visiting
many old friends.
Mr. and Mrs. George H. Otto
Jr moved the first o f the week
to n farm on the Elder Springs
Load.
The Fnturdny Evening Pinochle
( tub attended the Chamber of
Commerce in Sunnyside Park on
Saturday, and then went to the
home of Mr. and Mrs. G. Godfrey
at Pearl Heights. Those attending
were, Mr*
Florence Hunderlin.
Mrs. Maude Tupper, Mr. J, Hol­
lister, Air. and Mrs. Charles

Osteen
By MRS. KING ALLMAN
The WMU of the Baptist Churci
met Monday for an all day meeting
lo be taught the sludy course “ Un­
der the North Star” which was
about mission work In Alaska.
Mr*. D. F. Stamp of Ormond
Beach and former Missionary to
China and Hawaii for thirty years
taught the book. Those present
were. Mrs. A. C Tyson, Mrs. B
F. Burke, Mr*. Nolan Osteen, Mrs.
Harry Osteen, Mrs. E. W. Smith.
Mrs. John Helm, Mrs. E. II. Co­
hen, Mrs. Charles Brown, Airs.
George Hirt. Mrs. L, F- DcLoxicr,
Mrs G. Beall, Mrs. Raymond
Lawson, Mrs. J. S. Peterson, Mrs.
R. H. Williams, .Mrs. Dick Jones,
and Mrs. King Allman.
There will be no Home Demon­
stration Club meeting Tuesday,
March 8th but Wednesday, .March
!»th will be Home Demonstration
Club Day at the Volusia County
Fair. All members are asked to
attend if possible. Bring a sack
lunch.
The Osteen P-TA will meet
Tuesday, March 8th at 7:30 p m
at Hie school house. After the
business merlins, a film entitled
“ Good Wrinkles" will be shown.
Refreshments will be served dur
ing the social hour.
Monday evening Mrs. D. F
Stamps told of the work that she
and her husband did as mlssianWales and Mrs. E. Ayers. The
next meeting will be at the new
home of Mr. Louie Knoll.

• l’ LUMMNU

ariet In China. Also showed slides

Gerard TOpae flaw h r plane.

of Alaska and China.
The Brotherhood of the Baptist
Church met Tuesday evening at
the church with the following pre
sent: Rev L. F. DeLoricr, Donald
Dreggorx, Nolan Uatccn, Elmer
Cohen. Wendell I!!r*., Uc.t .tt Sal
ton,
David Hosack,
Manning
Todd, Gerald Hosack, J. S. Pet­
erson, B. F. Burke and Fay L.
Lee of Enterprise.
Airs P. T. Piety attended an or
ganizational meeting of the new
St. Johns Presbyterian Church in
Leesburg. Monday.
Miss Frances Lawson and Mr.
Ted Price of Sanford attended a
farewell party at the home of
Miss Jewel Cohen. Fridsy even­
ing given in honor of Roy E.
Spencer, who was stationed with
the Navy in Sanford, but has been
transferred to Charleston, S. C.
Air. and Mrs. Raymond Lawson and Mrs. Ellen Cochran call
ed on Mrs. Bessie McLean and
Mrs. Bessie .McLean and Mrs
Opal Miller of Oviedo, Sunday.
.Mrs. Manning Todd has return­
ed home after visiting her daugh­
ters, Airs W. B. Whlddon of
Arcadia and Alra, Marion Lcltncr
of Belle Glade.
Mr*. J. D. Garrett and children
and Mr. and Mrs. Bcrylc Peter
son and son of Dade City were
dinner guests of Mr. and .Mrs. J.
S. Peterson and family, Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. V. P. Allman
ami son Paul made a business
trip to Jacksonville, Saturday.
.Mr and Mrs. Grant Clutter and
J. L. Allman made a business Dip
to Jacksonville, Tuesday.

where he will attend the funeral
of his mother. Friends of the
Fllpses* wish to extend their aympathy at this time.
Mr. and .Mrs. R. J. Carlton, and
Mrs. J. H. Edwards of Port
Orange and Mrs. J. C Rape of
New Smyrna called on Air and
Mrs. George Hlrt Sunday.

• KHESKY

M. G. HODGES
WELLS DRILLED — PUMPS
ROAI)

PHONE

Mr and Alra. John Stone and
family have as their guests for a
few days, Air. and Mrs. Hoyle Kel­
ly of Sanford, N. C.
Air. and Mrs. Connely Wella of
Springfield, Ohio are visiting Alra.
Wells' parents and brother and ,
sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs John
Maxwell and Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Maxwell for a few daya.
Rev Layfayetie Walker of De' .and ronducted the services at the
Baptist church, Sunday.
Phillip Bauct had as his guests
•Sunday, Mr and Mrs. Hubert Kirk­
land of Orlando, and Airs. Fred
Ballard of Maitland.
Mr and Mrs W. L. Seig spent
Sunday in Dade City with friends.
Mrs Florence Fortner left Tues­
day for Jacksonville where she
will make her home with her lit­
ter.
A 19-3/4 ounce can of apaghat"
tl sauce with meat will be enough
to serve with about 8 ounce* of
spaghetti (uncooked weight).

NOTICE

HEATING

PAOLA

Geneva
By ADDIE PREVATT

700

Mr. Campbell wishes to thank everyone for their won­
derful patronage dur inn his operation of Campbell*! Se­
curity Feed and Seed Store. And announces that ha
will he with the new owner and purchaaer Mr. J. D.
Woodruff, for a short time.

Hill Lumber &amp; Supply Yard

FIH I
BEAGLE
PUPPIES
Oven as Prizes!
BOYS
GIRLS

Only Ford offers Short Strok^V^^s
for every size truck in a full line

S*tet SufwU&amp;i Sue 6

The Mf hand ini
V-&amp;9. Them remarkable new anfinaa an rapidly out-u
dating conventional lonf-etroka
Hiair abortar l
stroke prolongs piston ring lift up lo 63%. Essf*—■ last
longer! You can aava up to one gallon ot gm in m
I
But ONLY FORD gives yon ■ Short Stroke engine is
«»r y truck fiom Pickupe to
FOUR Stoat
Stroke V-fl’aandaSbort Stroke Sta—one QabkrijitMmt

Caffusf
U Good Pood! lor Kvorybody

FORD TRIPLE ECONOMY TRUCKS
W

MANY $ M m FLAVORS \ PinH, Cono«, Cup* and 1/2 GaHon
AT YOUR DEAUR'S
J Taka Homo Family Siao Padtaaoi

STRICKLAND

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M ORRISON,

•OS K. let SL

UiUUfAt TJa WBBO-TV

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looking Over

Facade
LaFemme

All Florida

By lu murphy

Oh fiddle faddle.
Why can’ t Mamie wear n
lorgnette if she wants to?
All right—no technically
one does not wear lorgnettes.
Well — wear —swing — rap —
whatever it ia one does, I do
not see why one can not do
it even if one is the wife of
the President o f the United
States.
D o I make m yself clear,
Om aha W orld Herald old
friend?
Poor little Mamie. All day
long open drives, shake
hands, wave, smile, chit,
chat, keep it gay, kid—and
then—ah me, faux pas—one
glance through a lorgnette
and everything brealm loose.

All aha waa trying to do
was follow the text o f a
apeech her huaband waa
making. A friendly gesture.
But ehc made the miatake
ilicing the aid o f a lorgo f utilicing
Ratta. And hark the Herald
— gala bunt forth into i

to use a lorgnette. What do
you rockon they want her
to do. Go blind?
1 also do not know why
they stopped with “ pleasant
and unassuming.” Why
didn’t they just go ahead
and call her an “ old shoe"
and ha done with it.
Actually • lorgnette can ha right handy. Especially
If you d o not have a liter­
ary evening planned—still
you would M e t o rand Urn
Ana print—but at Urn earn
------------------- 1 up your hair.
M B to fee! It to • Sym bol
Hnutour—trao tbo word they
m od. And tboro la no ta t­
ting around it. Mamin ia
about aa hautouriah aa a
toaa bud.
Par ha pa if aba branched
V

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t t k

THANKS TO YOU, TOOI
In rtadinf your “ Lotten to the
Editor" pace in ycaterday’a(Fab. 13)
AD Florida Magaiine - ah ieb I
ahraya renddrat to aanifothen enjoy
your mafarina aa much aa I do-1
•nta the letter from Mrs. J. Roy
Rebbiae of Delond, and yew replyBoth of thane remind me of my
an pardonable negelct in thanking
you far forwarding Mrs. Robbins’
latter to me, and for tbe nice and
moth aprom ted story written by
ew aspalar feature atary writer of
the Nruecoia Newa-Jonraai. arhkb
appaared in a Jnly issue of A&gt;

It ia gratfyiag to a gal who wB
■near ana M ngain, that yaw and
yow staff rarognlao merit and in*
— nicy in oanUng warbaat art Rant

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TO T H I

material to make them, along with
instructions for asttmf up his loom
With my*permission, Mrs. Dtrlington has copisd tbs instructions
and distributed them to vrtarana
Mlwsatid In -marine in I f ■
‘‘m----- *
conation ia tbs Miami araa. It ia a
plawauro to ha of aarvfca to tho boys
whs did aa much far ua and am
apandlag thsir days down that* in

HOP! TMtY U K i IT, TOO

,

First, Td like to say I mjoy your
magaiinr so much. I never waste a
copy. I mail them to friends and
relatives.
Most of all I enjoy the featuraa
and stories concerning Florida's his­
tory. As I lika to learn aa much aa
possible about this "our adeptad
In your edition of Feb. t, you
terraled in bssstiful'
On tbs east coast, w
away anuaual one#, but tbs amal
unique eao. I believe is the beans at
Willard A. Van Nast. M i)., of New

par

ANY W EEK. W e have re­
ceived a heartening number I
o f responses to our recent
appeal for information con­
cerning Florida home* of
unusual architecture. It may I
be, because o f the grent
number o f answers, we will
be unable to include all of
these homes in the planned
series o f articles on that
subject. But we do appreci­
ate th e splendid response
and we’ll do our best to
“ cover the hom efront."
Over the pnst year we
have received weekly from
the Florida State Chamber
o f Commerce a business bul­
letin. The statistic* in these
bulletins offer an amazing
picture o f our state’s growth.
Although parts o f many o f
these bulletins have been
printed elsewhere from time
to time, we feel that a
“ birdaeye” view o f the whole
should be o f real interest to
our readers. Hence, we soon
will publish a business story
on our state which, we think,
should give each o f ua un­
bou n ded enthusiasm for
Florida's future.

OUR COVCR
All o f the sadntw and bitism — o f a once proud and
haughty race o f warriors
shows on the face of, the
aged Seminole Indian who
posed for our cover on the
grounds of “ Florida Aflame,’’
saga o f the Seminole*’ long
and tragic fight for their
last homeland, the Ever­
glades.
.

I NO. V

Tstai

•Iffm l * Florida
b U M »
b "»»

"TimIs
Ilfland
Sem inoles’ B loody Fight
For In dep en d en ce told
In C o lo r fu l S p e c t a c le
By LILLIE MAY MARSHALL

I n is is my story! This
is my land! T hese are my
people!”
A. dram atic voice ema­
nates from the jungle, to the
accom panim ent o f weird,
rh yth m ic music, as lights
glowing through and above
tall trees festooned with
Spanish moss, illuminate a
dark sky.
"Florida Aflame,’-' the col­
orful spectacle in dialogue,
dance and music, telling the
story o f the tragic early
struggles o f the Seminoles
to hold th eir hom eland
against invading whites, ia
unfolding.
From the prologue to the
closing, rampant with color,
spectacular in every scene,
the presentation Bets forth
the injustices practised by
the white man against the
native Seminoles.
An order from Washing­
ton sending troops to force
them into boats and on to
Oklahoma, leaving Florida
to the invaders, is the spark
which definitely sets Florida
aflame as the Sem inoles

under their valiant chief,
Osceola, struggle tragically
and, seem ingly, futilely to
remain in Florida.
M aking and breaking
treaties with equal aban ­
don, the soldiers drive the
tribesm en with their sick,
aged and hungry, farther
and farther from their
hom es and crops, stalking
.sleeplessly into the swamp
in search o f haven.

Osceola, with the innate
honesty o f the Indian and
his undying belief in the
Great Spirit, persuades his
people, in .sp ite o f th e re­
peated injustices perpetra­
ted, that it is better for
them to submit than td re­
bel.
Hut when th e soldiers
shoot down the ch ie fs wife
at a meeting under the white
flug, he exclaim s, slashing
his knife through the prof­
fered paper, “ T his is the
only treaty th e Sem inoles
will ever make now, with
the white man.”
T here are tw o scenes in
the production which are so
strikingly beautiful and
meaningful that no member
o f the audience should be
able to forget them.
One is that in which the
birth o f the red man is nar­
rated in resonant, dramatic
tones b y the chief, ns thp
Great Spirit first surveys
with pride the earth he has
made, then descends, Indian
fashion, l «&gt; create the red
man front a mound o f dust,
to rule over it.
Another is the colorful fi­
nale in which chiefs, tribes­
men, pioneer whites, bluecoated soldiers and Negroes
(Cootmued on ptf* M)

NSNZIIO SfMINOti Isdiswi ptrdpr vengeance ever body of ■ arrtor slaei
by wtute soldiers during truce

v

* AMfiends Magatiae-PAGC «

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a

By GENE GORDON

is it land of fabulous wonders."
E I.OHIDA
,
That is the opinion o f Mohammed Re/a Pahlevi.
And, as the Shall of Iran, a land o f wonders in its own
right, Mohammed Hern Pahlevi should know whereof
he spenks.
The Shah and his beautiful queen, Soraya. recently
completed a tour of Florida, the first reigning royalty
ever to visit the state.
Primary object for their visit to Florida, the Shah
admitted, was to learn the art of water skiing. As the
guest o f Dick Pope at Cypress Gnrdens. the Shah and
Ins queen did just that—but it was his tour of the state,
which covered glittering Miami Bench, the lush West
Const and the colorful citrus belt, that brought forth
the declaration "Florida is a laud of fabulous wonders."
The only familiar sight witnessed by the royal couple
w as a polo game nt Delray Bench. Polo, t he Shah ex*
plained, originated in his own land and is one o f his
favorite sports.
The giant citrus packing plants, tourists attractions
such as Cypress Gardens, Florida’s mammoth cattle
industry and the lowering and ornate hotel "ro w " of
Miami Beach left tjuccn Soraya and her handsome
Shah "absolutely breathless.”
Greeted by a mob of more thun 3,000 cheering Miam­
ians on their arfival in Florida, the Shall and his queen
closed their visit to the shouts of more thousands who
heard the royal couple declare that Florida weather is:
“ Fit for a king."

Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi o f Iran
a n d Queen Soraya are first reigning
royalty ever to vacation in Florida;
"We are both left breathless w ith your
state's tropical splendors; friendly people,
a n d a ll the things to see in Florida,"
IN fU ll regalit. th# $h«h gracieuily petrt in a typical flood* t&gt;«ri|iound
PACt 4 -A ll florid* M*g«iin*

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A pictorial m i n t ol rov Jill&gt; • amt
to I lo ru lj ahem Stub jm l O urrn
Ol Iran tin tin g p a llin g plant!
cattle rani hei polo game! and the
afatr’a a ll crn trr J t C v p im t in
ilon» Upper let! photo l i l r h r i
Shah with camera xml h o lt. Pub
Pope (Ir ll) . at Cyprraa O an trn i
Ju it below I hr Shah greeted h&gt;
Gov leRoy Colima On right u
Shah taking alt Iraaon At bottom
ol rag* (lelt)ia O u rm Sorava. hai l
row on lo ll, with Mra Charlra
Wnghtaman. hot Palm Roach boat
raa. at polo matchra in Prtray
B ra rh i h r O u rm pata Brahma
bull (bottom ol pagr on right) aa
Orn Jamra A Van l l r r t ( Ir ll)
loola on with bull'a owner. lam ar
Rrauchamp (In hat)

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All florida M ag a n n r-P A G I S

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LIFE AND DEATH BOOKKEEPIN
By JOHN TERRY

No
Io t lung ng« n wnrker nt
the Florida Stale Hoard of
Health opened n letter ndd refuted In the Bureau of
Vital Statistics, and read:

—all are grist for the mills
o f vital statisticians. And, in
Florida, nil are part o f the
permanent records stored in
a firep roof vault nt the
headquarters of the Board
Dear Sir:
of
Health in Jacksonville.
Pleatte ad vine me im­
Although
the average per­
m ediately if I can
son knows little about the
change my first name
workings o f the Bureau of
from G ladys. , . to Jane.
Vital
Statistics, the records
I feel my name does not
—most o f which are confi­
suit my personality, and
dential—play an important
my son wants to name
part in his life literally from
his d au gh ter nfter me
birth to death.
hut he d on ’ t like the
Birth certificates, for ex­
name Gladys . . .
ample, provide indisputable
There is no record o f the proof of citizenship, and are
reply sent this unhappy lady often needed when applying
by Everett H. Williams, Jr., for em ploym ent, i'robate
the Bureau’s director, hut it courts frequently decide dis­
seems safe to say she w*is puted will cases on the basis
told to he guided by her o f birth records, and in Flor­
conscience. Changing your ida, proof o f age in the form
name, except by marriage o f n certified copy o f the
or a d op tion , is one o f the birth certificate is required
few statistics not recorded before a child can be en­
in that division o f the State rolled in a public school.
Board o f Health.
During most o f the Inst
However, in what has century, the only records of
been called—appropriately births and deaths in Florida
enough—“ Life and Death were those kept by one or
Bookkeeping,” many other tw o o f the larger cities. In
facts abou t Floridians are 1899, a law calling for state­
carefully noted and filed. wide reports was passed, but
Births, deaths, marriages, little effort was made to en­
divorces, adoptions, the oc- force It. The present Bureau
rurcnce o f certain diseases o f Vital Statistics was born

in I!) 15 with the enactment
by the Stnte Legislature of
a "m o d e l vital statistics
act." With this ns a basis, a
net-work has now been set
up which collects data from
the state’ s most isolated
communities.
Vital statistics is a record
o f what happens to people,
and i n c l u d e s more thnn
births and deaths. T he oc­
currence o f disease, for ex­
am ple, and the guises in
which death strikes. T h e
number o f babes who never
drew breath, and the reasons
why others didn’ t reach their
first birthday . . . infant mor­
tality, in the im personal
words o f the records. Any of
these — especially the dis­
eases—could become a public
health p r o b l e m affecting
«housands o f the stntc’s resi­
dents.
Asa means o f controls, each
o f these diseases (there are
about 50, but polio and V.D.
are good examples) has been
tagged "reportable" and the
Board o f Health is immedi­
ately notified when a caw is
found. R ep orts com e from
d octors and veterinarians,
hospitals and health officers,
and from the B oa rd ’s own
diagnostic laboratories in

many Florida cities. By are important, too, for the
means o f modern, electronic may provide the only evi
tabulating machines, each deuce pf a health program’,
bit o f inform ation is fitted effectiveness. In Florida, a
into its proper place. In the in other states, heart di
cast* or an infectious disease, sense is the number one kill­
its incidence is charted, nnd er,, with cancer running a
nn effort made- to predict close second. And there’s a
where it will turn up next. macabre compliment for the
Then the completed picture state's doctors and health
is turned over to epidem i­ officers in the notation that
ologists nt the Jacksonville during the first six months
hcndqunrtcrs and the state’s o f 1954, nuto accidents were
health m achinery swings responsible for more deaths
into action to halt the ail­ thnn nny disease except the
m ent’s sprend. As the re­ tending two!
ports of new cases dwindle, » The statistics ofTer a hope
the Bureau o f Vital Statis­ for the future, too. In that
tics returns to the more same period Florida had 27.prosaic tnsk o f recording 28.1 more births thnn deaths,
births and deaths.
and 5,*1,77 m ore marriages
But the cnusoA o f death than divorces.

N E R M O U S '!
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By BOB CARMAN
*n thii pogi bp Jack Camlet |

"I'll id ly a out thing, Pay! Ruhardi htltrr Itant I'm tht htU pitcher on thii team
•
and get mt o f tht bench."

"S ow .ya M J tit hat like thii, itr? Tht grip. ut. that'i uhat
putt mt an' oh Baht Roth in tht um t ila u "

"B oy! That Ctnt V’oodling inrt tan hit. Ijook at the ch hall
go. I btt tht Yankttt uith lit) had him bath "

+

I t isn't every year that a city lures
a major league hall team from Ari­
zona to Florida—but Daytona Heath
has accomplished that feat.
As a result, the entire town is out
aelling tickets for the Baltimore Ori­
oles’ spring training games with the
Dodgers, Phillies, Pirates, Tigers,
Redlegs, Nationals and Athletics.
T h e Chamber o f Commerce is
busy publicising Daytona Beach's
new acquisition which brings to
Florida for regular spring training

13 o f the nation's Hi major league
hall clubs.
Our bench warmers in the photo­
graphs on this page are Dan and
Don Cunningham, or is it Don and
Dan—anyway they art the twin
sons o f Mr. and Mrs. Gary Cun­
ningham o f D aytona Beach. T he
boys, with most o f the other kids in
Daytona Beach, plan to spend all
their free time at the city's Island
ball park where the Orioles will play
most o f their eshibition games.

7 \ W

u', don't worry pal. ut'/lget in tht next game

Tht) ain't
got a hitter hattery than nt Cnnnmghami ”

.7 1

�CONQUEST of a
KILLER

Science Has Killer “ Down For The Count” ;
Ex-TB Victims Make Good Insurance Risks
I N ot so long ago you had a cheat X-ray
made by a State Board o f Health mobile
unit; and, now your health officer tells
you you have tuberculosis.
Shocked by the thought o f TB , you
want to know, “ What can I do?'* “ Take
the 'cure* in a atate TB hospital,” the
doctor advises, "and thank Goa you con­
tracted tuberculosis in 1864 and not
in ’34."
•
•
Today, the doctor, trho finds it neces­
sary to tell his patient ha js suffering
from TB. does not feel his diagnosis is a
death sentence, as it might well have
been, say, a decade and a naif ago.
Relatively few people die of tubercu­
losis today in Florida. With early diag­
nosis, and early hospitalisation, they are
more apt to become even better life in­
surance risks than their non-tubercular
neighbors. (This is official).
What has brought about this a mating
metamorphosis in TB destiny—a modem
miracle? Poesibly not a miracle, but a
reasonably good substitute, whose comnonent Darts are:
Facilities: Since 1934, the State Tu-

berculosis Board of Florida has financed,
constructed, equipped, staffed, and put
in operation four great and modern TB
hospitals (Orlando, 1938; Lantana, I960;
Tamps and Tallahassee, 1982) increas­
ing the number of beds in state tubercu­
losis institutions from tero in 1937, to
l.SOOiplua in 1982;
Treatment: During the past 16 yean
there has been remarkable progress in
the medical and surgical treatment of tubeaculosis, and in case-finding, education,
social services, rehabilitation, and in
many other essential fields o f T B con­
trol;
"W onder” Drugs: Proven dnti-tuberculosls drug (beginning with the discov­
ery o f streptomycin in 1944), revolution­
ary thoracic surgery techniques, admin­
istered in modem, well staffed state TB
hospitals coordinated with an excellent
mass X-ray program for finding the di­
sease in its early stages, have resulted in
an unbelievable decline in the TB death
rate in Florida, something over 80 per
cent during the past 18 years; or, tran­
scribed in actual numbers, 987 deaths
from T B in 1938 when Florida’s popula­
tion was lees than two million, as com ­
pared with only 306 deaths reported in
the state in 1958 with a population over
three million.

What happen, when &gt;cu are
told you have T S? Thete » rr
picture, of a real patient who
look the " c u r t " and now ha,
returned to a normal and ute
ful life [ I ) O ur anonym out
patient it greeted in the lobby
by nurte with wheel chair (3)
Staff Immediately tla rtt neceatary c h e c k , anti treatm en t,.
( J ) X-rayt are a " m u tt." (4)
Smile of v icto ry when alter
m ontht of treatm ent, «-ray
thow* recovery. (5 ) And the
happy "goodby" to fellow patle n la. Thit girl tpent many
montht lett in the hotpttal than
the would have 10 yeart ago,
and her ultimate recovery wat
far more c e r t a i n , thankt to
modern drugt and the u ltra­
modern facllille t of Florida's

horpital.

4 ; }

AS Flaetda Mtfailnc-PAOI S

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JO H N W llSOIt S Q M IS V U IE "
EI1A TEAGUE

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WHAT HAS GONE BEFORE: During •
20*year wild fling of « r l y ■twmboatin* along
(ha St. John* Rivrr, tirurdon boati brought
northam vhitora up along tha rivar rourw
and thraa banka vara organiaad. Jackaonvilla
»aa aatabliahad in 1B22 aa port of antry to
Florida* By IMO, tha St. John* waa carrying
timbar, naval atoraa and dtrua fruit to mar*
kat, raaulting in founding of attanaiva induotry aupplying fuel for tha wood burning vaoaala. Enterpriae, DaLaon, Da Land and other
towna wara founded and attanaiva orange
grovae operated nearby.

CHAPTER IV
by • dense growth of
trees, the quiet village o f DeLeon
enjoyed popularity only because of
the spectacular springs which bub­
bled up from a subterranean stream
at the rate o f 94,000 gallons per
minute. The excess water poured out
of the natural pool into a spillway
through a run and eventually into
the 8t. Johna River.
In DeLand, before the opening of
the steamboat era, there was but a
single log cabin on the townsite, but
as late as the close of the year 1882,
there were a score o f houses in the
middle of Its confines. Four years
later a fire destroyed the few places
of business aa well as some o f the
light frame buildings. The residents
thereupon began to rebuild with
brick blocks instead b f wood.*
Close connections with all trains
on the main tine could be made to
DeLand from a branch line which
ran from Jacksonville, Tampa and
Key West Railway. Being so fortui­
tously situated, DeLand began to
progress. A few o f its streets and
several of Its houses were lighted by
electricity. The 2,000 inhabitants,
who had come mainly from the
northern states^ settled down to
make a cultural center o f DeLand.
In the month-pf November 1887,
tha actual school attendance in Vol­
usia County waa 1746 pupils. In
some o f these schools the elements
of Latin were taught, In addition to
the common branches such as alge­
bra and geometry.
In 1862, Mr. DeLand organised
DeLand Academy,* which held its
first1sessions in a rented building
q

O

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iK*&lt;
•A•

haded

under the direction of the Rev. Mr.
Griffith of Troy, N.Y. Within five
years the school was moved into two
large, well furnished buildings situ­
ated at the corner o f Woodland
Boulevard and Minnesota Avenue.
The following year, DeLand Aca­
demy was chartered as a university
by the state Legislature and a fac­
ulty of nine teachers, guided by Prof.
J. F. Forbes, taught courses in busi­
ness, college preparatory subjects,
music and art. Books were con ­
stantly added to the library for the
use of the students of the university,
as well as the townspeople.
The city o f DeLand was founded
in 1876 by Henry A. DeLand, who
planted water oaks 60 feet apart
along prospective streets. Spurred
by this generous example, the citi­
zens o f DeLand set about to make
their city notable for its shade trees.
The council allowed property owners
a 60 cents tax rebate for each tree
two inches or more in diameter they
planted along tha streets. When
bankruptcy threatened, the ordi­
nance was repealed.
In 1886, a citrus culturist by the
name of Lue Gim Gong introduced
a new variety o f orange, for which
the U.S. Department of Agriculture

awarded k m a medal. He p e r fe ^ d
the Gim Gong grapefruit, which
could withstand 10 degrees greater
cold than any other variety.
Lue Gim Gong also pollinated a
currant with a grape, to create the
cherry currant; perfected a peach
for growth in greenhouses; and pro­
duced a salmon-colored raspberry.
Although lavish attention was
given to trees by a linking powder
manufacturer and a Chinese, it re­
mained for a hat manufacturer to
establish a university. Stetson Uni­
versity opened in DeLand in 1886
and became a co-educotional insti­
tution, which was incorporated three
years later. John B. Stetson, for
whom the school was named, lived
a part o f each year in DeLand in a
home which was once part o f a

French chateau. The house con­
tained documents and relics of medi­
eval Europe including the Shrine of
the Bishops of Liege; the library of
Louis XVIII of France and his cous­
in. Count d’ Avary; rare books, fur­
niture, tapestries, jeweled prayer
book, and other objects.
Within two miles o f DeLand, the
St. Johns River widened into a sheet
of water known as Lake Beresford,
to which the open channel allowed
the boats to anchor in the auiet,
peaceful lake in the pine lands.
The town of Lake Beresford had
a combination post o f f i c e and
general store. Lake Beresford was
accessible at all times to all o f the
boats on the St. Johns River. A
wharf, built by A. H. Alexander to
avoid the long haul to and from DeLand landings, became the principal
rea. The
shipping point for the area
apa and F
Jacksonville, Tampa
Key West
Railroad passed through the town
only a few yards from the foot of
the wharf. As the Alexander Com­
pany had a commodious depot which,
gave shippers of citrus fruit a choice
o f river or railway transportation,
Lake Beresford was the only place
from Buffalo Point to Sanford which
offered such a choice.
The land at Beresford was fine
for the growing of orangtes, limes,
shaddocks, bananas, pineapples and

dates. T h e soil 4hs also kindly to
the maturing o f peaches, plums,
grapes, Japanese persimmons, pears,
corn. oats, sugar-cane, arrowroot,
cassava and all o f the common gar­
den vegetables.
T his soil was particularly good
for citrus, and in 1886, approximate­
ly 32,600 boxes o f oranges and lem­
ons were shipped from the groves in
the precinct o f Beresford.
Beresford and DeLand, because
o f their proxim ity, were bound by
com m on interests. W henever the
larger town increased its various
facilities, the people o f Beresford
benefitted. But it was DeLand which
finally developed into a winter resort.

The town sprawled out in comfor­
table stability on the high rolling
pine land, about five re)iles east of
the St. Johns River and 25 miles from
the Atlantic Ocean. It was a pros­
perous community, with assessed
value o f real and personal property
o f almost $400,000. Most of this
wealth was owned by northerners
who chose the town for the efficacy
o f its climate. They throve in the
high, dry pine region which waa kind
to invalids. Many of the sickly tour­
ists who settled in DeLand even­
tually became hale citizens.
The health o f DeLand was so
phenomenal that out o f a population
o f 2,000 people, there were oil the
average less than three deaths a
year.
The hotels served only temporary
quarters for the visitors from the
colder climates, for soon they ex­
changed the accommodating hostelries, where electric lights and hot
and cold water both werq provided,
for the comfort of their own similar­
ly equipped homes.
As connections were easily made
with all trains on the main line from
Jacksonville to Titusville, the num­
ber o f tourists increased each year.
Owners who had settled and bought
groves became aware o f the advan­
tage o f having freight shipped to and
from DeLand without break of bulk.
DeLand was abundantly supplied
with churches, representing the Bap­
tists, Presbyterians, Catholics, Chris­
tians, Episcopalians, Universaliats,
and Congregationalists.
The exceptional beauty o f the
region six miles southeast of DeLand
attracted Mr. DeLand. He named
the place Lake Helen, for his only
daughter. Obtaining the Prevatt
estate, he built a town to suit him­
self. He erected a large hotgj, cleared
off all o f the surrounding under­
brush, and left only the tall pines
standing. On the fringe of the pine
stands) he had groves planted, and
gardens where fruit, fresh vegetables
and strawberries were grown for use
at the hotel.
Aa the town grew in popularity as
a winter resort, the seasonal visitors
mined to build homes. Some of
residences coat as much a

K
$7,000 sadt.

■ -------m a s u s a p i i s n i u i i k ) . •
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SIGNS OF SPRING
By BOB BAIFE
All Fieri** Sperti |*iter

VfRO BEACH I* the tit* of on* of Florid*'* btxbtll "factor!**" wh*r* th* natton't lop piayftt
and “farmhands" |*t thd* training. TM* I* a group of Broofclyn't Dodger* »ho rail Vtro B*arh
"hotn*" «ach t«a«on.

CHICAGO IA.LI
Tempo, Fla.
BROOKLYN
|Vtrs Booth. No.
. Mloml, Flo.
K. C ATHUTi a
Was! Fs Im Booth, Flo.
fittssurgh

Fort Myan. Bo.
flOWDA NOW hao II of th* I* Mg kagu*

training h*r* *arh spring.

Jc t.ottinA's dom ination o f the na­
tional baseball scene each spring
has been increasing gradually ever
since that day, in 1888, when a man­
ager named Ted Sullivan ted the
Washington Senators southward to
train in Jacksonville. The Senators,
incidentally, had a young catcher
at the time named Connie Mack.
The spring training era in the
South, barring n few interruptions,
hns continued to gain in popularity.
Today there are HI major league
clubs and 13 o f them are training
in Florida. Although March I is the
official camp opening date, players
on nenrly all clubs arrive earlier to
do private conditioning, and a num­
ber o f the major leagues have adop­
ted Florida ns “ home."
The Sunshine State is even hog­
ging the news from one o f the
camps o f the three clubs isolated in
Arizona. Tampa’s Al Lopez, who pi­
loted the Cleveland Indians to the
American league pennant last sum­
mer, is hoping for the same kind of.
success, and one o f his chief hopes
centers in Herb Score, a fireball
southpaw from Lake Worth, where
he was such a high school sensation
that m ajor league scouts fell over
one another in the race to sign him
as a $85,000 bonus plnyer. Pitching
for a Cleveland farm club ut In­
dianapolis last summer, Score hnd
a fabulous record to earn him the
designation o f the Outstanding
Minor Leaguer o f the Year, thus
the No. 1 personality of this spring’s
preview o f 1055.
This puts Iaike Worth, a com ­
paratively small city on the Fast
Coast in Palm Beach County, in the
available position o f turning out two
o f baseball's most lalked-of individ­
uals, for"it is also the home o f Mnyo
Smith, the new manager o f the

Philadelphia Phillies, who train at
Clearwater.
Sm ith grew up on Lake W orth
sandlots. played his way to the maj­
ors briefly, then became a manager
in the New York Yankee system.
After two good seasons as pilot of
Birmingham in the Southeastern
Association he was picked for the
Phillies' jo b in a move which sur­
prised many baseball observers. Hut
the Lake Worth fans who know him
well weren't too surprised. They re­
cently staged a big testimonial din­
ner in honor o f Sm ith and Score,
and they are optimistic enough to
believe that by next October the
World Series might lind Herb Score
on the mound for Cleveland against
Mayo Smith's Phillies.

AN O TH tR FLORIDIAN in th* now* it t * l«
W erlh't Mayo Smith. now pilot of Phdadrlphia
Philllo* H it t*am Irain* at C k t r it t lr r

T h e greatest concentration of
spring baseball is in the St. Petershurg-Tampa area, although I 1m - Fast
Coast gained an addition this spring
when the Baltimore Orioles went to
Daytona Beach. T he always news­
worthy Brooklyn Dodgers do their
early training at Vero Beach, then
play exhibitions in Minmi, mid the
Fast Coast has another "new sy"
ramp this year at West Palm Beach,
where the Athletics trained for nine
years as a Philadelphia club, and
this year put on Kansas City uni­
forms.
First exhibition games are sched­
uled March 10, anil the gnmes, plus
daily cam p workouts, give Florida
residents and visitors the chance to
get simultaneous sun-1mis and closeup looks at their baseball idols.
*
ALTHOUGH THE Indian* In in in A ru m * &gt;hr-y
a** iw h ia Florid* bocaut* oi young H*rh Jeer*
of III* Worth (c*n t*r) and Al lop*t. Ck»*tand
managor (toll) who com** Irom Tampa That*
Boh frtl* r at right, whore w inlrr home
in
D «lr*y Roach

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MAGAZINE
I I I ...

W SHOULDSE..
Mir 6—Water Ski Show, Lake­
land.
Mir. 6-12—Fun ’n Sun Festival,
Clearwater
Mar 6 —Florida Southern College
Concert Hand, 3 p m., city audi­
torium, Lakeland.
Mar. 7-12 —Citrus County Fair, In­
verness
Mar. 7—Horace Heidi’s TV Show,
Peabody Auditorium, Daytona
Beach.
Mar. 7 —Metropolitan Basio, Cesate Siepi, Carreno Club, St. Pet­
ersburg.
Mar. 8*12—South Florida Cham­
pionship for Men, Invitational,
Palm Beach Golf Club, Palm
Beach.
Mar. 8—Cincinnati Symphony O r­
chestra, Pensacola.
Mar. 8-12 — Home Show, Forr
Lauderdale.
Mar. 8-11 — National Midwinter
Pistol Matches, Tampa.
Mar. 9-10—Flower Show, St. Pet­
ersburg Garden Club, Armonr.
Mar. 9-10—State Gold Medal Shuffleboard Tournament, Mirror Lake
Park, St. Petersburg.
Mar. 9-13—Florida Chain W inter
Trapshoor, Rod and Gun Club,
St. Petersburg.
Mar. 10—Yma Sumac, Peruvian
Orchestra and Dancers, Pensacola.
Mar. 11—Annual Fiesta Tropicale,
Hollywood.
Mar. 10-12-F ifth Annual Exposi­
tion of Universal Hobbies, 2-10
n.m . Municipal Pier, St. Peters­
burg.
Mar. 11—Exhibition of Paintings
and Crafts, Art Museum, Jack­
sonville.
Mar. 12-13 —National Champion­
ship Motorcycle Races, Beach
Course, Daytona Beach.
Mar. 12—St. Petersburg • Havana
Yacht Race, Pier, St. Petersburg.
Mar. 12-13—State Women’s Bowl­
ing Tournament, Ten Pin Lanes,
St. Petersburg.
Mar. 12—Civic Drama Guild of N.
Y. Production, ’’The Vagsband
King," Pensacola.

&lt;a JJC i j u
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t r a c t io n

5

SILVER SPRINGS
(ruin or fihine)
UKFORK LEAVING

FLORIDA
Jungle Cruise

Ptiate Sub

»«

ROSS ALLEN'S

£ io*M P iP rtti
INSTITUTE
UMINOll INDIAN VtUAOI
laatlc Blrda—Alllaetars—Wild Animals
Ovlded Taurt Nearly

THE AI TRACTI ON
OF 1 Ht WE F k

%, cu m oc CMLCAK

Rainbow
Spring*

Silver Spring*
iMirnittviul tVft Ijnrti

■■Mbit at Anile we Cart and Car' Nates barb la Orandad's Day.

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U m Hr t*r&lt;W Imtitrfr

IK* Cr*n*f* Cat Urkit

Everything tram a “ana heat
[they" la a Canrard Thorough
•rare.

til.

Weak! Wachaa

TOMMY BARTLETT'S

Jpring

INTERNATIONAL

o ea rm en

Cypres*

Florida

Hand lead and Pat Dear
♦ram Cauntrlar tba Warld Over

Garden*

Aflame

Yea WIN Wall Remember rbe Day
Yau taanl at

SILVER SPRINGS
Hear PrUadtv OCAIA

i*'.K Tba laaalt

CYPRESS GARDENS

‘ p^UB.BOATS«U(

fa

Bird of paradtie. camellia*. bouganvlllaa
and ether exotic, rare tropical plant* in full
Hoorn make Cypres* Gardens, frequently
shown In motion picture*, newsreel* and on
Iriavialon program*, on* of Nature'* mod
beautiful outdoor color ttudlot —and ih*
photographer'a heaven.
Thar* art thrilling aki show* four lima*
every day. featuring world-famous aquamaid* and *U champion*, performing In
•Mounding for matlent and figure*, among
them the Umov* five-men human pyramid.
A perfect finish to a beauty-packed.thrNIpecked day at Cypres* Garden* I* a relaxing
trig through the winding waterway*, flowerhanked canal* and |ungki*nd an a quiet
electric heal with an experienced and In-

fy EWf *

C ra im iM r
I n O irt«| U S ort
tn r I onTI m m m M a* PUSCVi HISIS

to saivtow srtivoi tittautAM

le a FLORIDA'S

WEEKI WACHEE

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UNDERWATER
SHOWS

Africa U SA

^ouwj^ueuj^ji^
M ■ . iwth at Ik Paswsbwg « V- 1 Re- If

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FLORIDA AFLAME
DRAMA »f

SUNN01D

Praducad In thd Philipp* Park ,
Amphitheatre at lahav Hwtwr.
Hand*, (hawing nijpmy except'
Monday M t i l l p.m.
Adm.i II.30-11.30-11.00

MMtvanost MPOtauTso*

WfM.

« Cas Hurt*. Mwi.S

AFRICA-U.S.A.

ffM

Rida in comfort through WO acres of
Urge hard* of wild African animal* all |
roaming free in their natural habitat,
Juat aa they do in Africa.
N M s M ilM D A U s I

See A ll o f Florida but b y all m eant,

Sm beautiful

in

CYPRESS GARDEN S
4 w arn ski shows daily -

•OCA RATON. EUt

FACE 13-All fbridi

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C O N Q U E S T OF A KILLER
(Cenltnurd frem pjgr 9)

While there nre many T B hospitals
The T B sanatorium o f years past, hod
throughout the nation, they vary great­
one m ajor value in the fight ngainst tu­
berculosis—the isolation o f the nllllictcd
ly, however, in the degree in which mod­
ern drugs, surgery and other treatment
to dam the flow o f infection and prevent
procedures and techniques are employed
the spread o f the disease to members of
in effecting the patient's recovery.
their families, friends, and their respec­
tive communities. The modern T B hos­
The pntients in Florida’s four tubercu­
pital has a second prim ary o b je c t iv e losis hospitnls receive the maximum
effecting the recovery o f the pnticnt
benefits from all the newly discovered
through the use o f every nnti-tuhercuanti-tuberculosis drugs, the very best in
losis drug and professional skill known
diet, and the advantages o f the latest
to modern medical and surgical science.
techniques in thoracic surgery, executed
During the sanatorium era, the treat­
by the most able thoracic surgeons in
ment o f tuberculosis was directed toward
Florida.
increasing the patient's nnturnl resist- .
It is understandable that the medical
nnce to the disease—bed rest, relaxation,
and surgical care now given Floridn tu­
diet, and a collapse o f the lung by air or
berculosis patients is costing more per
surgery. There were no known drugs
pntient day than the simpler sanatoria
which directly attacked the cause of the
treatment in years past. It is equally un­
disease—the tubercle bacillus itself. Actu­
derstandable that actually the cost is
ally sanatorium treatment was effective
less, for the patient’s recovery is not only
in upward to 25 per cent o f the enses;
far more certain but his stny in the hos­
but, altogether too often, however, it
pital is considerably shorter.
wos not enough, and u m ajority o f the
It is obvious that serving more patients
T B victims succumbed after a long strug­
for shorter. periods gives effectiveness
gle with the disease.
from both the state's investment in hos­
The discovery o f streptomycin in 194-1,
pitnls and its investment in the profes­
the first o f the "w onder" drugs; PAS in
sional staffs o f the four institutions.
1948, and the third member o f the pres­
This more efficient use o f our State
ent chemotherapeutic family, Isoniazid,
Tuberculosis Hospitals is bringing closer
in 1952, revolutionized tuberculosis treat­
the day when the state TB hospitnl sys­
ment and thoracic surgery almost over­
tem will be able to furnish a bed, with­
night,
out delay, to every active case o f tuber­
T h^old sanatorium now became n hos­
culosis found in Florida, and the dn.v
pital in every sense o f the word. The tu­
when the further sprend o f this drended
berculosis victims no longer spent long
disease within the boundaries o f the Sun­
months and years in “ cure" tnking, but
shine State will be under control.
becam e medical and surgical patients,
Over 2,000 new enses of T B will be
whose clianceH o f recovery immeasurably
found in Floridn in 1955, but fewer cases
im proved, and whose period o f hospit­
will d ie -m o re will recover, and live use­
alization was grentiy shortened, in many
ful lives.
instances, as much as 50 per cent.

' *1
I
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I 1 * 7 5 (IH S t , J a t l t o n v f l l t . Flo

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1 Mombo D»*
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lilt
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JEWELLED COnON
M AM BO DRESS
nut

Thr mitisi hit of ths —s
mm Yew'll In* * thw ihaiming
fl«4*l prlM niih its high fssh
t*m dolsils Th# full Rsrnd *hiri,
i i n M niih * ru»* of tushy
li&gt;|&gt;t*tl by s Kw»|*t| i m l snd
UrditS Studdsd »Hh tpsrkf.rg fhliw

»U4m* A loan ttbl'itl if Ifeii*to#»*#
SSI DM K*lf holt sid* Upper
Wsnhshl* c o t t o n y f f t l l *
spvuJLM*! ®ilh ri«S* t o if*
in hnlitsnl &gt;sfi«n. lus*wus

Uwadrr.sJid *•!**•y Hu*

SilOt 1 0 -1 1

Z A C K fO N V IU I
171* »•&gt;•
• lltlltfo tt*

MUBtattOM.
in,

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H i l l • ,&lt; roi HI

f»i.-| 4

Salesm an m akes $326
PROFIT in 36 days
with LIX-PAIN
in spore tint* only
V O t'

i| » * j l i ih&lt;* l i * 4 *if

III PAIS is tpuil it
krl .4 li d i i i M N s m m h ,
(•ssfi tpi| i«» h w t r t
h n k # he §i*4 ill ntifttttUi r d n

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Vis isbuf ifo** ton»«» fNrrilr*
* 4 4 V « * r r 'a t r d t n f a r w « r t
(s ttis m
M et fit * tm
f*fv*rt 1 **4 lm ?M|) (M ile

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MAI*

M R . R EA LfO R
You Get All of This
for only 20c a Word
CIRCULATION
OVER

300.000

lt» -*4f» « l KM

#* in *1 *sk* I*

Ml

•«•*

1*1*1 Ofl ( r f k i h i iM | I» « ! Si%4

r*»ir reft

D M. W. PUIS

How to Holp Y o u r
“ Scratching" Dog
U jour 4of « “ rfeifonic s t r a U h * f I s few ran
•t*nll&gt; ditfint. hsting rubl.ir* until his si in l«
l i t nod •wtt’ lU way In f**if**ii* c k s * sad
I t s Its* Bud •till b# m ls rin i frum «n int*n*»
felisvfw “ Imwf H«hM thsl h— witUd in Iht I
iwr&gt;# m dm ft of tun Untursd shin Alter im * »fl»n
Bfadisr* unplos—nl oMsipta stout** -snd in 4 ofi
II Is Hi H. itch, tu h’
|
f m r dug M in lormnni -b * touts I® you far
M p And ( N i l m •«—twful op—d y nlw f U lit
feu— at u*m* Mss H w lf f t Aatihtslsmiiw I big
TsbWtl M p*f 4 ww 1m m ond M
w kfe in*
pi—sisynl Hoty nr* sin* wilt dang nod la ran
it*l nod r— to l tlw sll*»ji lk*l —ah— 6 tfe—n
d*f licit snd nrrsuh Innst mi snd —i in u i s t
Hit MustWrs Asii Iiu m n Due Tshirts si your

mmMm Wf p®* thnp ■»d is—liwr* nrhi I*(f I
KCttATION It an twfortlsa p*rt of Mr St thr um t'i T&gt; footpath

|

If »*uf d ssb t tsn 'l supply srnd i t IS v*t
has In t i n Hunter* h w iM ls , Htnshsmpiwn
US. N Y

DISTRIBUTION
Distributed With
29 Florida Papers

From Pensacola
To Miami flra ch
READERSHIP

Over I Million
Readers
PLACE YOUR LISTINGS
NOW IN THE

A L L F L O R ID A
CLASSIFIED SECTION
AH Mood* M *g *rin r-P A G [ IJ

�c

“THIS rs MY LAND”
(Coptinucd from pjgc l)
who have escaped from the
masters in Georgia to take
refuge in Florida, mingle in
striking pageantry across
the Florida soil as the Semi-

nolc voice again speaks:
"ThiB is my Btory! T his is
my land! These are my peop ie !"—adding "and the red
man will always stand on
the white sands o f Florida!"

i t f c music dies and t l *
hillside am phitheatre is
flooded with lights. T he
audience is brou gh t hack
from the Florida* o f the
1800's again to Philippe
Park, near Safety Harbor,
facing the natural jungle of
ancient trees, tall palms,

swamp cabbage aiAfahruhs
which has served as a back­
drop for the action o f the
play.
Here "Florida Aflame” is
being shown nightly except
on Mondays. It will con­
tinue through Apr. 17.
John W. Caldwell, author

o f "Florida'iW ame," is a na­
tive Floridian. He first came
in contact- wilh the Seminoles wher&gt; a small hoy and
his association with them
fostered his determined in­
terest an d research which
led to the eventual creation
o f the drama.

HOW MANY FEATHERS ON
A ROOSTER?

ls m M

„

e

s

e

r

e

F A C T&lt;.* 5
W

•
% .... •v-.-.v-wvw, *•w.v.v.%.
...

CASH PRIZES

Add up the figures and
find o u t Most anybody
can add. but can you
add correctly? The reason

bN /Jk

d fe S v io IK

people like number palsies
Ie beeeuee they ere feeclnet,
^ J t
IP,. Fun right In , . . r

.....................
F .urlh P H e. . ............ . S M S
5th 10 8lh P rile’ “ ch t2®0.00
Wh In 1JIK Prize. e.eh 1100.00

own home, and CASH

14lh to 18th Prise, each

REWARDS for the

k

WINNERS. Try It yourself.

$50.0*

19th to 44th Prise, each

$25.0*

45th to 75th Prise, each

$1M *

— HERE ARE THE RULES —
I. This ii entirely a contest of num­
ber*, strictly a Game of Skill. Add to­
gether the number* that make up the
drawing of the Rooster and get the SUM
TOTAL of the figures. The picture 1*
made up o f ilngle numbers: 2, 3, 4, 5, 7
H and 0. There are no sixes, no ones, no
zero*. There are no double numbers like
“ 23”, etc. Just add 2 plus 3 plus 9, etc.,
are
and get the SUM TOTAL. There
~
no tricks to this puzzle, lust a problem
In addition. It is not so easy but if you
are careful you may get It exactly right.
Only persons sending a $5.00 contribution
agram are eligible
to our Scholarships Program
for these Cash Prizes. No additional
donation will bo required at any time
during the contest. Cheeks end Meney
Orders should he made payiMs to
'SCHOLARSHIP, INC.' Bend cash If
yea prefer. Write as fee additional panic
4b If

2. If you send your contribution before
the dale printed on the entry blank you
will quaiif:
“the $300. **
Promptness
fy for
i*
Bonus, making the
t
tout Pint Prize
$2000.00. The P r oimptness Bonus will be
added to the first prize only.
3. You should check and recheck your
solution carefully before mailing. Oare
It has been sent It may nat be changed
ar withdrawn. A contestant may submit
an additional entry In this contest with
an Improved score provided each such
entry U accompanied by the required
S5.II0 contribution. W# will acknowledge
receipt of your entry and contribution
promptly. Read the rules carefully. Please
do not write for additional Information
concerning this contest since information

t*nt Is not available to all other contest­
ants cannot be given.
4. This contest is confined to persons
within the continental limits of the United
States. Persons directly connected with
Scholarships, Inc. and members of their
immediate families are Ineligible. Due
to the uncertainty of mall address entries
ore not recommended from persons in
the Armed Forces. Entries wtU net be
srrepted fretn person In Alaska. Canada,
Hawaiian Islands end ether lees lions owtside of the United States proper.
•*. Entries will be accepted from Janu­
ary 1 to April 11, 1B55. Entries postmarked April 11 will be accepted.
C&gt;. In case of ties on this Rooster Puzzle
the winners wilt be decided by a tiebreaker number puzzle consisting of
drawing a path across n chart of numbers
to arrive at a high total. The contestant’s
position In the winning list will be deter­
mined by the best scores submitted; the
best answer will receive First Prize, the
second best answer will receive Second
Prize, etc. In case of ties on the tie­
breaker puzzle,'prizes will be reserved
for the positions of tied contestants and
their final order of finish determined by
additional tiebreaker puzzles until a def­
inite winner for each prim la chosen.
Seven days will be allowed for working
the first tiebreaker puzzle and three days
for each subsequent tiebreaker. If ties
remain after seven tiebreaker puzzles,
duplicate prizes will be paid.
7. It Is permissible for any contestant
to receive help from their relatives or
friends but ONLY ONE SOLUTION

Mlae Lets Unger to ene ef
In training at
writes. “New la my secaad year ef tretolag I
fatty rashes hew Cartaaeto I anas to have beea

&gt;y HRIN TWIBKIIDSON

^ n w r?

FIRST PRIZE $1500 plus S.r&gt;00 Bonus
for ,&gt;romP,neM &lt;Me ru,e 2)
Second P r is e .................. $1000.00

may be submitted to the tiebreaker puz­
zle by any group working together, end
any solution known to have been sub­
mitted in violation o f this rule will be
rejected.
p. A complete report o f this contest
Including the names of all winners will
be mailed to every contestant lust as
soon as the winners have been decided.
The sponsors of this contest reserve the
right to decide any questions that may
arts
* '
ise during
the contest and persona who
entar agree to accept these decisions
ns final.
C, L. KITTLE. Manager
is a contest
paid ML. The rales am simple sad
plete. It's entirely a
strictly a game ef skill. We priat Ike
winning answer witk .the name aad ad­
dress ef Um winner, la fact we priat the
name* and semes ef aN nf the
A pencil Is Um i
yea start ea aa canal
•m else. Ne pictures to identify, aa
statement* to write. U yea kave aeeer
token part In a number panto centast
why not give II a try. Olve yeoraelf a
fair chance to succeed. This any he the
hobby yea have been leaking far. Oper­
ated hy a aea-for-predt
a aired by Us charter to derate
la excess ef prises, adearthing and togttlmsto epersUng expenses to charitable

..» .

(The Hamlnge)

is racing tim e at inter­
Inationally
known Hialeah
T

Race Track again. T o this
beautiful sp ot com e the
fam ous racing horses from
over the country as well as
th e fa m ou s p eop le Avho
com e to see their favorites
take part in these great
track meets.

Equally im portant are
the beautiful flamingos
that were native to South
Florida long before Ponce
de Leon came to our shores.
For many years these un­
usual birds were so great in
numbers that when a boat
made its way over the wa­
ters, they rose like great
pink clouda.
.
The hunters played havoc
with them, killing for the
beautiful plumage so that
large flocks are to be seen
only at the Hialeah Race
Track and the Singing
T ow er near Lake Wales,
with a few flocks at the
various bird farms, amuse­
ment parka and private
estates.
T od ay the flock at the
track 'numbers several
hundred. M ore and mors
are to ha seen at various
laces, and, now protected
t y law, they have lost the
fear o f the hunter and are
again making their home
in the Everglades.

Mail to SCHOLARSHIPS, IN C , Bos 211, Uwm tetfcur*. lad.
There a r il------ -- feathers on the Rooster.
Type your name and address tl possible, if not priat by

7
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A !■ 1 i Q K i D A
.

tiPa&amp;*w*n at

PAOC 14-Alftortda

vn zz:

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Deaatlmi mailed baton April %

ICM, qualify Car

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C L A S SI FI E D
ADVERTISING
9 O

*

Bo* 767

Ocolo

t - m iO N M

VI—UNCLASSIFIEDITEM*

RHEUM ATISM '
Do tou luflfi wuh arthntii, k iilit i. neumil. neuralgia. lumbagoor wuh i chronic
Hitt of ill health aatciciiieJ with, of contnbutable to iheumintm' V in e today for
fire booklet SOUTHERN « ROSS HOS
PITA L A C LIN IC , 1124 Grand Central,
Tampa 6, Fla

VISIT the beautiful Original Gaiden of
Eden at Bmpit. Fla, tee the gopher ttert.
the wind the Aik wat made of. llie both
place of out fun patrnu

f s - P IM A li MflP W AN liD
HOME W ORKERS W AN TED Sell cm
ployment join luted |JO$W per a n ! potaible No eaperiente netettary RUSH R E ­
PLY for detail* MAXW ELL. 210* Payne.
Dipt F J, Qrreland 14, Ohm
H O M EW ORKERS
imeteued in addreuing and mailing advettiling pottcarda You may earn 111 weekly
apart time. Wt inttruct you—write HOUSE­
H O LD SAVINGS. Boa )». Dept AF-I,
Coahocton. Ohm
G IRLS T O M ODEL fix T V thowi, lathion ahowt Patricia Sierrni Finithing
St hoot, I IT E. Fonyth, Jaakacxirille
3J-M U SIC. DANCE,' DRAMATICS ~
Complete terrier foe Songwiitrit Write
"H ELEN E’S” Receding Studm, Wl Hart
had A te, Ounna Daimna IVoh, Fla
SO N G W R IT ER S O P P O R T U N IT Y (luaranired Atnon Thtu Guild Bund
cant and Tape Submhaaon Setticr Wine,
National Songwiiirri Guild, lu l l South
Atlantic Ace, Daytona IVath

M EXICAN hand tooled bagt, tullfoldi.
bamboo and fibre miniature for eattingi,
palm hail capt wholeulr only Rrtiueti
catalog Franciaco L. dr Atkot, 904 Scott
St., Lartdo. Tea
M-14rt4NW» OPPORTUNITI*l
W EE K LY up to 1)00 weekly demited in
yocu mail boa? Detail* free Aldentmith,
2T0R-P Ladeta. San Bernardino, Calif
ADDRESS poatalt at home. Earn |J commiaiina rat ii ordel received Incrructinen
IV . Refundable. Benner, Trenton J. N. J
63—JtWeUtY
MAKE SHELL JE W ELR Y for patttme of
resit at a paofic Senaartonally lower price*!
WholeaaW peace* on quaahtarx Many new
itetna. to modem kin (at coat of material!
only) ilhratratcd in new |f ) ) catalog-TV,
credited on | l order Don-Lee Sbcllctafi,
Boa 4267AFM, Daytoata Beach, Fla.

FANCY Lr*f Caladium--------------------with growing initrucirona, pet 100 portpaid, M in. |JSO. 1 in |)SO. IH in MOO,
2 in SHOD Auaain A met, Sebting. Fla

VI-UMOAUMiomMS
FABRICON RE-W AVING COURSE
H F EIC E
204 Magic A r e . SanfordJTa
m ayT

h"e I&gt;

T

ou

'

A pcnonal metaage be you: Your 19))
h n n M , character analyut, your lucky dan,
ouatbert, colon. My clitnicle include*
, aoriery and butineu leaden
in raere field. Send date of birth with SOc
for each date wanted. L A D Y B EA TR IC E,
F. O. fca_2204._Miami_BeKh. Fit___

ITS

Flo

D ESTR O Y U N W A N T ED HAIR FOR
EVER Temirirm relief it not enough
With liiim uli "II unwantrd bait it gone
freeret if utrd at direitrd Painlert—Sale lllit I f il l Money Ha. k Guatamre it it fail*
Send I f on lot grnetout tupplt Fotmula
TIJ potipaid or trm &lt; O D plut pottage
charge* lemto Rcteatth Lab-uaton, Bor
T4I, lake Wotth, Fla

oj^-ANriouii
FOR SALE: Mahogany tlrighbed. walnut
bedioom tune, reft old leligiout book*
Mattoctia, 441 S Bcath St, Daytona Heath

G IF T SPO RTSW EAR SH OP Oppotite
pottoffitr and Ihrtttr |7,loo including
new hnuirt tupplirt and menhtndite
Wine J G Dtcka. 142 W Indiana Are ,
Del end, Ha

135—M ISCIllANEOUS FOR SALE
S E N D lit CEN T S fair wholrtale catalog
lining borne netdt at a btg taring II
credit on furl order Haigam lloure. I l l
Whitt Dure, Tallaharrre, lie

134—RIAL ESTATE FOR SALE

FO R R EN T: Stott and Office Space in
large building located Sebting. f i t , one
blink from Pott Otfue. Sebting it growmg rapidly due to large teal rttair Jereli^r.
ment Contact W. II Hriihrtington,
llighlanda County Newt, Selling, F1a

L.ARCiE building tunable lot nlfitrt tx
tiotri in Palmetto, lit Completely re­
modeled 4)prnmg ol tht new M illie
Budge makit tint ptirpetty »rty alttaitirr
Contact Jordan anJ Sipet. Realtott, Pal
metto, Fla.

113—INCOME fi BUSINESS PROPERTY
FOR SALE

HP—FtOtlOAJAAPS

l«r» N ET LEASE-BACK
Canning Quirk Ftrrre Plant, Siuih Honda
tell S2i4,i««i to year Irate hat k at 122.V il
net Deptrnilion jffotdt ct,client tit ad
rantage "We tell Florida Nationally."
Write fur National Matkrting Plan
T H E K EYES COM PANY
2J4 Bithaync Blvd., TeF *2-092. Miami
-------------Six Florida Officer
National Affiliatr* 2* Major Cttin
M ODERN MOTEL
AT SILVER SPRINGS ,
One of Florida’* finett—AAA approved—
21 unut— built in l94)-$l.4nn,oiw tan
annuallr in irra Ait-cundiimned, braird,
new filtered pool Price 1 2 0 .000- tun­
able trtmt. Bnwhuir available B R Shaf­
fer, Jt , State Salei-AII Type* Intenmcni
Piopertict.
W t Sell Florida Nationally
Write foe National Marketing Plan
T H E K EY ES CO
2M Bitcayne Bled. — Miami, Fla
SIX FLORIDA OFFICES
^National Affiliatr* In 2fi Mijnr Otie*
PROFITABLE W ATER FRON T HOTEL
Ft. Myeta, FI* - * New England Inn midrt
a tropical (etting Eacrllrnt condition,
modern pool. 4* ittomt with hath, 2 bed
loom apartment manager Nett |I9,*ST,
place 1 171/no, |7l/nn nth St;&gt;r SalttAll Tyret Inrrnmrni Ptopettirt
We Sell Flotilla Nationally
Write fix Nationtl Mitkriing Plan
T H E K EYES CO
2)4 Bitcayne Bled. — Miami, Fla
Sat Florida Officer
National Affiliate* in 21 Majix Otiea

PORTABLE BURGLAR ALARM
~?MI HI0 H1 WATCHMAN ’

BLASTS A TREMENDOUS ALARM AND
INSTANTLY FLOODS YOUR PREMISES
N d B X iA j n n n i M )

|**l H u f

mb'

It fdrdfxta »w» fM f -

r * « t paini pt rn|F» *"9ttal|gn*.*rj*ly Hi I
*l«rtw ta
fillfM
can
n N
b* thr AF*t tip
If t'ffl am amAiing d m an*#
(malAFil

h * n ia # « n f
t it #
An**#
» € hfh* Ofidv I |

ZOYSIA
THE NEW
FLORIDA WONDER
ORASSI
Pumiry "Vc-lr a Gnwn" /.uy*i* t»
truly prrtnntirnt. futiiplflely
iimmtnr lit ilit» rhitirh ling, nurt-*
ttimiey ami taurry. Il miuirr*
fewer mowing*, Itm* ft-rtilirMtinn
I halt any ullier atlrni live grata
Once a *ml there are no mute
weetling priililem* One t li|i|inig
will keep it from flower lied* for
the aeaMin. Grow* well in *un
ami *hatle I* green year ’rmiml
anil with*lanil* rough aliu*e.
Very tolerant to salt *prny.

SU W A N N EE RIVER Camp tile* tnd
of bet landt, tow priced "RD ," But 16),
Atlanta, G x

it

N *on&gt;*« •

d r y a h a k t i for flo u t u t t h f M f , • L i H t t , •

•emp ltd)*, *tc P«l*»l*4f |*r •luniiobifii.fi
•al ronfiifilA «wf i o f (i‘*n and (ytrfoifiltJ lid

•URN RffUSF
and
GARBAGE

Nippai Nmh PtMpHgoti

SAFELY
OUTDOORS

F«H PLANTINO INSTRUCTIONS.
Mato CMC*, cam cm worrit oatxa looaa

PURSLEY ZO YSIA CO.
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Shop and Save
In Sanford

No. 13T

^ L U M * XLVI

Zoning
Meet
Is Set

Convict Is Jailed
After Gun Battle

A public hearing on annex­
ation and rezoning proposals
will be held today by the City
Commission. The hearing will
begin at 8 p.m. at City Hall.
The annexation plan would
extend the city limits south
to take in the new 27th St.
school and the Dreamwold
subdivision. The annexation

Believed
Jaybees To Meel
Assailant At Civic Center
Of Grower Tomorrow Night
Two Escapees

would reiguite a special act of the

legislature

Judge M. Farmer
To Address Group
A! P-TA Meeting

C A M INVOLVED IN COLLISION— T m person* were Injw ed la a crash IrtoIt Ii x these two cars Sunday on Stale
Stead 415, one-half mile east of Sanford. Drivers were Robert
P. Williams, 29. Erie, Pa., and John H. Hogan, 30, Sanford.

★

★

★

★

★

★

10 Persons Injured
In Traffic Accident
Pennsylvanians, Sanford Negroes
► Involved In Two-Car Collision
V eer pereoc* from Brie, Pa.,
ta d abe Banford N erve* were in­
jured Sunday afternoon In • twoear eraah on SUto Road 413, a
&lt;(half ntfla cart of Sanford.
All were taken to FeraildLauihton Memorial Moapltal (or
treatment
'
D riven of the c a n were Robert
P. William*. 29, Erie, Pa., who
■offered fractured riba and multi­
ple lacerations, and John H. Ho­
gan, 30, Sanford, head laceraUaoa
apd abrasions of tha arm.
In WOliamt* car wera hli wife,
.d ia ry , » , Edmund Wejkowikl, 41,
*-% id Rose Orlando, 13, all of whom
Buffered lacerations, contusions,
sad abrasion*.
PH frl la R eg ia ’* vehicle were
Jepee M. Taplor, IS, multiple laeerattons of the faee; Mary Lou
Harden, I t fractured right leg;
Rplvla Harden, 19, posilhle frac­
ture of the right foot; Jsunona
Barden, five months, lacerated
faee, aad Shirley Kelson, four,
^onUukm s of the right side.
* w Damage totaling 3323 wat report­
ed In two traffic accidents Satur­
day, City Pollen said.
One driver, Leonard E. Haumahild, lb, attached to the Naval
Air Station, waa charged with
carelasa and negligent driving.

leaving the scene of an accident,
and having no driver’s licenio.
A IMS Chevrolet sedan driven
bp Haumihlld wa* Involved in an
accident at Ihe interiection of 51h
St. and Park Ave.
Patrolman Joe T. Hickson said
Haumshild ran a stop sign in front
of a 1932 Chevrolet sedan driven
bp Francis Cecil Fields, 32, Route
2, Sanford.
Damage to each ear was esti­
mated at 9130.
In the other accident, Patrol­
man Arnold William* reported a
1934 Ford truck backed Into a
parked 1951 Ford convertible on
Sanford Are., 43 fret north of 9th
St. The ear’s right door sustained
923 damage.
Driver of the truck was Handberry Sims, 27, of t i l l 1* Hickory
Ave. Tha car was being driven
bp William Thomas Smather, 24,
of 949 Glyiwsy Drive.
Williams said the truck was
parked at 9 gas station when the
car pulled in. The truck driver
wai unaware of tha car parked
behind hie vehicle, the officer said.

1 Strolling
In Sanford

city waa nomad.
hy the

Judge Mattie Farmer. Juvenile
Court Judge of Orange County, and
a noted juvenile authority will ad­
dress the Junior High School P-TA
at its meeting a p. m. Tuesday,
in the school auditorium. She will
speak on the "Adolescent; His So
cial Adjustments."
Judge Farmer was appointed tc
her p r o m t position in Novrmber
of 1912, and prior to that lime ahe
had served for 22&lt;« years as a
principal in Orange CmintySschools
She was graduated from the Uni­
versity of Florida in 1932 where
she majored in Child Welfare and
Child Psychology,
A distinctive honor was bestow­
ed on Judge Farmer, whrn in 1950
she was invited by the Prruident
of the United Stales to attend the
White House Conference.
A past director of the National
Council of Juvenile Court Judges,
Judge Farmer la also a member
of the Florida Probation and Pa­
role Association; tha Florida Child­
ren’s Committer; the Florida
Federation nf Sorlal Workers, and
also holds honorary memberships
in many Orlando and lurroaDding civic cluba.
Of local interest la Ihe faot that
Mrs. W. P. IIrooks, wife of the
First Baptist Church minister in
Sanford, was ■ science teacher of
Judge rarm ar'i when she attend­
ed high school In Georgia, where
the Judge wee bora and raised.
All parent! and others Interested
in youth are cordially invited to
hear this outstanding apeakar.

Sanford Fire Dept
Answers 3 Calls
The Sanford Fire Department
answered Owes calls during the
weekend. The first one Saturday
at 12:33 p. m. between 12th and
13!h Streets on Lake Ave. where
fire completely destroyed a two
room house occupied by Armstead
Field and did considerable damage
to another house adjacent to it.
Roth houses wera owned by Violet
Grehy.
The second fire or purred at 1:20
p. m. Sunday between Fourth and
Fifth Street in tha alley between
Sanford and Cypress Ave*. The
house, occupied by James Camp­
bell and owned by Liza Dubose,
was destroyed as was its con­
tents.
The third alarm came In Sunday
night at 9:20 from 309 E. Fifth
Street between Cypress end Pine
Aves. The house owned by Fred
Johnson and occupied by Frank
Thomas, was damaged consider­
ably.

Under the proposal, ths city
limits would he moved from 26th
St at the A.C.L. Oviedo tracks on
Ihe east, to one-quarter mile
south of 27th St., on a line
Straight west about 18 blocks lo a
point in Lake Jennie.
The new line would turn north
on Georgia Ave. to 20th St,,
widening the limits five blocks
most o f the way.
Another recommendation calls
for the annexation of two and
one-half block* on ths east aids
nf Ihe rlty from the lakefront o f
Lake Monroe on ths north, south
to 8th St. The present line is Ml
Virginia Ave.
The City Zoning and Planning
Commission has passed a recom­
mendation onto the Commisalon
that it instruct the legislative de­
legates to pais a local enabling
ait for large-scale annexation on
three sides of thr city.
Since the feeling of the plan­
ner* heesme known, eoiisideiable
opposition has become apparent
from fringe area residents, th#
ones included tn tha annexation
proposal.
Robert Brown, chairman o f th*
Zoning Commission, feels that th*
planning commission, feel* that
inora knowledge of the subject
ESCAPED CONVICT CAPTURED— Lying nn » hunk in Ihr
would mean irss alaitn and to
Sfminute
County .Init is William Lewis, one nf three Negro
has mode it plain that a legislaninviclw who esnipi'il I mm the Stale itoail Camp at Oviedo
(Cunlinued on Page 8)

Angel's Eal Shack
Safe Found Empty
A safe, stolen Thursday night
from Angel’s Eal Shark, 2501 San­
ford Ave., was found Sunday near
the old Naval Base Road, about
two and one-half miles south of
Sanford. City Police reported.
Th* safe, which had contained
approximately 9M0 In cash and
checks, wss empty eacrpt for
shout 40 cents in chsng*.
Discovery of the safe was report­
ed to Police by Hiram Wesley
Shannon, Route 2.
T. J. Angel, owner at Ihe res­
taurant, said tha 900-pawd sefe
was loaded on a truck bg thieves
who entered tha establishment
through a window.

Many Long Hours
Involved In Play
At Tourist Club
After IS hours nf hard playing
the Handley Silver Cup Trophy
was won hy Mr. and Mra. Riddle
of Umatilla. Over 400 spectators
and playsrs gathered at the San
ford TourtJit and Shuffleboard
Court for this annual event.
Fifty-two teams from II towns
were represented at tha tourney
which began at 9 o’clock Friday
morning and anded at 11:30 that
night. Second prize winners were
Mr. and Mrs. Mather of Ortng*
City and third place winners were
Mr. Pin* end Fag Frary of
Winter Park. Fourth price winners
names were not available.
Consolation prize went lo Mr.
laivejoy and Mr. Manchrrt of
Orange City and second rontolation went to Mr. end lira. Clyde

Gen. Sanford Museum Step Closer

The General Sanford Library end
Museum la on* step nearer real­
ity.
A t an adjourned meeting Fri­
day night, the City Commission
voted to algn an agreement with
tha Ganeral’a heirs ‘t o put the
machinery In motion to acquire
th* library and th* entire Gen­
eral Sanford collection.”
Tha action waa taken on a mo­
la the scene of a tion by Commissioner Karl Hig­
which ta being ginbotham. Seconding the motion
In regard In the shad wa* Commissioner John Krider.
lev In an attempt la pot *
A 150 by 130 - foot space in Ft,
ef
Mellon Park, east o f the Cham­
ber o f Commerce building, waa
designated tor the museum and
landscaping. The museum would
(ace First 8L
,
The memorial would house the
library and effects o f the lata
Gen. H. 8. Innford for whom tbo

mi M r

...

O M w Berth uul eentral f M b a a
A ll afternoon; low tsmp*r*tnr*4
ihniit n extreme north In IS
central inH M Interior •ilrem *
in«th portion, continued moderate.
Ip cool Tueiday.

Mrs. Fred Williams, a member

Ce„ MS W. o f the museum committee, cited
third «L ■a had haon with the the library** importance for rerisen Rag* 4. tu t. At aearch purposes, and said tha mu­

seum la tha "grer.tcat thing that

**** 0 ’lO l» 4 *

The great historical value o f
tha Central's papers, records and
correspondence wat emphasized by
Randall Chase, who has been pro­
minent in the drive for construc­
tion of tha memorial.
Appropriations o f 97,600 each
toward the 930,000 museum have
been made by the City and coun­
ty. Part of tha discussion Friday
night centered around means at
raising th* remaining money.
Th* Carnegie Foundation and
other foundationi were mentioned
as possible sources o f help,
but
this wa* left open for eapioration. State aid, the discussion re­
vealed, has more or Us* been
ruled ouL
With regard to maintaining tho
memorial, Chase raid a retired
couple might bo persuaded to
Uvo there and taka c a n a f it In
exchange for living quarters and
a small salary. Ha aald that had
bean dona at otb*r memorials.
Tha 8eminole County Historical
Society aad tha c snaral Sanford
Memorial
IJbr
/.asoclatioa

mm «i»

o f assistance.
The memorial rannot be kept
open and run as it eboutd hs on
a volunteer basis, Chase said ii
answer to a proposal that civle
club members be used instead af
talaritd workers.
He said that in time he saw no
reason why the public library
could aot be combined with tha
memorial library ,
Commissioner
Jack
Ratigan,
while admitting that tha museu
would ba an asset la ths city,
said he would vote against ap­
propriating any more money for
construction of tha building or
for maintaining tha mcmotial. 11a
cited tha city's financial condition
as tha reason for bis stand.
H1 foal wa can apand tha money
on thing* morn beneficial la tbo
people immediately living In Banford," ha declared.
Other than Chase and Mra.
Williams, members af tha mu­
seum committee present at Fri­
day night’s meeting waea Mr. aad
Mr*. Charlea Da waa* aad Fred

Saturday night. Lewis was wounded in (tie leg and ruptured
in n gu n battle last night. Wi l l i Lewis is Deputy Sheriff \V.
L. Long. (Staff Photo)

Israel Is Charged
As Brutal Agressor
JERUSALEM ffl’l— Israel has been charged hy the U. N.
Mixed Armistice ('oinnti.sHioii as a ‘'brutal” aggressor wlm
deliberately attacked Egyptian forces in the liitzn Strip a
week ago.
The nrmiatlce group said the bloody assault in wliieh UK
Egyptians and M Israelis died
violated the 1W4U Palestine truce
agreement.
The commission's ruling ye*,
lerday heightened speculation at
U.N. headquarter* in New York
thst the Security Council would
vole
similar
rename
against
Itrarl when II lukei up the ex­
plosive Issue again to-xt week.
Maj. Gen. Kdson l„ M. Burns
of Canada, U. N. Palestine tmrr
chief, was expected tn leave for
New York in e few days to give
the Security Council a personal
report on the Gaza incident, widrh
has attained relations in Palestine
to the breaking point.
At yflterday’a meeting on the
Egyptian-Israeli Igirder, (ho Imre
rommlssion adopted an Egyptian
resolution declaring Ihn limn at­
tack Feb. 28 "w a. committed hy
Israeli
regular a r m y
force*
against a i Egyptian regular army
force." It waa carried over Israeli
objection* by the votes of the
Egyptian delegation and the II. N.
chairman, Commandant Francois
Geicoiuaggi of France.
At ths same time the commis­
sion brushrd aside an 1st aril
counter rumplainl that an Egyp­
tian unit had ambushed an Isim-ll
patrol, starling a running fight
that took th* Isiaelit Into Egyp­
tian territory. This complaint was
killed o ff when the Egyptian de­
legation voted against it and Gicomaggi abstained.

j

CofC Committees
Report Tomorrow

The fir«* organizational meeting
of the Jay hers, arv organization
sponsored hi the Inral Jayrres (or
The pit la p Inn k vlnlrn Sun
young men hetwren the age* of
ilay front Thunisi Hollingsworth,
II anil 2U. u.n held last week at
the Cine building in Fort MpIIob
Oviedo, wa* (niind shunt nnnn
Park, Temporary officer* werq
lnil.iv parkril .&lt;A yard* ntf Slate
elected hy the .70 boy* present.
Itnail 119. approximately I nnlr
The purpoie of the Jaycee* i* to
from Wagner.
promote rlvio interest among the
Oviedo Pulin' Chief Grnrgf V
Kelsey said tin- switih ki-&gt; n o lpensqi&lt;r* of our rotnmunily; to
Mam young men for nctive partici­
xliP in the ignition.
pation in Junior Chamber of Com­
"Apparently « r wrrr rrmul
m erce work; In encourage and
ing tin-in (mi i line," hr s.iot,
promote acipialilance-hip. good
■rlririiig In Ihr escaped run
will, and fellowship among young
lit Is.
men; lo a-vlst in developing com­
An escaped convict, be­ munity spirit; to encourage anil
lieved to be the one who at- assist young men to obtain belief
tai-keil in elderly Ov iedo man understanding of business prin­
with an axe, was jailed here ciples: to encourage young men to
today after being eaptnred cooperate with civic organization*
in a gun battle with I’lorida and with each other at all time*
Highway Patrolmen Inal ami to h.irnc-s arid mobilize Ilia
young man power of our communi­
night.
William Lewis, 20, one nf ty h&gt; su 'doing to assist In the big­
three Negro runvirl* who fti-i! ger. better and greater place in
P ip Stilt* llnnii ( limp nt Ovii-ilt) which to live.
Hie by-law* of the club will In*
H.itonlny night, wrnt down with
n ballet in thr h-g in thr ex.hnngo presented hy a committee to he
o f fire near I'iiicirch School in voted on at lliv next meeting
which is tomorrow night. It was
Orlando,
Lewis filed at Slat* Trooper also decided that the weekly meet­
It him til K. Doyle'* patrol car ing will be held on Tuesday nights
with a shotgun, damaging Ihe car. from 7:30 to t) o’clock in the Civic
Doyle returned the fo e
and building. Any hoy interested It
Invited to attend. Thomas Stringer
wounded him in the leg.
Du- gun 1ml 11&lt; nee lined short- ami Vnti* Williams are cochairmen ill eliargr.
1/ heCoio midnight,
l.eivia m u dining » 1M7 Jeep
til the time of hi- rapture. Thu
Jeep and tun gum were stolen
\e&gt;t n'tghl from a house near
I ongMood on tli* Long-wood Ovie­
do ltd.
The other two esrapeea, Man in
Men ill. 27. ai d John I rltoy
(Continued on I'agr M)

Still At Large

Tourist Promotion
Highlights Speech
By Howard Sharp

George D. Huss
Dies At Hospital
George I) lluss J r , 4H, died
suddenly lnd.iv al 8:35 a m al
Hie Fcrtmld Memuriul Hiivpit.il
lie w «, burn March IX. 11X13 m Unrollon, N. C ami liliiili' lliv home
fur Hie past 35 ic.irv iii Watlchula,
Fla. lie w,iv a member of Ihe
Kplveop.il Chinch id Wauclmla and
n merchant there.
Ilev ides the widow he |v survived
hy ln&gt; f.ilhcr. George I), l i ny Sr.;
one brother, I H. Hu m : livb vislers, Mr., Dave Davidson, Mis..
Clue H u m , Mrs. George Ileal,
Mrs Ubs Sengo, mid Miss Lillian
H u m , nil of Waurhula, mid nne
stepvun, Earnest Scully nf San

Various coin mi tier* will import
"Tuesday nt llu&gt; monthly Hireling
nf tin* Inhi rd of dilPi-lors o f the
Chinn her of
Column ce,
The
mei-liiig will begin at K p. m.
l(i'|Hirtilig wilt lie the hnsehnll,
publicity mid advertising, higliwny, nnd fair exhibit rummittecs. ford,
Tile hint id will meet In the
'III* Imtty will he sent to WauCity Cmiimi.ninii room.
cliiila fur Ihe funeral and burial.

Mrs. J. Creighton
Dies Unexpectedly
Mr*. Jennie Shaw Creighton, 77.
died unexpectedly at Ihe home nf
her daughter, Mr« Harry F. Kent,
120 W. 19th St., Friday afternoon.
Mrs. Creighton, who hid lived
in Sanford for (hr past 13 year*,
wa* born May 27, 1*77 in Dallas
Cenlar, Iowa, and was a member
of tha Congregational Church of
Onnawa, Iowa,
Beside* her daughter, she I*
survived by one grandson, Paul T.
B luer* of Dover, N. t\; one grrat
granddaughter. Belly Riggers, also
of Dover, and one niece, Mrs. El­
len Qulnowtkl, Beatrice, Neb.
Funeral Service* were held to­
day al 3:30 p. m. at Brisson Fun­
eral Home with the Rev. A. G.
Melnnl* officiating. Burial wa* in
l4kn View Cemetery. Pallbearers
wera Paul Bulla, W. R. Fort, Roy
Maun, O. C. Rowand, M. J, Du-

a m U M U ritt _ ,

"t am sure we all recognize the
fed lli.il ic&gt;"d communities in - 1
don't happen, amt mi community
Standi still—it is eilhrr go ng for­
ward. or it is going bacaward"
said How.-nil Sharp, speaker at Hi*
Itolary Club meeting at noon.
Sharps* main point in his speech
wjv the value of Tourist promo­
tion m a town. "Tourist promotion
ii a ptcasaul occupation, because
travel makes people happy . , ,
It i. a hlg joli lo sell travel as the
American way of life—lo Ameri­
cans amt In remind llicin that
rlierivhed memories of vacation
travel is (omcltimg which no na­
tion catastrophe— no economi*
situation— or personal misfortune
can ever take away from them.
"H is highly competitive, with
Ihe world at a competitor and for­
eign countries spending million,, to
lure our vacation away (nun ui.
People go nowhere hy accident—•
they go where they sea promoted
in go and llm state nr area which
does die best job nf promotion j e l l
llie business.
" I hope Fheida continues Ms
vast advertising and promotional
program because tha impart of
Ihe million* nf tourist dollar* af­
fects the cennuniy of all of tin and
this revenue can he greatly m*
creased in Hie years ahead.
"Hv really knowing our einivmumty ami nor slate, and hy
sharing our knowledge ami au d io
tiasn Ha’ it with our visitors, wa
are not only helping uurselve* hut
also helping tn make this nation
stronger, better undrrNlood, and
more fully appreciated.
"F or America—after all —If
in-I a huge rollcelion of neighbor*,
most of them different, many &lt;4
the unique, (ml all bound logether
in a common aim and common
goal—to make American a bettiW
place lu which tn live- to to workin play and to worship—a shining
example tn the rest of the wnrld.
Sharp resigned last June as sec­
retary-manager of the Wyoming
Commerce and Industry commis­
sion and U imw living in DcUary,
DIET TO CONVENE
TOKYO T—The newly cleotel
Japanese Diet will convene March
IB In choose a prime minister ana
art on a new budget, Ihe Cabinet
announced Inday, Prime Minister
Ichiro II j toy am* i* expected td be
returned to office.

RICHMOND TEAM BEGINS PRACTICE — I.uke Appling
(center), manager of the Richmond Vlrginlamt, ponen with
Kenny Chapman (left), infieldnr, and Hank Edwardx, out­
fielder, aa the (earn began drills ikla morning ml the old 81*-

- -

-

OFFICIALS SAY R ED !
FORCING hTV DENTS
WASHINGTON tJV-U 9.
i t i Communiit latellit* govern­
ment* are reported* foreieg l e t
m illion students lo k e e n R q a ria a
to weaken Wrukern ttriw aw h*-

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�</text>
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*\

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1st, 2nd, 3rd pldce
in every race
won by cars using
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A gasoline "F irs t” wns registered
a t th e w o r l d - f a m o u s D a y t o n a
Beach Speed Week when every gaspowered winning cnr in every event
used P U R R Premium Gasoline.
Am azing p roof thnt P U R E d eliv­
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under the most dem anding driving
conditions.
W hn t’s m ore, P U R E Premium
holds more official w orld’s records
in N A S C A R racing events than
any other gasoline. A nd the sam e
gasoline qualities that provide a d d ­
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driving cnrs ju st like y o u rs — mean
im proved mileage nod perform ance
for y o u , in you r car.
W h y not en joy a ll the power
built into you r car? T o bo sure,
use P U R E Premium Gasoline . . .
the m odern pow er fuel with the
race-winning q u ality!

I ; -ft -u

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r e i r S m l - -rsrr

Stock car winners use PURE. In every stock car race, including the big 160-mlle Grand
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R p r e S S C f. ■

Sports car winners use PURE, In every sports car event, winners were PURE Premium
users. A clean sweep for PURE in every event!

Take a tip fro m le a d in g ra c e d r iv e r s

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�••-A **

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WiotKeVr ...

Shop and Save
In Sanford

O M w Berth uul eentral f M b a a
A ll afternoon; low tsmp*r*tnr*4
ihniit n extreme north In IS
central inH M Interior •ilrem *
in«th portion, continued moderate.
Ip cool Tueiday.

No. 13T

^ L U M * XLVI

Zoning
Meet
Is Set

Convict Is Jailed
After Gun Battle

A public hearing on annex­
ation and rezoning proposals
will be held today by the City
Commission. The hearing will
begin at 8 p.m. at City Hall.
The annexation plan would
extend the city limits south
to take in the new 27th St.
school and the Dreamwold
subdivision. The annexation

Judge M. Farmer
To Address Group
A! P-TA Meeting
Judge Mattie Farmer. Juvenile
Court Judge of Orange County, and
a noted juvenile authority will ad­
dress the Junior High School P-TA
at its meeting a p. m. Tuesday,
in the school auditorium. She will
speak on the "Adolescent; His So
cial Adjustments."
Judge Farmer was appointed tc
her p r o m t position in Novrmber
of 1912, and prior to that lime ahe
had served for 22&lt;« years as a
principal in Orange CmintySschools
She was graduated from the Uni­
versity of Florida in 1932 where
she majored in Child Welfare and
Child Psychology,
A distinctive honor was bestow­
ed on Judge Farmer, whrn in 1950
she was invited by the Prruident
of the United Stales to attend the
White House Conference.
A past director of the National
Council of Juvenile Court Judges,
Judge Farmer la also a member
of the Florida Probation and Pa­
CAM INVOLVED IN COLLISION—Tm person* were In- role Association; tha Florida Child­
jw e d la a crash IrtoIt Ii x these two cars Sunday on Stale ren’s Committer; the Florida
Stead 415, one-half mile east o f Sanford. Drivers were Robert Federation nf Sorlal Workers, and
P. Williams, 29. Erie, Pa., and John H. Hogan, 30, Sanford. also holds honorary memberships
in many Orlando and lurroaDd★
★
★
★
★
★
ing civic cluba.
Of local interest la Ihe faot that
Mrs. W. P. IIrooks, wife of the
First Baptist Church minister in
Sanford, was ■ science teacher of
Judge rarm ar'i when she attend­
ed high school In Georgia, where
the Judge wee bora and raised.
All parent! and others Interested
in youth are cordially invited to
hear this outstanding apeakar.

10 Persons Injured
In Traffic Accident

►

Pennsylvanians, Sanford Negroes
Involved In Two-Car Collision

V eer pereoc* from Brie, Pa.,
ta d abe Banford N erve* were in­
jured Sunday afternoon In • twoear eraah on SUto Road 413, a
&lt;(half ntfla cart of Sanford.
All were taken to FeraildLauihton Memorial Moapltal (or
treatment
'
D riven of the c a n were Robert
P. William*. 29, Erie, Pa., who
■offered fractured riba and multi­
ple lacerations, and John H. Ho­
gan, 30, Sanford, head laceraUaoa
apd abrasions of tha arm.
In WOliamt* car wera hli wife,
.d ia ry , » , Edmund Wejkowikl, 41,
*-% id Rose Orlando, 13, all of whom
Buffered lacerations, contusions,
sad abrasion*.
PH frl la R eg ia ’* vehicle were
Jepee M. Taplor, IS, multiple laeerattons of the faee; Mary Lou
Harden, I t fractured right leg;
Rplvla Harden, 19, posilhle frac­
ture of the right foot; Jsunona
Barden, five months, lacerated
faee, aad Shirley Kelson, four,
^onUukm s of the right side.
*w Damage totaling 3323 wat report­
ed In two traffic accidents Satur­
day, City Pollen said.
One driver, Leonard E. Haumahild, lb, attached to the Naval
Air Station, waa charged with
carelasa and negligent driving.

1Strolling
In Sanford
la the scene of a
which ta being
In regard In the shad
lev In an attempt la pot *
ef

hy the

mi M r Ce„ MS W.
th ird «L ■a had haon with the
risen Rag* 4. tu t. At

leaving the scene of an accident,
and having no driver’s licenio.
A IMS Chevrolet sedan driven
bp Haumihlld wa* Involved in an
accident at Ihe interiection of 51h
St. and Park Ave.
Patrolman Joe T. Hickson said
Haumshild ran a stop sign in front
of a 1932 Chevrolet sedan driven
bp Francis Cecil Fields, 32, Route
2, Sanford.
Damage to each ear was esti­
mated at 9130.
In the other accident, Patrol­
man Arnold William* reported a
1934 Ford truck backed Into a
parked 1951 Ford convertible on
Sanford Are., 43 fret north of 9th
St. The ear’s right door sustained
923 damage.
Driver of the truck was Handberry Sims, 27, of t i l l 1* Hickory
Ave. Tha car was being driven
bp William Thomas Smather, 24,
of 949 Glyiwsy Drive.
Williams said the truck was
parked at 9 gas station when the
car pulled in. The truck driver
wai unaware of tha car parked
behind hie vehicle, the officer said.

Sanford Fire D ep t
Answers 3 Calls
The Sanford Fire Department
answered Owes calls during the
weekend. The first one Saturday
at 12:33 p. m. between 12th and
13!h Streets on Lake Ave. where
fire completely destroyed a two
room house occupied by Armstead
Field and did considerable damage
to another house adjacent to it.
Roth houses wera owned by Violet
Grehy.
The second fire or purred at 1:20
p. m. Sunday between Fourth and
Fifth Street in tha alley between
Sanford and Cypress Ave*. The
house, occupied by James Camp­
bell and owned by Liza Dubose,
was destroyed as was its con­
tents.
The third alarm came In Sunday
night at 9:20 from 309 E. Fifth
Street between Cypress end Pine
Aves. The house owned by Fred
Johnson and occupied by Frank
Thomas, was damaged consider­
ably.

Believed
Jaybees To Meel
Assailant At Civic Center
Of Grower Tomorrow Night

would reiguite a special act of the
legislature
Under the proposal, ths city
limits would he moved from 26th
St at the A.C.L. Oviedo tracks on
Ihe east, to one-quarter mile
south of 27th St., on a line
Straight west about 18 blocks lo a
point in Lake Jennie.
The new line would turn north
on Georgia Ave. to 20th St,,
widening the limits five blocks
most o f the way.
Another recommendation calls
for the annexation of two and
one-half block* on ths east aids
nf Ihe rlty from the lakefront o f
Lake Monroe on ths north, south
to 8th St. The present line is Ml
Virginia Ave.
The City Zoning and Planning
Commission has passed a recom­
mendation onto the Commisalon
that it instruct the legislative de­
legates to pais a local enabling
ait for large-scale annexation on
three sides of thr city.
Since the feeling of the plan­
ner* heesme known, eoiisideiable
opposition has become apparent
from fringe area residents, th#
ones included tn tha annexation
proposal.
Robert Brown, chairman o f th*
Zoning Commission, feels that th*
planning commission, feel* that
inora knowledge of the subject
ESCAPED CONVICT CAPTURED— Lying nn » hunk in Ihr
would mean irss alaitn and to
Sfminute
County .Init is William Lewis, one nf three Negro
has mode it plain that a legislaninviclw who esnipi'il I mm the Stale itoail Camp at Oviedo
(Cunlinued on Page 8 )

Two Escapees
Still At Large

The fir«* organizational meeting
of the Jay hers, arv organization
sponsored hi the Inral Jayrres (or
The pit la p Inn k vlnlrn Sun
young men hetwren the age* of
ilay front Thunisi Hollingsworth,
II anil 2U. u.n held last week at
the Cine building in Fort MpIIob
Oviedo, wa* (niind shunt nnnn
Park, Temporary officer* werq
lnil.iv parkril .&lt;A yard* ntf Slate
elected hy the .70 boy* present.
Itnail 119. approximately I nnlr
The purpoie of the Jaycee* i* to
from Wagner.
promote rlvio interest among the
Oviedo Pulin' Chief Grnrgf V
Kelsey said tin- switih ki-&gt; n o lpensqi&lt;r* of our rotnmunily; to
Mam young men for nctive partici­
xliP in the ignition.
pation in Junior Chamber of Com­
"Apparently « r wrrr rrmul
m e r c e work; In encourage and
ing tin-in (mi i line," hr s.iot,
promote acipialilance-hip. good
■rlririiig In Ihr escaped run
will, and fellowship among young
lit Is.
men; lo a-vlst in developing com­
An escaped convict, be­ munity spirit; to encourage anil
lieved to be the one who at- assist young men to obtain belief
tai-keil in elderly Ov iedo man understanding of business prin­
with an axe, was jailed here ciples: to encourage young men to
today after being eaptnred cooperate with civic organization*
in a gun battle with I’lorida and with each other at all time*
Highway Patrolmen I nal ami to h.irnc-s arid mobilize Ilia
young man power of our communi­
night.
William Lewis, 20, one nf ty h&gt; su 'doing to assist In the big­
three Negro runvirl* who fti-i! ger. better and greater place in
P ip Stilt* llnnii ( limp nt Ovii-ilt) which to live.
Hie by-law* of the club will In*
H.itonlny night, wrnt down with
n ballet in thr h-g in thr ex.hnngo presented hy a committee to he
o f fire near I'iiicirch School in voted on at lliv next meeting
which is tomorrow night. It was
Orlando,
Lewis filed at Slat* Trooper also decided that the weekly meet­
It him til K. Doyle'* patrol car ing will be held on Tuesday nights
with a shotgun, damaging Ihe car. from 7:30 to t) o’clock in the Civic
Doyle returned the fo e
and building. Any hoy interested It
Invited to attend. Thomas Stringer
wounded him in the leg.
Du- gun 1ml 11&lt; nee lined short- ami Vnti* Williams are cochairmen ill eliargr.
1/ heCoio midnight,
Saturday night. Lewis was wounded in (tie leg and ruptured
l.eivia m u dining » 1M7 Jeep
in n gu n battle last night. W illi Lewis is Deputy Sheriff \V. til the time of hi- rapture. Thu
Jeep and tun gum were stolen
L. Long. (Staff Photo)
\e&gt;t n'tghl from a house near
I ongMood on tli* Long-wood Ovie­
do ltd.
The other two esrapeea, Man in
Men ill. 27. ai d John I rltoy
A safe, stolen Thursday night
(Continued on I'agr M)
from Angel’s Eal Shark, 2501 San­
ford Ave., was found Sunday near
the old Naval Base Road, about
two and one-half miles south of
"t am sure we all recognize the
JERUSALEM ffl’l— Israel has been charged hy the U. N.
Sanford. City Police reported.
fed lli.il ic&gt;"d communities in - 1
Mixed
Armistice
('oinnti.sHioii
as
a
‘'brutal”
aggressor
wlm
Th* safe, which had contained
George I) lluss J r , 4H, died don't happen, amt mi community
approximately 9M0 In cash and deliberately attacked Egyptian forces in the liitzn Strip a suddenly lnd.iv al 8:35 a m al Standi still—it is eilhrr go ng for­
checks, wss empty eacrpt for week ago.
Hie Fcrtmld Memuriul Hiivpit.il ward. or it is going bacaward"
shout 40 cents in chsng*.
The nrmiatlce group said the bloody assault in wliieh UK lie w «, burn March IX. 11X13 m Un- said How.-nil Sharp, speaker at Hi*
Discovery of the safe was report­ Egyptians and M Israelis died j
rollon, N. C ami liliiili' lliv home Itolary Club meeting at noon.
ed to Police by Hiram Wesley violated the 1W4U Palestine truce
fur Hie past 35 ic.irv iii Watlchula, Sharps* main point in his speech
Shannon, Route 2.
agreement.
Fla. lie w,iv a member of Ihe wjv the value of Tourist promo­
T. J. Angel, owner at Ihe res­
The commission's ruling ye*,
Kplveop.il Chinch id Wauclmla and tion m a town. "Tourist promotion
taurant, said tha 900-pawd sefe lerday heightened speculation at
ii a ptcasaul occupation, because
n merchant there.
was loaded on a truck bg thieves U.N. headquarter* in New York
I
lev ides the widow he |v survived travel makes people happy . , ,
Various coin mi tier* will import
who entered tha establishment thst the Security Council would
hy ln&gt; f.ilhcr. George I), lin y Sr.; It i. a hlg joli lo sell travel as the
through a window.
vole
similar
rename
against "Tuesday nt llu&gt; monthly Hireling one brother, I H. Hu m : livb vis- American way of life—lo Ameri­
nf
tin*
In
hi rd of dilPi-lors o f the
cans amt In remind llicin that
Itrarl when II lukei up the ex­
Chinn her of
Column ce,
The lers, Mr., Dave Davidson, Mis.. rlierivhed memories of vacation
plosive Issue again to-xt week.
Clue
H u m , Mrs. George Ileal,
Maj. Gen. Kdson l„ M. Burns mei-liiig will begin at K p. m.
Mrs Ubs Sengo, mid Miss Lillian travel is (omcltimg which no na­
l(i'|Hirtilig wilt lie the hnsehnll, H u m , nil of Waurhula, mid nne tion catastrophe— no economi*
of Canada, U. N. Palestine tmrr
chief, was expected tn leave for publicity mid advertising, higli- stepvun, Earnest Scully nf San situation— or personal misfortune
can ever take away from them.
New York in e few days to give wny, nnd fair exhibit rummittecs. ford,
Tile hint id will meet In the
the Security Council a personal
'III* Imtty will he sent to Wau"H is highly competitive, with
After IS hours nf hard playing report on the Gaza incident, widrh City Cmiimi.ninii room.
cliiila fur Ihe funeral and burial. Ihe world at a competitor and for­
the Handley Silver Cup Trophy has attained relations in Palestine
eign countries spending million,, to
was won hy Mr. and Mra. Riddle to the breaking point.
lure our vacation away (nun ui.
of Umatilla. Over 400 spectators
At yflterday’a meeting on the
People go nowhere hy accident—•
and playsrs gathered at the San Egyptian-Israeli Igirder, (ho Imre
they go where they sea promoted
ford TourtJit and Shuffleboard rommlssion adopted an Egyptian
in go and llm state nr area which
Court for this annual event.
resolution declaring Ihn limn at­
does die best job nf promotion j e l l
Fifty-two teams from II towns tack Feb. 28 "w a. committed hy
llie business.
were represented at tha tourney Israeli
regular a r m y
force*
" I hope Fheida continues Ms
which began at 9 o’clock Friday against a i Egyptian regular army
vast advertising and promotional
morning and anded at 11:30 that force." It waa carried over Israeli
program because tha impart of
night. Second prize winners were objection* by the votes of the
Ihe million* nf tourist dollar* af­
Mr. and Mrs. Mather of Ortng* Egyptian delegation and the II. N.
fects the cennuniy of all of tin and
City and third place winners were chairman, Commandant Francois
this revenue can he greatly m*
Mr. Pin* end Fag Frary of Geicoiuaggi of France.
creased in Hie years ahead.
Winter Park. Fourth price winners
At ths same time the commis­
"Hv really knowing our einivnames were not available.
sion brushrd aside an 1st aril
mumty ami nor slate, and hy
Consolation prize went lo Mr. counter rumplainl that an Egyp­
sharing our knowledge ami au d io
laivejoy and Mr. Manchrrt of tian unit had ambushed an Isim-ll
tiasn Ha’ it with our visitors, wa
Orange City and second rontola- patrol, starling a running fight
are not only helping uurselve* hut
tion went to Mr. end lira. Clyde that took th* Isiaelit Into Egyp­
also helping tn make this nation
tian territory. This complaint was
stronger, better undrrNlood, and
killed o ff when the Egyptian de­
more fully appreciated.
legation voted against it and Gico"F or America—after all —If
maggi abstained.
in-I a huge rollcelion of neighbor*,
most of them different, many &lt;4
o f assistance.
the unique, (ml all bound logether
The memorial rannot be kept
in a common aim and common
open and run as it eboutd hs on
goal—to make American a bettiW
a volunteer basis, Chase said ii
place lu which tn live- to to workanswer to a proposal that civle
in play and to worship—a shining
club members be used instead af
Mr*. Jennie Shaw Creighton, 77.
example tn the rest of the wnrld.
talaritd workers.
died unexpectedly at Ihe home nf
Sharp resigned last June as sec­
He said that in time he saw no her daughter, Mr« Harry F. Kent,
retary-manager of the Wyoming
reason why the public library 120 W. 19th St., Friday afternoon.
Commerce and Industry commis­
could aot be combined with tha
Mrs. Creighton, who hid lived
sion and U imw living in DcUary,
memorial library ,
Commissioner
Jack
Ratigan, in Sanford for (hr past 13 year*,
wa* born May 27, 1*77 in Dallas
while admitting that tha museu
DIET TO CONVENE
would ba an asset la ths city, Cenlar, Iowa, and was a member
TOKYO T—The newly cleotel
said he would vote against ap­ of tha Congregational Church of
Japanese Diet will convene March
propriating any more money for Onnawa, Iowa,
IB In choose a prime minister ana
Beside* her daughter, she I*
construction of tha building or
art on a new budget, Ihe Cabinet
for maintaining tha mcmotial. 11a survived by one grandson, Paul T.
announced Inday, Prime Minister
cited tha city's financial condition B luer* of Dover, N. t\; one grrat
Ichiro II j toy am* i* expected td be
granddaughter. Belly Riggers, also
as tha reason for bis stand.
returned to office.
H1 foal wa can apand tha money of Dover, and one niece, Mrs. El­
on thing* morn beneficial la tbo len Qulnowtkl, Beatrice, Neb.
Funeral Service* were held to­
people immediately living In BanOFFICIALS SAY R ED !
day al 3:30 p. m. at Brisson Fun­
ford," ha declared.
FORCING hTV DENTS
Other than Chase and Mra. eral Home with the Rev. A. G. RICHMOND TEAM BEGINS PRACTICE — I.uke Appling
WASHINGTON tJV-U 9.
Williams, members af tha mu­ Melnnl* officiating. Burial wa* in
i t i Communiit latellit* govern­
seum committee present at Fri­ l4 kn View Cemetery. Pallbearers (center), manager o f the Richmond Vlrginlamt, ponen with ment* are reported* foreieg l e t
day night’s meeting waea Mr. aad wera Paul Bulla, W. R. Fort, Roy Kenny Chapman (le ft), infieldnr, and Hank Edwardx, out­ million students lo keen Rqariaa
Mr*. Charlea Da waa* aad Fred Maun, O. C. Rowand, M. J, Du- fielder, aa the (earn began d r ills ikla m o r n in g ml the old 81*- to weaken Wrukern ttriw aw h*-

Angel's Eal Shack
Safe Found Empty

Israel Is Charged
As Brutal Agressor

Tourist Promotion
Highlights Speech
By Howard Sharp

George D. Huss
Dies At Hospital

CofC Committees
Report Tomorrow

Many Long Hours
Involved In Play
A t Tourist Club

Gen. Sanford Museum Step Closer
The General Sanford Library end
Museum la on* step nearer real­
ity.
A t an adjourned meeting Fri­
day night, the City Commission
voted to algn an agreement with
tha Ganeral’a heirs ‘t o put the
machinery In motion to acquire
th* library and th* entire Gen­
eral Sanford collection.”
Tha action waa taken on a mo­
tion by Commissioner Karl Hig­
ginbotham. Seconding the motion
wa* Commissioner John Krider.
A 150 by 130 - foot space in Ft,
Mellon Park, east o f the Cham­
ber o f Commerce building, waa
designated tor the museum and
landscaping. The museum would
(ace First 8 L
,
The memorial would house the
library and effects o f the lata
Gen. H. 8. Innford for whom tbo
city waa nomad.
Mrs. Fred Williams, a member
o f the museum committee, cited
the library** importance for reaearch purposes, and said tha mu­
seum la tha "grer.tcat thing that
**** 0 ’lO l» 4 *

The great historical value o f
tha Central's papers, records and
correspondence wat emphasized by
Randall Chase, who has been pro­
minent in the drive for construc­
tion of tha memorial.
Appropriations o f 97,600 each
toward the 930,000 museum have
been made by the City and coun­
ty. Part of tha discussion Friday
night centered around means at
raising th* remaining money.
Th* Carnegie Foundation and
other foundationi were mentioned
as possible sources o f help,
but
this wa* left open for eapioration. State aid, the discussion re­
vealed, has more or Us* been
ruled ouL
With regard to maintaining tho
memorial, Chase raid a retired
couple might bo persuaded to
Uvo there and taka c a n a f it In
exchange for living quarters and
a small salary. Ha aald that had
bean dona at otb*r memorials.
Tha 8eminole County Historical
Society aad tha c snaral Sanford
Memorial
IJbr
/.asoclatioa

mm «i»

Mrs. J. Creighton
Dies Unexpectedly

a m U M U r it t _ ,

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page 2

TH E SAN TO KP H E E A LP

Men. M*r. 7, 1955
C n ^ e c J uI t w h e n I
I WANT TO TAKE

MlSSTEASLEV
WOULD WEAPA
PETTICOAT ON

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WOOL 6 U&lt;T WILL
PIT T p -J BETTER

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IN THERE AND REMOVE-*DL* 1
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X RRMRAWER THAT W AS A EXJ

THAT’S WHAT I LIKE
A0DUTTH1S PLACE’ *
THEY NEVEP CET

' THE iEurr M KT ON SOUl

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7i
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*THR MACHINE 10 FDR l

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i’ BRING ME SOME

7 ALL ROWT1

[COTTAGE CHEESE AND TEA.

Science Seeking Age-Old Mackerel Mystery Solution
Ao age-old mystery of the tea—
je riddle of the vanishing mack*
iral — It a problem that confronts
Atlantic cen ta l fiiherman who tup
ply • large share of lha nation's
flib dinner* each year.
Sclantlflc Inveatlgaton, ai well
ai experianred fiiherman, are bit*
(ltd by the annual myitary of the
dliappearlng mackarel. The fUh
inpear off the Virginia Capet In
April each yaar and remain in
lentlful supply while the ichoola
lovt. northward.
Upon reaching Nova Scotia wa.
art U&gt; September, the flib then
iter. § return migration until
‘J ity arrive off Cape Cod in Novem­
ber Then they vanish.
In the dayi before modern ficUl*
tiei of processing and freetlns flib
were developed, according to Jo­
seph C O’ Ulem. bead of A I* P
rood Stores National rith Departmint, only salt mackerel wai aval
title fot the Lenten segien when
wnturner demand for hah end m

foods reaches Its peak. Since quickfree ring was developed, however,
ha said ample supplies h ive been
retained from earlier catches to
supply the demand.
Annuel production of mackerel U
very erratlr end consequently com­
mercial flihlng for tills type is e
great gamble. In the lSOO's, the
catch it mackerel varied from so
lo 100 million pounds yearly with
&lt;ho biggest haul of ITS million
pounds being landed In 1084. Sup­
plies nowadays are considarsbly
smaller averaging about 10 million
pounds a year with only one-haU
that amount landed as recently a*
ISSI.
Many thaoriea have been ad
vapeed by fishermen as to the res'
tons for dlskppearsBce of the
schools that nrevlde such highly
praised fish dinners. One iheory
his it that after summering off the
Gulf of Main and Nova Scotia the
tub return to a smell area called
'No Men's Lend,' ton miles off

Newfoundland where they bury
themselves in the mud.
Supporters, of the latter theory
offer evidence of the mud In the
mackerels’ ayes In the spring to
substantiate their claim, rurthar,
they aald, mackarsl has two coats
if skin with a layer of oil In be­
tween, permitting them to spend
the winter slumbering on the ooaan
bottom.
Others believe the mackarel diaappear Into the warmer waters of
ibe Ouif Stream and remain In vir­
tual seclusion until the time comes
(or them to make their appearance.
They substantiate this theory with
the fac&lt; that mackarel ire surfacefeeding fish and could not survive
at the bottom ot the sea. This pos­
sibility (a further supported by the
(set that in recent year* winter
(ishmg for mackarel baa been con
ducted off the South Atlantic coast
with moderate success
Regardless Of whit happens M
aseterel In the tnW mniag months

between their appearance In the
spring and tbalr disappearance In.
the fall, according to O 'B rU jC
(hare are sample supplies of maekero! end many other verlltlea ef
fish available to both coastal and
inland consumers for the forthcom­
ing Untan season Modem proces*
sing and distribution make more
than ISO varieties of fish available
to bring the nation's total cooiump*100 of fish and othar taa foods to
1,tm ,oqu ooo pounds, or about 10*
oounda ear capita.
g

GOOD DEED BACKFIRES
/IOLA, 111.
VIOLA,
HI. W
&lt;JP)&gt; - Whan
When Mbs
Jessie Miller recovered from
illness In the hospital. Mrs. r ? 3
Langford, bar niece, want to her
hom» to ready It for her return.
Now tho aunt la horns end the
niece la In the hoiplUl. Mrs-Lang*
ford cut h*r fort as « Jagged
piece o f glass after dropping «
refrigerator trey.
*
' Christmas calibrations were ban­
ned In Missachusettp from
v MIL

T H IS C O O K IN O

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Boating Becoming Outstanding Sport In Seminole Area
The Sanford Boat Warts located
o a the St. Johns River bank abeet
three miles east ot Sanford
Celery Avenue, ia fait
■ popular place. Boating Is
e f the outstanding sports la Bsmt*
■ola County and most o f the boats
c i the county are kept here.
Owned by John Bromley, the to­
ta l attraction was started In MM

**i*t&lt;n the rtegt met m l*
grass, thouunds e f bfrda, many
varied* i of flib, balmy weather
and cloudlesi ehiep offer to a
sightseer treasurer* unnumbered.
Mr. Bromley stated B ut there
are about m beau in his docks
sad about B Italia have bpaa add­
ed since m o . MMt o f the croJaen
are from Winter Park and Orlando

and ether parts of the United
Bfftes.
'
A new display room of Owens
Cruisers has Just In the past few
gears been constructed.
A sportsman can be rare that

you

for

walk leading to tha boat stall.
It ia nol uncommon to ace a
group
ip .of. poopto such ap numbers
business groups and
of clubs, .bnslaepe
churcht organisations r t , *
group of friends getting together to
go on a picnic
plcnte or eutiai I on one *
tha crullers.
Among the most popular places
, Blue Springe It miles .tram

VitiM&amp; A m , 5S

Crete to permit the owner to walk and shaded s p o ti® &lt;
the river
from the repair dock to tho mala

im

4 *

* * * *

m

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�Lake Mary

T E L E V IS IO N

Growing Pains Hit
Dairy Industry
As If Increases

Major Roy 0 . Brown, US Army,
retired has purchased the Leopold
WkBR-TV JACKSDXVU.T.R
W nno-TV ORLSSDO
house but does not expect to take (S«bf**&lt;
ta C S t u t Wltkaat Ketlral (Sabjtvt I* I'k iu * WlUiMl SillNI
MONDAY r.ss.
MONDAY r.ss.
possession rot several months.
4:00 Rrlfht«r Par
S: IS "Mr. and Mrs."
1:15
8*er*t
Btorm
Ills Vlawara Distil
4:14 n* Tour Account
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Scott, their 4:30 Charm Chat
S:00
Tortla
Face* Ufa
son and twin daughters, have mov- 4«4S Cartoon Cam at
5:15 Road of Ufa
1:00 Ramar of the Junela
ed from Sanford into the garage S.IO Adrtntur# With Uncle Walt 5 SO Carry Moor*
1:04 ,V*w». tVaathar, Scoria
apartment of the former Fred T. •:00 Weather-N'awt-Sncrla
(.so Superman
In a feature article entitled "A
4:IS Induitry on Parade
Williams place.
T.-oo TV Ple**t
4:10 Mu* leal Varlttiea
Look Inin The Dairy Industry”
7:15
Rrd I’nrtiam
4 :0 Muilcat Varlellee
7:14 CHS .TV N*w»
published in the Feb. 1 Issue of the
Drtw Pearenn
^ O rlan do Ward has returned to 1:00
7:45 Parry Como
i:lS John Hair Xewa
“ Exchange Bulletin” of the Flo­
1:00 Hum* and Allan
his Lome in North Monroe, New T:S0 Ford Theater
*:10 Jackacnvlllt Forum
rida State Department of Agricul­
1:40
Puval
Show
Hampshire.
4:40 I Lov# Lucy
1:11 Art Llnhletter A the Klde
ture, Mr. Dick Stark (Livestock
S.IO Pacambar Drlda
1:10 Storlte of the Century
in-d Dairy Specialist of the Depart­
10:00 Mudlo On#
1:00
t
Lon*
Lucy
Mrs. C. L. Truslow and her bro­ 1:10 [December Bride
11:00 New* and Weather
ment) had the following to iny
11:15 Htx Flclur#
ther, Walter Lampert returned to 10:00 Juttlce
about the Indus try’ s development
11:45 6l«n Off
10:10 Marlin Rhythm Rtderi
their respective homes in Freder­ 11:00
TUESDAY A,SI.
and its high quality products:
Xtwt-SnU-Weathtr
I CO Tati Fatlarn
icksburg, Virginia, last Saturday. 11:11 Kmart Rhythm*
7:40 Morning Show
“ The Dairy industry in Florida
11:10
"Emmr
Awards"
They had been visiting their par­
9:04 Rob Crctby Show
is at this time suffering not only
9:50
Shopper*
(lulde
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Lam­ 1:09 S i rT hriff
r i n iT r.ss.
10:10 Arthur Clod (ray
with the usual problemi of the
pert.
IfSO PI* On Proaram Resume
11:54 Strlka II Rich
Milk Industry but with a variety
1:1S Xews-Weather
11:00
Valiant
Ladv
I : f o llnltrwcoil Then end Now
TL'EMIAV P.M.
of growing pains as well.
„ * Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Stockdale, of 1:00 HI* Tayoff
11:15 Lova ot Ufa
“ Ten years ago Florida imported
Tarentum, Penns., accompanied by 1:10 Uarry Moore Show
II 10 Saari-h for Tomorrow
II 45 Holding Light
her brother. Dr. Lloyd Thompson
ipproxim
itcly fifty per cent of the
TAMPS WKLA-TV
1:40 Kltchap Show
Moadey
of Plttsburge, Penna. have arrived
1:50 Welcome Travelers
fluid milk consumed in the State.
»:00 a. m Test Pattern
1:40 Robert Q Lawla
' to spend some time with their bro­ S:!S (loldcn Window*
Today, with a forty per cent In­
'
1 10 Houeep.-trtv
ther and sister-in-law, Rev. and 1:10 Tampa t'nlv. Workshop
1:00 Rig 1'avoff
crease in population, Florida dairy1:11 ConrernlnK Mlie Marlowe
l.lli Open limits
Mrs. James M. Thompson.
1:00 Haw kina Kalla
Mr. and Mrs. A. Paulk of Sill VII at Love
The World of Mr. Sweeney
Douglas, Ga. were the weekend 4:10
4:41 Modern Romances
guests of her mother, Mrs J. 1:00 Little Reacnla
S:10 Wllmo The Clown
L. Bullard.
5:10 Ilon-dy lioody
1:00 Tea Ileverly Show
tVTRR - 1100 Kilocycles
'ft
4; JO Home Edition—News
Dr. and Mrs. C. R. Smith
S: 14 Home Edition—Kport*
MOVDA7 l-.M.
who own a portion of the former
*;J4 Home Edition—Weather
4:10 News
7:09
The
Rebels
Quartet
4 15 i&gt;s»n Interlude
Fred T. Williams grove have re­
7:30 Producer*’ Showcaaa
4:45 Claude IL Wulla Show
turned to their home in Clif­ a.so P.ibert Montaomery Present* 5:00
The Rhythm Hour
4 04
10:Jn Ellerv Quern
World Al hi*
ton, Virginia.
1:15 Twilight Bungs
11:00 Kina* Croairoad*
11;I0 Kmmy Award*
4:10 Sport* Rook
1:00 N'ew* and Weather
4 45 Muilcat Urogram
Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Stutzman
V-.4(0 Drilling On A Cloud
i:tii Elen Oft
from Lancaster, New York arc
7.15 Evening Mu*lc
7:30 Dial "M" For Mutlo
the guests of their friends, Rev.
9:04 Sight Edition*
and Mrs- L. W. Scott.
They
9:13 United Xallorg
4:10 If* panceltma
spent Monday at Marineland and
•0 3 4 At Horn# With Mualo
fu esday, in and around Orlan
10:55 News
IHUO Dayman'# Call to Urayar
d a and Winter Park.
It.tfS Kilrn Off
T ir.sn A v a . ■1:40 Klgn &lt;&gt;n
•too ,Ias,drCCb!.are etao eta thh
1:01 Layman'# Call to Urayar
Mr. J. J. Johns who has been
4:05 Pawn Braakera
4:10 S’ewa
hero with her sister and bro­
1:15 We»ltrn Jamboree
ther-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ar
4:55 News
7:00 Seven O'clock Club
chle Franklin, has returned U
7:15 News
her home In Brooklyn. N. Y,
1:00 Sports At A (llano
LOS ANGELES (P Pstiy Gar
Jrckev'a Choice
denseed, a one-man Marshall Plan, 4:05
Morning Pavotlonf
Friends of R. H. Eubanks will has set sail to "sow a green band *:I0
1:45 Morning Melodlat
World At'Nina
glad1 to haar that he Is tm- ■round the world to offset the
Uu-l" for Ladles
ovlng and Is now at home, fol- Red band."
4:10 Hymn Tima
For Ladle* Only
9:45
hospltalixation
at
thr
Patty Is really Aloyslus Mozler, I0:0i 'tOO
Club
Florida Sanitarium In Orlando.
,'ews
49 year old engineer on ■ mcr &lt; 0 : ! &lt;
140
Club
.0:5
chant ship. Ho calls hlmaclf Patty 11:01
tepetl Uerformanca
X. X, Franklin continues a Gardenseed He began his cam 11:10 Repeat Uarformanca
lent at the Femald Laugh psign of bringing garden seeds to 11:00 World Al No' n
TDtian.AT P.M.
Memorial Hospital, Sanford. needy persons when he saw a 11:15 Radio Farm Plgaat
11:14
Tuetday
Matinee
young girl In Pusan, Korea col
1:15 sund by for Muilo
Mr. and Mrs. E. H. McConagby lapse and die of malnutrition sev
1:14 New*
MS Flar Non* Ranch
of Clearwater and Msboningtown, cral years ago.
1:15 Stand Hr for Mutlo
Penna ware the weekend guests
"I decided to do something
M his uncle and aunt, Mr. and about it and bring food lo these
lira. P D. Anderson.
starving people,1" Patty said.
Already he has distributed more
Lake Mary friends of R. W. Shed
than half a million seed packages
don win be glad to know that he Is
in various world ports, lie has
again at his Sanford borne, follov
even been praised In the congres­
FORT HOOD, Tex - P v t . Burlag a heart attack which hospital
sional record.
bridge E. Ratliff J r „ 22, whose
Lead Mm at the Femald LaughPatty's cabin aboard the Philip parents live at 404 W. 28th St..
Mra. Jack Howell and son, Russ pine Bear, which sailed yesterday Sanford, Fla., recently partlclpat
i t Jacksonville, era visiting her for tha Far East, was crammed ed In a special Army test axer
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ervin with 100,000 vegetable sded pack- cite at Fort Hood, Tax.
Purpose of the exercise was I
jajUlc her husband Is on a short agesstar of duty away tram his station.
The International Rotary Clubs teat combat command experimer
are aiding Palty and will meet al formations organized by It
Friends of Herbert Lampert will the ship In Korea, Jspsn, Philip­ 1st Armored Division to adapt h
bn glad to bear that he la making pines and other ports and help the latest concepts of stomlc-agc
ground warfare.
a good recovery following recent distribute the seeds.
Ratliff, who comploted basic
nursery and It Is expected that he
Petty explained the Orientals
can be removed to his home from ere a proud people: "They won’ t training at Camp Gordon, Ga., is
the Fernsld Laughton Memorial take a handout but they will a c­ a radio repairman In the division's
Hospital In Sanford within the cept seeds bccauso it helps them 123d Maintenance Battalion.
Before entering tlm Army In
•ext few days.
help themselves."
Mr. and Mrs. W. Pulver and
Patty, who has spent about $1,- July 1983, he attended the Unlver
• tucked, terrific,
M r. and Mra. R. W. Keogh spent 800 of his own money on the pro­ slty of Florida for two years.
lu a d a y at Cypress Gardens and ject, has received soma tokens of
Suave, Binooth . . jo
OUs R. Gosser, Seaman, USN.
Bob Singing Tower.
gratitude. In Sum lira someone
Enjoying the Baked Ham Sup- gave him a tiger which he pre­ husband of tho former Miss Doris
gentle sheath, with
par, which was a benefit ft
sented to a loo. A family In Ma­ 1, Sjoblnm of Lake Mary, roam
pockets, In perfect black
listed
March
I
In
the
Naval
Service
Loogwood Doctor*! Building,
laya offered him a baby which
for a period of six years. Gosser
arday at the Longwood Park wera ha declined.
or navy sheer rayon
Mr. and Mra. P . D. Anderson and
Sometimes handing out seeds Is presently attached to Photo
crepe to take you any­
graphic Squadron C2 based at the
their houseguests, Mr. and Mra E, his a lighter side.
H. McConaghy and Mr. and Mrs.
In Indonesia a native took a Naval Auxiliary Air Slatioa at
place, any time. That
V U tar I. ~
package of Patty's seeds, tore off Sanford.
hard-to-flnd kind o f
the top u d calmly ate them.
. Friends o f Mra. One Nelson,
"Y ou're supposed to plant them,
NO WALKOUT
dress you'll love to live
Another of Varner Nelson, will ha sot eat them," Patty said,
SAN FRANCISCO (A1) — Gol­
■orry to learn that ihe is a pa
"But they won't come up for den GaU Bridge pairjers gat a
In, look your beat in.
ttont at ton new Winter P u t Hoe aeveral months," replied the na­ ride in a motorised cart when a
G fists 12ii to 20VS or
pttoL
tive. "How do I know I'll be here day's work ends In the middle of
14 to M
t h u l"
the 4,200 - foot span. Too far to
LL tad Mra. J. C. Coppangar and
• black or aary
walk to their parked ears.
ebfldrea, Gwaa, Jeanne and Jack
accompanied by their brother, Leo­
left Monday for Pensacola where
nard Cochran of Bradenton, spent
About 13 per cent of tha area of
he has beta transferred.
the weekend In south Georgia, Ireland is covered by snow fields
and glaciers.
Mr. aad Mra. Arthur 0. Undoc visiting relatives.

Radio

m«n m producing ant orfy aB tha
fluid milk needed but a slight iurplut most ot the year betides.
Such sn tncreaie in the volume of
milk produced it Indeed an s m it­
ing thing; when you consider that
ill the milk produced for market
In Florida it this time li of Grade
‘ A‘ quality It is little less than
phenomenal.
"It Is hard to believe that such
a growth in the Dairy Induitry
would have been possible without
the stabilising effect of the Florida
Milk Commission, the aid of the
Dairy Inspection Division of the
Department of Agriculture sod var­
ious Health Department! of the
State, the Florida Board, the splen­
did work of the Florida Dairy
Association and the complete co­
operation of the various instruc­
tional. research and extension ser­
vice! of tiie University of Florida
and the U. S. Department of Agri­
culture.
“ The advantages of this Improv­
ed milk supply to the consuming
public should bo rather obvious.
The consumer is assured of a su­

A PREVIEW OF

'Pally Gardenseed’
Sows Green Band
To Offset Red One

perior tpjsUty afik prodoeed no* mated to be from I I to U thou­
der his own state’s supervision
and the surplus affords a cushion
which assures plenty of milk dur
log the winter months when the
supply drops off and the demand
Increases, duo to tbe influx of
tourists.
“ The Dairy Industry's contribu­
tion to the State's economy is
more important thin most of us
realise until wo look at the re
cord. In a recent summary rciwrt
of the Florida Dairy Industry, Mr.
John M. Scott, Chief Dairy Super­
visor, had the following to say:
“ The cash farm income to Flo­
rida dairy farmers (third largest
of Florida's agricultural products)
is about 80 million dollars for the
88 g a l l o n s of Florida-produced
milk.
"The retail sale value of this
milk after processing is about 88
million dollars.
“ It takes over 1.200 dairy farms
with 165,000 dairy cows to produce
this milk.
“ The total employment of the
dairy industry of Florida Is esti­

sand persons.
"The investment In the property
of Florida dairy forms and plants
is very great. Pime authorities
estimate dairy farm investment
alone to be St.OoO oo per cow in­
cluding all lands, improvements,
equipment, cattle, etc.
"The industry's annual payroll
Is estimated at 25 to 30 million dol­
lars. Its expenditures for supplies
(other than milk), —equipment,
containers, insurance, etc — arc
estimated at over 13 million dotlars.
“ It should also he noted that soil
i m p r o v e m e n t and conserva­
tion have always gone hand In
hand with dairying in contrast to
the soil depletion and erosion which
too often follows many row crop
practices.
"These changes, however, have
brought with them some problems
which are new lo Florida dairy­
men. Pressure is applied from var­
ious sources for s reduction in
price. Milk sold as surplus brings
lower returns. Relations become
strained between producers and

W
D

'0 &gt; c

AT

y o it is d lb u
Y es, Yowell’s Ib ready to help
you with your Easter shopping.

totWo"!

Travel or go to town with enay g rtri

News Of Men
In Service

ef (Ms first

In a con trust-touched, perfectly-fit­
ting suit ot Burlington’s creABc-roalntant acetate and rayon. The su­
perb tailoring includes hand-bound
buttonholes.

$ 1 7 -9 5

C O S T U M E JEWELRY
A wide eoloctlon o f cos­
tume jewelry to add the
finishing touches to
your Eu9tcr outfit.

Come In and see tho
many colors you have to
choose from.

COME IN AND SEE
THE GREAT ALL
'i

&gt;SK

\ \

\ \ | | I /

/

$ j.o o - $]5.00

/

EASTER

Mrs. BtBy C. Banka
have ranted the smaller of the two
Oreenleaf houses.
Prieods of Mrs. I . E. Lloyd, Jr.
c l bo glad to haar that she was
to attend church services,
aernlngf for the first time
a severe heart attack last
•Jftaa
S f f Tcap,
.
as a Student Nurse, to

W H I T I N G - DAVI S
A L U M E S H BAGS

HATS

In your Easter bonnett. * •

1955

The finishing touches to
your Easter ensemble,
We carry a complete line
ot Whitlng-Davis hand­
bags, in your choice sizo,

Yes let us help you select
your bonnett this year.

ABM9 WIDTH • IIMOTM
CTRB9MTM • COMBOMT

N* U /
•&gt; *

• /# ^

$ 7 -9 5 4 1 0 -9 5

M p to bar tnlatog.
and / . D.

f

ELL DRILLING
Howard C, Lone
Pfcont
S88
Jjl
*,t”
" i X . .1*^' '
tm

Kilimanjaro, a 19.321 foot peak
near the Equator in Africa has gla­
ciers on its slopes.

'

C

Mr. and Mra. K. R. Godwin
aad daughter have ranted the
Mrae cottage oa WUbur Avenue,
■a ta servlag a tour of duty with
Mary at NAAS, Buford.

distributors end between distribu­
tors and eonMimer.
"In regard lo the present price
of nulk it should be pointed out
that while production cost of milk
is higher in Florida thin in most
part- ot the Lnitod States, that
average workers* hourly earnings
tnd.iy will still buy almost twice
ai murli nulk as twenty years ago
and that milk, on a nutritive basis,
is still one of the cheaper foods.
"M ore attention should be given
in the future to public relations In
order to acquaint the consuming
public of tbe superior quality of
milk produced In this State. Not
only are tbe sanitary requirements
unusually high, the butterfat con­
tent is correspondingly so. As an
example, the average butterfat
content of milk sold in Chicago,
Illinois Is 3 5 per cent. In Jackson­
ville, Florida it is 4.1 per cent.

FASHIONS F O R M ..

a

jsn

warningLoe, DeL have arrived
*g M t#k— pufM i*^ of the Ap|
bane, recently purchased by the
Mr. aad Mrs. P. B. Bowmen
have routed the Castleberry home,
■a ta curn aUy stationed at NAAB,

TIIF SANFORD HERALD
31on. *!.ir 7. 1955
Page 3

We

r/T Y V
t

a,

have

a

wide selection

o f colors, styles and prices.

r,n

Seminole Truck

£

Tractor Co.

$ 2 -9 8 -

14

&amp;

« - ■u ■

J

•4

-

'»

�a
til ffr*/.4
fj’’ *

•• "
W -'a j
‘ .^&lt;&gt;i*A:ng « V.
'*■

;• ;

■, ■

•

/

( ' .vv,1

Mohammedan priest who specialise* In «r-j
pounding religious law Amin al-Husaelnl|
waa chief o f the group In Jerusalem, and
used his religious prestige to plot against ’
Jews and British. He hoped to make Pale­
stine his own kingdom. His assassins killed
Moslem statesmen In other countries who
opposed his views, notably, in 1951, King
Abdullah of Jordan. He inspired the unsuc­
cessful war waged by Egypt against Israel
in 1948.
b

Averted Strike
A atrike which many would have thought
a catastrophe of the firat water has been
averted In New York City. Thia waa a
threatened garage workers’ atrike, which
would havn locked 150,000 cara either In or
out of the garages. Police estimate that al­
ready 500.000 cars have to cruise about to
find parking apace. With 150,000 more the
situation would soon have become intoler­
able.
8trikea of public employes, railroad or
public utility workers are generally believed
disasters to be averted at all costs. What
about the refusal to work, on the part o f
others, definitely private, but affecting
great masses o f the community? Garage
employes offet one example. A contemplat­
ed strike of grocery workers, which one
Eastern city fnced a few years ago, would
have been another.
Are such strikes, admittedly legal, to be
regulated or forbidden? If forbidden, what
becomes of the workers’ freedom? If al­
lowed, what becomes of the rest of us?
This question may come up more and
more in the future.

Hot Potato
Amin ai-Husscini former Grand Mufti of
Jerusalem, is on his travels again. For some
years he has been in sanctuary in Egypt,
safe from the British and the French who
wanted to arrest him. Now ho has been or­
dered out of Egypt, and Is reported to be
peeking refuge in Saudi Arabia.
Tho Grand Mufti haa long been known an
an arch-plotter In the Near East A mufti is

The Sanford Herald

3.2a*

Monday, Mar. 7,1956
TODAY'S BIBLE VERSE
That we henceforth ba no more children,
tossed to and fro, and carried about with
gvery wind of doctrine, by the alelght of
fnen&lt;— Eph. 4:14. For some thousands of
Meeu* h u raan R rV a heart building up wla£ ■ * $ t o e M W t o &amp; O f IKm We should hold
A s t tfl! we a w tloBhtoifBBven wrong.

Big Bear Lake
Composed O f 3
M ain Sections

Millions Happy With 1955 Cars

J

NEW YORK (JS—Millions uf
A m ericini are pruud and hippy
owner* of sew shiny 1933 model
motor cars.
Hut if you are doing to aive j
second automobile in the familv,
Hcmy Austin Clark. Jr., suggests
you be a real rugged IndividjiUri
snd shop around for ■ fine old
sturdy 1913 Model T Ford or a
(narry 1919 Sluts Rearcal.
Clark. 37-year-old sugar heir, Is
une of the nation’ s leading antique
n r collectors. He has some ISO
models, most of them manufsc
tured before he was born.
Restoring antique autos Is ■ hob
t&gt;y griming in popularity each
year
“ There are now between I0,0uu
and ts.ooo antique cars in captivity
-th a t is. cars that have been re­
stored and tre in the hands of
collectors,*’ he said. "Before the
Second World War there were eoly
&lt;tbout 500.
"There are between 0.000 and 10,
noo collectors, ranging from college
l&gt;oys lo elderly millionaires. Some
1.000 now have five or more old
cars The restored cars are worth

"S B W

Surplus People
8peclal steps must ba taken to ease the
problem of over-population in Western Eu­
rope. These steps have been outlined In a
study of the problem. They need Implemen­
tation before the overpopulation evident now
in five nations leads to serious social dislo­
cations.
First, what Is needed In these countries
Is foreign caDital to finnnee development of
their natural resources and new sources of
employment, and provision for the emigra­
tion of large numbers of people.
The spccinl report, sponsored by tho
Council &lt;&gt;f Europe, found that tho Nether­
lands, a nation with a highly developed and
efficient economy, haa reached absolute pop­
ulation saturation. Only emigration of more
than 50,000 persons annually can solve Its
manpower surplus.
While Ills, report held that West Ger­
many can absorb the large number of refu­
gees It acquired in the past few years, capi­
WASHINGTON u b-F oi the first
tal is needed to make this possible. Even
time In more thin 20 years tbe
here, however, emigration for about 200,000 Senate tod*} began a full Invcitl
iwrsona is. recommended.
gation.of ihe atock market. The
Italy ran absorb n slightly higher per­ cause: the market boom which has
lasted IS monthi. Prices are the
centage of its foreign population than at highest in history.
present through better organization of ita The purposes:
1. To sec If there is danger the
internal resources, but this requires foreign
capital. However, tho report concludes that ooom may end in a bust like that
,f 1929 The last Senate investiga­
the problem cannot be solved unless Italy tion. 1933-34 grew out of that bust.
can arrange for the emigration o f 300,00 2. To examine market practices
persons annually for tho next 10 years. *nd operattona under the govern
Simitar problems exist In underdeveloped ment restrictions snd regulations
imposed since Ihe last investtga
Greece, and to a leaser extent in Turkey.
tion.

JAMES MARLOW

Market Probe First In 2 0 Years

Predicting A Hurricane

1 :
’ f v

HAL n o r L B

BONK "OP (T“-!T!NnON

Which would you rnther have, zero
weather or a hurricane? Somo could get
along without either. These were told by
Robert If. Simpson of tho New York City
atAtiun of the Weather Bureau, that this
is a real alternative. It is apparently more
than a coincidence that tho last few years
have produced simultaneously both milder
winters and hurrican visitations.
Much Investigation Is needed before the
probable paths o f hurricanes can bo charted.
If tills investigation receives adequated fin*
nncial backing, It should be possible within
five years to tell at least where a tropical
gale will not h it The actual path o f the
storm will be harder to pinpoint
The trouble la that the necessary re*
search wfl^ cost money.

1. To eee whether new regula
lions ere needed to protect both
the national economy and the gentrsl public from excesses or dis­
aster.
The tnquny, made by the Senate
Hanking Committee, opened on a
(nothing note. The chairman, Sen.
Fulbrlght (D-Ark), emphasised he
doesn't wxnl to rock the boat lust look at It. A "friendly" In­
quiry, he eslls It
„
,
At least 0» top specialist* In
finance and industry, in and out
of gevsmmeat. wlU appear as wit­
nesses After listening thw# week*
the committee wUl digest whet H
leaned and then start sgsin.
The seep* of the tovastlgaUon
..V b * uad-r.tood from FulbAaht'i
statement thet hi* committee
sought aa wltoesse* people quail
fied to the** Held*:
The general eeoeomle picture,
D u lln e s s conditions. credit aad tax
policies, investment companies,

pension fund snd union fund parliclpstlun lie Investments, equitfi;
ticipation in investments equity and
financing and slock exchange mem
her trading
On Feb • the committee mailed
* questionnaire to 5,500 brokers,
dealers investment advisers, flnanr,al wntcr* and economists About
22 per rent replied.
In genetai the participants in Ihe
ouytng and selling of slocks ex­
pressed fuu confidence in tho mar­
ket. The economists as a group
reflected, as Fulbrlght described
‘i a greatei degree of caution.
Fulbrtgb: pointedly expressed
(.•me concern about the impulsive
people who have moriey to Invest
snd may make decisions on Ihe
basis of one day's testimony by one
witness lie said:
“ I want to suggest merely as a
cautionary reminder, that what

MKTBRKD GOI.D
BAST HAVEN, CONN. (UP) Police found gold to a parking me­
ter - a century o ld ts.so gold
piece They returned It to a wo­
man who said It belonged to her
eight-year-old son. She dropped It
in the meter by mistake

may be he*rd on any slngla day
•rom a high source may ba at­
tached roo' and branch on the
following diy by an equally high
sou rce.'
This wax another way of laying:
No matter what you hear from day
'.u day don't start guessing about
tnc matket until the full story Is
unfolded.

unylhlng from ■ few hundred do)
)ars up (o, l would say, gto.ooo."
Clark use* a new ear hlmiell fur
daily drtvim, but Instate modem
models lack many qualities of tbe
old autos Granddad drove In the
adventurous age of motoring.
“ The new ears aU have aeveral
extra feet ot useless metal eneaeing nothing" be observed. “ Ami
a lot of them are plastered with
chromium pasted on for no obvious
reason.
“ They've sarrtfteed Individuality
at the sltat of mass production.
Unless you pick an unusual twotune joh, you can't tell one car
from anothei. But if you're driving
an 1804 risson you don't have any
trouble finding It in a parking lot.
“ The old ears had a lot of other
advantages. Fresh air, for one
•hing. And morn visibility. You
could see where you were going.
“ I have to admit the new ears
have better brakes. But if you gat
into a two loot enewfall, an aid
car will phw right through it. A
new car is too low. It Just piles
up the snow la front of It and
stalls.
“ A modem ear la alsa lost in
12-Inch mud An old ear wasn't.
A Model T could go places that no
niher car since It eeulg—except
•he Jeep.
"SpeedT That's nothing new la
motor cars. In 10N Frad Marriott
made 127 miles an hour In a Staniey Steamer. The next year he
was doing an astimatad UN to IM
when he bit a rough spot and everturned The car'a boiler went about
half a mile down tho track, but
Frad survived.
“ In the Faria to Madrid rate
back In 1903 they achieved ■ speed
of so miles an hour. But they

killed 10 many spectator*, along
tbe way—I believe It was about
40—they had to call off the race."
"They bad some horrible seeltents in the oid days, Just as they
do now (n *erms of safety the only
thing that hasn’t changed In th
automobile la the nut behind
wheel."
Clark believes the most valuable
and desiraole old car in the coun­
try is his 1910 Simplex sports car,
which * will still do 00 to M mllea
*n hour easily."
Many af the antique eari h*
searches out to buy and restore
are found to eld family bams and
estate garages Others, surprising­
ly. are still on the roads.
m
“ Thai eao be embarrassing,” ha
■aughad
‘Sometime* an owner
gets Indignant when you tell him
you want to buy and preserve aa
aa antique th* car ha drives every
day.
“ Th* awner may not necessarily
no poor either. I understand th*
Aston hsva a ton Rolls Royca
which they sometimes still usa for
tRamoor occasions.”
Clark who recently sponsarady
th* 'Carnival of C a n " aa Broad­
way keepa mast af hli antique*
la a museum at Southhampton.
Oat of hti trite exhibits, a 190*
Aditni-Farwcll with a rotating aagin# that spins Uka a top, haa a
feature which Detroit might well
consider pulling Into its &gt;IM model
•t plena caution* wives.
“ You can drivs It from either
tho frost or back teat," said Clari^
Although there la a tradition that
were Invented at Tarentum
about 4M B. C., they have b e n
used by peop'es of Asia and Afri­
ca from time immemorial.

Kites

SAM DAWSON

Senators Wonder About Surge
NEW YORK tri—Been kicking
vourscl! because you didn’ t mika
* killing by buying stocks a year
agoT
Well tike heart. Some U.S. sen­
ators itart wondering out loud to
Jay atyiut now come stock prices
went uo so much faster and higher
than they and most pcoplo had
expected.
And thara are a lot of “ finan­
cial expert*'* in thli town—and
perhaps in your town too—who
didn't rorevea how big the bull
market world grow either.
The senators may, somewhere

tie money tor what it really waaV
ad. when it thought the priee wee
right. Bn. many corporations did
right well to miking profits gad
handing out dividends.
And the publie. onpredktibly
dropped the eloofneas to the stock
market which It kid maintained
since the unhappy days of l t a .
ft hae been to the merket to recent
weeks, trading tip* and rumorsand puking op price*.
"
The senators may aik tome
q u a tto u about that-abeut the
•Jpe nod the ru m en end the extent
ef public's urge to epeeuUto.

along to their study of the stock
merket, point a finger at " y e u " •h# public. For tho public didn't
act the way soma financial exports
Pgurad U would a year ago.
At that time the stock market
already had been climbing sharply
for several months. And maey axoerix thought It wa* due for a set­
back, or at least n slowdown la
the rate of climb.
Industrial production wee slipDing at that time, and the ex a m s
thought public confidence would be
shaken.
But it didn't turn cut that why.

UNLOADING

very large bear waa killed to !M4
In thet high and dry area around
which It was tow and swampy
known ae a “ Wekiv* Swamp
Lands".
This area is ideally suited tor
dtru i aad there are approximate­
ly too home* to this area at the
t time ringing to prices up
,000, of which many were
homesteaded at the turn of the

CO M PLETE

STO CK

U SED C A R S
BELOW COST

^

Mi* vicinity. ■. H. MaNaOl per-

■Meed approximately MB acres
tom e aad the following year M
waa plotted off to » tor* plots
Bad named WMeiU's Orange VUla
Mbdivlaloa which la located o«
Ihe east tad of Big Baer Lake.
Ifcla aecttea eeetatoa three lakes

1955

TAG

W ITH

EV ER Y

CAR I

1 9 4 7

Okfomobllt M u *

$ 2 9 5 -0 0

1 9 4 7

B^ CE ^ aG o £ ^ £ S o n rr**

1 9 5 0

Buick Super Sedan, fully equipped.

$ 8 5 0 0 0

1 9 5 0

Buick Special Mam Djraafla, Radio* A Beal B*y.

$ 8 9 0 *0 0

1951

Chevrolet B«1 Air, Herd To*

1 9 4 9

Ford

1 9 5 3

» « * ~ " w

1 9 5 3

Buick RM Coupe, Dynaflo, Radio, Hooter
Power Steering, Power Brakes,
Eloetric Windows.

" *

$

$39500
i* a -,r * .* * *

. 1 9 5 3
a

0

$ - ,.« « —

I

I - —— ^

Ifcitf. doubly fciib to . . . •»&lt;

350.00

^

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.

S o jc ia L
# Ohio State Alumni
To Attend Party
A t Racquet Club
Reservation* already made for
the Ohio State University Alumni
party to be held at the Winter
Park Racquet Club on March 10
Indicate a large turnout.
The dinner and reception I* In
hnnor of John B Fulton, alumni
a leeretary, who is making a tour
* of fiftern alumni clubs in the south
and west. He will show films and
speak informally on campus and
alumni activities.
A- buffet style chicken dinner
will be served. All Ohio State
alumni are Invited and can make
reservations by calling Mrs. Baefcelder at the Winter Park Racquet
Club. W. P. 5-4931, or Mr. l-eroy
B Coffman at Orlando 2-1653
A
To date reservations have been
made by the following Orlandif
resident*: Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Gerdts, Donald Krafl, W. B. Cal­
kins, Mr. and Mrs. Tracy Pilling
er. Dr. and Mrs. Calvin Willruth.
David Cunningham, Mr. and Mrs*
I. H. Gilbert.
Reservations from Winlcr Park
Include Mr. end Mrs Leroy Coff­
man, Mr. and Mr*. Carl Baldwin,
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Bolsnder, Ms| Jor and Mrs. G. C. Wolf. Mrs E.
O. Buxton, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Kimberly.
Out of town reservations are Mr.
and Mrs- George Calkins and Dr.
and Mrs. T. W. Schrodder, Daytuna Beach; Mr. and Mrs. Ervin
Lewis, Mt. Dora; Mr. and Mrs.
Sara Hlgginbottnm. Babson Park;
Mr. and Mrs. Fioyd Snyder, Or­
mond Beach.
Also Mr. and Mrs John Fill9 Patrick, Mr. and Mrs. John Wil­
liams, Lt. T. R. Sheibcnberger,
from Sanford. Mr. Fullcn, the
tmnorcc, will bring his Iwo aunts,
the Misses Reck, who live in Or­
lando, and Dr. Peter Roy, presi­
dent of the Jacksonville alumni
club, end Mrs. Roy.

* VC-5 Welcomed
• Home With Dance
A Welcome Home VC-8 dance
was held at the USO Saturday
eight with dancing on the paliu
adding to teh enjoyment
Many
were onhand to celebrate
the
event and refreshment* o f coffee
and cake were served by junior
hostesses Miss Pat Cassutw anJ
MiTin,asF
NaMTMfWl ilyNEct
Mil* Barbara Gill. Also assisting
4 : wen* Mrs. W. P. Yesley and hire.
V. H, Grantham from the Chris-tian Chureh.
' Sunday night a large crowd
was on hand to enjoy TV night
with Miss Dot Teslo end Miss
Margaret Von Herbulis acting as
junior hostesses. Ladies from the
Congregational Beth Israel acted
as senior hostesses. Refreshments
were served.

Blonde Hair Best
For Accurate
Humidity Record
BALTIMORE— Instrument mak­
ers, a meticulous lot at best, prefer blondes with hair at least 14
•4 . inches long.
Strictly deadpan, these preclBlon-mindcd gents will also tell
you they have na (scientific) In­
terest in blonde tresses which
have been defiled by chemicals
or curling irons.
Anyona who has watched the
traffic in and out of a beauty
parlor would think thesa men of
science have laid down require­
ments impossible of attainment.
But the Fries Instrument Di­
vision of Bendls Aviation Corp.
reports it buys about 800,000 such
hairs each year.
It stems hum in blond hslr un­
touched by dyo or curling Iron
works bettar than any other
- known substaneo as the controll­
ing (actor la a device to record
humidity.
Such hair absorbs moisture
consistently under given coodi^ 6 Dons and always dries out at the
asm a rate. About tight strands
i used to an instrument- The
ir stretches as the humidity
goes op and It abaorbs moisture,
Aa it drfaa out, it grow* taut Tbe
■
f -----------The flavor and nutritive value o f
an egg yolk art not affected by
the cater of tho yolk. Color is de­
termined by heredity aad
•etna by Urn ban.

C

h O T IC I

I win aat ka n aasnrikls far
debt* tnewrrad by
than asywH.
PUUaa
i t . «.

■M-A

Lake Mary Church I
Members Are Led
In World Assembly

Eustis Garden Barn
Toured By Ladies
Of Central Circle

ROBERT McDOWELL Kentucklaa who has earned a brilliant
reputation as pianist with the
Chicago Symphony nnd other or­
chestras, will sppear at Elisabeth
llall In Del.and. This la the final
roncert of the '54-’55 aerie* to be
presented under the inspire* of
the Dr Land Civic Music Associ­
ation.

Truthseekers Meet
A t McKinley Hall
The Trulhsrrkers Class of tbe
First Methodist Church met lssl
week in McKinley Hall.
The meeting opened in regular
form with Mrs. Turner, president,
being in charge of the devotional.
Scripture waa a portion of the
First Chapter o f Luke
after
which
the class
song, “ Help
Somrbody Today."
Mrs. Nellie Vaughan, secretary,
read tho minutes and a thankyou note from the Punlys for
the stove and oil donated by the
class and Roy Wall. The Purdy*
also thanked the class for helping
them be comfortable during the
long winter months.
Mrs, Turner expressed thanks
to the members who helped make
the wedding party a success.
Mr*. T. E. Wilson reported
that Mr*. R. F. Crenshaw’* son
Olin, would undergo surgery at
Rome, Ga.
Various report* were given by
officers and there waa a collec­
tion of dues. A committee was ap­
pointed to visit shut-in* and the
sick. At the close Mrs, Turner
called for a Testimony meeting
stating that this was tho very
time to become refreshed for tho
revival.
8cvcra! testimonies were given
and praise to God for his wonder­
ful blessing these past years waa
spoken by alL The meeting closed
with prayer.
The Jiostcsaes, Mrs.
Reauia
Moye and * Mrs. C. A. I’bnder
served Russian tea and cake* la
24 members.

American Pottery
Winners O f Awards
American Artist* era making
some of
the most
beautiful
ceramics In the world,
experts
agreed whan viewing the recent
exhibition
at
tha
Syracuse
Museum o f Fine Arts, Syracuse,
N. Y.
A total o f 17 award* totaling
12,700 were announced
at tha
opening o f the colorful show, In
which competition was open to
sculptors,
potters.
cnamelista
and architects,
Much interest centered around
the
dinnerwara displays,
in
which awards ware madeas
follows:
China award,
"Noeturne,” In which the
pattern
was created under tho direction
o f Richard U. Garvin and
the
shape designed by Garvin
and
Donald E. Follcy, Pottery and
porctlaln
award,
"Daybreak,”
designed by Don fichreckengost.
Stoneware award, a design
by
Edith Heath.
’
In tha handmade pottery sec­
tion, designers showed tea and
carafes, puneh bowls and cups.
Unusual table srttings
were
shown,
In
which
handmade
pottery
dinner*am
waa cum■tael cutlery and
hand woven
blned
with
modern itainlcu
linen table mat*.
action move* levers which record
tha humidity.
Harry J. Grady, purchasing
agent for the division, says ha
gala low o f offers from woman
wllllng.to sell a bit of their crown1*1 diary.
&lt;
One lady accompanied her otter
with aa admonition. "Don’t tall
a y husband.’ ’ Grady says the
company doesn't.
A small girl tried to palm off
soma hair from her doll. And one
woman aOtrnd tha hslr o f a dog—’
literally.
Grady aays It Isn't known ex­
actly why shades other than
Hands w ant do. Ha guesses U
may be tha pigment
ent.
For tha depart
nv
rtment
o f stalls9 « k M felma about
b a in M inches long to make aa

NOTICE
An Calendar
Liftings And
Nawa

The Central Circle o f the San­
ford Gatdcn Club had a garden
run to Eustis where they met at
the Garden Barn. Hostesses were
Mrs. Zcb Ratliff, Mrs. George
•McCall and Mrs. R. C. Moore.
The meeting opened with a re­
cipe for’ enjoying life. gixe« by
Mrs. It. C. Moore, chairman,
The flower show which will be
held April 28-29, was discussed
and members were lemimlcd to
get the plants ready for the plant
sale, it was discovered that 559
plants were exchanged during the
month with most o f them going to
the school children.
Mrs.
Rossettrr,
horticulture
chairman, announced at this time
to cut back and fertilize plants,
lt waa announced that 24 national
parka were visited by members
during the last year.
Delegates were elected to at­
tend the Stale Convention in Jack­
sonville, April 14-16. Mrs. B. C.
Moore, delegate, Mrs.
B.
E.
Pugh, alternate, and Mrs. Frank
Evans second alternate.
Mrs.
Grorgc McCall program chairman,
introduced Rcba F. Harris, who
lectured on stowing and utilizing
everything grown in the garden
and using waste material
for
compost pite*. Mis*
Olive
H.
Williams then presented a pro­
gram of colorful slides on flower­
ing trees which were greatly en­
joyed by all.
At noon a nose-bag feed waa
enjoyed in the bam. The nouesaea
scr ved drink* and decorated cakes.
After luncheon
the member*
were conducted on a lour of the
gardens. Those attending were
Mrs. Lloyd Leadnran, Mrs. F. IL
Hill, Mrs. Frank Evans, Mrs. A.
C. Benson, Mis* Alice It. Cooper,
Mrs. J. W, Schwarz, Miss Ade­
laide Conte, Mr*. A. K. Rossctter,
Mrs. E. M. Hoke, Mr*. Georg*
McCall, Mr*. Zcb Ratliff
and
Mrs. B. C. Moore.

Handsome Actor
Starts Up Career
Seemingly Ruined
HOLLYWOOD '.P -A year has
passed since handsome young Dick
Contino resumed a career (hit once
seemed ruined. Now the accordion­
ist Is looking fur new fields to
conquer.
lie scents to have re-cstabllshrd
himself in the show world by
means of hard work, During the
year, he ha* spent 45 weeks per­
forming throughout the country.
Although he can now earn an
average $3,500 weekly in night
clubs and $7,500 In Las Vegas,
Contino Is slowing down on the
nitery dates.
" I want to try tha movie* and
TV,” he says. “ It's not that I’m
against night rlubs. But I want to
find new challenges. I think it's
bad to believe that you are limited
to one field only."
Contino has rhanged a great ileal
from the last time I aaw him. That
was just three years ago, after he
bad served 4tb months at MrN'eill
Island Prison, Wash. He had plead­
ed guilty o( failing to report for
Army induction.
Now 25, Contino is an Inch taller,
more filled out and seems to be
better adjusted to life. Ha admitted
that he fell easier with people and
credited his Army experience for
that. Ha spent two years In (he
service, much of H entertaining
troops In Korea.
"The Army did a lot for m e,"
he said. "It gave me an assurance
that I never had before.
"You mutt remember what my
life has been like. I graduated from
high srhoot in June of 1847. In
December 1*47, I entered show
business. I never belonged to any
fraternities or clubs In high school.
1 think I bid only two data* with
girls when 1 waa in school.
" I could get along with people
when I waa talking In a group
around a table. But the minute I
had to walk up on the stage and
entertain, a wall came down be’ ween me and the audience. 1 felt
I had to give everything 1 had to
get across.
"But in the Army It was differ­
ent. They appreciated having en­
tertainment, and you could feel
the frlendliueia from them because
I was one of them. I got so I
could catch the mood of the audi­
ence end give them whatever they
wanted. Sometimes my accordion
would give out and I played the
piano or sang.
" I incorporated thesa things Into
my night club act when I got
back. Now I don't feel that I have
to knock myself out. It's more like
entertaining soma friends In your
own living room. I play the piano
a little, slag a little and play tha
accordion."
ounce. Bendix uses up loo ounces
par year, according to Grady.
The market so far is monopo­
lised by women. Hen haven't
been able to meet the 14-inch
requirement.
U they should, "that would be
tha day," murmured Grady.

DON'T MISS TH E

2nd

B r ig , n . n »
M

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M iffr ili

A n

★

A

★

★

★

Sala
F fc.

1717

★

Impressive Ceremonies Unite
Miss Cameron, W .Sullivan Jr.
The AH Soul’s Catholic Cliuivh was the stone o f the wedding
which united Miss Jacqueline Marline Cameron and William John Sulli­
van Jr. in marriage Saturday afternoop at 5:'t0 o'clock.
The bride la the daughter o f Mr and Mis John McLean Cameron
o f Sanford, anil the hridegroum is tha soil i t Mr. and Mis. William
John Sullivan Sr. of Decatur, Ga.
The bride’ * father escoited her styled with an empire waistline,
to the altar which was decorated featuring ■ "V " neckline nnd el­
with standing basket arrango- bow length sleeve*. She chose
picnts of white gladioli, white rccesaorlea o f n lighter simile of
pom poms, and palm*. The single blue and wore a «lute orchid cor­
ring ceremony was performed by sage.
Father William YIcGuiru of Atlan­
Following the wed ling, a reta. Ga.
Mrs. F. E Roumillal, aoloist and ecplion was held nt the Woman’s
organist, sting Schubert's "A ve Club. Guests win- greeted at the
Mari*’’ and softly played during ihmr by Mrs. Cull William* and
the ceremony " 0 Perfect Love". Mis. James Blankenship. The
The traditional wedding marches bride'* table wav laid with an lmpoited white linen cloth. Crystal
were used.
tnmilcluhra held burning tapers
The biide was lovely In a waltz and the punch was served front
length gown of Princes* hue ovrr two crystal howls at each end of
satin. The fitted bodice flowing the labln, Thr four tiered cake
into an extremely bouffant skirl •*'■* topped with a miri.itme bride
featured an Edwardian collar ami and gloom.
wa* styled with full length sleeves
The table was flunked on either
ending In a point at the wrist. The
elbow length veil of silk Illusion side by baskets of white gladioli
and white pom poms. Mngrmtia
m i attached to a cloche type
tiara o f lace embroidered with leaves and while gladioli were
bride'* Jrwcl*. The bride’* Imuqurt used throughout the club.
8erving rake wrie Mis. Ver­
was fashioned of white rat nations
non Hardin, Mis. Ray Ozler, and
centered with a whit* orchid.
Mis* Martha Anne Cameron of M r*.' Dorothy Cotrudi. Serving
Sanford, lister o f the bride, was punch were .Ml*. Edwin' Clapp,
her only attendant. She was &gt;lrt. Wesley Fiilnton, Mr*. K. J.
gowned in a ballerina length dies* Moughton Jr. and Mrs. Grrgnry
of ice blue cryatalette taffeta de­ Kinlnw, Floating hostessel were
signed with a moulded bodice Mrs. W. Fite, Mrs. J. E. Gradirk,
gracefully draped to the fitted Mr*. Richard Hass, and Mia. Milwaistline and featuring a very ton Moote. Mis. Itulicit Mcl.ellan,
full skirt. The strapless dem!-. kept thr* brido's hook.
Mrs. Sullivan is a graduate of
letage, filled in with nylon tulln
waa covered by a matching fiachu. Seminole High Si haul nnd the
Sne wore a matching half-hat o f Crawford W. Long School o f
nylon tulle, embroidered with Nursing In Atlanta. Ga.
Mr. Sullivan attended schools
pearls and a nose veil and car­
ried a bouquet of pink carnation*. in Atlanta and is a g(urinate of
Serving aa best man for Mr. Emory University’ wlnre he was
Sullivan wa* hi» father, W, J. a member o f ,Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Sullivan Hr. of Decatur, Ga. Fraternity, Hr Is associated with
Uahers wera Robert Mrl^llan the DeVillds* Company.
Mr*. Sullivan chose for travel­
and Edwin Clapp o f Atlanta and
ing a two piece beige linen suit
Kirby File Jr. of Sanfoid.
The mother of the bride chose (tafuring a large collar yf brown
fur her daughter's wedding an af­ unit fiesta, She wore matching
ternoon length gown of Dior blue accessories and an orchid corsage.
After a wedding tup to Mexico
taffeta/ styled on princes* lines
with a very fulT akirt and fea­ the rouple will be at home at 465
turing an Empire waistline, ac­ Lutiiisn* Drive, N. E., Atlanta,
cented by a deep "V " neckline and Ga.,
Out-of-town
guest* for the
short aleevea. She wore a laticework Juliet cap o f the same ma­ wedding included: Mr, and Sir*.
terial, studded with shaded pearls W. C. Mundre and Mr. and Mr*.
and harmonising accessories. She .M. C. Cameton of Jacksonville;
Mrs. Mary A. Cameron of Leeswor a white orchid corsage.
Mrs. Sullivan chose for the oc­ Lurg; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mecasion an afternoon length gown Lellan, Mr. and Mr*. Richaid
o f navy blue lace ovrr taffeta Kane, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Clapp,

SH O ES

rnd Mr. and Mr*. W. J. Sullivan
Sr. of Atlanta; Mr. and Mra.
Merton Murphy, the Mi**e* San­
dra and Maxine Murphy o f St.
Peterahurg; and Mr. ami Mr*. R.
H *Cheer o f Miami.
Bake a package of rake mix in
two layer* Spill one layer In half
to make two thin layers amt sand­
wich together with prepared pack­
aged vanilla pudding; lop with
chocolate frosting Top the remain
mg rake layer with penuche frost­
ing and save for another meal.
Marinate thin onion rinifl In wine
vlnlgar to which a little sugar has
Seen added
Serve the drained
rings wilh solid-pack tuna fish,
homemade mayonnaise, a howl of
rrisp greens and crusty rolls for a
delirious and
satisfying lunch.
Fresh fruit and cofffce for dessert.

FOR MEN

FOR LADIES

• N naaB a*
• Freeman
• Ruble*

e Paradis*
• Naturaliier
e American Girl

FOR CHILDREN
. *

Calendar

MONDAY
THURSDAY
The Palm Circle of Ih* Sanford
The
First
Baptist
Sunday
School Worker’s Council meeting Garden Club will meet nt 9:30 w
will begin at 7 p. m. with a cover­ m. at the home of Mrs. Robert
ed dish supper in thr Memorial Bauman with Mrs, Arthur Pitts
Educational Building, The regular to be co-hostess.
FRIDAY
meeting will bcgili at 7:30 p. m.
The Hihiscu* Circle of the Gar­
Evening Circle No, 2, of the
First Presbyterian Church, Mrs. den Club will meet nt tho homo
C. IV. Johnson, Chairman,
will of Mrs. Joe Melsch on West Firs*
meet with Mrs. John A. Burton, St. at 10 a m. After a short busi­
1309 Palmetto Ave.. at S p.m. Mr*. ness meeting a trip to the l.ee-,*
Henry D’ Amico and Mrs. D. P. burg nursery for luncheon will
be taken. Each member
will
Lanier co-hostesses.
Circles o f the First Methodist bring a covered dish.
The Duplicate Bridge Cluh will
Church will meet as follow*: Cir­
cle 1 at McKinley Hall, 3 p.m., meet in the Yacht Club with seat­
with Mrs. Clyde Ramsey and Mrs. ing to start at 7:45 p. m. and
Lion Stall; Circle 2 with Mr*. A. play to begin at R o’clock.
The Dirt Gardeners Circle of
F. Collum. 200 W. Id St. at 3 p.m.;
will
Cirrle 3 with Mrs. J. C. Meriweth­ the Sanford Garden Cluh
er. Celery Ave. at 3 p.m.; Circle 4 meet with Mrs. Harry Cushing in
with Mr*. J. M. Hayes, 119 W. Id Loch Arbor at 10 a. tn. An inter*
St. at 3 p.m.; Circle fi with Mrs. esting garden quiz will be held.
SUNDAY
John Garrison. t0.’ 3 W 25 St., at
High attendance day will be
10 a.m.; Circle 7 with Mrs. Jamrs
Williamson, 201 W. ISth St. 8 observed in Sunday School and
Family Day in the morning wor­
p.m.
llctn Sigma Thi wilt meet at B ship service at tho Ccntial Bap­
p.m. nt the home of Mrs. \V. G. tist Church.
Firming, 2017 Mrllonvillf At*.,
with Mr*. L. Hawkins Connelly as
eo-hostasi.
T U E snxY
The Gleaners Class will have
a monthly meeting at the First| Friends of L. R. Brnrelle, fath­
Baptist Church’* annex at 7:30 er of Mrs. IL R, Herndon, 1020
p. m. Mr*. V. P. Hasty will ba Myrtle Ave,, will he sorry
to
hostess.
learn that he has been admitted
The Pilot Club will hold its re­ to Florida Sanitarium and Hos­
gular business meeting In tho pital, (ljlando fur observation and
Yacht d u b at R p.m. The board treatment.
will meet at 7:30 p.m,
St. Monica Chapter of Holy
Miss Jane Davis. Mis*
Gail
Cross Episcopal Church will m&lt;el Bitting and Miss Reverly Giay,
with Mrs. J. E. Anderson, $04 students at Florida State Uni­
l’a*t 20th St., at 8 p.m.
versity in Tallahn.ssee, spent the
The regular monthly meeting of weekend with their parents.
•'ongiegational Itelh Israel will
Mr. and Mrs A. C. Cleveland
Ih held at the Jewish Center. Mag­
nolia Ave. and 10th St at 8 p m. and daughters, Jeanette nnd Carol
at
New
St. Mary’s Chapter of H oly spent the weekend
Cross Episcopal Chureh will meet Smyrna Beach.
at the home of Mrs. A. R. Pinker­
ton. 1911 Magnolia Ave.. at 8 p.m
Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Rukttr
The Daughter* o f Wesley Sun*| are celebrating their 29th wed­
day School Class o f th* First ding anniversary today.
Methodist Chureh, wilt inert at
7:311 p. m. in McKinley Hail,
Add varum seasoning tn ground
with Mr*. Robert Cole, Mrs. Don­ beef — horseradish, prepared mus­
ald Dunn, Mr*. Grace Gregory, tard. grated onion or crushed gar­
Mr*. Louise Knowles, Mrs. J, M. lic and cjtchup Spread the cut
MeCaskiil and Mrs. M. B. Smith side* of hamburger buns with the
as ro-hostesses.
meat mixture, making sure it coy.
The First
Baptist
Concord er* the edge* of Ihe roll. Broil sev­
Choir will hold rehearsal at 6:3(1 eral Inches from high heal until
p. m.
meat is done as much as desired.
The
First Baptist Intermedi­ Watch carefully so thal the meat
ate Ambassador* will meet at won’t be overdone. Y'ou can spread
7 p. m.
six hamburger buns with a pound
Anna Miller Circle will meet at of meat this way.
the Elks Club at S p. m.
The Unily Class will meet at the
Valdez Hotel at 7:45 p. ni. with
Carolyn Parsons as teacher. The
study hook will he continued, and
the public is Invited.
Circle No. 5 of Ihe Methodist
LAST TIME TONIGHT
Chureh a ill meet at the home of
STARTS 6:50
Mrs. L. A. Anderson, 2017 Hibi­
Feature 7:17 - 0:57
scus CL, at 10 a m.
It. W. A. circle of Ihe First
Christian Church will meet at
Circle* of th* First Methodist
Chureh will meet aa foliows: Cir­
cle 8 with Mra. Walter Clapp,
2112 Decotts Axe. at 8 p.m.; Cir­
cle 9 with Mrs J. M. Blanton, 402
W. 20 St., at 9:30 a,m.
The Horticulture Chairmen of
tha Sanford Garden Club wilt
meet at the home of Mis. IL
James Gut 1921 Palmetto Ave. at
10 a m.
Tho Junior High School P-TAj
will inert in the school auditorium
at 8 p. m. Ihe executive hoard
will mrrt in Ihe library at 7:3(1
o ’clock.
■ &gt;.**»•
The WutnaiT* Rlble Class of the
First Baptist Churrh will meet
at 7:3(1 p. m. at the home o f Mrs.
Vnlie Williams, 609 Magnolia Ave.
with Group No. 4 aa hostesses.
WEDNESDAY
The First Raptist Carol Choir
will hold rehearsal at 3:30 p.m.
The First Baptist Prayer Mrct.ng sen ire will begin at 7:50 p.m.
A&gt; coni mile with the study o( the
book “ A Winning Witness.’’
THURSDAY
The First Baptist Carol Choir
will hold iclii areal at 3:30 p.m.
The First Baptist Crutadrr
Choir will hold rehearsal at (I p.m.
The Junior Royal Ambassador*
will meet at tha First Baptist
Church at 7 p.m.
The First llaptirt Chureh Choir
will hold i choanal at 7:30 p m.
Thu Azalea Cirrle o f the Garden
Club wilt meet at tho Garden
Center at 8 p. m.

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"S T A R T B T O M O R R O W *
I
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■ WUJAM iHAKCBSVARt * R

I JUUUS P
I CAESAR. MRU KAMI

*SA N Ep R D

"W h en equality la higher then price"

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Page 5

MUMh 81

* FIIA Improvement

m

IMtflUr AZHUNCE CfNIHt

Ilf

MIIS, W. J. SULLIVAN JR.

Recently, members of the Lake
Mary Presbyterian Church, togeth­
er wilh members from the Upsaia
Church and from the Glcnwood
Church were led by Mr*. Daisy
Douglas of Wrirsdale in the
World Affair* Assembly, which
was in Ihe nature of a forum.
Three speakers, furnished by ihe
Board of Foreign Missions and In­
troduced by Mrs Douglas, who is
Ihe Florida Synod representative
on that national Roard, talked
about the field* of Iheir endeavor*
and then answered questions pos­
ed by the audience.
Mrs. A. E. Harper of Moga, In­
dia, guest spcaV.r of the morning,
began the progranj. She was dress­
ed in a lovely blue sari, the na­
tional costume of India, and gave
a brief description of the garment.
She painted a vivid picture of Iheir
village school, designed to educate
hoys and girls of the village who
had no chance to learn Education
had always been for the wealthy
before the Harpers' system took
shape. As Ihe pupils came primar­
ily from a depressed class, the
school was a self-help affair, and
it was found that thr project
method, which such a school made
neccssacy, actually developed the
pupils mure than a fixed curicuhim.
The Punjab state has adopted
Hits method nnd Moga ha» trained
3.000 teachers. The heads of the
Punjab organizations, such as hos­
pitals and schools are in Indian
Christians and from these enlight
coed leadership ran be expected
The Rev, William A. Zocrnrr of
Lahore, Pakistan was Ihe second
-pcaker. He gave a brief historical
sketch of East and West Pakistan,
explaining that the Moslems hail
been there since Ihe righlh ern
lury and had never amalgamated
with Ihe Hindu*. He drseribed the
shift of Hindus and Moslrms at
the lime of partition and Ihe re
suiting riots and massacres and
was proud to report tha the Chris
ian communities behaved hrauti
fully during this period of tragrdy.
They sewed red crosses, marie of
doth or paper on their clothes to
show Iheir Christianity
The Rev. Alan IL Hamilton.
Principal of Ihe Mission School in
Caracas, Venezuela was thr last
speaker, and began by bringing
greetings from all Ihe Protestant*
of Latin America. He explained
why there were and should lie Pro­
testant missions in Lalln America,
whit’ll is supposedly a Catholic
country.* He outlined the contem­
porary situation in Venezuela
where there is great liberty to
purstir Christianity and where the
church is dynamic. He then an­
swered his own question of
“ Where Do We Go Now," by out­
lining the nerd for missionaries lo
train the young men. the need of
prayrr and finances. “ While the
Venezuelin Christians are doing
a magnilirient work, and are aim­
ing at self support they still need
mir help in the new day in mis­
sions."
*
Following Ihp question and an
swer forum, Din ladies of the host
church under the ahlc chairman­
ship of Mr* George R Patterson,
served a hnimti/11! revered dish
■upper In the guests and fellow
church members.
After Ihe supper, the forum was
eonlinucd for a short time and
the prugrarn closed with the pro­
jection of colored slides, depicting
the life and thr progress of Vene­
zuela. which Dr. Hamilton accom­
panied by an informative Irrturr
’ •rile '"n 'H
A .-s i-v .
was a great opportunity for ths
,.._ i t ....
a ...I Lake Mary was
indeed honored to have tlwce such
such able speaker* at the same
tim e," stated a Lake Mary resi­
dent.

AHE SANFORD HERALD Mnn. Mar. 7, 1035

FDIC

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take a look

in the
JfiLLOW PAGES

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SANFORD H ERAI.n

^CHAMPION MAKER - - • By Alan Mover

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M A ES EV ER HAP.

M «a *7-

Colleges Set
For Tourneys
By THE ASSOCIATED F’ ltEHS

Except for the Ivy Liugua race, which has yet to tie de­
cided, all the tumult and the shouting of the regular college
basketball season Is over. Now it's down to the serious busi­
ness of the NCAA and Nntlmial Invitation tournaments.
The Ivy League representative will be determined by
Wednesday at tha latest— n day
after the NCAA’ Tournament gets
under way. This la ths most com‘ ilad situation sine* the Ivlra
sa beeping records back in
&gt;902.
Here's the setup!
Princeton second la the league
arith a 9-4 record, closes its regular
•anion schedule against Brown in
ths first game of an unusual
deuble-haadar at Prlncton. Colum­
bia end Penn, who finished In e
tl* fo r flret with 10-4 record*,
•leib la the second gems.
If Princeton loiet, the nightcap
will be for the championship. Rut
Princeton la a strong favorite to
ship Brown, amt If tha Tleera da
Win, they'll meet tha second-game
wrtiaer Wednesday night on a
SMutral court fo r the title.
Until yesterday, the Missouri
(Volley Conference had the key te
• spot la both the NCAA end NIT.
T b s race wound up In a tie be­
tween BL Louie and Tulsa. The
winner o f a playoff was te play In
the NCAA end the runner-up the
MIT, Be they solved it by a con­
ference committee vote. Tul»* got
the NCAA epri aad Bt. Louie tha
K IT .
Be here's how they Haa ap In
the preliminary round o f the
MCAA tomorrow night at four
different *potsi
A t New Verb—'Williams, New
England representatives, vs. Cantalus; Duke, Atlantic Coast Con­
ference repm entatlve - ( N o r t h
Carolina Btato, the winner, is in-

K

e'lgible), vs. Villanovs; end de­
fending champion LaSalle vs.
West Virginia, Southern Confer­
ence tltliat.
At Lexington, Ky, — Miami of
Ohio, Mlil-Amerirsti Conference
champion, vs. Marquette, and I’cnn
Blnto vs. Memphis State.
A t San Francisco—Idaho State,
Rocky Mountain Conference cham­
pion, vs. Sesttle, and Ban Frsnrlaeo, ths No. 1 team In the As­
sociated Press poll, vs. West
Texas, which got the Border Con­
ference bid on the toes o f a coin
after tying with Texas Tech for
the title.
— At— nklahnmp— c ity —nkuhnm*
City U. vs. Bradley.
All the winners g o oa to the
second round Friday, which also
will be contested at four sites. At
that time, the eight conference
champions that drew first-round
byes also swing Into action. These
games will be played at Philadel­
phia, Evanston, 111., Manhattan,
Kan.( and Corvallis, Ore.
Friday's winner* play Satur­
day, with ths four victors then
going to the national semifinal*
and finals at Kansas City March
13-19,
Ths NIT will be In competition
with the NCAA Saturday with
two double-header satsions—Man­
hattan vs. Louisville, Lafayette
vs, Niagara. Betoa Hall vs. BL
Francis of Loretta, Pa., aad Con­
necticut vs. Bt. Louis.
The four seeded teams

Cleveland Power-Packed
As Wynn Signs Contract
Hurler To Get
About $40,000
For 1955Work
By SHELDON BAKOWITC
The Associated Pres*
Since pitching usually U the pre
dominant tactor In the success of
a pennant winner, the Cleveland
Indiana had good reason today to
gloat.
•
The last of the Tribe hurters,
Early Wynn, a perennial holdout,
cam* to terma yesterday. Tha
hard-working right-hander signed a
contract for about Mfl.ftOO.
Tea mi were not disclosed by
General Manager Hank Green
licrg, who still hat two recalci­
trants to contend with — second
baseman Bobby Avila and outfield
er Dave Phltley.
Wynn said, "You can say It end
cd In a draw. He (Greenberg)
gave In a little and so did I."
The Indiana seem to abnund in
pitching potential for the IBM cam
palgn
Wynn and Rob Lemon were tha
mainstays last season, winning 23
apiece, while Mike Garcia account
cd for IB victories and Art Iloutte
man contributed IS. That adds up
to DO of Cleveland's lit triumphs.
Veterans Boh Feller (11 vletm
ries) and Hal Newhouser (7), plus
rookie relievers Don Mossl ( 6 ) and
Bay Narinki (3), alto will he back
on the scene, hoping to duplicate
their 1954 aurceaa.
But Cleveland also la expecting
another pitcher, who wain't with
them lu t season, to be a big asset. He la Herb Score, a strapping
St-year-old left-handrr who com­
piled a H I record (or Indlanapo-

111,
Other happening! around the
spring training circuit:
Mickey Vernon of the Wishington Senators ended hli holdout by
signing for a reported 130,500.
With Ted Klusiewakt of the Cin­
cinnati Hcdlrgi plnch-hltting safe­
ly for both sides, big Klu'a team
edged the Gui Bella 1-1 in an lntrasquad game.
Bookies Boh S c k and Joe Sianka and v e t e r a n Bubba Church
pitched shutout ball aa tha Bladei
blanked the Leonards 5-q in a Chi­
cago Cub Intra-squad game.
Wall Dropo, hoping to plug the
Chicago White Box's first basa
gap, hit a hoinar and two singles in
the Sox lntra—squad contest
Third baaeman Jim Flnlgan da
liverod t h r e e bits end rookie
southpaw Carl Duscr allowed jua
one bit In three acortleis Innings
to highlight the Kansas City Ath­
letic*' first lntra—squad gams.
Home runs by Willie Maya and
Whilcy Lockman sparked the New
T m l&gt; fllsni’ 1 regi ^ r f
« Q-l r lr
lory over the rookies.
Bill Bruton belted an tnalda-thepark home run With two men on
bate as the regulars tied the scrubs
4-4 in an lntra—squad game at the
Milwaukee Brevea’ camp.
fending champion Roly Creaa, Dunuesne, Dayton and Cincinnati—
move Into action Monday and
Tuesday against the preliminary
winners.__________________

Sports
Roundup

By CABL R. OYER STREET
By GATLE TALBOT
NEW YORK UR - Tha decision
Coach Paul Mlkler added another feather to hla cap Saturday night
of Maureen Connolly to drop her
at the Oviedo Llona walked away with the Central Conference Basket­
racquet and grab a frying pan
comes as a oruel blow to woman's ball championship at Umatilla. Thua far this year the Lions have g e n f
tennis, which had shown •omij undaftetod la I t eneountora In season play plus the Class C Group •
signs at becoming ■ popular tpee tournament end the Central Conference.
talor sport again under.the slimu
This Wedneadsy afternoon *t 4:1B tha Lions will meet WewnhlSehka
lus of the lllile star’s pulverising
In tha Drat round In the State High School Basketball Tournament la
forehand and her refusal ever to
hit a shot with any thought In mind Gslneeville. The winner o f thie game stays on to play the victor e f
the Sopchoppy and Trenton game, In the eeml-ftnala Friday afternoon.
except to win a point outright
i
• Thera la no girl player Is sight The finale will be Saturday afternoon.

Printers Trim
Music Shops
Bowling Lead
The Celery City Printing Company cot Bakun's V o ile Shop lead to
seven game* by taking two of thrae games from the Burnett Painters
whlla the Muslcmen dropped two of three gamee to New York Life
Wednesday night. Stint Machine Company went all tha way in allotting
out tha Tommy's Radiator Shop by taking ell three games.
This Wednesday night finds red
hot Celery City taking on the
league leading Bukur’a Music
414
&gt;»
|»
(•hop, while third plaee Tommy's 44
ce Stint MachlnerJoh nSuiltvsn.V
m rT Y "1
Radiator Shop maeta tha Burnett
4*1
Painter*, lo s t place Stint Machine
4SI
will meet New York Life.
III
414
Bobby Borsdorf of the Celery
ISC
City five had high elngle and high
eerie* teat Wednesday night Bobby iw . r i l T * ”
'V T V
hit a HO for hlgh'+ndlvidual elngle
jjj HI iii 111
game and e total of 631 for high &gt; B.
• P. _____
series.
Iii li! 41*
I* H»aa
. . . . . . . . . III
419
Paul "King Flab" Peiold la attll 7 B
ila l
I II
head man In the Individual aver­ » T.iat
ages with a IW M average tn
aeventy-twe games, while Geerg#
•&gt;- KMJIW
Pexold la runner-up with e 1*7 J
t O. Kanla
average In aeventy-elght encoun­ * J- C ook*
• M. Mtabb
ters.
Be Tatai
In the Tl gemea played thoa _ _ 5£ * £ » * i uruaic swop
far thie season Bukur's Music
. . . it. •,,’ TJ,1
Shop has copped 41 while leeleg
f e „ .
30 to set the pace for the league
Second plaee Celery City Printing
. &lt;
im i ii i ii ^
Company has taken 41 while drop­ m rT
ping 37. Tommy’s Radiator Shop
end New York Life ere tied for
third place both teema taking M
•• m i l tea.
n m e i wblta loalng W. The Bur­ A- TanRarkolle
■* taras ist.tr
r. tiukur
U 1*117 141.1
nett Painter* have token 80 whlla M.
hi , ah
ST 4114 14114
losing 42 for fifth place. Leat II. Tamm
47 7(10 la i n
J.
c.i.ike
vs m u i«i.n
place Stine Maclna Shop haa won
If. H ack .ab a ck
l l l l o 1*n.|*
33 and lost 4B.
H. Hollar
l i ■sis iau.ee
n. Rieala
71
tzios
tsi,s»
The Celery City crew have high J. Kannar
Ti n it s is7.il
team average per game with a II. K ratier
2* n a il iiT.si
llarl n Irk
4 * l a t ll U 7.ll
776.1 with New York Life close W,
II. Mar
71 II10I 1*4 41
behind with a 771.28.
II. Ilarbat
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10471 1 l i . i t

to replace the San Diego alammer
either In potential ability or at a
box office draw. Until such time as
the vrorid'i champion decides she
can spare enough time from her
impending matrimony to resume
ber court earcer, as she eventu­
ally will, they would do as well
to take the women'* tingles off the
big board at Forest Hills.
There Is nothing more boring tn
ill sport* than a tennis match be­
tween two fairly good gal players.
Prior to the time Little Mo msdc
her electrifying appearance four
seasona ago and reawakened the
spectators, there had been an un­
usually'trying period of approxi­
mately a decade, going back to
Alice Marble's last appearance In
the championships In 1040, during
which K was difficult to keep the
eye* open.
The dreary hiatal ended add of a
sudden on the fall day in 1B53 when
the spectators in the stadium at
Forest Hills saw Little Mo swat a
tennis bad for tha first lima.
Though the stocky kid wat only
IT and plainly knew little about the
game's finer tactics — and cared
less — there was little doubt that
she was going to win that cham­
pionship and as many more as ihe
cared to collect.
With Juvenile disdain, tha Coast
kid battered her sray through the
old guard. She never layed a shot
safe, never hit a purely defensive
stroke. She proved again that
women's tennis could be exclstlng.
and we regret that she 1* breaking
off now before she haa had a
chance to consolidate her position
as one of lha very best the world
haa seen.
B olt?
PI arm

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Radiator Shop WOW t.
Sltna Machln* Co. t.
Raw Tork U fa In*. Co. waa I, B u ­
k in '* S im la S ho p |.
Celtry CMjr I'rln tln e Co. wow I.
H um an P a ln ta n 1.
THAW HIQH TURKU! RAMUS
Calarr City Print. Co.
s ill
Haw T ork U fa la*.
Co.
till
llurnau Paintar*
till
Ktlna Marhlna Co.
1111
Rukura Mualn Rbop
S ill

see ra* ■** ties
1W
• ■ • 1*HW

R A riT T h * o o .

SS.C. Hare* „
B Vonlftrbulle
s w . T rra.

t'arrnll
Riirnalt
Cobb
Col
or Mart
Uor

UlAai. lip.?

• • • • e

Speaking o f basketball, Hngh Carlton, Principal at Lake Mary
School, did a fine Job In running the Seminole Junior High BasketbetL
Tournament which ends) Friday night with the Lyman Junior H fglP
Girls taking the Oviedo gale by n score o f 42-11. Sanford Junior High
Team (1) dropped BUvla 43-18 in the ftnala
Mr. Carlton said: "It Is not our Ides to develop athletes. Our goal
Is much higher. We are stressing good cititenshlp, sportsmanship and
spirit. If nothing more, theta young people trill better be able te un­
derstand the gems o f basketball, have a better relationship with ether
children end other school* s i well as learning enough about the gnats
to be good spectatore."
If Mr. Carlton and the other coaches In the Junior High Schools^
around the county are not building good athletes, would someone show*
this poor scribe what a good Junior High teem leek* UkeT

• e a * a
The Seminole County Sportsman Association went on reeord lari
wi**k to extend the salt water shad season for 30 days. The organisa­
tion hat sent letter* to every other club In this ares, asking them to help
push this Iiaus. It's all la the Interest of sports fishing, ee all T«S
flshartaan might drop the Association a card end let them knew kow
}ou feel about the many different things these men have done te heV
make your past tints a pleasant end enjoyable ae possible.

• o o o e

• o o o *
Coach Bill Fleming has been letting
while the baseball field aeross from the
playing shape, the boye trill take to the
• • a •

j
hie boys work eat to Mm fg ia
High lebeol ti being pad lata
field Tuesday.
*

Baseball for Sanford this summer may sot bo lbs beet bet H looks
as though wa will havo n team la tha Uke-Orango League. "Bod*
Hire* bee been appointed manager this season. “ Rod” hopes to gad
■am* o f his players out o f Longwood and Oviedo as well as Sanford,
Other members, o f ths league era Eustis, Leesburg, Meant Dora, Ta» *
versa, Umatilla and Winter Garden. Anyone wishing to toymri for tfc*.
team may contact Mr. Hire*.

• • # • •
When a man Is down
a SO* gams Wednesday
Ing la ths City Bowling
a 131. Team eaptaia
better; he boated ■
only 116. AU I eaa

11,5118VWCtassl

FOR LISTINGS
OF GOOD CLEAN
USED TIRES

W ELSH T IR f
SHOP
IN W. to
S • TSf -M

Carl Krskine of the Break!ya
Dodgers pitched twa two-bitters
during tha IBM season.

REW R-l70F,Serie&gt;
IfllckMt

fl

Luke Appling manager of the Richmond VlrglnUiie arrived la
Sanford last Thursday noon wearing dark glasses. Oa Inquiring abend
the blinders, it seems ns though Luke had been np tn the eold country
and got the “ Pink Eye” . Thin Florida sunshine trill Ink* care of that
in short order, Luke.
Luke haa got tha same problem sa oar other baseball guest, l e t
Boudreau, had when he w*a her* last month. Both msaageye eon snip
take their team* up. Juat how far wa will have to wait sad see, bet tkn
Virginians, like tha Athletic*, finished last season la the cellar.

�*a.J

•

d a il y

CRO SSW O RD

DOWN
ACftOSS
1. Elder
1. Breaches
statesmen
8, Felines
(Jap.)
8. Tree
I. r r t occu­
(C. Am.)
pied
10. Medley
3. Author of
II tvgtnninf
’The Gold
12. Tree
Bupt’*
14. Back
4. Place
is. Likely
B. Finishes
16. Siberian
8. W in g e d
gulf
7. End
17. rowerful
8. A king of
80 MolybdeIsrael
num laym.)
II. Away
Si * melon
13. Kind of
crmtainlnf
wood
icecream
S3 *.ont period
of lima
7 ” 1"
S3. A mark
m rauale
|3. Marina
food Sail
\\
IT. Polo
is
injecture
*(
nna
n*L)
&gt;r
■t uU apart
$4 orthaut
TT
vbbr.)
|! ibllcal
it
* mo
tfl 'otn
Sored)
ST ireek letter
|t&gt; tefroa^
41 One of
many
layera
sT
&lt;5 At one time
63 Pounder of
XT
the Chrta*
tian BcUno
XT
church
41.------off
(gold

18. Warpyarn
18. Lettuce
lU. S.)
10. Fanci­
ful
52 Settle
securely
23. Tine
! I Rosy
26 Employ
■tlsHsr’s t o s t *
20. United
33. Stitch
Service
36. Middle
Organiza­
30 Nonsense!
tions
40. East(abbr.)
northeast
31. Vaulted
(abbr.)
32. Cornered
4

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Girls Account For 5 0 Percent
Of School Enrollment In U. S.
UNITED NATIONS. N Y LP Girls make up half the highxchool
enrollments in Europe and north
America but only 28 per cent in
Africa end 27 per cent in Asia.
The U.N Educational. Scientific
and Cultural O r g a n i z a t i o n
(UNESCO) rites these figures in
reporting ’’ equal opportunities” in
this respect in Europe and North
America and "m arked” inequality
in the otner two. It saya the per­
centage is 40 In South America
and Oceania.
UNESCO, with headquarters in
Paris, surveys the girls' second­
ary education situation in a 61page report prepared for the 18nation U N. Commission on the
Status of Women, to meet here
March 14-April 1.
It speaks ol considerable prog­
ress Iowan) equality since 1930
but notes that this progress since
World War II has been slower than
before The survey says:
In 1930 girls had already at­
tained equality In 10 of 38 listed
countries — Alska, Canada, the

United States. Denmark, EnglandvVa'cs. Noithrrn Ireland, Scotland
Finland, Sweden and New Zealand
In 1940, Australia. Chile and the
Dominican Republic reached the
same stage.
Since (hen. France, Ireland and
Japan nave done so too.
The proportion of girls in »rc
iindary schools increased most in
Haiti—from 0,' per renl in 1913
to 15 oer cent in 1932.
Belween 1931 and the latest
check, it went up from 7 7 to 28
per cent In West French Africa,
26 to 41 per cent in Mozambique,
8 5 to 19 per cent in Iraq. 4 to 14
per cent In Cambodia. 8 9 to 1« 7
per cent In India. 5 9 to 2t per
cent in Syria and 19 8 to 30 per
cent in Thailand.
UNESCO says the main factor
that keeps girls from getting sec­
ondary education is unequal edu­
cational facilities—"especially in
countries where one - srx schools
are the rule, as is the case in the
majority of countries of Asia and
in several of Latin America."

■

L

XT

L
L

__

Sugar Ray's
^Boston Pullout
Faces Inquiry

S

W 'l» "
» ToJiBht_TonigJit

Dr. Edwin Hontmd of tha
Ksaaaehuaatta Boafa* Commission
•aid ha asaalaod Babiaaoa at tha
ftfkter'a hate) and “ found no eviI h m at sickness «r Injury which
. waald warrant at* to pMtpoa* tba
M

m

limit

on adraaea promotion and
to bath Kdhiaaoa —
Bmafl.
Rahtoioa ataa la listed to flfht
l t d OUa to Milwaakaa March M-

MIAMI BEACH UR-^Joe D lm ifgin. retired New York Yankee out­
fielder. arrived here Sunday for t
vacation and dropped a hint that
he is considering a business ven­
ture in New York that will get
dm—indirectly—back Into base­
ball.
Pressed as to what the buslnest
might he, he said "it haa something to do with baseball, indirect­
ly. A TV show or lomcthing like
that "
Joe turned lo TV for a while
after he retired as a Yankee p.ayer in mid-winter of 1951 Ho had
played 13 years with the Yankees
and wound up with a lifetime bat­
ting average of .325.
is progressing with this annex on
the pay as you go plan.
Mrs. Mary Cranston who rerrnilj passe,I away was the last
|charter member ef the church.

not AaaocutBD firm

Onea-baitan Roaala Delanay,
fresh from his upset victory
welterweight champion Jobany
Btxtow, malm his aatwork taler)■tea debut tonight agaiaat Bugar
At Wflaou, of New York, at New
York** I t Ntcholai Atom
Dm Akron, Ohio, wutitpaw,
railed to a No. I raaktog among
tite middleweight! aftoraU r#b,
U win ever laxtoa ia a nootitto
la a 8-1 favorite to tradk
48th victory ia the 14-

R EA LEfM I

Anniversary

%

L

2nd TREMENDOUS
Quantity Right* Howryod.

Reconstituted Lemon Juice

iv Zsliulil

DINNER TIME
Chicken or Bocl Pot Plot

36 TUNA
Za

03c

IV .11.

Price* G ood Monday 4 Tuesday

t£

L

23c

8-o x.

“ W 0 W”

N a Vi Cans ROYAL HAWAIIAN

Horae Moat Dog Food

2

37c

No. I Can*

Armour Suds
N ow Dotcrqon!

27c

Large

R IV A L
Dog Food

Carton of 6

19c

2

23c

No. 1 C an*

CUT- R ITE
W axed Paper

Case of 2 4

Playoff Slated In Baton Rouge
Golf Tournament

'

In Indirect Way

f W—: --

•

w

The Free Methodist Church of
Sanford was first organized in
l.vV« Monroe in 1917 by the ttov.
It. Wingct, district elder, with
the Rev. \V. P. Jullin as ita first
pastor.
In 1949, under the leadership
nf district superintendent A. II.
Fleming nml the Rev. J. W. Ivey,
pastor, the church decided to more
to Sanford. On March 11, 1949,
lots were purchased on the cor­
ner of W. 4th SL, ant Laurel
Ave., and on Aug. 22, ??K5, the
church building was moved to its
new location and made Into a
parsonage. However, a portion of
it was still used for church arr
vices for some time. On Jan. 7,
1947, the foundation was begun
for the new church.
New Sunday School -oom* are
now in the process of being built.
The new annex will house five
new tins* rooms, a kitrhrnrtte,
and a pastor's study. The church

u

LAS VEGAS, Nev. un-Whal'a it could lake pictures of your chest
Ilka flying through the atomic or teeth, but little else.
The film badge you am wearing
aloud?
Scratch any ana of five news leoks about the same after 3 hours,
men who were on such an Air 20 minutes ol flying as when it
flight yeiterdsy. end you might get was Issued to you. Radiological la­
- five different answers. But agree- boratory development will show
w menti would be general on a few exactly how much radiation you
were exposed to. Unofficially dosi­
things.
P int, (here's the awe you feel meters indicated total In-flight ex­
tor the missive, rolling column nf posure ol 62 to 78 MR inside the
brown end reddish particles of dust plane. Outer surfaces picked up
and nitrogenous matter towering 160 MB
Newsmen’ s boots registered 6
before you. You have the fascinat­
ing beauty—the beauty of a cobra MR and some had almost that
or water moccasin—as It begins much on Ihclr hands AM they had
to do was wash them.
to slltber across the sky.
You've beard so many tales of
Finally, (here's the feeling of ad­
its deadlincss that you have re­ miration for the skill and coolness
lieved not to be flying into Ihc of the Air Force men who fly these
serpent's mouth. Tha main portion cloudtracking and sampling mtaof the cloud, tha so-called mush­ sion on every test in Nevada or
room, rises too fist for a low fly­ the Pacific. They're scientists too.
ing BIS' to touch. Looking up at ind their competence in collecting
its brownish gray underside Is om­ inti on atomic cloud structure
inous enough from lets than 10,■ and radioactivity Is building up a
vital fund of knowledge.
400 feet below.
The real testing of Its volatility
It could mean the difference be­
Is left to tha 1840 jet flyboys who tween victory end defeat In the
'can hit and run a lot faster and dread event of atomic war.
^ higher than w« can. Their Job does
not annuo our envy.
Although the heat bai gone out
•f the elood, there's a natural
apprehension about radioactivity.
Desplta official asiuraocea that It
tabai sustained, heavy exposure
to get a harmful or oven latently
BATON ROUGE. La. OB - Three
injurious dosage of radiation, you golfers, who fought from behind
een’t help but feel that every rule during a tricky wind, lee off today
'
'
iception—and
playoff-for 82.300 fl ret
money in the 112,300 Baton Rouge
at soon not be exceptional
m Yet aa the plana plarcas tha Open.
m gauxelflu fabric of the lower eloud,
They ere Bo Wlnlnger, Oklahoma
or item, you feet no different than City; Jimmy Clark, Laguna Beach,
on previous flights through na Calif.; and Billy Maxwell, Odette,
ture's duoda. Chamber record Tex., who tied for first wilh 178a
era end gelger countars point after yesterday’s fourth round.
briefly to flgurti that would eause
The three came from behind In
an X-ray technician no worry; aev- the final round, played as • sudden
oral huodrad mlUiorosntgens (U R ) cold snap with powerful wind
gusts played tricks with their riwta
on the 6,430-yard Baton Rouge
Country Club course.
However, Clark managed • par
73 and the other two got 71s.
If they tie again today, a sudden
death playoff will follow.
Maxwell, playing la the ft
BOSTON UK - Tha Massachu­
setts Boxing Commission will meet threesome, fen eix Inehse shert ef
today to dlecuse Boston’s latest (tret money on the 18th hole when
Betie wrangle — lu gsr R*y Bobln- be missed a putt and a winning TO.
"I knew I needed a birdie 4 to
aon'a last-minute pullout from last
Saturday night's scheduled 14- win." laid Maxwell, “ and 1 tried
rounder with Georgia Small of owful hard, too hard. That putt
wai only about seven feet."
Brooklyn.
Marty Furgol, Lemont, 111., who
•#L Maanwhile In Cincinnati, Promotor Art Wlrth insisted that bad a ooe-atroka lead over the field
HUbtoMsi — eoetima middleweight with M3 at the start of yesterday's
j » d welterweight champion at­ round, found the eh ll wind and
tempting • comeback—would fight final round tension too much. He
Sohnay Lombardo la Cincinnati earn* la with 74 for a ITS total.
Jerry Barber, Loe Angeles; Jay
H a n g 11 ae scheduled.
Robinson withdrew from hU Hebert, W oodmen, N. Y .; Art
ecbcduled Boston match after com- Doe ring, la wood, N. Y., end Cary
Staining that ha bad • aora throat Mlddloeoff, Klimesha Lake, N Y
and virus symptoms which ha said finished with 278.
.m a d t him too weak to appear,
Promoter Sam Btlverrasn wants

S

Free Methodist
DiMag May Get
First Located
At Lake Monroe Back Into Game

40

'•Newsmen Have Different Views
O f Flying Through Atomic Cloud

a

Since most of the men stationed
at NAAS. Sanford are connected
with naval aviation, few can say
that they have ever acted as
helmsmen aboard a ship. Hftwever, Sidney K. Weaver, aviation
clcctrontcsman chief. Fleet Aircraft
Service 51, holds a certificate
vshich authorizes him to act in
that capacity aboard any vessel
in the Hnyal Australian Navy.
It was during his tour of duty
with the Naval Attache's office In
Melbourne, Australia that Weaver
was awarded this unusual distinc­
tion. During August, I960 the II.
M. A. S. Australia, a light cruiser,
was ordered to Heard Island In
Antarctica, about 3000 miles from
the city of Perth on the west of
the "Land Down Under."
Previously, several ships had
tried In vain to reach the ermote
Island, attempting to rescue a
member of an Australian weather
party who was suffering from icute appendicitis. High seas hail
Tom Dowd, road secretary for
forced one merchant ship after an­ lie Boston Bed Sox, is an official
other to turn back hut the Austra­ in the National Football League
lia managed to get through, at during the fall and winter months.

T ire SANFORD HERALD
Mon. Mar. 7, 1955
PnR* 7

—

tr

P

■tom to f o through with the Boatea fight at a liter date.

times iMe lo proceed at only four
knots. Weaver was assigned to
make the trip as an observer.
The trip took several days and
Weaver had an opportunity to
meet many of the ship’ s crew­
members. It *as during the course
of a conversation with one chief
petty officer that he found he
could earn a helmsman's certifi­
cate by completing several hours
of Instruction and standing at least
eight hours on watch during the
trip. He docidisJ to try.
And so It was that on August
12, 1950, Captain George C. Old­
ham, Commanding Officer of thr
H. M. A. S. Australia, awarded
what probably is the only Austra­
lian Navy helmsman's certificate
held by an American to Sidney
Weaver.
The eertiflcale says. "This is
to certify that Sidney K. Weaver.
ALC, U. S. Navy, has acted as
helmsman in a ship under my com­
mand and is hereby qualified in act
as helmsman in any nf His Majes­
ty's
Australian
ships. Signed,
George C. Oldham, Captain, It.
A N ."

Australian Navy
Certificate Held
By Sidney Weaver

75c

25c

125 FL Roll

HUT* Hone Meat

DOG FOOD
2

No. 1 Cana

_ 2 JL _

PAN-REDI FROZEN

NORTHERN
Tollal Tissue

2

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B oll.

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Kretschmer
W heat G e m

Taste 0*8041 Perch

STICKS

Taste O'Sea Haddock

FILLETS - 29c FILLETS

12 ox.

33c

MY-T-FINE
Pudding*

SLICED
PORK

Pkg.

LB.

9c

Sunshine Cracker*

HI-HO's
Lb.

■BREUSS VEAL

STURTEVANT’S COTTAGE

CUTLETS
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3 5 c

CHEESE

69

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Pkg

23

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l7-oi*

59c

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DOG

RATION

5 “ 49c

t

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SINUS TROUBLE,
A IT N M A &gt; a d NAY B IV IB
N I W T I I A T M I N V — f i l l T B IA l

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BREAD

^AMERICAS GREATEST FOOD BARGAINS!

2

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*•

�M. vicnery,
Former Sanfordite,
Opens Texas Firm
Philip M. Vickery, former Senford lie, he* recently opened hi*
menu fee taring b u itn m m Arling­
ton, T ext) tinder the firm netue,
Vkkery-Slmms, Inc., A special
type o f netarel get end oil field
liquid measuring equipment 1* now
being manufactured by the newly
formed company.
Incorporator* o f the company
other than
Vickery are Paul
Simms, a former fellow officer
with him in the U. S. Army at
Camp Darkely, Texas, and Donald
H. Brown of Forth Worth. The
company serve* as distributor In
the Texas and New Mexico area
for Commercial oil field equip­
ment and manufactures orifice
fittings and meter tubes. The first
order went to Standard Oil of
Texas at Snyder to be used In
msesurlng water Injections on a
secondary recovery program.
Vickery, the son o f Mis. Lillian
Vickery o f Sanford, was born here
and received his education in the
local schools. Shortly after gra­
duating
from Seminole
High
School he entered the U. 9. Army
and spent nearly 10 years In tho
service. For a number of years h*
represented a California
firm
which manufactured similar equip­
ment. For sevtral years hs and
Mrs. Vickery resided In Fort
Worth, later moving
to their
ranch at Meridian, Texas. For the
past year they have been residing
at Arlington, Texas, located half­
way between Dellas and Fort
Worth.
Repressntallvs for Vlekary Simms, Inc., In tha Texas ard
New Mexico area
will be VIckery’a nephew, Welter Bsel, who
owns and operate*
the Beal
Equipment Company In Odessa,
afth.MiM taoln shrdlu mfwypstao
Texas.

Officers
MiG's Illegally
To Oppose Wildlife
Ask Requirements
Personal Tax Cut Put On Fishermen Taken Into Korea,
Command Relates
Passed By Demos
WASHINGTON (AV-Scn. Hoiland (D -F la), says ha will oppose
the 120-a-pm on income tax cut
passed by House Democrats.
“ Wo Senate Democrat* were
not consulted on the $20 reduction
by our colleague* In the House,''
he M id In n statement, "nor have
w# held any party conference on
It, so tho matter is not a party
issue."
But pointing up Its political sig­
nificance, a Democrat who asked
not to be named said he hai no
doubt that a "campaign docu­
ment’' is being prepared as the
minority report o f eix Democrat!
on the Senate Finance Committee
who supported tha tax cut. He
said It will be used in the 1956
campaign.
Senators Byrd
(D-Va)
and
George (D-Ga) voted with seven
Republicans on th* committee to
knock out the tax cut provision
which the House had passed after
a hitter partisen battle. Byrd »»id
last week at least 10 Senate De­
mocrat* would support his stand
or the Senate floor, but he de­
clined to name them.
In addition to Holland, Ben.
Eilcnder (D-La) Mid during the
weekend he would oppose the cut
on the ground reeulting inflation
might "result In our people ac­
tually losing money in the long
run."
The tax cut would be effective
on wage* earned after n**t Jan. t.
House Democrat* tarked It onto
an administration bill to extend
present corporation and excise tax
rate*, now due to drop April 1.

Convict

(Continued from Page 1)
Although ths term "Infantry"
•asms to corns from a Latin word Young, 20, wer* still believed to
m tin in i "Infant," no ona Is sura be in the area east o f Oviedo.
Police officers are hunting them
row It camo to mean "soldier.”
with bloodhound*.
Thomas Hollingsworth, 61, a
flower grower, was ths victim of
tha ax* attack yesterday after­
noon. Ha received two broken
i n m n i t u a x T row s m s
~ke Boar* er Pubtln Instruction arms and cut* on the heed and
jtoinL
___County,r ____
stools
Florid*. will was reported In fair condition at
reeetvs bids for ths'furnishing of Winter Park Memorial Hospital.
M labor, materials, equipment and
A neighbor who answered Hol­
aorvieetjwealred far tho construc­
tion e f Classroom baits, t. 4, I, and lingsworth's screams for help re­
d, and Aressserr Dultdlngi for
(oath
Sanford „School,
taaford. ported he m w a Negro drive eway
... _____
.i t
dnsts County, florid*, eanalst- In Holllnsworth'a pickup truck.
e f four classroom wing* eonPolice Chief George A. Kelsey
slag flftsen classrooms, library,
ns-making suits, and adtoane la- of Oviedo said Hollingsworth's des­
fatorium building.
torn an
__ .___ a. administration cription of his attacker talllod with
Idlag, and attnty building. ua&gt; that of Lawli.
tliH a. m., Harsh It, ISIS, at
Tho attack occurred et about 1:30
Court Rnuos, Sanford, Florida.
a and plaea tha bids p. n . on Holliflgsworth'a bulb farm
of**** an* read a mUa wast of Ovtedo off Stale
igv aad eneattlcatloaa mar Road 419.
art by espositing lio.se
Hollingsworth said tho Negro
waa wearing a white T-shirt and
had apparently exchanged hla pci____ J. ■ueh deposit will be refund­ ton trousers for a pair o f overall*.
Lewis, when captured, Wat wear­
ed l a fall to nook parson who rsing a white dress shirt and a pair
S r ’j f t r j r s s fw
ir
w
®
sets may ba of khaki trousers.
seat o f SfS.oe eaek.
Following the attack, a pickup
is tu
.. snt_sofuadsbl
fled etiaok or bank.draft. truck answering the description of
tha Board o f Piiblle In­ the stolen vehicle waa sighted by
fer Seminal* _ County.
B. Oovarnmenl Bonds, or Andrew Duda Sr., who waa out on
try bit bond oaa
horseback. Duda said tho truck
and aoespUbla auratlaa picked up two Negroes on n dirt
aubml
road in a grove Just wait of Slavla
T i l suossosful bll
bidder wilt ba re&lt; and not far from tho prison cam
Road blocks were thrown ftp
pay for M leuTrod te furnish a
porfnrmaaca
. . . . . _____ and payment
ths vicinity by the Florida High­
bond
...ada.
ttontlo a la eallad to tho fact way Patrol, deputies from tho
I not tsoa tkaa tha eslalmum Seminole County Sheriffs office,
‘ 1 wagao a* ast forth
__ fteauoaa matt b* pal* •nd other officers.
Tha*Highway Patrol described
%**of PabtU Instruction
Bin County. Florida, ro- the atcapeei as dangerous.
right to reject any aad /
Lewis was aerving a robbery
a or te waive any lafeorl the bidding. Me bid eh.*11 sen tan c a from Manatoc and was
ftoon shot by a prison guard in making
____J tn far a parted of firto
days subsequent to tha open an unsuccessful escape attempt
of bids without the ooassat
Jan. IS. Merritt, o f Hollywood,
the
im u m n m tv B j
airman. Board ef Public was aentcncad for armed robbery,
itruetlon f o r le m le o ls and Young, or Tampa, waa sen­
tenced In Palm Beach County for
MiVwso!^ioTrs ts rr
lalsndont o f r u b lk i taetnetlan ■uto theft
The men at Urge w a n believed
i» y » jr a o v s 0 0 VBT,
In bo wearing blue faunal nod
marten ihtrts with khaki trousers,
!• » H u m *
l b * tshirt* were taken from a
bouse In Ovlodo yesterday.
lira. Hollingsworth, contacted at
Winter Park hospital, described
tho attack on te r husband aa fol
rs- lows:
Bo ted gone out to the form
from their homo in Oviedo. A
Negro approached and e n g a g e
him in conversation. Hollingsworth
turned his baek aad the Negro
grabbed a shovel, hitting Urn over
the bead with it.
Hollingsworth turned again
asked him what te wanted. The
Negro said a dollar.
14. IMS
Hollingsworth started booking
away ranching for hit w aflot The
ibted ■ small ax
N un

Legal Notice

&gt;as»law*

* **%&amp;#&amp;

v r ix s v ,

s asintaa ts*

aad ru
hla focoarma with i
the ax and alao i

^ W IW .

■Ida of

• half*.
RoUlagaviirtk MB la ft *
aad tha Mapre Jumped hi hi
J o * ta a aoUhfcar. C. M. Utttetea
•M S.
IW U M 9
t o M p . A a Nopre

W

M

Police Investigate
Sleepwalking Side

R. Holler Qualifies
As Group Member

LANCASTER, Pa. b f - With po­
lice pursuing, a young motorist
drove for 12 miles down the wrong
side of the busy Pennsylvania
Turnpike last night at speeds up
to 100 r a , p. h.
The chase finally ended when
the speeding car crashed Into a
tractor trailer set up as a road­
block. The driver, Kenneth Shelly,
27, of nearby Lititx, Pa., died in
a hospital two hours later without
giving any reason for his flight.
Police said he hit the roadblock
at 90 m. p h., making no apparent
effort to stop.
As his car roared along, some­
times without headlights, dozens
terrified motorists were forced off
the highway. One ear went down
an embankment but no one was
injured.
Lt. Walter E. Price of the stat|pollcc said Shelly’s car hit the
trailer so hard lt pushed under 11
■nd continued on for at least 10
feet

Statement Leaves
Soviet Guessing
TAIPEI, Formosa UH— The boss
of the U. S. Pacific Fleet says, " I f
the United States Is willing we ran
defend anything against tho Comrounisls."
But the statement left tho Reds
guessing.
Adm. Felix B. Stump was asked
by newsmen whether hit statement
Included the Communist-menaced
Matsu Islands, 20 miles off the
mainland.
He replied, "Anything."
However, top American officials
have not specifically and publicly
said what action would be taken
In event of a Red assault on the
Matsus or Quemoy, another Na­
tionalist Island across the Formosa
Strait.
Stump visited the Matsus yes­
terday. Ho was here several days
fr* conferences concerning For­
mosa's defense. He hid a final
talk this morning with President
Chlang Kai-shek before going to
Hong Kong.

Zoning
(Continued from Pago 1)
tlve enabling act does not mean
th* area included immediately
becomes part o f tho city.
“ W* only want the enabling
act eo that when a developer
begins a subdivision and wants
the advantage! offered by th*
city, the subdivision can be an­
nexed without waiting for an­
other term o f the legislature,'
Brown says.
City Mgr. Warren Knowles has
prepared figure* on a 912,000
house to allay fears o f fringe re­
sidents that the city (rente them
In for the tax** they could pay.
Such a house, he eayi, would
be assessed at $8,000, subject te
a alx-mlll debt service tax at full
asseisment, or $48.
Tha houM would be subject te
a seven and one-half mill ad
valorem tax on $3,000 only, be­
cause o f homestead exemption, or
122.50 Total tax bill would be
$70.60.
Because the city has more
favorable fire Insurance rates the
home owner would Mve $31.75 per
vear. He would m v * a minimum
.if 59 a year on his wa*»r hill, be­
cause o f a one-third higher rate
outild* the city limit*. I f the city
lt picking up hit garbage and
trash now he would save $24 a
year by being In tha city.
So Knowles concludes, for $6.75
a year, tha newly-annexed house­
holder gets police, fir* and sonlng
protection, street lighting, sewers,
mosquito control, end a parks re­
creation program that even pro­
vides free bus transportation for
his children.
The proposed toning changes
would open th* residential areas
from Third SL to Fifth S t, be­
tween Palmetto and Oak Avee., to
retail commercial eetabllehments.
Sanford Ave., from Seventh St.
to 10th S t, would also he com­
mercial, with th* exception o f th*
west sldo of th* street at th*
Grammar School.
Commercial xonlng o f th* south
nidt o f 25th St. from Park Av*. te
Bnnforf Av*. waa alao recom­
mended. Th* area has been deve­
loped into a (hopping center.

When Icebergs break off from
glaciers, they often carry soil,
Some scientists believe that chan­ ticks and othar material which of­
ges In air pressure with the passing ten are transported long distances
of storms sometimes trigger earth­ and dropped to the sea floor when
quake!.
tho Iceberga m alt

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aft**

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■vLl'rJ '&gt; .V* - r_ •
S*1;

A J.

1

wm m

S

Couple Celebrates
75th Anniversary

tRVINO. Tex ir-Student*’ havo
called on the state to nelp settle
a fight between the Irving School
llosrd end fired Supi. John Beard.
The 53-year old Dr Beard is bat- l
(Sins to keep hit Job. The boird
lias stood last on Its decision to
discharge him
The tuss raged unabated today
while a strike by some 200 teach­
ers and other school employes who
support Beard entered Its second
week. Volunteers and replacements
are running the schools, which are
under police guard because of tho
emotions) pitch In this booming
little city of tome 23,000 near Dal- V
at.
a s hot words flew, students w ere
preparing a letter to State Educa­
tion Commissioner J. W. Edgar
asking help The idea of the letter
originated with nine students, and
ed by and signed the tetter.
*3 It from either side.
While a policeman stood by In tho
Irving Community House, senior
and junior high school students fitIt said In part. "W e, tho students C
of the Irving school system, repre­
senting tho rights of every Ameri­
can studenl request tho aid of state
officials In Austin for Investigation
and Improvement of the schhoo) sit­
uation during the pretest emer­
gency "
There was no immediate com­
ment from Edgar.

CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. un— J.
M. Patterson, 105, and his wife.
Cordelia, 99, today' celebrated
their 75th wedding anniversary.
Mrs. J. W. D on , a daughter who
lives next door to the Pattersons,
■aid the couple had been "thrilled
to death’ ’ for weeks in anticipation
of the big day.
Both were feeling fine this morn
Ing and "rearing to g o", Mrs
D oit said.
The rattersons have five living
children, 38 grandchildren and 37
greatgrandchildren. Not aQ were
able to make lt, however.
The celebration was held In the
LONDON UP) — The Rest Isns
Patterson'i modest house, the hinted over the week end that
wails of which were covered with they are working on atomic-pow­
more than 200 cards from weli ered *|r *nd s u craft.
wishers all over the country.
A Moscow broadcast Mid they
have already built atomic reac­
tors which ran be used In ocean­
going vessels, automobiles and lo­
comotive*.
•
If they hava made t motor suit- *
PAHOA, Hawaii Lit- Tho threat able for ocean-going crafts, It ap­
nf violent new volcanic outburst* pear* logical that thay may hare
’'iing like a dvrk cloud toriav over an atomic unit capable o f power*
the danger-fined lava fields of ing submarines as well as sur­
eastern Hawaii Island.
face ships. The U. S. Navy ate
Earthquakes of Imlshlng In­ ready has an atomic submarine,
tensity Jolted tho area throughout the Nautilus,
yesterday. They rumbled along the
Since tha and o f World W op 11
20-mllo slope from Kllauea crater th* Soviet* hnv* been making a
to the active volcano fields on great e "
* develop a vn«t
Puna Peninsula.
aubmarioa fleet,

Russians Give Hint
O f Atomic Power

Volcanic Threats
Hang Over Hawaii

KM B

steamlnr toward tha island
of
Bermuda and leaving 800 striking
crewman stranded in Naw York
as alleged "deserters."
Ths 22,500-ton vestal Mlled yes­
terday without poesengara and
manned by a skeleton crow o f
12C.
Many o f th« passengers had al­
ready been settled In their cahlns
late Saturday afternoon when the
Brltiah-ownod Fumes* Bermuda
Lir.ti announced ths.li— trip—
canceled. Bine* then, many got air
transportation to Bermuda. Others
went o ff to other resorts or re­
turned homo,
*Tha strikers, member* o f the
British Notional Union o f Stamen
had left tha ship In protest against the firing o f thro* crew­
men who had sought a $30 month­
ly cost-of. living pay Increase.
Th* line claimed the dlechartod
crewmen had become "agitator*,"
threatened other members o f the
crew and wrote insulting notes te
the ship’s officers.
•scaped In tho pickup, a dark
green 1161 Chevrolet.
Littleton took Hollingsworth Into
tho Ovlodo Clinic and Hospital
w han ha waa given fkst aid and
told hla story to deputies. Ho was
then sent to Winter Park Memor­
ial Hospital for treatment

HOLLYWOOD (Jte— George Go­
bel and Walt Disney stacked up as
favorite* to win television Emmies
tonight as tho nation, via NBCTV, watches tho seventh annual
awards of tha Television Academy,
The TV counterpart of the mov­
ies’ big Oscar show goes on na­
tional television for tho first time
11:30 p. m. to 1 a. m., EST.
It will start at 11:30 p. m. end
continue to 1 a. m. EST.
i f Dli aey wteg -o a -Kja my te hlr
first year of telecasting, th* trip
to the podium will bo old stuff
for him. Ho has won 94 movie
Oscars, mors than any other pro­
ducer.

Ohio River Swells
To Higher Levels
CINCINNATI. Ohio
(IV- Tha
swelling Ohio Rlv*r — which hat
routed hundreds o f families from
homes along Ite banka — will go
higher than had been antl«!pated
aa water from hoary rains yester­
day rolls In from tributaries.
T han were no reports of heavy
damage at tho river continued to
rito toward doorstep* la low-lying
areas from Pomeroy, Ohio, to
LoulsvUl*, Ky. Tho Ohio highway
patrol reported tho river foiling
above Marietta, Ohio.

W h o m aysy o u ca n ’t h a vo

la crablng and all normal driving, the
Mad— art angled for eoonomy -n n d you
got n lot inoro mile* from • tankful of go*.

General Insurance
H.

JA M E S

GUT

Bat when you have to move liufentfy—
when you need quick getmvny,or naoddm
bunt of eefety-eurge power to got out ol
• tight spot-yon just prtu down tha gap

AG EN CY

sis b a s t r a n S T R U T
m am vs

■.JAMBSCUT
m im e o g r a p h

p M

Mias &amp;Gils
p r in t in g

—

■nd brother! whet • w
agio they oeme up with!

t y p in g

C R E D IT IN VESTIG ATIO N S M A S S

, to ti y ou V #
* -0

pf

t o • tp lli m c— L

Y oeV i n e w U t anything flke It before
-booouM there'a n o w beau anything like
ft h*f"f in sn eutomobfle.
becked by the highe* VB

A N Y W H E R E IN U N ITED STA TE S OK
______ FO REIG N CO U N TRIES

CREDIT BUREAU OF SANFORD

They brought foe mum principle to
B olek S pecial . C in tu u y . B u r n er

n■ i

m

*—
Jfl ►

——

MITCHELL, S. D. &lt;**- A yoitnt
rural couple’ s four children horned
to death today when a pre-dawn
tho bedroom where they were
lotting oil stove, swept thrnuen
te bedroom where they were
sleeping.
The mother, Mrs. John Heinrich.
27, was driven hack by flames and
dense smoke when the and neigh
bort attempted to rescue the trap^
ped children, ranging from 2 to
6 years.
Mrs. nelnrich was taken to a
hospital with first and second de­
gree burns. Heinrich, a tvuqk
drive, was on a delivery run at
the time.
Mra. Waller Bracha, a neighbor,
■aid Mrs. Heinrichs told her: "The
worst thing was the screams of
the kids.” The fire broke out about
12:30 a. m. and destroyed the
two bedrooms In the home.

Students Ask Slate
To Settle Question

Ill ^ f 9 W „

g J Q
i l k
4i f
r

FT..

Four Children Die
In Morning Blazs

300 Crewmen Left
Alleged 'Deserters' Gobel, Disney Rate
NEW YORK ifl) — The Queen
As T V Favorites
of Bermuda was at sea today,

_______

II

m

PANMUNJON W — The U. N.
Command lodty told the Neutral
Nations Supervisory Commission
that testimony of s defecting North
Korean pilot proved the Commanoists Draught Russian-built MIGt
into North Korea illegally after the
armistice.
MaJ. Gen. Leslie D. Carter, se­
nior UNC member of the Military
Armistice Commission, relayed the
testimony of North Korean senior
Lt. Noh Kum Suk to the NNSC in a
letter.
Noh flew a MIG across the de­
marcation line and delivered it to
Allied officials near Seoul Sept. 2,
1953. It brought him a $100,000 re­
ward offered by Gen. Mark Clark,
U. N. commander, for a MIG in
combat condition.
Carter’ s letter said Noh reported
being stationed at two North Ko­
rean air fields after 'he July 27,
1953 armistice end personally see'
mg at least 80 MIGs flown Into
North Korea from Manchuria.
Carter wrote the NNSC that Noh
Is attending college in tha United
States "ami is unable to appear
personally before the mobile in
spectlon teams Investigating (Al
lied charges of illegal Introduction
of MIGs inlo North Korea) . . .
“ But If so demanded by the
NNSC his testimony . . . can be
HOLYOKE, Matt. ( A - Police verified in a form satisfactory to
today were Investigating (he pos­ your commission."
sibility Bradford P. Borden, 22, of
Greenwich, Conn., waa sleep-walk­
ing when ho broke Into a home.
Francis A. Downey, Investigat­
ing a noise in his homo early yes­
terday, found Borden sitting In a
NEW YORK, N. Y . , - Roy IloUdazed condition in a living room er of 2(32 KclIonvlHc Avenue, San­
chair.
ford, has qualified as a member of
Borden claimed he was driving the 1954 Presidents Council of the
home from Northampton when he New York Life Insurance Com­
became sleepy and pulled over to pany's Top Club, Dudley Dowell,
the tide o f the road for a nap. executive vice president of the
The next thing he knew he woke company, announced today.
Mr. Dowell said that Holler tltn
up In Downey’s living room, police
has qualified to attend an educa­
quoted him as saying.
Police said It Is possible Bor­ tional conference In Boca Raton,
den walked In his sleep from the Florida, March 7-11,
The council la composed of the
car, opened a window In the
top 250 agents of New York Life
Downey house and climbed In.
Borden was charged with break­ which has a field force of over
ing and entering In the nighttime 5,200 full-time agents In 158 branch
while police continued thek inves­ offices throughout the United
States, Canada and Hawaii. Mr.
tigation.
Holler la attached to the Florida
branch office.

*— T S S M S B f i S i S . - -

M CM

M

DAYTONA BEACH UP) — The
Florida Wildlife Federation today
called for a law requiring every­
one fishing in Florida streams
and lakes to have a license.
At present, a person does not
need a license to fish in his own
county.
Erif Watson o f New Smyrna
Bench, federstlon Legislative Com­
mittee chairman, said sportsmen
and out-of-state fishermen now
carry the entire burden o f the
conservation program ns 9 out of
10 person* fishing in the state do
not icav« their own counties .
The proposal for licenses for all
was Incorporated Into a resolution
which will be presented to the
1955 Legislature.
Other legislation, proposed at a
federation meeting, would:
1. Put enook In the game fish
category, taking it o ff the com­
mercial fishermen's list. The limit
catch would be eight a day.
2. Require nlrbonts used In the
Everglades and other swampy regioni to ba licensed ant number­
ed. A spokesman M id that airboat* are used mostly by frog
fishermen but that others
have
begun using them for illegal fish­
ing.

Young Motorist
Drives 'Upstream'
In Heavy T ra ffic

Iff
n

vJf
.j
i

\ V

$
f

b

-

�.

•aj

mri

1

W A N T AD
RATES
M VPLK H O T

ItSPECIAL SERVICE
-14
ARTICLES FOR SALE
Sofa bed. like new. Sacrifice *50 UPHOLSTERY— Slip covers made
RED-I-MtX CONCRETE
IN V E S T M E N T
Phone 2158 R.
to order at
Grease Traps • Scpti* Tankan ix b e d d in g m f g . c o .
Window Sills • • Lintels.
IN V E S T M E N T
. ablng
Sand. Rock. Cement. Steel, Mortar
I’ honr 501 J
works for ONLY *10.00 and you 1301 Sanfold ,\%e.
MIRACLE CONCRETE CO. haul It.
Stanley’!* Hike Shop
308 Kim Ave.
Pkoae 1115
SANTtlRtl ELECTRIC CO.
A truely nice 4 unit Apartment
310 E. 4th St Tel. 2Ut
I l l Magaolli Ave.
house in excellent condition and SEWING MACHINES *23.00 UP.
Bicycle 5 General Repair, Key?.
conveniently located. All com­ BERT'S 184 S. Park Phase t7«l
Lawn mower sharpen A Ser­
JALOUSIES &amp; AWNINGS
pletely furnished. Could make
vice.
i
someone a fine home plus in­ ACCORDION, 120 Bass. 3 Week* Life lima Glass and Alumtnufn
—Free Estimates—Free Instal­
old. 9 Switches, Cost *700.00,
come. Price US,000. Tefip* eea
FHA
Financing
lation—Telephone 1(23. Furni­
SU11 has Guarantee. *173.00 or
be arranjed.
For Remodeling and repair*.
ture Center, IIS W. First St.
best cash offer immediately.
Nothing Dima—Small Monthly
Write Box 5, c /o The Herald.
*7**pJ ool R m U f
SMITH - CORONA Portable Type­
Payments
writer. Perfect condition. Phono
Real Eetate —
Gen. la u ra eee
METAL ROOFING
Sherman Concrete Co.
1667-W after 8 p. m.
201 Edwards' Bldg. Ph. 18 or 2474 Now In Stock. 3-V Crimp —t ' i "
Out West tilth
I’ honr 1189
Corrugated— 2 4 " Corrugated.
J. R. Alexander
T. M. StrlM ir
Get all Your roofing "eeds at
CONCRETE
Reg. Real Eltale Broker*
LARGE supply of Orangeburg fi
Sherman Concrete Pipe Co. Ready Mixed Concrete. Conrrate
hre pipe and titling* for your
Block, Sand. Gravel. Cemrnt
Plume 2489
sewer needs.
S l j U m K J t, dey eiy Out West nth St.
Concrete Pipe to Meet All Quali­
MATTRESS and Box Springs Re­
fications.
Phone 112* A. B. Peterson,Broker
Phone 2119
novated Like New. Call Today
for FREE Estimate.
S|ierm*n Concrete ripe Co.
e p m e r
ECHOLS BEDDING CO.
Uul West in k St.
a irfield wUlenj. Job* MaUch
Carasr 2nd A Magnolia
Ph. U22
IDOT San lord Ave.
Phone 1M3
(Bud Bamberger, Mgr.)
Loch Arbor
Plowing, dtsi-ing. grading. Tree,
TWO Lake Front Lota with Trees
VENETIAN BLINDS
and shrubbery moved Dewitt
Priced &gt;2,300. for both.
Hunter (tot E 2filh St.
(Nationally Adv. Rolla-tlcad)
Wl YEARS OF SATISFIED
Manufactured in Sanford
SERVICE AND VALUES TO
TWO inside lota with troai on
OCR CUSTOMERS
RANDALL ELECTRIC’ (’O.
paved St. ISO ft. frontage priced S e m in o le V e n e tia n B lin d Cm
NOW
*90 Wait Ird SL
Phono 995 WAS
T V SEHVICE CENTER
at only &gt;900. for both.
8.95 Utility Tables
4.50
* Factory supervised Service
8.50 each Modern Table
Uiad furniture, appointee, tools,
\
• Houxe calls 9 a, m. till !» p in
■Robert A. Williams, Realtor a4c. Bought—sola. -Larry't Mart
Lamps ................ 2 for 8.50
(All makes «nd model?»
Raymond E. L a a d n lst A aeecleo
to 95 each Plastic Cocktail
m Bast
last tat St. Phene im .
Phone 24d0
Phona I t n Atlaatte Bank Bldg.
Chain .........
2 for 13 00 1112 Mag. Ave.
u s e d
Wa s h in g m a c h i n e 19.30 Simmons Box Spring
SEWING MAltllN E S— Repaired
MODfcRN New Home wfih 10
Good condition. Only Mo.oo. See
or Mattress
_____ 38.30
or rebuilt Also machines (or
acres bearing grove. Easy tarns.
A1 Lyon at Sanford Electrla Co.
49.95 Platform Rocker
38.50
sale. 315,110 up Phone lluuc.i.iril
Phone 1393-*.
118 Magnolia Ave.
54.95 Club Chair
38.50
1JJ7-X M. Boy 249. Lake Mary.
59.50
5
pc.
Wrought
Iron
THREE BEDROOM—2 BATH
RESTONIC
Dinettes
...
4150
Snnrnrrl
New, spacious and distinctive plan,
Triple Cushion Mattrcia
89 50 9 x 12 Axmtnster
outstanding quality of construe
Vacuum G leaner Service
*
*
Made
Smooth
to
SooU-e"
Wool
Rug
..............
So
no
lion throughout, this deluxe
Phone 711 X J
Furniture Center
89 50 Sofa B e d ..............
32. S'!
home has Just been completed
Parts and Supplies fur All Makes
79.50
Studio
Couch
..
33..V
I
118
West
1st
SL
Phona
1423
and la located in one of the most
—Rcnt.ils—
89.50 Contour Chair
fiS.'fl
charming aecUona of Sanford.
*2.50 gal.
PAINT
B9.50 Simmons Sofa Bed 77.50
It It an outstanding buy at $16.- 24
lb. Roasttra ............... $2.(9 ea.
249.50 Simmons
PLUMHING
OOO'OQ. *?,000.00 40wg u o j hapdBoy'y u«dj*r*]tJrts . . . . , 4 for J.ou
tfide-g-Bfd
198.50
Contract and repair work Free
cats mates R L. Harvey. 204
We k$v* maay ether euUUadlag
1321
Sanford Ave Phone 1828
valuta in 2 and S Bedroom
homes, down payments as low
61 V A R I E T I E S
P. M. CAMPHKLL
as $1,000.00.
GOOD and B A D
Native and Foreign Woods.
Gcnrral Cnntrarlnr
See Them At
203-99 E- 1st St.
Phone 127
"Homes of Distinction”

»-

AD

err Iextra
n fe r

e a a b fo r Mtiett* ywi
us*. PlacCO fou r ad to
BO L
r. Phona lttL

A Ulna ad, suefaaa tb# ooo above
G only 96c par day oa our lo w *
day earned rata economy plan. C e
^ar day lor &gt; day* M d sec for
A little apace like tiila will le t
your mcaaace before our more
■tin 10,006 raadara. Tell am to­

day I phono VOL

T%a above 4-Una ad eon be .ran
A I full data for only $2.40, J daya
^ ir r only il-SO and one day for 72c

A M IC I— m s RALR

-»

IN V E S T M EN T

B cu llh ll

Golden

t ’tS ’&amp; f s u r r A ’S’SK
aCall
t ua
The

about oar builnera rata*.
Want

Ad

Department

is

r js ia a ftcy tt
weelwla^lnaarSoBi it } :P?.
3:00 p m. will bS published under
Too Late To Claaalfy.

a s s u r j*
responsible for only one tncorreci

Insertion.

_

It'd So U n

M 1o m l S f i * 3 \ 5 f f 8 r
the Wont Ad department
Sanford Herald
W H E E L
I
IWVLAXA APABTOENTB: W W ,
private baths. 114 W. Flrat St.
F U R N I S H E D Utebenetle a p t
Slumberland Court Hlway 17-8*
South. Pboee 1X84-W.

Malher Of 5anford

Seminole

W. DISTRICTS
1901 P art Aroma*

Sherman Concrete Pipe Co.

T. W. HERO Out West 13th St.
PRae* IT

WE Need Your LUtlnga—

L. M. PASSONB REALTY
at &gt; Potats, Jets. I l l A 17 *2.

Cu

Florid*

homes
Avalon
423.

Apt*.

E B kim cr.

♦ H E Bemiaole RaaUr * * © e n ­
able Hornaa ead Apt*. Phone n .
TRAILER SPACE— Available. $11
per month. Children Welcome.
Lake Moore* Trader Court
Fh
“ *
■TORE ROOM. Ut45. 4th and
Sanford. Inquire Jecobtoa ■ Department Store.

Phoa* 2(89

ARTICLES WANTED
ENVELOPES, letterheads, state
ment.*, Invulees. hand Pith, and
Highest CASH and TRADE-IN
p r o g r a m s , etc Progiessive
prices paid for used FURNI­
Printing
Cn„ Phone 4(&gt;S—401
Hlway lT-aZ Heath
Phae# 111 TURE. Call 958. Wilson-Malcr
West lath St.
Furniture Co. 311 E. 1st St.
WESTINGHOUSE LAUNDROMAT
Only *50.00
PIANOS WANTED. I'll Buy Any ITOOK sanding and finishing
Cleaning, waxing. Serving Semi
infon) Electric Ce.
Plana worth rteln*- L. L. Sill.
Dole County since 1925. 11. M
Phone 2184.
118 Magaeifo Ave.
Gleason, Lake 31 ary.
A I R C O N D IT IO N IN G
INCOME TAX SERVICE
Room or Housa
Wm. 11. Murray
40 P IG S - Good breed. Will sell
H. B . P O P E D O L IN G .
t i l l Celery Ave.
Tel. 1841X-M
on# or alL Call 1S1-R.
Park Ave.

Phone 81$.

| g B a p i i &amp; « r g&gt;k ROOM

u $ m r ,a~ §m*gt.u*
xm

Eiitlwad M*fl. Mg-nrooTbottHm
rail vlt|) afoctfc
ptaette « « . Plagtie or
riyai tape*. Cettaa
Cettaa or ayleo

ankvik Ghm and Paint Co.

112 NE Park Av*.

- 3 B » » m

" it t t J s a &amp; w ^ 'X BEDROOM Hama with Glass
Florida Room, can be used a*
Bedroom,
t jrrg
ge L
Lot. Da» m . la

»tke. Tafma.

n eferred Rates lo Preferred
Policyholders
John W illiam s Ins. A g e n cy
417 Sanford Atlantic Btak
Phone 34

Mutualize And Economize

t-

BEAUTY rABLORS

—Z1

SPECIALIZING
in
Personality
Hair Cuts, Lillian McDonald's
Beauty Studio in Casselberry,
Hi-way 17-92 South. Phone W. P.
27-2182. (Closed all day .Monday).
Drop In— Free Parking

THE SANFOHD HERALD
Mon. Mnr. 7, 1955
I'age 9
TOO
CAN
BELL
Anything
With A
Classified
Ad
JUST CALL

ARE YOU bored with sour looks?
Try OUR AMERICANA CUT
which can be set In a variety
of wavs to renew your charm.

C\.\ I1LSS Simp

1621

rhona 543

RESTAURANTS
LAStER SPECIALS On Perman­ 2 U .
ents. JC.50 and 58 50 Includes
YOU!
YOU! YOU!
Shaping and Styliqg tor YOU.
Home cookrd Meals
Air
conditinnerl.
Soft
Water
and
“ T oot Mutnal Krirada’'
Real Pit Bar-ILQ
Pcngtiin lleattcss Dryers.
Chill, Hot Dog*
Phone 104
.1 Senior Opera!nr*
All Kinds of Sandwiches
HARRIETT S BEAUTY NOOK
=i
Good Coffee
Wc give United Tradtni Stamps
I - \t Tt.Mlintl.KS TH VH.CIl*
at Clydes Grill
105 South Oak
Phone 971
lilt SAI.E— Armv fi x fi Banjo
208 Sanford Ave.
tip- Truck. Good condition. 25— LAUNDRY SKRW1CE —r ,
laiure

«ilh

Boyd - Wallace

Write Box tot. Osteen, Phone
# One hour * Wary and
sanford Uj M(-i
Dry

If—AUTOMtinil.E

DEALERS—is *

SELL YOUR CAR TO
Itoy Hrrt's Used 4’ am
Saidord Ave A 11th ft.

*
#

Damp

One hour H • Wash and Dry

Fold

K E R O S E N E
17e PER GALLON
AT YOUR

IMPERIAL
SERVICE STATION

Finished Laundry
Sanltone Dry Cleaning

KnuthnIHe I-aundromat
South Side Foodmart Bldg.

1208

S.

r AKK

A VE.

-1‘ DM- \ND KHISD
- 21 _______ ta* East au&gt; (W.
Watch found in car. Owner may 2 7 r i . ^ &gt; SERVICE
-T 7
nave same hy paying for ad at
L.
Kill—Piano
Technirlan
lli-ratd Oflice.
l’tmnu 2IB4. Hoot* I. Sanford.
I I I I N I ) - Ki-&gt;:. with initials 1) .
SIWAIJ. BUSINESS
L. f' tall at Suecnev’a.
If ynu have a sm.U busincsa in a
secluded part of town and are
FOUND— Strrlinc silver bracelet
near Ynwrll's. Owner ma? have
Interested in gctlint customers,
list the xervlcl ymi offer tr the
hv tdenUfying amt paying tor
Classified column of the Sanford
adv
Hors'd Call 1831.
LOST: Grey and While parakeet
with lilue lad Name. " P ile ."
REWARD I’alBe Glenn John
son Phone 1952-J.
t- — t i l l ’ I ill&lt; Al. SEK VII'E S j—21
R andall F ncclrlc Co.
Uendix and Crosicy Applancrs
Youngstovx Kitchen
fbe-lrmal ccrdracUng snd repair*
112 M agnolia A ve. P h on e 113
C O R M L Y IN C.
"Your Hot Point Doalix"
Ph. 778

S u n fn n l F le rtrle Co.
IIS .Macnnlla Ave.
Phone t42
.SEt-.* Yr.ur Genet.il f.lrrtrle dealer
for TV and Amdiancrs.
FltlGIDAIKK appliances
sales
and service. G. It High, Oviedo.
Fla. Phone 4151 or Sanford
1643W after fi p m .

r a - UUFII’E KOUIPMKNI -1 3
HAYNES Ottiec Machine Co.,
Typewriters, adding machines,
—14 H
Sales-Rentals, 314 Magnuliu, Ph
44.
_ tf "' y o u k AD WERE IN 7 11If '
SPACE IT WOULD ATTRACT I
EVERYONE'S ATTENTION AS
T1DA HAS ATTRACTED YOUI

AND e U U O tN G N E E D S

SHERMAN CONCRETE
PIPE CO.

Out Went 13th SI.

Phone 2189

C A LL TH E

NUM1IER

^
Q

^
j

FOR
SUDDEN
SERVICE

H IL L LUM BER b SU PPLY YARD

WANTED; RellrrH 1 W irm l rnllrr.,1
couple to manage 10 unit apart
men! house, rent Dae. Pnonr
1JS2-J evenings.

BOOKKEEPER

Phone 390 Experienced— Keep books, act a&gt;

9-114 Watt Bad SL

Ce- I l f Magnolia Av*.

.

" h o m e a
S r i, m
i7 J t T t .h ^. ,X. l .10* or oas
_________
r&gt;, screened poreh. Carport*

-it n

Aluminum

Venetian Blinds

cashier. Meet public. Mu.t haw
sxiierlcnce. Year 'round. Estali
llshed local company'. Rcnly giv
I experience to BOX MP c/i
&amp; a Herald,

INGHOUSE Laundromat— LADIES— Tired of routine work?
Like a career and lo br inde­
lan 2 yeara old. A BARAIN at *100.00
pendent? Avon has thousand* nl
women today enjoying business
Sanford Electric Co.
success. Mr*. Juanita Rusted.
118 Mageetla Ave.
P. O. Box 975, Orlando
UNDERWOOD Typewriter perfect
condition $1000; Winchester 22 HA HELP WANTED (Fem ale) to A
Rifle practically new, *15.00;
GIRLS!
GIRLS!
Kerosene Automatic Hot Water GIRLS! ^
Good Hours, Good Wages. Ap
heater, *15 00; • a IX Linoleum
lily in person at Scminola Drive
u , 801 East First SL

&gt; ' B e d r o o m ,.' ia n iffta « i r u
room. ^U r g e cornar l e t $43
Princeton Ave.

S o i U i . ^ r i l e ^ r a i d ’ L.
Oviedo, or call 488L

INSURANCE

W W S T O * 4* 8 ,»

on, Or;
Open for Iaipaction, 9412 RoRv
Ave. Two Quality Built
3 BR
1
10E A P T . on U ko Charm.

t e a s * * *
% n a r M n in s :

B-

Phase 144*

in s u r a n c e

I’hnne 1417 218 I’ alnirtlu Ave.

USED TRACTORS
Brttt Traclar Co.

DOWNSTAIRS ApartmanLLarge Whether baying or selling, R will
GOOD Used O. ft. Refrigerator.
clean rooms. Sun room. 8U Park
Excellent Condition. Only *123.00,
Av*.
___ _________
Sea A1 Lyoa, Bailord n u t r ia
Camer-

HI Way 17 92

floors, bath, hollow tile construc­
II
tion, walking dlatance to clock. USED Refrigerator, It Runs—and i t HELP WANTED . -I I
Owner was hem aaya sail at
refrigerator YOURS For Only 2 aggressive Public Relations Wo­
*30.00
men to solicit by Irlrphone and
RAYMOND » . BAIL, REALTOR
Sanford Electric Ce.
personal contact. Good proitosi11*
Magnolia
Ave.
liun
far live wires. See Mr. Casa
ot
at Brown's TV, 108 W. lat St.
—
Factory
to
You
—
9:30 to 11:00 a. m. only,
C A. WHIDDON, SR.

W. H. “ RILL” BTBMFEft
4 Boom Apartmeat. $00 Pert.

Jublice

14 B -

~

■ W ’JSSPH W SW T1 8 8
Klddi
Iddie stroller, *7.30; Copper

•cree.
•recn doors,
. . . _____
*3.00; Beautiful
___ EXPERT Typist desires part time
work. Knowledge of shorthand
Walnut dining room aulte, *73.00;
also do typing at homa. P. O.
Wagner 3 H. P. Electric motor,
liagla phi ia with 1 " eantrifugai Rax 1447, Sanford, ria .
HOa
ethar Rems COOK to work dayi. Experience.
References. Phona 54-J,
fa Super Trading Poet, 1T-I2
1 mil* So. Phone Z21S-R.

S room upstair* tarnlAed

m

A N N IV ER S A R Y
SALE!
* M S ' J S ¥ ,n r B 6

SSsA.

March T . IS

■.Atlantic
.Phono 1-3(18
Fla,
Daytona Ra*eh» ~
Lot.

1KFRIG ERATORS
■RK kl —

Near

Barrie*

mad

RCA Motorola Ralca and Service

ta y w -p a a s
' £

3

t i «

$ BEDROOM Houae at U he Mary,
cup
City w*t*r.
w»ter. Lprga
U rge rooms,
raoi
cloaed • Cu. Ft, with Fuih Button
with
Rowan.

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1 IR laniard Av*.

Am

ROMRXme SEWING MAOONRS

• J s M ^ t s s is
INCOME TAX
Tax Returns prepared while YOU
walL Room 208 above B. L.
PerUaa, Flrat I t Pkam m .
SWAIN'S BATTERY SERVICE
SERV1
• Battery • Generator • Starter
Sts
Road service, phone *17. 402

* . 2nd SL
$• Gal. Vaitmghouse Table Top
HALLE
GARAGE
Hat Water Heater (with 10 yr.
~ U te a ) Regular list price
• 8 .W

$11*4$.
W#|linghouse~

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aew «e iai* at eaty . . . . *!|»m

WEffisa*

__ at] Mill work
Hardware Items before you
ad be pleasantly surprised

BELL'S CABINET

Bi-w*y 17-82 South

Phone 144

-— - - I _________O T T 1 C I

o* all make* and models.
yenray appianai will make the 8ANFOBD ELECTRIC CO.
dawn payment We Oaaeee local- US MagaaU* Av*.
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a

THE SANFORD HERALD

Pay* 1ft ~ Mrtr. Mar. 7, U 58

Aviation Storekeeper Job Is Big
The planes have been “ up" the
flight line* h»v* be«n flown, the
photograph* have bean taken, the
print* have bf*n made end sent
to their domination*, and another
Fhoterraphie Squadron Slaty Two
detachment ha* rompleted Itsmisalon with a “ Wall Dona". The
mechanic* who kept the plane*
flying, the pilot* and naragators
who flew the flight line* and tha
.photographer* who took tha pic­
ture* and mad# tha printa have
dona an excellent Job, yet, behind
the detachment itand* other men;
man *eld«m baard of, but never
tha let*, extremely important to
tho tuceeia of the ml»»lnn. Tha
yeomen, the parachute rigger, tha
communicator, tha administrator
and tha itorakaaper ara but n
few o f theta background man.
Let’*
loo k it tha
Aviation
Storekeeper. What’* Important ebout hi* JobT Ju»t what doe* ho
do to aid tha detachment 7 Tho
Storekeeper ha* a herculean Job
beginning lateral weak* before
the detachment leave* and endIny only after eeveral week* fo l­
mi
lowing the detachment* return.
eh
P in t, after consultation '•ith
tha Officer- in-Charg# o f the de­
tachment, tha mechanic*. th* elec­
tronic* technician*, the yeomen
and other detachment perionnct,
a Hat of material needed I* made
Up by tho *to rekeeper, incorporatlay all eoncelvabla item* consid­
ered n ecem ry for tha detachSlant, ThU lilt uruatly include*,
special clnthfnr, special tool*, air­
craft parts, cooking utentUs, ad­
ministrative supplier, ordnance *•
qulpment, fond, photographic ma­
larial, camera*, special
ground
handling material and any number
o f other Items depending on the
area of the world in which the
Attachment i* to operate.
Tha storekeeper checks
this
list vary carefully to insure that
correct stock number* are uwri
and that tha Items are really neceeisary. Next, a letter with tha
lilt o f material a* an enclosure,
b written from tha Squadron to
the Commander Air Force, U. 8Atlantic Fleet, via tha ehaln o f
requnting authority to
I - ' command,
procure and assemble tha items
r S n e : fo r tho “ pick up". While awaiting
an answer to tha request, tha
•tanka*par's Job' begin* la ears•st, Ha sat* up separata detach­
ment aupply record* aa a “ aubaidiary" or “branch” of tha squad­
rons “ main supply office."
I
y fj
Ha types requisitions for tha
*•
matartals that will be needed.
I
This usually Involves hundreds of
&lt; Items and a complete, accurate,
requisition Is needed far a«eh Keen
ordered. Ho seta op n syitem o f
I lock tally cards to insure a rofs rd a f all materials received and
to beep track o f tha items whan
they are la tha field. Since there
will ho no shelves or bin* la tha

loaded and tha storekeeper "goes”
on detachment..
Upon reaching the operating
area ha supervises the unloading
and storing ef the bote* of ma­
terial and tha detainment phase
of his Job now begins. During de­
ployment the storekeeper main­
tains all detachment supply re­
cords, inform*
the Squadron
weekly of all material, gasoline
and oil costs, orders items to re­
place those used from the psek-up,
and accounts
for and returns
used accountable material to In­
sure strict inventory control. He
muit maintain strict cost account,
ing records to Insure that the de­
tachment does not exceed, allotted
operating fundi. Sine# tha mater­
ial boxea ara leapt locked at all
times and only the storekeeper
has access to them, be is there­
for* on call 34 hours a day to
break out parts for uie, aa nor­

mally the planet fly by day and
are serviced at night It ia also
the storekeeper* duty to originate
and hive records on all Priority
“ A” materials on order and aaslst
in all phases of following up the**
order to obtain the material as
expendious as possible. Because
for each day an aircraft Is on tha
ground for lack o f an essential
part there are many man hours
lost When tha day arrives that the
detachment* mission I* completed
the Storekeeper is then responsible
fo r Insuring the return o f
all
the material remaining In tha
psrk-up.
He close* the detachment re­
cords, end asslsta tha Offlcer-lnCharge In making a request for
a return Air Lift by furnishing
the necessiry Information Just as
it was needed to originally de­
ploy the detachment. Again he
supervisee the loading of tho e-

qrfjpwWBl for Re return,
onslsssh dvr
ecaEIa MilIBsbh
Upon arrival at tha Squadron
the storekeepers work It still far
from completed, for be must again check the material to insuro
that It all has returned. He then
must type tha necessary paper*
to return the unused material to
tb* Navy supply system. Also
any special tools, elothlng, or
other material checked out
to
detachment personnel on a custo­
dy basis must be returned and
accounted for prior to the store­
keepers duties being completed.
Then the storekeeper will ex­
hibit the earn* characteristics of
his fellow detachment members
and depart on a well earned leave,
another behind the scenes techni­
cian hai displayed that team,
work will always wim
A kipper it a male salmon at
the approach of the breeding searon when he develops a sharp besk,
known as a “ kip” , but the name
ti slro applied to herrings which
ere cured In the same way as true
kippers.

—

March May Provide Reconciliation
NEW DELHI, India (It - March
may provide India and Pakistan a
bright new prospect for reconcilia­
tion.
For the first time In mor* than
a year, the two countries are voic­
ing good will toward each other;
and rumors are current of a solu­
tion in disputed Kashmir sod on
many of the other Issues dividing
the feuding neighbors.
In the first week of March,
"steering committee!” of high In­
dian and Pakistan officials will
meet, probably in New Ddlhl. They
will discuss dozens of minor dis­
putes sod do the spade work for
a New Delhi meeting at tha end
of the month between Prime Min­
ister* Jaw sh irlil Nehru of India
aAd Mohammed All of Pakistan.
At tha moment, relations ara bet­
ter than they have been since All
and Nehru met In loss, in the
same atmosphere of good wiU now
prevailing. This atmosphere was
quickly diisipated In charge and

countercharge, however.
But the pendulum started to
swing back. New Delhi and Krachi agreed to reopen talks, under
the auspice* of the World Bank, on
division of Indus Canal water*. A
railroad link waa opened between
India and West Pakistan for the
first time since partition in 1947.
Bitter relations again gave way
to good will, and In January Pakis
tan Gov. Gen. Glulam Mobim
med visited Naw Delhi to Join in
India’ a Republic Day celebrations
Tha M a r c h negotiations were
scheduled.
Minor Issues range from the pay­
ment of pensions to trade and trav­
el regulation* The World Bank
will bo allowed to continue Its
efforts to resolve the eanal mat­
ter while Kashmir will b « left to
the prime ministers.
Rumors current‘ in New Delhi
and Karachi say AU ,n&lt;* Nehru
may a g m to settle Kashmir on a
“ status quo” basis — Incorporat­

ing those parts o f Kashmir now in
Pakistanlan hands In Pakistan, and
tha Kashmir areas under Indian
control in Indie. Tha present cease­
fire tine, drawn by the U. N. Se­
curity Council, would become the
border between Pakistan and In­
dia. The question rema’ns whether
Indian and Pikistan’ Mi oponion
accept this solution.

|

\ k 'l

COVERT, MICH (UR) The
Charles Robinson family live* In
an octagonal bom / which has been
a landmark here /or M years. Tba
barn la also elgnt-slded.
No ooe Is quite sura why ,t waa
nuilt that way, but Mr*. John Beplman, whose uncle, Orlo Sbattuck,
built the house, says that “ Uncle
Orlo h id a theory that then was
le u wall space in a round-shaped
than a rectangular M use.”
Therefore, she rtaians, he might
have figured it was cheaper to
heaL

w
m

Ford passenger-car sales to CMSflproere
? those of any other make by

Theea box number* age refer­
enced on the stock tally card*
ho provide a simple but foolproof
locator and Inventory aystorn. U
•separation with tha mechanise,
Olectroale technicians and electrt•Ians, the storekeeper inventories
Ike detachments M a of tqoU,
and -orders replacement* to Incur*
complete allowance’ af tools. He
also attending “ supply school”
dailythis echos!, taught by fellow
Storekeeper*, sever* tho tatrieg*
•las af allotment accounting, and
Other technical phases of supply,
te bring him up to ’ date on all
&gt;*a af tha never supply ays-

•

,1 .

&gt;,

1

e*

t

m tv

ft

fe l;

4

CS‘ bafero

Ford is theleeder

hi* departure.

As the detachment material arlira# at tha squadron, tho atoroentars tt’a receipt t
requisition leg and aa tha
a i fl- tally cards, and accounts tor K,
Ls£1 UK meanwhile ha arranges, through
CSi; Eft
the. Supply Officer sad the FuW
lie Works Officer, to have boxea
atado for tha material and op
•xpenditlously as poasiMs, anahen, packs, weights, and streps
W i v;’: the* material la preparation for
Mg Journey to the eperating area.
i • • I?

vk-‘ivy

K|
UI

f .

B ritS e V

A running total o f tho hen
W t&amp;hti la made available te the
•apply Offices whs la eonjuwt h * with the Officer-ia-Cherno
Ptqeeets aa “ Atr l i f t ” to f i r t i e
4 and mea from tha h a m

fe ttB &amp; s b o

Ford is the leader in V*8
Ford is the leader in ride

o f dm

•* frsi

* ' ..a *

W
-I",
V- ' .1 *V »&gt;.'
S W o tr4- - - V
MM.

•

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BUNG

O . D . F a rre ll

8 1 0 B . Ftnrt

OCTAGONAL HOME

,1

area ef operation for stance, all
•art* and supplies’ an kept la
pinged, lacked, and numbered bon-

BARS R O M

HILLSBORO, X . H. (F&gt; —
Lothrop Herrick,
69, returned
home from a brief hospital stay
nursing a * o n eye.
Friends say Herrick want into
his cellar to a eider b e m l and
was about to l o o m the bung,
which chose that moment te pop
m
ou t

IV

MA-M

n n
h gV j.,-'
H 'r K i

1

lowing Hour*!
Week days: • a.m. te « :U * * .
Satardav* « e-m. la I d * g n .

Closed (te a t*ao y a .
Saturday until B i n Man.

FARRELLS
Afcode Pkg.
Store

�„»5

Shop and San
In Sanford
V O L U M E XLVI

•aj

W ea tfier

® he ® $k 6
b ta b lb M

1*08

HANFORD. FLORIDA,

L j^ ^ a lS

TUESDAY, MAR. %, 1955

A — etntnd

L raw d

N o . 133

W in

Storms Of Protest
End Public Hearin

Dulles Foresees
Further
Attack
f

WASHINGTON ( ^ —Secretary of State Dulles was de­
scribed today as believing the Chinese Communists are not
bluffing and will shortly make some military move against
Nationalist-held islands opposite Formosa.
The secretary, who returned Sunday from a trip to the

I Far East, had plenty o f oppor(unity today to outline such
view, either at secret briefings to
cungressionsl committees or in a
report tonight to the nation.
Ha is making a day o f it: Tha
Ernst* Foreign Relation! Commit­
tee in the morning, the House
Foreign Affairs Committee in the
afternoon and national radio-teleForty Two Stetson students arc vision networks tonight.
The recorded half-hour talk will
serving as interna in 20 public
achoola from Jacksonville to Mia­ be carried over radio by CBS (10
mi during the spring semester, p.m.), ARC (10:30 p.m.) and MBS
according to Dr. Ray V. Sowers, (11:30 pm .). A Dim will be tele­
chairman of the Division of Edu vised over Columbia (11:15 p.m.). EXPLAINS
ADVANTAGES — City Mumigrr Warren
Officials said Dulles appeared
, eation. Tbo Intern program Is un
Knowles explains (lie benefits nf annexation n( (hr public
' # d e r the supervision of Prof. R. J convinced the Chinese Communists
hearing held last night hy the City Commission. Knowles
I-ongitreet. Mr*. Margaret Bryan would make some move toward
la interning at Westside Elemen­ carrying out their threats to st­ cited lower costs of insurance, wutcr, and garbage und trash
u ck Formosa. He was represented pick-up. (Stnff I'holo)
tary School under Mra. Helen
Stephenson, Francina Flanagan as feeling that military action
against eoasUl islands probably
la at Southsida Primary Intern
Ing under Mrs. Chloris S. Daria, would be coupled with subversion
efforts directed at Chlang Kaiand Floyd C. Richards is at San
shek’a Formosa refuge and Its
ford Junior High School under
the supervision of Miss Gcorgena outposts
lie mu* said to Lc unwilling,
Hart.
even in private conversations, to
spell out American Intentions on
•
* * *
w Tickets are now on sala for tha ■lefento o f the Nationalist-held is­
Gilbert and Sullivan production of lands o f Quemoy and Matsu, jusl|
“ The Gondoliers", which will ba o ff the Red mainland opposite
presented March 26 at 8:30 p. ra Formosa.
by the Florida Symphony Slngars
PARIS A — Seven battalions of
Dulles and President Elsenhow­
tilt south Vietnamese army have
at the Orlando Municipal Audi er have said Quemoy and Matau
been assigned to put down a revolt
torium. Thla group o f over 00 will be defended if atUckcd by
Central Florida muaielans is ■ Red China In an obvious drive to
by army deserters In the central
mountains, a French Press Agency
new affiliate o f tha Florida Sym conquer Formosa.
phony Orchestra, and will ba ac­
dispatch from Saigon said today.
Dulles reportedly says he made
companied by the full symphony no commitments when he and
The battalions, including artil­
.^orchestra under the baton o f its British Foreign Secretary An­
lery and tank units, have been
'^regular conductor, Frank Miller thony Eden discussed the For­
Tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock ordered Into action around Quang
when it makes Its initial Orlando mosa situation In tho Far East.
a gruund-brraking ceremony will Tri, tho dispatch said.
appearance. Tickets for tha pro*
A month ago In this region sev­
be held at Forest Lake Academy
duetion may be obtained by writ­
for Ihe new boys' dormitory addi­ eral hundred soldiers and auxi­
ing or railing tha Florida Sym
tion. The final building is (o house liary gendarmes who were about
phony Office at the San Juan
120 boy* while the presrnt wing, to be demobilised deserted their
Hotel in Orlando, or at Robinson
which will he one-third of tha total units with (heir weapons.
Music Company, Orlando, or tha
project, will cost approximately
Concentrating in the mountain
Muaia Box in Winter Park,
$140,000.
region of Ualang, 13 miles w rit of
a a •
The ceremonies will take place Quang Trl. the deserlers harassed
Cadet Terry D. Cordell, son of
Tha Seminolt County Forsst in tha new auditorium completed the regular army with mortar fire.
£ Mayor and Mrs. J. D. Cordell, has
In tha past wcrL, skirmishes
Rangers reported three fires yes­ last summer.
been elected to the RoundtabU at
Present to offer *everal ea­ have been fought between the re­
terday m e mile south east' of Howtha C tU dalJ* Charleston, g. C.
all Lake where ten e tn a burned rnarks will be Senator Douglas bels and Ihe regulars. Twelve of
Membership to this group Is limit­
and two houses wort endangered. Stenslrom, Representative V o I i e the deserters have been killed and
ed to 15 ta d only four aopbomeree
The rangers took obth tractor* W i l l i a m s Jr., Representative 75 taken prisoner.
out of tha entire school were se­
and tank truck to tha firs and Mack N. Cleveland Jr., and chair­
Tho chief of Quang Tri Province
lected. Cadeta are chosen on the
man o f the County Commissioners
accused of oegli---- hast. nf SfiU m lr stsndln* tn hi. with tha help o f fivo volunteers John MnUrh s i well s i other Cnm- was recently
In Ih n .o .11 .n l-.W . . n.1 U.».
broogtit tha f its updey control;
major. He must be approved by ell
A grata firs was reported on mlatloncrs O. E. Fourakrc, Fred replaced
his tea c hers after which the boys*
Southwest Road but no damage Dy*on, W. Brown Miller, and B.
Tho French Prrss Agency quot­
group discusses and votes upon his
waa reported. Another g ra n firs C. Dodd. H. T. Mllwre, County ed Viet Nani military sources as
acceptance. Cadet Cordell ia a
burned on Woat 20th Street on Superintendent of Public Instruc­
Jt 1SS3 graduate of Seminole High tho old railroad track bod with tion, ha* also been invited to give saying a sharp clash between
lloa lino religious sect rebels and
a brief speech.
no damage told.
the regular South Viet Nam army
Others
who
are
(b
attend
are
Don
Early this morning a sawmill
took plaro last week. The Infor­
caught fir# ia Oviedo with Hang- R. Rees, chairman of the Acad­ mants gave these details:
era Monroe Parsons
and Dirk emy board and five-state area dir­
The lloa llau troops stormed and
Hudson responding to tho call ector fir the school's church work; captured a Viet Nam Army control
and potting the fir* under con­ V. G. Anderson of Atlanta, Ga.; tower at Bathan south of Soc
trol. Extent o f damage U un­ and If. S. Hanson, also of Atlanta, Trang. about 110 miles southwest
fiva-state area director of the For­ of Saigon. This Is in the Camau
The Seminole H « h School Band known.
Tho rangers ask that anyone est Lake educational program.
peninsular region recently evacu­
under the direction
o f Em fit
ated by Communist-led Victminh
Cowley, will participate in the who wiahee te bum trash on his
troops under the Geneve armistice
^ D is trict Four band contest to bo property, please contact- them and
agreement. South Viet Nam troops
^ h e ld in DeLand on March
18. they will b* glad to stand by In
moved in after (lie Victminh pull
Thousands o f visitors era expect­ cat* it gate out o f hand. They
out.
ed to attend the mass concert a n an N hour call.
John Keeling, WTRR sporlscaslRegular army troops counter
Whan reporting a f i n pleato
and drill to bo held la tha Munigive name, address sad telephone er, will travel to Gainesville to­ attacked Ihe post and destroyed it
aipal Stadium at • p, m.
morrow where he will make a with mortar fire. Tweny-lhrce re­
Almost 1,000 high school musi­ number.
lape recording o f the Ovlcdo-We- bels were reported killed, six In
cians will fill the stadium with
wahltchka basketball game which Jurcd and several raptured.
their colorful uniforms and play
is being player! in the first round
together. Each school will then
of the Class C Stale final*.
individually present a marching
The account will be played back
drill on tha field. Twenty-four
,-abands will participate.
WASHINGTON A - A “ cod# of tomorrow night over radio atatioo
Eighteen Beminple
musicians fair practices" for Houm commit­ WTRR at 0:30 o'clock.
are to compete in selo end en­ tees cams before the Rules Com­
CINCINNATI Ofi- The hump nf
semble ronteata during the day mittee today for anticipated ap­
LIGHT PLANE CRASHES
and ax information booth will bo proval It U backed by Republicsn
WEST MEMPHIS, Ark. &lt;/P) — Ihe flooding Ohio River moved
slowly downstream today, forcing
aet up at Do Land High ae that and Damaeratle leader*.
A light plane crashed In down­
visitors can learn where and at
yesterday hundreds of families and business­
Tha S a u te is considering K* own town West Memphis
•hat time the varieua competi­ COd*.
after striking a high wire but es from the shore areas.
It left a wake nf heavy property
tions ere scheduled.
A House vote on the new regula­ neither pilot Joe Bowen nor hi*
The DeLand Band ami Orrhee- tions kgs been scheduled for late passenger, Paul G. McKinney, an damage as it spilled out along Its
u 4 Assn., will aet up refreshment this weak, on tha assumption that Army photographer, was believed natural borderline separating Ohio,
Stands at the High S. boot end the Bales Committee would clear injured seriously. They suffered West Virginia, Kentucky and In­
Jptedium far the eoevenlenee e f
after g brief
cuts and bruises. The plane appar­ diana.
An estimated 2,600 families were
*M od toto
ently ran out o f foci.
affected. In Ohio alone, some 900
families fled shore area home*.
The Weather Rurcsu at Cincin­
nati called it a "m ajor flood" b*cauie more than two thirds of the
981-mile river was at le n t five
feet over flood stage. The Ameriran Red Cross classed it a* a
“ dlsafter."
Col. J, L. Person, the Ohio
Rlvrr engineer, said damage
would probably run to several mil­
lion dollars.

Strolling
In Sanford

Battalions Assigned
To Put Down Revolt
South Vietnamese Army Is Told
To Stop Uprising By Deserters

Forest Lake Ready
For Special Event

Seminole Rangers
Answer Three Calls

Seminolt Hi Band
Will Participate
In District Meet

Oviedo Basketball
Game To Be Heard

Fair Practice Code
Awaiting Approval

m*

F * aorth and wntnd,
party ctondy snotbcsit and *W
tram* sooth: mirier this aftrrunni
and tonight with lowest tonight
ranging from 1IJ* and scittercl
froM tn north portion.

Ohio River Leaves
Damage In Its Path

Orlando Builder
Indicted For Plot

Convicts' C a p tu re Resignation Asked New Plan
Extends
Of
Barber
Official
Puts End To Search
Boundary j

Ending a two-day search two escaped convicts were
caught iu (lie Negro quarters of Oviedo last night by a r»l&gt;nmn posse who killed one hiuI wounded the other when they
made an attempt to run.
TALLAHASSEE c - Gov. ColJohn Lelloy Young, 20, Tampa, fell dead as buckshot tins hn» called h*- the immediate

By Gov. Collins

Krider Seconds \
Scott's Motion

T h r C ity C om tn forion v o le t!
i.,re into his Chest. Hie com- resignation of Joe I Smith, chnr
panion, Marvin Merritt, 27. hit man of the llnrhers Sanitary Coin Inst niitht to rrcon im - tul to
lightly, dropped to the ground mission, nnd said he Mould hold r&gt; th r N*J..tilol«» ('u tility leg isla ­
suspension hearing for lum i( he tiv e d eleg a tion Hint th e city
nnd surrendered.
he g iv en tlit* o p p o r tu n itv to
Slate Trooper T. Mark Mack didn't.
lie Issued the statement last a n n ex o u tly in g ureas w ith o u t
said Merritt, under sentence for
armed robbery at
Hollywood, night alter Smith denied at his a re fe re n d u m .
would he moved to Raifonl .Statu home in Miami .1 report lti.il lie
T h e a ctio n D rought tn n
turd resigned. Smith sa I d hr
Prison.
wouldn't give up In. po*t until he s to rm y en d in g n puM lc h ea r­
Yoon, Meititt and William Lew­
had been given s d u n ce to defend in g m a rk ed l»y Ih e h e a te d
is, 20, escaped from the Oviedo
protests of residents id the ieohimself.
lien* which would be taken into
LONDON* f/P) — Foreign Seere- State Road t amp Saturday night.
Smith's resignation was an the city.
Lewis, serving a robbery sen­
tary Anthony Eden today railed
nounced Friday hy Robert Fokes,
Approximately fi3 persons at­
on Cliinng Kal-Shrk* to withdraw tence from Manatee ('utility, was
administrative a-.M ant to Guv
tits Nationalist armed forcea from shut and caplinrd in an exchange Collins, along with those n( two tended the hraring.
nf gunfire with a Florida High­
Commissioner E I', Scott’s mothe rua.tal islands o ff China.
other commission members. The
Giving lha House of Commons way patrolman late Sunday. He is olhers were C. R Rankin of Mon- (ion that the recommendation bo
made was seconded h&gt; Commis­
a report on his Ranghok meeting being held in Seminole
y|
injurtr*
1 ticello, and A. L. Dickm-nn of Or sioner John Krider and unanim­
with IT. S. Secretary nf State jail pending outcome o f injur
lamlo
ously approved by Ihe Commis­
Dulles and tour o f Southeast Asia, received by Thomas Hollings­
Smith said he had wriltcn S sion.
Eden praised both the United worth, 6! I-year-old white man.
Idler In Gov. ('uliins which said
Hollingsworth said a Negro de­
The annexation plan would ex­
States and Chinese Communists
in pari:
tend Ihe city limits south to tako
for relasing tension over For­ manded money, and tried to kill
"I have not reigned and will
him with an axe. Doth o f his arms
in the new 2Jtli St. school and tnoil
mosa.
not resign until vorli a time that I
However, he said sounding out were broken amt his head rill. may be given'an i&gt;Pi»&gt;ilunily lo of the Drcamvvohi subdividon.
IViping on a trass • fire hsd led Police Chief Geotge Kelsey said defend myself and family against
Annexation proposal* submitted
him to *'ln‘lievsrm»J'J'JWWWWI.M Lewis matched Hollingsworth's criticism directed against the bar­ by Ihe City Zoning and I’ lannint
description
of
his
attacker.
him to "coma reluctantly to Ih*
ber board u( which 1 am chair­ Commission wero altered slight­
The last two fugitive* wera fin­ man."
conclusion that the necessary conly alter it was pointed nut that
the city would taku in son:*
ditions fur progress dd not yet ally overtaken by lha large, eon*
The reported resignations came
slanlly moving bam! nf Isw offi­
exist."
swampland hy holding to tha ori­
in Die wake of s disclosure the
"Ths U. K. government have al­ cers ami civilian volunteers who hoard issued sonic 20 licenses im ginal act-up.
Under the new plan, tha souready given positive proofs of kepi ■ tight cordon around Uviedo properly last year.
tliarn limits uf the city would ho
their desire to relax tension and for two days.
It ink In said some applicants
An II•)car-old Negro school boy, who had failed to pass tesla for extended .731) feel south of 27th St.
reduce tho risks of war," Eden
The new line would run between
said, "I am convinced that they Charles Gainey, walking through licensing
were
given pawing
wish to see conditions created a gruv* after school, slopped tn grades anyway on instructions Marshall and !fariwc!l Avcs, on
which would put an end to activo pick a tangerine and saw xunie (rum Lcnnatil IVpper, adminixtra the southwest side of Ihe cllv and,
military hostilities In the area and prison rlothe.* hanging on a limb. live aids to former Acting Guv. on ihe northwest sole, would run
west on 2uth St. to pie Atlantic*
rrdurs tha danger* of a wider On* of tho fugitives stepped from Johns.
Coast I.in p j ’ a,':o,id'* i &gt; -.
^
behind a trre artl fled
Tollins laid Smith ought to re­
line
track’.V
w
u*.t
tnen
go
north
■'Tnev
Tney have effu, lively restrainThe boy reported hi* discovery sign and added:
In tlie \. C. L.'s Leesburg track
«*d tha Chinese Nationalists in re- lo Hwy. I’ tlnin. Alack and T. O.
“ If he doesn't I will regard it
and tiaek to the pre.-ent city limits.
rent weeka front Initiating
at­ Robinson Jr.
is my doty to proceed with a
Many property owner* tn llse af­
tacks against the Chinese main
Hounds were brought from Ihe hearing and if Hie facts arc as
laud. They have persuaded
lha prison ramp. Highway patrolmen reported in the pres* Mr. Smith fected arms registered strong ob­
N ationalist* t« aisrnaLa the T si-h. and thrrift's re.r.-. combed iky Jut. Mill lm suspaniled " ------------------ jections amt said they could 'Cii_
r r r ------------------------------cn and Nanchl Islands.”
Foke* had anmumred Smith's
Boston grow until dusk.
advantage" hi being taken
As for ths Chinese Communists,
Then a Nrgro drove up lo llic resignation alter Smilli told him lo into ilu&lt; city. One of them, c.ipt.
Eden said "fur Iheir part they
a
telephone
conservation
ho
wimbl
grave with * lip the men were in
Thomas it Ihirge-s, said he had
have refrained from
attacking
lha quarters a half mile closer lo quit.
a petition to submit to tho Com­
Qumoy and the Matsu*." lie **
"Ho
told
me
he
would
wire
mission.
town.
pressed hop* "they wilt continue
his resignation. I assume hr mrant
City Managin' Warren Knowles,
Peace Judies Thao Aulht swore what lie said ami announced it to
to exercise this n -lis in t and that
through figures chalked on
on a
they will make it apparent that, in ■ coroner's jury al Ih* scene the prrss."
hlacklmard, explained tlie hi-newhile maintaining intact in all aud picked Jim l.e* as foreman.
(its of annexation, lie pointed out,
respects their position ill tegsrd Judge Atilm trhetiuletl Ih* hnpiesl
among other things, the •vlngs
tn Formosa and the Pescadores, In the Oviedo rily hall at I p. m.
"it lire insurance, water and
they will not
prosecute their Friday.
tr**h and garbage pick up.
claims by forrsful means."
Dr. W. V. Stonar decided U
One property owner said after­
buckshot wounds am iss ths chest
ward:
TAII’ KI, Formosa te* — timing
caused Young's death acnading
"At first I waa not In favor of
Kai-shek's Chinese Nationalists are
In Judge Aulin. *
annexation, hut if Uu.se fi,ni*ea
Merritt was treated at the apparently convinced of Amcriean ate c o n e d , u looks like evaryliody
Oviedo elude, wlivre sounds (o support for the defense of the would hkn to gel intn the city."
Matsu Islands dominating Foo­
hi* right shoulder, upper rlghl arm
Thu itecti for tiro protection in
and rlghl rib* were found nut chow, a Cum to uni st poll.
Reports suggesting that there] Ihu arcus subject In none rollon
serious.
Trooper
Mark
said
Miv
WASHINGTON A - Sen. Gore
might he an ovarualion of the! wa* cited hy Ri.hert llrown, chulr(I)-Tcnn) polled the ns Iion's gov­ Hit wIK b* moved lo Halford slate Matsus, at the northern void of the man o( Uie Zoning Cum mis -Ion. in
prison.
ernors today In an effoM tn find
Formosa Strait, have provoked an answer to a protest by William
Mcrriit and Young lopuralad angry reaction here.
nut whethnr the slates arc ready,
Wesley Jr.
willing and abta In put up more from Lewis and stayed class to
The anger stems from the poll
Wsidey, however, pointed out
money for highway improvement. Oviedo In order hi pick up non- out from Ihu Taehens and later that Ilia City Fire Department of­
Gore la ehairman of a Senate prison clothes they had left al from Nu/rliUhan. These wet* ten makus rum nntsido thu City.
Public Works subcommittee now lha home nf Rcbocra Oxcndinc, bitter steps for the Nationalists.
"A* a humanitarian. I'm fur
considering President Eisenhower's girl friend of Merritt's.
The Nationalist line now is that that," Uniwn declared. “ As a tax­
plan for a huge new to year fed­
Tha Iwn fugitives rvadtd lb* Quemoy and Ih* Malsus will he payer, I'm against M. Tl'a my
eral-state highway moderniiation posse and tracking hounds through defended, with or without Ameri­ money that's being spent."
program and Gore's rival proposal repeated narrow carapsi. At one can support.
Wesley and others, arguing
for an increase In the present fed­ time the hounds led (he hunters
Official sourcat insist that III* against annexation, said: "Wu'ro
eral aid highway program. Both away from the Oxemllno home • lUmato.l 5,000 man Matsu garri­ not getting alt wc'ra paying W
proposals would entail bigger itate and in a few minutes they were son Is being trebled.
now."
outlay*.
gone, the pair slipped In tbs front
Aliiie S|M-er drew loiid-applaust
In separata telegram* to ths 48 door and out the back.
37 1100 K V U T t T I 'D
I
urged that a referendum
lists chief executives, Gore said
They reportedly stopped only
PARIS t/P) ' u r 60JH1U Chinese l"'
" " lhe annexation prothe subcommittee had Instructed long enough lo pirk up a red
living in North Viet Nam wh.-n
"&gt;mll!‘t
him to ask for Ihe governors' shirt and a blue shirt.
tin* (ient’VJl hi mifttiri* wu« MKiiril, lie given an npixirtunily In vuto
views on ("the ability and present
Young w si wearing the red shirt 35,000 have hern evacuated to the on the matter.
Inclination of their respective
"An area should he left on ths
when
he died. Merritt bad on the , noii-Cuimminist South, the French
states to raise thr additional funds
blue plaid.
|Press Agency reported today,
. edge nf Hie community," Speef
to match and implement proposals
said, "an that people can come in
now bsfors It."
and locate without having to far*
Gora explained that hr proposrs
thu city's heavy bonded indebtedto nearly double the present 875
nusv."
million-dollar annual federal high
Hu said Ihr City had been held
way allocation. The slates would
back hi-rau-e of Ibis iridrhtedne ■«
continue to match most of the
and cited lli.it ax thu reaxon in­
federal funds on a so-so basis.
dustry has passed up Sanford.
WASHINGTON ( A - John K. Gal­ "friendly study" of the slock
City taxes begin us ns soon -if
braith, Harvard eronnmlxt said to­ market In the light of the slock
an area (» annexed. Mayor Denver
day tha United States may ba in price rise.
Galbraith v o i c e d agreement Cordell said in reply to a property
tha aarly stages nf a boom-sndowner's question. City Manager
buat cycle (hat could and in a with stuck exchange presidents
1120-style crash.
who testified earlier that the Knowlc* pointed not, however,
that "no one pay* for se»era;.o
Galbraith told thr Senata Bank­ American economy is fur strong­
IIERSCHER, III. (At — Tex, *
until you get it. The same goes
6-year-old lion afflicted with ar­ ing Committee there art "formid er than in 1U29. He agreed luu for water."
thritis, la going la Florida and sbla safeguards" against another there are lifeguards against a
Knowlc* said that garbage and
warm weather for four months.
such crash. But he spoke In his new crash, among them curbs nn
trash pick up would begin immed­
"wholesale
market
rigging
aud
prepared
testimony
of
"resem
­
Th# 325-pound lion will mak*
iately, along with police and firs
thetrip la hi* special station wag­ blances" between condition* in the ferveut salesmanship.''
proteclion.
But he cautioned that "the fun­
late 1020* and today that ha said
on, equipped with stesl bars,
Karlor, the Commission approv­
Tex, owned by 80-year-old Mlsa "ara certainly Interesting and pos­ damental problem of containing a ed all re/oning recommendations
speculative orgy, ones it is well
BobbyrtU Porter, who has had lha sibly disturbing."
submitted by ths Zoning Hoard
animal sine* it was a cub, lives ia
Ha urged that ths government launched, remains essentially un­ with the rxcepliou of a proposal
s 10 by 18-fsot knotty pin* dea, and Wall Street b* ready to halt solved "
asking that the area between
Just o ff tbs living room In tb* credit buying of slocks and to put
Galbraith, who has written a Fourth and Fifth St*. b« noted
Porter home. Ire* bars separate oa other emergency brake* If lha aoun-lo be-published booh o* tha commercially.
the two rooms.
Di-year-old bull market sbowa no ltt&gt; financial dsbacls, lavr such
t Tax has • ssmuffsrsr to slga of alackaaiag to th* assr fu- danger sign* now at inaroased
ADKNACF.lt CONFINED
Bsbbyetta'a mstber, Mrs. Posri
credit buying, an tolue of nawBONN, Germany Of) — Wixsi
Patter, n s f l why tha
aomsM into th* marks I sod * (terman Chanewllur Konrad Ads-

Foreign Secretary
Calls On Kai-Shek
To Withdraw Men

China Apparently
Sure Of Support

Senator Gore Polls
Nation's Governors
On Highway Plan

Galbraith Says Boom, Bust Cycle
Could End In 1929 Style Crash

Arthritic Lion ls&lt;
Coming To Florida

BARTOW A - Criminal Court
Judge Roy H. Amldon has ruled
J. Willard Durden !■ solvent and
able to pay for hla defense to
charge* o f conspiracy to murder.
Durden, an Orlando contractor,
has been indicted for plotting to
kill three wealthy persons—Mrs.
Byrd T. Boaeb and K. H. Gerlacfc,
both o f Lake Wales; and Mra.
Louisa Clark Havloy Sandberg of
Orlando.
During preliminaries o f hla trial
in tbs Roach case, Durden weal
adjudged insolvent and tho state*
assumed tho expanse e f his do- along with Bshhysttoli brother U d Harold B. Wood, at M. Paid
fans*. Ho waa easelida it hut
Bill, a n lahl*g Ta« to Bto

■ T

71
*

haters**

*

too sals naurr, 10, waa confined to
horns f ilk J _ cold today, lha

\J

his

J

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&lt;
■ I

a

THE SANFORD HERALD

Pay* 1ft ~ Mrtr. Mar. 7, U 58

Aviation Storekeeper Job Is Big
The planes have been “up" the
flight line* h»v* be«n flown, the
photograph* have bean taken, the
print* have bf*n made end sent
to their domination*, and another
Fhoterraphie Squadron Slaty Two
detachment ha* rompleted Itsmisalon with a “Wall Dona". The
mechanic* who kept the plane*
flying, the pilot* and naragators
who flew the flight line* and tha
.photographer* who took tha pic­
ture* and mad# tha printa have
dona an excellent Job, yet, behind
the detachment itand* other men;
man *eld«m baard of, but never
tha let*, extremely important to
tho tuceeia of the ml»»lnn. Tha
yeomen, the parachute rigger, tha
communicator, tha administrator
and tha itorakaaper ara but n
few of theta background man.
Let’* loo k it tha Aviation
Storekeeper. What’* Important ebout hi* JobT Ju»t what doe* ho
do to aid tha detachment 7 Tho
Storekeeper ha* a herculean Job
beginning lateral weak* before
the detachment leave* and endIny only after eeveral week* fol­
mi
lowing the detachment* return.
eh
P in t, after consultation '•ith
tha Officer- in-Charg# of the de­
tachment, tha mechanic*. th* elec­
tronic* technician*, the yeomen
and other detachment perionnct,
a Hat of material needed I* made
Up by tho *to rekeeper, incorporatlay all eoncelvabla item* consid­
ered necem ry for tha detachSlant, ThU lilt uruatly include*,
special clnthfnr, special tool*, air­
craft parts, cooking utentUs, ad­
ministrative supplier, ordnance *•
qulpment, fond, photographic ma­
larial, camera*, special ground
handling material and any number
of other Items depending on the
area of the world in which the
Attachment i* to operate.
Tha storekeeper checks this
list vary carefully to insure that
correct stock number* are uwri
and that tha Items are really neceeisary. Next, a letter with tha
lilt of material a* an enclosure,
b written from tha Squadron to
the Commander Air Force, U. 8Atlantic Fleet, via tha ehaln of
command, requnting authority to
I - ' procure and assemble tha items
r S n e : for tho “pick up". While awaiting
an answer to tha request, tha
•tanka*par's Job' begin* la ears•st, Ha sat* up separata detach­
aupply record* aa a “aub, 1 ment
aidiary" or “branch” of tha squad­
rons “main supply office."
I
yfj
Ha types requisitions for tha
*•
matartals that will be needed.
I
This usually Involves hundreds of
&lt; Items and a complete, accurate,
requisition Is needed far a«eh Keen
ordered. Ho seta op n syitem of
I lock tally cards to insure a rofsrd af all materials received and
to beep track of tha items whan
they are la tha field. Since there
will ho no shelves or bin* la tha
area ef operation for stance, all
•art* and supplies’ a n kept la
pinged, lacked, and numbered bon|

\ k 'l

w
m

Theea box number* age refer­
enced on the stock tally card*
ho provide a simple but foolproof
locator and Inventory ays torn. U
•separation with tha mechanise,
Olectroale technicians and electrt•Ians, the storekeeper inventories
Ike detachments M a of tqoU,
and -orders replacement* to Incur*
complete allowance’ af tools. He
also attending “supply school”
dailyth is echos!, taught by fellow
Storekeeper*, sever* tho tatrieg*
•las af allotment accounting, and
Other technical phases of supply,
te bring him up to ’date on all
&gt;*a af tha never supply aysCS‘bafero hi* departure.
As the detachment material arlira# at tha squadron, tho atoroentars tt’a receipt t
requisition leg and aa tha
tally cards, and accounts tor K,
meanwhile ha arranges, through
the. Supply Officer sad the FuW
lie Works Officer, to have boxea
atado for tha material and op
•xpenditlously as poasiMs, anahen, packs, weights, and streps
the* material la preparation for
Mg Journey to the eperating area.
A running total of tho hen
Wt&amp;hti la made available te the
•apply Offices whs la eonjuwth * with the Officer-ia-Cherno
Ptqeeets aa “Atr lif t” to fir t i e
4 and mea from tha h a m

loaded and tha storekeeper "goes”
on detachment..
Upon reaching the operating
area ha supervises the unloading
and storing ef the bote* of ma­
terial and tha detainment phase
of his Job now begins. During de­
ployment the storekeeper main­
tains all detachment supply re­
cords, inform*
the Squadron
weekly of all material, gasoline
and oil costs, orders items to re­
place those used from the psek-up,
and accounts for and returns
used accountable material to In­
sure strict inventory control. He
muit maintain strict cost account,
ing records to Insure that the de­
tachment does not exceed, allotted
operating fundi. Sine# tha mater­
ial boxea ara leapt locked at all
times and only the storekeeper
has access to them, be is there­
for* on call 34 hours a day to
break out parts for uie, aa nor­

mally the planet fly by day and
are serviced at night It ia also
the storekeeper* duty to originate
and hive records on all Priority
“A” materials on order and aaslst
in all phases of following up the**
order to obtain the material as
expendious as possible. Because
for each day an aircraft Is on tha
ground for lack of an essential
part there are many man hours
lost When tha day arrives that the
detachment* mission I* completed
the Storekeeper is then responsible
for Insuring the return of all
the material remaining In tha
psrk-up.
He close* the detachment re­
cords, end asslsta tha Offlcer-lnCharge In making a request for
a return Air Lift by furnishing
the necessiry Information Just as
it was needed to originally de­
ploy the detachment. Again he
supervisee the loading of tho e-

qrfjpwWBl for Re return,
onslsssh dvr
ecaEIa MilIBsbh
Upon arrival at tha Squadron
the storekeepers work It still far
from completed, for be must again check the material to insuro
that It all has returned. He then
must type tha necessary paper*
to return the unused material to
tb* Navy supply system. Also
any special tools, elothlng, or
other material checked out to
detachment personnel on a custo­
dy basis must be returned and
accounted for prior to the store­
keepers duties being completed.
Then the storekeeper will ex­
hibit the earn* characteristics of
his fellow detachment members
and depart on a well earned leave,
another behind the scenes techni­
cian hai displayed that team,
work will always wim
A kipper it a male salmon at
the approach of the breeding searon when he develops a sharp besk,
known as a “ kip”, but the name
ti slro applied to herrings which
ere cured In the same way as true
kippers.

March May Provide Reconciliation
NEW DELHI, India (It - March
may provide India and Pakistan a
bright new prospect for reconcilia­
tion.
For the first time In mor* than
a year, the two countries are voic­
ing good will toward each other;
and rumors are current of a solu­
tion in disputed Kashmir sod on
many of the other Issues dividing
the feuding neighbors.
In the first week of March,
"steering committee!” of high In­
dian and Pakistan officials will
meet, probably in New Ddlhl. They
will discuss dozens of minor dis­
putes sod do the spade work for
a New Delhi meeting at tha end
of the month between Prime Min­
ister* Jaw shirlil Nehru of India
aAd Mohammed All of Pakistan.
At tha moment, relations ara bet­
ter than they have been since All
and Nehru met In loss, in the
same atmosphere of good wiU now
prevailing. This atmosphere was
quickly diisipated In charge and

countercharge, however .
But the pendulum started to
swing back. New Delhi and Krachi agreed to reopen talks, under
the auspice* of the World Bank, on
division of Indus Canal water*. A
railroad link waa opened between
India and West Pakistan for the
first time since partition in 1947.
Bitter relations again gave way
to good will, and In January Pakis
tan Gov. Gen. Glulam Mobim
med visited Naw Delhi to Join in
India’a Republic Day celebrations
Tha M a r c h negotiations were
scheduled.
Minor Issues range from the pay­
ment of pensions to trade and trav­
el regulation* The World Bank
will bo allowed to continue Its
efforts to resolve the eanal mat­
ter while Kashmir will b« left to
the prime ministers.
Rumors current‘ in New Delhi
and Karachi say AU ,n&lt;* Nehru
may a g m to settle Kashmir on a
“ status quo” basis — Incorporat­

ing those parts of Kashmir now in
Pakistanlan hands In Pakistan, and
tha Kashmir areas under Indian
control in Indie. Tha present cease­
fire tine, drawn by the U. N. Se­
curity Council, would become the
border between Pakistan and In­
dia. The question rema’ns whether
Indian and Pikistan’Mi oponion
accept this solution.
OCTAGONAL HOME
COVERT, MICH (UR) - The
Charles Robinson family live* In
an octagonal bom/ which has been
a landmark here /or M years. Tba
barn la also elgnt-slded.
No ooe Is quite sura why ,t waa
nuilt that way, but Mr*. John Beplman, whose uncle, Orlo Sbattuck,
built the house, says that “Uncle
Orlo hid a theory that then was
leu wall space in a round-shaped
than a rectangular Muse.”
Therefore, she rtaians, he might
have figured it was cheaper to
heaL

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— BARS R O M BUNG
HILLSBORO, X. H. (F&gt; —
Lothrop Herrick, 69, returned
home from a brief hospital stay
nursing a *on eye.
Friends say Herrick want into
his cellar to a eider b em l and
was about to lo o m the bung,
which chose that moment te pop
m
out

O. D. F a rre ll

810 B. F tn rt

lowing Hour*!
Week days: • a.m. te « :U * * .

Satardav* « e-m. la Id* g n .
Closed (te a t*ao y a .
Saturday until B i n Man.

FARRELLS
Afcode Pkg.
Store

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•aj

W e a tfie r
F * aorth and wntnd,
party ctondy snotbcsit and *W
tram* sooth: mirier this aftrrunni
and tonight with lowest tonight
ranging from 1IJ* and scittercl
froM tn north portion.

Shop and San
In Sanford

®he ® $ k 6 m*L j^ ^ a lS
Dulles Foresees
Storms
Of
Protest
Further Attack
End Public Hearin

V O L U M E XLVI

b ta b lb M

1*08

HANFORD. FLORIDA,

TUESDAY, MAR. %, 1955

A— etntnd

L ra w d W in

No. 133

fscribedWASHINGTON
( ^ —Secretary of State Dulles was de­
today as believing the Chinese Communists are not
bluffing and will shortly make some military move against
Nationalist-held islands opposite Formosa.
The secretary, who returned Sunday from a trip to the

Convicts' Capture Resignation Asked New Plan
Extends
Of
Barber
Official
Puts End To Search
Boundary j

I Far East, had plenty of oppor(unity today to outline such
view, either at secret briefings to
cungressionsl committees or in a
report tonight to the nation.
Ha is making a day of it: Tha
Ernst* Foreign Relation! Commit­
tee in the morning, the House
Ending a two-day search two escaped convicts were
Foreign Affairs Committee in the
caught
iu (lie Negro quarters of Oviedo last night by a r»l&gt;afternoon and national radio-teleKrider Seconds \
nmn posse who killed one hiuI wounded the other when they
vision
networks
tonight.
Forty Two Stetson students arc
made an attempt to run.
TALLAHASSEE c - Gov. ColThe recorded half-hour talk will
Scott's Motion
serving as interna in 20 public
John Lelloy Young, 20, Tampa, fell dead as buckshot tins hn» called h*- the immediate
achoola from Jacksonville to Mia­ be carried over radio by CBS (10
T h r City Comtnforion volet!
i.,re into his Chest. Hie com- resignation of Joe I Smith, chn r
mi during the spring semester, p.m.), ARC (10:30 p.m.) and MBS
man of the llnrhers Sanitary Coin Inst niitht to rrconim- tul to
(11:30
pm.).
A
Dim
will
be
tele­
panion,
Marvin
Merritt,
27.
hit
according to Dr. Ray V. Sowers,
lightly, dropped to the ground mission, nnd said he Mould hold r&gt; t h r N*J..tilol«» ('utility legisla­
chairman of the Division of Edu vised over Columbia (11:15 p.m.). EXPLAINS ADVANTAGES — City Mumigrr Warren
suspension hearing for lum i( he tive delegation Hint th e city
nnd surrendered.
Officials said Dulles appeared
, eation. Tbo Intern program Is un
Knowles explains (lie benefits nf annexation n( (hr public
he given tlit* o p p o rtu n itv to
Slate Trooper T. Mark Mack didn't.
' # d e r the supervision of Prof. R. J convinced the Chinese Communists
lie Issued the statement last annex o utlying ureas w ith o u t
said Merritt, under sentence for
I-ongitreet. Mr*. Margaret Bryan would make some move toward hearing held last night hy the City Commission. Knowles
armed robbery at Hollywood, night alter Smith denied at his a referendum .
la interning at Westside Elemen­ carrying out their threats to s t­ cited lower costs of insurance, wutcr, and garbage und trash
would he moved to Raifonl .Statu home in Miami .1 report lti.il lie
tary School under Mra. Helen uck Formosa. He was represented pick-up. (Stnff I'holo)
T he action Drought tn n
turd resigned. Smith sa I d hr
Prison.
Stephenson, Francina Flanagan as feeling that military action
storm
y ending n puMlc h e a r­
wouldn't
give
up
In.
po*t
until
he
Yoon, Meititt and William Lew­
la at Southsida Primary Intern against eoasUl islands probably
ing m arked l»y Ihe h ea te d
had
been
given
s
dunce
to
defend
would
be
coupled
with
subversion
is, 20, escaped from the Oviedo
Ing under Mrs. Chloris S. Daria,
protests of residents id the ieohimself.
and Floyd C. Richards is at San efforts directed at Chlang Kailien* which would be taken into
LONDON* f/P) — Foreign Seere- State Road t amp Saturday night.
shek’a
Formosa
refuge
and
Its
Smith's resignation was an the city.
ford Junior High School under
Lewis, serving a robbery sen­
tary Anthony Eden today railed
outposts
nounced Friday hy Robert Fokes,
the supervision of Miss Gcorgena
Approximately fi3 persons at­
on Cliinng Kal-Shrk* to withdraw tence from Manatee ('utility, was administrative a-.M ant to Guv
lie mu* said to Lc unwilling,
Hart.
tended the hraring.
shut
and
caplinrd
in
an
exchange
tits
Nationalist
armed
forcea
from
even in private conversations, to
Collins,
along
with
those
n(
two
nf gunfire with a Florida High­ other commission members. The
Commissioner E I', Scott’s mothe rua.tal islands off China.
spell out American Intentions on
•
* * *
way patrolman late Sunday. He is olhers were C. R Rankin of Mon- (ion that the recommendation bo
w Tickets are now on sala for tha ■lefento of the Nationalist-held is­
Giving
lha
House
of
Commons
South Vietnamese Army Is Told
made was seconded h&gt; Commis­
Gilbert and Sullivan production of lands of Quemoy and Matsu, ju sl|
a report on his Ranghok meeting being held in Seminole
injurtr*y 1| ticello, and A. L. Dickm-nn of Or sioner John Krider and unanim­
jail pending outcome of injur
“The Gondoliers", which will ba off the Red mainland opposite
with
IT.
S.
Secretary
nf
State
lamlo
To Stop Uprising By Deserters
approved by Ihe Commis­
presented March 26 at 8:30 p. ra Formosa.
Dulles and tour of Southeast Asia, received by Thomas Hollings­ Smith said he had wriltcn S ously
sion.
by the Florida Symphony Slngars
PARIS A — Seven battalions of Eden praised both the United worth, 6! I-year-old white man.
Dulles and President Elsenhow­
tilt south Vietnamese army have States and Chinese Communists
a t the Orlando Municipal Audi er have said Quemoy and Matau
Hollingsworth said a Negro de­ Idler In Gov. ('uliins which said
The annexation plan would ex­
been assigned to put down a revolt for relasing tension over For­ manded money, and tried to kill in pari:
torium. Thla group of over 00 will be defended if atUckcd by
tend Ihe city limits south to tako
"I
have
not
reigned
and
will
Central Florida muaielans is ■ Red China In an obvious drive to
by army deserters In the central mosa.
him with an axe. Doth of his arms not resign until vorli a time that I in the new 2Jtli St. school and tnoil
mountains, a French Press Agency
new affiliate of tha Florida Sym conquer Formosa.
However, he said sounding out were broken amt his head rill. may be given'an i&gt;Pi»&gt;ilunily lo of the Drcamvvohi subdividon.
phony Orchestra, and will ba ac­
dispatch from Saigon said today. IViping on a trass • fire hsd led Police Chief Geotge Kelsey said
Dulles reportedly says he made
Annexation proposal* submitted
companied by the full symphony no commitments when he and
The battalions, including artil­ him to *'ln‘lievsrm»J'J'JWWWWI.M Lewis matched Hollingsworth's defend myself and family against by Ihe City Zoning and I’lannint
criticism directed against the bar­
.^orchestra under the baton of its British Foreign Secretary An­
lery and tank units, have been him to "coma reluctantly to Ih* description of his attacker.
ber board u( which 1 am chair­ Commission wero altered slight­
'^regular conductor, Frank Miller thony Eden discussed the For­
Tomorrow morning at 11 o'clock ordered Into action around Quang conclusion that the necessary conThe last two fugitive* wera fin­ man."
ly alter it was pointed nut that
when it makes Its initial Orlando mosa situation In tho Far East.
Tri,
tho
dispatch
said.
a gruund-brraking ceremony will
ally overtaken by lha large, eon*
the city would taku in son:*
ditions
fur
progress
dd
not
yet
The
reported
resignations
came
appearance. Tickets for tha pro*
A month ago In this region sev­ exist."
be held at Forest Lake Academy
slanlly moving bam! nf Isw offi­
swampland hy holding to tha ori­
duetion may be obtained by writ­
for Ihe new boys' dormitory addi­ eral hundred soldiers and auxi­ "Ths U. K. government have al­ cers ami civilian volunteers who in Die wake of s disclosure the ginal act-up.
hoard
issued
sonic
20
licenses
im
ing or railing tha Florida Sym
liary
gendarmes
who
were
about
tion. The final building is (o house
Under the new plan, tha souready given positive proofs of kepi ■ tight cordon around Uviedo properly last year.
phony Office at the San Juan
120 boy* while the presrnt wing, to be demobilised deserted their their desire to relax tension and for two days.
tliarn limits uf the city would ho
Hotel in Orlando, or at Robinson
It
ink
In
said
some
applicants
which will he one-third of tha total units with (heir weapons.
An II•)car-old Negro school boy, who had failed to pass tesla for extended .731) feel south of 27th St.
reduce tho risks of war," Eden
Music Company, Orlando, or tha
project, will cost approximately
new line would run between
Concentrating
in
the
mountain
Charles
Gainey, walking through
said,
"I
am
convinced
that
they
were given pawing The
Muaia Box in Winter Park,
$140,000.
Marshall and !fariwc!l Avcs, on
region of Ualang, 13 miles w rit of wish to see conditions created a gruv* after school, slopped tn licensing
a a •
grades
anyway
on
instructions
The ceremonies will take place Quang Trl. the deserlers harassed which would put an end to activo pick a tangerine and saw xunie
the southwest side of Ihe cllv and,
(rum Lcnnatil IVpper, adminixtra on
Cadet Terry D. Cordell, son of Tha Seminolt County Forsst in tha new auditorium completed the regular army with mortar fire. military
ihe northwest sole, would run
hostilities
In
the
area
and
prison
rlothe.*
hanging
on
a
limb.
live
aids
to
former
Acting
Guv.
£ Mayor and Mrs. J . D. Cordell, has Rangers reported three fires yes­ last summer.
west on 2uth St. to pie Atlantic*
In tha past wcrL, skirmishes rrdurs tha danger* of a wider On* of tho fugitives stepped from Johns.
been elected to the RoundtabU at terday m e mile south east' of HowCoast I.in p j ’a,':o,id'* i &gt; -.
^
Present to offer *everal ea­ have been fought between the re­
behind a trre artl fled
Tollins laid Smith ought to re­ line track’.V w u*.t tnen go north
tha C tU dalJ* Charleston, g. C. all Lake where ten e tn a burned rnarks will be Senator Douglas bels and Ihe regulars. Twelve of
■'Tnev
Tney have effu, lively restrainThe boy reported hi* discovery sign and added:
Membership to this group Is limit­ and two houses wort endangered. Stenslrom, Representative V o I i e the deserters have been killed and
In tlie \. C. L.'s Leesburg track
«*d tha Chinese Nationalists in re- lo Hwy. I’tlnin. Alack and T. O.
“ If he doesn't I will regard it and
ed to 15 ta d only four aopbomeree The rangers took obth tractor* W i l l i a m s Jr., Representative 75 taken prisoner.
tiaek to the pre.-ent city limits.
rent
weeka
front
Initiating
at­
Robinson
Jr.
is
my
doty
to
proceed
with
a
out of tha entire school were se­ and tank truck to tha firs and Mack N. Cleveland Jr., and chair­
Many
property owner* tn llse af­
Tho
chief
of
Quang
Tri
Province
tacks
against
the
Chinese
main
Hounds were brought from Ihe hearing and if Hie facts arc as
lected. Cadeta are chosen on the
man of the County Commissioners
accused of oegli- laud. They have persuaded
lha prison ramp. Highway patrolmen reported in the pres* Mr. Smith fected arms registered strong ob­
---- h a s t. nf S f iU m lr stsndln* tn hi. with tha help of fivo volunteers John MnUrh s i well s i other Cnm- was recently
jections amt said they could 'Cii_
In Ihn.o .11.nl-.W. . n.1 U.». Nationalist * t« aisrnaLa the T si-h.
tha fits updey control;
and thrrift's re.r.-. combed iky Jut. Mill lm suspaniled " ---------------- r r r -------------------------major. He must be approved by ell broogtit
A grata firs was reported on mlatloncrs O. E. Fourakrc, Fred replaced
cn
and
Nanchl
Islands.”
Foke*
had
anmumred
Smith's
Boston grow until dusk.
his tea chers after which the boys* Southwest Road but no damage Dy*on, W. Brown Miller, and B.
advantage" hi being taken
Tho French Prrss Agency quot­ As for ths Chinese Communists,
group discusses and votes upon his waa reported. Another g ra n firs C. Dodd. H. T. Mllwre, County
Then a Nrgro drove up lo llic resignation alter Smilli told him lo into ilu&lt; city. One of them, c.ipt.
ed
Viet
Nani
military
sources
as
Eden
said
"fur
I
heir
part
they
a
telephone
conservation
ho
wimbl
acceptance. Cadet Cordell ia a burned on Woat 20th Street on Superintendent of Public Instruc­
grave with * lip the men were in
Thomas it Ihirge-s, said he had
Jt 1SS3 graduate of Seminole High tho old railroad track bod with tion, ha* also been invited to give saying a sharp clash between have refrained from attacking lha quarters a half mile closer lo quit.
a petition to submit to tho Com­
lloa lino religious sect rebels and Qumoy and the Matsu*." lie **
"Ho
told
me
he
would
wire
mission.
a brief speech.
no damage told.
the regular South Viet Nam army pressed hop* "they wilt continue town.
his
resignation.
I
assume
hr
mrant
Others who are (b attend are Don took plaro last week. The Infor­ to exercise this n -lisin t and that
City Managin' Warren Knowles,
Peace Judies Thao Aulht swore what lie said ami announced it to
Early this morning a sawmill
R. Rees, chairman of the Acad­ mants gave these details:
through figures chalked on
Seminolt Hi Band caught fir# ia Oviedo with Hang- emy
on a
they will make it apparent that, in ■ coroner's jury al Ih* scene the prrss."
board and five-state area dir­ The lloa llau troops stormed and while maintaining intact in all aud picked Jim l.e* as foreman.
hlacklmard, explained tlie hi-neera Monroe Parsons and Dirk
(its of annexation, lie pointed out,
Hudson responding to tho call ector fir the school's church work; captured a Viet Nam Army control respects their position ill tegsrd Judge Atilm trhetiuletl Ih* hnpiesl
Will Participate
among other things, the
and potting the fir* under con­ V. G. Anderson of Atlanta, Ga.; tower at Bathan south of Soc tn Formosa and the Pescadores, In the Oviedo rily hall at I p. m.
China Apparently "it lire insurance, water•vlngs
trol. Extent of damage U un­ and If. S. Hanson, also of Atlanta, Trang. about 110 miles southwest they will not prosecute their Friday.
In District Meet
and
fiva-state area director of the For­ of Saigon. This Is in the Camau claims by forrsful means."
tr**h and garbage pick up.
Dr. W. V. Stonar decided U
The Seminole H «h School Band known.
One property owner said after­
Tho rangers ask that anyone est Lake educational program.
peninsular region recently evacu­
buckshot wounds am iss ths chest Sure Of Support
under the direction of Em fit
ated by Communist-led Victminh
TAII’KI, Formosa te* — timing ward:
caused Young's death acnading
Cowley, will participate in the who wiahee te bum trash on his
"At first I waa not In favor of
Kai-shek's Chinese Nationalists are
troops under the Geneve armistice
^ D istric t Four band contest to bo property, please contact- them and
In Judge Aulin. *
apparently convinced of Amcriean annexation, hut if Uu.se fi,ni*ea
agreement. South Viet Nam troops Senator Gore Polls
^ h e ld in DeLand on March 18. they will b* glad to stand by In Oviedo Basketball
Merritt
was
treated
at
the
ate coned, u looks like evaryliody
moved in after (lie Victminh pull
Thousands of visitors era expect­ cat* it gate out of hand. They
elude, wlivre sounds (o support for the defense of the would hkn to gel intn the city."
Nation's Governors Oviedo
Game To Be Heard out.
Matsu
Islands
dominating
Foo­
ed to attend the mass concert a n an N hour call.
hi* right shoulder, upper rlghl arm
Thu itecti for tiro protection in
John Keeling, WTRR sporlscaslRegular army troops counter
and drill to bo held la tha Muni- Whan reporting a f in pleato
and rlghl rib* were found nut chow, a Cum to uni st poll.
Reports suggesting that there] Ihu arcus subject In none rollon
give name, address sad telephone er, will travel to Gainesville to­ attacked Ihe post and destroyed it On Highway Plan
aipal Stadium at • p, m.
serious.
Trooper
Mark
said
Miv
WASHINGTON A - Sen. Gore
morrow where he will make a with mortar fire. Tweny-lhrce re­
he an ovarualion of the! wa* cited hy Ri.hert llrown, chulrAlmost 1,000 high school musi­ number.
Hit wIK b* moved lo Halford slate might
lape recording of the Ovlcdo-We- bels were reported killed, six In (I)-Tcnn) polled the ns Iion's gov­ prison.
Matsus, at the northern void of the man o( Uie Zoning Cum mis -Ion. in
cians will fill the stadium with
ernors today In an effoM tn find
Formosa Strait, have provoked an answer to a protest by William
wahltchka basketball game which Jurcd and several raptured.
their colorful uniforms and play
Mcrriit and Young lopuralad angry reaction here.
nut whethnr the slates arc ready,
Wesley Jr.
together. Each school will then Fair Practice Code is being player! in the first round
willing and abta In put up more from Lewis and stayed class to The anger stems from the poll
of the Class C Stale final*.
Wsidey, however, pointed out
individually present a marching
money for highway improvement. Oviedo In order hi pick up non- out from Ihu Taehens and later that Ilia City Fire Department of­
The account will be played back
drill on tha field. Twenty-four Awaiting Approval
Ohio
River
Leaves
Gore la ehairman of a Senate prison clothes they had left al from Nu/rliUhan. These wet* ten makus rum nntsido thu City.
,-abands will participate.
WASHINGTON A -A “ cod# of tomorrow night over radio atatioo
Public Works subcommittee now lha home nf Rcbocra Oxcndinc, bitter steps for the Nationalists.
"A* a humanitarian. I'm fur
Eighteen Beminple musicians fair practices" for Houm commit­ WTRR at 0:30 o'clock.
Damage In Its Path considering President Eisenhower's girl friend of Merritt's.
The Nationalist line now is that that," Uniwn declared. “As a tax­
are to compete in selo end en­ tees cams before the Rules Com­
CINCINNATI Ofi- The hump nf plan for a huge new to year fed­ Tha Iwn fugitives rvadtd lb* Quemoy and Ih* Malsus will he payer, I'm against M. Tl'a my
semble ronteata during the day mittee today for anticipated ap­
LIGHT PLANE CRASHES
and ax information booth will bo proval It U backed by Republicsn WEST MEMPHIS, Ark. &lt;/P) — Ihe flooding Ohio River moved eral-state highway moderniiation posse and tracking hounds through defended, with or without Ameri­ money that's being spent."
aet up at DoLand High ae that and Damaeratle leader*.
Wesley and others, arguing
A light plane crashed In down­ slowly downstream today, forcing program and Gore's rival proposal repeated narrow carapsi. At one can support.
Official sourcat insist that III* against annexation, said: "Wu'ro
visitors can learn where and at
Tha S au te is considering K* own town West Memphis yesterday hundreds of families and business­ for an increase In the present fed­ time the hounds led (he hunters
eral aid highway program. Both away from the Oxemllno home • lUmato.l 5,000 man Matsu garri­ not getting alt wc'ra paying W
• h a t time the varieua competi­ COd*.
after striking a high wire but es from the shore areas.
It left a wake nf heavy property proposals would entail bigger itate and in a few minutes they were son Is being trebled.
tions ere scheduled.
now."
A House vote on the new regula­ neither pilot Joe Bowen nor hi*
gone, the pair slipped In tbs front
The DeLand Band ami Orrhee- tions kgs been scheduled for late passenger, Paul G. McKinney, an damage as it spilled out along Its outlay*.
Aliiie S|M-er drew loiid-applaust
In separata telegram* to ths 48 door and out the back.
u 4 Assn., will aet up refreshment this weak, on tha assumption that Army photographer, was believed natural borderline separating Ohio,
37 1100 K V U T tT I'D
I
urged that a referendum
West
Virginia,
Kentucky
and
In­
lists chief executives, Gore said
Stands a t the High S. boot end the Bales Committee would clear injured seriously. They suffered
They reportedly stopped only
PARIS
t/P)
'
u
r
60JH1U
Chinese
l"'
"" lhe annexation prothe subcommittee had Instructed long enough lo pirk up a red
Jptedium far the eoevenlenee ef
after g brief
cuts and bruises. The plane appar­ diana.
living in North Viet Nam wh.-n
"&gt;mll!‘t
An
estimated
2,600
families
were
him
to
ask
for
Ihe
governors'
*Modtoto
ently ran out of foci.
shirt and a blue shirt.
tin* (ient’VJl hi mifttiri* wu« MKiiril, lie given an npixirtunily In vuto
affected. In Ohio alone, some 900 views on ("the ability and present
Young wsi wearing the red shirt 35,000 have hern evacuated to the on the matter.
families fled shore area home*.
Inclination of their respective
"An area should he left on ths
when
he died. Merritt bad on the , noii-Cuimminist South, the French
The Weather Rurcsu at Cincin­ states to raise thr additional funds
edge nf Hie community," Speef
blue
plaid.
|
Press
Agency
reported
today,
.
nati called it a "major flood" b*- to match and implement proposals
said, "an that people can come in
cauie more than two thirds of the now bsfors It."
and locate without having to far*
981-mile river was at le n t five
Gora explained that hr proposrs
thu city's heavy bonded indebtedfeet over flood stage. The Ameri- to nearly double the present 875
nusv."
ran Red Cross classed it a* a million-dollar annual federal high
Hu said Ihr City had been held
“dlsafter."
way allocation. The slates would
back hi-rau-e of Ibis iridrhtedne ■«
Col. J, L. Person, the Ohio continue to match most of the
and cited lli.it ax thu reaxon in­
Rlvrr engineer, said damage federal funds on a so-so basis.
dustry has passed up Sanford.
"friendly
study"
of
the
slock
WASHINGTON
(A
John
K.
Gal­
would probably run to several mil­
City taxes begin us ns soon -if
market
In
the
light
of
the
slock
braith,
Harvard
eronnmlxt
said
to­
lion dollars.
an
area (» annexed. Mayor Denver
day tha United States may ba in price rise.
Arthritic Lion ls&lt; tha
Galbraith v o i c e d agreement Cordell said in reply to a property
aarly stages nf a boom-sndquestion. City Manager
cycle (hat could and in a with stuck exchange presidents owner's
Orlando Builder
Coming To Florida buat
1120-style crash.
who testified earlier that the Knowlc* pointed not, however,
"no one pay* for se»era;.o
Galbraith told thr Senata Bank­ American economy is fur strong­ that
IIERSCHER, III. (At — Tex, *
until
you get it. The same goes
Indicted For Plot 6-year-old
lion afflicted with ar­ ing Committee there a rt "formid er than in 1U29. He agreed luu
BARTOW A - Criminal Court thritis, la going la Florida and sbla safeguards" against another there are lifeguards against a for water."
Knowlc* said that garbage and
Judge Roy H. Amldon has ruled warm weather for four months.
such crash. But he spoke In his new crash, among them curbs nn
J. Willard Durden !■ solvent and Th# 325-pound lion will mak* prepared testimony of "resem­ "wholesale market rigging aud trash pick up would begin immed­
iately, along with police and firs
able to pay for hla defense to thetrip la hi* special station wag­ blances" between condition* in the ferveut salesmanship.''
proteclion.
charge* of conspiracy to murder. on, equipped with stesl bars,
But he cautioned that "the fun­ Karlor, the Commission approv­
late 1020* and today that ha said
Durden, an Orlando contractor,
Tex, owned by 80-year-old Mlsa "ara certainly Interesting and pos­ damental problem of containing a ed all re/oning recommendations
has been indicted for plotting to BobbyrtU Porter, who has had lha sibly disturbing."
speculative orgy, ones it is well submitted by ths Zoning Hoard
kill three wealthy persons—Mrs. animal sine* it was a cub, lives ia
Ha urged that ths government launched, remains essentially un­ with the rxcepliou of a proposal
Byrd T. Boaeb and K. H. Gerlacfc, s 10 by 18-fsot knotty pin* dea, and Wall Street b* ready to halt solved "
asking that the area between
both of Lake Wales; and Mra. Just off tbs living room In tb* credit buying of slocks and to put
Galbraith, who has written a
and Fifth St*. b« noted
Louisa Clark Havloy Sandberg of Porter home. Ire* bars separate oa other emergency brake* If lha aoun-lo be-published booh o* tha Fourth
commercially.
Orlando.
the two rooms.
Di-year-old bull market sbowa no ltt&gt; financial dsbacls, lavr such
During preliminaries of hla trial
t Tax has • ssmuffsrsr to slga of alackaaiag to th* assr fu- danger sign* now at inaroased
ADKNACF.lt CONFINED
in tbs Roach case, Durden weal Bsbbyetta'a mstber, Mrs. Posri
credit buying, an tolue of nawBONN, Germany Of) — Wixsi
adjudged insolvent and tho state* Patter, n s f l why tha
aomsM into th* marks I sod * (term an Chanewllur Konrad Adsassumed tho expanse ef his do- along with Bshhysttoli brother Ud Harold B. Wood, at M. Paid
haters** too sals naurr, 10, waa confined to his
fans*. Ho waa easelida it hut
Bill, a n lahl*g Ta« to Bto
horns f ilk J_ cold today, lha
*

Strolling
In Sanford

By Gov. Collins

Battalions Assigned
To Put Down Revolt

Foreign Secretary
Calls On Kai-Shek
To Withdraw Men

Forest Lake Ready
For Special Event

Seminole Rangers
Answer Three Calls

Galbraith Says Boom, Bust Cycle
Could End In 1929 Style Crash

■T

71
*

\J

J

�#
»v»

Page 2

Tata. Mar. R. TP5B

T H E 8A N F O R H H E R A L D 6« t n n u it U completed during
----------------------:-------------------rAla time for advancement in ratIng
The non-rated men attend lec­
tures and movies for advancement
on subjects ranging from safety
average flight Um* of i l l hours precsuUoni to security classifica­
per print.
tions.
A typical days for a pilot on In addition to the estimated IT
active duty with VA-4T1 began classes of Instruction, that are
at 7:80. a. m. with a routine mus­ conducted for the recruit,and ap­
ter. Fallowing muster, they at­ prentice pay grades, they receive
tended a one-hour lecture on one approximately 100 hours ol actual
of tha above mentioned topics. on-the-job-traloing from the rated
At this point the pilots split In men of the squadron.
to two groups, with one group Alt In all, two weeks of active
taking part in a straffing flight, duty wilh the United Elates Navy
while the other underwent a course li a continuous period of long and
In Instrument flying. Straffing hard work for tha Reserve* and
runs and inttrumrnt flight usually an assurance tn the American
last about on* and ■ half hours. people that the Navy la maintain­
Next on the morning agenda ing a strong and ready fleet of
was an air to air gunnery practice, "Week end Warrior*."
(fere, the pilots stage "dogfights"
among themselves, thus slmult*
Ing actual battle condition*.
PIGS ARB SMART
ITHACA, N. Y. &lt;&lt;Jt) - Cornell
Resuming operation after the
noon meal, tha flyers ones again University specialists say the pig
lake to (hr air for over an hour ol probably Is (he smertest of the
glide bombing. This involves pick hoofed animals. The scientists, Dr,
ing out a pcdcilgnalcd target blow, H. H. Dukes and Dr. A. U. Moore,
and repeatedly making runs over aay the horses "Just Isn't too
the target dropping mock bombs. bright."
Following the session of glide Tests here ebow-ed pigs to be
bombing, they return to the class­ quickest of tha hoofed group In re­
room to the various problems en­ sponding to signals for food. Hie
countered while flying snd asked scientists say that plgi get no
cbanca to abow Uialr Intelligence
to volca a possible solution.
After the hour of ejssiroom baeeuac 'bey usually go to market
work, the pilots are airborne once before they ara a year old.
more, this time to practice roc­ Given a chance the apaclallsti
ket firing and another course of tael, the pig can be one of tha
cleanest of animals. He roots ainstrument flying.
in the dirt party becauae
Alto included in one of these Re­ round
tha
aeniitjv*
feeling derie* in his
serve cruises, Is a certain amount trout helps keep
him In contact
of night flying. In tha case of VA- with his environment.
In effect,
071, they completed approximately pigs
two to four hours of Ibis type fly­ noses."hive "fingertips in their
ing per pilot.
They rink the hoofed animals'
Thu officers who fly these planes Intelligence as follows: pigs, mules,
are alto assigned specific jobs, horses, goat* aod sheep. The spe­
such as Gunnery Officer, Naviga­ cialists say cows probably rate be­
tion Officer, Operations Officer,,
horses, but the evidence it not
eto., to that th working day of low
clear.
these pilots is filled to Hie utmost.
Training of efillstad personnel
Is considered of Ut# greatest Im­
portance as they also have tn*ny
obligations to meat. It becomes
tha automatic job of Uio Aider
and njora experienced men to in­
struct and assist the pew recruit.
Mach titles must have planes in
Up-top condition and ready to fly
at all times. Hundreds of supplies
mutt be requisitioned before tha
cruise and during Hie time away
from the homo port. Yaoman and
a maintain an and. . . . __ .. records; oparetloni
completed end still pending, flight
time and correspondence. "In■ervlce' training courses for rated

n o o v T M fT W o tiM

F!HD TMT&amp;MLt IMHTTO
*?jcw vw r 3h b o w e m t Turn
HONVf'

Naval Reserves Always On Alert
iliary Air Station, ten Air Re­
serve squadrons from til psrta of
tha country underwent a refresh­
er court* during iba year 1054.
These squadrons ranged from the
smallest fighter squadron to the
larger patrol squadron.
From tha rime a squadron ar*
rives In Sanford, until the time it
departs, it’s working days are
filled with Navy procedure. Each
day is mapped out well in advance
so at to utilita every minute of
this precious training
Taken from tha Operations Dan
of Attack-Squadron CTI, of At­
lanta, Ga., who recently under­
went their actlva training at the
NAAS, hara ara a few typical
day* and procedures for both of­
ficers and enlisted men that had
to be completad before their
training ended.
All pilots attended approxi­
mately SO hours of ground school
lectures on Navigation, Engineer­
ing, All Waitber Flight. Combit
Information Communclatlons, Saf­
ety and Survival, Oxygen, Naval
Orientation and Tactical Air Sup­
port. Thai* aama men flew an

Purina tha p u t year, many thou*
aanda of officer* and men of the
United SUlei Naval Air Reserva,
left (heir families, hemes and Jobs
for a rigorous two week training
period of active duly with the
United States Navy.
Tot the most part, theta Reserve
numbers ara veterans of many
years Naval arrvlcc, with somo
baring seen active duty in both
World Wart and tha Korean War.
The primary objactivet of the
annual training period for Re­
servists are to maintain a high
level oi combat readiness and to
help them keep abreast of the con­
stant changes within the Navy.
Of course, thete goals ara aided
by the monthly meeting that it
conducted by the Rcjcrve com­
ponent Itself, but nothing ctn take
the place of aetual on-the-job experlencc.
Consequently, each of these Re­
serve actlviijai throughout the
United States rtcciva orders from
(he Chief of Nava] Air Reserve
Training. Gjanvloiv, HI,, tor thtir
two week activation.
Here at the Sanford Naval Aux­

DAI LY C R O S S W O R D

HMMli
Hf).j | .•illllt-J
33. Move* 1biZiHiUi
ULSffillM
with
energy
34. Rang*
38. FarxL
ful
28. Omit
(print.)
uKarri^.-ri
28. Wav*
xmraiY
30. Grows
UI1i IK
old
S3. Close to Seetsegar**
84- Give
over
88. Olopo
35. Voided
30. Opening*
escutcheon
(an a t)
18. Greedy
41. Malt
IT. Wide nor!beverage
aontat band 41, Kan'*
scrota
nick­
escutcheon
name

3. Wa*
ACROSS
obligated
,1. Vaults#
roofa .
S. Masculine
#. Atm (Soot.) 4 Refer*
11. Conscious
8. C.ustKi
«. Whet?
13. One of tha
Great Lake* 7. Revotva
8. Cherish
11, To take out
(print.)
V, Danlah
15. liadeeof
weight
a primary
10. Half cm*
rotor
14. Gnddeaa of
16.
' wm
discord
(Or.)
IT rfa
15. At horn*
c &lt;nam*
lb. io or the
10. Any
I lusagea
climbing
for blood
plant
50. Feminine
31. Suspend
pronoun
33. Other­
88. Clowns
wise
SB. Twofold
ST. Manacles
1 1
51. Flowerleif
' ant*
II

St. ui'a

r.
80. Affirm
81. Capuchin
monkey
IS. China
and fevsr
St. Company of
I lingers
SB. Simpleton
aiL fleshy*
# 0, l ’erich from
hunger
43. hullin'#
(here*
44. Trttiid In
N.-wYork
try
4E. Grow white
41, Bamboo,

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MOLD IT/

Security Restrictions To Remain
WASHINGTON (ft - For as long
ai President Elsenhower remains
in offle#, right security restrictions
will be in effect at hla new farm
home on the'Civil War battlafield at Gettysburg, Pa,
Tha place probably will be ready
lor occupancy by E n te r or toon•r, and already the house is get­
ting some of the protection that
goal with the presidency.
Uniformed g u a r d s from the
Treasury Department — the agen­
cy whose Secret Service Is charged
with guarding tha presldcnt-hava
been assigned to a round-the-clock
watch to keep out any treapussers
as well as battlefield sightseers.

Tourists can get a look at the
President's w -j w «trm from a
actnlc towar
mlUa away.
Any of tham with a good pair of
blnoculari might bava been able
to sea the chief executive wander­
ing around the grounds Friday. He
snd Mrs. Elsenhower spent five
hours here en route to their lodge
in Maryland's Catoctin Mountains
for a weekend of rest. They re­
turned to tha Whit* House 1st* yes­
terday
A haU-mUe-leng lane Uadi to
the house from a public highway,
but a sign swinging from ■ heavy
chain blocking tho lane declares

the farm private property closed
to sightseen.
Another public highway about a
mile off In another direction af­
fords passers-by ■ good long-range
view of the home, but that view
miy be dosed off soon under land­
scaping plana for tres planting.
A photeelsetric alert system
will help Up off the Secret Service
to any unauthorised movement
shout the property.
One enterprising light lunch
merchant who ba* a pUee on tha
highway reportedly haa bean offer­
ing customers binoculars to taka
a look at the Ft***hower hom*
while they munch sandwich**.

ACTREM RTBS
OF HEART ATTACK
#
NEW YORK OB - Actress E th e r
Levey, former wife of tha lata
song-ind-danc* min George M.
Cohan and a performer tn all hi*
productions from 1101 to HOT, died
of a heart attack yestarday. She
wae 73.
T A N IG m DIES
HIROSHIMA, J«pin (#M4k#f
Noboro Tanlgawa died of a baa
•*—
•iv
attack at hla moment of vie w f r
today in Japan's general aUctlon,
His new test In the Diet want to
tha runner-up - « Right gociqUpL
The beak and betas *f » Hpound pelican weigh about Sf
ounces.
_____

Legal Notice

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T h e unBsrsliffieB Is
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NORTH CANOl.tWAl
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li MAiun n uiir.iirii._riiinnn.

vvrnui IIOBRUT T, O H RRKT . Ha
( a ndant, lhaaa pra aa nta a r a ' I n aom.
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f l . l u . r , , ?l*r • • '• I o n l o r (ha pa ar
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aprotat laplalailnn a u th n r l a l n * raid
Board of Suparvlaora la d e a n out.
ranalr a n d ra e ta r a hp o o n t n a t o r

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IN TIIN CIRCUIT COURT
tt eoBdt out by flying abort tha p a p a t l a and In daclara anah aaaaaa*
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"By STANLEY

* THE OLD HOME TOWN

•Someday Drill M a y N ot Be Test
BATTLE CREEK, Mich.,
—
Someday ween the alrcm wail in
an American city U may not be
drill. It may be the real thinsIf it li, people may remember
February. 1955, when the Atomic
Energy Commlsalon gave the warn
leg; The radioactive cloud from
one hydrogen bomb could ipread
death over an area the alze of New
V jeraey The (all-out from the drift
ing cloud of an H-bomb of the typo
the United State* exploded In tho
Pacific on March 1, 1R54, could
kill all expoied people up to 140
miles downwind. Possibly 5 to 10
people out of every 100 could die
es far as 1D0 miles away In the
direction the wind was blowing
Desth would ride the wind In i
(at cigar-shaped mist posilbly 20
stile* wide
What has the Federal Civil De­
fense Administration doneT What
eke your prospects of staying
•live?
Critics have aaid that PCDA did
■'t keep pace with the A-bomb, to
■ay nothing of the vastly more
destructive H-bomb. They say that
weaknesses in some cities snd
elates ean be blamed on tho na­
tional organisation's leadershli
1# They say a strong elvtl defense
• must, sot only to provide the
means of fighting a war but i f •
deterrent against an aggressor who
might be willing to gamble with the
thought h i eould knock ont U. S
production with one massive at­
tack.

Claudette Colbert
4 Prefers Live IV
To Filmed Variety
NEW YORK t«l - Unlike miny
movie queens, Claudette Colbert
prefers live television to the filmed
M
A number of Hollywood’s fern“ Inina stare have shunned tha live

camera because of Its revealing
gate, lass flattaring than tha film
camera with Its special lenses and
•oft llghta..
Bat M lu Colbert, who began
her acting carter on tha Broadway
stage In 1029 and made bar film
debut in 1120, says:
"Photographically, film la tha
sofa way, I wrestled with myself
and decided on live television, I
decided If people bad seen ma as
long as they had and knew my
face as wall ai they do, and I
didn't ahow up tha way they'd ex­
pected on Uva TV they'd aay, 'Max*
be ahe'a net wall photographed this

_
•

_
*

"And It's much more fun doing
• Uva show on television because
it's Uka doing a stage play.
" I Iowa the feeling of tha thea ter abo«&gt; 1L I’ve been la p;
ta n a a long time 1 ado
them, hut I've missed tha feeling
of a live performance."
Miss Colbert, at 40, has leaa to
fear from liva cameras than many
actresses years younger. Her i
Marine* has ahaagad little aln
void whan, u a young beauty, she
won an Academy Award for her
role la "It Happened One Night."
Her performance with Francbot
Tone an CBS-TVs Bast of Broadway production of "Tha Quarte­
rnsa" last night was her second
•tarring M a la a Uva TV drama,
•he map As throe m an before tha
aeasoo la ever. Bar next will be la
the CUma* production of "Private

“

-

April V.

Want More
Money In
Your Pocket?
IM m

FCDA po-nts out that, unlike the tion it would not be necessary to
armed forcet, It cannot order citi­ destroy or discard clothing since
zens what to do. It can't even order in most cases it could be ncndcred
them to be concerned about the safe by laundering or by simply
propcct that this country may waiting for natural decay of the
some day bo bombed. On local radioactivity.
levels, say* FCDA, it has to depend The basic plan of civilian de­
on volunteers. And the enthusiasm fense In any future atomic attack
of volunteer waxes and wanes with will be evacuation of cities. The
tne international political climate, feasibility of such a plan Is based
as well aa with local politics when on the expectation of adequate
it Involves getting the money to warning of an attack. Eventually,
carry on a campaign of education when the nation's great continental
and preparation
shield of radar and other detection
Now since the AEC announce devices Is completed, It Is hoped
ment ot fali-out effects, FCDA of­ every american community will
ficials hope the public will awaken have from four to six hours warn
to the poss billty of danger but at mg. But, tay defense officials. It
the same time will ice that survival probably will be 2Vi years before
i* possible
lhat great warning arc ii welded
For civil defense Is here to stay. from the Pacific Islands up through
Thera arc, says Administrator Val the Arctic and down to the Azores.
Peterson, only two things that could Meanwhile, some of the nation's
end it In our time: Absolute aa- target areas now have three to
■urine* tha* the world could live four huurs warning time—while
m peace; or a positive statement others have only SO to 45 minutes.
by military leaden that no one FCDA offlcisls will not specify the
could lay a finger on the United warning times of various areas.
States.
But what if there la no warning?
At the headquarters of the FCDA tt'a well within tha realm of pos­
here, be and members of his staff sibility that guided missiles, now
tell you there are other facts of known to be capable ot long range
Isle in the atomic ago besides those ind Incredible speed, could be
In the AEC announcement.
launched from enemy craft far off
This, in essence, Is the FCDA
shores—aa far as 1,500
meiiagei An H-bomb attach would American
miles la some eases.
be horrible. But tho civil defense
program is ready to face It. If you That means a target city or In­
were esughi in the direct target of dustrial area could suddenly be
a bomb you'd probably never know blasted by missiles with atomic
what hit v^u. But outside that two- wtrhcsds without prior warning of
mile range you and your family any kind,
would stand a good chance of sur­ Assuming there Is a warning, Is
vival If you taka the trouble now evacuation of American cities any­
thing more than paper plans with
to learn what to do,
■-unfamiliar?—
—Prtereen-eltes these fl
Milwaukee has made public a
steps: v
1. Prepare a shelter area In yourplan, it probably will be the first
homo whether you live In a city or large city to test wide-scale evacu
In the country. A basement shelter atlon, Peterson says. But there
Is good but an outdoor shelter already have been other smallwith three feet of earth cover and scale evacuation maneuvers car­
an air filler intake naturally la ried out with surprising speed and
efficiency.
better.
Such an air filter system would In Mobile, Ala., 20,000 persons
consist of two separated shafts with were evacuated by auto without a
a porous substance on top of the fender being scratched, FCDA
intake shat,. A filter similar to saya. In Houston all autoa were
that used in an auto carburetor removed from a downtown area
would be perfect You would need nf 400 blocks within six minutes.
an intake fan powered by batteries Other successful evacuation tests
hsve been carried out In Spoksne,
with a 72-hour capacity.
You also would need an exhaust Wash., Albany, N. Y„ and Eriesystem hooked up with the Intake, Pa, Obviously they require fast,
with fan* for both operating at efficient organisation to keep cars
about the same speed. The tops of moving, to overcome panle, to see
both shafts should be covered and •hat the inevitable man who runs
elevated above tho surface of the out of gas or tha saboteur with a
mission doesn't succeed la blocking
ground.
By using such an air filter sys­ a major highway.
tem you could burn candles in your Before the dangers of fall-oul
were known It would have seemed
■bolter
I. Stock your shelter with a throe that an Isolated farm would have
day supply of emergency food and been one of tha safest places In
the country. But a potential enemy
water.
S, Stock your shelter with a target might be Rapid City Air
•hree-day supply of emergency Base la South Dakota, Peterson
food ftdo wi Ur.
says. And fall-out from axploalon
S. Got a radio, preferably battery of a hydrogen bomb there could
operated, end keep U In a safe endanger life on a farm 100 mllea
place.
away.
4. Don't get panicky and flee aim­ T han was a time when many
lessly. Radioactivity disintegrates farmers throughout the country
rapidly and you would be safe In could say, "Why, my farm la 100
reasonable shelter until civil de­ miles from any place." But now
fense officials Informed you tha nearly everybody's fsrm la only
danger hid passed.
100 miles downwind from "any
g. If you should be exposed to place."
fallout, remove outer clothing and The thinking of Americans la un­
wash exposed parti of the body dergoing a drastic change these
thoroughly—with soap in the water days Fewer believe, "It esn't hap­
u have stockpiled. Unlesi you've pen here." More realize that “we­
ea exposed to serious contamina­ 're an la this together."

C

Gold-Trimmed Car
Carries Rich Lady
Throughout London

T H E «A N T O ftD H E ftA L P
Tues. M ar. 8, 1955
P tg n 1

LONDON Lft — A limousine
trimmed In gold carries Lady
Norah Docker through London's
gray streets.
“Gold was decided upon as be­
ing the most practical,” she says.

TOO LATE TO CLASSl FY

It's true chromium was scarce
when her car was built, but the
statement scorns to echo Marie
Antoinette's "Lot 'em eat cake."
You'd think, then, that Britain's
toiling millions might resent the
lady. Instead they love her. Her
obvious enjoyment of the things
money can buy appeals to Britons.
“ I always believe in having a
go,” she has explained.
She receives more newspaper
space than the average Cabinet
minister gets. Columnists quote
her on every subject—so long as
it’s not serious.
Lady Docker says the rich have
an obligation to live a life of some
display, to cheer up the rest of
the citizenry.
"The people In the street Just
love to see Uie show," she ob­
serves.
Her husband Sir Bernard Dock­
er has many business connections,
including one with an outfit that
builds custom automobile bodies.
Her gold-plated car was born
there. She has had others since It
was unveiled in 1351, but none ex­
ceeds the splendor of its 8,000 gold
stars and gold • plated radiator,
bumper and wheel rims.
Lady Docker, at 44, I* slim,
blond a n d
always faultlessly
dressed. Sir Bernard, 58. is tall
and calm with a face that shows
constant good humor. She was
twice widowed. Husband No. I.
Clement Callingham, left her $720.000. No. 2. Sir William Collins, left
her four million dollars.
She and Docker married In 1919
Britain was a cold, dark place,
caught In the grip of postwar
austerity. Editors began to oper­
ate on the theory that nothing lift­
ed the gloom like a story about
Norah Docker's diamomi-enrnisted
life. Times arc better now, but the
aura lingers on.
At Norah Turner, Lady Docker
grew up In comfortable but not
luxurious circumstances. Between
the wars she worked In a depart­
ment store selling lamps and
women's hats. "There wasn't much
difference In the goods In the two
departments," she recalls.

"Despite the fact that I have
married three well-to-do men, my
friends are mostly ordinary but
genuine people," she says.
She thinks coal miners are won­
derful Last year she went down
In a mine near Wakefield. The
miners cheered when she brought
up two lumps of coal she had
hacked out with her own mani­
cured hands.
Thirty-three of those same min­
ers were entertained later aboard
the Dockers' yacht. For six hours
they sipped pink champagne as
the yacht cruised around tho Isle
of Wight. The miners gave the
Dockers a large bouquet of carna­
tions and roses with this card: "To
two pals—from Um boys."
f ig h t

canceled

ALICE, Tex, (/)•) — Two per­
fectly matched rattlesnakes wer.
having it out when a two-lrggi-d
varmint settled both their hash.
Edgar Lee Starts said after he
killed tha fighting snake*, ho
found aach measured 6 feet, a
Inchea and had 13 rat: lea.

Legal Notice
KOTICK

To n itric v n
•* 7 J 5 e i a e r i r c o h it o r t h f
KIWIS jr iu r tA i. r u i n it o r
ri.niuriA . iv axis rim n a n .
■* e n a x rt:n v ,
JOHN n o n INBOW, PUInlirr t .m i i
r.izjuiHE itnniNao.1, uaiandant
Cabs No. Ml*
TO KLOtMBE ltOTIINBONt
T°u ara hereby n o tin g tho i
•ult hao b»*n brousht aaalnot y«u
is ths Bhov* ontltlad rain In thn
aboTj natnod Court. whorola tho
rsllH sought by ths Plaintiff. John
Dobtassa, l« a dscres gm otitic
Flalnlltt a divorce, and ynU aro
h • r • b y not IMid and rodulrod
to rili f p o r a o n a t t y or by
■ttnrnry) with ths CI • r k of
said Court your w rtttin dsfanss,
tf aay, to lha Dill of Complulnt In
■■Id ault and to aarvi a copy thsrsof upon attornsy for Plaintiff on nr
btfora ths Tth day of April. ISIS.
Ifarala rail not or dscraa pro con(•"«&lt;&gt; will h# sntarsd against you.
WITNESS n r band and ths nrfirial ssnl ot said Court at Hanford.
Florida. Ihlo Till day of ilatrh,
A. V., I l t l .
O. P. tlsrndoa
Circuit Clark
Wilson Altiaridar
Attornsy for Plaintiff
P. a Dos 4S4
Kara Park, Florida
(Baal)

ii

MIDGET TELEVISION
SAN fl VFAEL, CALIF. f(T) A
2-inch television aci, built la 1942,
brings In all tha local nations. A
store has the tiny set on display—
In a doll's house.

HOUSE Furnished. 1505 Elliott
2 BEDROOM completely furnish­
ed bungalow, private yard. 312
Palmetto Avc. Phone 2392.
Church Building and Corner lot
12th and Laurel. Apply 111!
Laurel.
_______________ _
NEW 3"""BEDROOM, spacious ma­
sonry home, quiet section, near
shopping center, kitchen equip­
ped. a real buy at *12.000 00, re­
quiring $2,joo oo down, balancs
like rent.
$1,500 00 down buys this almost
completely furnished 2 Bedroom
home. Owner anxious for im­
mediate s a t e , therefore h a s
priced thl* home at S9200.00,
which is about $SOO below to­
day's market.
ONt OS THI ENGINES from a 17-47 Stralojet which
crashed and burned at Lake Charles, La., tics next
to a trailer. The falling engine smashed an auto
(left), broke a fence and damaged tho trailer.
Capt. Mark Deck, 35, of Downcvllle, Calif., swerved
his crippled plane from a more drnscly populated

area before the craft plunged Into several houses
nml trailer* 500 ynrds away. The thrcc-man crew
of Uie bomltcr and a couple In one of the trailerhomes which burned were kitted. Shortly before
the crash, pilot Deck had radioed that one of his
engines was out.
f/nlernattonat 5'oundphofo)

Durable M olotov Is Still Around
By TOM WHITNEY
The ASSOCIATED PRESS
Other communists cotnc and go
but hard-eyed and durable V, M.
Molotov is still around.
Sixty five y ean old Wednesday,
ha probably has a better chance
than some others among hi* Krem­
lin colleague* nf some day dying
peacefully in bed.
For Vyacheslav Mikhailovich
Molotov seems a permanent fix­
ture in the U.S.S.R. He has stood
in the hono: guard at the funeral*
ol such distinguished men as Lenin
and Stalin, Mikhail Kalinin and
Andrei Zhdanov Ho has seen inch
able and powerful men as Leon
Kamenev, Grigori Zinoviev, Ni­
colai Bukhinn and Lavrenty Boris
purged and executed.
"The bos*, filing clerk In Russia,"
Lenin is said to have called him.
Hut It w&lt; uld never never do to
underestimate Molotov. Many an
able diplomat has discovered this
Iruth for himself the hard way.
He is a shrewd, stubborn and un­
yielding bargainer who lives up to
his adopted party name 'molot"
in Russian means hammer.
Now, with the Kremlin leaders
seemingly addicted to playing a
round of musical chairs every so
.often in order to eliminate one
more of their number from the
high-level power game, It would
be a mistake to underestimate Mol­
otov's position.
Molotov has no political machine
of hf* own He ilool not possess
any Important lever of power, lie
gives orders only to diplomats. Be­
cause of thli he Is not dangerous
io other contestants for power In
the Kremlin. Because of this they
can afford to leave him alone.
But this weakness explains why
Molotov, who during Stalin's life­
time was always No. 2 In prece­
dence, was bypassed at Stalin’s
death In iclccthm of successors to
Statin'! Job'
Hi* prestige Is a second reason
for his position. He is tho only
"old bolshevik"—one prominent In
communist affairs hefnre the 1917
revolution—who actually had close
Association with Iwnin and the oth­
er early party ieadcra and who
still survives In a high position. He
la thus the sole link of tho present
Soviet leadership with their revo­
lutionary past and their wor­
shipped Len,n. The present leaders

need Molotov for he has the stature
of elder statesman they lack.
But whatever else Molotov may
or not be, he is devoted to com­
munism and to the Communist
Party. This is his greatest strength.
Joseph Stalin, it would appear,
enjoyed on occasion humiliating
Molotov before foreign guests. He
often directed slighting remarks
at him or stressed his messenger
hoy role. It must have been hard
for Molotov to take hut he did.
In 1919 Molotov apparently got
into pretty serious trouble. This
coincided with his toss of his jab
u* minislei of foreign affairs. The
causes wen obscure but he had
to humiliah* himself hy delivering
a long address on criticism and
srlf-criliclsm "regardless of rank."
Quite apparently he had been
forced to confess errors before his
politburn colleagues. Ho took this
too without whimpering.
It was alter Stalin’s death Mint
Molotov returned to his old Job as
minister of foreign affairs, Simul­
taneously he was made a first
deputy premier, one of four men
with this rank In March 195.1 of
whom now only two are teft: him
self and Lazar Kaganovich, tt was
a time when tho new government
wished U&gt; ease some of the more
acute tensions with the free world.
Molotov set about his assign­
ment with tha same ab-llty and
vigor hf h.’d used for Stalin in
prosecuting the cold war from 1919
to 1949 or In Implementing tho
Nazi Soviet part of 1039. Ho could
ho rcticil on to do almost any job
in Hie field of foreign affairs about
as well ns it eould he done. Even
tills opponents had words of praise
for tils ability in diplomatic nego­
tiations.
Molotov's official biography gives
most of the essential st*tails of his
rarccr Burn March 9, 1899. the
son of a shopkeeper. He began ms
revolutionary activity at the age
o» 15. In ti'00 ho Joined the Bol­
shevik Party
In 1912 n&lt;* began work for the
newspaper Zvezda and later took
part in organizing the paper Pravda. He wrote for it under various
pseudonyms At this time ho mrt
Stalin who also worked on l’rvada.
Ho was exiled twice, hot escape I
and took an early hand after tho
overthrow ol tho tsar in March

1917 and in the Bolshevik revolu­
tion in November. In 1918 he was
made chairman of the Council of
the National Economy of Potrrgrird (new Leningrad) and the
northern district of Russia.
By 1921 he was a full member
of the party Central Committee and
an alternate member of the Politouro.
In 1930 Molotov was made pre­
mier of the U SS R.—a position
* hleh ho hrid until tail when, five
seeks before the German attack
on Russia, Stalin look the post.
No Westerner has the illghtest
,dca what role Molotov may have
ala.ved in the Kremlin inner circles
n the past two years. Doe* he
lave any personal ambition* for
himself of rising higher, of pernap* succeeding to Stalin’s man­
tle? Does lie have any chance?
' inly Molotov himself would know
Ihe answers and It I* eertalnt hst
-io conceals them even among hii
Kremlin colleagues behind a stern
and Impassive fare.
Ilut it Is worth noting that few
men in the world possess Molotov's
stubbornness and patience In at­
taining their ends. Among the
Kremlin clique he occuplc* an in­
teresting position.

SNOlVnOUND MICE

H

'M

HOME OF qNBMASCOPj

NOW SHOWING
N O M IN A T E D F O R A C A D E M Y A W A R D !
" O E IT F IC T U t E O F T N E ;

-

LOST—Grey and Blue Parakeet
"Chirpy". Blue hand on leg.
Phnre 594. Howard -Z ellah
Welsh,
HOUSE— 2 or 3 Bedrooms, un­
furnished. Not over $50.00 Close
_in. Write^Box CW e/o the Herald,
YOUNG single man to learn
Office1* trailC' aPPly , l ,,cral11

Legal Notice
k i i t i i ’h

op
p rn t.ic i ip i n i x a
l-OII TIM! (1.0*1 XU OP A ( Kit*
TAIX OOAII
T o W'lIOM IT MAT CONCRIlNi
) » u Hill la k e noil,* th at t h a
. . ii 1,
. " L . Cnunijr l'umml»«lon*&gt;ra
« l ll , «t 10:00 ti'rlork A. M , on
T u » « " v . |h o ; : „ J ,iay of M arrh.
A. I). loss, «t tho County C o m m i e
• loner a Itoorn in th a Hrmlmila
1 ounly Court
llnuna.
H.inrnra,
Florida, hold a puhlto haarinir aa
provided hr Hoillun n a .« a . I j m * nf
Florida. ISM, to c o n il d e r and d e te r .J1.* w hrtlia r n r not t h a County
will y.irflt*, abandon, dl-,-notion,*,
arnt rhino, a n d / o r lonuunro nnd i1Ihrhsim «ny H uh! of tho Count)-, a n d
liiildlo In and
nny I m d . n r InI n r o l Ihorcln d o tln r ito d unun a n y
m«|i or |dal rnrordod In Homlnnle
County. Kliirldn. and which o trerla,
rondo n r hlx hwayo »r« m'-ro |i nrtloularly dasorlbod ■■ folluw it
A IS I m I rm h l- n f - w *y o s
Honth Ihiundflry of Lot* IS amt
13S o t tho Hlnvla Colony I'mii,
liuny'o Kohdlvlolnn, n* rai-onl d
tn Tim (look 1 , I’nao 71. I'uhtla
Hoenrda ,,t Hrmlnoto County,
Florida. Ursa ItitM SI (rot (or
public road r l r h l- n f - w « y »
n:itS(»N S IN’TRHItSTIttn MAT A p .
I'ltAII AM I lilt II i: A lit* AT T i l l )
TIS'I; * M I | U , A C 14 A llu v ia
BI'ISCIFIKD.
IIUAHD OF COITNTT COM-

Sanford Electric Co.
BRINGS YOU THE BUY OF TOE YEARt I t

Lancer V -8

■ P 1

V I o \j t c

RI DE- I N

l c irv cf

T HE A T

LIMITED
QUANTITY

Tuesday — Wednesday
STARTS 4:55

DRUMS
rift
RIVER
Vi
&gt;' l| :Q i :
AUMBRMUUnOM W l*

By D O D G E

FEATURES T ill • 19:21
FLUB

k

W e e s p e c ia lly In v ite y o n t o t a k e
f f c o m m a m l. • . g e t t h e t h r i l l O rsL h a u u l!

**) ClA V ES-.i

JU U U S C A ES A R

FOR SALE: 1930 Ford, $85 00,"
Phono 1709-J., or ICC a t 1809
Paloma Dr.

CONCORD, N il. UD - Wanted:
Cat w'th attached snowplow.
New Hampshire's mouie dam­
age to orchard* drew a letter
Iron r "Mr*. W." at Dayton, Ohio.
"1 tried everything and finally
wished I had a cat. Next morning
. . , nno was on the hack no--'
He soon got rid of them plus the
neighborhood ones too.”
T ie state Fish and Game De­
i t i s s i d N k tin &lt;*r r i m
partment appreciate* the thought
c o r NT V O F HKMINllU-J,
behind Ihe letter. Hut, It points out,
FLORIDA
orchaid damage 1* usually caused (SEAL)
r Cl P, tlorndon
hy mice which “ work under aome Mrn-k N.t ly(Tnvrtand,
Jr.
two feel of snow."
Cnuiily Attorney

a c r o ss

M

WINCHESTER 22 Rifle practically
new. $15(X); Kerosene Automatic
Hot Water heater, $!5 00 ; 9 x 12
Linoleum Rugs choice colors.
$8 50; A New double Wardrobe
3 mirrors. $35 00; Mahogany
dresser with cnod mirror, $14.50;
A Nice Kiddie stroller, $7.50;
Copper screen doors, $5.00;
Rrautiful Walnut dining room
suite. $75.00; Wagner 3 H. P,
Electric motor, single phase
BARGAIN— 1 Burner Perfection
kerosene kitchen Range, Like
new. Phone 736-M-4.
BAHAMA nED. 2 Bolster Pillow*.
Green Floral tapestry upholst­
ery. Almost new. Oriclnal price
$89 93. Will sell for $30.00. Call
1879-W after 6 p. m.

/ 3 A LI Y I O N

V ?

Seminole County Motors

T* W i t t i t t t P. M.
7 I A T U U t» U ONLY

CARTOON

I l f ft. T in t 8L

£

•Fail-Safe Alarm Sy«t«m • CounUrbalanctd lid
• Potitiv* Action latch •Rtmovabfe Da»k*ts
_______ •Selective Temperature Control
3 ft tm iiv*Pt{T( r \ t

Sanford Electric Co.
116 Miff* A t*.

PboM &lt;41

\

V I

Phone 1011

J

*
*

—
.

�%

Eliminating A Racktt

7A U K S

Polltici And Statehood

The American Federation of Labor hie
nent Its affiliated unions a program design­
ed to eliminate the possibility of mlauee of
union welfare fundi.
A number of specific recommendations
sre made Including one which would pro­
hibit the paying of sslarieR or fees from
welfare funds to any full time union offi­
cers. The program also calls for locals to re­
vise their constitution so that they can ex­
orcise effective control over their funds. It
would establish annual or semi-annual Inde­
pendent audits to be open to impaction by
any Interested party. Thera are many other
point* covered.
Perhaps the most encouraging feature
of the AFL program la that it urges educat­
ing member* of local union* to the need for
vigilance in the administration of their own
fund*. If union members could be made to
realize how important their constant par­
ticipation in union affair* la many of th#
evlU of the past could be remedied.
Organized labor haa won many vlctorlee
for the working man and women. Theie
have aeldom been won easily. They meint
sacrifice and &lt;*ften hardship. It Is distress­
ing when evidence la displayed that some of
the fruits of these victories have fallen Into
the hands of the racketeers. The AFL la
wise to take positive steps to end abuses In
the handling of union welfare funds wher*

Secretary nf the Interior Douglas McKay
haa declared himself In favor of statehood
for Hawaii but opposed to granting tha
earns statue to Alaska. He says that before
Alaska Is admitted to the union there should
be assurance that as a elate It would not be
dependent on the federal government.
If the Secretary la expressing adminis­
tration policy, as seems likely, It la • dif­
ferent policy from that expressed In the
Republican party platform In 1052. In that
presidential election year both parties went
on record as favoring ntatahood for the two
territories.
POLICY
If Secretary McKay'a objection to grant(ng Alaska statehood la valid now why waa
It not equally valid when the GOP platform
was drawn up? It la inconceivable that Alas­
ka la any lees well-developed now than it was
then, that today It la more likely to become
a dependent of the federal govarnmsnt than
It was in 1062.
It must not be believed that tha Rapub(leans are the only ones who went back on
their promise of statehood for Alaska and
Hawaii. Democrats have controlled both the
Congress and the White House and have
failed to fulfill their promise of admitting
these territories.
All thle gives rise tc the question of
whether political |wtrty platforms have uny A-Blast Brightens Skies Over Nevada
real meaning or whether they aro not col­ LAS VEGAS, Nev. UP—The big- Thle wai the highest lower »
lection* of pious platitudes and empty pro­ ta il and briahteal btaat of the tVer ael off in Nevede, It wee
misee. Should party politic* be the most Im­
fourth of the current aerias,
portant consideration In weighing the fit­ dawn today
The white flash waa perhapi Ihe
Fifty obierver* law lha dole
ness of a territory for statehood?

'» A

The Sanford Herald

Naming A President
The presidential campaign will be longer
than we think. The Democrats had planned
to hold thrlr 1056 convention on August 27,
almost the latest on record. Tho Republicans
Intimated that they might meet even later.
The idea In both cease was to shorten tha
campaign and thus eavo money. Now It ap­
pears that these late datos aro not practic­
able State laws would in some cesas forbid
the certification of presidential candidates
for the ballot so near to tha a|acttonTha Democratic convention le now an­
nounced for August 18, and there are hints
th* Republicans will revert to their ordin­
ary practice, and meet before their rivals.
At that, both parties will be meeting (n all
Tuesday, Mar. I, 1088 probability a month later than they usually
do.
TODAY* BIBLE VERSE
Perhaps a mors intensive campaign, tha
But let him ask In faith, nothing waver­ aim of there later dates, will seize popular
ing, for ha that wavareth la Ilka a wav# of Interest moro than In the past. If a con­
*$ha eea, driven by the wind and tossed.— siderably larger vote is brought out than
James 1:0. We waste time when w* make tha 50 par cent, above or below, that ordin­
rhetorical long winded prayers. Be specific arily comes out, the change In eonvantlon
dates will be beneficial to tha country.
and sincere, pray with complata faith,

'S3S

moat Jauling ever »een In Lai
Vegsa 75 mile* from Yucce flat.
It ebon* ■ yellow gold color
above the mountains near Loi Angelei iso mile* lo the southwest.
Ft was almoil at though the aun
were trying to make an early appearanee.

«» N7*“

1

*ion from Angel’a Peak on
Chirleiton Range, wait of Uie I
**** Th*y
** V l , f n*
,h* m?*}
•
***n fr0m ,hB m°un,,lh v*otl
pomti
The blinding flash finally fa:
like the filament of a light bu

M A RLO W

Civil Defense Boss Has New Idea
a

WASHINGTON OR—Vel Petcreon.
civil de'enst boie
___ seems to he
having new ideas all the lime on
how people
can esca
. .
the radioactive fallout of a hydrogen bomb.
Iter# are some of them:
Last July he laid the government wee planning a device that
could sound an advance warning

Alliance Is Called
By Three Countries
CAIRO wt— Egypt, Syria and
Saudi Arabia called last night for
a new neutralist Arab military
and economic alliance. It would
replace the eight-nation Arab Lea
guc setup dealt • near death blow
by Iriq'a recent defense pact with
Turkey.
A joint Syrian-Egyptian commu­
nique said the two nations hail
reached “complete agreement'' on
principles of a pact to act up a
joint military command and bar
alliances with non-Arab nations.
Saudi Arabia's King Saud In
Riad announced his government’s
“full aupport" of the plan.
The three atatea laid they would
call a meeting of premlera and
defense ministers of the Arab na­
tions this month to work out de­
tails of the new pact. The other
Arab nations arc Lebanon, Jor­
dan, Yemen, Libya and Iraq.
Syrian Foreign Minister Khaled
el Axem said in Damaacua that
Iraq would be Invited to join In
Ihe new elllenre only If ahe junk­
ed her pact sjlth Turkey.
At s height of 13 mile* It li an
average SO degrees colder over
the equator than over the poles of
the earth.

something that could be Installer
m a bedriwm and set off by change in the electric current
On Feb 20 he expressed the
uiought the problem of radioactivi­
ty could be licked If every person
*i&gt; wining to build shelters In ihe
sack yard like a simple eyclone
vhclter for 11*0 or ■ concrete one
for perhap. $1,000.
Yesterdsy he offered three brand
new ideea to s leasts Armed
Service* subcommittee which la
holding a lertea of hearing! on
civil defense problem*:
Evacuee* could hide In milct of
concrete p.pe—four feet In diam­
eter and covered with three feet
of dirt—hu.lt along the highways.
Or—machines could run along
Ihe highway* digging bcilda them
miles of tranches I feet wide and
a feet deep for pereotu fleeing the
blest area.
Or—a seme of concrete build*
ingi eould be aet up as shelter*
tlona the highways.
While Sen SaltonaUU (R-M lli),
a committee member, didn't say
Peterson was having pipe dreams,
he did etprcaa dla'.aite for tbs
thought of people lying e*d t* end
in plpei and called the trench plan
“unrealiatlc.”
One jf Prterson'i greatest handi­
caps is leek of enough pubUe intercat in civil defenae. It *ai an
intereat which probably perked up
In mid-February when Ike Atomic
Energy Commiieloa leaned Its nowfamous report
It aaid the deadly radioactive
fallout from a hydrogen bomb like
tha one exploded In the Pacific
last year could contaminate an

MAelMFa MMt S a lm i

Medicines In this won­
derful age are very guod.
W h e n your Physician
writes you a prescription
he can now morn often ex­
pect a positive cure, in­
stead of Just hopefully
wishing for good remits.
- Those five or ten dollar
prescriptions usually oava
you months of illness, and
may prevent serious opera­
tion!. Thay art, "cheap**,
Indeed when you conalaar
how, "good”, they are.
Trust your Physician. Ha
prescribes for your health,
and selects tha medicine
ou need most. We wilt
eep their coat as low as
possible.

J

TOUCHTON
DRUG CO.
Oar. 1st A N lfM h i

PRESCRIPTION
CHEMISTS
•R ueU tien by Dlehln*se t r t e
C opyright t l l l l

ake command
thrill first hand 1

Storm Building On Job Outlook

S

"ALL GOOD THINGS
ARE CHEAP"

N tw day! N aw Dodgal N aw driving dlscavtiyl

SAM DAW SON

NEW YORK, Msreb
(ft - A baseless, sad H double U "overfull
■tom la building up today over employment’’ li a elite to be de­
tho outlook for jobi In Ibis period sired.
of good time*. Are tha ehsnees of Tbe bank * tconomlate note that
landing a Job getting better or during a "bode peacetime boom
. . . women who might bolter be
•oraof
The deboe srliae from this: at home ratling their families and
Btulnois la bolter than s year ago. etudenU who might better stay In
Bat more people sre out of work. sehool are tempted by tbe abun­
' Many of tboio who are working dance of Jobe to go to work."
have better taka heme pay-either After (eying that a certain
m fatter hourly wage reteo or amount of unemployment, is nor­
m longer work weeks. And their mal, Uw bank economists assert
Last the official unemployment fig­
pay buys s little more st the store
Or lets them better quality goods ures reflect not only thoeo really
looking for work but alio the (set
St the old pries.
that currently idle “people often
Union leaden, however, wan i N ebsssip about Uw Jobe they
le t unemployment may rise fur­
ther this month—perhaps reaer
•our million Chiefly they elte a
- Constantly growing labor force.
Bet they also worry about tho re-

But people ms? bavs relaxed
aln this week whin Sir Winston
urehlll «sld Uis Soviet Union
count not match this country In Itbombs tor three or four yean,
ipoka of present American suiieriority. and warned the Hue-line not to try trick*.

they want, and reluctant to ehingo
o m p I o y o r , oecupsUon or resi­
dence."
The bank notes: "It ta remark­
able that no one calculates the
totals of unfilled Job*. That such
exist In large numbers la evidenced
In ,the turnover etetlsttee and tbe
help wanted ads, to say nothing
of the chronic ahotrages of demeetle help."
Labor leaders doubtless will
have quick replies for tho points
tho bank economists make. Tbe
unions stress that tho fundamental
need 1a to? more Jobs as more
people noth working ape.

Yin see whit It's Ike t* rule the
rote la rushing styta. EveryIterfsthionte Inch %*i% Ota's g*r

ra m i

r T

■
in»A
f • V* . 4

"} ft.'&gt;,
•' 4V' 4/J- ■'

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■

�. . •-»?

S o c ia l, £ v &amp; n td u
WuuZEEBm'**
«*,TURHDAY
v The Gieanen Claee will have
o monthly meeting at the First
Baptist Churrh’e annex at 7:30
p. m. Mr*. V. P. Heety will be
hoe tola,
Tha Pilot Club will hold lie re­
gular huelneee meeting In the
Yacht Club at B p.m. The board
will meet at 7:30 p.m.
BL Monica Chapter of Roly
Croea Episcopal Church will meet
mrlth lira. J. E. Anderson, B04
T e s t *0th 8 t, at • p.m.
Tha ra«ular monthly meeting of
Congretatlenal Beth tirael will
ha hald at tha Jawlih Center, Megaolla Ate. and ISth St. at I p.m.
■t. Mary’a Chapter of Holy
Croea Epiicopol Churrh will meet
at the home of Mre. A. R. Pinker­
ton, 1911 Magnolia Ave., at i p.m.
Tho Daughter* of Wesley Sun­
d a y School Class of Jhe Tint
•Methodist Church, will meet at
1(90 p. m. in McKinley Hall,
with Mr*. Robert Cola, Mre. Don­
ald Dunn, Mr*. Grace Gregory,
Mre. Louiee Knowlee, Mre. J, M.
McCook111 and Mn. M. B. Smith
na oo-hoeteeeea.
Tha Pint
Baptist
Concord
Choir will hold raheoraa! at 9(90

P. m.

Garden Nook
By SADIE B. GUT
The Sinrord Garden Club of
Florida Federation of Garden
Cluba
With aralras and camelllai past
their peak of bloom you'll want
to be planning for other flowore
for your summer garden. As ha*
been mentioned
befon, many
flowers can ba placed in front af
asalcai to provide bloom when
tho aulea season la over. By care­
ful choosing of these flowen you
can havo more or lea* of a peren
nial border, with bloom tho year
round.
Caladiumi are the usual fin t
choice and add eoler to the bor
&lt;ler all summer. All of tho be
gonlae are good, including star
leaf, beefiteak, angel wing, wax
leaf and to forth, a* they like
the tame soli and condition* as
a ta in t, If they are In a eemi
shady spot, in tha foreground.
Uloxlnles can alto be used nd
ran taka morning tun. Chrytan
thtmumi could be planted fur
ther back in the "bays" between
the aialra* to provide fall bloom,
They should bo staked or at
In st pinched lack frequently to
make sturdy bushy plants. Ver­
bena likes the aulea bed con­
ditions also, hut rare must be tak.
cn to prevent the spreading plants
from encroaching on the aulea
root system,
Another choice If the asalna
are in a more sunny situation I*
rotes. The miniature*, polyanthus,
flaribundai or the new grand!,
floras would be lovely.
And speaking of roses, those
of you who believe that only
Southern grown standard varie
ties of roses do wall la Florida
■hould have teen the healthy
planta .and huge bloom* of the
Jackson A Perkins
(A New
York Nursery) roses blooming in
the gardens visited on the Win
ter.Park garden tour. Thay were
truly a gorgeous sight.
But getting back to our home
gardens, heat tolerant annual*
should b* planted now, such at
ageralum, cosmos, marigolds, por*
tillers, lortnla, tlthonia and sinnlas.
Annuals already blooming, In
eluding nasturtiums,, pansies and
sweet peat should be kapt picked
to prolong the blooming season.
Florida cranberry or Resells
may be planted now. This member
of tha hiblacui family, classed
boUnlcally as hibiscus sabdarlffa,
is useful in the garden' for the
cranberry-llka jelly which is mads
from tho flethy calyx of tho flowar. Often confused with this plant
la the red-leaf "hibiscus eatval
daanui" which la used for hedges
or specimen plants to add color
to tha garden.
Jasmines and viburnums con ha
'tsoil layered” this month and
root quickly,
'

Mrs. J. C. Fridetl
Is Honored Friday

Miss Hoolehan, Mr. Stubbs Speak Vows Sunday

In ■ beautiful double-ring cere­
Mn. J, C. Frldtll of Hommoasport, N. Y., houseguest of Mrs. mony l Its Betty Rose Hoolehan,
A, W. Lee, was honored on Fri­ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jam rs
day afternoon when Mr*. F. E. R Hoolehin was united in mar­
Rnumillat entertained aboard the riage In Millon W Slubb*. von of
Mr. and Mrs. Waller Sluhh*, Sun­
"Skylark".
Favor* ware presented to the day at 3:30 p m al Ihr Firsl
gussta and special memoir* were Methodist Church with the Rev.
given the honored guest and Mr*. Milton H. Wyatt officiating.
Irane Rlnes, who was celebrating1 The church was softly lllnml
nalcd by burning taper* held bv
her birthday at that time,
Tha hostess wav assisted tiy branched candelabra. Talmv am
Mrs. A. B. Wallace, Mrs. Edmond baskets of white gladioli and frr
Msisch and Mr*. A. W. Lee. Oth­ were placed throughout.
The organise Mrs. Albert Hick
ers present were Mrs. J. C. Atcocka, Mr*. Minnie Jones, Mrs. von, rendered the traditional nup
Eleanor Zimmerman, Mrs. Mae Hal music and Mr*. Ell* Nile
Dickens, Mn. R. J. Holly, Mrs. llearnc. Gainesville, soloist, sang
Dial Gray, Mr*. B. A. Howard, "The Lord's Prayer" and "Be
Mr*. F. L. Woodruff Sr., *-vJ1 cause".
Mra. Thomas Vaughan.
The bride, given in marriage by
her father, was lovely In a gown
nylon net over white
James Dunn Says ofsatinwhite
featuring a fitted bodice
and a full skirl with a pjvamirt In
'Oscar1 Is Jinx;
sert uf Chantilly lace. Her flngrr
veil fell from the Juliet cap
Wife Hides Trophy Up
encrusted with seed pearls and
HOLLYWOOD (JK-Is Ovcar a her only Jewelry was a single
JmxT James Dunn thinks maybe strand of pearls, a gift of the
groom.
It Is.
Miss Betty Sue Alderman, Lake
•My wlf# hid tha Oscar I won,"
he ssys "I don't cara If I never City, maid of honor and her only
attendant wore a gown of yellow
•e* It again.”
Jimmy is now enjoying h:» third nylon net over taifeta with a fit
movie career; .this lime It's movies ted bodice, full skirt, and stole
for TV He stars with Michael She carried a bouquet of blue Iris
O'Shea and William Bishop in
Joe Good acted as best man with
"It’s a Great Life.” one of the Jack McGuInty and Henry Willi­
funniest of the new shows.
ford serving as ushers.
The last time we talked at length
The bride’s mother choose for
was just nina years ago. Jimmy daughter's wedding a pink em­
nad been a top nama in the '30s broidered dress with pink accessor­
as coslar with Sally F.llers and ies and an orchid corsage while
Shirley Temple He faded out of Mr*. Stubhs. mother of Ihe groom,
Rims, returning triumphantly with wore a alee) blue taffeta streetan Academy Award parformanca length dress complete with a pink
as Dorothy McGulra's alcoholic hit and an orchid corsage.
husbsnd In "A Tre# Grows in
A reception followed at the Wo
Brooklyn.’* I saw him shortly be­
min'* Club.
fore he won the Oscar.
Mrs Stubbs' traveling outfit was
Ha said he had lift ZOth CenturyFox. "After 'Brooklyn' they put a light blue spring suit with navy
me In a turkey exiled 'Caribbean accessories. She wore the orchid
Mystery " he ramarked. "I didn't from her bridal bouquet.
After a short wedding trip
squawk because I thought they
would give me a break. Then through south Florida thr couple
they gave another script. Out will reside at 024 SW Fifth Street
of 120 pages, I had IB sidas—and in Gainesville.
most of the lima I didn't say
Out-of-town guests were Mrs.
anything.
Jack McOlunty, Mrs. McRae of
"I, told them If they wanted a Georgia; Mrs. Ed Stephen and
pantomine artist they should hiiw Mrs. C. C. Mixon of Gainesville:
somebody like Jimmy Savo. So we Mr. and Mrs. Earle W. Blley of
rartea with no hard feelings.”
Ft. Pierce: Mrs. Newell Alder
Jiramyt second movie career man. Wildwood; Mr. and Mrs. J
died an early and mysterious M. Paulk. SI. Augustine: Mr. and
death. Despite the Oscar, the film Mrs. George Gardner, Kissimmee;
offers just did coma.
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Paulk, Kissi­
He went on to more bad luck, mmee.
dropping 143,000 In a stage flop.
Mr. and Mrs. G. A. McPherson,,
He made only one picture—a
Winter
Haven; Mr. and Mrs. Jer­
quickie called "Tha Golden Gloves ry Corel!,
Tampa; Mr. and Mrs
Story" In 1949.
Jimmy and his wlf* Edna con­ Henry Williford, Gainesville; Mr
tinued living at their heme on tha ■nd Mrs. Joe Good. Gainesville,
beach at Malibu. Tha Oscar ratted Mra. W. W. Gary, Mr. and Mr*.
Arehla Almond of Gainesville;
oa the mantel.
"On* day when tlilngi looked Mra. Helen S. Bowers, Thomastho blackest, I looked at tha mintal vllle, Ge., Mn. Raine S. Bowers
and tha Oscar waa gone," Jimmy •nd Mr. and Mra. John Tyaon III
tald. "I askad Edna about it. She of Jaekaonvllle.
tald sha had hid It and wasn't
going la tell me where It was.”
Wondering how to use that mar­
Jimmy is Irish, so you ran un­ joram you havo on your shalfT Try
derstand hls delight In telling that it in meat balls or a stew.
tha very next day ha startad
dickering for "tt'a a Great Ufa.”
Since then ha hat dona a number
of dramatic thowa In tho Eatt and
now hit agent raporta a hot deal
for a movie.

Tho Pint Baptlit Intarmadl*
Ambasendore srlll meet at
7 p. m.
Anna Millar Circle will mMt at
tha Elka dub at l p. m.
Tha Unity Claee wlU meet at tha
Valdai Hotel at 7:49 p. m. with
Carolyn Panoni a* teacher. The
•tody book will bo continued and
DM public la Invited.
R. W. A. circle of tha Pint
ChrieUan Church will meat at
m Ctrclea of tho Pint Methodist
•Church will moat a* followe: Clrala I with Mr*. Walter depp,
S41I Decotta Ave. at S p.m.t Cir­
cle P with Mra. J. M. Blanton, 40S
W. 10 S t, at B)30 a m
Tho Junior High School P-TA
will moot In tho ochool auditorium
at S p. m. Tho axacutlva board
will meat la lha llteary at 7:20
* o'clock.
Tho Woman'a Bible Claee of the
First Baptiat Church will meat
• a t 7(80 p. m. at the home of Mra.
Vella William*, 600 Magnolia Ave.
with Group No. 4 as hoatcaaea.
Methodist Youth Fellowship
Subdlatrict meeting, leaving the
church at 6:41 p. m. for DeLand.
WEDNESDAY
The Pint Baptlat Carol Choir
will hold rohoanal at 8t80 p,at
Tho Pint Baptiat Prayer Meetmg aervica will bagla at 7:90 p.m.
#W a eontlaua with Urn etudy ad tha
book *'A Winning Wltaota "Juaior Chair Rahoanal at Pint
Methodist Church nt 9:48 p. m.
Mid-week prayer services of
P in t Methodist Church at 7:90
p, bl, followed by hte Commission Loch Arbor at 10 a. m, An Intoreating garden quit will ba held.
aw Education meeting.
Rota Circle of tha Sanford Gar­
THURSDAY
den Club will meet at 9:49 a. m.
The Pint Baptist Carat Choir in the home of Mrt. W. A. Morri­
will hold rchoanol at 1:30 p.m.
son, 1KM Sanford Ave.
Tho Vint Baptlit Craaador
The Mimota Circle of the San­
No corn popper in the bousoT
Choir trill hold rahoanal at 9 pm ford Garden Gub will meat at
Tho Junior Royal Ambassador* 11 a. m. at tha Garden Center for Then heal three tablespoons of sa­
will moat at t u Tint Baptlat a covered dish luncheon with Mra. lad oil In a skillet that is 9 or JO
Inches in diameter. When a drop of
Churah at T p m
B. A. McWhorter as hostess.
water added to tha oil sissies, it's
Tho Tint Baptlat Church Choir
SATURDAY
lima to add W cup of popcorn. Now
trill hold rthcaraa) at 7:90 p.m.
Churah Membership Class#* for cover the skillet and shake. When
Tho Aaalaa Circle of the Garden
Club trill meet at tho Garden hoys and girts of Junior Depart­ tha corn begins to pep you can
ment ago at Fint Methodist tower tha heal but nap shaking
Canter at I p. m.
The Palm Circle t i the Sanford Churah will meat at 10 a. m. in until you hear the lari kernel pop.
Garden d ab will moot at liSO a. the aortal room at MeKtaley Turn Into n big bowl sprinkling
tali over tha popcorn ai you da
m at the home of lira. Robert Hall
SUNDAY
Bauman with Mra. Arthur Pitta
High attendance day will b*
la be oo-hoeteia.
Senior Choir Rchoanol at Pint observed la Sunday School aad An ange food cake made from a
Family Day la tha morning wor­ packaged mix will fm te a* wall
Mathediat Church at 7:90 p, m.
Tha Hamarocallii Circle of lha ship service at the Central Bap­ at one baked at hams "from
•cratch.”
Sanford Garden dub will meat tist Churah.
at tha home of Mre. P. B. Adame,
MM Lake Are. at t;tt p. m. CoH A N D SE W N T W O -EY E LET
hoataeeaa will ba Mr*. J. P. Hall,
Mrs. M. B. Smith and Hiaa Ethel
lite r.
i The Camellia Circl# of the San­
ford Garden Club will meet al
■ p. m. at tha bama of Ura. Ralph
Batti, 1109 E. Tourth Street. Mre.
B. C. Whitmire trill ba eo-hc'te-i.
n o TEL "class t i tha
-i
le ftist Cbureb will meat In ne
Chapel al ■ p. m. with Mr*.

Beth Israel Has
Monthly Meeting

fis/iAD Jm h
Mr. and Mrs. Nick Bohar of
Cleveland, Ohio, who have been
vacationing in Miami, aie spend­
ing several day* In Sanford visit­
ing with Mr*. George Cabas and
Mr. and Mr*. Peter J. Bokur be­
fore returning homo.
Friend* nf W. M. Colbert Sr
will regret to know that he con­
tinue* to he seriously III at hi*
home at Slo E. 18th Street.

Gentry, Annis Vows
Exchanged Sunday
Miss Mon* Joy Gentry, PhnonW,
Ariaona, ami Norman EIDwnrth
Annla, Sanford Navnl Auxiliary
Air Station, were wed Sunday at
0 p. m. In th* First Christian
Church hy thr Rev. John R. Gol­
den. The couple was accompanied
hy Mr, and Mr*. Eugene Earl
Ott.
About 80 guests were present
for thr errnnony
Mr. Annis Is a jet alrplana
mechanic and has been In tho
srrvico for thr pa*t )7 year*.

Congregation Beth Israel held
Its monthly social and business
meeting Sunday evening at 8
o'clock nt the Jewish Community
Center, Magnolia and 16th S ts,
with Mrs. Melvin Siskind, Mrs.
I’liil Kessler, and Mrs. Elliot
EHcnherg, acting hostesses.
After discussion of business, a
social period followed. An alien
dance prise donated by Mrs. Mor­
ris Stostky wn* won by Joe Mots.
Refreshment* were served to
the following: Mr. and Mr*. Jno
Moss, Mr. and Mr*. Mslvln Bitkind, Mr. and Mr*. Elliot Ellenbrrg, Mrt. A. Knnnrr, Mr. and
.Mrs. Phil Kessler, Mr. and Mrs.
Sol Gordon, Mr. and Mrs. Morris
Stotsky, and son, Jnrkir, Dr. and
Mrs, Edwin Epstein.
Guest* present were Mr*. An­
na Cohn of Brooklyn, N. Y., and
Mi** Pnrnh Epstein nf CenlrevllIr, Md.
Delicious Sunday hrunch: brown­
ed potk t a .it age link* with glared
apple ring* hoi corn bread and cof­
fee. Serve orange or tomato julco
■md cereal firsl, if desired.
Rome rook* like to pour off tho
tat at bscon rooks In a skillet;
they *ay the bscon 1* crispier this
way Just be sure to drain the ba­
con well on absorbent paper when
11 come* nut of the skillet.

Want creamy white mashed pota.
loesT Port the spud* before boil­
ing- And remember not to flood
the potatoes with waler during the
boiling process — use Jusl enough
to cover them.

Page

Marlon Brando
Changes Ideas
HOLLYWOOD CB — M a r l o n
Brando'a movie career hi* been
markrd by turbulence almost
from the start.
I did hi* first Interview when
he arrived in Hollywood five yean
ago He was living the life of a
paraplegic at Birmingham Veter­
ans Hospital In preparation for his
rote In “Thr Men." Despite tha
legends that surrounded him when
he did "A Streetcar Named De­
sire" on the stage, he seemed like
a fairly normal young man. But
he was apprehensive of what
Hollywood, especially the press,
would do to him.
In the following years, he be­
came more of a legend Column­
ists wrote about hit sloppy attire,
hi* pel raccoon, wild motorcycling
and generally eccentric behavior.
Brando's one great regret In hit
career it that he let thi* publicity
gel out of hand. Ho admits that
he contributed to some of It. He
it thankful that he Is not a con­
ventional typo—"I can think of
nothing duller ”
"But the publicity made me look
pev'ty stupid." he remarked. "I
w a s the hot copy boy who
scratched himself and spat In the
oolted palms.
'The bad part of it was that
people were conditioned to (his
publicity. When they met me, they
•aid to themselves, 'I hope ha
isn’t going to be rude and uncouth;
I hope he won't kick my Aunt
Finny.' I had to reconvert their
whole attitude."
Far from being rude, Brando la
*ofl-spoken and courteous to oth­
er*. During our talk, he was In­
terrupted three limes by actors
who wanted him to get them
part* In hls new picture, "Guy*
and Dolls." lie politely told eaeh
me that all the roles hud been
cast largely by players In tha
Broadway version.
Brando has had one major ex­
plosion during his Hollywood ca­
reer. Thai was when he walked
out on "The Egyptian" just a* tha
picture was to start. He was re­
placed by Edmund Purdorn.
After Ihe "Egyptian" walkout,
2iHh Cenlury Fox slipped a two
millinn-dollar still against Brando,
It wa* dropped after the avtor
agreed to star as Napoleon In
"Desiree."
"I made a mistake and I pihl
for It.” he commented "It was
my own fault If I had had any
sense, 1 would have handled tha
situation belter.”

PARADERS!
DRESSES
For the Kiraler pantile for the young;
minis who whero'n a size 1 to -I, In
orifnndiea, ailkn, taffeta*, and ninny
other material. Trimmed llko tho
hrenth of spring, with lure ami bows.
Mnny with embroidered braid, and
underneath It nil a precious enn-enn
petticoat.

J.9 8 -

3 .9 8

Cowan*« has In the size 5 to 8 group,
a wide arleetlnn nf colon*, style* and
budget prices. For the Knitter parada
what could be better thnn h atlff pin­
afore over n taffeta pnttiroat. Coma
In and look at our selection. T his
group la priced at

2 -2 9 -

5 .9 8

FRANCSCAN WARE ECHO

12-P IE C E B A SIC SET

PETTICOATS

4 DINNIt PLATE* • 4 CUPS • 4 SAUCERS

Franciscan Ware

1

ECHO PATTERN

A tto W i

R m r M t n » budget •pportulty tike thla—lS-pWc*
Bute Bat af Praadncpa War* at a truly *xceptloaal
Stock Pric* 115.40

Win. E. Kader, Jeweler
MW— 9B m e m u T C T

US U Park A m

iaamgJ

fm O T m U )

PR.SI7.W

•4

Just like biff sister wears.
Tha perfect touch to any
young lady’s Enster outfit.
Trimmed with lacc, nod ao
very, very full. Priced ut

2-98

at *9.95

WEAR

(Photo By Raymond Studio)

Dr. and Mr*. A. W. Epps Jr.
are In Washington, D. C. anil
Rethcsda, Mil. for two weeks where
Save lemon halves after you
Pr. Epps will lake a emirse In nave squeezed the Juice from them;
dental surgery. While there they wrap in waxed paper and More in
plsn to visit New York City.
(Jit refrigerator. Kill the halves
with ehutnry and serve with a
Sir. and Mr*. C. A. Whlddon •urry of chirkrn, Iamb or href.
Sr. spent the psst weekend In If you want to be extra-fancy,
Montgomery, Ala visiting their nolrh the rdge of the lemon before
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Riling with the chutney.
Mrs. L E Mo*e.s and family.
Mix pretzel sticks with sailed
Me. and Mrs. Harold If. Kastncr •vanilla when tho teen-age crowd
had a* their weekend guest* at wants • snack
their home at 1801 E. Second St
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Schneider and
ion Arnold Jr. of Maitland.

Franciscan Spring
Promotion at Kader’s

Bostonians

MENU

Tues. Mar. 8, 1955

Seminole Chapter No. Two OE8
mel Thursday at 9 p. m. In the
Masonic Hal) with Mra. Virginia
Anderson, Worthy Matron, presid­
ing The meeting npcnrd In regular
form with two candidate* being
Initiated: Mrs Elltlrn Rector and
Mr*. Kathryn P. l-cach. Each wa»
prevented with a beautiful corsage.
Mrs Anderson appointed her
committee* 'nr the Golden Annlveraary which will he held on
March 17 al the regular meeting
Committee* appointed were hlslory, decorations, Invitation and
badge*, all past matrons with Mn.
Louise Rill*, chairman.
For program and music, Mr*
Vivian Welch, Mrs. Helen Leinhart and Mra. Stella ktoore were
chosen; refreshment, and table de­
corations, Mrs. Henrietta Baines.
The hall was decorated In ycl
low and red snap dragons, Mrt
Anderson's color* for lha year.
Visitors from out of the state
were prevented and a short talk
was given by a district deputy
from Charleston S. C.
Refreshments were served by
Mr*. R. W. Turner.

MIW. MILTON W.

a

TTTK HATCTOW) HCTAtT)

Two Are Initiated
Into Eastern Star

iH o ii ro t s o u

and

cu m

SHO ES
For tha young In h e art.. .
Acrobat 9 h o e a . Potent
leather or Just white
leather. We have the shoe
you want.

�r

-

........

THE SANFORD HERALD &gt;

Page 6

Toes. Mar. 8, 1955

Set Good Example,
Governor Urges
Baseball Players

LaSalle To Defend Cage Crown Tonight
M anagers Shift Players Around
W ith Eye To Building U p Clubs

TAMPA &lt;/P)—Gov. Collins
has appealed to baseball
players not to recommend
any product for profit that
they would not recommend
for their own sons.
By SHELDON SAKOWITZ
The ASSOCIATED PRESS
Speaking at the annual
governor’s baseball dinner Major league managers often
for teams training in Florida, experiment during spring Irslning
Collins said baseball players with position shifts designed to

11

I

i

GREAT GUY, GOLAI - - - By Alan Mavar

centrating on polishing the play
of 18-year-old Harmon Klllebrew.
They are striving to improve Ihc
bonus youngster's throwing with
hopes of stationing him at third.
Dressen also Is looking over
some othci prospects on the 50man squad In an effort to send
Yost to th: outfield.
Chicago Whit* Sox skipper Mar­
ty Marion shifted two of his rookie
infield prospects to the outfield tn
sn intrasquad game yesterday
Mrst baseman Jim Marshall and
third baseman Joe Kirrcne were
the displaced p l a y e r s as the
"Myalls'' edged the "Guttcrldges”
5-4.
Brooklyn Dodger manager Walt
Alston named his starting lineup

for Thursday night's opener with
the Milwaukee Braves and vet­
eran shortstop Pee Wee Reese was
not listed. Alston considers Reese
his regulai shortstop, but would
like to see him perform at both
second and third base.
Milwaukee B r a v e s ' Manager
Charlie Grimm has two young
shortstop prospect* In eamp—A1
Facchlnl and Bill Caro—so the put
Caro at third In yesterday's intrasquad game. Grimm, elated at
•heir ‘surprising ability,” said,
“Tley looked sharp In our early
wurkouts last week but did even
better in competition."
Meanwhile, at Clearwater, Fla.,
B a s e b a l l Commissioner Ford
Frick says something should be

tom &amp; O L A
O F lA S A L L E

W/NPS UP YUS
fa bu lo u s

4 -Y E A R

/

V A B Srry

CAREER

done to help pitcher* and It be
had his way "I'd legaliza the old
'epitter'
The commissioner dropped In on
the Philadelphia Phillies' training
camp Monday “to line up six tick
cts" for an exhibition game Thurs
day.
He look the occasion to ex­
change views on the new "stop­
watch” rule requiring pitchers to
deliver the ball within 20 seconds
after they step on Ihe rubber (he
thinks it will only put further rettrlrtloni on the pitchers) and fl
nancial prospects for the major
leaqucs this season (he forecast a
prosperous year).
The so-called "stop-watch" rule
is designed to speed up the aellon
and shorten the playing time,
mailer of considerable discussion
In recent years with ball games In
variably dragging out past the 2hour mark.
"If the boys want to circumvent
any rule, 'hey can find ways and
means of doing so,” Frick said.
“ But I do think something posi­
tive should be done to help the
pitchers. Why with this lively ball
and everybody swinging, It's got­
ten so a pitcher's afraid to lay
the bill In there.
"If I had my way, I'd legalize
the old 'spltter.' It wai a great
pitch and one of tho easiest to
throw . . . there was nothing dan­
gerous about It. Mostly, the ball
dipped and did tricks — from a
natural delivery.”

A

,

M i.

Preliminary Game
To Pit Explorers
Against West Va.
B» THE A«lOCMTED PPr ^8

Y/ELP/MO d

LaSalle’s Rxploreni ltd by
three-time All America Tom
Oola, open defense of their
national Intercollcjriate b a s ­
ketball title tonljrht, meeting®
W e s t Vlrglnln’a Southern
Conference champions In on*
of eight preliminary games
scheduled for four cities.
Actually, the NCAA Tour­

TO

pefe Np

77iE
Yf.C.A.Aua

CROWNS
are object* of hero worship to strengthen their clubs. These shifts
American y o u t h . Profenionai don't always work out, but there's
playera have an obligation to eet no hsrm in Improvising with the
an example for theee youngster*, material at hand.
This season has been no excep­
he said.
Some baseball player* exploit tion. The big league skipper* have
nament yet* under way befora tha
their leaderihlp for profit, Collin* been switching players ail around.
field of 24 Ii completed. The Ivy
said. They have a right to do *o, The Washington Senators have
league, which ended tn a threehe added, but he questioned wheth been toying with the idea of movway tie a* Princeton defeated
er they arc then living up to their Ling third baseman Eddie Yost to
r 'he outfield provided an adequate
Brown 68-39 last night, will de--^
responsibilities.
ride it* representative at RutgerO"
"i with every ball player, be­ repUcemeni ran b» found.
Manager Chuck Dressen and
tomorrow night when Columbia
fore he recommend* pny product
coach
Cookie
Lavagetto,
a
former
meets Princeton.
OH the radio or felevlilon or top third sackcr, have been con­
through newspaper advertlilng,
Columbia eliminated Penneylwould ask himself the ilmple
vanla 73-71 in a game played af­
queitlon: Would I recommend this
ter tha Prini-eton-Brown contest.
to my boy?'*, Collin* laid. "If he Florida Briefs
The Ivy champion wilt not awing
would not, then he ihould not
Into NCAA action until Friday
lead hi* nelghlmr'* boy who 1*
when it has tha unenviable task
eager to follow.”
of facing tha LaSalla-West Vir­
Present were about 40Q repre­
ginia winner at Philadelphia.
MB F /R ST G AIH EP TAMf
sentative* of major and minor
LaSalle (22-4) and West V lr-*
A S A FRESH M AN IN
^
ouipbea
■vague team*, official* of both
ginla (10-10) wind up a tripleSEH
SU
S
CHOICE
i
?
5
2
S
P
A
R
R
IN
G
league*, iportswrlter*, photo­
header at New York’s Madison
F O Q A U -A M E R IC A
L A S A U e TO
grapher* and broadcasters.
, OR THE 9 R P
Square Garden. William*, (17-1)
A S U R P R IZ E W Hi
The biggest hand wa* reserved
7 t im e - m s t r u e
.
N ew
Ensdr^d representative,
BATON ROUGE, La. UB -Chunliiv
r
*
£
RATIONAL
WORTH P O E S N T 9 HOW
for six member* of baseball’* Hall
ti'tes on Canlsulua (16-8) In tho
JViTAT/oM B A SK E T B A U
ky Bo Wininger today headed for
IN
THE
ST
A
T
IST
IC
*,
of Fame: Fred Clarke, Pittsburgh
first game and Duka (20-7), run­
a week's rest at his Oklahoma
tourney in New Yo rk
A E N A S TO B E S E E N
outfielder; George Slater, fit.
City home with his first PGA lour
ner-up to Ineligible North Caro­
TO B E A P P R E C IA T E P \
TAM
PA
(/P)—
Ilnlio
Zahnrinn
ono
of
th«
nation'll
lending
Louis Drowns first baseman;
S/NCENEPOeS
1 lina State In the Atlantic Coast
women
golfern,
plnnned
to
fly
to
A
ugusta,
Ga.,
today
to
n
a
r-'
n,ment
victory
and
the
12.200
first
EVERYTHING EQUALLY W ELL
/ Dairy Vnncc, Ilrooklyn pitcher;
Vlllanova
Ciinfcrence, m e e t s
ze Golf
n heTourney.
l 12-500 Baton Rouge
D&lt;ll Terry New York (Hants first tlclpnte in th e W omen's Tltleholdors Open T ournam en t s ta r t- pr
MrtittaM *» Xtaf FMun SfWlnM
(16-9).
Open
basoman; Mickey Cochrane, Phil- Ing Thurstlny.
After a week's layoff the tour­
The other preliminary round
adtlphla Athletic* catcher; and
Mrs. Zaharies, who dropped out of the Sarasota Wom­ ing professionals play next at St.
games will be played at Lexing-U
Bill Dickey, New York Yankee
en's Open two weeks ago, said she Petersburg Fla.
ton, Ky., El Reno, Okla., and Saa
catcher.
was rested and felt fine.
Wininger, 37 displaying accurate
Francisco.
The governor also complimented
Iron shots and deadly putting, easi­
Marquette, which had the .
baseball playera for setting a high
WINTER PARK un—Rollins Col- ly trounced Jimmy Clark of La­
unique regular season record of
standard of conduct off and on
lege today released this tennis guna Reach, Calif., and Billy Max
losing Ite first and last garnet but
schedule:
the field.
well of Odessa, Tex., Monday in
winning 22 in between, takes on
Baseball player*, whether they
Maich 15, Presbyterian; 22, sn 18-hole playoff for flrat money.
Miami of Ohio (14-8), th* Midknow It or not, are great teacher*
Davidson; 25, Ohio State; 30, Duke;
Wininger stroked a six-underAmerican champion, at Lexington,
and leader*, he said.
April 1, Florida State; 8, At par 80, four strokes better than
Th* other gam* matches Pena ’
"If you have a boy and want
By GAYLE TALBOT
Florida; 8, Gustavus Adolphus; Clark, who won the $1,500 second NEW
YORK
1-i&gt;i__*
■ lit—Ronnie
1 ■it
. . . Delaney
•
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
State (17-8), third In last year's
him to grow up to be a successful
NEW YORK IB - Roland La 13, Centre; 10 Miami; 19, at Stet­ money. Maxwell, who bad puller
lefthinded middleweight, is _
and Memphis .v
State,
,*■
baseball man, teach him to under- btarza, who was a highly regarded son; 20, Florida Southern; 23, at trouble, shot a one-under-par 71 to sensible young man. At 25 years
Th* San Francisco Don*, loader In Tit# Associated Pro** poll o f, -championship,
___- I I __II---- ---- —-- 1------- —
Lirti
l.t. &gt;•
Stand and love baseball,” Collin* challenger for the world heavy­ Miami; 27, Stetson:
.5*
*•
take home $1,170 third place mon- of age, he has acquired a wife and college biiketbftU power* for th* last four weckst remained In th* No* * A
put together a string of 18
said,
five children. He even likes fight 1 spot today after a close ballot duel with Kentucky. ,
weight championship less than two
Mey 2, at Virginia; 2, at Wash­ oyr.
Ing.
The
three
deadlocked
for
first
years ago, was stiffened In five ington and Lee; 4, at Duke; 5, at
With San Francisco, Kenturky end other teams heeded Into tour- I straight in compiling a 17-4 re­
rounds the other night by a Cuban Presbyterian; 13, at Florida South­ Sunday with 72-hole totals of 278. But he likes money better.
nament play, tha final regular-eeaion poll of tha nation’s sports writ- ‘
San Franctaco'a Dona, tha na­
Assistant Tournament Chairman *T’m after some real money in era and sportacastcrs brought out
fighter you probably never heard ern.
American Squad
tion's No. 1 team with n 28-1 re*
Jim Winfree said the fourth an­ this game now,” Delaney »a„
ni before, one Julio Mederos.
„ ft heavy vote.
Id to11 Minnesota
244 ord and featuring All America
Baton Rouge Open drew such day "I've been fighting for small
Fori Pan-Am Games In his lail fight previous to that, EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, Fla nual
A total of 171 votea were cast, 1? Alabama (1)
131 Blit Russell, swing Into action
LaStana looked like a sleepwalker UB—In the first games of the South­ fine crowd* the iponior* were con­ purses long enough.”
131 against West Texas (14-7), Bor­
In losing a 10-rounder to Charlie eastern Air Force District Basket­ sidering hiking the prixe money If he can find soma opponents, San Francisco receiving 87 for 13 UCLA
Faces Last Trial
first place and Kantucky—which 14 George Washington
114
to
$15,000
next
year.
det Conference rspnaeatatlv*, at
Norkui,
strictly
a
second-rater.
Atu)
ball
Tournament
last
night
Eglln
Delaney might get that pot of
HOUSTON, &lt;JB - The U.S. Pan110 San Francisco. On tha same card,
1 *-J M
.1 J_
The tournament was played over gold. Right now. he spends most of finished the 1034 season as No. IB Colorado (1)
American
track and
(laid
squad In tha one before that ha dropped defeated Turner AFB, Ga., 92-77;
1—collecting 31. On points, based 18. Tulsa (2) 108 Idaho 8tata (18*7), Rocky Moua_____.Its
. . Pfinal
M competlth
. itlva warm a decision to Don Cocke!!, the Palm Beach AFB defeated Al the 6.450-yard Baton Rouge Coun­ his time earning a living aa a on 10 for firet, 9 for second, etc., 17 Vanderbilt (1)
takes
94 lain Confarsnea titisholdsr, tea- .
laborer In the country engineers Saa Frandaco received 1,424 and 18. Illinois
tip Tuesday night with Wea Santaa chubby cove who haa been sen­ brook AFB, Panama Canal Zone, try Club eourie.
82 kiss Seattle (1M ) In tha fifth
tenced
to
face
Rocky
Marciano
la
in
Akron,
Ohio.
61-37,
Orlando
AFB
defeated
Tyn­
and Fred Dwyer ai the big attrac
Kentucky, 1,388.
10.
West
Virginia
(1)
78 meeting of th* year between tha
May.
dall AFB, 81-72; and Plnecaitle
tlona.
He punched out a unanimous
63 too teams. Seattle holds a 1-1
LaSalle, heading Into defense of 20 St. Louis
Those are tha only timet tha defeated Moody AFB, Ga., 53-48.
10-round decision over Sugar Al Its NCAA title scramble along
One of the largeat track crowds Bronx
edge.
Battler has climbed Into a
Wilson Monday night In St. Nleh with San Frandaco and Kentucky,
in Tesai history Is expected at ring since
the
fall
night
In
1953
The last two at-larga teams to
olai Areas. On the heels of his clung to tha No. 3 place with 1,043
Public School Stadium to aea the when Marciano starched him In KANSAS CITY OB- Florida State
ba selected for th* championship,
^ i T " * * 1* a - ,.
St.
Francis
Team
non-title decision over champion points.
natlon’i finest trackmen compete tha
University
staved
off
a
Montana
round of their Utle bout
nl*£h
nTLtr ,**■&gt; Johnny Saxton, ha now has tha
Bradley (7-19) and Oklahoma
■gainst • group from Texas and at a 11th
rally to win 94-84 In the 4r
K
Fin91»„ credentials to hold out for a big A couple of lata upsets Juggled Seeking Title
local ball park. LaStana, who State
City (9-17), battla It out at O
Oklahoma eoUegea and unlvarsl- thought
opening
game
of
the
NAIA
Basket­
ha was going to ba cham­
i.*a bundle of cash.
tbs top 10 rankings, as tha con'
Rena.
ttea.
Quintet* re -ftS ITT.se
pion before the bomba want off ball Tournament hera yesterday. BKCO
ferene* championships were de­ KANSAS CITY (JB - Tha East,
MD ______
a s r n — ________
s ^1&gt;- Trie—
From tha four sits* the win- .»
After leading early la tha game,
Santea and Dwyer will switch that night, appears to be washed
"That Wilson Is a rough cus­ cided. Iowa, ruler* of the Big Ten which hai failed to coma up with
Montana State foil behind end the DJ ^ - o r r " * D*"r °” M,‘
to the outdoors their mlla run up.
tomer.” said Delaney, who haa and ranked only No. 13 last week, a champion In tha past 18 National acre will move Into Friday's re.
glottal playoffs at Philadelphia,
rivalry that highlighted tha eastern The point we would like to make 6eminolea from Florida held a 43lost only one fight aa a profession
all tha way Into tho No. Intercollegiate BaikatbaU tourna Evanston. 111.. Manhattan, Kan.
Indoor seasons Both gslnod vic­ la that when Rocky gate through 87 halftime margin.
al while piling up 49 vletorie*. Ileaped
1 Rubbling River 17.00 IM S a s
place. Minnesota, beaten by manta acoda highly regarded St. and Corvallis, Ora. Flials wfll ba
tories in Um East but Um dual laying U on a man there ii one Ham Warnke lad Florida with • Texas T*n*o
1.(0 l i e "He can take a punch and sure
RarpiUn
■10 didn't look aa though ha wai afraid Iowa and then by Wisconsin, Fraacia of Brooklyn in quaat of
to Kansas City March ll-lft.
rtirhad a climax with thalr lets opponent whom ho can flgura IS points while Ted Carter was t Quintet*
( |.|) 4t.|o
its flrat title today.
wrestling • mateh finish In the on making a buck with later on. high man for Montana State with r o i H T»l * A C » - B/1S— T im e b m of ma because I'm a lefthander.” skidded from No. 8 to .No. 11.
! LfGj Turk
MS Mo I
UCLA, tn ninth place last week,
Tba St. Fraada Terrier*, who
Wanamaker Mlla In M a d l a o a Tha only reason tha Brockton M.
! Diets euperlor
MS
lost a pair to Oregon Stats aa the have knocked off such teams aa
Swart Garden.
1 Dulabroes*
MO
Balter Is matched with such an
Pacific Coast race was decided, City Collage of New York Baton ST. AUGUSTINE IB - Eighty
Both have salJ they wfll ba out Improbable customer as Cockell TAMPA OB— LueUle Chambliss,
Good
Year
Seen
r M X 'itlV 'J tZ and
dropped to No. I t with the Hall and Siena to regular season players, hopeful tha chilling wind
to win tonight
tha
Winter
Haven
girl
who
beat
I
Superior
Bud
10.0* MB
Is Uut be killed off Joe Wal­
Peso* Pact
Party O’Brian hopes to wrap up now
Northern Division champions tak­ play, meet Quincy, UL. college to which whipped the Poms da Leon
ISO
cott, Eisird Charles and LaStana the men for the Florida pistol 41 -Mr
pane*
By
Stan
Musial
Rene*
”
"
440
ing over the No. 10 spot. Mar­ their first-round start (12:10 p.m. course yesterday wfll moderate, A
a quick victory in Um ahot put
crown last year, may be a real
Qutnfei* n -i) ia.«e
his previous Utle defenses.
ST.PETERSBURG, Pla, (R
tonight and then concentrate on hi Before
quette, fourth a week ago, dropped CST).
threat in the National Midwinter ■ixth b * cb - e/ie— w H« as.1
lead off today to tha qualifying *
that,
while
he
was
coming
» Wire Um
SI.10 S.io l ie Sun (U m Man) Musial, tha St. to eighth after being defeated by St. Fraada haa a 1M record. round of tha East Coast Woman's
Um discus. Tha formar Southern up, Rocky left a string of broken Pistol Shoot opening today.
&lt; Holden Heete
1100
?.** Louis Cardinals' slugging 90-grand
California star holds tha world’s dreams behind him. Not ona of the
Quincy haa won II and lost t.
Notre Dame.
Tournament.
|.(4
Mias Chambilsa baa won the, S Nature
. . . ,, ______
racoid in tha ahot and haa frankly scores 0( men be dynamited out— woman's division of this shoot for eBvscxTn l u c V a / i * - Tint aa.s outfielder, bad some bad a
North
Carolina
State
moved
up
admlttsd ha hopes to dafaat tha
for National League pitchers to­ a notch to No. 4 after wlanlng
" .
to.«* iYos
Layne, Lee Savold, Harry the last four years i m baa offer-11a ^Addition
discus record holder, Fortune Got- Rex
day: Ha'a ready for
Lake
ed the men Increasing eompetl I Bubbling
the Atlantic Coast Conference
Matthews,
Carmen
Wlngo,
among
(Umax
den.
year at the plat*.
tlon.
Quintet*
(*.t&gt; TI.SSluml
tourney, Duqueene Jumped from
O'Brian has thrown tha discus others—has amounted to anything Tha absence of defending eham kiuhtn HArift— a/ia— t u * at
Musial,
who
is
starting
Us
l&gt;th
since. Wlngo naver fought again,
No.
t to sixth. Utah remained No.
‘
Liukr
Cal
way
1T.I0
T.4#
ft.
season with the Cards, has been
plon Huelet L, Berner may give
only now is recovering from
and Dayton advanced • notch
Time
I0 4S 4.00 rifling hits an over Al Lang Field
from 10th to ninth.
?let*a {i-l) IMS
since tha club
. JTM HACK— S/IS Time aa.1 training.
The leaders, with firet place
• A s i i r
, t , r T iT ;t:
The Man said ha to to aa good vote* in parentheses:
condition now a* ho ever was.
1. Ban Francises (67)
T m not going to try tor boat­ ft Kentucky (N )
liftW ‘i O renade
m s e.ta M 0 ers. Just give ma tboeo hits this
ft LaSalle (I)
H arm oay .P eak
It* mo
n a r.M Musial aaU, Hot Staa may 6. N. a State (I)
Q ulnuia (8»9) " h f t
toersaaa Us homer preductioa g a ft town (II)
ft Duqueene
T. Utah (4)
ft Marquette (4)

Babe To Enter
Georgia Tourney

Wininger Takes
$2,200 Top Prize
At Baton Rouge

Delaney Beats
Wilson In Bout

S ports

Roundup

FJf

■Frisco H o ld s
To No- 1 Spot

SOKC

l\
,

! ‘r

GIVE YOUR ROOF MUSCLE!

10. Om

m

Stole (I)

E V E R -FA ST SHINGLES
YMViwf has qat to Iw • l
rala, wind, toad end anew-

KIH K S B

�1 I|Ir I I1TI8—

.*5

1
1
I

Call T
W A N T AD
RATES

a-

a-REAl agTATt r o i
INVESTMENT

INVESTMENT

fAMFLK MiK« AO

IN V E ST M E N T

GET •xrrt cash for article* Jon
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bouse in excellent condition end
'“ day. rbooa *
conveniently located. AU com­
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s f t s t s f t S T aomaona
come. Price 115,000. Tama caa
be arrangad.

t.’S&amp;a

A Uttta tpaea Ilka tUi will |*t Real Eitate — Gea.
ra. fan
leaurancc
201 Edwards' Bids. Ph.
fb. »U eor 34T4

J- w W
ad evi t a r o
■ ~i.40,
I day*
Itau'Sn
t
t
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lr only | l JO tad ooe day

J; -Cus s r

b

Qt J J w R aJky

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Phone i m A. B. P*ter*oo.Broker
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P. J. Cheitenon. Albert N. Pitta
Garfield Wllletu. Joba MeUeb
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TWO Like front Lot* with Trtea
Priced tjjoo. for both.
TWO {aiida lots with ttreei ee
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Tt« Want Ad Dcpirlment fa

f e l i S U ' &amp; ««*V

a

I

urday afternoon. peidllDa for
week-day insertion* U 2.00 p. »•
'.d lo l publication.
publll
the day preceding
than
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m
t * P.m.
t . »■ wtll
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Raymond E. Landmlst, Aeaeclao
Pbone 1173 AUaptic Bank Bldg
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Phone 13W-J.

Seminole Realty

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old. 9 Switches, Coit *700 00. TURE. Call 9M, Wilion-Uaier
Still has Guarantee. 1173.00 or Furnitura Co. Ill E. let SL
best rash offer Immediately.
Write Box *, c/o The Herald.
PIANOS WANTED el'll Buy Any
Piano aerth Plgisg L- L. MUMETAL ROOFINO
Now In Slock. S-V Crimp —1UM
Corrugated- 2H" Corrugated. T j^ JJjJ^ J J v e g e e h ^ S u jjM e ^ ^ l
Get all Your roofing needs at
Sherman Concrale Pip* Co. 40 PIG S- Good breed. Will sell
Out Wen llth St.
Phone 2113 one or all. Call ld-R
■ R L f WANTED
-1 *
MATTRESS and Boa Sprint; Re­
novated Like New. Call Today I aggressive public Relations Wo­
lor FREE Estimate.
men to solicit by telephone and
personal contact. Good propoii
ECHOLS REDDING CO.
iion
for live wires. See Mr. f a -a
Comer 2nd A Magnolia
Ph. IZ32
at Brown'* TV. ins W. 1st St.
(Bud Bamherger, Mfr.)
9:30 to it:oo a, m- oniy.^_____
VENETIAN BUNDS
Retired or irm^rrtired
(Nationally Adv. Rolla-Head) WANTED:
couple to manage 10 unit apart
Manufactured in Sanford
merit house, rent free. Phone
Seminole Venetian BHnd Cm
1292-J eveningi.
MO Wait 3rd «L
Phone mi
BOOKKEEPER

nJSSBFSLm

* Mj dB Smo6lb t0 g^u .,..

Pumltur* Center

III West lit St

Pbooa 1423

61 VARW5TIEP
Ngtiva and Vorelin W«odi.
See Item At
Sherman Concrete Pipe Co.
Out Weal 13th St.
Phone IUI
USED TRACTORS
Britt Trector Co.
■Hray 17 *1 South
D a m mi
— Faetory to Toe —
A la n In nm

private batha. 114 W. First St.
Venetian Ullnda
f U B N l S H E D kitchenette apt- AYMONp M. BALL, REALTOR
Enclosed bud. Sag-proof bottom
Blambtrlaod Court Klway IT-81
with pteatfc ends Flattie er
‘•as,1*. rati
184
gS tT p h oM 1884-W.
rayon tapes ' Cottaa or aylee
cords.
cl a : w h id i
Haflaway u d ^ 7
Henkarik G lau and Paint Cm
Day, Week or month—Tel. 1US,
Pbooa M0
t a t US-114 Weal tad BL
118 Meat Pint tlf
Parmitare
UNDERWOOD
T&gt;pewriUr
perfect
Avalm Apt*. Efficiency. Phone W. H. - m i ” STOUTER
condition *3000; Winchester tt
Rifle practically naw, *13.00;
___________________
Kerosene Automatic Hot Water
REE Scmiaola Realty for Deilrheater, illOO; • x 11 Linoleum
112 Ml Park Ave.
na
tU t Homti tad ApU. Pbont IT.
Rugs choice colors, *4.50: A
New double Wardrobe 3 mirrors,
Whether baying or eetiing. M will
*23.00; Mahogany dresser with
good mirror, I14.M; A Nice
W J.*V. RAlL REALTOR
(a k i Monroe Trailer Court
Kiddle stroller, *7.50; Copper
State Raak Building
Phone M80.
screen
________ "__________Phone
17M doors, *5.00; Beautiful
Walnut dining room suite, *75.00;
• t o r e ROOM. 18*45. 4th ind Open for Inspection, 2422 Holly
Wagner 3 H. P. Electric motor,
Sanford. Inquire Jacobaona DeAve. Two Quality Built 3 Bfl
single phase with 2" centrifugal
maionry-conitrucled h o r n e t
partaeat Store.
_______
pump. Hundredi of other ilemi
Ceramie Bath, vinyl tile or oak
priced very low.
UNFURNISHED cottage with Htfloors, screened porch, Carport* The Super Trading Post, 17-93
Large loti, Termi, L. J. Rimer,
1 mile So. Phone C212-R.
Buifter, sJlo Hotly Ave.
4 Boom Apart meat. 500 Park.
f BEDROOM Home with Olau
A N N IV E R S A R Y
la Room, ican
— be________
Florida
uaad ai
DOWNSTAIRS Apartment. Uijjfc
- t Bedroom. Large Lot., DeSALE!
clean rooma. Sun room. I l l Far*
; i s : ' ..................................
Termi. Phoaa
Ava,
2022-M,
March 7 - 12

w ta n *

Wk

M

*
wnncvwm avw.

14SPECIAL BRRVICF
UrilOLSTERY— Slip covers
t&lt;&gt; order ut
NIX BEDDING ,MFG.
1301 Sanford Ave.
Thonr

I* B-BALESWEN WANTElClO
2 Salesmen, apply In person t
Claude IT. Wolfe, 305 Sanfurii
Ave. Must have lived in Flori
da for 1 year. This Is a year
around position. No drifter* will
be given consideration. Trans­
portation furnished.
IIWORE WANTED
-11
COOK to work days. Experience,
.^f^ffrrence^ltiump 3( J.

14 -

BPBOAI. XKBTTCRg -14

INCOMB TAX SEBVICB
Wm. If. Murray
rray
t i l l Celery Ave.
Tel. 1MI-X
CABPKNTEB WORK
For quick repair jobs, or
bolUUng CafiJIm 1IU-M4.
JRLANDO Meming Bentinel, Or

aae-la ..

E

»

• w

•?H K S

s - ia ^ g

f l

l W t i r i Offkc Supply

I two ildwim Hccae, UMaraiahal * 4 1

j5*

far Koath, PhoBi

m

% T R 4 S S ! R U ? ‘Rued M B * o i k for tt mm EB M T L g VINYL Alttbltee TO*.
time eso. Known ee county n i l
* SANFORD LINOLEUM A
“C r i p p e a Sub-Dirt*Son1'
TILE GO.
W W. Firat gL

’B T6&amp;SB i
legtdar U W

eve w

“ • a*

E. tad SL
guarantee) Regular list price Bee Ue for quoUtiou uU Mlllwort
at Lake Mary.
(1M.K—Sale Price .. (lee.*5
" ime before you
gmscasH
. room*, cloeed » Gal
Upright Hot Water Heater
m o b . f liv in .
latiy eurprtsed
&lt; w n - cu fiote*) R*C. m*.m.
____ ^ CABINET

^ t S u h U s r ' ^ ' *T v - d W ,
■ow en tale at enly . .. . *ia»M
RETTLED Couple Oaan S Roou
Tbate price* are near wholesale
Apartment. P rivate, Bate, am
trance. Apply 8W Kim Av*.
prlcaa and we cannot give theta
after Mfreh 12. la moat c a m
ieitf aid appuaaea w ill'make’tea
down payment Wa finance local­
Bedrooma with ADDING MACHINES. Typewrit­ ly With low finance charge*. Act
er*. (Guaranteed Cleaning and
now these won't last.
Repair Work),

Baggerly Appliance
C enter

m MlgwaUa Add.

t* m

Utflity Tablet
___ Modem Table

Phoea lu

SERVIH
all make* and model*
HANFORD ELECTRIC CO.
Ill Magautte Av*.
Pheec 442
00

1----- ’" p m .C A M F B K L L
Gaearxl c w t i t t w
"Homes ai Otatlnction"
HI Way 17-82
PfenM
FUJOR^IACTMO J
SUvusa:
LBox m i Phoea tis-b -4.

Ob* W*a4 13th

188* efc^t* Piaatte Cocktalf , M
*r_.M«ttre&lt;a

HMrgy irer Sdote

1787

Golden Jubliee

aeso

LARGE supply of
hr* pipe and (I
Murar needs.

TJbirtj Me
R W I f I* ^JWiiasUr

3881 Sanford Ava.

PJjout UU

am E. 4th SL Tel. 2434
Bicycle A General Repair. K
Lawnnsower sharpen *

O bJ!

TfSfT 7
~ A « JOfMfDrnONING

f

vtca.

MatherOf.Ward
GOOD and BAD

88348 K- 1*4 14. .
"S i

P J jjim

new
paint.
__ ___ _ „ __ ___ furtlture to look like m w , Thl* paint
la especially durable ai writ a*
beautiful. For free demonstrations

m •m m m

h^ w.

tVr-

X &lt;r

t

—14B

Freffired Rates to Preferred
PoUeyholden
John W illiam s Inn. Agency
417 Saafnrd Atlantic Rank
Phea* 24

experience. Year 'round. Estab­
INSURANCE
-14 FI 218 Palmetto Ave.
I'b. 779
lished local company. Reply giv­ 14 B—
ing experience to BOX MP c/o
FKIGIDAIKV. appliance* sale*
The Herald.
and service G II High, Oviedo
*
Fla. Phoaa 4151 or Sanford
LADIES- Ttrid'of MulmT^orky
1642 VV afttl A n.m
Like a edretf and to h d '- n a /
pendent? Avon has thousands of
S anford E lectric Co.
women today enjoying business
II* Magnolia Ave.
I’boae 142
sucres*, Mrs. Juanita Russell,
M a tn fix c And Kronomixd
t&gt;EU Your General Electric dcaiei
P, 4). Bax 975. Orlando-________
In- TV and Appliance*
rtn i ----------------—------------------In u re wltk
HA HELP WANTED (Female) It A
OFFICE KOU1PMKN1 -2 3
Boyd - Wallace
GIRLS!
GIRLS!
GIRLS!
HAYNES Ollier Machine Co
Good Hours, Good Wages. Ap
"Tear Mutual Frlewdn"
Typewrileri, adding maemnes
lily In perion at Seminole Drive
t’koae 1*1
Safes RcnUla. 314 Magnolia, I’b ,
in. 60] East First St.
44
MAID to work I days ■ week,
und till noon on Eat. Call before
8 a m. or after 4 p. at. Phone
1487-W.
______________
WAITRESS. Apply Seminole Res
taurant. 1481 French Ave. or call
2543.

1 cu. fi:. Li»7rpfiW *

» R

INSURANCE

RAN D A L!. E I.E C T R IC CO. 17—4UTGMOBU.KS TRAILE«*
T V SE R V IC E C E N T E R
FOR sAl.fe— Army fi x 6 Itan jo
* Factory Supervised Service
type Truck. Good condition.
* House call* 9 a. m. till 9 p. m
Write llnx 104. Osteen. Phone
(All makes ami modcDi
Sanford 1357-lt-4
112 Mag. Ave.
Phone 2400
14—AUTOMOBILE DEALER!*—18
SEWLNG MACHINES- Repaired
S E L L YOUR CAR TO
or rebuilt. Alio machine* for
Roy tlrel's Used Cart
sale. 513 00 up. Phone Houcaard
Santord Ave A Ulh St.
1777-X-M. Box 2(9, l^ke Mary.
21- LOST AND FOUND -21
S anford
Vacuum C leaner Service
Watch found In ear. Owner may
Phene 114 X J
Have aamr by paring tor ad *1
Herald Office
Parts sad Supplies for All Make:
—Rentals—
' FOUND— Keys with Initials D
HALL'S GARAGr. for general Auto ] E. F. Call at Sweeney'*.
repairing Also Wrecaer Service FOUND— Sterling silver bracelet
402 Celery Ph 1090 M - IBM It
near Yowell's. Owner may have
Nigbta
b\ identity ing and paying tor
adv.
_
1
PLUM BING
Grey and White Parakeet
Contract and rrpvtr work. Free LOST:
with hlue tail. Name, "Pete."
estimate*, tt L. Harvey, jot
IIF.W MID I’allie Glenn John
Saidnrd Ave. Phone 1829.
mwi. Phone 1932 J
ENVELOPES, letterheads, state­ O - ELECTRICAL SERVICES - «
ments, invoices, hand bill*, and
p r o g r a m s , etc. Progressive
Randall ETedrlc C a
Printing Co., Phone *04—401 Rendi x and (Toslcv Applixncei
West 13th St.
Ymingstovi. Kitchen*
FIDOIl sanding and finishing Kleetrieal eirlraetina and repair*
Cleaning, waxing. Serving Scnu 112 Magnnlla Ave. P hone 11.1
ool# County since 1925 H. U
GORMI.Y INC.
Gleason. Lake Mary

UNU
W f e t o l V TT Rat Rattle
*s
Service u t t Repel re
With Year Trade-In
„
RCA Motorola lalae and SemesII ACRfS
B8 with levaly
levely 2 bedroem 1 Cu.
Ft. with Push Button
_ S ^ r * Ahome.
l Hardwood floon.
floor Lifatime
Gaae’e Taxhea Service
Defrost. Lilt Price *389 50
, I car garaga. No better
Ave.
With roar Treb
..*242.85 urn
1
Cu,
Ft.
l
J
i
t
Price
___
DOMUTIC 8BWING MACHINES
I In Florida for
Fhewe *18.
_________
trucks. With undergi
gala* • Rentals Service
' r I noT b’ ••• • " * * GARRETTS
PHONE till
g S HT..;
W
C
O
M
M
T
A X ------n 5 ? c S r 5 . cB ? W l
Tax Return* prepared'while YOU
NICE I room upetalra furaUhtd
wait. Room 20* above B. L.
apartment. Screen, porebu and 0 .‘ s f e r a - it o
EH Electric, List Price *2«9 M
Pcrktea, Plrat At.. Phoaa MU
SIM 6, Atlantic
Phone 13451
garage. Phone Z76-J.
WUh ywnr Trade-In ,. *im.m
Daytona Beach, rla.
SWAIN’S BATTERY SERVICE
center. Water,
mo. 1478 _
W eveningi.

CO.
504 J

Plowing, discing, grading. Trees
and shrubbery moved. Dewitt
Hunter. 601 E. 26th St.

18* Ctj/rt. LHt Price *448.8*r

A FARM

—14 I I I —
made

4HEAI TY PARLORS —2] TIIK SANFORD HKRAI.D
T iics. M;ir 8, ll'o.T
I’age 7
I'ELlAUZtNG in Pcrsonalily
Hair Cuts. Lillian McDonald's 25— LAUNDRY SURVVICE —2S
Reauly Studio in Casselberry.
One hour Wash and Damp
Hi-way 17-92 South. Thono W P.
Dry
27-2182. (Closed all day .Monda&gt;).
One hour Vx Wash and Dry
Drop In— Free Parking
Fold
Finished Laundry
E.VSTi;n SPECIALS On Perman­
Sanltone Dry Cleaning
ents. 56 50 and M.io Includes
Southaide l.aiinilrnmat
Shaping and Styling fnr YOU.
South Side Foixlmari Bldg.
Air conC'ioned. Soft Water and
Penguin Heatlcss Drjcrj.
tOS Kasl 23!h SL
3 Senior Operators
27l'I-.r.-l&gt; SK liV K l.
- H
HARRIETT'S RBAUTV NOOK
We give Prilled Trading Stamps L. L Sill —Piano " Tceimician.
03 South Oak
Plume Oil
Phono 2104 Itouio t. Sanford.
IRE YOU hired with vnur looks' 29—
nKSTAURANTS
Try OUR AMERICANA CUT
which can be set in a variety
YOU!
YOU! YOU!
of ways to renew your charm.
Home cooked Meals
vVA BESS SIIOI*
Pbone is .1
Rest Pit liar H Q

' f YOUR AP WERE IN Tnif
SPACE IT WOULD ATTRACT
EVERYONE’S ATTENTION AS
TIPS HAS ATTRACTED YOlJl

Chill, Hot Dogs
All Kinds of Sandwiches
Good Coffee
at Clydes Grill
Son Sanford xve.

AN O B im O tN G ' N B E

SHERMAN CONCRETE
PIPE CO.
Out Want 1.1(It SI.

P hone - If'fl

C A L L THE

n

^

NUMBER © 3

if-**
I ’OR
SU D D EN
SE R V IC E

HILL LUMBtR &amp; SUPPLY YARD

�*

*v*

e

Radio

said gently. “He tried to protect
you, and your daughter, whom be
madly love*. He had a problem,
and ba w asn't talking, ro t until
be knew the score. When Eileen
heard me accuse him at trying to
kill Ralph, aha believed me,
thought he had really done it—for
her. T hat almost drove E arl crazy,
trying to figure it out. For all he
knew, Eileen might have been
mixed up in it. too. Ho—"
"No," Ja k e Fortuna said harsh­
ly. "E aft knew the eenre. Right
a fte r X saw you ca rry Ralph away.
X guessed th a t be w as still alive,
and 1 began to run. I met Earl,
and I loot my bead, and 1 told him
w hat I'd hod to do—because be
w ouldn't loon re* the money. 1
told him th a t I'd aw ear I'd trm
him shoot Ralph, out of jealousy,
and because he w anted Etlsea. The
whole country knows th a t she
k ited him for Ralph. 1 told him
th a t you m ight come snooping
around, and to w atch the ravine—
X didn't w ant in take a chance cm
b u n g seen there. Then l left h l a .
g a t a rifle, and w aited behind a
roll fence out back where 1 dould
w atch the ravjoe. A t noon you
showed up, began your poking
around, and I took a shot a t you.”
I said, "And Rex Bishop, fixing
a fence In the bottom, saw you
Shoot a t me, and be came up to

Shout e t me, and be pointed a t
th e ravine, end— I always liked
aid Rnx, but 1 bad to shoot him,
to keep him quiet."
2 shivered, thinking et aH the
things th a t made a person kill, and
X said, "Jgke, there's a woman, I
suppose ?“
His heavy mouth w ent loose,
and he gave me a boastful grin,
T w o women, and I'm fifty-six
ars old." He leered a t ma lawd"A blond* in Cleveland, and a
brunette in Toledo. They coat me
* tot of money."
"I'll bet," 1 sold. "When did you

G

“ Thai gave me the idee," He ad­
m itted, uniting at me. '“There was
no harm in trying. 1 went out to
her place. The lights were on. and
It wae wide open. 1 found her up­
stairs on the bed, asleep. I locked
tha windows, rigged a pencil with
a cord tied to It, and atuck It in
the key. 1 read It come place, and
It worked."
“I t’s an old trick.” 1 aald. "Tou
ran the cord from the pencil under
the door, turned the key until the
bolt waa almost ready to click
■hut, dosed the door and pulled
tha cord. Tba pencil acted as a
lever end flipped th* key over,
locking the door from the Inside.
Tba pencil fell to the floor, and
you pulled It out under the door.
I saw the yellow speck on the
key last night, but 1 didn't tumble
until now th a t it was paint from
one of your pencils. You couldn't
be certain of w hat Earl Scltzman
would do, so you tried to frame
Judy, too."
Ha tcried the pencil he'd been
holding across the table. "Maybe
th a t's tha ana I used.'' he said.
“There'll be dents Ut it. from the
pressure on tha key,” I raid.
"W hy don't you look a t It and
see?" be Invited.
I let the pencil ley end watched
him. "And then you typed the sui­
cide rot* an Judy's typewriter."
"W ith one Unger."
J thought of old Rex Bl.-hop,
end of Judy, Loo. she would have
died If t hadn't found bar as I did.
Maybe, for me, in the Anal scoring,
tha ana life would cancel out the
other. I hoped so, and 1 aald, "You
followed me to Den's Place, know­
ing th a t 1 waa looking for Earl
Scltzmon, became t ‘d been to hla
house. You want In ahead of me,
warned E arl th a t I waa hunting
for him. U s ducked out the back
door, afte r telling bis poker pals
th a t 1 was s pesky insurance sales­
man, and to cover for him. Ha
woe already leery of me, because
I'd slapped him around a little, and
be didn't know w het you were up
to. You knew th a t 1 would guess
th a t E arl had scooted out the beck
door, th a t I would come out that
way, too, and you waited behind
the can In the alley, and—" I
stopped, remembering lha sound

TELEVISION
TUESDAY
l:M s. m T -tt ra tte rs
t.l* 004*8 Windows

I 19
S iti
4.an
I : IS
L ie
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1:18
4:18
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1.48

7.44 V*4'i Caravan

U;#* T-Nea I* AaltsS

ii.ao b r i l t , a b l * ,* i»
Liioft tv a iih a r - N o w * Briefs

!i!lt IVVkil.......
1:1} ( S H . mR $ g g J r i 2

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fY*ith*r-K*M» Brief*
H a lV w oa d f h t n «»e I
T his Land e t Our*

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•tlC Rshsrt &lt;5 ’Lewi*
di"« lirieniar Day ■
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4 Io

f&lt;*«r*l t t a r n .
Da V*or Account

(iil
A 18

Raad a t LU*
&lt;l*rry H oard
Kd t. n t4lh*r,

1

lion born* Faoe* LU*
* 88

T a u r H M lt h and T su
O a t a r n l n * HIM H a rlew
H i» k ln * rails
F irst Dev# .
The W nrld «f Mr. B w s e n a r
S|*a*rn JM m te ca s
DuOs B 1 4 .- all
w i l e i n th a CTswe
H»«ity Dnsdy
Ta* h a v tr l y i h « w
Hem* Cdltlnn—K s w t
Hem* E 4lilon—Snorts
Hama Cdltlnn—W e a th e r
( , 14V Lombardo Show
p in a k f h o r * Shew

1

Sim *

I . s e u n i o n Bar!* Show
8 ,en F i r , i n * T h*at*r
Si 18 Clrti* T h r a t e r
19.88 T ru th e r Cen**quen«M
l( i» * TBA
11:88 K l a r r C ro itro a d a
11.10 T anlehl
l i i e ,*&gt;*»» a nd W s a l h a r

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k iss rift

GIRAFFE SUFFERR
FROM A lT B R m A
OKLAHOMA CITY l* -H 'i bid
when a giraffe has laryngitis but
it’s vorM when its arthritis.
Thit's whit is ailing a lady
giraffe in tha Lincoln Park Zoo
gnd it hit Director Julian Frazier
up ia the sir. The victim, who
h u n t • n*me, is la ssrious con­
dition. Frazier says be Is going to
hive to rig up some sort of sling
today to hoist tha eiling giraffe
to she won't h*ve to bear any
w*,gkt oa bar forelegs.
GENERAL ARRTVER
CAIRO, Egypt (It Henry A •
Ryroide, 41, farmer Army gen­
eral end mutant secretary of
state, arrived yesterday «■ UJ.
s mbs seder to Egypt Be succeeds
u m r m Caffery, who retired.

Hut with the fear there waa the
rege, auddcnly flaming, and at the
name tim e another p art of my
brain cautioned me to be crafty, to
Induce him to delay the moment
when he would decide to pull the
trig g er of the gun 1 knew now ho
held beneath lha table, ' l l won't
work." 1 heard my voice B a y in g .
"They'U get you, Jake."
"E arl's car is out in hack." he
a a l d "The keys are In It and the
lank la full. 1 checked, before I
came in. The Urea on my car are
bad, but In Earl'a car 1 can get a
long way, maybe to Mexico. I've
aim got a couple of thouiand in
cash from Lho Cleveland cattle
deal." Ha paused, and aald in a
whisper, "Buck up,' Bennett." Hla
teeth ahowed between hla Upa.
"You can only die once."
"Don't do it, Jake," 1 ten an ted .
VtolenUy I pushed against the
table, and my chair went back­
ward. The kitchen roared with the
blast of hi* gun. It waa sa If a
baseball bad been thrown, quite
hard, against my right aide, above
the belt. The Impact made me
gaap and 1 slammed on my back
on the kitchen floor. My logs felt
dead, but there waa no pain.
Jake Fortune waa on the floor,
too, twisted sideways, the table on
top of him. 1 clawed the .38 from
my overcoat pocket, pushed my­
self to one elbow, tried to steady
the gun. Fortune rolled clear of
the table, and he fired as ho rolled,
Lha bullet splintering the wooden
cabinet beside my head. I fired,
my w rist wobbling, and I knew
th a t I had trussed. A flower pot
on the window MB behind him
flow to bits. Ha pushod himself
upward, swaying on hla knees. 1
had plenty of time to aim care­
fully. Tba kitchen seemed to Jump
with the muzzle blast and a tittle
black bole appeared Ut Jake For­
tune's shirt over hla rig h t shoul­
der. The impact rocked him, and
hia gun arm dangled limply.
“Ail right, Jake," I aald. "You're
done."
Grimacing, be grasped hla right
w rist with hla left hand and ha
brought the gun up and ground.
I yelled, " N o r but ho swung the
gun toward mo.
Thera waa only a split sarrwd
of tim e left, and I didn’t have auy
choice. 1 shot him in the face.
I made it to tha telephone * n j
pulled the receiver toward m e end
asked for Sheriff Morrlaey. Then
1 peaeed out on the floor.
Q oee beside me a voice
"Hello, Jim ."
(To Be Om Mh m ^

T v a a n s r p.m .
(:Se N»»»
I IS D r a i n IiUrlUri*
4:4S Claud* H. W e l t s Shaw
T h* R hythm I l n u r
• tan World At s i s
IMS T w ilight S a n a a
4:1# S p o r t i Boon
a:4i Sluaical P r o r m i n
T an V. r . VT.
T "5 HrlM lna On A Cloud
T: 1 S K v fn ln p Sluile
T in r a i l * r i i h i r
I r i s r&gt;ut " W T o r Musle
« nn c i t y H i t t B ro a d ca st
■ in P l a t "ST' F a r H u i l o
S.00 N l a h t E dition
1:11 tTnllad Nation*
S 10 It'a D ancatltna
1010 • At H o b o W |t * t tu a l e
10: SS Naw*
ll:«n U r m r n ' i Call t o P r a j a r
I t SS S l r n O f f
a ns
trni
« OS
SI*
S IS
SIS
Iron
TSS
IrSS
I OS
I 10
I IS
S on
1:11
S:Sn
S:IS
lOrnn
10:11
10:10

10 -11

11:18
11:11
Itill
110 #

W EDNESDAY

W EDNESDAY

11:11

H its
I in
Ills
I no
1:11

A .H .

sian on
U r m t n ' i Call to P r a y e r
Dawn B ro a k ara
Now*
W a s ta r a J a m h o r o a
Naw*
B*v*a O'clock Club
Now*
Spnrta At A O ta ao a
J o r k a r 'a Choir*
M orning Devotion*
Slornlna i t ’ lodlr*
World Ai Nina
Moalc F o r Lad la*
H ym n Tim*
y or D a lla s Only
Sluile for T ou
lio n Club
Nawa
l in o Club
0 *m« of M s te d r
Phil Raad At O r g a n
i ^ y m e n 'a c a l l t o Preys*
W orld At Noun

LONDON — The suspect In
the Jewelry robbery case has been
maneuvered in a pretty tight cor­
ner. It seems unlikely the sweetl a c e d grandmother could have
done the deed. But Scotland Yard
has analyzed her nail polish, and

$25,000 Worth of Ru*8 Will Be Sold Re&amp;ar less of.Cost!

AMrnlinn Housewives, Homeowners, Apartment, Hotel «nd Motel Owners: 3 Pays Onlv—Open Wed. ft Thun, 'til ft
THE ORIENTAL RUG SHOP 318 N. Park Ave, 1 Blk. N. of P. O. Winter Park, FI*.
la holding the Biggest Rug Sale In htatory—Broadloom, Hand-Made Hooked Rugs and Orientals will b e a o ld r e ­
gardless of cost. All nalcs final.
____________
HALL RUNNERS
HAND MADE Sarouk,
ORIENTAL RUG i IMPORTED TIEAVY
Kerman Dea.
t
BROADLOOM
9x12 Reg- H .M

|

• x IX Reg- 555

1*27
\

P .M .

Radio P a rra Dtaaat
W ad n a ad s y M atloaa
K *«4
B a r Non* B e nch
W orld At T h r a a
lln ltad Nation* Story

l|
1
r GEN. IMPORTED
| Sarouk and Kerman 11
Oriental Dea.
1
1
1
1
[1169.
^
1

PI

The surface of Likes Huron and
Miehifin is 21 to XS feet lower
than thst of Lake Superior.

TRAIN to TEARS LATE
KTT1MAT, B. C. ((A) — Wbaa
the first tratn pushed through tha
outskirts of this ooe-tlma Indian
villi gs, now a booming aluminum
plant center, U was 50 yean bohind schedule.
Kltimat was charted as tha Vast
Coast terminal of tba Canadian Na­
tions] Rsllway early Is tha century.
Speculators tied up land along the
route, however, and th# line veered
north to Prince Rupert, Just
“across the tracks" from the sou­
thern tip of Alaska.
Now tho mw ID-mitUon-doQar,
48-mlla rail link will be a Una of
supply and a shipping route for
the giant aluminum reduction plant
and an expected pulp mill which
will give birth to an Industrial
city in tba wilderness. Kltimit is
miles north at the United
States border.

1654
DODGE ROYAL
4 Door l t d u

Powerflile

Radio, Heater
13,000 Milan
E xtra d e u

■s»na \
PLYMOUTH

_41 -

of her movements on the night of So the customers troop out Inlo
Feb. 15.
the cold grumbling, the TV is
At this moment of television sus- switched off and no one knows
pense, the boss of the pub growls? what befell Grandma.
“Time, gentlemen, ptease-sorry, So irritating has the problem be­
got to close. 10 o'clock and it'a the &lt;come that" ft appears television

no power oa earth baa managed
to do up to now. It map bring
about a ehanca ia rtfultUooi to
permit British pubs to stay open
a little later. Until the end of the
play, anyway
The closing hour varies place
to place from 9:20 p. m. to l l p.m.
The 10 p.m puba seem to be hit at
the crucial moment
m

PUBLIC NOTICE

16M
CHEVROLET
4Dn t M h

Young GiH Dies
Despite Help Offer

."4*8

'■

(t . ;

'

$59

HOOKED RUGS
REG. *159 _ 9ztl

M

^ JM

m

beat
th ese

j

!:a

Vi OFF

Gen Imperial

ORIENTAL

Bereok A Kerman

Des. Rug

io x is

R et. * 15.00

cor

&lt;
90*

ALSO
Xz4 ____
- S 2.91
SsItNi T* | f n bcwfll
Gen. Imported
ef this Irassidsn sal* t* 6x5 .„
__
5.95
ORIENTAL
mt n ,4 * n ,n I* CretrmI
4x4
t2J&gt;0
Fl*r4d* IStw flw H it, *4
Sarouk A Karmaa
29-50
Im h HiS Hms* 1,111 !•• 4, Cx9
Designed Rags
**ld Is s H u li dealer* -r 10x11 .................... 59A0
Sizes lO ill
}»hh*r* far rr*al*. Why
Also
11x15.
12x15,
pmy rataII at serllaa
r« $20f
12x24
yrtm l

�W« other"

(D j# W an ted i&amp; ttalft
Be Careful , M om , D a d ,
Hungarian
Reds
it Isn 't T hat Ea sy
Lash Premier Nagy
Shop and Save
In Sanford

fir flr

•

F.-rtabbabed 1908

VOLUME XLV1

AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER

HANFORD, FLORIDA.

ste a d y M t k N i l

r l» u to partly t toady elsewhere
thronrh Thursday, slowly rising
temperaturei, highest this after*
noon 7#-71. tow fat tonight 4« S» la
north to H 4 i t# tooth.

9

A m d iM

W EDNESDAY, MAR. 9, 1955

No. 139

Prana Inward Wire

b s s

Recaptured Lewis
Taken To Raiford;
To Return Later .

By SANDRA DUNN
Herald Staff Writer

SCHOOL DAZE — Sandra Dana (center). Herald staff
writer, studiea questions while taking a sixth grade lest at
Sanford Grammar School. “It was tough," she said after­
ward. (Staff Photo)
______ .__

William Lewis, 20. recaptured
convict who had been held in the
“Junior, I’m ashamed of Seminole County Jail since Mon­
these grades. Whnt do you do day, was taken to the Stato Pri­
with your time: shoot mar­ son at Raiford yesterday.
bles? Why, when I was in t-ewls will be returned here at a
school, 1 m n d n straight future date to fare charges, of
stealing a Jeep and assault with
A s . . ."
to kill. Another charge of
Hold it. Mom or Dad. Lay Intent
assault with intent to kill has
that paddle down. You should* been filed In Orange County, but
he glad Junior brought home will be held against his parole.
his report card instead of his Lewis, one of three Negro conixaminatinn papers. You might ' vlrts who fled the State Road
have to answer the questions.
) Camn at Oviedo Saturday night,
To are If rhildrrn have a t easy was wounded and raptured in a
a time in arhnol a* some parents gun battle in Orlando late Sunday.
maintain, 1 took a sixth grade test
The other two escapees were
yesterday at Sanford Grammar cornered Monday night at Oviedo
School.
One convict John Leroy Young, 20,
Walking Into the classroom, I was killed, and the other, Marvin
trough!: This is going to be a Merritt. 27. was wounded In the
resultant shooting.
push-over.
Of .course, that was only what
Merritt was taken to the prison
with Lewis.
I thought.
I soon found o u t.l was in for
One charge of assault with In­
tent to kill was placed against
seme hard work.
Ileiold Ilcckenhach, school prin­ Lewis as the rc-nlt of an axe at
cipal, had agreed to pull no lack on Thomas Hollingsworth. 01,
punches. 1 was to get the same an elderly Oviedo flower grower.
test the students had taken. For
Hollingsworth, a patient at Win­
one hour, I ceased to be a news­ ter Park Memorial Hospital, re­
paper reporter and actually be­ ceived two broken arms and cuts
came. in the eye* of Ilcckenhach on Ih? head In the attack Sunday.
and Mrs. Sybil Itouth, the teacher,
Police Chief George A. Kelsey
of Oviedo said Hollingsworth's
just another sixth grader.
It had the opportunity many description of his attacker tallied
grown-ups wish for. 1 was a with that of Ia&gt;wis.
Lewis, at the time of his cap­
school kid again.
At home a t night, after w* set­ ture, was driving a 1917 Jeep
tle down in tha old easy chair, a stolen from a house near lamglet of ua conjure up a pleasant wood oa lit* Longwood-Oviedo
Road.
dream of our school days.
We wish th at we could become
la-a is went down wilh a bullet
a child again, Just for a day, all In the leg in the exchange of fire
the while retaining our adult near Pineloch School In Orlando.
knowledge. Would we amat* our
He fired at State Trooper Rich­
teacher! She would have to give ard K. Doylc'a patrol ear with ■
(Continued On Pag# f&gt;«T*s)
shotgun, damaging the ear. Doyle
returned the fire and wounded
him in the leg.
A charge of assault with fcilent
to kill was filed In Orange Coun­
ty as a result of the attack on the
Highway Patrolman.
Two stale prison Investigator*
arrived In Oviedo yesterday from
Tallahassee to Investigala the
shooting there Monday nigbt.
They aro II. D. West 'anti R. C:
Ilaynswnrth. working out of the
An aetlnn committee to see the office
nf Slate Agriculture Secre
IT. S. nifhwajr" 17-92 project tarv Nathan
Mayo.
through to completion was propos­
Wert
said
and Haynsworth
ed last night at a meeting or the were trying tohoreach
Police Chief
Chamber of Commerce’* board o( Kelsey and A. D. Stanley,
guard
directors.
at the Oviedo Slate Road Camp,
The proposal waa mad# by *«n. to "atralghtrn out" conflicting
Douglas Stcnstrom, a member of stnrlea of the shooting.
the Chamber’! J-ong-Range Roads
Stanley made a statement to
Planning Committee, at the meet­ Peace
Justice Then Austin Sr.,
ing In the City Commission Root* that
he and not Kelsey had fired
at City Hall.
the shotgun blast that killed
Four-lanlng of the highway, lag­ Young, Krlsry also said Stanley
ged at the number 1 road project did the shooting.
in Seminole County was discussed
The full story of Hie shooting U
by Slenstrom and Juhn Melsch, scheduled to be aired at an inquest
vice president of the Chamber. at 1:30 p. m. Friday in Oviedo
The State Road Department, Town Hall.
Meish said, plana to send two ap­
praisers to look over tha highway
to determine which tide will be
widened.
The board endorsed the resolu­
tion pasted recently by the Roads
Planning Committee. Th# resolu
tlon, emphasizing th* Importance
of the 17-92 project, said fourlaning of the highway “will not
The Bemtonle County Junior
only aid and promote tha develop­ n u m b er nf Commerre recently
ment of Ih* economic life of began sponsoring a program, "The
Seminole County, but win also Jaycee Forum", over radio sta­
materially decrease the death and tion WTRR every Friday night at
traffic toll through traffic acci­ I p. m.
dents on the said highway.*
The purpose of the program Is lo
The 17-B2 project will be further inform the people of Rcminole
discussed at a meeting of the County on topic* of current Inter­
Roadi Planning Committee tonight est. A panel of Sanford citizen*
at Elmer's Restaurant Th# meet­ from various occupations ask the
ing will begin at 7 o'clock.
guest questions pertaining to the
Bailey Odham la chairman of topic under discussion.
the committee.
To date the panel has questioned
Present at tonlght'i meeting will two Insuraneemen, Andrew Careabe Richey Green, DcLand, district way »nd James Gul. on the recent
engineer for the Highway Depart- new ruling of the State Insurance
(CawU— d Os Pago Baton)
Commissioner on fire Insurance
coverage; Warren Knowles, City
Manager; and nnh Rroun. chair
man of the City Planning and
Zoning Board.
Guests appearing before thr
oanrl Friday night Mar. II, will
be Slate Senator O. Douglas Slrn
slrom, and State Representative*,
Mark N. Cleveland Jr. and Vnlie
A. Williams Jr. Any question thr
publir would like answered by the
legislative delegation may be
mailed to the Jayree* and II will
be asked of them Friday night.

Request By County
Turned Down By A CL Action Committee
Commission Informed Of Rejection
For Use O f Vacated Right-Of-Way

Strolling
In Sanford
Dr. Terry Bird, Seaaiaalc Conaty
Health Officer, shewed a csacer
«tllm at a recent meeting of the
Losfwwd Chic Chib. Approxi­
mately 4# pertoas were present.
Dr. Bird explained the services
of tha Kernlotto i f —toy Cancer
**M'

o d

.•-

-

aiftord Mi MWis w« apeak os
“Planned Iadd*rfH Dtatrlcto" st
tomorrow’s laschoM Meeting of
the Jaster Chamber of Commerre.
JCho meeting will begin at soon
the Yacht Club.
• • a

Rotary club president Jim Holtzclaw end secretary R. W. “ Doc"
Rupreeht are try inf to break a
four-way tie for a board of direct­
ors’ nomination which developed
at a primary election held by the
club Monday. Tho club Dominates
•ix men for (ha board, three of
,-prbom are later elected.
^ S e r ia l Charlie Marriaoo was
welcomed hack to the staff af the
Beaford Herald today. Ha wiU
aerva as aa adrerliatof
lathre.
RUBS PICK LB COMPANY
CHICAGO (/P) — Thr Great
Lakes Plckla Co. la aulog the
Flamm Pickle Co. In U, 8. DisM t Court fay qiC JttO

The Atlantic Coast Lina Rail*
road has turned thumbs down on
the county’s tdqueat for use of
vacated right • of . way, the
County Commission was informed
yesterday.
The county had asked to be
permitted to use th* abandoned
main line running from Ninth St.
to the Country Club road aa a
short • cut thoroughfare to the
Lake Mary road.
County Attorney Mack Cleve land read the negative reply. The
railroad
said tho right-of-way
could not be relinquished.
In other action, tha Commis­
sion:
1. Agreed to give Long wood
a half • block of county owned
land as a alto for a clinic th*
town plan* to build to induce a
doctor to set up practice there.
Th* commission specified that
tha property, in back of Ward's
Longwood Hotel, now dedicated
as a park, must be used for the
medical center or revert to tha
county.
2. Rejected a proposal to set*
tie 1476 worth of estreated, but
unpaid prisoner bonds, for &gt;300.
Assistant State Attorney Hubert
Griggs received the settlement of.
frr from Joe Mots, former San*
ford bondsman. Th* bonds were
issued in 1063.
3. Voted to pay half cost —
an unknown figure over &gt;500—
us u Joint expense with the city
af Sanford In extending the dram
pip* a t th* aouth end of th*
French Av*. project another 131
feet.
4. .Voted to maka a &gt;300 dona­
tion to tha Red Cross.
A Approved the request of
Ua Pago ttovaw)

*

For 17-92 Project
Proposed Last Nite

Jaycees Sponsor
Radio Broadcast

Meeting Postponed
By School Board
The regular meeting of the
Seminole County Board of Public
Instruction has been postponed
until Monday, Superintendent W.
T. Mil we* announced.
The meeting had been scheduled
for Thursday.
,
Bids on the remainder of (he
Pin* Crest elementary school, 27th
SI., will be let at tho session,
which win start at 1&gt; a. m.
TOT PI8TOUI BANNED
NEW YOKE OH - Tha City
Council h«a passed • bill banning
‘‘resvlistk’’ toy pistol*. Councilman
Darig Boss laid mor* than 100

V-

Precautionary Call Officials
Is Issued By Union Dismissal
For Southern Bell Imminent
The Southern Brit Telephone Co
union h is issued a "precautionary
call'' fur worker* lo strike at C
a. m Monday unless a new con
traet has been agreed upon by
midnight Sunday
Officers of 130 Southern Itell
m-al- in nun- MMi'lir.otern ‘tales

were telegraphed ihe tentative

‘(like call la-t night. Hut a
-|mk-- man for the CIO Communt
cation Workers of Xmeriea laid if
i* merely a "precautionary eat!"
irtlettried as "routine ami nrer*
-ary precautionThe Company today presented to
the Conununirations Wickers of
America an improved propo-al
which it hoped would form the
i&gt;a-is for prompt agiccount on a
new contract.
CAPTAIN J. 8. TI1ACII. USN, Commnndrr, Naval Air The offer, contingent on Union
liases. Sixth Naval District, (far rlglil) holds n forms ra in - acceptance of a no strike clause.
loRtte which resulted after elimination or consolidation of 11st | ***
bargaining which w.t*
taking place todav following a re
2R00 forms shown in Ihe foreground. Also shown with Copt. ce*%
several days. The Com
Thnch ore (left lo rijrht) Commander W. G. Winslow, USN. party, ofa-ked
Monday that bur
senior member of the Pohllrnlionn Control Hoard nnd Mr. gaining be resumed. Tim present
W. K. Glasgow, director nf the Sixth Naval District llrnnrh contract expires midnight, March

Publications and Printing Office, Naval Air Station, Jackson­
ville.

★

★

★

★

★

★

Workers Party
Prints Statemenr
lU'HA PEST, lltinjtnry f/P)
—Lenders of the llmtparinn
•'ommunist party today ncnisetl Premier Imre N'agv o f
- I iK|„ jsl dev iiit ionium” „nd
•f supporting m i s t a k e n
"t'Kliti-d ideas" in speeches
and article.*.
Western observers in Vlen«
na said Nauy’s dismissal

from office appealed imminent,
lie had hern his country's chief
mouthpiece for Soviet rx-Premlep
Gcorgi Malenkov's policy of more
consumer goods. His downfall had
Iss-i-n expected sinre Ihe Soviet
Union and Hungary early tin*
year returned to imth-ics cttiphasiting heavy industtin! production,
which includes war material*.
A statement hy the Hungarian
Works Communist party's Cen­
tral Committee, published in alt
Budapest newspapers, a c c u s e d
IS.
Nagy uf encouraging element*
Under Mtc Company’s offer the who tried to frustrate industriali­
sation nnd deny the necessity of
(Continued On Page S o in )
heavy iudustiy development.
Only by development of heavy
ministry, It added, roold there !&gt;•
a development of light industry
and agrieultnre.
The statement said the ciiticisnt
of N ag/ was voiced at a srqsion
of the Cential Committee
March 2-t. The rhief s p e a k e r at
tne meeting was ttie party's first
sect etui y Mntyas linkosi.

Sanford Base Hits Pilot International
Delegates Elected
At '
Old Man. WasteTo District Parley

Th®'Naval Auxiliary Air Station nt Sanford, along with
many air stations throughout the Sixth Naval District, will Mrs Harvey Swan-on, Mr*. Sue
hit hard nt “old inan wasdo" In tha near future to the time of S. Stephenson and Ms-*. Walter I.
more than $ 12,000 por year.
Carter were eleeted at the rnrel- i Jaybees
This Intended saving of the taxpayers money wiu ac-1ing of the Pilot Club last night to

eomplixhrd w-cently when Cap
tain J. S. Tlinrh. USN. Comman­
der, Naval Air Hases, Sixth Naval
Oistrirt. appointed n I'uldirations
Control Hoard to eliminate dupli­
cations in th* printed and ittinrographrd fos^is utilized hy tha
Naval Air S9ition under his eontaiand andthr fleet airrraft squad­
rons suppmttd by them.
The Board! whose member* re ­
presented N|val Air Stations In
the district bud their supporting
Fleet Air Units, rarrfully re­
viewed then! forms, consolidated
and redesigned them, nnd finally
ihtennined fliich forms were to
t-e standardized for all artivllies.
Of th* orig n«l 2.MHI forms se­
lected or rrt rwr, consolidation anil
elimination n u lled in a rata!ogu« containing only 112 forms.
Arrnrdingl the first phase of

the program consisted of a com­
pilation and review of over 2.Mill
printed ami ininieogiiiphed forms,
many of them aimilinr In purposr,
but different in design, that were
used by two or mora Naval Air
activities. This was done hy Mr.
William K Glasgow of the
Itianch I'uldirations and I'linting
Office at the Naval Air Htatiun,
Jacksonville. Mr. Glasgow, a
civilian employ* of the Nary, de­
serves much credit for originating
and guiding tlda progtam. His reconunrmlallons concerning the
forms selected for review were
submitted »o the I'uhliealions Con­
trol Hoard for consolidation or
elimination.
Although hulk printing and
storking of approved fount will
(Continued On Tag* Weven)

To Choose

I n- J n ..
serve as delegates to the spring r e r m a n C n t L C a d C r S
dl-lrlrl meeting of District Four. A s. k l - v i. C f l { c ; n n
Pilot International lo he held In
I NCXT J C S S I O I l
Daytona lleueh April 2'J llirmigh 'Ilia Jayhepe, a newly organized
May 1.
I club for boys between th* age*
Alternate* eleeted wive Mr« | nf 1120 anil sponsored by Ihe
Nanrv Brock. Mr*. O. K. Goff and Jaieees to promote rivie Interest
Mrs. J P Hall Mrs. Ituth Camp ami IcadiVkhip, held its second
hell of Daytona Beach, dl-tibt meeting last night In the Civic
guitirimr, will prciddu over the building In Fort Mellon Park
dlslrlrt sessions.
Joe Hunt, temporary prr-idirnt,
A report of the club's main pro presided over Ihe meeting at which
Jcet, tho Milk Bank, given hy time the members voted to hold
Mr*. Carter, revealed a total of the first election for permanent
&gt;27.(ID spent during the past two officer- April S Temporary laws
months for raimrd and dried milk ami a temporary constitution were
Mr*. Carter slated that Ilee milk adopted.
had hern furnished fir eight
All young men of the required
age ire urged to contact Ihe presi­
children in two Lundies.
Mrs. Carter, who represents Ihe dent or com* to th* meeting next
Pilot Club on the hoard of the Tuesday.
Out of the 40 members on the
th* Seminole County Chapter of
registration trook, to were present.
(Cuntinurd On Peg* H orn)

Forest Lake Academy Ceremonies Held Today
The lemliol* County Vglslntiv* delrgal on and two county
commissioner* participated in
ground-breaking ceremonies for
Forest Lake Academy's new boys'
dormitory to ay at Maitland.
Present i ere Sen. Douglas
Rlcnstrnm; I eprrsrntatlves Voile
Williams Jr. and Mark Cleveland
Jr.; and Coi tnisaitmer* Juhn W.
Mrisch and ’ f. II. Miller.
Hlenstrom congratulated t h e

Arademy and a*M that Feminnl*
County was walrhlng Ua pro­
gress.
Among thus* *|&gt;eaklng at th*
evrnt were II. 8. Hnnit-u, educa­
tional secretary for th# Southern
Union Conferear* of the SevenDay Adventist Church. He talked
on "The Future af Forest la k e
Academy.”
Other speakers were V, G. An­
des eon, president of the Confer-

once; Jielson Walker, Orange It. R tii, chairman, Forest Lab*
County eopertaUrulent of educe Aoeilsmy Hoard, and R. L. Oetiun, and H. Lester, Academy tnunaoa, academy principal.
hoard utvmhur, Apopka.
Th* Academy hand, Ud by J*#h
Th# Invocation waa given by
Kirelngvr,
and Hi* Color Guard,
It. V. Herd, minliUr of the Boni­
ta iIn im Seventh - Day Adventist lilectrd by Csrpt. L. K, Ktev-na,
Church, and the scripture k m I paitlripatrd In tb# ceremonlv*.
read hy A. D. Hutch, minister, The i liolr sang selection* utulry
Kress Memorial Church, Winter
th* dilre'-ion uf Uaina Ramey.
Park.
K. K. Lutx Jr., minister, Oilaiw
Goexts were Introdured hy l&gt;

Central f'huieh of the SeventhPay Adventist, ga\* the bcnedla.ion at thr building site.

do

toy-*/

«■

Mrs. A. Franklin
Dies In Sanitarium
Mrs A. Ftanklln, 71, died at th*
Flnri is Sanitarium In tk la ’ido at
.T30 a. m. She had been In ill
health fur about seven years.
Mrs Franklin, born August 5,
pun in Farnivillr, N. C., lived lit
Lake Mary for the pa-t nine year*
previous to living in Kaiiford «m; l
PII7. She was a member of tb*
Fpiocopal church In High Springs,

FIs.

She Is survived hy her huvhamt,
three daughters. Miss Ia&gt;rrnr Fran­
klin of Sanford. Mrs. It. II. Kulianki. Lake Mary, and Mr*. J.
I*. Whitaker also of Sanford: on*
son, Archie K. Franklin, Arling­
ton, Va.; seven grandchildren,
llirr* great grandchildren, on*
sistor. Mrs. J. J. John*. Brooklyn,
N. Y. nnd two brothrra, ft. R.
Philips. Brooklyn, N. Y. and T.
D. Philip#, Wilson, N. Y.
Funeral asrvlrea will b* M 4
Friday at &gt; p. at. at tha Brian**
Funeral Bon* with lb* Bar. V.
P. Brook* Jr. offtotaling. Boris
will b* k Oak U » a '

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                    <text>*

*v*

e

Radio

said gently. “He tried to protect
you, and your daughter, whom be
madly love*. He had a problem,
and ba w asn't talking, ro t until
be knew the score. When Eileen
heard me accuse him at trying to
kill Ralph, aha believed me,
thought he had really done it—for
her. T hat almost drove E arl crazy,
trying to figure it out. For all he
knew, Eileen might have been
mixed up in it. too. Ho—"
"No," Ja k e Fortuna said harsh­
ly. "E aft knew the eenre. Right
a fte r X saw you ca rry Ralph away.
X guessed th a t be w as still alive,
and 1 began to run. I met Earl,
and I loot my bead, and 1 told him
w hat I'd hod to do—because be
w ouldn't loon re* the money. 1
told him th a t I'd aw ear I'd trm
him shoot Ralph, out of jealousy,
and because he w anted Etlsea. The
whole country knows th a t she
k ited him for Ralph. 1 told him
th a t you m ight come snooping
around, and to w atch the ravine—
X didn't w ant in take a chance cm
b u n g seen there. Then l left h l a .
g a t a rifle, and w aited behind a
roll fence out back where 1 dould
w atch the ravjoe. A t noon you
showed up, began your poking
around, and I took a shot a t you.”
I said, "And Rex Bishop, fixing
a fence In the bottom, saw you
Shoot a t me, and be came up to

Shout e t me, and be pointed a t
th e ravine, end— I always liked
aid Rnx, but 1 bad to shoot him,
to keep him quiet."
2 shivered, thinking et aH the
things th a t made a person kill, and
X said, "Jgke, there's a woman, I
suppose ?“
His heavy mouth w ent loose,
and he gave me a boastful grin,
T w o women, and I'm fifty-six
ars old." He leered a t ma lawd"A blond* in Cleveland, and a
brunette in Toledo. They coat me
* tot of money."
"I'll bet," 1 sold. "When did you

G

“ Thai gave me the idee," He ad­
m itted, uniting at me. '“There was
no harm in trying. 1 went out to
her place. The lights were on. and
It wae wide open. 1 found her up­
stairs on the bed, asleep. I locked
tha windows, rigged a pencil with
a cord tied to It, and atuck It in
the key. 1 read It come place, and
It worked."
“I t’s an old trick.” 1 aald. "Tou
ran the cord from the pencil under
the door, turned the key until the
bolt waa almost ready to click
■hut, dosed the door and pulled
tha cord. Tba pencil acted as a
lever end flipped th* key over,
locking the door from the Inside.
Tba pencil fell to the floor, and
you pulled It out under the door.
I saw the yellow speck on the
key last night, but 1 didn't tumble
until now th a t it was paint from
one of your pencils. You couldn't
be certain of w hat Earl Scltzman
would do, so you tried to frame
Judy, too."
Ha tcried the pencil he'd been
holding across the table. "Maybe
th a t's tha ana I used.'' he said.
“There'll be dents Ut it. from the
pressure on tha key,” I raid.
"W hy don't you look a t It and
see?" be Invited.
I let the pencil ley end watched
him. "And then you typed the sui­
cide rot* an Judy's typewriter."
"W ith one Unger."
J thought of old Rex Bl.-hop,
end of Judy, Loo. she would have
died If t hadn't found bar as I did.
Maybe, for me, in the Anal scoring,
tha ana life would cancel out the
other. I hoped so, and 1 aald, "You
followed me to Den's Place, know­
ing th a t 1 waa looking for Earl
Scltzmon, became t ‘d been to hla
house. You want In ahead of me,
warned E arl th a t I waa hunting
for him. U s ducked out the back
door, afte r telling bis poker pals
th a t 1 was s pesky insurance sales­
man, and to cover for him. Ha
woe already leery of me, because
I'd slapped him around a little, and
be didn't know w het you were up
to. You knew th a t 1 would guess
th a t E arl had scooted out the beck
door, th a t I would come out that
way, too, and you waited behind
the can In the alley, and—" I
stopped, remembering lha sound

T E L E V IS IO N
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11.10
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TUESDAY
s. m T -tt ra tte rs
Taur HMlth and Tsu
O ata rn ln * HIM Harlew
H i»kln* rails
First Dev# .
The Wnrld «f Mr. Bwsenar
S|*a*rn JMmtecas
DuOs B14.- all
wilein tha CTswe
H»«ity Dnsdy
Ta* havtrly ih«w
Hem* Cdltlnn—Kswt
Hem* E4lilon—Snorts
Hama Cdltlnn—Weather
(, 14V Lombardo Show
pinak fhor* Shew
V*4'i Caravan
union Bar!* Show
F ir,in * Th*at*r
Clrti* Thrater
Truth er Cen**quen«M
TBA
K la r r Croitroada
Tanlehl
,*&gt;*»» and W salhar

t.l* 004*8 Windows

U;#* T-Nea I* AaltsS

ii.ao b r ilt , a b l* ,* i»
Liioft tvaiihar-Now* Briefs

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HalVwoad f h t n «»e I

This Land e t Our*

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f&lt;*«r*l t t a r n .
Da V*or Account

1

lion born* Faoe* LU*

( i i l Raad at LU*
A 18 &lt;l*rry Hoard
* 88 Kd t. n t4lh*r,

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GIRAFFE SUFFERR
FROM AlTBRmA
OKLAHOMA CITY l* -H 'i bid
when a giraffe has laryngitis but
it’s vorM when its arthritis.
Thit's whit is ailing a lady
giraffe in tha Lincoln Park Zoo
gnd it h it Director Julian Frazier
up ia the sir. The victim, who
h u n t • n*me, is la ssrious con­
dition. Frazier says be Is going to
hive to rig up some sort of sling
today to hoist tha eiling giraffe
to she won't h*ve to bear any
w*,gkt oa bar forelegs.
GENERAL ARRTVER
CAIRO, Egypt (It Henry A •
Ryroide, 41, farmer Army gen­
eral end m u ta n t secretary of
state, arrived yesterday «■ U J.
s mbs seder to Egypt Be succeeds
u m r m Caffery, who retired.

Hut with the fear there waa the
rege, auddcnly flaming, and at the
name tim e another p art of my
brain cautioned me to be crafty, to
Induce him to delay the moment
when he would decide to pull the
trig g er of the gun 1 knew now ho
held beneath lha table, ' l l won't
work." 1 heard my voice Baying.
"They'U get you, Jake."
"E arl's car is out in hack." he
aald "The keys are In It and the
lank la full. 1 checked, before I
came in. The Urea on my car are
bad, but In Earl'a car 1 can get a
long way, maybe to Mexico. I've
aim got a couple of thouiand in
cash from Lho Cleveland cattle
deal." Ha paused, and aald in a
whisper, "Buck up,' Bennett." Hla
teeth ahowed between hla Upa.
"You can only die once."
"Don't do it, Jake," 1 ten an ted .
VtolenUy I pushed against the
table, and my chair went back­
ward. The kitchen roared with the
blast of hi* gun. It waa sa If a
baseball bad been thrown, quite
hard, against my right aide, above
the belt. The Impact made me
gaap and 1 slammed on my back
on the kitchen floor. My logs felt
dead, but there waa no pain.
Jake Fortune waa on the floor,
too, twisted sideways, the table on
top of him. 1 clawed the .38 from
my overcoat pocket, pushed my­
self to one elbow, tried to steady
the gun. Fortune rolled clear of
the table, and he fired as ho rolled,
Lha bullet splintering the wooden
cabinet beside my head. I fired,
my w rist wobbling, and I knew
th a t I had trussed. A flower pot
on the window MB behind him
flow to bits. Ha pushod himself
upward, swaying on hla knees. 1
had plenty of time to aim care­
fully. Tba kitchen seemed to Jump
with the muzzle blast and a tittle
black bole appeared Ut Jake For­
tune's shirt over hla rig h t shoul­
der. The impact rocked him, and
hia gun arm dangled limply.
“Ail right, Jake," I aald. "You're
done."
Grimacing, be grasped hla right
w rist with hla left hand and ha
brought the gun up and ground.
I yelled, " N o r but ho swung the
gun toward mo.
Thera waa only a split sarrwd
of tim e left, and I didn’t have auy
choice. 1 shot him in the face.
I made it to tha telephone * n j
pulled the receiver toward m e end
asked for Sheriff Morrlaey. Then
1 peaeed out on the floor.
Q oee beside me a voice
"Hello, Jim ."
(To Be Om Mh m ^

T v a a n s r p.m.
(:Se N»»»
I IS D rain IiUrlUri*
4:4S Claud* H. Welts Shaw
Th* Rhythm Ilnur
• tan World At sis
IMS Twilight Sanaa
4:1# Sporti Boon
a:4i Sluaical Prorm in
T an V. r. VT.
T "5 HrlMlna On A Cloud
T: 1S Kvfnlnp Sluile
T in r a il* r i i h i r
Iris r&gt;ut "W Tor Musle
« nn city H itt Broadcast
■ in Plat "ST' Far Huilo
S.00 Nlaht Edition
1:11 tTnllad Nation*
S 10 It'a Dancatltna
1010 • At Hobo W |t* ttuale
10: SS Naw*
ll:«n U r m r n 'i Call to P ra ja r
It SS Slrn Off

WEDNESDAY A.H.

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10:10
10-11
11:18
11:11
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sian on
U r m tn 'i Call to Prayer
Dawn Broakara
Now*
Wastara Jamhoroa
Naw*
B*v*a O'clock Club
Now*
Spnrta At A Otaaoa
Jorkar'a Choir*
Morning Devotion*
Slornlna i t ’lodlr*
World Ai Nina
Moalc For Lad la*
Hymn Tim*
y or Dallas Only
Sluile for Tou
lion Club
Nawa
lino Club
0 *m« of Mstedr
Phil Raad At Organ
i^ym en'a call to Preys*
World At Noun

11:11

Radio Parra Dtaaat
Wadnaadsy Matloaa
K*«4
Bar Non* Bench
World At Thraa
llnltad Nation* Story

H its
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Ills
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1:11

LONDON — The suspect In
the Jewelry robbery case has been
maneuvered in a pretty tight cor­
ner. It seems unlikely the sweetl a c e d grandmother could have
done the deed. But Scotland Yard
has analyzed her nail polish, and

$25,000 W orth of Ru*8 Will Be Sold Re&amp;ar less of.Cost!

AMrnlinn Housewives, Homeowners, Apartment, Hotel «nd Motel Owners: 3 Pays Onlv—Open Wed. ft Thun, 'til ft
THE ORIENTAL RUG SHOP 318 N. Park Ave, 1 Blk. N. of P. O. Winter Park, FI*.
la holding the Biggest Rug Sale In htatory—Broadloom, Hand-Made Hooked Rugs and Orientals will b e a o ld r e ­
gardless of cost. All nalcs final.
____________
HALL RUNNERS
HAND MADE Sarouk,
ORIENTAL RUG i IMPORTED TIEAVY
Kerman Dea.
t
BROADLOOM
9x12 Reg- H .M

|

• x IX Reg- 555

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WEDNESDAY P.M.

l|
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| Sarouk and Kerman 11
Oriental Dea.
1
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The surface of Likes Huron and
Miehifin is 21 to XS feet lower
than thst of Lake Superior.

TRAIN to TEARS LATE
KTT1MAT, B. C. ((A) — Wbaa
the first tratn pushed through tha
outskirts of this ooe-tlma Indian
villi gs, now a booming aluminum
plant center, U was 50 yean bohind schedule.
Kltimat was charted as tha Vast
Coast terminal of tba Canadian Na­
tions] Rsllway early Is tha century.
Speculators tied up land along the
route, however, and th# line veered
north to Prince Rupert, Just
“across the tracks" from the sou­
thern tip of Alaska.
Now tho m w ID-mitUon-doQar,
48-mlla rail link will be a Una of
supply and a shipping route for
the giant aluminum reduction plant
and an expected pulp mill which
will give birth to an Industrial
city in tba wilderness. Kltimit is
miles north at the United
States border.

1654
DODGE ROYAL
4 Door l t d u
Powerflile
Radio, Heater
13,000 Milan
Extra d e u

■s»na \
PLYMOUTH

_41 -

of her movements on the night of So the customers troop out Inlo
Feb. 15.
the cold grumbling, the TV is
At this moment of television sus- switched off and no one knows
pense, the boss of the pub growls? what befell Grandma.
“Time, gentlemen, ptease-sorry, So irritating has the problem be­
got to close. 10 o'clock and it'a the &lt;come that" ft appears television

no power oa earth baa managed
to do up to now. It map bring
about a ehanca ia rtfultUooi to
permit British pubs to stay open
a little later. Until the end of the
play, anyway
The closing hour varies place
to place from 9:20 p. m. to l l p.m.
The 10 p.m puba seem to be hit at
the crucial moment
m

PUBLIC NOTICE

16M
CHEVROLET
4D n t M h

Young GiH Dies
Despite Help Offer

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REG. *159 _ 9 ztl

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�W«other"

Shop and Save
In Sanford

f i r f l r steady M t k N i l

(D j#
•
F.-rtabbabed 1908

VOLUME XLV1

Be Careful, Mom, Dad,
it Isn't That Easy

W

a n t e d
AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER
HANFORD, F L O RID A .

Recaptured Lewis
Taken To Raiford;
To Return Later .

By SANDRA DUNN
Herald Staff Writer

SCHOOL DAZE — Sandra Dana (center). Herald staff
writer, studiea questions while taking a sixth grade lest at
Sanford Grammar School. “It was tough," she said after­
ward. (Staff Photo)
______ .__

William Lewis, 20. recaptured
convict who had been held in the
“Junior, I’m ashamed of Seminole County Jail since Mon­
these grades. Whnt do you do day, was taken to the Stato Pri­
with your time: shoot mar­ son at Raiford yesterday.
t-ewls will be returned here at a
bles? Why, when I was in
school, 1 m n d n straight future date to fare charges, of
stealing a Jeep and assault with
A s . . ."
Intent to kill. Another charge of
Hold it. Mom or Dad. Lay assault with intent to kill has
that paddle down. You should* been filed In Orange County, but
he glad Junior brought home will be held against his parole.
his report card instead of his
Lewis, one of three Negro conixaminatinn papers. You might ' vlrts who fled the State Road
have to answer the questions.
) Camn at Oviedo Saturday night,
To are If rhildrrn have a t easy was wounded and raptured in a
a time in arhnol a* some parents gun battle in Orlando late Sunday.
maintain, 1 took a sixth grade test
The other two escapees were
yesterday at Sanford Grammar cornered Monday night at Oviedo
School.
One convict John Leroy Young, 20,
Walking Into the classroom, I was killed, and the other, Marvin
trough!: This is going to be a Merritt. 27. was wounded In the
resultant shooting.
push-over.
Of .course, that was only what
Merritt was taken to the prison
with Lewis.
I thought.
I soon found o u t.l was in for
One charge of assault with In­
tent to kill was placed against
seme hard work.
Ileiold Ilcckenhach, school prin­ Lewis as the rc-nlt of an axe at
cipal, had agreed to pull no lack on Thomas Hollingsworth. 01,
punches. 1 was to get the same an elderly Oviedo flower grower.
test the students had taken. For
Hollingsworth, a patient at Win­
one hour, I ceased to be a news­ ter Park Memorial Hospital, re­
paper reporter and actually be­ ceived two broken arms and cuts
came. in the eye* of Ilcckenhach on Ih? head In the attack Sunday.
and Mrs. Sybil Itouth, the teacher,
Police Chief George A. Kelsey
of Oviedo said Hollingsworth's
just another sixth grader.
It had the opportunity many description of his attacker tallied
grown-ups wish for. 1 was a with that of Ia&gt;wis.
Lewis, at the time of his cap­
school kid again.
At home a t night, after w* set­ ture, was driving a 1917 Jeep
tle down in tha old easy chair, a stolen from a house near lamglet of ua conjure up a pleasant wood oa lit* Longwood-Oviedo
Road.
dream of our school days.
We wish th at we could become
la-a is went down wilh a bullet
a child again, Just for a day, all In the leg in the exchange of fire
the while retaining our adult near Pineloch School In Orlando.
knowledge. Would we amat* our
He fired at State Trooper Rich­
teacher! She would have to give ard K. Doylc'a patrol ear with ■
(Continued On Pag# f&gt;«T*s)
shotgun, damaging the ear. Doyle
returned the fire and wounded
him in the leg.
A charge of assault with fcilent
to kill was filed In Orange Coun­
ty as a result of the attack on the
Highway Patrolman.
Two stale prison Investigator*
arrived In Oviedo yesterday from
Tallahassee to Investigala the
shooting there Monday nigbt.
They aro II. D. West 'anti R. C:
Ilaynswnrth. working out of the
An aetlnn committee to see the office
nf Slate Agriculture Secre
IT. S. nifhwajr" 17-92 project tarv Nathan
Mayo.
through to completion was propos­
Wert
said
and Haynsworth
ed last night at a meeting or the were trying tohoreach
Police Chief
Chamber of Commerce’* board o( Kelsey and A. D. Stanley,
guard
directors.
at the Oviedo Slate Road Camp,
The proposal waa mad# by *«n. to "atralghtrn out" conflicting
Douglas Stcnstrom, a member of stnrlea of the shooting.
the Chamber’! J-ong-Range Roads
Stanley made a statement to
Planning Committee, at the meet­ Peace
Justice Then Austin Sr.,
ing In the City Commission Root* that
he and not Kelsey had fired
at City Hall.
the shotgun blast that killed
Four-lanlng of the highway, lag­ Young, Krlsry also said Stanley
ged at the number 1 road project did the shooting.
in Seminole County was discussed
The full story of Hie shooting U
by Slenstrom and Juhn Melsch, scheduled to be aired at an inquest
vice president of the Chamber. at 1:30 p. m. Friday in Oviedo
The State Road Department, Town Hall.
Meish said, plana to send two ap­
praisers to look over tha highway
to determine which tide will be
widened.
The board endorsed the resolu­
tion pasted recently by the Roads
Planning Committee. Th# resolu
tlon, emphasizing th* Importance
of the 17-92 project, said fourlaning of the highway “will not
The Bemtonle County Junior
only aid and promote tha develop­ n u m b er nf Commerre recently
ment of Ih* economic life of began sponsoring a program, "The
Seminole County, but win also Jaycee Forum", over radio sta­
materially decrease the death and tion WTRR every Friday night at
traffic toll through traffic acci­ I p. m.
dents on the said highway.*
The purpose of the program Is lo
The 17-B2 project will be further inform the people of Rcminole
discussed at a meeting of the County on topic* of current Inter­
Roadi Planning Committee tonight est. A panel of Sanford citizen*
at Elmer's Restaurant Th# meet­ from various occupations ask the
ing will begin at 7 o'clock.
guest questions pertaining to the
Bailey Odham la chairman of topic under discussion.
the committee.
To date the panel has questioned
Present at tonlght'i meeting will two Insuraneemen, Andrew Careabe Richey Green, DcLand, district way »nd James Gul. on the recent
engineer for the Highway Depart- new ruling of the State Insurance
(CawU— d Os Pago Baton)
Commissioner on fire Insurance
coverage; Warren Knowles, City
Manager; and nnh Rroun. chair
man of the City Planning and
Zoning Board.
Guests appearing before thr
oanrl Friday night Mar. II, will
be Slate Senator O. Douglas Slrn
slrom, and State Representative*,
Mark N. Cleveland Jr. and Vnlie
A. Williams Jr. Any question thr
publir would like answered by the
legislative delegation may be
mailed to the Jayree* and II will
be asked of them Friday night.

Request By County
Turned Down By A CL Action Committee
Commission Informed Of Rejection
For 17-92 Project
For Use Of Vacated Right-Of-Way
Proposed Last Nite

Strolling
In Sanford

Dr. Terry Bird, Seaaiaalc Conaty
Health Officer, shewed a csacer
«tllm at a recent meeting of the
Losfwwd Chic Chib. Approxi­
mately 4# pertoas were present.
Dr. Bird explained the services
of tha Kern lotto i f —toy Cancer
**M'
o d
.•aiftord Mi MWis w « apeak os
“ Planned Iadd*rfH Dtatrlcto" st
tomorrow’s laschoM Meeting of
the J aster Chamber of Commerre.
JCho meeting will begin at soon
the Yacht Club.
• • a
Rotary club president Jim Holtzclaw end secretary R. W. “ Doc"
Rupreeht are try inf to break a
four-way tie for a board of direct­
ors’ nomination which developed
at a primary election held by the
club Monday. Tho club Dominates
•ix men for (ha board, three of
,-prbom are later elected.
^ S e r i a l Charlie Marriaoo was
welcomed hack to the staff af the
Beaford Herald today. Ha wiU
aerva as aa adrerliatof
lathre.
RUBS PICK LB COMPANY
CHICAGO (/P) — Thr Great
Lakes Plckla Co. la aulog the
Flamm Pickle Co. In U, 8. DisM t Court fay qiCJttO

The Atlantic Coast Lina Rail*
road has turned thumbs down on
the county’s tdqueat for use of
vacated right • of . way, the
County Commission was informed
yesterday.
The county had asked to be
permitted to use th* abandoned
main line running from Ninth St.
to the Country Club road aa a
short • cut thoroughfare to the
Lake Mary road.
County Attorney Mack Cleve land read the negative reply. The
railroad
said tho right-of-way
could not be relinquished.
In other action, tha Commis­
sion:
1. Agreed to give Long wood
a half • block of county owned
land as a alto for a clinic th*
town plan* to build to induce a
doctor to set up practice there.
Th* commission specified that
tha property, in back of Ward's
Longwood Hotel, now dedicated
as a park, must be used for the
medical center or revert to tha
county.
2. Rejected a proposal to set*
tie 1476 worth of estreated, but
unpaid prisoner bonds, for &gt;300.
Assistant State Attorney Hubert
Griggs received the settlement of.
frr from Joe Mots, former San*
ford bondsman. Th* bonds were
issued in 1063.
3. Voted to pay half cost —
an unknown figure over &gt;500—
us u Joint expense with the city
af Sanford In extending the dram
pip* a t th* aouth end of th*
French Av*. project another 131
feet.
4. .Voted to maka a &gt;300 dona­
tion to tha Red Cross.
A Approved the request of
Ua Pago ttovaw)

*

Jaycees Sponsor
Radio Broadcast

Meeting Postponed
By School Board
The regular meeting of the
Seminole County Board of Public
Instruction has been postponed
until Monday, Superintendent W.
T. Mil we* announced.
The meeting had been scheduled
for Thursday.
,
Bids on the remainder of (he
Pin* Crest elementary school, 27th
SI., will be let at tho session,
which win start at 1&gt; a. m.
TOT PI8TOUI BANNED
NEW YOKE OH - Tha City
Council h«a passed • bill banning
‘‘resvlistk’’ toy pistol*. Councilman
Darig Boss laid mor* than 100

V-

i&amp; tta lft
9

A m d iM

W E D N E SD A Y , M AR. 9, 1955

r l» u to partly t toady elsewhere

thronrh Thursday, slowly rising
temperaturei, highest this after*
noon 7#-71. tow fat tonight 4« S» la
north to H 4 i t# tooth.

Prana Inward Wire

No. 139
b s s

Hungarian Reds
Lash Premier Nagy
Precautionary Call Officials
Is Issued By Union Dismissal
For Southern Bell Imminent
The Southern Brit Telephone Co
Workers Party
union h is issued a "precautionary
call'' fur worker* lo strike at C
Prints Statemenr
a. m Monday unless a new con
lU'HA PEST, lltinjtnry f/P)
traet has been agreed upon by
midnight Sunday
—Lenders of the llmtparinn
Officers of 130 Southern Itell •'ommunist party today ncm-al- in nun- MMi'lir.otern ‘tales nisetl Premier Imre N'agv o f

were telegraphed ihe tentative - I iK|„ jsl dev iiit ionium” „nd
•f supporting m i s t a k e n
"t'Kliti-d ideas" in speeches
and article.*.
Western observers in Vlen«
na said Nauy’s dismissal

CAPTAIN J. 8. TI1ACII. USN, Commnndrr, Naval Air
liases. Sixth Naval District, (fa r rlglil) holds n forms ra in loRtte which resulted after elimination or consolidation of 11st |
2R00 forms shown in Ihe foreground. Also shown with Copt.
Thnch ore (left lo rijrht) Commander W. G. Winslow, USN.
senior member of the Pohllrnlionn Control Hoard nnd Mr.
W. K. Glasgow, director nf the Sixth Naval District llrnnrh
Publications and Printing Office, Naval Air Station, Jackson­
ville.

★

★

★

★

★

★

‘(like call la-t night. Hut a
-|mk-- man for the CIO Communt
cation Workers of Xmeriea laid if
i* merely a "precautionary eat!"
irtlettried as "routine ami nrer*
-ary precautionThe Company today presented to
the Conununirations Wickers of
America an improved propo-al
which it hoped would form the
i&gt;a-is for prompt agiccount on a
new contract.
The offer, contingent on Union
acceptance of a no strike clause.
***
bargaining which w.t*
taking place todav following a re
ce*% of several days. The Com
party, a-ked Monday that bur
gaining be resumed. Tim present
contract expires midnight, March

from office appealed imminent,
lie had hern his country's chief
mouthpiece for Soviet rx-Premlep
Gcorgi Malenkov's policy of more
consumer goods. His downfall had
Iss-i-n expected sinre Ihe Soviet
Union and Hungary early tin*
year returned to imth-ics cttiphasiting heavy industtin! production,
which includes war material*.
A statement hy the Hungarian
Works Communist party's Cen­
tral Committee, published in alt
Budapest newspapers, a c c u s e d
IS.
Nagy uf encouraging element*
Under Mtc Company’s offer the who tried to frustrate industriali­
sation nnd deny the necessity of
(Continued On Page S o in )
heavy iudustiy development.
Only by development of heavy
ministry, It added, roold there !&gt;•
a development of light industry
and agrieultnre.
The statement said the ciiticisnt
of N ag/ was voiced at a srqsion
of the Cential Committee
March 2-t. The rhief speaker at
tne meeting was ttie party's first
sect etui y Mntyas linkosi.

Sanford Base Hits Pilot International
Delegates Elected
At '
Old Man. WasteTo District Parley

Th®'Naval Auxiliary Air Station nt Sanford, along with
many air stations throughout the Sixth Naval District, will
Harvey Swan-on, Mr*. Sue
hit hard nt “old inan wasdo" In tha near future to the time of S. Mrs
Stephenson and Ms-*. Walter I.
more than $ 12,000 por year.
Carter were eleeted at the rnrel- i Jaybees
This Intended saving of the taxpayers money wiu ac-1ing of the Pilot Club last night to

eomplixhrd w-cently when Cap
tain J. S. Tlinrh. USN. Comman­
der, Naval Air Hases, Sixth Naval
Oistrirt. appointed n I'uldirations
Control Hoard to eliminate dupli­
cations in th* printed and ittinrographrd fos^is utilized hy tha
Naval Air S9ition under his eontaiand andthr fleet airrraft squad­
rons suppmttd by them.
The Board! whose member* re ­
presented N|val Air Stations In
the district bud their supporting
Fleet Air Units, rarrfully re­
viewed then! forms, consolidated
and redesigned them, nnd finally
ihtennined fliich forms were to
t-e standardized for all artivllies.
Of th* orig n«l 2.MHI forms se­
lected or rrt rwr, consolidation anil
elimination n u lled in a rata!ogu« containing only 112 forms.
Arrnrdingl the first phase of

the program consisted of a com­
pilation and review of over 2.Mill
printed ami ininieogiiiphed forms,
many of them aimilinr In purposr,
but different in design, that were
used by two or mora Naval Air
activities. This was done hy Mr.
William K Glasgow of the
Itianch I'uldirations and I'linting
Office at the Naval Air Htatiun,
Jacksonville. Mr. Glasgow, a
civilian employ* of the Nary, de­
serves much credit for originating
and guiding tlda progtam. His reconunrmlallons concerning the
forms selected for review were
submitted »o the I'uhliealions Con­
trol Hoard for consolidation or
elimination.
Although hulk printing and
storking of approved fount will
(Continued On Tag* Weven)

To Choose

I n- J n ..
serve as delegates to the spring r e r m a n C n t L C a d C r S
dl-lrlrl meeting of District Four. A s. k l - v i. C f l { c ; n n
Pilot International lo he held In
IN C X T J C S S I O I l
Daytona lleueh April 2'J llirmigh 'Ilia Jayhepe, a newly organized
May 1.
I club for boys between th* age*
Alternate* eleeted wive Mr« | nf 1120 anil sponsored by Ihe
Nanrv Brock. Mr*. O. K. Goff and Jaieees to promote rivie Interest
Mrs. J P Hall Mrs. Ituth Camp ami IcadiVkhip, held its second
hell of Daytona Beach, dl-tibt meeting last night In the Civic
guitirimr, will prciddu over the building In Fort Mellon Park
dlslrlrt sessions.
Joe Hunt, temporary prr-idirnt,
A report of the club's main pro presided over Ihe meeting at which
Jcet, tho Milk Bank, given hy time the members voted to hold
Mr*. Carter, revealed a total of the first election for permanent
&gt;27.(ID spent during the past two officer- April S Temporary laws
months for raimrd and dried milk ami a temporary constitution were
Mr*. Carter slated that Ilee milk adopted.
had hern furnished fir eight
All young men of the required
age ire urged to contact Ihe presi­
children in two Lundies.
Mrs. Carter, who represents Ihe dent or com* to th* meeting next
Pilot Club on the hoard of the Tuesday.
Out of the 40 members on the
th* Seminole County Chapter of
registration trook, to were present.
(Cuntinurd On Peg* H orn)

Forest Lake Academy Ceremonies Held Today
The lemliol* County Vglslntiv* delrgal on and two county
commissioner* participated in
ground-breaking ceremonies for
Forest Lake Academy's new boys'
dormitory to ay at Maitland.
Present i ere Sen. Douglas
Rlcnstrnm; I eprrsrntatlves Voile
Williams Jr. and Mark Cleveland
Jr.; and Coi tnisaitmer* Juhn W.
Mrisch and ’ f. II. Miller.
Hlenstrom congratulated t h e
toy-*/

«■

Arademy and a*M that Feminnl*
County was walrhlng Ua pro­
gress.
Among thus* *|&gt;eaklng at th*
evrnt were II. 8. Hnnit-u, educa­
tional secretary for th# Southern
Union Conferear* of the SevenDay Adventist Church. He talked
on "The Future af Forest la k e
Academy.”
Other speakers were V, G. An­
des eon, president of the Confer-

once; Jielson Walker, Orange It. R tii, chairman, Forest Lab*
County eopertaUrulent of educe Aoeilsmy Hoard, and R. L. Oetiun, and H. Lester, Academy tnunaoa, academy principal.
hoard utvmhur, Apopka.
Th* Academy hand, Ud by J*#h
Th# Invocation waa given by
Kirelngvr,
and Hi* Color Guard,
It. V. Herd, minliUr of the Boni­
ta iIn im Seventh - Day Adventist lilectrd by Csrpt. L. K, Ktev-na,
Church, and the scripture k m I paitlripatrd In tb# ceremonlv*.
read hy A. D. Hutch, minister, The i liolr sang selection* utulry
Kress Memorial Church, Winter
th* dilre'-ion uf Uaina Ramey.
Park.
K. K. Lutx Jr., minister, Oilaiw
Goexts were Introdured hy l&gt;
do Central f'huieh of the SeventhPay Adventist, ga\* the bcnedla.ion at thr building site.

Mrs. A. Franklin
Dies In Sanitarium
Mrs A. Ftanklln, 71, died at th*
Flnri is Sanitarium In tk la ’ido at
.T30 a. m. She had been In ill
health fur about seven years.
Mrs Franklin, born August 5,
pun in Farnivillr, N. C., lived lit
Lake Mary for the pa-t nine year*
previous to living in Kaiiford «m; l
PII7. She was a member of tb*
Fpiocopal church In High Springs,

FIs.

She Is survived hy her huvhamt,
three daughters. Miss Ia&gt;rrnr Fran­
klin of Sanford. Mrs. It. II. Kulianki. Lake Mary, and Mr*. J.
I*. Whitaker also of Sanford: on*
son, Archie K. Franklin, Arling­
ton, Va.; seven grandchildren,
llirr* great grandchildren, on*
sistor. Mrs. J. J. John*. Brooklyn,
N. Y. nnd two brothrra, ft. R.
Philips. Brooklyn, N. Y. and T.
D. Philip#, Wilson, N. Y.
Funeral asrvlrea will b* M 4
Friday at &gt; p. at. at tha Brian**
Funeral Bon* with lb* Bar. V.
P. Brook* Jr. offtotaling. Boris
will b* k Oak U » a '

�a

THE SANFORD HERALD
COTTA PUU. MVSCli
roatp&lt;E B -cajL O »rr e t
ANYBODY TmIRE-THEYBE
kU. AOLCEP/CAVT WASTt:
A MINUTt-GOTTA 1
__. OCT MV HANDS CM

THAT
ecuvDto
lihe a
S\E£ ZLt.

WMN

LUCK/
we vsekit^
SACK IN •

R j r ’sssas?

WNia-TV JACMIOWYU.LB
tvi:usfk:»[&gt;AY r.M.

( la k j .tt in r k i a a r n i i k a i l Matlcai
4:011
ills
4:10
iiM
1:11
Site
»;0*
4:10
T:«4
7:15
Till
ilt
;44
:0«
lllft
10:00
&gt;4:41
tl:5*

Brighter D ir
Facrat flocm
on Tour Account
fnrtl* faeaa U fa
Stead of U fa
Oarry Moor*
N**i. w eather. iporta
Wild Oil! lllckok
Henry Ford
Jungle Macabre
CEF-TV M «S
Parry Coma
Arthur Oadfray
Tha .Mti:ian»lra
I've O-t A Sacra1
Blue Ribbon Bouts
Barbar a Corner
F t—r £ W n t her

«.«l
Tina
».S4
*&gt;ilO
lo rll
10.14
11:14
11:04

Test rs tta n r
SfarolpK e!»t&gt;w
Bob Crosby
Shoppers aulda
.Saw,
Arthur aodfrey
Strike It Bioh
Valiant Lady
TUlStIDAT rJB.
Leva of U fa
search for topsorrow
Quldlng Light
Kitchen *how
tValcema Travelers
Rabart Q Lewie
Mouse Party
Big Payoff
Op&lt;i Houaa

J

Hill _i W
TWt'RSDAT A.M.

Radio

IS IS
11:11
11:41
1:40
1:10
1:44
&gt;:4o
Ii04
1:14

TAS4FA W n A .T V

W H iN iir P. H

ill Her None Beach
;0j Pit Sion* Ranch

:44
ill
:il
jll

Warns s t Thrs*
United Bailees Starr
1444 Club ,
Grain lnUrIu4e
IIS Cleuaa H. * slts F
:01 The Rhythm Kane
:ei woria At at*

ill
ill
ill
:C1
sis

Twuttht loses
Snorts Book
Musical ProfraM
Drifting On ^XSoud
Rases For A fcfdr.

• :00 Night Edition
(:1S tJnlisd Nation#
1:14 Must# fer Ladlea
M
At* Ho**o* w im x w k
s i l l Lsymaa’s Call U Prayer
[1:41 lis a Off
TIIUBIDAT A. H.
*;oi La vine n't Cetl U Fray or
l i t Dawn Breakers
V i t WsVsra Jssahorea
■ ill New*
l.Ou naves O Ciock C)«h
f i l l News
i l l ; aj&gt;on* At A pianos
I jM Jockey's Choice
t:S e M orning D ovollnss
|:4 l Moraine Mstodlae
• ;f a World _r»i Nina
J i l l M ute For L sd lu
f*!*v
|*:U
|v.ft
LliSi
(J:0 i

Mu-Id For Tots
1144 a u k
%-t.,
Ooms et Melody
tVorld At Nook

Til rn I DAT fM.

|l : l I Radio re rtn Digeet
U :i) Thursday Matlnoo

}.l i New»
g i l l Bar Korn* B uck

Oollen Windows
Adventures In Art
Ceareriiltia Miss M

ave

irld «f Hr. nweeary
Basseaces
of the Juncle
Dooly
os Beverly Shew
Hesse Edition—News
[orss r iiu o n —Sforu

rows Settles—wasth«r
!a*5fr a u k *

’#•»* Caravan
1 Married Jean
My Little Msral*
K raft Theater
This Is Tear Life
City Detective
{etna's Crossroads

Tonight

gOIOUUtlBlPS RECOMMENDED
WASHINGTON W -Secrttary of
tha Army Stevens has recommend­
ed to Congress that tha goverement give acbolanhlpi to help
overcome tha ihortagi of doctor*
and dentists available to tha armed
forcaa.

In 1915 Oia Goldsboro elementary
school wes located at the corner of
15th Hreet and Lake Ave. It was 4
two room frame building with the
late Mrs. Wilson erving as Princi­
pal and her sister Jessie assisting
bar. These two taught thero until
1911 when the flu epidimle broke
out and they wars claimed by
death. A Mrs. Ward completed the
term of 1918.
J. N. Grooms was Supervisor of
colored school! of the city recom­
mended Joannah Moore principal
of tha school and sbo was ap*
pointad by the board of trustee!
for tha position which aha took
over is 1918-1911.
In 19)0 a four room frame build­
ing waa built on the present site,
where three teachers taught, prin­
cipal J. L. Moore, tha late Sylvie
Hicks, and Alms Stewart
During the years 1930-1923 the
colored welfare board headed by
the late Rev. H. J. Jones who was
then Pastor of tha Methodist
Church, bought five acres of land
adjacent to the present school site
and turned It over to the county.
The rooms became congested. A
need was created for more room
end teacher*. Two more room*
were added and the sanctified
church waa rented. Thelma Duboie
and Florelta Smith ware added to
the faculty. Aa the school began to
grow one more teacher waa added
and had to do double itiijoni were
necasiary In order to accomodate
the children. The following teach­
ers taught there for about 13 year*:
Mrs. J. L. Moor*, Laaomla Paterion Pike, Sally* Fields Thelma
DuBoie, Florelta Smith, Emporia
fattarioa and Julia Merritt
In 1950 the war habits began en­
tering school and It was overcrowd­
ed Four more teachers were add­
ed to the faculty and two more
rooms were added. The faculty re­
mained 12 In number until 1950-58.
Mrs. Joannah L. Moor* remained
a a principal of the school for 85
consecutive years. She retired In

a it CLomM

WE KIN 6EE
WMUT MCI
—a u «*to/

Scientists Discover
Ample Materials
For Nuclear Energy

BELGRADE, Yugoslavia UP) —
Yugoslav scientist* hive found
ample raw material In thia coun­
try for production of nuclear en­
ergy and toon will teek to gene­
rate nuclear power for produc­
tive purpoic*, Preiident Martha!)
Tito said.
Ha told Parliament "the uie of
the energy for the welfare of the
which
people” U an objetive
technically could be realized very
eaiily. At the tame time he call­
June of 1553.
ed for deitrucilon of all exleting
la 1954 the fourth grade was add­ nuclear arma and eaid efficient
ed to the school. ThU action ne­ International control would be e»cessitated more teachers. Mrs. •ential to prevent miiute of the
Margaret Oliver and Mrs. Ola power.
Brock were then added. Miss P. B.
In a statement picpned for the
Reid waa appointed to the position Yugoslav Parliament and broadat principal after the retirement cait by the Belgrade radio, Tito
of Mri. Moore,
•aid: "Well equipped inetltutiona
The present teachers are first have been founded in Belgrade,
grade Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Lamb. Zagreb and Ljublpana for nuclear
Mr*. Franklin, Mrs. Hall; aecood reithreh.
__
. Yugoslavia has am­
ada Mrs. L. V. pike, s. L. Bent- ple raw materials for exploitation
r. E. K. Walden, R. T. Hanker- of nueltar power for peaceful inson; third grade V. Z. Green, Em­duetrial purposes and it la In tha
poria Patterson, Charles Roberts,______
___ _ to undertake
position
directly
Miss E. M. Moore; fourth grade work toward the generation of
Mr*. M Oliver, Mrs. 0. G. Brock, nuclear power.”
J L. Givens; fifth grade: Mrs. LW. Blair. Mrs. Ruth AUen. Mrs.
Jose Allen. Miss F. B. Reid, and
Miss Prln.

K

Coast Guard Says
Improper Loading
Constitution Club Cause Of Sinking
NORFOLK. Va. (I»- The Coast
said yesterday that shifting
Asks Florida House Guard
of what it called Improperly loaded
For Investigation cargo caused the freighter MorMIAMI UT— Tha Constitution
Club of Miami b n asked tha Flori­
da House of Representatives to In­
vestigate whether Rep. John B
Orr Jr. waa allgibl* to run for of­
fice.
Orr said he would welcome the
Investigation and called tha club
" • group of radical McCarthy­
ite*.
The club aant a resolution to
member* of tha Legislature ques­
tioning whether Orr could have
"conscientiously, properly a n d
without any mental reservation"
taken the qualifying loyalty oath
because he previously had repreaented a client contesting Miami's
anti-communist ordinance.
Orr was attorney for Alfred P.
Rosenberg who sought to b*va the

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Golden Cere
Virginia Capei. Thlrty-aaven of
her 18-man crew perished, Includ­
ing Capt. McMahon. Eleven aurvlvors were rescued 41 hours after
tha pinking.
Tha freighter wgi as youtg from
Victoria, Brasil, to Baltlmora, Md.,
with 9,008 loos of In n or*.
TRUSTWORTHY TRUSTY
WACO. TEX (ID) M ica
east a trusty from Jail shopping
downtown. Ha found a billfold and
promptly turned It over to the
caps.

MiuiON Itqad

Groan Limas
SUNIWin N nn

Prunt Juica
TAICO Ires*

Laying Mash
NASItCO Crtt*

Rifi Crackers

'S u p s H B i h r W ta ta m Fresh Porit

There’s even more to

ifte i world At Three
ilrU Musical Fragraea

WASHlNGTOIf (A— FTBddast
laanhower today happily era*tad
l* "Society of the lam ag w
rldga" In
hosMrtU U
rmy voterana who apaaitaadad
to dramatic capture ct that giro«lc bridge over the Rhine la Gart*ny 10 year* ago.
Marking tha 10th gaalrenory af
i* saiiura, tha Praaldent tovtM
ta group to tha Whit* Rous* gad
resented each of the vaterug ■
trtifletia of mcmberahlp fa the
rw society.

TVIa la W w t r « S k a b a p s • * . fo r O i a w M
a tlR a i la
l a « M u f o ty and c o p f o r t
while you d riv e , am i 8a n M i b g ra aiar v a h *
wham yog tr a ia ,
Truly modern tinea are ahapad by awa/ahwac. Yaw
can aa* what wo mean la tha d a p crystal cure* of
Cbenolat'a Swa p l ight wiadahMd . . . a dramatic
atyb note, oartalnly, bat one that atom* from tha need
for wider, aafcr vision. Or taka high-tea uUlighta—
they add lo tha haaremlre lawgth of line . . . bwt
they arq p where they eon bo area for aafaty’e aaha.
Tha H u r t loanrere acrea* fho hood areoH jw t dec­
oration
. they shark the Utah* for Ihd High-Level
waHlMlna oyakam h r daoher, Iraahar air. Aad tha
whole ahapo c i the body-Ua lowneae, tha dieted belt

motoramic CHEVROLET

S W iH p S s w M w I V I I *

H y*aa Coalfai
K o illir Sfihiga

55 Ms . J g i i t
5? H t

®
i

JR

W

?*g.tog

H £ 3 B X .2 L 9 t

WooAory “

I f f Ik

b y rfk p

W m rnm 's

t«

m

Q nur

k f iir

1

“S ’ TU
i*

;?ma:.,*/
.i

_____

�THE SANFORD HERALD

Quality Rights Reserved
PRICES IN T H IS A D GOOD

None Sold to Other Food Merchants

Prices Good Thru Sai., March 12

IN A L L L O V E T T ’S , P IG G L Y W IG G LY A N D T A B L E S U P P L Y FO O D S T O R ES !

TOP QUALITY MICH. YELLOW

,V y

SLICED
HICKORY SWEET

BACON

Sunny] and Pure Pork

Large Stalki Pascal

IT, S. Ne&gt;. 1 Top Qualify Sweet

Trx»« Cello

ar Cured Smoked Baron

CARROTS

SAUSAGE

2 11)5.

19c

New Crop Tirin

CABBAGE
Ih.
4c
Lsrpe Juicy
G R A P E F R U I T 5 f o r 29c

Western W lnesap

Sunny lend Skin] m i

WIENERS
Sunn.vland Smoked

Superbrand All Flavor*

Kat-Rita Freeh Ground
Morrell1* Cooked

Kraft** Cracker Barrel Mallow

Taste O’Sea Proien Dressed

MIX 'EM UPI
SWANSON MEAT PIES
SEABROOK BABY LIMAS
AGEN rORDHOOK LIMAS
MORTON FRUIT PIES

YOUR CHOICE!
SWANSON'S
T V TURKEY DINNERS

REAL SOUTHERN

White Acre Peas

TOT ROAST DINNERS

AGEN Sliced

Peaches 5'~
TASTE O'SEA Haddock

lim it On*

Limit Six

WILSON'S Boot

LAND O SUNSHINE PVx.n or Set/Rl.tng

CHOPPED “ BIF" ....

FLOUR 5

DIXIE DARLING

CRACKItr GOOD

39a

10 .

SAL DRESSING «

VANILLA WAFERS. . .

TROPICAL

PLUS BOTTLT DEPOSIT

BLUE ROSE RICE 3
Clfrber's Chopped Biby Vood-I

PEPSI COLA

6 - c,„.

Libby « Corned

BABY FOODStrain*

BEEF HASH

Nlhlrt* Fancy

Libby'*

MEXICORN 2
Tee B ar*—48 Cl. Site
TETLEY TEA
Armour Star .Sliced
DRIED BEEF
Atmour Star Corned
BEEF HASH
Armour Star
BEEF STEW ISna. C an
Atmour Star
CHILI &amp; BEANS
A tm our S tar
ROAST BEEF
»f UlC Sea White Mrot
A FISH

v

DEVILED HAM

e -c
sc

Libby's

POTTED MEAT 3 C&lt;
SAUSAGE 2 u c
Libby'*
ROAST BEEF ».&lt;*.
Blur Plate
MAYONNAISE
Crunchv Peanut Rutter
PETER PAN
Llbbv'i Virrui*

LA U N D RY
BLEACH

S

t Soap

TEX 2 ^ 29c 2

GREATEST FOOD BARGAINS!

*

J

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• .w ! . t _ J

JAMBS MARLOW

Red Cross Gives Aid To Millions
Who Are In Need Of Assistance
There waa h time In our early history
when people counted entirely on direct help
from their neighbors or close relatives to
sec them through periods of misfortune.
Our way of life stems largely from that peraonnl, across-the-fence sharing of adversity.
Today life is more complex. The protec­
tive unity of families is weakened as indivi­
dual members scatter from the home com­
munity.
Rut people have not changed. In time of
troublo, they need assurance th at they are
not alone. To help provide this assurance,
millions of Americans turn to the Red
Cross. Because they join and serve, they are
able to extend a friendly hand to those who
most need help.
We sec that help in the millions of pints
of blood freely given through Red Cross for
those who would die without It. We sec it
when a New Kngland fisherman who lost
his boat in a hurricane is given another so
that he enn earn n living for his family. We
see it in emergency help to the family of a
servieemnn who is away from home.
An urcount of Red Cross operations in
Florida during 1951 was recently received
by Gov. Leroy Collins, showing more than
17,000 of Hie state's citizens active in the
humanitarian services of the agency.
Highlights from the report rcvcnlcd that,
through the Red Cross. Floridians last year
assisted 11,000 servicemen's families with

The Sanford Herald

h tI M K M is HMt« u i w i n n
_
____ ___ __ ___ __
mm r „ i om rt •»
n i r n rr-nnnrs. r e tw
j i r s M tm m u x p

r m. n is M
(&gt;*«w tt* * "
nMi,*M
h im ?

Wednesday, Mar, 0, 1065

TODAY'S BIBLE VERSE
He taught them a i one having authority.
—Matt. 7:29. Paul argued, but Christ did
» o t Christ's teachings have stood up for
nearly two thousand years and they have
formed the foundation of our civilisation.

rtLOOW Aifc
A N IW W D t1

personal problems and helped 8,400 war
veterans in applying for government bene­
7WlK* ,
fits. Red Cross volunteers also gave more
70MT‘°
than 05.800 hours of service at military hos­
pitals and another 40,700 hours at veterans
administration hospitals. Training in swim­
ming and lifesaving was gi\;cn 22,800
Floridians, another 21,500 received first aid
training, and 5,400 were certified in home
nursing.
Polio epidemics which struck the state
during 1954 also found the agency on the
job! Red Cross nurses and volunteers were
recruited for the affected areas, and more
than 400,000 cubic centimeters of gamma
globulin, provided by Red Cross, were distri­
buted by the Office of Defense Mobilization
to public health departments over the state.
The 1955 Red Cross campaign for mem­
bers and funds is now going on. In Seminole
County, volunteer workers are driving to­
ward a ?8,750 goal.
A community's sucress is tied up with
its growth prosperity and well-being as a
whole, and with the well-being of its resi­ HAL BOYLE
dents ns individuals and units of the com­
munity. The Red Cross, by being of service
to a large cross section of any community,
contributes in no small way to its pros­ NEW YORK lA*-Items from an The world of tomorrow: Fred
■xfdily almanac:
'liters, automotive showman, preperity and well-being.
Are men's shoes taking years lirts speals of 130 miles an hour
During the past fiscal year, the Seminole ■iff their lives?
m II be commonplace on superCounty Red Cross chapter gave more than A leather firm has raised the highways 23 years from now...
gC.000 in financial aid to servicemen and question whether the fact women iccidcnti will be cut to a minimum
wear much lighter footgear may . motorists will wear safety hel
their families in the county
partly explain why they live longer ■nets as well at safety belts.
In addition to offering many vital ser­ than men . . Men's light summer Almanac travel notes: More peo­
vices, the chapter serves in the capacity of shoes weigh three pounds a pair, ple in this world live on rice than
acting field director for the Sanford Naval heavy winter shoes five pounds or .-n dally bread.. .but rice-short
Japan Is nuw trying to get mo
Auxiliary Air Station under A. G. Scar­ more.
This firm figured the average oi its population to twitch to wheat
brough, field director, Air Force Rase, Or­ man
lifts a foot 33,000 times a day ,. .some six million Japanese chil
lando.
or a total of 411« torn of leather—
Seminole County has been fortunate in if he Is wearing shoes that weigh
having "n very dearth of disasters." the five pounds a p air.. .by wearing 600 Refugees Want
light ahoes that weigh a pound less
chapter emphasizes. A percentage of the each
he ean take a load of 10't To Go Back Home
funds raised in the county will go to the tons off his feet every day----PAIIOA, Hawaii (F— Six hundred
National Red Cross to take care of great (Maybe If we went barefoot, refugees badgered officials yester­
disasters. Through the campaign now being fellows, or better yet, stayed in day for permission to return to
homes in the devastated Tuna
conducted, the chapter says persons from bed all day, we'd live to be 100!) loeir
homes In the devaitated Puna
northern disaster Areas who nre vacationing
Peninsula as week-long volcanic
eruptions simmered down to a
in Florida or have chosen Seminole County
mild bubbling action.
ns their itcrmitncnt home, may contribute to
Earth tremors moderate. Lava
fiiHnster relief in their home states.
foundations which had shot to a
In almost every corner of the ia rth , the
breathtaking 1,000 feet were just
Red Cross is recognized as a symbol of the
bubbling, with an occasional half­
hearted 30-foot apout.
good neighbor. It may represent you—
Volcanologist Gordon A. Mac­
through your membership—in helping other
Donald urged the refugees to wait.
people in time of trouble. Or It may repre­
He warned that new eruptions
sent warm-hearted people, whom you do not py C. E. PLETEMEYER. ADC “are still possible. I don't know
know, rallying to your aid in an emergency. The First Lieutenant's Depart­ when it will be safe”
ment. In define It In a single
However, families from KalaThs fund campnign is now on. You hava phrase,
might be termed the pow­ pans and Opihikao were told they
an opportunity to k&lt;*ep alive one of the er section of the Fleet Aircraft could go home today on condition
great American traditions—friendly, neigh Servlet Squadron Fifty-One opera* -radio-equipped trucks and drivers
tional machine LCDR E. J Still, etnod by ia both tiny south coast
borly help to our fellow men. •

First Lieutenant
Department Said
Powerful Section

Mechanical Brains Face Uptrend
counters In self-service stores,
and the customer the amount of
each Item, the total charge, the
•mount of money the customer of­
fers to payment, and the change
duo.
Underwood Corp will market, at
around 113,000, a baby brain for
small buslntss men. The electronic
computer. Rtocom to, the company
saya, caa handla aa satire payroll
in one operation — including com­
putation and HemIting of gross
earnings, and* dedu
* luctiona for in-

America, Canada
Hava New Signals
In Case Of Attack

au n t U i. hospitalization, defense
bonds and social security tax.
Farrington Manufacturing Co. of
Boston will field test a new el
Ironic ayitcm called Scandei, de­
vised to tot oil companiM use au
lomatie tabulation tn their book
keeping on gasoline credit cards.

Man Is Defeated
After 65 Years
OLD ORCHARD BEACH. Maine
Lft—Ninety-two year old FTed f.
Luce lost his bid for an Old orrhard Beach Town office yesterday
for the first time in &lt;3 years.
The veteran Republican lawn
clerk was beaten for ro-electton
by Mra. Esther S. Crowley, •
housewife.
The vote for Mrs. Crowley, who
waa a coalition Republican-Demo­
cratic candidate, waa ML La
got M and William L. Grabs

RATTLE CREEK, Mich
•tw w ining signal system of eoamy air attack-which drops the
general all-clear signal because of
radioactive fallout dancer — has
bam worked ofat by civil
Luc* haa bald just
The United States and Canada
have adopted the system together, &gt;wn office. Because of
a decided to
Now, simplified stgnala a n to ha the town
clerk's
imiafci m rirsM, b an s aad other waa
waning device* Thera are two slgsalt. Oat la the “alert”

S7

USN. is head of tha First Lieuten­ villages.
ant Department.
it it the responsibility of this
department to continually inspect
and observa operative equipment
under Uielr cognizance such aa ve­
hicles, water, and elsetrie ai equip­
ment
Vehicles am Inspected and ser­
viced each day. Many small dis­
crepancies are handled and repair­
ed Immediately by lit Lt Depot
personnel. In other cases the dis­
crepancies are analysed by the de­
partment and if the nature it such
teat It ia beyond the scope ot the
lat Lt'a feeUlttee, It le referred to
the Public Werts DeptUpkeep ef epaeea, condition ef
of fire fighttog equipment, proper clearance of
Ore tones, ohsnrvanra of safety
precautions, aad many more du­
ties combine to make e day to
tha Fleet Lieutenant's Department
a full day tor aO Ito personnel
Chief Ariatiea Machinist's Mato
Charles K. Fletomeytr is the
partment'a lea Abut petty officer.
Other enlisted men assigned to the
First Lieutenant's department are:
W. O. Mills, baatawala’e mats
lin t elan . Rap Harris, boatswain's
mate third class, Marvin Y sog.
aviation machinist's male
class, Billy Baxter, airman. Den
Pertain, airm en .'

to effect since
_ J I _______ ___ to

tf ndtoaiHva tonal.
UJ Obit

to

S?

to ha k u d b d by al

Inside
Washington

friend of the West, has pushed Ger­
many into rearmament. He is 73
and will not be around long. What
happens after he leaves the scene
is ■ guess. The West bad to gam­
ble on it.
Will tha present democracy .urP
limie with strong civil controls
on the military or degenerate aft.
er Adenauer into a power struggle,
eba-ta, revolution and the return of
a dlrtatorshfr of some kind?
Rearmed Germany may remain
a loyal ally. Or ana may burst
tnrough Allied controls and plunge
Into huge rearmament aimed at re­
gaining her lost territories
The West Germans lntenstly da.
•ire reunion with East Germany^
where the Russians have built aa
armed fore# with the help of Ger­
man generals captured In the war.
It is even possible the new mili­
tary leadership, If It gains enough
•r, may take Germany out of
the Western alliance and shift te
Russia.
Craig recalled that under the
first German republic to the 1320s,
whan German’s army waa limttmL
to '00,000 men, the general®
schemed secretly with the Runlae
Communist* to get arms.
Perhaps the only happy prospect
to the picture of German rear­
mament. besides tea Immediate
strength It gives the Alike, to that
the Russians teem far m on
ried about It than the WeM.

WASHINGTON- The nations
millions ot television fans-consti­
tute a major reason why the Re­
publicans can go to San Francisco
for their 1&gt;34 national convention,
while the Democrats moat remain
In Chicago.*
The California city waa chosen
by the Republican national com­
mittee on the assumption that
President Elsenhower and Vice
President Richard Nixon will be
dren in elementary slhools
renominated without opposition.
get bread at luncheon.. .the coun­ Thus, the GOP ean confine its
try also is going in for tale vision nominating session to a relatively of strplus commodities
in a big way. . .what are the most few hours, including demonstra­ L i bilateral agnemanto wittot.
popular p r o g r a m s ? Baseball, tions.
other countrici.
wrestling, boxing—and old movies!
Even If there are favorite ion
In any case, a Stela subcommit­
Odd facts: The gisnt new spec* candidates or possibly a candidate tee under Senator James O. Easttacular sign in Times Square, ad of the Republican "Old Guard," land (D), Mississippi, to proper*
vertislng a soft drink, has 33,000 It U doubtful that more than two tog to get the facta from the prin­
light bulbs, and a 30.000-gallon-*- r three namet will be presented cipals on both aides.
It to perfaapa significant that
minute waterfall.. .a recent sur to the Republican convention.
The entire acision could be stag­ Eastland's colleague to the House,
vry showed grade school students
misspelled the simple word "quaa- ed In the late afternoon or early Rep. Jamie Whlttea (D), Missi­
'ion” in 132 different ways.. .but a evening and television audiences ssippi, first brought the question
eommon word that tcen-agera of­ acron the nation would have am­ of a conflict of intensta between
ten find hardest to vpell Is ''eti­ ple opportunity to view tee pro­ SUte and Agriculture tote tha*
open.
quette’'. . .whether this proves any­ ceeding!.
thing. we don't know.
The Democrats, however, face
Beale* Apparently tried to a *
Almanae personality: Frank Lu­ the possibility of a half dozen cr vance to smooth the troubled wether. known as “ the Bing Crosby more names being placed in nom ter* by stating to a
of the sandpile set," believes he (nation. Speeches and demonstra­ that 100,000 balei of cotton—ten
has told more stories to more tions would run Into the wee hours commodity In which tha two Misschildren than anybody in history... even If the session began at noon. toalppiau are chiefly interestedst 33 Luther, who has been a cow­ Eastern TV watchers likely will will be sold tadar the special pro­
boy. priiefighter, evangelist, de­ find themselves sitting before their gram.
• e e
tective and operatic tenor, has sets until after midnight with tee
made UO records for children Democrats meeting to Chicago
Mystery S u b - The Navy to par­
rlnce 1330, sales have reached the W en tee convention to San Fran­ ticularly Interested In reports thitfo
AS million m ark.. .Prank, who has cisco, it la likely that dawn in the a mysterious submarine has been
two kids of his own, holds this east would greet the lest nominat­ sighted off tea Florida eoari and
theory about children:
ing speeches on the West Coast bolli air and surface lookouts are
s e e
“ A child's emotional patterns
being kept tor tee unexplained
are set for life by the time he Is
Exploitation— Democrats In Con­ U-boat. There to no fear teat
two years old. When he's ilk he gress are all set to make tfae the Soviet Union to planning any
speaks with his father’s accent, most of real or fancied differences meek atomic attaek lawched
he gossips about the neighbors between the State and Agriculture ___ a aubmartot, or that sabo­
lika his mother, and he baa the departments over farm export teurs might ba smuggled ashore.
same attitudes Towards other races policies.
The Navy’s toterest stoma from
and religions in life In general that
There la, basically, considerable a desire to spot end study ten
those close to and around him reason to believe that Agriculture characteristics ef tha la test-type 4
have".. .In other words, whatever Secretary Ezra Taft Benson would undersea vessel* ef the Red navy
you do to yourself, you do to your like to move much faster than and check performance against
children, too."
Stele to willing to go to getting rid the Amariceg anhaairlna flotilla.

of fJto low-priM i t

to

ef

Gordon A Craig, Princeton pro­
fessor and specialist on German
militarism, in a recent lecture con­
sidered the danger o( rearming
Germany b&gt; asking: Who will tec
new German military leaden be?
Reports from Germany have said
only those officers who had no
connactlon with the Nazis will be
commissioned But Nazism was
history A longer chapter has been
cnly one short chapter in German
that of the military leadership, an
xious for eeaqueit to Justify its ex
istenee.
It is possible the new teadenhip,
even though non-Nazi, win continue
Ihe old story by reverting to type.
Chancellor Konrad Adenauer,

CAR-TO P SIX

“taka

to

WASHINGTON -P - In deciding
to rearm Germany, the West had
to choose between the potential
danger of revive^ German milltar.aril and the more immediate dan
ger of an aggressive Ruaaia.
The potential danger remains al­
though. starling out, German re­
armament will be under tome con
troUp an armed force of SCO,000
men tied in with Germany's Wait
cm neighbor* and NATO, the
North Atlantic Treaty Orgaatoa
tion.
The United States mora than
five years ago proposed German
rearmament and haa fought for the
idea since. It la coming closer to
being reality. France, remember­
ing three German Invasion!, has
been cool.
In Germany iUelf there Is much
pacifism and opposition to rearms
ment Under the pressure of chan
tng events thii pacifist mood may
evaporate and become again one of
militarism.
The German military leader
ship ha* been' a consistently dom­
inant, antidemocratic force, con­
temptuous of civil authority.

Items From An Oddity Almanac

SAM DAWSON

NEW YORK i f — Mechanical
brains cut down to handle the prob­
lems of the small business man
am being offered in Increasing
number* today. And still more are
1In the building or lasting states.
King-iit* electronic computer!
•re already in the field to handle
scientific and engineering problem*
•o com pi*s that the average man
cant understand what they're try
lag to do, let alone how they do It
They are part of the move toward
automation - with the theoretical
foal a completely automatic f a c ­
tory—and some factory workers
worry lest they spell lots of jobs.
Moat of the companies in the bot­
toms machine industry aim are
tuning to the field of the,smaller
putora for specific
i as helping oil companies tab- (data automatically the flood of am
tow-cuff transaction of t h e i r
- credit card customers, or
ftoanca companies handle mort­
gage loan account'
tingMere are tow of
_____ ___
f the new
|m t facing offered, or premlaed tor
dMivtry within the next year:
Rational Cash Register says
9Mt early to UM it wlli Install tor
•OtomtftUl um the first of Its NaComputers, priced a t ground
. M, and tailored to the anode
Maay business which can
om electronic
to built a
which

RearmamentConcernsTwo Dangers

eio ecaT s iz e , sm o o th b st nnnroniannet, h io h k st

At

*i

M

19

V
Mi
sfr * ;

*

■

1J S S E I

�"H i

Serial fcvjwlA.
*V ‘

WEDNESDAY

Tha First Bsptiit Carol Choir
Will hold rehearsal at 3:30 p.m.
Tha Firat Baptist Frayer Meet­
ing service will begin at 7:30 p.m.
Wa continue with the study of tha
book *A Winning Witness."
Mid-week prayer services of
• F irs t Methodist Church at 7:30
m., followed by hte Commission
on Education meeting.
The Unity Truth Class will meet
In tha Valdez Hotel at 7:45 p. m
with Miss Carolyn Parsons as
teacher. The study book will be
continued. The public Is invited
THURSDAY
Tha First Baptist Carnl Choir
will hold rehearsal at 3:30 p.m.

The First Baptist Crusader
% Choir will hold rehearsal at 6 p.m.
Tha Junior Royal Ambassadors
will meet at tha First Baptist
Church at 7 p.m.
Tha First Baptist Church Choir
will hold rehearsal at 7:30 p.m.
The Azalea Circle of the Harden
Club will meet at the Garden
Center at 8 p. m.
The Palm Circle of the Sanford
Garden Club will meet at D:30 a.
m. at tha home of Mr*. Robert
ffesuman with Mrs. Arthur Pitts
to be co-hostess.
Senior Choir Rehearsal at First
Methodist Church a t 7:30 p. m.

Course On India
To Start Monday
By WSCS Circle
Circle No. Five of the Women’*
Society of Christian Service of
the First Methodist Church met
with Mrs. L. A. Anderson at 2017
Hibiscus Court with Mrs. Brad­
ford Byrd as co-hostcss Monday
at 10 a. m.
Mr*. M. R. Strickland, vicepresident, opened the meeting af­
ter which Mrs. L. B. Clark gave
the devotional.
It was announced that the Mis­
sion Study would start at the next
regular meeting on March 14. The
business meeting will begin at 9:30
a. m and the Mission Study at
10:t5 o’clock. It Is - to be an all­
day affair and members arc asked
to bring covered dishes for Ihc
luncheon. The subject for the
course will be "India Under Three
Flags".
After this the circles' mission
study was given by Mrs. Grady
Herman based on the book "The
Master Calleth For Thee".
Mrs R. U. Hutchison, president
of the WSCS was recognized as a
guest for the morning.
Refreshments were served to
Mrs. I .exile B. Clark. Mrs. J. A
Azcrcilo, Mrs. M. R. Strickland,
Mrs. R. U. Hutchison, Mr*. Louise
Knowles, Mrs. George Stllzrr,
Mrs. S. G. llarriman, Mrs. Carl
Chorpcning Sr.
Mrs R. A. Futrell. Mrs. C. F
Brannon, Mrs. F. B Adams. Mrs.
E. B, Lancy, Mrs. W. B, Nichob
son, .Mrs. E. t&gt;. Kirchhoff, Mrs.
H. M. Rumbley, Mrs. W. P.
Fields, Mrs. Grady Herman, ami
Mrs. Robert Recly.

The Hemerocallis Circle of the
Sanford Garden Club will meet
at the home of Mrs. F. B. Adams,
200S Lake Ave. at 7:45 p. m. Co
hostesses will be Mrs. J. P. Hall.
Mrs. 51. B. Smith and Min Ethel
Riser.
The Camellia Circle of the San9 ford Garden Club will meet at
|
1 a ■&gt;
t p. m. at the home of Mrs. Ralph «
Betts, 1105 E. Fourth Street. Mrs.
R. C. Whitmire will be co-hostess.
The TEL class of the First
Baptist Church will meet in the
A new rirele of the garden club
Chapel at 3 p. m. with Mrs. C. E. of Sanford Is being organized for
Benton and her group as hostesses. Navy wives. Any Navy wife who
Semlnoli Rebekah Lodge No. wishes to become a member Is in
43 will meet in the lOOF Hall at vited to attend the meeting March
I p. m.
8 from 1 to 3 p. m. at the home of
The Sanford Home Demonslra* the chairman, Mrs. V. L. Redficld,
Jl'tlon Club will meet with Mrs, Bro- 414 W 20th St.
&lt;Ue.Williams, 302 Oak Ave., at
The purpose of this mrrtlng Is
|:30 p. m.
to complete the organization of the
Tha Magnolia circle of the San­ circle and collection of dues by
ford garden club will meet with Mrs. G. W. Loir, treasurer, so
Mrs. Joel Field. 228 W. I»lh St. at that applicants can become full
I p . in. Roll call will be answered fledged members of tha Garden
by stating "what kind of program Club of Sanford.
I would like next year."
Mrs. W. Hibbard, vlee-chalrman,
The Grammar School P-TA will
present a program on Jap­
meet in the school auditorium at will
anese
flower arrangements by re
• p. m. All parents are urged to quest of
Mrs. H. Little, program
Attend.
chairman. Mrs. Hibbard has stud
FRIDAY
led in Yokosuka, Japan at the
The Hibiscus Circle of tha Gar­ Kofu School of flower arrange­
den Club will meet at the home ments and also at the Sbogetsu
of Mrs. Joe Melsch on West First School
Bt. at 10 a. m. After a abort busi­
Mrs. George McCall, president
ness meeting a trip to the Lees­ of the Sanfccd Garden Club, will
burg nursery for luneheon will be present in an advisory alalus.
be taken. Each member
will
bring a covered dish.
Noble will give a lesson
The Duplicate Bridge Club will Amelia
on
Esther
of the Bible. Member*
-m e e t in the Yacht Club with ay turged to attend.
• ing to start at 7:45 p. m. and are
Circles of the Womrn of the
play to begin at I o'clock.
Presbyterian Church will
The Dirt Gardeners Clrela of Firit
meet
as
follows: No. 1 Mrs.
the Sanford Garden Club
will Ralph Austin
Smith, chairman,
meet with Mrs. Harry Cushing in with
Mrs. Mary Bnlly, t i l l Myrtle
The Sanford Tourist and Shuffleboard Club will meet at 7: JO p. m. Ave., at 3 p. m.; No. 2 hire. W I,
In tha Club house with entertain- Roche, chairman, with Mr*. Louise
Kent. Join Cardoso, Stetson Uni­ Carman, 100 W. 20th St., at 2:30 p
versity apeaklng on "What Art m.; No. 3 Mri. Claude Howard,
chairman, with Mrs. G. If. Brown,
Flying Saucers".
Tha Dependable Class of the t i l l Park Ave. with Mrs. K. W
’• First Methodist Church will meet Fite aa ro-hoitei* at 3 p. m.; No.
at tha Church at 5:3a p. m. and 4 Mrs D, C. Howard, chairman,
than go to McCall’s Camp for a with Mr*. J. L. Wilkinson, 1209
aupper and meeting. Members are Oak Ave., with Mrs. O. 'C. Mc­
requested to bring table service. Bride as co-hostess at 3 p. m.;
The Mimosa Circle of the San­ No. 5 Mrs. George A, Stine, chair­
ford Garden Club will hold it’s man, with Mrs. W. A. Ludwig, 609
annual birthday luncheon at U:3t E. 4th St., with Mrs. John Elck as
m. at tha home of Mrs. C. R. co-hoiteaa at 9:45 a. m.; No. 9
tley, Golden Lake. Mr*. Frank Mr*. Arthur &amp; Moore, chairman,
L. Woodruff III will icrva a* co­ with Mr*. H. H. McCailin. 1041
MelfonvUJe Ave., with Mrs. P. B.
al ho*tan .
•re* The Jaearanda Circle of the Smith aa co-hostess at 3 p. m.;
Oarden Club will meet at 7:30 p. No. T Mr*, W. D. Simpson, chair­
in. at tha home of Mrs. Joaapb man, with Mrs. A. G. Mrfnnls.
900 Palmetto Ava., with Mr*. P.
Tarlap on Golden Lika.
T. Meeks and Mrs. Fred Dud­
SATURDAY
aa co-hostess at 3 p. m.;
Church Membership Classes for ley
Evening Circle No. 1 Mrs. W S.
boys and girls of Junior Depart­ Bromley, chairman, wills Mr*.
ment ago at Firat Methadlat /Mabel Brown, 1114 Park Ava. with
Church will neat at 10 a. as. la Mrs. John Smith and Mr*. J. a
tha aerial room at McKialay Welter as co-hostesses at • p. m.
Mall.
Evening Circle No. 3 Mrs. M. M.
J
SUNDAY
Land, chairman, with Mrs. Thomae
High attendance day will be Cobb, H I Oak Ava., at 9 p. a .
abas nrsd in Sunday School and
Family Day In tha nornlng wor­
Aid half a teaspoon of dried
ship service at tha CeaWal Bap- cruakad b u ll to a pint, of vary
Mat Church.
hot vlaagar and pour into a bot­
TUESDAY
Sanford Lodge Na. a will ob- tle or jar. Cover tighUy and allow
stand about 10 day*, shaking
serve Good Will Night honoring to
all Master Mssoas from DeBary, tha mixture each day. Then strain
aad the Naval Air Nation. Supper through ehoosocloth and your herb
will be served la the banquet kaB vinegar will be ready to use to
WJ1*—ote Temple promptly at • : »
m. All master masons mo cor­
A Ne. 90S con af fruit or redially invited la attend.
ivtablaa
la one whose net weight
The American Roma Depart■ e a t of tha laniard Woman'* Club ia 19 or IT euacai. Thai* will bo
will moot at C&gt; ■- la tha Club about two aspa of tha fruit or
op Oak Are. Tha program vegetable to th ecus. Same meat
products and rendy-to-sarva soupo
‘
to three No.

Seminole Hi
By YVONNE CUI.t.EN

Most of the Juniors are walklnr
around the halls sporting new
class rings. Every year It seems
like they cause a little more ex­
citement than the year before.
Six weeks exams are half way
over with now, but you don't see
any of the kids at the movies and
other "hang-outs" right now.
Mixed chorus rehearsals for
Glee Chib district started thiweek, and of reurse everybody’*
hoping for a first division, and
working mighty hard at It.
Some gossip: What way this I
heard In Tourhlon’s yestrrday
about hnw sweet, cute and hand­
some Bud Davis ts. and whit a
lucky girl Janice Kinlaw fi. There
are some jealous girls around
SHS, &gt;o Janice vnu sure had better
hang on to a boy like that while
you can . .
Everybody’* sorry to hear about
TerreHe Jta n Nelson and Ilarold
Pate breaking up, hut maybe it
won't be too long before they’re
hack together again. Who’s identi
firation bracelet is it Margaret
Moore’s been wearing around
lately? It’s hard to believe that
Margaret’s going steady but 1
guess miracles do happen.
Randolph Crow’s got a "crush”
on. but then I did say I’d wait
until the next article to put that
In. didn’t I. . . He has been dat­
ing Patti Witte, but I promised
him that I’d keep it a «rerct *o
don't anybody tell PIJiASE . . .
Jimmy Butler was home last
weekend, and Pat Harrington had
a date with him every night he
was home. It must he love. Tough
luck for all you girls who'vv got
crushes on him . . .
Pat Dunn and Alvin Thompson
are still one of the cutest couple*
around anywhere. Shirley Ander
son and Dale Osteen are the new­
est steady couple around and 1
might say one of the cutest and
and best suited.
all for nuw . . .
uGuest
u t n that's
urn, » nil

Garden Club Forms oeseeingy»11 n
Navy Wives Circle
Circle No. Four
Will Participate
In Study Course

L

_____ _____ Peacock------Mrs. H. R. Grier, Ifn . W.
Lasier and Mrs. Dearer Cor#NL

MONDAY
&gt; V * Elsie Knight Orel* of tko
Firat Bsadst CJusrtk will area* at
S u ’JTIke S u rd s wMk Mrs. Ea-

' ••

d m 'i

w.

AazSlaiY vffl Mart a« •

p .« . at *a homo of Mr. aad Mrs.
fctak L. Millar. MU Palnatto
J U . •MtMn. ■

NOTICE
AH Calendar
Listings And
Society News
A rsEagoesU d
By I p . h l Tbs

Garrison Home
Scene Of Meeting
Of WSCS Circle

Circle No, Four of the W. S. C. S
nf the First Methodist Church met
Monday afternoon at the home of
Mrs. J. M. Hayes, 119 W. 16th
Strcc&gt;.
Mrs. John Morgan, chairman,
presided. The devotional was led
by Mrs. W. S. Thornton who open­
ed with prayer and read scrip­
ture from the toils chapter of SI.
John ninth and 10th verse*.
Reports were given, routine busi­
ness disposed of and Mrs. Morgan
urged attendance at the arries ii
study meetings on "India" to be
held at the church. The first will
be Monday which will begin at
10:15 a. m. with a covered dish
luncheon at noon. The following
meetings will be held on March
16, 21, and 30.
Mr*. Robert Easlerday and Mrs.
Ethel H., Piper were welcomed
as visitors. Mrs. Grady Herman,
study chairman, conducted the
study from the book, "The Master
Calleth for Thee."
Refreshments were then served
to the following ladies: Mrs. J. G.
Davis, Mrs. Dora Guerry, Mrs.
T. E. Wilson, Mrs. C. C. Priest,
Mrs. W. J. David. Sirs. Joe J a r­
rell. Mrs. W. V. Bitting, Mrs. R.
D. Priest. Mrs. H srry Dick. Mr*.
R. W. Sturdivant,' Mr*. J- M.
McCaiklll.
Mr*. A. L. Hardesty. Mr*. Roy
Tillis, Mrs. P. H. Wyatt, Mrs. Os­
car Tolar, Mrs. Albert Jarrell,
Mr*. W. S. Thornton, Mrs. Grady
Herman, Mrs. John Morgan, Mrs.
J. Rosa Adams. Mr*. Robert Easterday. Mr*. F.thel II. Piper, Mr*
J. M. Hayes and Misi Aline Chap­
man.

Mrs. Meriwether
Hostess To Circle
Circle No. Three of tha First
Melhodlit Church met recently at
tha b'ime of Mrs. C. J. Meriweth­
er with co-bostes* being Mrs. C.
E. McKee.Tha meeting was opened in, re
gular form and announcements
were made.
Refreshments were served to
Mrs. JL F. Cole, Mr*. C. J. Mcrl
wether, Mrs. J. F. McClelland.
Mrs. C. E. McKee, Mrs. C. F.
Mima. Mrs. A. C. Ponder. Mr*.
R. F. Robinson. Mrs. E. B. Smith.
Mrs, Russell Tench. Mra. R. W.
Turner, Mrs. Nrllla Vaughan, Mrs.
R. T. Warren. Mrs. Mfltoo Wyatt,
Mr*. A. D. Zachary. Min Bessie
Zachary and Mrs. Alice Haynes.

"SHORT HAIRI I
. . . Raya The

National Hair Fashion

Let eur skilled stylist* create ■
new hair de to eesaaiemeat
y«Rr aptiaw wardrobe sad flat­
ter re al Call far aa eaaeiat-

Ey i - Beas Bw tujr
Shop
PBONB MB

FASHION SHOW MODEI.S— Memlwrs of Ihe Nnvnt Auxili-,
nry Air Slntion Sunford Officers Wives Club will model
dibits Louis’ spring and summer fashions at the benefit tea
and fashion show, Friday. March II. The event will be held
nt the Sanford’s WomnnV Club huildim: and all jim fils will
he given to the Forest Park School for Fxiepliomil Children.
Model* left to right are: Front row seated, Mrs. II. S. Holler,
Mrs. H. M. Walker, Mrs. II. W. Olson, Mrs. II. d. I.nyscr. Mm.
W. It. Edwards, Mrs. C. E. Myers Standing, Mrs. A. E. Wall­
er, Mrs. J. K. Dynr, Mrs. F. F. lohnson. Mrs. J. C. Vogel, nnd
Mrs. d . S. Hlakc. (Official US Navy I’ltolo)

Mrs. W. Colbert
Guest Of Circle
C irtlr One nf the Woman's So­
ciety of Christian Service of the
First Methodist Church met Mon­
el*v sMernonn at McKinley Hall
with Mr*. Clyde Ramsey and Mrs.
Lida Stall.
Mr* Itrodle Williams, chair­
man, presided and opened the
meeting with The Lord'* Prayer
Repoit* were given and current
business was discussed. An announcemeul wax made concerning
a series of sessions for Ihe mis­
sion study of India. The first of
these session* will lake place
Mondav at the program meeting
of the WSCS. which xtartx at 10:15
a. m. and end* with a covered
dish tnnrhrnn at noon. Other ses­
sion* will lake plare nn following
Wednesday and Monday evening*
All member* wrre urged In at­
tend these well planned and inter­
esting meetings.
Mr* N. V. Farm er gave the de
votinnal. A guest speaker. Mrs
Wilma Colbert gave an interest­
ing review of the mlxsion study
rhap'.er, Wives and Mothers of the
Bible
Delicious refreshment* w e r e
served by the hostesses. Those
present were Mrs. Harry Brown,
Mr.* Mabel Blount, Mr*. S. P
Bolvn, Mrs. I J. Boyette, Mrs.
M. W Castle, Mr*. N. V. Farmer,
Mrs. L. P. Hagan, Mr*. J. R.
Ilouk, Mr*. Ruth Lundquisl, Mrs.
M. E Moje, Mr*. W. B. Moye.
Mr*. R. M. Mason. Mr*. II. B
McCall, Mr*. Clyde Ramsey, Mr*
A. B Steven*, Mr*. Lida Stall.
.Mr*. Ilrodie William*. Mrs. M A
Wirth. and guest, Mrs. Wilma
Colbert.

(p s A A o n a h

Match II ha* hern cho*cn as the
dale for a study on India at the
First MethudiM Church, it wav an
nounred at the Monday morning
meeting of Circle Six of the Wo­
man’s Society of Christian Ser­
vice which wa* held at the home
of Mrs, John Garrison. Thi* study
l* to begin at Id a m. with a cov­
ered dish luncheon at noon, will be
followed by studies on March 16,
21. and 30 at 7:30 p in.
Mr* W W Tyre, chairman of
the rirele. opened the meeting
with prayer while Mr*. G. B. Hud­
son, devotional chairman, used
a* her topic. “Christian Love” ,
taken from John One. chapter
four, verses 7-11 and 20 21.
Regular monthly report* were
given at which lime it was an­
nounced that a market basket
sate will hr held at the April meet­
ing when Mr* R. L. Clicquennoi
will be hostess.
Mr* Eva llorkev. study book
chairman, continued with "The
Mas'*? Calleih For Thee" using
the chapter on Mary and Martha
Following the business session
a light refreshment course wa*
served to Mrs W. W Tyre. Mrs
G B Hudson, Mr*. M B. Baker,
Mr*. J R Calhoun, Mrs. R. L
Clicquennoi, Mrs. J. R Crawford,
Mrs. Eva llarkey, Mr*. W A
Hunter, Mr*, Clark Leonardy,
Mr*. M t.. Nichols, Mr*. Walter
Price, Mrs C. L. Wallis, and two
guests, Mr*. Jennie Stint) and
Mrs. J UeNcxing.

Mr. and Mra. Harry L. Lindsey
and daughter* Martha and Panic
wer* Sunday guest.* of Mr and
Mr*. Edison Goit and Mr*. George
li. Lind*e&gt;.

Local TB Patients
Will Be Honored
By Presbyterians

Mr* Donald If. Norton and Mrs
George II Lindsey of Geneva went
on the Florida Audubon Society
Print River Boat Trip Sunday
from Mt. flora to Leesburg.

Plan* to sponsor a shower for
Seminole County TB Patient* were
formulated at the meeting of
Evening Circle No. 2 of Ihe First
Presbyterian Church, Monday at
the home of Mrs. John Burke.
15(&gt;9 Palmetto Ave Co-hostesses
wete Mrs 11 P. Lanier and Mr*
Henry D'Amico.
The aforementioned shower will
be the April project for live cir­
cle. and members will be notified
articles suitable to bring to the
next meeting.
Mrs. A L Lyons wa* appointed
flower chairman Announcement
was made of a Family Night to be
at tha church March 3t ,
Mr; Victor Greene taught the
Bible lesson and Mrs. Harris Fold*
presented Let'* Talk About It, one
Evangelism. Mr*. C. W Johnson,
rhairman, presided over the meet
ing.
Other* present were: Mrs. Al
Case. Mrs W. J. King. Mrs. Jes
vie White, Mrs, Thomas Freeman
Mr* L. E Walker. Mr*. Thomas
Ratliff, Mrs. A. E Kipp, Mrs
Harry Weir, Mrs. W E. Dodson,
Mr*. Joe Corley, Mrs. Richard
Packard. Mr*. Robert 8. Brown.
Mr*. Dick Aiken and Miss
Rebecca Stevens, Miss Gloria
Worthing and Miss Mary Earle.

Mr. and Mr*. Harold Magalia
and son* Tommy and Stevie from
Anderson, S C. are visiting in
Sanford with .Mrs. Magaha’s sis­
ter .Mr*. S D Allred and her bro­
ther lummy Brown.
Mi*v Vena Woodenek returned
from Jacksonville after spending
a few dav» with her brother, F. C.
Woodcock, who underwent surgery
at the St. Vincent* Hospital.
Mr. and Mr*, J. E Butler Sr.
returned to Phoenix, A rir. after
spending a few day* with Miss
Versa Woodcock, .Mr*. Butler*
sister.
It will lake about 20 minutes
In a moderate oven In thoroughly
heat a rouplc of. jar* of ravioli.
For good flavor sprinkle the ra
violl wilh grated
Parmesan
cheese as you put each layer into
the dish. Serve ihe baked ravioli
with a salad of greens, hits of
fillrled anchovies and garlic
French dressing

Summer Style and Comfort, T oo!

Grammar P-TA
Sets Day Aside
For 'Bull Session'
Tha Grammar School P-TA will
meet, Thursday. March 10. at *
p ni. In the school auditorium
Mrs. Rachael Brinion h is aecrpl
rd tha P-TA presidency for the
balance of the year.
An old fashioned "bull session’’
with Herald Hcckenbsrh, principal
as moderator, will be the pro
gram for the evening. This open
forum will give parent* snd Irarhers an opportunity to ask ques­
tions, discuss problems, and make
suggestions.
All parents are urged to attend
and to come with a question tc
ask.

V K f lY 3 (
LA8T TIME TODAY
FOR ACAKMY AWARDI
I 6IEL6U0 • LOUIS CAUttW

mono o'i t itx

• can t cajoom
MaOMN VMhi

JULIUS
CAESAR
PEATUBB TIME
1:31 - 4:03 . «iM . 8:39

' ('&lt;&lt;&gt;/rc
^

v*

$49.95

CLOTHES ^

STARTS TOMORROW

Clap M t In atyle. In a new Curie* Suit that haa
l9 everythin? you want . . . good color, light
weight, new atyling. Wrlnkle-rchiniant dacron
and wool, will hold a preau and keep you cool
M d coatfortabla.

B . E . PU RC ELL CO
12t W. lat St.

X

.1

Sanford — Orlando

Phone 174

Miss War moth
Is Honor Guest
A lingerie shower for Mi** Mar
gie Warmoth was given by the mo­
thers of the children in her class
at the home of Mrs. Ralph Wight
H. 1817 Plumosa Ave., at 8 p. m
Monday night.
Games were played wilh prize*
going to Mrs, Jack C. Morrison
and Mr* R T. McCaskill.
The gifts were prevented to the
honorre under a pink and white
umbrella. On the handle was a
huge white bow from which hung
streamers of orange blossom*. In
the 1*vine room a spring theme
wa* r a tried out with sweet peat,
and roses. Ir the dining room the
same theme was carried out with
the table being covered with a
white linen Clothe holding a floral
arrangement of white sweet pea*
and orange blossoms in the eenttr. Placed in the middle of the
arrangement was a white bow
and irrnw to carry out a cupid
Ihc.ne. Mrs. S. W. Kempson pro­
vided over the punch bowl.
Those present were Mrs. J K
Davis, Mrs. Ralph Dean, Mrs
Owen Forgtison, Mr*. Rogrr Har­
ris, Mrs. Ed Higgins J r , Mrs. S
W. Kempson, Mr*. John MrCnrt,
Mr* Alex Mclnnis Jr,, Mrs. Jack
C. Morrison, Mrs Donald Mvcr*.
Mr*. N. E Pell, Mrs. Allen Wal­
lace J r , Mrs. R L. McKnlght.
Mrs O. P. Herndon Jr. Mrs. Nash
Kennedy.
Mr» Clyde Brooks, Mrs. Wil­
liam Chagnon, Mr*. John Hay
Jr., Mrs. Aiulry Liibcek, Mrs. R.
P. McCaskill, Mrs. William A
Norris, Mrs. Douglas Stenstrom.
Mrs. Dcllon I'evlon, Mrs. T, E.
Wood ham, Mr* I J. Rucker, Mrs,
Raymond Bennett, and Mr*. Ralph
IVighi II.

THE SAVFOnn HEPAT.n
Wed. Mar. 3, 1955
Page 5

Circle No. Seven
Meets On Monday
Sirs James Williamson wax hos­
tess to Circle No. Seven of the
First Methodist Churrh when it
met at her home. Monday evening.
Serving a* co-hoscss was Mrs.
Morris Ferguson,
The meeting was ealled to order
by the chairman. Mr*. Roger
Harris which was followed by tho
inspirational devotion given by
Mrs. R. V. Thompson.
Roll call and minute* were given
by Mr*. W, M. Kirk and the study
was presented by Mrs. G. G.
Myers Mr*. Grady Herman and
Mrs. W R Herron were visitors
to the circle to discuss what the
circle* on a whole were planning
for the forthcoming year.
Deliriou* refreshments w e r e
irrvrd to Mrs Roger Harris, Mr*.
Carl Chorpcning Jr., Mr*. W, A.
Morris, Mis. G. G. Myers. Mr*.
C. O Pate. Mrs. A II. Rcokwith
Jr.. Mrs. Genpva Brantley, Mr*.
Earl Bostick, Mrs. Morris Forguson.
Mrs. Cecil Jones. Mis, W. M.
Kirk. Mrs R M. Jones, Sir* E.
L. Ley J r . Mrs Emory Spo:r,
Sirs. R. E Thompson. Mrs Rob­
ert Wyrhr, Mrs. B. C. Young,
Mrs. C. If. Hicks and Mrs. James
Williamson.

LAST TIME TON Hi I IT
STARTS 6:35

m m ACROSS
D R IV E R '

Juke Box Dance
At USO Tonight
Tonight at the USO the regular
"Juki- Box" danre will be held
The Def.and girls will be busies*,
cs.
There will be hot coffee and
cookies* dancing and fun for all
so come on down and join In. Sen­
ior hostesses will be from the
Presbyterian Church.
Cook a package of dried mixed
fruit wilh a few lldn slice* of
lenion and add sugar to taste;
serve in a pretty gla** bowl and
accompany with a thin custard
satire. You cun make tho sauce,
if you like, from a package of in­
stant pudding-and-pic filling mix.

o f r a m i tm
tniim tfnuT aP L w i
k
nmniwm. ntha
7:11 - 16:28
n .u s

ft

SHtUDlM! w." i. TICHNICOirS

ato--y"CMAIOCOKT! U*£UCHtlSTUN• v t

Ul*y/ f**y*4Lre*«%,I, VtHuMlml ‘Fnt**4
toUMUPflMJl •toorMb mu4HLJTUI
8:18 Only

CARTOON

Join the Easter Parade
in a Bobbie Brooks Suit

�*

•

7 •

P m ff ^ Wefl. War. •, I*W THE BATTFmin WBHALP

Sports

Today in Baseball

Roundup

Ailment
its Simmons

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
I f the Philadelphia Phillie* are to be pennant contenders,

they’ll need nil the help they ran get from ace left-hander
Curt Simmons. Without an effective Simmons, there’s no
telling how embarrassed rookie Manager Mayo Smith might
b« in September
That (am* old ailment that
plagued him throuah most of tha
1U54 season ia back and Curt la
behind tha reat of tha hurlera In
tha Phillies' Clearwater, Pirn.,
tamp. No sooner did ha begin
throwing tost week than tha arm

began to aeht.

He waa aiked If It felt any hat-

pointed
Team

ter today, and ha aald gloomily:
"Not yet It ferla like It'a in
there pretty deep,"
Tha ache la at the top of hla
arm, and although It (withered him
moat of laat year, Curt elll! man­
aged to win 14 games. It uaually
Pothered him after ha pitched,
rather than before.
So far, May has been lucky. E in p t for Simmons' pain he has
had few trouble*. Hi* club la huatllng and he llkei the look* of
soma of the young pltehars.
Rut another newcomer to the
major league ranks Isn't having
thing* so easy. Pink Hlggina of
tha Boston Red Sol watched out­
fielder Carl Olson amaih Into tha
left field wall In Sarasota and
suffer a mild cerebral eoneuaalon.
The flychaaer waa taken to a
hospital. He waa resting today al­
though h* suffered abrasions of
the left ear and left hand.
Jo* Black, tha big Negro fsatPallar who created a sensation
with the Brooklyn Dodger* In 1062
only to drop Into oblivion the pact
two years, has Impressed Manager
Walt Alston.
Hr took a turn on the mound
In an intrasqusd gams yesterday,
and Alston liked what he saw.
"Dlack looked good," said the
skipper. "He la working on a halfspead pitch which may halp him
considerably,"
In tha Milwaukee Braves and
New York Yankees camps at
Bradenton and St. Petersburg
there were old stories being r*&gt;
told.
Outfielder Andy Pafko of tha
Braves and first baseman Joa Colline of th* Yanks were fighting
off aspirants for their Jobe.
The veteran Pafko la being chal­
lenged for the right field berth
by Henry Aaron.
Collin* has a whole hatful! of
m ala Including Eddie Robinson,
Bill Bkowron and Frank Leja.
Manager Casey Stengel said ha
Isn't preparsd to answer the In­
evitable "Who'* on first?"

BT m
ASSOCIATED PRESS
, FJw of tha highest icorei la
A t Southta titrn Conference were
aimed today to the Aiioclated
Preat l»U AO - SEC baiketbaU
team.
Denver Braekeen of Mississippi
waa a unanimous choice of the
eoichei and players, who ielecle&lt;J
lb* team for the AP. The Ole Mlia
sharpshooter polled 181 polnta of
g potiible 169 and won the poiltlon
of. honorary captain.
Braekeen'* teammate* of the All
1 Mar unit are Jerry Harper of Atet barea, Bob Burrow of Kentucky
and Ed Wlanar and Carl Wldaeth
• of Tanneiiet. Alt of laat year’a
AA-SEC team membera were sen1 tori ao there were no repeatera,
’ but Braekeen, Wiener and Widielh
moved ap from tha 1864 aecond
i team.
|
Averaging more Sian IT polnta
I a gam* aU aaaaoo to pica Indivi­
dual scoring record*, and rewriting
the Ole Mlia record book In the
' doing. Braekeen was named on the
Strut team of every ballot ascept
MW. He waa plaead on the lecond
team of that ballot
Wlanar and Burrow were named
to a first second or third team
hefto au every ballot east Wldaeth
waa left off one ballot and Harper
toned to get a vote on two.
coaches and playen wart
to vote for membera
toama.
Ou • M l point ayatem, Harper
werivsd 144 point votea, Wiener
US. Borrow 1U and Wldieth lit.
Titian* ace Hal Cermlnl, who
ad up M points In tha balloting,
aded a strong aecond team
Corvinl's mates are Jim Aihmoru
of Miaaiiitppl lu te , No. I acorei
Is lb# SEC, George Una of Ala
By FRANK BCX
bsma, Bob Emrick of Florida aik AP Newafro tare* Rporta Editor
Bill Kirkpatrick of Adbuni
VERO BEACH. Fla.—To the
Harper, scoring and rebounding Intinerant baseball writer* one
M l of t o Alabama team which Item stand* out among the II
B in Kentucky a b a ttle far I
major league training camps ia
aanfirir t shswptoashtpe an ti tha Florida. It la th* number of re­
t o d game waa played, I t o turning servicemen on hand. But
toBaat maa on toe AB-SBC aqaad when notes are counted there's n*
LoalsvtR*. Ky. wkte to 11 toot Tad Williams or a Willi* M an
8 Burrow, also a tremaadoua beek- coming berk to haunt pitchers.
hoard maa, la aeut at 6-7. Braekeen
A year age at this aprawllng
by tb* Brooklyn Dodera M ossa
big ben* for a third
•tonight National League
teg average sf M
mo, Brack*** averaged aaat waa Dos Newcombs who had
a fame duriag the tea- Jnet retained from too Army. But
M.79 and Wldseto 19.76, the SO-gsaa* victor ad IN I turned
•wt te be a bust, winning only mine
I and Burrow If Jf.
to 1964 with alx sample**
Dedgto official» MO! toy* N ew
will supply the pitching
aaotoor of atigtoOtty
otoore have aaol
t* overhaul ib* Giant* but
a Hickory
Karaor andf Brachooa,
ir i
a n not eo confident now
are toe only ■ waken
th* 890-pound Negro.
W the lithe athlete
fr*m
at lm» yean age.
' to* DeTigers end Pittebvg Pirate*

■ 7 OATLI TALOOT
TAMPA (ft—Thara Is a
fa rm
lion 00 Uis part at
oracle* this spring to write oil toe
Chicago White Sox, to suggest that
thay winded themsoivee chasing
the Indians and Yankees the past
three years and now are likely
to fall back into the pack.
This feeling to not shared by the
club’s new manager Marty Marion,
who has made a sreat recovery
from the case of "defeatist com­
plex" which was ascribed to him
by the Baltimore owner* when
they canned him two winter! ago.
There probably never was any­
thing wrong with Marty that a
lew good ballplayers couldn't have
cleared up.
The former gtesl shortstop be­
lieves, a* Paul Richards did be­
fore him, that the Sox are good
enough to go all the way if only
on* man should get hoi at the
plate and help Minnie Mlnoso
drive In some runs. He thinks it
is that close between his leam and
the two front runners, and he
would like a chance to prove IL
"Few people reallie tha differ­
ence on* more'good hitter In the
ineup can make to a ball club,"
he said. “Or maybe more of them
do after what WiUia Mays did for
the Giants last season. AU I ask
is for either George Kell or Walt
Dropo to coma back with a big
year and I’ll guarantee to show
them something. I think one of
them might do It too, the way
they’ve been • looking."
Kell,,* former American League
batting champion, waa a spavined
hone when trader Frank Lane Rid
him from the Hutton. Red Soa early
last season. Instead of finally solv­
ing the club’s thlrd-biie problem,
Kel*. couldn’t run a lick and fi­
nally underwent an operation on
hi* right knee in August. It ap­
pears to have mended well.
Dropo, a first baseman, waa ob­
tained from Detroit during tha win­
ter in exchange for Ferris Fain.
WhUe Dropo, on hla erratic record,
would appear to represent a big­
ger gamble than Kell did, there
la a happy feeling In camp that
this could be th* big fellow’a year.

LaSalle, San Francisco Win
As NCAA Tournament Begins
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There's a
NEW YORK
scholarly speahiag •oUeg* b*i
ketbsn fan in BL
standing ap for th* coetm srtlal
bonus rule. It may not b* perfect,
he says, hut It's ■ step In the right
direction.
He's Eddie Hickey, toe
little guy who doable* *s
coach sad athletic dlraettw af I t
Louis University 9* wen •• bring
a fan and student of th* gam*.
Th* nil* grants a bonus shot la
a player sinking a tree throw. This
la a change from too praviou*
"bonus" regulation which givo 1
playsr a second chine* after mist­
ing ■ foul shot, and teadt Hickey
to term th* present rut* "prof*
re as in th* right direction."
Th* bonus rule M taking t hoi
rap, says Hl*k*y—"to* aiaoh cnL
letsm too soon."
It shouldn't "bo condomnod foe
failure to aceompUah a euro-aU far
aU the varisbl* in th* gamo," ho
lays, "nor should to* hoau* rate
bo charged with too direct r t f
possibility of cutting down to*
amount of fouling. It's objoctlv*
wai to c n it* * workable incross*
in tha penalty tar to* p*ri a**l
foul."
That’* aa tetorwttsg dadraa* *I
to* rule, which aypoari handed
fur to* Junk pH* next mooth whoa
th* coUago rules oommltte* goo*
Into actio*. A majority of coaches
who have commented on too rule,
aa wcU as 1ports writers, figure
they can do without K next raasa*.
That follows to* patten of Into.
College basketball k getting to b*
a lot Ilk* a woman baying 1 net
oa it Marches tor 1 stUsfgetery
answer to fouling end gam**end­
ing free to ap*. It doffs on* rate
and trie* another. Than doffs to il
and trie* a third.
And Ilk* a woman, R appear*
collage basketball can't stand to
open a new eeama with test year'*
hat
Hickey's lea* eomprombe with
rate eriUra to that there
may be too sever* ■ penalty for
an offensive foul which match**
toot ef a defensive tool and R ut
there U dmtot about th* necessity
of .1 change In th* tool penalty te
toe laat to n * minutes when a find
to worth ai
throw*
gam*
dm .
*d l«
Idaho

of • twin bfil at So* V ra»
Ia tha opener Seattle spur*.
too second half te thrash
State, to* Rocky Mourn

At ■ Rom , Okte*
turned hath Oklahoma OHy
te a
ontrioo.
With A l
■eovUtef the
an NCAA Toe
cord of N potato te a etegt* 1
AU
Th* Rxplorere hold “
BUI
tested 99
to fat n minute* a* mark of 99, wbteh they aot te teal
the Baa
ysaris final
to an 66-66 victory in
M.

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DELAND 18 —Stetson today an­
nounced Its 1953 golf schedule:
March 94 Sanford NAS at San­
ford; M Jacksonville NAS at Jack­
sonville; March Sl-April I State
PHOENIX, Aria. (A*)-Bring the betting hare of th* World Seriee
Intercollegiate Tour*ament at Mi­ hasn’t brought Duaty Rhode* any closer to being a regular outfielder
ami U at Rollins at Orlando; IX
FSU hare; IS FSU at TaMahaaaae; with tha rhemplon New Yerk Giants.
On the ether hand, there 11 no chance Manager Leo D um ber will
2ft Rollins here; 99 Sanford NAS
bare; May Jacksonville NAS here. suggest that Mr. Rhodes be peddled, Lee says be medt such s sug­
gestion teat spring.
Duaty Isn’t to* happy about It*
yet the fact remain* — he's tha
’• No. 1 pinch hitter, but he
won't ho playing regularly In too
outfield sine* hi* defensive ability
hsa drawn no ravo notices,
"In center field we have Wtllte
.Maya," aey*' Duaty. “In, right
Arid Don Mueller. Ia laft Aald
Browne in 1961, to* • foot I
At Baraaota the Boston Rod Ben Monte Irving. 1 think I should get
pillow for the bench. It gets
athlate hit .180 In SI games after expect &gt;pitching help from Dick *■wfnliw
tamwwt lea anane tinwLa '*
a .340 mark for M games at Col­ Brodowaki. Th* N-ytar-old right awfully hard in some parks'
When th* big Southerner
orado Spring*. However, t h e bandar from Bayonne, N, J., di­
Browns traded him to Detroit, The vided 10 derisions with Boston la off the bench as a pinch hitter
White Box since have tried to buy 11163 after a T-l record at Louis­ teat season he was tha (courage of
him buck for 1100,000,
ville. Fur* Throneberry, 93, will the National Leagua and ClevuI pitchers. Hla homar that won
Th* Tigers also have pitchers be battling for an outfield berth.
Werner BLrrer and BUI Black and U 1941 he hit NO as a Red Box th* m a t World Series game w ont
be forgotten. He hit n tingle and
outfit Icier John Phillip* a* a*rrle* rookie in N games.
In the aecond game—
returnees. Blrrrr had a 6-10 re­
At Tampa toe White (ex have
incidentally caught ton Ay
cord at Buffalo In IN I, white ft* JjH rito , at, • toartetep.
that ended to* contest All told
Black waa 11-t at Baa Antenla In
he knocked la sovea run* with fear
K.
hit* ia ate tia ra at h a t
Over at Fort Mjror*. to* Pirate*
Ton might tol.it Dusty,
have shortstop Dick Groat, 14, a
A n t name, Jim, la tornfiy
•taadout who came from Doha hi . A* Oowwater the Phillies have
IN I to hit JS1 for Plttebnrgh hi hM*e for Gerald Clayeemb, aa _____ _ that 'saM
M game*. Th* lowly Pirn tee ate* wtoldM whe served In Germany Cleveland.
have Dtek Bartiromo, a first haam
T * ," he any*. *1 M a t get to*
- rHrtetom
two riyht-hawdoi pit- h ^ b N
torifl from that I dtt tram a
id Loo
chera, Ronald
Lee Klin*
Xlla* and llU
BUI hit JT6 ftar Terre Haute!™'* ** single ia toe llth iaaiag with toe
BolL Bartiromo, 33, v s i te Ger­
Out wuut toe Cuba h e v t __
many withth aBorite Command. .
teto Barry Chitl, a catcher
Brooklyn. Two day* later I
A slick fioldor, ko kit astir J&gt;0 whn ia BS names kit JT4 ia 19X3.
aether hit that won. Tan al­
te IN games te IN I. Rite* loot
so* a kick when yen beat
all aorta decisions with FHtekargh
•oil, St, s oooond bosomoa.
Far toe regular teate 'U white Boll was 6-1 that year
m m . Aria, hot ho kit only
with Burlington, N.C. te Clara &gt;
te M game* ft*. bdteaapoUa
haU aad 114 with Bristol, Va* te
sot part af %L
Clam D. At Bristol, Boll pHrited
BAIT LAMBOfa. MUM. (ML s Taakooa. af ooomo. *m
ton* ae-klttera, two af tons te
mwcoaota*. With to* Ftratra h* W te ■artta, wh* to due baek te ti*
dropped hi* only dorletem
April Karate, a M -ponad pockte to*
Me af trnamite, ted the Taakoes
te t o * IBM World Boris* *•*m m l of Bratolyn which tedtrartiy
ted te to* firtas of Dads** pUot
a#

' round gsmds last night.
They ware Joined In the sacond
round by Canlalua, Viltenovu,
Marquette, Penn Btato, Bradley
and Scattla, who in turn elimin­
ated Williams, Duka, Miami of
Ohio, Memphis State, Oklahoma
The Seminole High School Base­ City and Idaho State.
The eight winning teams along
ball team opened official practice
yesterday on the ball field aeroit with eight other*, who received
from the high school. Coach BUI first-round byes, play next In
Fleming la being satiated by Cart Philadelphia; Evanston, HI.; Man­
Kelllea. Practice la being held hattan, Kan.; and Conrallls, Or*.
from 1:30 to I o’clock each week —the altea of the aecond-round
games Friday. The winner! coma
day.
Only three tettennen returned to grip* Saturday to datarmlna
from teat year’t team. The the four teams for the semifinals
enaehea, however, have more thaa and final in Kansas City March IS
30 candidates from whom to pick a and 19.
15-man squad. Almost every poalHere’s how th* aecond round
aliapea up:
llon la open.
Jim Hawkins la the returning
At Philadelphia — Ivy League
pitcher far th* Celery Feds and champion Princeton (13-10) er Co­
Johnny Jones will be th* letterman lumbia (17-7) va. LaSalle (tl-4)
behind the plate. The other tetter and Canislua (17-9) va. Vitlanova
man returning to the squad is (17-9).
Larry Batea, who played in the
At Evanston—Kentucky (22-3),
outfield teat season.
Southeastern Conference chainHawkins and Jones will be at ilon, vs. Marquette (23-3) and
their old positions while Bates may owa (17-4), Big Tan champion,
move to the Infield.
va Pana State (1S-S).
At Manhattan—Southern Meth­
Th* Feds will open their regular
season about March 23. A 10 to to odist (16-7), Southwest Confer­
game card Is planned. The cow ence champion, va. Bradley (3-19)
fcrcnc* tournament will be held and Colorado (16-8), Big Seven
the first week In May and the dis­ champion, r t Tulsa (30-6), selaetrict tournament win be played ted to represent the Mteaouri Val­
ley after finishing In a tla for
th* aacond week of that mot*.
first place with 8L Louis.
At Corvallis — Oregon Btate
(21-7), Pacific Coast Conference
champion, vs. Seattle (21-6) and
Utah (33-8), Skyline Conference
r i a t r n arst— s/i*
champion, va. Seta Francisco (gi­
(nr*I Half OeUv Om W»I
ll.
m i as*'
S D lr r c t Aim
4.11
1 Bus* maa
Th* Ivy League title, which
I n t a n n Boy
_ _
»■**
wound up In a three-way dead­
Q uintets ( • - ! ) | 1 M »
•B ro il) HACK— l/ta — T ta t MW lock, will be determined tonight
fSiria* Hell Dali? P klr)
T n i u h t Bit
I M S s.aa 4.as when Columbia faces Prineetea ia
a.ta M t New Brunswick, N. J.
S l .i l t l r n r n t t
a is
&lt; Brssxart
LeSalls’a Explorers eliminated
Qiilniela tl-f) *a*1
West Virginia, th* Southern Con­
IValtr Doubts as I*
THinp bach — a/* * - *Jm# at
ference champions, 96-81 la th*
a Party Curt
«.•* j.*s ».
4 Tuttou t.lklt
9.1* •■*• windup ef a Madison Sonar* Oarden triple-header ia New Yerk.
f y . ( U Earlier, Canislua downed William*
| G h o s t W in #
Is* 73-60 sad Vilteneva outlasted
is. at !**
Hornrd Pro#
• 4S Duke, th* Atlantic Coast Confer­
T A n o th s r H onarm oo*
Quintal* (a-a1 rasa
ence represent*lira, 74-79,
Ia a Lexington, Ky* doublea.**
Marquette wae extended
U ssrs? ""
t i t * 1,M
4.1# __
aril me before subduing
stubborn Miami eg Okie, to* Mid.,T t h uach —
w
lr. For#.
American Conference kingpin, N lira
7*. Pena Stem withstood a tete
Indian Ivors
state &lt;a-4t_M*e, _
rally 9* dispose «f Msmphte State
lulatal*

Seminole High
Baseball Team
Begins Practice

Ex-GIs Hit Training Camps,
But Nary A Mays Or Williams

C

Basketball Coach
AI Sf.Louis U.
Backs Bonus Rule

LaSallu, the defending champion, and San Francisco,
the No. 1 team in. the Aiioclated Press poll, are off winging
In the NCAA basketball Tournament. They won decisively
over West Virginia and Waat Taxaa, respectively, in first-

Rhodes N o Closer
To Outfield Job

Stetson Gives
Golf Schedule

Teams Defeat
West Virginia
And W. Texas

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�*

r sw Years Remain
To Fight Cold War
WASHINGTON W )—Th&lt;* United S:*tr« hits only about th r u to
four year* left to carry on the cold war with Russia from a position
of overwhelming military mirhL
After 10R0. the power relationahip will become mora nearly bal*
anced. That will mean InternaUonal political advantage for Ruaaia.
Somewhere about that time, un
less there have been profound
changes In the Soviet etata and
its leadership, the Russians may
develop a technique of dtplnmocy
by ultimatum. They may attompt
tc take over border atates merely
by threatening hydrogen bomb de­
struction.
These points, particularly aa to
timing, stand nut directly or by
Implication in British Trim* Min­
TOKYO un— Gen. Maxwell D. ister Churchtll'i statement to tha
Taylor wai named U. S Far East House of Commons yesterday.
commander and head of the
Churchill noted the boast last
United Nation* Command yeater- month by Soviet Foreign Minister
a«y
V. M. Molotov that Rusaia may
Effective April 1, he will suc­ have hydrogen bomb superiority
ceed Gen. John E. Hull, who H over the United State*. Actually,
retiring et hit own request after Churchill said, the United States
IT years in the Army.
is ths only country now able to
Appointment of Taylor was ex­ deliver an H-bomb attack “on a
pected- He has been given in­ few hour* notice.” He added, how­
creasing responsibilities In recent ever, that Russia ih three or four
months until he commanded all years will have H-bomb power to
ground forces In Japan, South Ko­ cripple the West.
n a and Okinawa.
Churchill's comments a b o u t
Hull wtll spend a month In the power relationships a rt borne out
office of the Army chief of stiff by the best Information available
kt Washington before he retires. h ire In official quarter*.
He has been Far E atl commander
Russia Is still behind In the rare.
elnce October 1853.
U is not enough to her to explode
Taylor essumed command of the a thermonuclear bomb. To uee It
•th Army In Korea Feb. 11, 1933. with military effectiveness, she
HI* place a* commander of ground must be able to deliver It under
forcea la Japan, Okinawa and rigid conditions on a target. Offi­
South Korea will be taken by Lt. cials say she is not now able to
Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer, deputy do that, and will not be able to
chief of ataff for plans and re- for perhaps three or four years.
aearch. Lemnitzer will be replaced
The conviction Is that mean­
by MaJ. Gen Jame* M. Gavin, ai- while the United States as a mil­
llitan t chief of ataff for operations. itary power, including atomie
Taylor ia In Thailand to check weapons, to meet with reasonable
• a the military altuation.
confidence any Red challenge any­
He la known for hie record of where.
bravery and a quiet, studious per­
In general, this appraisal give*
sonality which does not advertise fateful significance to the last two
his knowledge of eight tanguiges, years of th* present Elsenhower
Including Japanese, Chinese end administration and to the first
Korean.
two years of the next, regard!***
In World War II Taylor went of who ia president.
•n a dangerous mission behind the
lines prior to the Italian surrender.
SPEED. RUFF, GENTLE
He joined his surrounded division DRAW DRIVING SENTENCE
in the Batngne forest by a daring
DETROIT UP) — Speed, Ruff
piriehute jump during the Battle and Gentle drew reckless driving
of the Bulge.
sentences in Traffic Court yester
day.
Speed Rain Jr., and Ruff A.
NAVY REQUESTS IIS*
BOSTON UP) — A Navy re- Lewis were fined $25 and their
qutat for $180 to transport 100 operator's licenses were suspended
aeemen to march In the annual for six months.
Gentle Willis got the roughest
Evacuation Day — St. Patrick's
Day parade March IT In South sentence—five days in Jail and a
Boston drew a broadside last six-month driving baa.
VlTht from the City Council.
NEW BETSY BOSS rLAOS
'Anybody could almost hit a
CAMBRIDGE, MASS, (lit) golf ball from the Fargo Building
Naval headquarters , . , to the Too many little red (lags went up
Starling point of the parade," for Betsy Rms, Rideltffe College
said Councilman-William J. Foley, student and namesake of the wo­
man credited with making Ameri
I World War II Navy ofifetr.
ca’i brat flag and Radeliffe'a Bat*
ay paid * |10 fint.
The fine was Imposed In District
Court after police testified her car
i s th h ro i wT n r v a n c n r v r v was parked 18 times beiide park,
Jt i»&lt;ir, aRssiani.K l o i n t r , ing meters where the little red
. n .o n in a , i s r u n a a r c .
flag showed overtlma parking.
IK IIK: EftTATK o r

TV Awards Are Made In Hollywood

Gen. M. D. Taylor
Made Commander
Of Far East Forces

GENOA a COMPTON.

Deceased
To ai.l c n rn iT o n * and ru n SONS HAVING CI-AIMM Oil DKIIVNOM AIIAINBT HAItl KUTATK;
“ oa a nd each of you *r# hereby
notifie d a nd required (n present

Legal Notice
IN

c n iN T

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tiik

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i t IKIK. IKKIVH.K OH v r t ,

■ T t T l i o r M .nNIUA . IN PRO*
any claims and demands which you.
■ ATM.
or tllh tr of you,-may have against
the estate of ni'NDA n. r o u p . IN Itli THM r n T A T K O P
HO WARD F R E D E I t l t K WITT*
TON. deceased, 1st* o f said County,
MCHIKBB
to th* County J u d g e *f SEMINOLE
Deceased
“l e r l d a , a l his efflc# In
O A l l . WHOM IT R A T CON*
house «f said C oua ty at
(E M Vi
SANFORD. Florid*, w ith in s i g h t
Nolle* I* h s r e b r e lv s n t h a t a n c a l e n d a r m onth* from t h s t im e of
th* first pnbllc allon of th is notice. Nie non Ar t * ha* fiud n»r rinai
E a c h s l t l m or dsm and shell ho In r e p o rt a* A d m l n lr t r s t r l a /d/h/n,
w r i t in g , a n d shall s t a t e th* pise*
* f r e oldtnr* a n d post offloa ad*
d r e s s c f t h s claim ant, end shall b*
g w e r a to h r th* c la im a n t, t h s l r
a g e n t , o r a t t s r a s r , and so y such
e U i s a ^ r dsm a n d net se filed shall

**

Rsr Roller
A s 'a s s e n tn r o f th* l a s t
Will
•111 and Tis s ts m e n t of
OlINDA B. COMPTON,
daressod
.F irst publication Fsb. I*. I S I t
D ougla s a t s s s I r s Q

ig s r
•

V

e / l / a of th* a• ssltaatl*s or U P W A R D
F H K D E I t t r K W lT TACHtUnK. d*
ceased; t h a t ah* h a s Hied h e r p*tllinn for final d isc harge , a n d th a t
She will a p s l y to th* H a n o rab ls
K. F. I I O D llto L D B R . C a u a t p J u d a s
of gUMINOLB C o u n 'r , f l o r id * . Sa
ih* a m day o f M a r 1*11. f o r a p ­
prova l «f asm * a nd fo r riosl dlsc h a r s * a* Adm d ' h / h , r / l / a of Ilia
ra ta l* of U P W A R D PlIK D U Itli'K
WITTML'IIIMIIK. de i r . c d . a n thl*
l a t day of March. 1**4
Annl# Roberts, A dm lnlstra
t r l s d / h / n . e / l / a of th a
c i n l * of Kdward P ra d a rlc k
W ltta c h ls h a . dacaaaad.

• KRB8KT

P L U M B IN G

HRATINO

jP

G. HODGES

WELLS DRILLED — PUMPS
r i e u

ra o N B

b o a d

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MIMEOGRAPH PRINTING - TYPING
CREDIT INVESTIGATIONS MADE
ANYWHERE IN UNITED 8TATEB OR
FOREIGN COUNTRIES

CUNT

V

BUREAU

iT

THg MVI CONOMttMMt who were wounded when Puerto Rican
fanatics ahot up the House of Representatives got together In WashIngton on the first anniversary of the Incident. Shown on th* sieps
down which they were then carried to ambulances are (I. to r.):
Reps. Atvln Bentley (R-Mleh.t; Georg* Fallon. (D-Md l; Ben Jen .
sen (R-Ia ); Clifford DavtsfD-Tenn.land Kenneth Roberts (D-At* ).

Be Careful
(Continued From Page Onr)
us an *xtra-largr report card.
All our A’* couldn't be crowded
on the usual size.
We can toy leisurely with such
fancies. After all, we need never
face a .showdown. We can't go
back.
Rut there I was, the exception.
I had my ndult knowledge and I
was back In school. Now all I
had to do was floor them with my
wisdom and depart with a neat
M-or* of 100.
H*ck«nb*rh, a you ar*-trapped
smile on hi* face, put md through
the paces on arithmetic, spelling,
science, English, the whole works.
I looked about for an adding ma­
chine and an encyclopedia.
Out this was a test and I had
to dig back into my mind for th*
answers. They rame with what
ssi mrd to Ih* dog-sled slowness
Psychologists say that as we
accumulate new knowledge, we
lorget much of what w# havi
'earned In the past. A* Heeken
bach fired questions at me and
I wrote down answers, 1 felt I
was tha living proof of that
theory.
Typical questionst
What happened to th* Philippin* Islands on July 4, 194B!
(They gained their Independence.)
How Is human sound produced!
(By means of the larynx.)
Here are some other thing*
sixth graders must know:
John got 82 per cent on his
test, Adcle got 79, Joan 94 and
Harold &lt;19. What was their aver­
age m ark! (79.8 per cent.)
If an old-time tailing vessel
went 2.991 mile* In «9 days, how
far did It average per day! (37
miles.)

Write 118 as a Roman numeral.
(LX VIII.)
Which of these cities was tho
first capital of th* U.S.T Boston,
Philadelphia, New York, Wash*
lagtoa, Charleston. (New York.)
Multiply ID i I D i 1U.
(4 1/8.)
What is th* talUst mountain
peak In the U. B.T (ML Whitney.)
You ran rome out of your date
now, parents, a* 1 break the news
that those ar* only som* of th*
"#g*y" quMtloN*.
Can you nam* th* capital* of all
the ttataa? Try It *ometlm* when
you bar* a eoupla of day* to
Bo that I might tak* th* t*»t
under th* *aro* conditions as
thos* experienced by students,
Heckenherh provided classroom
atmosphere In the form of Mr*.
Routh and irvon student*.
Unfortunately. I had forgotten
to bring an appl* fa r the teacher.
An appl* might havg h*1p*dStudent* gathered around m*
ware Dian* Baty, Ihlrlay Jon**,
Lueretla Brinson, Martha Hood.
E n d Dudley, Jqfcnny Wh*leh*l
end Dicky Westfall, all of Banlord. They looked relieved beeau**
tfcty war* not taking th* test.
A t L et, I headed la my p a p m
to H*ek*nbaeh. H* graded th*m.
and. after k**pln* *»• In .u.p*M*
for a while, told ate with a stall*:
"Yau’vo p a m d .”
| t was a big moment. The
guinaa pig had ■arrived th* ax*

gem-r to those of past deeadr*.
“Children today hate broader
experiences throuuh the fnclliHc* of modem invention*,'' Heckrnhach said. “This makes It
easier for them to learn."
lie pointed out, too, that an*
other advantage is the parents are
forever striving to give their chil­
dren “something better than they
had."
As I left the school, I thought
about what llrchcnharh had said.
I cam* to th* conclusion childirn may have It easier today,
but parents ar* even luckier.
Parents don't have to tak* sixth
grade examinations.

Pilot International
(Continued From Pag* O at)
the Cancer Society, reported on a
recent meeting which she attend
ed. She reminded members that
they would be called on to solicit
funds in the forthcoming drive.
Plans were made to hold an
Easter food sale downtown on Sat­
urday, April 9 with Mrs. M. L
Reborn Sr. In charge of arrange­
ments.
Mrs George A. Stine, president,
Invited members to her home on
Summerlin Avenu8 Thursday night
to (phi ami stuff Easier seals for
the Crippled Children's Society.
This Is a yearly project of the
club.
Mrs. B. E. Chapman reported
a total of 143.80 realised on the
recent rummage sale. Proceed*
will be used toward the club's
various charties,
There were IS members present
al the meeting which was presid­
ed over bY Mrs. Stine.

Request
(Continued Front Page One)
Mr*. Camilla Bruce, supervisor of
registration, for a raise from
1100 to $160 per month. Tha
county pay* her salary, but leg­
islative act Is required to change
it.
6. Approved a Deputy Sheriff*
band on Ewell Whit*, guard a t
(he Econlockhatehee Ranch.
A
lelt«r from Sheriff J. L, Hobby
said the drputy'i bond on Ernest
M. Lee ha* b**n rvaelnded.
7. Named W. A.
Kratzert.
retired Slate Road Dept. Engine
er, as a man who must p a ss on
all sulHlIvislon roads before they
are accepted for county
main­
tenance.
8. Referred to the County At­
torney a request by Sanford In
dustrirs Inc., that tha county con­
tribute $700 for th# corporation
to continue Ha effort* in gaining
now industries.
Tha roqu**t w** aubmlttod by
a delegation of corporation offleer*, headed by Bill SUmp*r,
acting president County Attor­
ney Cleveland was Instructed to
find out If th* contribution can
legally bo mad*.
Mr*. J. M. Dlagman, secretary
of IIm Lak* Mary Chamber of
Commerce, asked when paving of
th* old Lak* Mary lo a d wa* to
begin. Commiulonor Otis Fourakro promised tho work la hi*
district would bo etarUd ia two
or throo wocka.

H. JAMES GUT AGENCY
a i s R A s r n u r i

m onk

it

(Continued From Page One)
moot, and Iwo of his assistants.
At last night's hoard meeting,
Mcisch also reported that annthrr
Chamber project, paving of Ihe old
Lake Mary road, will hr started In
two weeks.
A report by the Publicity and
Advertising Committer rrvealod
that an agreement is being work­
ed hy Ihe Chamber and the
Chambers of Palitha and DrLsnd
for joint use of a billboard north
of Callahan. The blllhosrd would
advertise tha attraction* of the
three areas.
J. C. Davis, chalrm in of (hr
Baseball Committee, r e p o r t e d
that about 80 persons attended ■
fish fry hrld recently for the K»nsas City Athletics. Davis said
plan* are being m ide for a barbe­
cue for the Richmond and Mlnnea
polis trams.
A report on th* Central Florida
Fair at Orlando was given by th*
Fair and Exhibit Committee, head­
ed by Gus Schmah and Marcel
Faille The Chamber had a booth
at tho fair, and a largo quantity
of fruit* and vegetables, donated
hy area distribute*?, was handed
out to perrons, attending the fair.
Mrs Bobble Jo Hunt, lying wood
was named aa the Chamber's of­
ficial delegate to the meeting nf
the U. S. Chamber of Commerce
In Washington, D. C., May 1-4.
Frank Evans of Lake Mary said
that Multet Lake Park Is in bad
condition. Melsrh told him that
Ihe county Sportsmen's Astoriaion apent considerable money
building up the park, but that
the park facilities had hern abuaed
by many portons visiting It.
Evans also pointed out the naed
for early conslmrlion of tho tidewalk from the Lake Mary School,
The project was authorized some­
time ego by the County Commiiiton.
Meitrii, chairman of th* Count)
Commission, said M. C. Hagan
county surveyor, li laying a center
line for the sidewalk and construc­
tion will atari In the near future.

in Ihe best Western or adventure
‘Cries category
Loretta Young hecam* th* first
actress in Hollywood history to
hold both a movie Oscar and an
Emmy. She said the thrill “ was
equal in both cases." She was
named the best actress in a regu.ar series.
George Gohel, in his fir»t year
on TV, climaxed a meteoric rise
by being named television’s nut­
standing new personality. Carney
and Miss Meadows wer* named
best supporting actor anu actress
in * regular series.
Olh«r awards:
Beil cultural, religious or edu­
cational program: Omnibus.
Best sports program: Gtllelte
Calv-acade of Sports.

Precautionary
(Continued From Pag* One)
scope of matter* subject to arbi­
tration would he broadened, and
additional cities amt additional
Jobs would be reclassified to high­
er wage schedules. Also, included
were 18 Items on which tentative
agreement was reached last fall
A* part nf Its proposal f*r a
no-strike clause lo protect service
to tr.e public, the Company ha*
offered to open to arbltrallon any
disciplinary action taken against
■n employe as a result of a breach
nf the cl»u*e
F. M. Malone, Southern Bell
Personnel vice-president, explain­
ed (hat Ihe Company’s wage offer
would Improve earnings of tele­
phone employes by more than MLooo.ooo a year.
"Forty-five thousand employes—
a nine out of every ten— will get
un Immediate Increase In pay.
Other employes—those with less
than 12 months service—will re
rrive from one to four increases
during the next year totalling up
to *10 60 per week. These increases
will result from the Company's
regular p ro g ressio n schedules
which provide for higher pay as
employe* gain experience
“ Under the Snulhern Bell offer,
more than h.ooo employes will re.
ceive at least $4 00 per week, and
over lt.ooo women In the business
will receive $2.60 or m ire per
week All other employes with
more than II months service will
receive an Immediate increase
from fi 00 to *3.50 per week, and.
in addition w i l l receive the
amounts provided hy improved
profession schedules.
Mainnr said the proposals were
"made with Ihe earnest hope that
they will form the basis for a
prompt and reasonable arltlcm en t"

Sanford Base
(Coni Innrd Prom Fage Onr)
rs-siilt In an annual saving of at
least 112,000, a tremendous ad­
ditional saving, th* magnitude of
which defies estimation, will be
appreciated in man-hours, re­
duced paper work and standar­
dized office procedure.
Although other Naval activi­
ties have Initiated publications
control programs, this is the first
tuns that so many diversified
fleet units and shnr* atatlona
hav* worked together to economite through the standardization
nf printed form*. Aa ths Puhllrallons Control Board, established
hy Commander, Naval Air Bases,
fllxth Navel District, continues to
prove It* effertlven***. It Is like­
ly that Its procedure* will set a
pi credent for adaption through­
out the Navy.

Best children's progrim : I^iizle.
Best daytime program: Art
Llnkletter's House Party.
Best Western or adventure se­
ries- Stories of the Ucnlury.
Best audience guest participation
or panel program: This is Your
Life
Best actcr in a single perform­
ance: Robert Cummings, "Twelve
Angry Men," Studio One.
Best actress In a single perform­
ance: J u d i t h Anderson, "Mac­
beth." Hallmark Playhouse.
Best male singer: Perry Come.
Best female singer: Dinah Shore.
Best mystery or intrigue aeries:
Dragnet
MF.MBETtS CALLED AWAY
FROM TELEVISION RETS
IPSWICH, Mass, (ZP) — The
annual town meeting approved an
*800.900 budget last night — but
only after some 10O town meeting
members were summoned from
their television sets lo vote.
Town officials reported that
romprtition offered by a highly
publicized TV show (the “Peter
Pan" musical), delayed the town
meeting about sn hour while they
telephoned member* in order to
secure a quorum.

WRONG ANGLE
HOUSTON, TEX. (ID) — lt»*
current city directory has a ploture that supposedly depict* tho
hustling downtown area today. In
It, cara are angled parked. Angle
parking hasn't been a Lowed alnco
1939.

Legal Notice
IN Tits: Cl DCFIT COUNT OF TUB
NINTH JIDIt'IVI. f lltr r iT . IN
and ro it s r N ix n u i rnt'NTV.
it.o m its , in c i u x c r n r . no .
am
HELEN CALLAGHAN FOnSTTIIE,
rialntirt

V
I.
ALEXANDER

FOKITTHK.
Psfandtal
N o T irr to s r r r . t R
TO: ALEXANDER F O It T 8 T II B,
W H O WE RESIDENCE IS UN­
KNOWN:

You at* h.-rsl.r S0IIIl.il that a
suit fer dlvorr* has h»»n sntsrsd
■KVlnsl sou hy HELEN CALLAG­
HAN FORSYTHE, Ir. til# Clretilt
Court of the Ninth Jmtlrl.it Circuit
nf F lo rid a, In and for Hamlnola
County, the abbreviated title of tha
ca«e being HELEN CALLAGHAN
FORSYTHE, l'lelnilff. ve. ALEX­
ANDER FORSYTHE. Defendant.
You er« hereby required to file
an arpearance or other pleading In
this cause on nf before April It.
1151. alsa a Decree Tro Confeaeo
•hall be entered against you.
IN WITNESS VVHEREOF I have
hereunto set my band and affixed
the seal zt VF* Court this Ith day
of March, A D l»3l
■/ O D Herndon
Clerk nf bald Court.

TAST - KITE

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CLUB

H ^ S T I EA K
MEATY

ALL MKAT IIONKI.KBS

49c Neck Bones lb 15c

STEW
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lb 29c

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Can

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F L A . 303 S T A N D A R D

Tomatoes
TItUsFLAVOR

PILI.HRURY

COFFEE

17 O*. CARR

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tYilh $6.00 ar Mar* Purrhss*
DEL MONTE 103 FRUIT
BUTTER KERNEL 103
GOLDEN

COCKTAIL

23c

CREAM CORN
PLANTATION PRIDE 18 Oa.
2 Cans
29c Sweet Pickles 29c
LYKKA IS O*. CORNED

Beef Hash
Dr) Mrmt* II O*.

Raisins

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23c CHOPPED
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Salad Dressing n 25c
Joan of A rt 841 Kidney

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25c Beans 2 cns. 25c

Joan aI Ar* 141 Bwttar

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Beans 2 Cans 25c Peas 2 Cans 35c
Part 84 Cl. PaptF

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Dot* 44 Os. Ftaaappla

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3 rg. 25c 2 bth 25c Soap 2 Bars 25e

TM OOW 6HUUCAL COMPANY

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General Insurance

Action Committee

Later, Heekenhaeh and I dls* Tho donilty of tho pianot Jupiter
iiMd tho question of how Ms- U lew than a quarter that of tha
day*a
compare la latolli- Earth.

OF SANFORD

as—

HOLLYWOOD if)—Wilt Disney
snd Dsnny Thomas, clulchlng two
Emmies apiece, today proved that
television h»s three snlht networks.
The two ABC stars, along with
NBC's George Gobcl snd Loretta
Young, plus Art Carney and Au­
drey Meadows of the CBS's Jhckic
Gleason S h o w , dominated last
night's seventh annual E m m y
swards of the Television Academy.
The show, sparking with theretainment. was nationally televised
over NBC-TV.
Disney, already the possessor of
21 movie Oscars, won in Emmy
lor Ihe best variety series an TV.
And his "Operation Under Sea.”
an episode In the Disneyland se­
ries, was adjudged Ihe best in­
dividual program of Ihe year.
Thomas, star of Make Room for
Daddy, wav named the best actor
In a regular series. Ilis show was
selected the best situation comedy
senes.
John Daly of ABC won for he:ng the best news reporter, and
the U. S. Steel Ilnur, also on ARC,
was n arm'd the best dramatic
reties.
The six awards out of a possible
21 gave ARC its healthiest show­
ing yet in the awards NBC and
UBS. which heretofore had domtnsted the annual awards, got sev­
en apiece.
The remaining award went to
tho sydirated series Stones of
the Century, whirh ls not confined
to one nelwnrk. Tills series won

THE SANFORD HERALD
Wed. Mur. 9, 1955
T* eb 7

i a Mm** BW*i... MNtnst ru tu rr v e u t
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*- ra g e 8

TUB SANFORD HERALD

Wed. Mnr. 9, 1955

DAILY C R OS S WOR D
ACROSS

t
&lt;

t
b

P
1

b
t
«
t

t

“Skipped. Now I got the whole
county to lake care of."
“Thanks for taking care ot me."
"You'll get a Mil, don’t worry."
Ha went out.
The elderly nurse came In. gave
me another hypo, and I slept some
mors. At dusk they brought me
some soup and tea, and alterw ard
1 tried to sleep, but the pain was
bad and 1 couldn't Sheriff John
M om ssy came. He talked to me,
and 1 remembered hla grave, quiet
vote# saying something about Earl
Scitxmon, but It was all foggy.
He went away. Sometime later on
there was another hypo, and then
blackness.
Sun again, ths white walla. Tha
pain was dull now. Mora lea and
toast and a soft egg. Even a
cigaraL
And Sandy.
“1 was here last night," ahe said,
“but you were sleeping."
“ Yea," 1 said. There was a hap­
py shine In her brown eyes I'd
never seen beforo.
“Do you feel b elter?"
“1 feel One."
“Dr. Mazzmi's back with Judy.
They want to Kentucky and got
married, isn 't th a t w oaderful?"
“Dandy."
“Judy called ma. She was so
happy ahe could hardly talk—be­
cause ah i's m arried to Dr. Maxcini, and because ahe hadn't shot
Ralph. 1 gucaa the doctor just
land of kidnaped her. Cave man
•tuff.” She laughed happUy.
“1U‘U make her behave," I said.
"W hat about Karl Bailsman and
EiloenT"
She stopped laughing. "Eileen's
Sweet—"
"Listen." 1 pushed myself up taking her fa th e rs death pretty
hard, and—" She paused, and
from the pillow.
"Now, now." She hovered over gazed a t m s soberly.
“Don't bs delicate," X said. "1
me "We muan't get excited." 1
felt,th e prick of the needle in my killed him. 1 had to."
She touched my cheek. “1 know,
arm , and then tbs gentle pressure
of her hands against my shoulder*. Jim . Nobody blames you. You're
1 sank back and closed my ayes. a hero in this town. A fter Earl
Sometime during the afternoon talked with hla lawyer from Cleve­
1 awoke. The spinal anesthesia land, E arl told Mr. Morrlasy all
had worn off and my legs felt about It—about bow Jake For­
tlngiy and there was tha beginning tune bad told him w hat be tiled
of pain la my aid s Old Dr. Sweet to do to Ralph, and bow ba threat­
came in. He probed, checked my ened Eari. R oot E arl went ball
bandages, looked a t a chart, gru n t­ crazy, X gucaa, trying to decide
ed, and barked a t me, “H urt y e t i" w hat to do about It- Ha lovaa
Eileen, and Ja k e was bar father,
“A tittle."
“I t will. It win. A forty-are and whan you accused Earl, Ellaen
•lug. Ju st missed the lower duod­ helped U along because aha really
enum. Lucky. Bowel wounds are balieved th a t Kart waa guilty, th at
bed, even with penicillin—don't let be bad triad to kill Ralpb because
of her, and E arl didn't know tekat
anybody tell you different."
•'Where's Dr. Maxxin] T" I asked, to d a Mr. Morrtsay came out to
thinking vaguely th a t Td asked It th e bouse and (old ua ell about I t
Ha found n rifle la the creek on
before.
CoprrleM. t r n hr B sSat Martia. DistilSets* by

&lt;_.lAIYi_lt THIRTY BIX
1 YUKNKU my tirad. Bandy sat
there, ilic sunlight glinting jn her
bronxa hair. There were tears on
her (ace. Ki&gt;e reached out and
touched my hand. Iter Angers felt
cool and wonderful. Behind her
•tood the tall, guant form of Hom­
er l.oUia. lie smiled shyly.
"Ill, follis," my voice said.
An elderly gray-haired nurse
came In. I closed my eyes. There
Were whispers, and Bandy's angers
left my band. "You're fine, Jim ,"
her voice said close to my ear.
“Everything's fine. Sleep now." t
felt nrr lips on my cheek. Presently 1 knew that she wsa gone.
I heard a faint din k ot glass on
tnttaL I opened my eyes. The
nurse was at a steel table by the
foot ol the bed tilling a hypo
needle. 1 said, "W hat Uma la It?"
She smiled a t me. glanced a t a
w rist watch.
“Almost twelve
o'clock nooa."
“ What day T"
“It a still Sunday.”
1 dosed my eyes again, remem­
bering tiiat final and terrible scene
In Jake Fortune's kitchen. **I want
to cce John Morrtsay," 1 said.
“I-atcr," tho nurse said sooth­
ingly. “You've bad a spinal, and a
liltlo ether, and you must rest
now. L)r. Sweet will be here to ace
you oclore Ion*,."
“ Where's Dr. Maxxiri?"
“Nobody knows," she said. “Its
left a note last night for hla land­
lady, M ra Brown, saying th a t he'd
be gone for a day or two. It's
rattier odd tor Dr. Maxxlnl to go
a way like that. Fortunately, Dr.

go build a apecial Ubocatoryfor
rearing generation! of ehlcnena,
guinea plga and poulbly other ant*
ala under absolutely Perils contlona.
The animal* would be n aed to
t u t the effect* of germs end other
aubitaucei purpoaely Introduced
Into their bodlta. Since the animal*
would be free of infectiooa at the
start, actenUit* would expect to
get a better Idea ef the effects of
the Introduced aubatance*.
Effort* to ralae germ-free labo­
ratory anlmala began aa far back
ga 1MT, but NIH adentlata aay the
greatcit advance* made in the
field, In the United S tatu at least,
have resulted from e project at
Notre Dame Unlverair, headed by
Dr. James A. Reyniera.
Tha Notre Dama group, working
alnce 1W, haa developed apecial
apparatua and procedures
Anlmala am bora in a farm*
frae environment. Prom that time
on, tha ak they breathe, the tood
they eat and the quartern In which
they live am kept aterile.
The government scientist* wean
lniplred to seek a laboratory of

J

J a k e s place, and It matched the
bullet you got from the tree, and
the bullet th a t killed Rea Bishop,
and Mr. M om aay said there would
be flngerprtnla, and na found an
address book in Jak e's pocket, and
letters from two women—one in
Toledo and one in Cleveland—ask ­
ing dim tor money. And two men
from Cleveland cam s to town look­
ing for Jake, and Mr. Morrtsay
said th at Jake nad stolen money
from these two men, and there
was a lot ef m o n e y in Jak e’s
pockets—"
“1 know," X said. "Tall ma about

EUcen."

"I talked to her. H er fatharia
funeral will be on Tuesday. She
and E arl are getting m arried soon
afterw ard."
"How's Ralpb T How does ba leal
about all th is?"
“Ha's Boa They aay ws can
bring him noma ins last of ths
week, i don't think he fell loo
badly about Eileen. 11a didn't aay
much about It, but I'm sure ba
nevar really loved her. I t waa just
th at Ju d y —" She smiled a t ma.
"Ralph will be all nghL lie 's got
big plans for ths farm , be and
dad."
X said, “You'd better call the
boas in New York."
“I've already called him," Bandy
said. "Ua swore horribly—because
there isn't any fee."
“Didn’t he express aa y concern
about m e?"
She l a u g h a d and bar eyes
danced. “He said you were a
simple-minded fool for risking your
neck when there waa no money la
it for tha agency."
“ Yea," X sighed.
“But he ordered me to report it
aa an agency Job—ao th a t your
hospital and medical expense will
be paid under tha sta te occupa­
tional compensation laws," Sandy

T. Merciless
X. F a th e r
fl. Cripple
a planet
0. Biblical
A Metal ta g
name
10. Spread*
11. City (F r.)
12. T e buy
grass to dry
and sell
1*. Siberian
13. Sim ilar
river
14. Marked,
1 1 Voided
as rhythm
escutcheon
IS. Turkish cap 10. Courier
IS. E ar shells
20. Turkish tills
17. Voodoo
21. Gain
snake god
23. Seaport
20. Conscious
(A lgeria)
22. Portends
24. F ilthiest
27. Lassies
2*. Husband of
Bathsheba
20. Mountains
n
(So. Am.)
20. U n g er
81. Occurrence
23. Remove,
ea bones
27. Man’s name
40. Together
41. While
30 i)
poplar
43. Chop finely
3/
*4. Kind of
thread
~
45. Mors
rational
46. P u t up a
poker sta k e
DOWN
8. P atron sa la t
A.
of tailors
f. Vex
TT
3. Violent
snowstorm
4. Each (Scot.)
5. Golf mound
«. Ascribe

w

-11-'

lieas N'e

».v r : i i

22.Organ

: ii»i i •; :i

ns a* j ii-if-v i

ef
i ii iui :in
hearing
iiiiii
r
j
n
a
i i H 'i i-ivoi*
24. Timid
IlhiXiTIH
J
l
t
i
. i l .1
22. N o n a
j i i i ’i 'Jisin
i
to d
22. Female - v ixi h '.v-imi-j
i j ; iij v j u
parents
-li.'J :l£Y ’
24. Penii ii'jr-; v dPiiAii-1
name of
Charles
_
. _
Lam b
TssMHaFe flaw
38. C ity (Oer.)
30. Require
38. A t one tim e 41. A wing
38. German
4 2 .Storage
riv er
crib

•

3

TT“

T

Inquire about our REAL LIVE PONY complete

ir

with Western saddle - Also bicycles that we will

IT”

f

soon have on display.

1

H

%ii

Is i4o

i»

WESTERN CORN FED PORK

%
WWSMMWNmKVM.
3

9

□ □ □ U
□ □ □ □

Xt 4aT
"TT
TT

j □ □
□ □ □

U. S. First Marine Division
Heads For Beachhead-Home

U. S. GOOD GRADE BEEF

lb. 39c CHUCK ROAST lb.
Loin Tip Roast
lb.
Loin END ROAST lb. 49c
PLATE STEW
lb.
RIB CHOPS
lb. 49c HAMBURGER 3 lbs.
LOIN CHOPS
' lb. 59c Lean Ground Chuck lb.
RIB END ROAST

SLICED BREAKFAST BACON

SEOUL, Korea WV—The U.S. 1st tures dropped io 40 below zero.
Marine Division is heading for a Their truit M» rifles, which under
normal circumstances might have
new, atrange beachhead—home.
The diviiion’a last contingents stopped the Chinese, failed to fire.
assigned to Korea are en route to The division suffered 3,300 casual­
San Diego. Tha 3.500 officers and ties, more than half from frost­
men left last weekend aboard five bite, before it pulled back to the
transports. The Army's 24th Divi­ MS.
' T h a t's real kind of him."
sion, redeployed from Japan, is The Changjin Reservoir taught a
Sandy laughed again and 8 replacing them.
.esson: their Island-hopping equip­
looked a t bar. 'T h ere are tia ra in
ment was to no avail In Korea.
The
Fight
1st
came
Into
existence
your eyes," 1 said. “Why u th a t? "
They tried innovations. While tha
in
the
1B42
staging
preparations
Uar ayes avoided mine, but the
Army scoffed at the lumbering
• t a n ware (till there. “Because for Guadalcanal. The Leathernecks thermal boots, the Marines ordered
Ralph's going to gat wall," she were known as the Pacific war’s them In bunches from the SUtei.
•aid aoftiy, “an d —and you're ail Island hoppers. They weren't sup­
r ig h t" Bha touched my hand. “1 posed to stick sround long enough In the winter of 1031, the Marines
gueae I’m just happy, Jim . A ren't to fight • land war. But they did reported a minimum number of
frostbite eases. The Army, still
you?"
in Korea—three yssrs storming up
- “Bure," X aaid, and X thought and down Korean hills. They suf­ using the old sboe-pacs, continued
th a t everybody waa happy, except fered 28,203 killed, wounded and lo suffer.
The Marines put the helicopter
Rex Bishop and Jak e Fortune.
missing.
to landing within enemy rifle range
And maybe they were happy,
Then the division stayed through to airlift wounded to rear area
too,
the poslsrmistlee period to help hospitals. The Army followed suit
(The Bmd)
the K o r e a n s rebuild homes, liter. And In November 1921, ao
i eradicate.
ehurehea, schools and lives.
entire Marine battalion waa air­
Tied down In the battle for the lifted by helicopter from a reserve
Nsktong bulge of southeast Korea position to the front lines—only a
in the early months of the war, few hundred yards from North
thsy got haek to their element— Korean troopal
amphibious warfare .— Sept. 14, Other "flrata" followed for the
1130. They spearheaded a 40,000NIH scientist* have previously man Invasion force in the daring division. Hie most prominent e l­
iter Imen t waa with the armored
ibowo that tt'a poailbla to produce Inchon landing.
these conditions la conventional But tram then on, It waa alow vest—and It now leema hero to
stay at standard military equip­
aalmala by variation of d iet But
n Indication of what
It haa nevar been poailbla com tha next three year* were to be ment. It laved many Marine live*.
Forty-two Marines won t h e
plelely to itparato germ-caused like.
dental troublea from thooe stem- The Leatherneck* had the dirty Medal of Honor in Korea.
mlng from diet, heredity and the but necessary Job of taking Seoul
endocrine gland ayatem.
RETIREMENT IS PARTIAL
from an enemy ordered to stand
LANCASTER, PA. (IP) - Dr.
and dlt.
TV HURTS WRITING?
There was never too much love John L. Mentaer, M, haa retired
DETROIT IP - Teachen of lost between the Leathernecks end from hla medical practice but did*
creative writing conalder televl- the rest of the 0th Army. But the n't get all the way to the sidelines.
aion a barrier to good writing, Marines fought
an integral part He haa been reelected to hla
aaya Thomaa Gauley head of tbo of tha Army through the war— &amp;lat term aaa director of the Farm*
Derby High School Engllah De­ except for one bitter phase.
era National Bank. He baa been
partm ent.
That was la December I860. The chairman of the board alnce IMS,
"What we atreaa la writing la Halla of Monterama never looked •erred aa president of the bank
simplicity, and you don't le a n farther away. A few hundred yards for 42 yean before retiring la
anything about simplicity from ahead lay the Changjin Reservoir. IMS from that poet.
television." he says.
Ringing the hlUa were to divletoea
UNWANTED DOGS
"TV program*, ho said, are of the Chinese Communist army
Altkough the time varies some­
WESTERLY, R. 1. (IP) - Things
waiting to crush the Leatherneck* what with temperature and in dif­
have gone completely to the dog* complex and Involved."
"We tell the etudente to write in a gigantic vise. The Marines ferent parts of tha world, a house­
aaya dog officer Joseph Zanella.
fly ran mature from an egg la IS
"1 alwaya have a pound of about their own experiences.'
to U days.
them," be report!, "and nobody Cauley said. "But vary few of
aeema to want them — not even them think they have anything
son* owners whose license tags Interesting to writ* about So many
a m u se d to the tangled plot* ef
appear on the canine."
The thing that hurts him meat, television, the constant action ea
though, la that b* haa to pay for tha screen end the frequent burnt*
feeding them out of hla own poc­ of callous brutality. They fell to
under*land them is beauty in writ­
ket under city ordinance.
ing about n quiet day In the eeun

New *55 Dodge
flashes ahead!

LYKES PALM RIVER, or
ARMOURS GA. PEACH

*

4 5 *

STANDARD

TOMATOES

10c

—

STARKI8T, LIGHT MEAT

29c

CHUNK TUNA
KRAFTS

Pt

MIRACLE WHIP

29c

DOLE

PINEAPPLE JUICE
25c
TRU-FLAVOR CHEESE 2 ^ ^ 75c
TRU-FLAVOR COFFEE 1^ 89c
41 Ox. Caa

FRUIT COCKTAIL

SOS Coe

RED RING

APPLE SAUCE

SOS Caa

23c

'

10c

SPICE CAKE MIX

»&lt;*»*

HILLS-DALE

/

SLICED PINEAPPLE

33c

•

No. S Coe

29c

V/4 Lb. J i r

59c

PLANTATION PRIDE

PEANUT BUTTER
■WHITTING

3

Lb. Can

79c
29c

PAPER NAPKINS
PLANTATION n u n

SWEET MIXED PICKLES «• 25c
Flair-f&lt;ukionad...aUvt with

jnM i
m * . r v u t M i ’*

unfy Motors
'

im i

v;-1

u&amp; x

- &lt;aL
.. tm

ran [h i m )

•■stock

V w -T

IF*

PILL8BURY — WHITE, YELLOW, CHOCOLATE OR OLD FASHIONED

SHORTENING

plan

&amp; &lt; !

i

DEL MONTE

10V4 Ox Pkg.

KEYSTONE
CUSTODIAN
FUND

45c
69c
23c
85c
49c

*™v

�■aj

nr

v

W A N T AD
RATES

14SPECIAL BERVirK
ARTICLES FOE SALE
UPHOLSTERYSlip covers
Used
furniture,
appilincoe.
tools,
RED-I-MIX CONKRETE
to order at
ate. Boughi—sola. Lerry'e M art
Grease Traps • Septie Tanka121 East 1st Si Pbooa lOL
NIX BEDDING SI KG.
Window Sills • • Lintels.
1201 Sanford Ave.
Phone
Sind, Rock. Cement, strel. Mortar

9—REAL ggTATR FOR M U - 1 9 -

INVESTMENT

INVESTMENT
f # n r t » M W a d _______
4 r r extra caah for nrtielea you
» longer use. Plsea your ad to- A truely nice 4 unit Apartment
S r . Pbone 1881.
home in excellent condition and
conveniently located. AU com­
a a-Unt *d. *ucb at the one abort
furnished. Could make
C only x * P « day on our low * pletely
someone a fine hnme plus in­
Zay tam ed rata economy plan, &lt;Sc come.
Price *23,000. Term* can
mm w *» 1 daya and Me tor
be arraefed.

INVESTMENT

CONCRETE

made

D
6

sr

r

t

Boyd 'Wallace

RoDaway aad Baby Bed*

LOWELL E. OJIER

Builder — Pbooe 1359
Aviles Apto, Efficiency. Phene
Custom Uomes and Florida
Builder low cost homea
419.________________________
"■ WAAttr tor Deaif- RAYMOND M, BALL, REALTOR
and ApU. Phone IT.
S. D. tlighleyman, Associate
e Homaa
Hoi
204 South Park Art.
Phaaa M0
■PACE—
Available.
*12
XJEB
aienth. Children Welcome.
&amp; A. W HIDDON, SR.
Moan* Trfiler court
Reg. Baal l u s t s Broker
119 S. Park
Pb. USt
4th and
W.
H.
-BILL’*
STEMPER
acobion’e DeRealtor—General Insurance
GERTRUDE DINGFELDER,
ASSOCIATE
ftWrURNlSHED cottage with kit*
Ills
112 NE Park Are.
•
- ^ n t e # end ressetlaa
Are.
Whether boylng or selling, ft will
pay you to sae:
A fftm e n t 900 Park.

5 0 WNBTAIRS Apartment L*r*5clean room*. Run room, t i l P a n

Avo.

_____________

Lawny. APT, on Lake Charm.
Jprtuda* S Bedrooms « d den.
Ve|y^reajouablt. R. A. Camertm.

J. ff. BALL, REALTOR

Florida State B a u Building
• CaU HalT
Phone 1788
Open for Inapectlon, 2422 Holly
Are. Two Quality Built 3 BR
masonry-construe
masonry-constructed
homea
Ceramic Bath, vinyl tila_or oak
floors, screened porch, Carports
Large lots, Terms, L. J. Rimer,
Builder, i i x Holly Ave.
S BEDROOM., separate dining
room. Large corner lo t a w
Princeton Ave.

ANNIVERSARY
SALE !
M arch 7 - 1 2
REFRIGERATORS
13 Cu. Ft. 2 Dr. List Price 9319.93
With your Trade-in ... 1349.93
103 Cu. Ft. Ust Price 94(0,00
With jour Trade-in — 92*9.99
S Cu. Ft., List Price *268.43
With Yeur Trade-in . 9
I Cu. Ft. with Push Button
Drfrost. List Priee 9299 90
With your Trade-in — 9249.93
• Cu. Ft. List Price $209.95
With yeur Trade-la . . . *178.18
RANGES
MG Electrlr, List Price 9309 03
With your Trade-in .. fil 1.93
HG Electric, Lilt Price *199 93
With your Trade-la ... 911*16
EH Elcctrie. List Priee l i f t 95
With your Trade-In
HM.99
KG Electric, List Priee 9189.93
With yeur Trade-in .... 9149.93
30 Gil. WeiUnghouse Table Top
Hot Water Heater (with 10 yr.
guarantee) Regular list price
IUM *—bale Frit* .. 91D8.99
30 GaL Upright Hot Water Heater
(10 yr. guarantoo) Reg. 8119.03.
N o w ........ ..................— *99.93
Westinghouse “21" TV Console
now on tale at only . .. . t i n t s
These priett arc near wholesale
prices end we cannot give these
after March 12. In most cases
your old appliance will make the
down payment. We finance local­
ly with low finance charge*. Act
new-these won’t I n f

. or Unfurnlibnone 1398.
___ _ ^___^
[ICE 5 room upstairs furnished
apartment Screen porchei end
ACRES with lovely 3 bedroom
g l r a f . Phone l » J . __________ 21home.
Hardwood floors. Lifetime
roof, l ear garage. No better
firm in Pforida fir celery and
itb a
truths. With1underground irri­
:e_of
gation. Os a paved- highway, a
miles from center of Sanford,
jo,W| 4Rl'
matte
Fla, Can oe bad for lf*a than Baggcrly Appliance
aveniegs.
cost of Improvements.
Center
JE— 8 Room House in OsO. G. ALLEN, Realtor
furnished or unfurnished, SIS*
119 MagaoUa Ave.
Pkepe STI?
S.
Atlantic
Phone
9-3431
» A m s oof land. Call 880-R.
Daytona Beach, Ftn.
Room I ROOMS on fine t a r i e L Lot.
Plenty' shade and fruit. Near
M YEARS OP iATIKFlED
SKRVICEAND VALUES TO
room famished apartment
OUR CUSTOMKBS
bottom floor. Phone 10Q3-J.
3 BEDROOM House at Lake Mary. WAS
NOW
City water. Large rooms, closed 1.13
Auaa, Ue-farnlshUtility
Table i
______
. «J*
garage, laundry room, flowers. 1.30 each Modem Table
Month, Phone
Letups . . . . . . . . . . 2 for 1.90
10 as each Plastic Cocktail
IF IT IS REAL ESTATE
c h a in ............ 2 for 19.00
ask Crawler a MaMaflk
IIJO filmmont Box Spring
at 11T M att F a rt Pkaaa T71
or Mattresa . ........ 3f.5u
4f.M Platform Rackor .. MJo
94.99 d u b Chair .......... 2*J0
9*.50 5 pc. Wrought Iron
Dlnattca ...TT......... 44.30
MJo • x u Axminster
Wool Rug ............. . 30.00
0 Sots Bed ............... 93.90
T9J* gtudla Couch . ... 98.50

A FARM

m

• IP fc

Golden Jubliee

s iit o ” -

TTJO
198.30

Mather Of Sanford

GORMLY INC.

!5 - LAUNDRY BERWICK -2 3
"Your Hot Point Dealer"
218 Palmetto Ase.
Pb. 778 • One hour - Wain and Damp
Dry
f i - OFFICE EQUIPMENT -23
•

One hour H • Wash and Dry

HAYNES Office Machine Co .
Fold
Typewriter!, adding machines, • Finished Laundry
Sales-Rentals,
314
Magnolia,
Ph
• Baritone Dry Cleaning
FOR SALP.: 1936 Ford. $8.Sm
*4
S o n th d d e L au n d ro m at
Phone Ui&lt;0-J., nr see at 1803
South Side Fnodmart BldgPaloma Dr.
__ | ________ I nEAUTY PARLORS -21
106 East 23lb SL
H-AUTOM OHlLE DEALERS—18 SPECIALIZING tn Personality
Hair Cuts. Lillian McDonald's 27t'l.VVO SERVICE
—27
SELL YOUR CAR TO
Beauty Studio in Casselberry, L. U Sill—Plano Technician,
Ituy Itrel'a Used Car*
Hi-way 17-92 South, Phone \V. l \
Phono 2164. Routs I. Sanford.
San lord A ve A lllh Sl.
27-2182. (Closed all day Monday).
Drop in— Free Parking
RESTAURANTS
I*— IHI.VTS - MUTOBfl
—U
EASIER SPECIALS On Ternunn il^ T c Mercury
YOU!
YOU! YOU I
enb. 36.50 and SS SO Includes
Mar!: 2'3
$10 per Mark
’* Huilic cooked Meala
soaping
and
Styling
for
YOU
1032 It) ilursc Scott
Real Pit Bar-B-Q
Air conditioned, SoM Water and
Atuatri
S133.3.1
r hill. Hoi Doss
Penguin
Heatless
Dryers.
1932 5 11 I'. Scott Atwater *10600
All kinds of 5andwiebe*
3if iSeriinr
Operators
9 Horse Jolin.-on
Mtnnn
u
u
t
r
ft
v
n
r
hi
*
Good Coffee
HARRIETT S BEAUTY NOOK
Eunruiic Zephyr only
343 93
at Clydea Grill
We give United Trading
Tradin Stamps
• All Motors Guaranteed
ins
South
Oak
206
Sanferd \ve.
Phone 971
• ur Traile your motor for a
105.-1 Evlnrude
nntlMlN SPURTING GOODS
:;ai \\ 1st SI.
Phnne 99*

l7-AITTOMOBH.E8TRAll.ERA

■ » i■■

i

21— LOST AND FOUND -21
Watch louiid in car. Owner m«luve same by paying lor ad at
llcr.ilil Ollu-c
FOUND— keys with tuitiaU
F. F CaU at Sweeney‘a.
LOST i!rev and White Parakeet
with blue tall. Name. “Pete."
REWARD I'at tic Glenn John­
son I'hotic 1952 J.
L o st Grey and Him- Parakeet
"Chirpy'*. Blue hand on leu.
Pit me 304. Reuard —Zeiialt

AND B U U O IN G .N E E D S

SHERMAN CONCRETE
PIPE CO.
Dill West 131 It St.

Pltunn 21S9

Wel-.h

C - El.FCTKICAl. BERklCER —21

Itandnll Electric Co.

C A LL TH E

Bcndix and Crosiev Applisoce*
Vuungstuv'L Kitchen
Flertrical cn-trarting and repair-

112 Mngmilla Ave. Phone IIS

FIUUIOAII4E

applianrcs

sales

and service G II High, Oviedo.
Fla I’boitc 4151 or Sanford
1642 W after « p m.

Sanford Klcctrle Co.

It* MaKtinlla Ave.
I'hone 447
SEE Y&lt; ur General Electric dealer
fur TV and Amdum-es.

NUMBER

83

FOR
SUDDEN
SERVICE

H IL L LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY YA RD

.'•;AID to work 3 days a week,
a id till ooen on Sat. Call before
0 a m. or after 6 p. m. rhone
K07-W.

WAITRESS. Apply Seminole Restsurapt. 1401 French Ave. or call
2i4X

0-11—SALESMEN WANTEP-10B
2 Salesmen, apply in person ft
Claude H, Wolfe. 303 Sanford
Ave. .Mutt have lived In Flori
da for 1 year, Tliia ia a year
around position. No drifter* will
be given consideration. Trana^portatio
ion furnished. ______

U =____gORB WANTBP

-1 1

COOK fo work days. Experience.
References, phone 54-J.
C jjE W H N ^ W O M ^ ^ n ^ T

t*— 8PKC1AL M B TIC lb

-V

WCOME TAX SERVICE

Wm. If. Murray
1111 Celery Ave.
Tel. 1141 X A
CARPENTER WORE
For quick renalr fobs, ee emeii
building CaDJlm llii-M-4.
ORLANDO Msming Sentinel, Or­
lando Evening filer. Call Ralph
Ray, 1169-J._______________

Bpeclnl — TV and (Ufik
Servk* Rad Repairs

BCA Motorola Sales and Sendee

G W i Tamaco Btnrke

118* Sanferd Ave.
M m e taw.
DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINES
Sales - Bestala Service
GARRET’S
raONC 1422

INCOME TAX .......

Tax Returns prepared while YOU
wait. Room 206 above B. I.
Perklai, Ftral 64. Hwee go*.
SWAIN'S BATTERY SERVICE
9 Battary • Generator S Sigrter
Road service. ' Phase 317.' 402

B. 2nd SL

See Ua for quotation! all Millworl
and Hardware items before yut
buy end be pleasantly su rp n sr

CAMPBELL'S CABINET

Ill-way 17-W South
Phone 14
cemplete TBLBVMON 8ERVICI
on all makes and models
8ANFORD ELECTRIC CO.
U l MagaeUa k n .
PRoee 442

P. M. CAMPBELL
General Ceetracter
“Homea el DiaUncUon”
1-Way rt-ai
h e m U47
FLOOR S A Jnn ra R rialiklng;
Oak floor* furattked. U tT lhfla
ished. RaaaeftaW terau. u hua
fneas aiice 1MB. Old floors made
like new. B. F. btaraes; Route
L box m : n ose tit- R d ..

*** PBA

GOOD and BAD
E- let BL

THE SANFORD HERALD
Pape 9

-14-6 22—ELECTRICAL SERVICES—22 Wed. Mar. 9, 1935

MOUGHTON INSURANCE
CO. ;
PHONf 811
504-J
ATLANTIC BANk BLDG

MIRACLE CONCRETE CO. Resdy Mixed Concrete. Concrete Plowing, discing, grading Trees
309 Elm AVa.
Phone 1333
Block, Sind, Gravel, Cement
and shrubbery moved Dewitt
Concrete Pipe (o Meet All Quali­
Hunter. 601 E. 26th St.
SEWING MACHINES 923.00 un
BERT’!' '(M 8. Park Phone 1TRJ fications.
Phone 2481
RANDALL ELECTRIC CO.
IT" Mali &gt;gany ConsoJatte Tele­ Sherman Concrete Pipe Co.
T V SERVICE CENTER
vision. 910. Cali after 5 p. m.
Out West 13th At,
• Factory Supervised Servica
2247-W.
n « y . _________________
MODERN New Horae with 10 • House calls 3 a. m. till 9 p. m
*7**ftfccU R taU f
a little apace like thli will let
(All makes and models)
JALOUSIES &amp; AWNINGS
bearing grove. Easy terms.
acres besrit
your mcaaaie before mir more Real Eatate — Cm. Insurance Life time Glass and Aluminum
112 Mag. Ave.
Thane 2400
Phone 13033-J.
Qan 10,000 reader*. Tell 'tm to 201 Edwards' Bldg. Ph. IS or 24T4
—Free Estimates—Free Instal­
dayL Phone 1*21.
SMITH
•
CORONA
Portable
Type­
lation—Telephone M23. FuroJSanrorfl
J. R. Alexander
T. M. Stringer
writer. Perfect condition. Phone
turn Center. 116 W. First St.
Reg. Real Estate Broken
Vacuum Cleaner Servica
t abort 4-Uno ad can b t run
1867-W
after 8 p. m.
Phone 714-X-J
hi! daya for only 82.40, 3 daya Hew would YOU like several hun­ ACCOnDlON. 120 B an. 5 Weeks
r0Biy |i.so end ooe day tor 72C dred acres fine cattle land right
old. 9 Switches, Cost *700.00, BARGAIN— 3 Burner Perfection Paris and Supplies for All Makes
—Rentals—
kerosene kitchen Range, Like
Still has Guarantee. 9173.00 or
on the St. Jotin’i River?
lu*. Sell. Rent, Hire with want
new. Phone 736-M-4.
best rash offer immediately.
We Have I t
a i t . the busiest talesman In
HALL'S GARAGE for general Auto
Write Box 9, c/o The Herald.
M n , Put one to work for you.
FOR SALE: Bargain. 4 Burner
repairing. Also Wrecker Service
- f t J J U t A U , Cmm frn* }
p im « 182L Wt will ba ilia to
Eleetrie
Range.
D
ttp
w
e
l
l
,
402 Celery. Ph. IP90-M - ldM-R
METAL ROOFING
storage
cabinet,
excellent
condi­
c h a ff It
in Stock. 5-V Crimp —T14** tion. Phone 1313 R-2.
Phone 1129 A. B. Peterson.Broker Now
Corrugated— 2 'i " Corrugated.
Par only 13.00 the abort 5-Une ad i Associates
A. B. Peterson Jr.,
Get all Your roofing needs at
PLUMBING
toon the Job for you or 9 full P. J. Chesterton. Albert N. rifle
The Florida Times Union.
y*: Only 82 23 keeps it working
Contract and rcpur work Free
Garfield Willetts. John Melach Sherman Concrete Pipe Co. Your Morning Paper.
Out West 13th St.
Phone 2t«9
. ym for I daya. 1 day la only
estimates. R L Harvey 2tvi
For Home Delivery.
Satdord Ave Phone 1*28.
Loch Arbor
Phone
Jack
Benton.
823-M.
—
Lake Froat Lots with Trees MATTRESS and Box Springs Re­
us about our business rates TWO
novated Like New. CaU Today
Priced 92,300. for both.
ARTICLES WANTED —4 ENVELOPES, letterheads, state
fur FREE Estimate.
ments, Invoices, hand bills, and
th e Want .A d Department^ U
i r n g r a m s. etc. Progressive
ECHOLS BEDDING CO. Highest CASH and TRADE-IN
m en’from 1:30 a. m. until 5:30 p TWO insido lots with trees on
prices
paid
for
used
FURNI­
'Tinting Co. Phone 406—401
paved St. ISO H. frentaga priced Cornrr 2nd A Magnolia Pb. II32
^ t e e b buslnet* day except
except Sat*
TURE.
CaU
038.
Wilson-Malar
West I3U) St
at only *900. for both.
(Bud Bamberger, Mgr.)
afternoon. Deadline for
Furniture
Co.
311
E.
li
t
St.
S ^ ? £-minsertion
tE k s U 2700 P. m
FLOOR sanding and finishing
Ee day preceding PUb'Jcation. Robert A- Williama. Realtor
VENETIAN BLINDS
PIANOS WANTED III Buy Any
Cleaning, waxing Serving Semi
,.y
coming Tn liter than Raymond E. Lundquiat, Assoc Ia j (Nationally Adv. Rolla-Head)
Piano worth Fixing L. L. Sill,
nnle County since 1023 H M
i-OO p. m. v u be published under Phone 16T3 Atlantic Bank Bldg
Manufactured In Sanford
rhono 2164.
_______
Gleasnn, Lake Mary.
roo Late To Classify.
Venetian BHnd Cn.
A dvertlun are requested to no- NEW 3 BEDROOM, spacious ms- Seminole
HELP
WANTED
—II
620 West 3rd St.
Phone IR5
14 B INSUnANCE
-1 4 R
Hly the Want-Ad Department lmsultry home, quiet section, pair
B O O K K EEPER
w
of any errors, in their
shopping
center,
kitchen
equip­
fil V A R IE T IE S
i t Sanford Herald will be
Experienced— Kctn book-, a rt as
ped; a real buy at 912,000.00. re­
Native and Foreign Woods.
cashier. Meet public. Must have
for oily one interred
Freferred Rites lo Preferred
quiring $2,300.00 down, balance
See Them At
experience. Year “round. Estab­
Pnlley holders
like rent.
Sherman
Concrete
Pipe
Co.
lished
local
company.
Reply
giv­
I f i So Em j
John W illiam s Irw. Agency
Out
West
lltb
81.
Phone
2499
ing
experience
to
BOX
MP
c/o
91.300.0(1 down buys this elmost
417 Sanford Atlantic Bank
To PUce A f f w t Ad
The Herald.
completely furnished 1 Bedroom
Phone 84
USED TRACTORS
C*U 1821 and nek fo r
home. Owner anxious for im­
pay end Night drivers. Yellow
Britt Traettf Ce.
» W a n t Ad depbrtm bflt
mediate s a l e , therefore h a &gt; Hiway 17-42 SeuU
Pfcoae 101 Cab Co., 219 S. Magnolia Ave.
fx'ieed this home at 99200.00,
which it about $900 below toYOUNG single msn to learn
— Factory to You —
d « ’a market.
rOB RENT
Mutualize And Economize
printing trade, apply at Herald
A lum inum
Office.
loaor* with
ELAKA APARTMENTS: room*,
Venetian Bllndn
batha U4 w. rirst sl - w. DIETRICHS
IQA
HELP
WANTED
(Female)
to
A
Enclosed
bead.
Sag
proof
bottom
T. W. NERO
rail with plectie ends. Plastic or GIRLS!
Phene n
GIRLS!
GTMJ!
f l N I S H E D UUhtnetU ad- 1M1 Perk Avene
rayon tapea. Cotton or nylon
"Tear Mutual Frlmde"
Good Hours, Good Wares. Ap
Dumberlmd Court. Hiway IT-**
cords.
rhoo* 164
WF
Need
Your
IJiUngaply
in
person
at
Stimnole
Drive
louth. Phone 1IM-W._______
Glaas and Paint Co. fit. 631 East First St.
L. M. PASSONB REALTY Senknrik
112-114 Weat 2nd SV
Phone 320
at 3 Polnta, Jcta. 419 A 17-92.

• Seminole Realty

INSURANCE

—14 14 I

RETICLES P O B S A L E - S

Pkeio 127

Paymfnta

S herw un Cnmcrei# Ca.
PheM 2t t t
WINCHESTER a Rifle practically Out Weal Uth
*15.00: Kerosene Automatic
iter heoter, 8JJ-00; ■ * « LARGE supply of Orangeburg fi­
IUM “Buga choice colon,
bre pipe and (iUlaga’ fer tout
1; A New
double Wardrobe
_ doub
aewer needs.
*13.00: Mahoi
dresser with good mirror, fll.90:
A Nleo Kiddle atrolicr. n t » :
Copper acroeo doom, *3.00;

J IM

is “ SSL

■s.astss.Bass;

g

j g

g

Ann

Phone tl.

Stamlar'e Bike Slwp

310 E. 4th SL Tel. 2484
Blcyele^HGencrai^Repair 1

\

*1cc . . . . .
err. Almost new. Or

,]

R **

s r w m q MACHINES— Repaired
or rabqllt. Also machines for

t

i

J

�it

; ,---

T-

- * f** y

WtBit—St y. Mhr. t, IMS

THE SANFORD HERALD

m

iU ’

N

m&gt;c

i$ « M ic N y
...

“5 #

o r e

_______ _

AN

EX TRA

______

ONE

Juit two weeks—but that's still plenty of tlma to
save enough Lucky Sucks to get a valuable prise at
our b'v lucky Buck Auction Sale, If you hurry! Oet a
Lucky Suck for every dollar you spend -get those
^

WITH ANY

THIS
WEEK

BROOM ■
* MOP

onlV

SNOW CROP
GREEN

VAN

CRISP FLA. HEAD

LETTUCE

2

•

23

DELICIOUS

APPLES

Lb.
Bag

9

A
■ !

Jm

Pkg.

For

BLUE BIRD

TUNA
No. Vfc Can

C

^

TREASURE ISLE
BREADED

CAMP
Heads

10
Ox.

37‘
SHRIMP «• 53*
O RAN GE 8 1
JU IC E
IS- 99*
PEAS

________________________________________________________________

FRESH PRODUCE

QUALITY MEATS

FROZEN SPECIALS

rt*C!

8$

19*

^

U. 8.
CHOICE

ROUND
KINGAN’S
RELIABLE
10 to 12 LB.
WHOLE
READY
TO
EAT

i

M ONARCH

CELERY

Stalk*

^

19*
BA K E

MARGARINE *■ 1 9 *

3

A 19*

Can

LIMIT

LYKES
PALM RIVER'
SLICED

.

COFFEE

|l

WIENERS
2

m

LYKES

emeus
BRAND

lbs

SUGAR

C

BAG
LOUT

OS

RITZl

Peanut
Butter &amp;

OSD

Lb.

&lt;yCEDAR
all rusroea

HOLSCM
H s d PUcel
Stuffed Mao

A T OUR AUCTION
9UNCLE
■SNR

OLIVES

14 Co. Pkg.
^ _

c o n v s r t r d t

C

^

A

*x

Sanford

ON A

M otor Cow

Vi Gal

BEAMS

AN EXTRA LUCKY BUCK WITH TH RU

Bleach
U B irrs

BAT.

TOMATO
JUKE
KOTEX

29*

!■h

4« On.

non.
PAINTS

PARK A V L
AT2StbSt.

1
••

a

x:

c»
245

&gt;7?- W ftfjV ;
R
wyt&gt;J-Wk i ,\

A*-V

- W&amp;F M

*.
‘i? rU-

49

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

NABISCO

BEECHNUT

LYKES

T E

R

SHORTENING
lb

PET NON FAT

DRY MILK 3 a

B AC O N

Hamburger

jm

FLAVOR SWEET

STEAK *■79

HAM S

FRESHLY
GROUND

FLORIDA
^

special items that give you extra lucky Sucks—and
you'll have a "lucky Buck Bankroll" big enough to
get a real prise. You |ust can't miss getting extra
value with our fine, fresh foods.plus lucky Bucksl

vUFYsSrt:

%

�r "" Weather'

Shop and Save
In Sanford

(le e r ta partly cloudy sad sflgV4ly higher Irm ptratorrs through
Friday, highest lhl« afternoon
71-ill. lowest tonight ranging
from shout .30 interior of north

1
im

EntabBshed ISM

iv n g p rx in R N T

SANFORD, FLORIDA.

tu m r

N K W SPA PK it

to 88 lower F.ast Coast.

1
A m o risln d

THURSDAY. MAR. 10. 1955

P rrx s

le a s e d

No. 110

W ire

a

m

Calls For Property
Owners
Determine
Future

Collins Removes
Smith As Cha'
Of Barber Board

• a l m o s t ______
man geta a try-out with a i
reported to the Richmond Virginians
thin morning for a try-out and while

tEAM—A local younfrj few cuts, (he owner of (hr club, Harry Sieimld, appeared on
team . Carl Overatreet the field decked nut in ratchinR nppnrel and took oyer the
Spring training campi
camp duties just to get a closer look at ihi* young man. (Staff
at the plate taking a I Photos)

Strolling Life-Long Ambition
In Sanford Finally Comes True

•

Any Daughters of tho Ameri­
can Revolution who are visiting
in the City are Invited to attend
tho regular meeting of the Bailie
Harrison Chapter tomorrow afternoon a t 3 o'clock a t the home of
Mra. R. E. Telar. 607 Magnolia
Ave. The Rev. J. B. Root, paator
• f tho Congregational Chrlatlaa
Church, will be the gueet speaker.
• • •
. Ceanty Jadga Ereea* llouskold

i t wfll apeak at C rem a Academy
at &gt;;26 a. m. teaseit« « ea 'T ie
Retstloasklp of the P .re * . the
Juvenile sad the Scheel.
e e e
O d d i t y Department— Many
stunned eyes were focused on the
middle of E. First St. in the downtown section shortly before noon
• today as e large metal drum
broke away from a soft drink
track end nonehaatntjr rolled down
the street defying all traffic. So
much for the lighter side. The
tragic ending came when the care­
free barrel decided to terminate its
little tour by resting comfortably
in the fender of a shiny new auto­
mobile. Apparently everyone was
to fascinated to atop the drum that
£ decided to "take a atroll In San1ford".

Alexander Infant
Dies This Morning
James Patrick Alexander, sis
weeks old, passed away very sud­
denly this morning a t 3:46 o'clock.
!la was bora In Orlando Jan. 64.
1D36 and was living a t 619 Laurel
| Ave.
l!e la survived by his mother,
Mra. Doris Alexander, one sister
lametta Alexander, grandmother,
Mra. Mable Alexander and grand­
father, C. T. Reed, Trenton, N. J.
Services will be held at the
graveside » a. m. Friday a t Ever­
green Cemetery. __________ ____

By CARL OVERSTREET
Herald Staff Writer

Today I realized every matin top ambition.
No, I didn’t meet Marilyn Monroe, swim the Engliah
Channel, or receive a million hucka through a rich uncle’a
will.
I was—if only for an hour — a professional, base hall
player.
Clad in an official uniform emblazoned with the number 07, I
tried out with the Richmond basebad club a t its Spring training
camp bar*.
Every man secretly believes ha
would make a wonderful ball
player If given the opportunity.
I had that golden opportunity.
As I did my stuff at the old
stadium, I was closely watched
from all aides. Rut not by big
league scouts. The players were
afraid 1 might bean one of them
with a bat or a ball.
"You look Just like Dom DiMaggio," another newspaperman
commented.
'T ’d say you look like Dlssy
Dean,” still another spectator
shouted. I noted that he put the
emphasis on "Dlssy.”
The Important thing was that
1 started at the top. Harry Rlehold, owner of the cluli, took time
out to alse me up himself. He
even served as catcher as I clout­
ed a few.
I waited for him to hand me a
contract. After all, I am no hold*
out. I was even willing to furnish
the fountain pen.
•
Turning over and over In my
ra'nd waa the question: Should I
ask for a tranus the first season
or wait until later?
1 knew I was a born baseball
player.
A fter playing baseball for an
hour, I wished I hsd never been
born. I kept putting my foot In
my mouth—and those spikes hurt.
Everybody ducked. Why? 1 had
walked up to the plate. I waa go­
ing to Murder that ball. I pointed

to the centcrfiold fence to Indi­
cate where tfca ball would go. I
felt libs* a kindergarten Babe Both.
I waa out faster than Rex
Layne.
My visions of glory evaporated.
It was then th st Manager I.uke
Appling pulled me over to the
side and gave me a few words of
advice.
lie shattered my Illusion that
.ill hasrhall players start reading,
the Wall Street Journal after the
first season. I thought they sat
up nights counting thousand dol­
lar bills Instead of ahrrp.
"Rasrhnll Is a hard life," Appl­
ing told me. "You start off in a
Class I) league drawing altout
f 130 a month, and the only place
you have less time of your own
is in the Army.”
I asked Luke If the young hail
players of today are any belter
than those ho handled five years
ago when he started managing
clubs.
"Kids Just don’t have time to
play hall any more,” he declared.
"They have too many other
things to do, Ilka watching tele­
vision and movita.”
After tho workout they gave
me, I was ready for some of that
T.V. and a nice cool movie.
SLOT MACHINES FOUND
CHICAGO —Sheriff* deputies
destroyed 12 new-type slot ma
rhinea captured complete with instnlctions to owners Including this
suggestion: "Keep parts where
coins are inserted well oiled. Use
no oil or grease on the pay-out
slides.”

'County Seeking To Give Vaccine
Detailed plans now are being
worked out for the possible admlniitration of polio vaccina to
1,700 Seminole County children
who will be eligible to receive It
U it is licensed. Dr. Terry Bird,
County Health Officer, said today.
As wa* announced by state
health officials, all first apd second grade pupils In public, prifev ate and parochial achools in the
atata are Included in tha planned
program. Vaccina also will ha
available to others through physi­
cians at tha ssma time.
But parents wars warned by Dr.
Bird not to Jump to coocltuioci
that tha currant planning indicated
tha vaccina already had bean
proved effective.
"The vaccina which will be
furnished by the National Founds
/ | | M (or Infantile Paralysis D the
^ i s m e vaccina that wai given to
446,006 children last spring.” ha

"But wa cannot wait until then
(or planning for the protection of aa
many of our children as possible.
Vaccinating large number of chil­
dren Is a big and important Job,
entailing many procedural tasks
(hat can't be performed over nlgtiL
"If Ute license is granted In
April we must be ready to start
vaccinating at once, so that, if
possible, we can finish before our
schools close and the polio sea­
son starts. We want to give (ha
vaccine early so that many child­
ren ran be protected before polio
appears in their communities.
"This program would not be an­
other teat but tha first use of a
newly-established preventive mea­
sure."
Under tha direction of the State
Health Department, Dr. Bird baa
bean conferring with officials at
tha County Chapter of the National Foundation for Infantile Para­
lysis, school authorities and phy­
sicians who have pledged their

**We do not knew yat
It really prevents Mralytie polio.
The polio vaccine will be furaUntil April, whan we wfll learn the
from a supply being pur­
ui m adia 0# the evaluation study now
W ag conducted at the University chased by the National Found»t ion
• f Michigan, we canaa* know U with March at Dimes funds. It will
be made available by the National
the vaccine is effective.

product to State Health Officers
for use In the school groups, if
llcenied by Federal Government.
Supplies also will be distributed
through usual channels a t the
tame time.

$200,000 Sale Is
Made By Whiddon
The largest grove In the Central
Florida area so far this month
was sold for a reported |200,000
by Renjnmin «nd Samuel Echeiman to A. F. I’owtdl of Delarad
through C. A. Whiddon S r, local
real estate broker.
The lit) acre hearing grove Is
located in West Orange County in
what is known as Windcmcre.
In recent reports from several
Central Florida counties, there
ha* hern v canvideryMr* v 'ou’.t *f
activity in Uip citrus induMiy
with quite a large number of
grove aalea being transacted in
ami around Seminole County.

C. W. MrKIHHIN J».

(su rr I’koiu)

★
★
★
Industry Subject
Of McKibbin Talk
At Jaycees Today
I'lannctl industrial district* was
the subject of an informative talk
presented lotlay at the Jay rrrs
noon luncheon by Clifford W Mc­
Kibbin Jr. who pointed out the
available ailea for Industry and
Ihe many new bu*!«ea* opimrtuiilties in the Sanford and Seminole
Counly area. The speaker further
brought out in hit speech that
"industrial growth does not Just
happen. It must be planned.”
McKibbin came |o Sanford la
January, 1949, to terse a* City
Manager which capacity he alto
held in Winter I’ark before coining
to thli City. He hgs had an ac­
tive part in the local organiza­
tion of the Roy Seoul* of America.
A short report on the progress
of the newly formeil Jay bee* was
given by Tommy Stringer who an
nounred that the bT , \ group has
elected temporary n /ire rs and
■■aa drawn up and accepted ils

Need Is Told
Of Right-Of-Ways
The future of I lie mov e In
L-ur-lane l ’. S. High way 179*.’ rests with owners of th e
abutting properly.
That was ihe opinion of
l lie Chamber of Commerce**
I-ong-liange Hoad* Planning
Com m ittee

a*

ii

m et

last

night at Kliner’s f’estauranl.
"I’our-laning of IJ. S. 17-92

★

★

im. J. c. emits

★

★

( S ta f f P h o to )

★

★

Exercise Is Secret Of Youth,
Says Dr. Gibbs Who Is 99 Today
T h e se c re t o f m a in ta in in g y o uth I* ex ercise.
S o snya J(iiblm. retired Michigan doctor now living

e* A02 Magnolia Av*. here in Sanford, who today is marking
hi* W-ith birthday.
"You have to keep your muscle.* Umber", lie said, "and

in rm lent standards." raid Biaile.v Oiihain. i bait man of the com­
mittee, "will require » lot of
right-of-way. If tiii* i iglit-of-way
rail b&lt;» bought cheaply enough.
Die project will go through. If
not, it won’t ."
I he help of ail Seminole Coun­
ty teddriil* it needed to in*uie
t lie completion of the project,
Ihl li* m *aid in iri|iie«tlng that
property owners join in the
gleal i nonet stive effoli.
lie riled the danger of "jeopard'ziug out opportunity” and warn­
ed that if cooperation ia not
»l,own on iiglit-of-way, the atato
neght go ahead with a hypata.”
Dillism again emphasized the
inipotlanrt of the project to the
county.
Kniir-lsning of LL ■. it j : haa
li» fn tagged by the committee as
i h* troonty's number 1 road ptolert. The St ilies Hus d Roaid b»a
jtppi opnntril 1800,IKK) for tlic p ro .
Kcl,
I k ill ptie 11 ‘1liornalt. fifth district
lairml&gt;er of th e S t a le Road Board,
• sid recently that the nmount Will
• iHPI i the p o t tion of tha highway
ft Util Grange County about to tils*
•It‘r IT «•* 1Itiioil, a pprnvinialrly
eight nub * south of Sanford.
Four-laiiing of Die highway, the
I'l amber committee poinlcd out in
n resolution recently, "will m»t
only aid ao,| promote the develop­
ment of Ihe economic life of Sfriinole ('m int), Imt will ulso ma­
terially Joel ease (be dentil mid
tinffii loll through traffic acci­
dents on tlic said highway ”
The highway ia the principal
.utensl highway running north
and south llilougli Seminole Coun­
ty ami lia* one of tin- highest
traffic counts of any road ia Flor­
ida, arcoiding to thr State Road
Irepai tnient.
Richey Green, district engineer
fol the Highway Department,
&gt;hnw,sl pielimilimy maps at tha
meeting last Night. Two of
Green's assistants wer* also pi*seat.

you have In exeieiae the In am
too." To explain Ihr latter com
ment h« waved ids hand »t the
Itook* surrounding him oil the
poicb swing.
With til" century tnmk ju*t
around tin- eoiner. Dr. Gibb* is
very unconcerned I lint lie dor* loo
much rxerri e. It** limbers llio-e
lliodist District Meeting
“muscles" by pushing * lawn
bi-Id at Filsl Methiiilt-d
mower, walking nine blocks to
ill Oiliimlu lonmiiuw wiili
the Post Office every day, puking
tu In-gin nt 10 a. m. ami
fruit, and doing most "f *••*- , • ciu lutj,- at
| in. Kntilh-ii
NEW YORK or A federal eaur chore* of a yaid attendant, l oll- " \\iir[ , Imp of tii,
Four Coinutisjury early today convicted lo Puer­ sequent ly Id* home and yard w e j .jour", Ibis study si-ission ia de­
to Rienn Nationalist party mem­ unit of tho tidiest in Sanford.
igned In mil nml plumule- Ilia
ber* of seditious conspiracy aftoi
Mis. Gibbs rays "I can't do n wolk in local Methodist CTiUlehr*
deliberating the rave for nearly
thing with him. If I g&lt;&gt; Gi town n* it is i Mined out in the vauuu*
10 hours.
in the r»r lie walks; toy* lie needs commissions.
An llth man was acquitted.
The Wntkshop is to b* led by
The group had been charged the exercise. The only thing
with trying to bring about '.he wrong with him i» that he is n oflii iiil n piesentatives of Die
rlitllrh - wide General lloanls
“ political independence of Puerto little linnl of heating."
"His friends have kept him from Nashville, Tenil. Ubisilimsti
Itico from the United States by
forre and violent« and armo-l rev­ by*y nil morning" she went on. of the l-'uui (,'oniiuUiion* invited
"As soon ns one leave* another uie Ashby Jones, rliuii mini of
olution.”
Testimony at the trial linked l!tc comes, -lust give him ■ hook and induration, J. C. Davis, rhuiriiiNti Fire Department
of roniinissiun on finance; Mis.
Nationalist parly with the 1930 at­ he’s completely happy
Mr. Gibbs, with h twinkle in ids Joe Arriiiello chairman of rout- Answers Alarms
tend) to assassinate former I'rrsi
dent Truman and the wounding of rye, remarked that people nowa­ mission of membership and Evan­
The Sanford Fife Department
five congressmen In the U S. House day* don’t get enough of the mus- gelism; slid Mr*. N'enl Farmer, answered four fire alarm* yester­
rhnirm.iii of &gt;ommlsiioii on mis­ day. The lir*t came at 1:20 p. m.
of Representatives March I. 1951. i li building exercise.
He was Imrn in a log robin at sion*.
In charging the jury, Judge John
when it was railed lo assist the
F. X. McGohey said it must de­ Kalamazoo, Mich, and begun a
All iliteiest, d llielllbe■s ,,f tin- Forest Ranger* al * grass and
cide whether the defendants helped g, nerul pru* tiro of medicine in Four Uuiiiiiiisaions al«o mu in , wood fire at Elder Springs
in these shootings. H the jury Crown Point, Ind. In 188(1. In I02J vited lu attend ill order that a
'Hu- M'roiid fire al !:3u p. m.
found that the shootings were Ihe be retired at lh« young ngc of M. llioie effective- commission pro- wa* also a gras* lire out of Ihe
isolated act of a few persons un­ While In Florida on a ttip he de­ glam may lie cal I led on h i the j Cily at Mohawk Aie The men
aided by the defendants, the jury rided to *tny In Sanford uml ha* local i hutch K. U. Hutchison, as wise gone 40 minute*.
could not consider litem against mude his home here ever slnre. ebullition of Ilia
the of fit ini lioaiil,
At 1:33 p. in another alarm
The climate "Just e r r e d " with uml |l ...... illlatOI Ilie Rev. Milton was turned in at III) W. Second
the defendants, he said.
The new conviction* brought to him.
II. Wyatt and llir Rev. Richaid Street at the Automatic Laundry
A« Tii- Hanford lle ial.l report­ D, Itiiighl, also will attend the operated h) bed Kennedy. The
77 the number of Nationalist party
members who have been convict­ er left l»r. Gibbs, he was seen VYotksliup.
source was a defciti va boiler,
ed of, or pleaded guilty to. sedi­ reaching for the luke to complete
however nothing was damaged.
tious charges in the past six his unfinished chore. Seem* as
The la*l call came at 2:33 p in.
months.
•hough the kindly gentleman John C. Andrews
wlieii another grass fire wa* disI* thoroughly confident of his
to u re d al 2til3 Mohawk Ate Tins
theory that the urerct of youth if Dies At Bay Pines
wa&gt; out of the city.
U. S. Finally Gets rxrrcUe.
John t\ Andrews, 70, died Mart'll
N at Ha) Fines Veteran* Hospital,
Spring
lie w.i i horn May 23. IK7H in Green Fla. Supreme Court
Dr.
Harry
Jessop
Another mild, pleasant day ap­
Count). Ga and formerly lived in
peared Ihe outlook for most of P r
a' which lime lie owned Affirms Sentence
Will Speok Sunday Sanford
nation today.
a grocery store at Paula Corner. TALLAHASSEE ' »*-The Florida
Dr Harry K Jessup, author of Mr \mlrew* served a* Chaplain Supreme Court yesterday affirmed
Tlie later winter spell of sprint
like weather sent temperature* into college textbook*, lecturer, arid in the VFW Fust in Craddock, Va Samuel J. Ilornheck's death sen­
Hr I- survived by two sons, J tence for Hie 1933 Haying of a
the upper 60s in western and cen president etneritu* of the Chicago
tral Texas yesterday. Reading* Evangelistic Institute, will be the )V Andrews, Atlanta, Ga ; Joe Dins! County patrolman
were in the 70s northward into guest speakir at the 10'43 o'clock K Andrews, of Sanford; ami two
Hurnbe-k, who wa* fleeing a
weal central Nebraska, the central Kumliy morning sendee of Ihi daughters, Mr*. Mary Spivey, hank robbery charge, had just
Miitissippi Valley and southern Church of Ihe Nazarene.
Sanf ird, Mrs. K. I,. Gay, of Ma robbed a restaurant and with a
He will also speak al a special con, Ga
Virginia.
companion was attempting to shoot
General warming wa* reported afternoon union service of Ihe fol­
Funeral servlre* will be tumor his way through a police cordon
throughout the Gulf and Atlantic lowing churchf*: Free Method)*! row afternoon at 4:30 o'clock al when patrolman Thomas Alien
coastal atates with temperatures Church of Sanford. Wesleyan Meth- Rriss hi Funeral Home anil burial Hulun ion Jr., wst killed.
as much as 23 degrees higher ear - odist Church of Panla. and the will bu in Ouklawn Memorial
Defense attorneys claimed Hornly today than yeaterday. Readings Lake Mary Nazarene (’lurch.
beck should not have been tried
Park.
in the 60s were reported from Tex­ •Special singing Is being planned
for first degree murder becausa
as and tha treat Gulf atatea north­ and tha public ia Invited lo at
none of the robbery victim* was
COLLINS M TODAY
ward to tha lower Ohio Valley.
tend.
TALLAHASSEE (B-Gov. Collin, killed and premeditation had not
found a fancy cake on his desk been proved as far at the patrol­
DUC LOCKED OUT
TEA PARTIES BANNED
man was eoiirem ej. They said
WASHINGTON IB - President
LONDON IB—The House of Com­ ihl* morning. It was a gift front Robinson could have hern killed
his
office
staff
on
hit
Mth
birthday
Elsenhower got locked out of the mons was told thst the British
by a wild shot from another officer.
White House momentarily today. Malay government has banned today.
Justice R. K. Huberts, writing
Ho bad gone into tho rose garden Communist - sponsored tea par­ The cake remained on the desk the court's opinion, said the pa­
just outside to greet a group at ties there because the Reds were white Collins cmwlucted a removal trolman was slain la the coarse
foreign students in this country to using them to Indoctrinate atu- bearing fur Joe L. Smith uf Miami, of the robbery and that xrss aX

Ten Puerto Ricans
Convicted By Jury

The National Foundation has fin­
anced the development and pro­
duction of the Salk vaecine. Contracts were made with manufac­
turers for a supply of vaccine
costing 69.ooo.ooo in Match of
Dimes funds. This enabled manu­
facturers to keep their production
facilities in operation during thr
wailing period and be ready to go by-laws.
into full production as soon as the
At Ihe present tim i the Jayrers
vaccine is licensed.
ace sponsoring a membership
"Vaccine would be given by the campaign with Gcprge Andrew
Health Department this spring Speer and A. B. Peterson Jr. as
only to those eligible children co-chairmen of the drive. Mem
whoa* parent* sign forma request­ berahip eards may be obtained
ing it,” Dr Bird added.
from the Jaycees Informatioe
Booth or by contacting
ntactlng any Jay
”11 la a completely voluntary cee.
,
am. The forma win be distri
through tha schools beginn­
r SUCCESSFUL
SUCCESS!
ing re st week. We should like EXPERIMENT
to
4- Boat
Post master
nr
WASHINGTON IB 4~
know as soon s i poaaible how
Summerfieid says the ex­
many eligible rhildrta wa must General
periment of moving Scont mail by
provide for, if (ha vacdaalfoa pro­ air when (pact is pvaflablo has
gram is carried out.
provad "quite suecwmtol” and ha
"If the vaccine is mot Memltd, may ask Congress te i

K

TALLAHASSEE IB - Gov. Col
Inn today removed Jor I., Smith ol
Miami a* chairman of the Flori­
da Rarbctv Sanitary Commission
because of alleged irrrgularitirt
in issuance of license* last year.
The governor ha* the poucr to
remove a barber hoard member.
Confirmation o( Ihe Senate i*
necessary.
The gnternor annminred re
moval wa* not intended to east
any per-onal reflection* on Smith
wild had ottered hi* cooperation.
Bill, hr said, while he
Smith had no Intent of wrongdo­
ing he had to »hare re&gt;pon»ibilitv
fiv Ihe wrongdoing of the besrd.
Smith told the govrrnur hr had
inlormation he was witling to pre­
vent to a grand jury of license
purrha.ving by applicant.*.
The two other member* of the
barber board resigned last week.
The governor said hr would nol
a-k the l.eon County Circuit Court
at tills time to rail a grand jury
to Investigate tba situation.
"I will a*k die new board I shall
appoint to confer with thr attorney
general s* to what action should
bo taken to prevent recurrence.*,"
he said.
Smith said he knew: of barber*
who received license* without lak
ing examinations. He said some
told him they bought their licenses.
"I don't know where he got the
licenses,’’ Smith said.
He described the go-bettvrrn as
"a Miami man . . . an Kalian . .
a dangerous man . . a racketeer."
Smith told the governor that on
(our occasions last year ha was
introduced In bqrbcr lircn-* annu­
l s - t i ay w- IL Aankln, then rhaii
man of the board, and was (old
by Rankin that "Mr. Fetter had
told him to give the man the exatninatioa on the short form, whirh
was referred to as Ihe Negro
piper.”

Four Commissions
Workshop Planned

Touch Of

•&lt; Urn'

c

«

4

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; ,---

T -

- * f** y

W tBit—Sty. Mhr. t , IMS

THE SANFORD HERALD

m

iU ’

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r e

N

Juit two weeks— but that's still plenty of tlma to
save enough Lucky Sucks to get a valuable prise at
our b'v lucky Buck Auction Sale, If you hurry! Oet a
Lucky Suck for every dollar you spend -g e t those

i$ « M ic N y m &gt;c
...

“5#

______ _

AN

EXTRA

_____

^

ONE

WITH ANY

THIS
WEEK

BROOM ■
* MOP

onlV

SNOW CROP
GREEN

10

PEAS

^

Jm

Ox.
Pkg.

VAN

SHRIMP «• 5 3 *
ORANGE 8 1
JU IC E
IS- 9 9 *

CAMP

CRISP FLA. HEAD

2

23

•

DELICIOUS

BLUE BIRD

TUNA
No. Vfc Can

APPLES

C
9

Lb.
Bag

A

■ !

ROUND

TREASURE ISLE
BREADED

FRESH PRODUCE

LETTUCE

U. 8.
CHOICE

3 7‘

For

____________________________________________________

Heads

QUALITY MEATS

FROZEN SPECIALS

rt*C!

8$

19*

KINGAN’S
RELIABLE
10 to 12 LB.
WHOLE
READY
TO
EAT

^

i

CELERY

Stalk*

FLAVOR SWEET

^

PALM RIVER'

19*
BA K E

MARGARINE *■ 1 9 *

T E

R

SHORTENING
lb

3

PET NON FAT

DRY MILK 3 a A 19*

Can

.

WIENERS

m

LYKES

BEECHNUT

NABISCO

Peanut
Butter &amp;

RITZl

BRAND

2
lbs

OSD

LOUT

Lb.

A T O UR AUCTION

ru sroea

HOLSCM
H s d PUcel
Stuffed Mao

9UNCLE
■SNR

14 Co. Pkg.
^
_

c o n v s r t r d t

C

^

A

*x
Sanford
Motor Cow

ON A

Vi G al

B E AM S

AN EXTRA LUCKY BUCK WITH T H R U

Bleach
U Birrs

TOMATO
JUKE
BAT.

29*

!■h

4« On.

non.
PAINTS

KOTEX
PARK A V L

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SUGAR

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all

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COFFEE

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LIMIT

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SLICED

Hamburger

jm

LYKES

B AC O N
LYKES

GROUND

MONARCH

S T E A K *■ 7 9

HAM S

FRESHLY

FLORIDA
^

special items that give you extra lucky Sucks— and
you'll have a "lucky Buck Bankroll" big enough to
get a real prise. You |ust can't miss getting extra
value with our fine, fresh foods.plus lucky Bucksl

vUFYsSrt:

%

�r " " Weather'

Shop and Save
In Sanford

(leer ta partly cloudy sad sflgV4ly higher Irmptratorrs through
Friday, highest lhl« afternoon
71-ill. lowest tonight ranging
from shout .30 interior of north
to 88 lower F.ast Coast.

1
im

EntabBshed IS M

iv n g p r x in R N T

SANFORD, FLORIDA.

tu m r

N K W SP A P K it

1

A m orisln d

THURSDAY. MAR. 10. 1955

Prrxs

le a s e d

No. 110

W ire

a

m

Calls For Property
Owners
Determine
Future

Collins Removes
Smith As Cha'
Of Barber Board

•a l m o s t ______
man geta a try-out with a i
reported to the Richmond Virginians
thin morning for a try-out and while

Stro llin g

tEAM— A local younfrj few cuts, (he owner of (hr club, Harry Sieimld, appeared on
team. Carl Overatreet the field decked nut in ratchinR nppnrel and took oyer the
Spring training campi
camp duties just to get a closer look at ihi* young man. (Staff
at the plate taking a I Photos)

Life-Long Ambition

In Sanford Finally Comes True
Any Daughters of tho Ameri­
can Revolution who are visiting
in the City are Invited to attend
tho regular meeting of the Bailie
Harrison Chapter tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock at the home of
Mra. R. E. Telar. 607 Magnolia
Ave. The Rev. J. B. Root, paator
•f tho Congregational Chrlatlaa
Church, will be the gueet speaker.
• • •

•

. Ceanty Jadga Ereea* llouskold
it wfll apeak at Crema Academy
at &gt;;26 a. m. teaseit« « ea 'T i e
Retstloasklp of the P .r e * . the
Juvenile sad the Scheel.
e e e
O d d i t y Department— Many
stunned eyes were focused on the
middle of E. First St. in the downtown section shortly before noon
• today as e large metal drum
broke away from a soft drink
track end nonehaatntjr rolled down
the street defying all traffic. So
much for the lighter side. The
tragic ending came when the care­
free barrel decided to terminate its
little tour by resting comfortably
in the fender of a shiny new auto­
mobile. Apparently everyone was
to fascinated to atop the drum that
£ decided to "take a atroll In San1ford".

Alexander Infant
Dies This Morning
James Patrick Alexander, sis
weeks old, passed away very sud­
denly this morning at 3:46 o'clock.
!la was bora In Orlando Jan. 64.
1D36 and was living at 619 Laurel
|Ave.
l!e la survived by his mother,
Mra. Doris Alexander, one sister
lametta Alexander, grandmother,
Mra. Mable Alexander and grand­
father, C. T. Reed, Trenton, N. J.
Services will be held at the
graveside » a. m. Friday at Ever­
green Cemetery. __________ ____

By CARL OVERSTREET
Herald Staff Writer

Today I realized every matin top ambition.
No, I didn’t meet Marilyn Monroe, swim the Engliah
Channel, or receive a million hucka through a rich uncle’a
will.
I was— if only for an hour — a professional, base hall
player.
Clad in an official uniform emblazoned with the number 07, I
tried out with the Richmond basebad club at its Spring training
camp bar*.
Every man secretly believes ha
would make a wonderful ball
player If given the opportunity.
I had that golden opportunity.
As I did my stuff at the old
stadium, I was closely watched
from all aides. Rut not by big
league scouts. The players were
afraid 1 might bean one of them
with a bat or a ball.
"You look Just like Dom DiMaggio," another newspaperman
commented.
'T’d say you look like Dlssy
Dean,” still another spectator
shouted. I noted that he put the
emphasis on "Dlssy.”
The Important thing was that
1 started at the top. Harry Rlehold, owner of the cluli, took time
out to alse me up himself. He
even served as catcher as I clout­
ed a few.
I waited for him to hand me a
contract. After all, I am no hold*
out. I was even willing to furnish
the fountain pen.
•
Turning over and over In my
ra'nd waa the question: Should I
ask for a tranus the first season
or wait until later?
1 knew I was a born baseball
player.
After playing baseball for an
hour, I wished I hsd never been
born. I kept putting my foot In
my mouth—and those spikes hurt.
Everybody ducked. Why? 1 had
walked up to the plate. I waa go­
ing to Murder that ball. I pointed

to the centcrfiold fence to Indi­
cate where tfca ball would go. I
felt libs* a kindergarten Babe Both.
I waa out faster than Rex
Layne.
My visions of glory evaporated.
It was then thst Manager I.uke
Appling pulled me over to the
side and gave me a few words of
advice.
lie shattered my Illusion that
.ill hasrhall players start reading,
the Wall Street Journal after the
first season. I thought they sat
up nights counting thousand dol­
lar bills Instead of ahrrp.
"Rasrhnll Is a hard life," Appl­
ing told me. "You start off in a
Class I) league drawing altout
f 130 a month, and the only place
you have less time of your own
is in the Army.”
I asked Luke If the young hail
players of today are any belter
than those ho handled five years
ago when he started managing
clubs.
"Kids Just don’t have time to
play hall any more,” he declared.
"They have too many other
things to do, Ilka watching tele­
vision and movita.”
After tho workout they gave
me, I was ready for some of that
T.V. and a nice cool movie.
SLOT MACHINES FOUND
CHICAGO —Sheriff* deputies
destroyed 12 new-type slot ma
rhinea captured complete with instnlctions to owners Including this
suggestion: "Keep parts where
coins are inserted well oiled. Use
no oil or grease on the pay-out
slides.”

'County Seeking To Give Vaccine
Detailed plans now are being
worked out for the possible admlniitration of polio vaccina to
1,700 Seminole County children
who will be eligible to receive It
U it is licensed. Dr. Terry Bird,
County Health Officer, said today.
As wa* announced by state
health officials, all first apd second grade pupils In public, prifevate and parochial achools in the
atata are Included in tha planned
program. Vaccina also will ha
available to others through physi­
cians at tha ssma time.
But parents wars warned by Dr.
Bird not to Jump to coocltuioci
that tha currant planning indicated
tha vaccina already had bean
proved effective.
"The vaccina which will be
furnished by the National Founds
/| | M (or Infantile Paralysis D the
^ i s m e vaccina that wai given to
446,006 children last spring.” ha

"But wa cannot wait until then
(or planning for the protection of aa
many of our children as possible.
Vaccinating large number of chil­
dren Is a big and important Job,
entailing many procedural tasks
(hat can't be performed over nlgtiL
"If Ute license is granted In
April we must be ready to start
vaccinating at once, so that, if
possible, we can finish before our
schools close and the polio sea­
son starts. We want to give (ha
vaccine early so that many child­
ren ran be protected before polio
appears in their communities.
"This program would not be an­
other teat but tha first use of a
newly-established preventive mea­
sure."
Under tha direction of the State
Health Department, Dr. Bird baa
bean conferring with officials at
tha County Chapter of the National Foundation for Infantile Para­
lysis, school authorities and phy­
sicians who have pledged their

**We do not knew yat
It really prevents Mralytie polio.
Until April, whan we wfll learn the The polio vaccine will be furafrom a supply being pur­
ui madia 0# the evaluation study now
W a g conducted at the University chased by the National Found»t ion
•f Michigan, we canaa* know U with March at Dimes funds. It will
be made available by the National
the vaccine is effective.

product to State Health Officers
for use In the school groups, if
llcenied by Federal Government.
Supplies also will be distributed
through usual channels at the
tame time.
The National Foundation has fin­
anced the development and pro­
duction of the Salk vaecine. Contracts were made with manufac­
turers for a supply of vaccine
costing 69.ooo.ooo in Match of
Dimes funds. This enabled manu­
facturers to keep their production
facilities in operation during thr
wailing period and be ready to go
into full production as soon as the
vaccine is licensed.
"Vaccine would be given by the
Health Department this spring
only to those eligible children
whoa* parent* sign forma request­
ing it,” Dr Bird added.

$200,000 Sale Is
Made By Whiddon
The largest grove In the Central
Florida area so far this month
was sold for a reported |200,000
by Renjnmin «nd Samuel Echeiman to A. F. I’owtdl of Delarad
through C. A. Whiddon Sr, local
real estate broker.
The lit) acre hearing grove Is
located in West Orange County in
what is known as Windcmcre.
In recent reports from several
Central Florida counties, there
ha* hern v canvideryMr* v 'ou’.t * f
activity in Uip citrus induMiy
with quite a large number of
grove aalea being transacted in
ami around Seminole County.

Need Is Told
Of Right-Of-Ways
The future o f Ilie mov e In
L-ur-lane l ’. S. High way 179*.’ rests with owners of the
abutting properly.
That was ihe opinion of
l lie Chamber of Commerce**
I-ong-liange Hoad* Planning
Com m ittee

C. W. MrKIHHIN J ».

(surr I’koiu)

★
★
★
Industry Subject
O f M cKibbin Talk
A t Jaycees Today
I'lannctl industrial district* was
the subject of an informative talk
presented lotlay at the Jayrrrs
noon luncheon by Clifford W Mc­
Kibbin Jr. who pointed out the
available ailea for Industry and
Ihe many new bu*!«ea* opimrtuiilties in the Sanford and Seminole
Counly area. The speaker further
brought out in hit speech that
"industrial growth does not Just
happen. It must be planned.”
McKibbin came |o Sanford la
January, 1949, to terse a* City
Manager which capacity he alto
held in Winter I’ ark before coining
to thli City. He hgs had an ac­
tive part in the local organiza­
tion of the Roy Seoul* of America.
A short report on the progress
of the newly formeil Jay bee* was
given by Tommy Stringer who an
nounred that the bT , \ group has
elected temporary n/irers and
■■aa drawn up and accepted ils
by-laws.
At Ihe present timi the Jayrers
ace sponsoring a membership
campaign with Gcprge Andrew
Speer and A. B. Peterson Jr. as
co-chairmen of the drive. Mem
berahip eards may be obtained
from the Jaycees Informatioe
Booth or by contacting
ntactlng any Jay
cee.
,

a*

ii

m et

last

night at Kliner’s f’ estauranl.
" I ’our-laning of IJ. S. 17-92

(S ta ff P hoto)

i m . J . c. e m i t s
★

★

★

★

★

★

Exercise Is Secret O f Youth,
S ays Dr. G ib b s W ho Is 9 9 Today
Th e secret o f m aintaining youth I* exercise.
S o snya J(iiblm. retired Michigan doctor now living

e* A02 Magnolia Av*. here in Sanford, who today is marking
hi* W-ith birthday.
"You have to keep your muscle.* Umber", lie said, "and

in rm lent standards." raid Biaile.v Oiihain. i bait man of the com­
mittee, "will require » lot of
right-of-way. If tiii* i iglit-of-way
rail b&lt;» bought cheaply enough.
Die project will go through. If
not, it won’t."
I he help of ail Seminole Coun­
ty teddriil* it needed to in*uie
tlie completion of the project,
Ihl li* m *aid in iri|iie«tlng that
property owners join in the
gleal i nonet stive effoli.
lie riled the danger of "jeopard'ziug out opportunity” and warn­
ed that if cooperation ia not
»l,own on iiglit-of-way, the atato
neght go ahead with a hypata.”
Dillism again emphasized the
inipotlanrt of the project to the
county.
Kniir-lsning of LL ■. it j : haa
li»fn tagged by the committee as
i h* troonty's number 1 road ptolert. The St ilies Hus d Roaid b»a
jtppi opnntril 1800,IKK) for tlic pro.
Kcl,
I kill ptie11 ‘1liornalt. fifth district
lairml&gt;er of the Stale Road Board,
•sid recently that the nmount Will
•iHPIi the pottion of tha highway
ft Util Grange County about to tils*
•It‘r IT «•* 1Itiioil, apprnvinialrly
eight nub * south of Sanford.
Four-laiiing of Die highway, the
I'l amber committee poinlcd out in
n resolution recently, "will m»t
only aid ao,| promote the develop­
ment of Ihe economic life of Sfriinole ('mint), Imt will ulso ma­
terially Joel ease (be dentil mid
tinffii loll through traffic acci­
dents on tlic said highway ”
The highway ia the principal
.utensl highway running north
and south llilougli Seminole Coun­
ty ami lia* one of tin- highest
traffic counts of any road ia Flor­
ida, arcoiding to thr State Road
Irepai tnient.
Richey Green, district engineer
fol the Highway Department,
&gt;hnw,sl pielimilimy maps at tha
meeting last Night. Two of
Green's assistants wer* also pi*seat.

you have In exeieiae the In am
too." To explain Ihr latter com
ment h« waved ids hand »t the
Itook* surrounding him oil the
poicb swing.
With til" century tnmk ju*t
around tin- eoiner. Dr. Gibb* is
very unconcerned Ilint lie dor* loo
much rxerri e. It** limbers llio-e
lliodist District Meeting
“ muscles" by pushing * lawn
bi-Id at Filsl Methiiilt-d
mower, walking nine blocks to
ill Oiliimlu lonmiiuw wiili
the Post Office every day, puking
tu In-gin nt 10 a. m. ami
fruit, and doing most "f *••*- , •ciu lutj,- at
| in.
Kntilh-ii
NEW YORK or A federal eaur chore* of a yaid attendant, l oll- "\\iir[ , Imp of tii,
Four Coinutisjury early today convicted lo Puer­ sequent ly Id* home and yard we j .jour", Ibis study
si-ission ia de­
to Rienn Nationalist party mem­ unit of tho tidiest in Sanford.
igned In mil nml plumule- Ilia
ber* of seditious conspiracy aftoi
Mis. Gibbs rays "I can't do n wolk in local Methodist CTiUlehr*
deliberating the rave for nearly
thing with him. If I g&lt;&gt; Gi town n* it is i Mined out in the vauuu*
10 hours.
in the r»r lie walks; toy* lie needs commissions.
An llth man was acquitted.
the exercise. The only thing
The Wntkshop is to b* led by
The group had been charged
with trying to bring about '.he wrong with him i» that he is n oflii iiil n piesentatives of Die
rlitllrh - wide General lloanls
“ political independence of Puerto little linnl of heating."
"His friends have kept him from Nashville, Tenil. Ubisilimsti
Itico from the United States by
forre and violent« and armo-l rev­ by*y nil morning" she went on. of the l-'uui (,'oniiuUiion* invited
"As soon ns one leave* another uie Ashby Jones, rliuii mini of
olution.”
Testimony at the trial linked l!tc comes, -lust give him ■ hook and induration, J. C. Davis, rhuiriiiNti
of roniinissiun on finance; Mis.
Nationalist parly with the 1930 at­ he’s completely happy
Mr. Gibbs, with h twinkle in ids Joe Arriiiello chairman of routtend) to assassinate former I'rrsi
dent Truman and the wounding of rye, remarked that people nowa­ mission of membership and Evan­
The Sanford Fife Department
five congressmen In the U S. House day* don’t get enough of the mus- gelism; slid Mr*. N'enl Farmer, answered four fire alarm* yester­
rhnirm.iii of &gt;ommlsiioii on mis­
of Representatives March I. 1951. i li building exercise.
day. The lir*t came at 1:20 p. m.
He was Imrn in a log robin at sion*.
In charging the jury, Judge John
when it was railed lo assist the
F. X. McGohey said it must de­ Kalamazoo, Mich, and begun a
A ll iliteiest, d llielllbe■s ,,f tin- Forest Ranger* al * grass and
cide whether the defendants helped g, nerul pru* tiro of medicine in Four Uuiiiiiiisaions al«o mu in , wood fire at Elder Springs
in these shootings. H the jury Crown Point, Ind. In 188(1. In I02J vited lu attend ill order that a
'Hu- M'roiid fire al !:3u p. m.
found that the shootings were Ihe be retired at lh« young ngc of M. llioie effective- commission pro- wa* also a gras* lire out of Ihe
isolated act of a few persons un­ While In Florida on a ttip he de­ glam may lie cal I led on h i the j Cily at Mohawk Aie The men
aided by the defendants, the jury rided to *tny In Sanford uml ha* local i hutch K. U. Hutchison, as wise gone 40 minute*.
could not consider litem against mude his home here ever slnre. ebullition of Ilia
the of fit ini lioaiil,
At 1:33 p. in another alarm
The climate "Just e rr e d " with um l |l......illlatOI Ilie Rev. M ilto n was turned in at III) W. Second
the defendants, he said.
The new conviction* brought to him.
II. Wyatt and llir Rev. Richaid Street at the Automatic Laundry
A« Tii- Hanford lleial.l report­ D, Itiiighl, also will attend the operated h) bed Kennedy. The
77 the number of Nationalist party
members who have been convict­ er left l»r. Gibbs, he was seen VYotksliup.
source was a defciti va boiler,
ed of, or pleaded guilty to. sedi­ reaching for the luke to complete
however nothing was damaged.
tious charges in the past six his unfinished chore. Seem* as
The la*l call came at 2:33 p in.
months.
•hough the kindly gentleman
wlieii another grass fire wa* disI* thoroughly confident of his
toured al 2til3 Mohawk Ate Tins
theory that the urerct of youth if
wa&gt; out of the city.
rxrrcUe.
John t\ Andrews, 70, died Mart'll
N at Ha) Fines Veteran* Hospital,
lie w.i i horn May 23. IK7H in Green
Another mild, pleasant day ap­
Count). Ga and formerly lived in
peared Ihe outlook for most of Pr
Sanford a' which lime lie owned
nation today.
a grocery store at Paula Corner. TALLAHASSEE ' »*-The Florida
Dr Harry K Jessup, author of Mr \mlrew* served a* Chaplain Supreme Court yesterday affirmed
Tlie later winter spell of sprint
like weather sent temperature* into college textbook*, lecturer, arid in the VFW Fust in Craddock, Va Samuel J. Ilornheck's death sen­
Hr I- survived by two sons, J tence for Hie 1933 Haying of a
the upper 60s in western and cen president etneritu* of the Chicago
tral Texas yesterday. Reading* Evangelistic Institute, will be the )V Andrews, Atlanta, Ga ; Joe Dins! County patrolman
were in the 70s northward into guest speakir at the 10'43 o'clock K Andrews, of Sanford; ami two
Hurnbe-k, who wa* fleeing a
weal central Nebraska, the central Kumliy morning sendee of Ihi daughters, Mr*. Mary Spivey, hank robbery charge, had just
Miitissippi Valley and southern Church of Ihe Nazarene.
Sanf ird, Mrs. K. I,. Gay, of Ma robbed a restaurant and with a
He will also speak al a special con, Ga
Virginia.
companion was attempting to shoot
General warming wa* reported afternoon union service of Ihe fol­
Funeral servlre* will be tumor his way through a police cordon
throughout the Gulf and Atlantic lowing churchf*: Free Method)*! row afternoon at 4:30 o'clock al when patrolman Thomas Alien
coastal atates with temperatures Church of Sanford. Wesleyan Meth- Rriss hi Funeral Home anil burial Hulun ion Jr., wst killed.
as much as 23 degrees higher ear - odist Church of Panla. and the will bu in Ouklawn Memorial
Defense attorneys claimed Hornly today than yeaterday. Readings Lake Mary Nazarene (’lurch.
beck should not have been tried
Park.
in the 60s were reported from Tex­ •Special singing Is being planned
for first degree murder becausa
as and tha treat Gulf atatea north­ and tha public ia Invited lo at
none of the robbery victim* was
COLLINS M TODAY
ward to tha lower Ohio Valley.
tend.
TALLAHASSEE (B-Gov. Collin, killed and premeditation had not
found a fancy cake on his desk been proved as far at the patrol­
DUC LOCKED OUT
TEA PARTIES BANNED
man was eoiiremej. They said
WASHINGTON IB - President
LONDON IB—The House of Com­ ihl* morning. It was a gift front Robinson could have hern killed
his
office
staff
on
hit
Mth
birthday
Elsenhower got locked out of the mons was told thst the British
by a wild shot from another officer.
White House momentarily today.
Malay government has banned today.
Justice R. K. Huberts, writing
Ho bad gone into tho rose garden Communist - sponsored tea par­ The cake remained on the desk the court's opinion, said the pa­
just outside to greet a group at ties there because the Reds were white Collins cmwlucted a removal trolman was slain la the coarse
foreign students in this country to using them to Indoctrinate atu- bearing fur Joe L. Smith uf Miami, of the robbery and that xrss aX
•&lt; Urn'

Four Commissions
Workshop Planned

Ten Puerto Ricans
Convicted By Jury

” 11 la a completely voluntary
am. The forma win be distri
through tha schools beginn­
r SUCCESS!
SUCCESSFUL
ing rest week. We should like EXPERIMENT
to
4- Boat
Post master
nr
WASHINGTON IB 4~
know as soon s i poaaible how
General Summerfieid says the ex­
many eligible rhildrta wa must
periment of moving Scont mail by
provide for, if (ha vacdaalfoa pro­ air when (pact is pvaflablo has
gram is carried out.
provad "quite suecwmtol” and ha
"If the vaccine is mot Memltd, may ask Congress te i

K

TALLAHASSEE IB - Gov. Col
Inn today removed Jor I., Smith ol
Miami a* chairman of the Flori­
da Rarbctv Sanitary Commission
because of alleged irrrgularitirt
in issuance of license* last year.
The governor ha* the poucr to
remove a barber hoard member.
Confirmation o( Ihe Senate i*
necessary.
The gnternor annminred re
moval wa* not intended to east
any per-onal reflection* on Smith
wild had ottered hi* cooperation.
Bill, hr said, while he
Smith had no Intent of wrongdo­
ing he had to »hare re&gt;pon»ibilitv
fiv Ihe wrongdoing of the besrd.
Smith told the govrrnur hr had
inlormation he was witling to pre­
vent to a grand jury of license
purrha.ving by applicant.*.
The two other member* of the
barber board resigned last week.
The governor said hr would nol
a-k the l.eon County Circuit Court
at tills time to rail a grand jury
to Investigate tba situation.
"I will a*k die new board I shall
appoint to confer with thr attorney
general s* to what action should
bo taken to prevent recurrence.*,"
he said.
Smith said he knew: of barber*
who received license* without lak
ing examinations. He said some
told him they bought their licenses.
"I don't know where he got the
licenses,’’ Smith said.
He described the go-bettvrrn as
"a Miami man . . . an Kalian . .
a dangerous man . . a racketeer."
Smith told the governor that on
(our occasions last year ha was
introduced In bqrbcr lircn-* annu­
ls - t i ay w- IL Aankln, then rhaii
man of the board, and was (old
by Rankin that "Mr. Fetter had
told him to give the man the exatninatioa on the short form, whirh
was referred to as Ihe Negro
piper.”

Fire Department
Answers Alarms

U. S. Finally Gets
Touch O f Spring

c

John C. Andrews
Dies At Bay Pines

Fla. Supreme Court
Affirms Sentence

Dr. Harry Jessop
Will Speok Sunday

«

4

�r

fl
Reckless Banning

i
-

1

i
i

t

&lt;
t

b
P
1
b

t
•
4
b

Over Ihe years the effort linn boon to
root nut arbitrary frovernmenlal power. One
ntropphohl which has never been atormerl la
the Tost Office Department, which rrxerve*
the rijrht to forbid the mail# to any puliliration it thirkx likely to rorrupt morals.
This hns led it to ban many hooka that are
freely sold in every bookstore.
A recent activity hns caused the Ameri­
can Civil Liberties Union to seek a court
injunction npainst « prohibition which it
thinks arbitrary and ridiculous. A transla­
tion of a well-known play by the Greek comic
dramatist. Aristophanes, one of the world's
great authors, was forbidden to n Cnlifornin
bookseller because to reach him it had to go
through the mails.
The costoms house used to do things like
this. Since 1931 the Treasury Department
has relied on a special advisor, Huntington
Cairns, a Baltimore lawyer with a wide
knowledge of liternture and a sane outlook,
lie examines eases where exclusion is pro­
posed. nnd if in doubt, consults authorities
and book 'reviews. His Judgments conno-

The Sanford Herald
Sail,

M d rO l

N l lw

■M * H l V i n t H

1

h trrH ■* u rm l ,Ii h

&gt;»• I'o .l O l l W •* I i l l a r 4 .
at
at M i n i
m a n pkkkism, m iiw
jack

ArttWf ■T. SOt# ••
■&gt;«•* « M
1, ISRU

IN

e

lo r m r s t A S B M u iiii|

• n in u m o i
a r T a n !* * __
T k r r * Mnalka

\

ia t m i
f l* *•* n**h
Oa*
ll&lt; H*atha

Oaa T*a i
•I I AO
A ll a k lta ar/ a*llr**. ta r la af l l u l a
'laMaaa l a f
■all*** a l * a i»r la la n * a i I n fka paf aaa af
(m ala w ill Oa rkaraaO fa* al r*B*iar a t

non

an

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f iiiln , I n

H altnaaltf
kf
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C k a a A f , af
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Bia«.

Tk * l i m i t la a a i a k n af fka Aaaa*falaA Praaa
arklrk I* ra llll* A #&gt;*l*al**l* la Ik* aaa far r r p *fcllraMaa af alt Ika Aaral a*«ra f S a l t f la tkla aawapapar.

Thursday, Mar, 10, 1965

TsgO 2
&lt; I

TODAY'S

BIBLE

VERSE

Render to Caeanr the things that are
Caesars and to God the things that are
God's — Mnrk 12:17. Some silly fanatics
think they should not pay taxes because
they do not like war. Christ took a different
view.

* fj
P

\

r '*

l

ration — blames the drop on Issl
year's slowdown In the heavy In­
dustries where silver Is used.
For silver goes Into autos, farm
t r a c t o r s , bicycles, dishwashers,
washing machines, sewing ms
chines, Iswn mowers, guns and
phones, as well ai Into TV and
radio sets, radar equipment and
the like. Also, the silverware and
Jewelry makers had some bud
months last year.
Uso this yegr is picking up wllli
Ihe
general
business revival.
Production of many of t h e
goods that use silver lias in
creased.
Now silver men are eying i
new field In TV and radio set pro­
duction, that of electrical circuits
printed on paper and using silver
ui the ink The current follows
Ihe allver to when Ihe electricity
is needed.
The printed sheet of circuits
substitues for the maae of wires

Yellow Cast to Skin
-lay Signify Jaundice

i

’ ll

*■§|j
(fj

I:

:|y i-ajUUM M. IVHMHtf. H A
COLD weather usually bring*
an increase m the number of
-------of infectious hepatlUa or
Jaundlee. This la a common type
of acute liver Direction which
•omsUmea occurs In epidemic*.
Buch apldemlce were fairly com­
mon In tha armed force* during
World War If.
Caused By Vlrua
Tha infection la caused by a
;*lru* which may be spread by
contaminated food or water. It U
inot ordinarily a severe disease.
Usually ft attack* young persona.
It la ganarally believed that
crowding, poor nictation and
poor nutrition may contribute
greatly to 1U development.
If you oontract tbia disease, you
probably wont notice any tgrznploma until about alx weeks after
you've been Infected. The dis­
order atari* suddenly. Usually,
you will lot* spur appetite, Mel
dick to your stomach and hare •
lever, in eevero eaan
will reach IBS or 1M
Tender Uver
fo u l!

HAL BOYLE

It s Hard To See Under Shiny Ego
NEW YORK (Uf) - There are no
nrnple like show people.
Rut they ar» generally eosicr to
l-ive at a distance than they are to
tike alter you gel lo know them.
Seen up close, it is often hard to
glimpir the human being beneath
the shining ego.
An exception is Giselr MacKcn
nr Ihe sprightly young Kin ging
star of "The Hit Parade." She's a

First Pacific Railroad
The first railroad to run clear across the
American continent was not an achievement
of the United States or Canada, but of Pan­
ama. The 100th anniversary o f the first
trains run 'from t!i Atlantic to th Pacific
has just been celebrated.’ By contrast our
first transcontinental railroad was not com­
pleted until 1809. and the Canadian Pacific
through traina did not begin to operate un­
til 1885.
Panama had a great advantage over the
United States and Canada, being situated
at a point where the oceans come within 70
miles of »ach other. Still construction had
to bo undertaken through a thick jungle,
and at this early period of railroad construc­
tion, to build even a short railroad there was
quite n iob. The republic of Colombia, to
which Panama then belonged, deserves
much credit for its achievement.

in older lets Hull new set* can
be madu smaller and more rumpari
General Electric enginreri
estimate that perhaps one million
vela with printed wiring wjll kbe
made this year.
Silver has plenty of competition
in Industry from the other metal*.
Al 83U cents an ounce — silver's
price (or mure Ilian two years —
it is an c^enslva metal.
Copper anJ aluminum are much
rheaper conductors of elcclrittly.
And not even the most avid silver
mnn contends that electric power
and telephone companies should
string silver across the land.
Baser metals are much cheaper
as solder. But silver men have
some sale* points for certain use*.
Because nf ■ low melting point,
silver solder Bows easily and i
small quantity does an effective
job, lowering unit costa.

Hearing Is Planned
For Barber Officer

Back up the home folks — The
cry of "carpet baggers" was ral
ted on Capitol Bill last week over
Ihe possibility of an oul-of-stete
firm being granted Ihe concession
right* for Everglades National
Park. A group of Floridians has
raised 1830,000 th hulld the neces­
sary facilities.motels, eating places, boats, and all the other attra­
ctions generally available In a
National Park. Yet, word was out
last week that the eoiamUmlgfct
go to an out-of-state bidder. Rome
members of th* Florida Congres­
sional Delegation were pretty well
up In arms over It—and It la be­
ing whispered around that the
word has been passed to Secretary
of Interior Douglas McKay, that
all "ned" will break loose If he
lets the contract to "outsiders."
Batter up — It’s spring training
time. In Ihe sand lots, In the big
leagues—and In Congress. And Syd
Herlong is again the manager for
the Democratic team In their an­
nual game against the Republi­
cans. Tho game I* staged in
Washington each yrar for charily,
and lo date Ihe Democrats have
have won every game. This year
might be different, because Syd's
alar pitcher, "Fireball Don Wheel■r," of Georgia, was defeated. So,
Syd Is looking for new material.
Ha may find It at spring training,
which take* plare at Daytona
Beach April tnd through the Tth.
During that week, the city of Day­
tona Beach la host lo as many bsllplaylng members of Congress that
Syd Herlong can get to vacation
(here. That goea (or Republican*
as well aa Democrat* — for you
een count on political wise Herlong to get the members of both
side* down to hi* district (for more
then spring training.) Whila there
this April, some ef the members
wlU flab with Syd In the OeUwahe
River—and baar him complain
•bout thn sad shape that river Is
la. (17 I. Inglneers should (lx it).
Then another group will visit some
nf tha USDA laborntorie* in the
area—take a look at the cllrua
altuation—and listen to Syd'a pitch
for more fitrus research money.
Yea, boyi, it's spring training
rime I
Hold the p hon e- Wo tike the

TALLAHASSEE W) — Gov.
Collins will hold * htarlng at
8:30 *, m, tomorrow to datermlne
hepatitis, Jaundice does not usu­ whether Joe t.. Smith, ef Miami,
rhalrman of the Barber* Sanitary
ally develop.
Doctors have as yat found no Commission, should be suspended.
specific treatment for this dliIn summoning Smith to the
hearing yesterday, Colllaa said It
Kow to Speed Recovery
wai railed to determine whether
The most important thing you "facts and circumstances as re­
ean do to apecd your recovery la ported in recent harbor board
to rest In bed, remaining there for meeting! and through the pree*
at least three week*. If your earn are such that you should be sus­
Isn't severe, you can get up to go pended."
to the bathroom, if it Is, use a
Resignations of Smith were an­
bed pan. Stay In bed at lo u t ten
days after the symptom* die- nounced last week by the gover­
nor'* office In the wake of a dis­
recovery usually oc­ closure tho board issued tome M
curs after about eta to eight licensee improperly last year.
weeks, but let me caution you
Smith, however, denied ho had
right here to take It easy when resigned and said he wouldn't
you do get up. About one-alith of
ihe patients have relapses be- giro up hie post until ho had been
given n chance to defend himself.
of *ani« Infection such
a cold, or because they try to re­
turn to pork too quickly.
Don't drink any alcohol while
you’re OL Baeeealve use o f alcohol
RECONSTRUCTION
m a relapse aftei
have

Wat a lot of I
Node such
meat, Britt I
eggs, ttrottec
H attw tll bel
for you, also
Don't eat ■
late; Instead, ge:
and butter.

Demos Take Double Look At Plan
WASHINGTON
Now, for th*
first lime lines Prrsldfnt Eisenhovicr entered the White House,
ihe Democrat* are able to exam­
ine his employs security program.
They’re taking a double look, start­
ing today.
,
Ttil* program has generated a
tot of Democratic heat, no doubt
much of It political, ever since
19JJ when the administration be­
gan Issuing numbers on tha people
fired from the government as se­
curity risks.
B e c a u s e the administration
didn't say how many of them actu­
ally were subversive*, the Demo­
crats called the whole perform­
ance a "number* game." The ad­
ministration claims 1,008 “ security
risks" have quit or been dlacharged.
There has been wide concern,
inside and outside Congress, that
the program, for lack of sufficient
safeguards, may be working Injualice*. Elaenhower atanda pat on
hla program. Over the weekend
Atty Gen. Brownell came up with
a few alternation* but they were
minor.

Advertising men are responsible for
many nesv developments of American life,
as most people realize when they stop to
think of it. Certainly keeping up with the
Joneses would be much harder If we did not
road in every newspaper and other adver­
tising media full accounts of tlie delightful
possessions just acquired by said Joneses.
One of the most successful advertising
men. the late Albert Lasker, in recalled by
extracts fcom his memoirs, published in the
"American Heritage" magazine. Ono feat
not usually associated with him, which has
meant more to millions than many a better
publicized invention, was the idea uf the day­
time radio serial
"Soap operaa" are often decried, •special­
ly for their endlessness. In this they resem­
ble comic strips, which may have suggested
them. Both while away ldlo moments, or, in
the case of the soap operas, make household
chores less tedious. Both are as a rule moral­
ly acceptable, though neither would ever be
called Intellectually stimulating.
Few persons are entitled to the distinc­
tion of having thought up a successful form
of mas* entertainment. Lasker, for better
or worse did that.

Silver M oves In W ith Industry
NEW YORK ft*) - Silver hss
marched Intn industry with the
electronics age. And this year
more of that matal Is going into
industrial products than Into silver­
ware, Jewelry or (ha arts.
Two chief talking points for
•liver's use in industry are: 1
its boosters say silver Is "tho best
conductor of electricity known to
man," and I they say that silver
•lloyi used to join (wo metal*
make ao strong a solder that the
metal parts themaelvei will break
before the silver joint will.
Last year wasn't too good for
Ihe sliver people, however. Some
83 million ounces were used by
U.S. industries and In the arts. But
this was a drop of U per cent
from the year before, and tha low­
est since m i .
Bandy &amp; Barman — which began as a silver brokerage firm In
1887 but Is now primarily a silver
maunfacluring and research organ

BUBBLE, BUBBLE, TOIL A N D TROUBLE!

Soap Operas

SAM DAWSON

I

JAMES MARLOW

quently are generally respected.
Unfor'tmalcly people like Cairns do not
grow on every bush. The Post Office Do*
patment might do well to run one down.
Otherwise it will find itself more and more
often brought into court.

natural. Right now I'm desperately
;n love with her. So are at leaat a
dozen guys I meet ever day, from
executive* to countermen In drug
store*.
The funny thing about us Glselelovers Is that each of us thinks
lie "discovered" her all by himself.
But we arc united in a firm belief
(hat a Bollywood or Broadway pro­
ducer Is a fellow who would starve
to death In a gotd mine, otherwise
why hasn't soma producer taktn
the scales off hla eyes and starred
mir girl In a big film or musical
fhow?
My wife ha* taken my autumns!
adultation for Miss MacKenzIe In
great stride. She has been through
this kind nf thing before.
"Any day now ( expect you to
tumble for Lassie," France* said
philosophically. "After all you've
horn moon-eyed over Helen Haye*
end Martha Scott for years. Does
this mean ynu'ra throwing them
mer? What hai Glsele got that's
so different?"
"About everything," I replied.
"She can sing and dance and play
Ihe piano and the violin. A'J kind*
nf talent. She's wonderful at light
comedy, and —"
"nut what kind of girl l« she?
Why don't you take her to lunch?"
So I did. W* met at the new
rclehrity filling station run by P.
,t Moriarly, who Is known on
Siath Avenue as "tha Uapaycr's
Tool* Shor."
dllsele *hm*ed up In. a h r coat.
For some reason I showed up like
a schoolboy with an apple In my
hand, which Mlis MacKenzio ae

cepled very graciously. She I* Jusl
over 3 reel 8 weighs 120 pounds,
and has snapping dark brown eyes
that are fun lo let your mind wan­
der in. Over e plate of corned beef
hash topped with ona of Ihe most
romantic looking eggs l'va seen In
years, I asked Glsele to tell me
about herself. And she said:
" I ’m from Canada, end my fa­
ther la a doctor. I studied to bo a
roncert violinist, and btcama a
singer by accident. Never did take
a lesson.
" I ’ m mad about trees. ] live
.rear Center Park because t like
»o walk there with my two dechi'
bunds.
"But I’d ralher cook lhan do anymind. I name my recipca after th*
fi lends who gave them to me —
such a* chicken Morgan, porkchops
Paul Casserole Aunt Esther, meat
loaf Diane.
"My own favorite 1* a compote,
hut It Is made with vegetables In
stead of fruit, and I never tell
anydne all the ingredients I put tn
to It But It hss mushrooms, hscon.
scallion*, fresh tomatoes, and all
kinds of herbs.
"I've made about ae records—my
latest Is an album of French nurs
rry tongs I learned at a child-hut
I've neyer had ■ really big hit.
Sure I'd love to be In a Broadway
•how, but only a rich man’*
daughter ean wait around for the
right part.
"But I'm happy with what Pm
doing now. f love living, and I be­
lieve In happiness. But doesn’t hap­
piness consist In liking what you
yet aa much e l getting what you
like?
"What am I afraid of? Oh,
apldera and all crawly things. But
most of all I'm afraid of making a
mistake while singing a lyric with
■bout SO million people watching
I don’t sleep much the night be­
fore a show.
"My hobbit* art movies, TV and
perfume. I spend four nights at
home watching television and ant
waring fan mall, l ’va teamed to
do both things at tha aamo time,
but sometimes I get th* plod I'm
watching mixed up In Bw tetter
I'm writing.
" I keep about 14 Unde of per­
fume, and douaa myself with It be­
fore I fall asleap. When I get tired
ef several kinds of scents, I mix
them all np and mike a new one.
My favorite right now la one celled
Vent Vert, or ‘Oteen Wind.' ft
makes me feel Bhe a Chrlataas
tree.".
She smelted like owe, too, a alee
clean spruce odor. And that'*
whet Glsele hat hereel# — a fresh
forest sett. When I earns heme my
wife took ono look at me end aeld:
" I tee you’re really gooe this
time. What about poor Bute
Hayes?"
1
"I'm afraid." I repUe
ly, 'Hetea w it have te struggle
tee rest of the way on her #w»."
There really h a n 't been a eta*
af theatrical puppy love like this
to tho family sine* grandpa wrote
anonymous math note* to

idea of the 101 billion dollar road
building program. But, w* also
would Ilka to keep the record stral
ght. A recent article praising the
plan waa headed like this: "It i “
began at Bolton Landing, July
18th" The record will show that
it really started three end ■ half
months earlier at the White House.
Exact date Is March lTth. On that
day. Cecil M. Webb, then Florida'*
Road Chairman, visited with Prealdent Eisenhower In the White
Houaa and presented this plan.
Bine* then, wn'U admit, It kee
grown in alte-eeeh person enema
to add n few billion to it—but don't
forget that It was Floride'e grits
baron, Cecil Webb who proposed It
to the President Date, March ITth,
18M.
Reverse elation — Everybody
interested In polities In Florida
knows that Congressmen Charlie
Bennett had hla race for the U. 8.
Senate pretty well under way when
George Bmalhere finally decided to
run egeln. Bennclt bad not officia­
lly announced for the rsee, but be
wee all set to go In case Georg*
decided be was tired of th* Job.
George's decision left Bennett with
Iota of eteem In hla boiler and an
■nnouacemeet weiring tn be eeat
out. Why waste a perfectly good
annouacemeat? Be. instead of send­
ing .out bie announcement to run—
Bennett eent out an "un-announce­
ment." pointing w t that he waant
going to run. Give him credit, he
received aa much publicity ever
not running aa many men would
Peroeotegowise, a human being
tor running- (PB — Ibis also autola the first year ef
mall tally look Beotly Peek out ef
ito than at any time afterward.
running tor Bennett’s scat).

headed by Ben. Olin D. Johnitnn
D SC, will it art hraring* coni-mlrstoJ on the Eisenhower program alone That will probably be
x stormy one fall of political Im­
plication* for I9M.
Elsenhower'* administration dirt
n't like President Truman’* pro­
gram for getting rid of govern­
ment employes who might endsnger the country if allowed to keep
their Jobs.
Eisenhower on April IT, 1843,
substituted hit own program. It
differed from Truman's in two
main ways:
1. Under Truman the teit waa
* man's loyalty. Under Elsenhow­
er a man can be fired if he's • irm
curity rl»k. What'a that? It might
be a Communist or a drunk or a
homosexual or a penon with a
Communist relitlve.
I. Under Elsenhower * min
about to be fired ean appeal to
the head of hi* agency or depart­
ment. If turned down there, hi’ *
out. Under Truman auch a man.
If turned down by hit agency
head, could appeal to a iperial
WASHINGTON-You tax 4lt- loyalty ravlaw board whoia wonfi
count th* present talk about tha waa final. Elsenhower abolished
possibility of a third political thla appeal* board.
party appearing an tha ballot la
lh« 1089 presidential election.
trful auto worktr's union, which
It U doubtful that the Republi­ mirgtr or not, will be tha peace­
can wing oppoiad to the Elian- maker for the pay. demand* ef
hewer admlnlatratlea eould mut­ organised labor.
• • * *
ter enough strength te put a pre­
sidential candidate In the field
Housing — The govonimrok
despite Its Lincoln Day blast at wonts to find out Just how sound
Ike. UOr Chairman Leonard Hall U tha continuing boom In tha
and cither regular Republicans al­ housing induitry. Fadarsl m 4
io lay that diialdent mimbare of •re making surveys to chock va­
the party will ba back in tha fold cant houaaa and apartmanta aby alaction day deipita thir grum­ gainst homa-bulldlng actlvlUaa.
bling.
A
Commerce
department
Of eour**,
Democrats would apokeaman aays there la nothing
like te tee a atcond Republican alarming about tha high rate of
group come Into the picture. With home construction since there *r#
a iplit in GOP ranke, their chanea unfilled housing requirement* in
of winning back the White House virtually every atate. However,
would b« enhanced. However, even what 1* laeklng la up to data
th moat optimistic Democrat* are Information on which tha expan­
not counting on euch o poaitblllty, sion can ba accurately measurote
They feel aura Etsanhowar will The last survey of thla kind waa
run far re-election ond that tho In 1980.
Republleant will eloe* ranks bohind him, whatever their dimNO RENT. NO TV!
greamanta,
BECCLES, England tri — Tho
a a a a
Town Council deciaded Monday
Unloa Unity—Look for fewer that tenant* tn municipal housing
•trikes when merger ef the A- projects will be dented permission
meriran Federation of labor and to put up television aerials U they
tha Congress of Industrial Orga­ are behind In their rent. "If *
nisation* take* e le ct sometime tenant can't afford to pay tha rent,
within a year. That i* the word n* can't afford • television set*-'
from labor expert* who contra­ a council spokesman explained.
dict speculation that walkouts
will become more frequent becauie ef labor unity and the re­
mittent Increase In th* pewar of
organised workmen.
The*# experts point out that
many strikes art caused by Jur­ THURSDAY — FRIDAY
isdictional dispute* batwetn uni­
STARTS Bt8«
on*. Tha merger will largely do
away with tuck dispute*, since
there will ba far leia competition
for collective bargaining- rights.
However, more Important, the
experts say that, although the
merger will mean larger strike
funds, union tender* are likely to
ico I* down their pay-raise de­
mand! when they no longer Hava
to “ make a record" t# keep thalr
worker* from thinking they eould
do bettor with oomo other union,
■ .I S S S * *
or to attract workers who are
■till unorganised. Thus management will bo hotter able to moot
union demand# or compromise on
tho mwithout a strike.
Incidentally, tha asporte say
Walter
Rauthar 1* far from
through aa a powerful labor fere*
despite th* fast that Georg* Kea­
rny will ba th flret AFL-CJO peaaidant. They point tut that le a ­
ther te atUl preside*! af tha pawUnlit they got control of Con­
gress this year Ihe Democrat*
couldn't set up an investigation.
Now they're ready.
Sen. Humphrey D-Mlnn a n d
Sen Stennls D-Mlaa have propozed creation of a special 11-man
commission to look into the whole
broad problem of government se­
curity — ranging from the Elsen­
hower employe program to law*
on spying and sabotage — end re­
port beck In March 1M3 with
recommendations.
Today, Humphrey, head of a
Senate aubcommiltea, opens hear­
ings Intended to acquaint Congress,
If It seta up the commission, with
information on the broad problem
of security. So his hearings won’t
be on Elsenhower's program alone.
But toon the Senate's Pott Of­
fice and Civil Service Committed,

Inside
Washington

.nur

FINANCE CORPORATION

SEALED BID SALE
INVITATION TO RID FOR COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
(FORMERLY KNOWN AS SANFORD BUS STATION)
SANFORD, FLORIDA
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION

Race** truetlwi Finance Corpoygtinx tavita* Bids for tk* purtkhs* i f property formerly owned by panfori Boa
fitatlon. Inc. located un Commercial S tm t. Sanford, Florida, described aa fellowe:
Lota 84. M , 17 aad M , lee* the Eaat SO feet o f Lot St. ef Lake View Park, tn Ika City of Sanford. So*
mlnole County. Florida, according to plat of Lake View Peril, of record In Plat Book t, Page 41 of tho
Public Records of Seminole County. Florida. Improvement* consist of concrete block building with atucco
finish formerly used aa bua elation and cafe. Bids wlU be considered on the property in ita entirety.
tha purchase of thla property may obtain bid forms and statement of term* and condL
at tho Atlanta Field Office, Room &gt;10, 411 W, Peachtree S t N. E* Atlanta, Georgia,
fclaut 4131, Eg tension 310. Elds for the property will be considered only If made la accordance
* * ‘ to the tenaa and sanditlnm aet forth in said statement AH bide must be presented at the
1Office af RFC by 3t00 P. M. Eastern Staadard Tima oa March IT. 1065.
■}•

h .

..

•• v ' - . s

v -'.

CHMQNO ACCOUNT

�-

SojdaL £viwhu

Regular Meeting
Held By Class

Calendar

Cadets O f Future
Air Force Academy
Can Finally Relax

Springs. roll*,
annnunee'l fhatl TTTE R A N T O R D TTERAT.D
DeMille would design uniforms [ J h
Mnr 10&gt; in s s
p a(r* 3
for toe cadets.

The Daughters of Wesley Sun
THURSDAY
Brooks Jr Tliere will he a church
day School Class of the First
N otu ’ s the time
HOI t.YWOOD ( rv Cadets o '
The Fitst Baptist Crusader nursery for small children
Mcttvdist Church met in McKin
ley Hall Tuesday evening at 7:30 Choir svill Hold rehearsal at 6 p.m.
A entered dish supper will hr the new Air Force Academy ran
The Junior Royal Ambassadors held at T p m. in the IOOF hall relax. They won’t be wearing
o'clock for it« regular business
and social mrcltng with Mrs. Rnb- will meet at the First Baptist honoring all Oddfellows and Rrb togas or armor, even though
ckahs Members arr urged to at- Cecil B
DeMille Is designing
rrt Cole. Mrs. Donald Dunn, Mrs. I Church at 7 p.m.
—T-- . . ----------- St
their uniforms.
Grac- Gregory, Mrs. L o u i s e
The First Baptist Church Choir lend, Knicrt.iinment is planned,
inrnt
of
the
Sanford
Woman's
Club
Knowles, Mrs. .1 M. McCa skill and will hold rehearsal at 7r-TO pro.
Tins I ascent aitied from a
Th* Azalea Circle of the Garden will meet at 8 p. m. in the Club talk with the pioneer film ma
Mrs. M. B. Smith as hostesses.
Mr», f,r*ily Dunrjin was hostess
Miss .tlargle Waijnnuth, popu^
Hall was decorated with Ctuti will meet at the Garden luui«r on Oak Ave. The program (,rr |n hist office The place was
In the Wesleyan Service Guild of l*f brulr.elect, was honored with gladioli and camellias placed at Center at 8 p. m.
will be a ntiistcial *ariety program idled with painting of uniform
the First Methodist Church for a parly Tuesday at 4:30 p, m. at vantage point*. Mrs. Albert Hick­
100 yars i f
Senior Choir Rehearsal at First with Alison Lee. Don Brcckcnrulgc from pastpictures like
"Sant
the March meeting which was held the home of Mr*. Vernon Davis, son opened the business session Methodist Church at 7:30 p. m,
and a dance trio from the Dux son and Delilah** and hi* future
f. &gt;;t hiihri Kg
Monday evening. The group met 34t&gt;9 S. Sanford Ave.
The Hrmcrorallis Circle of the httry School of Dancing Hostesses and most costly epic, "The Ten
with prayer followed by Mrs. C. E.
In the lovely new Flotilla room of
The home was beautifully deco­ White giving the devotions) anil Sanford Garden Club will meet will be Mrs. Willis I’eacock chair­ Commandments"
the Punran home. Mis* Ethel rated with inset and orange bins- closing with the Lord's Prayer in at the home of Mrs. F. B. Adams, man. Mrs H. II Grier. Mrs \t
The prodiicer-dircVor showed
Riser, president, was in charge of soma to carry out the bridal unison.
:oo« Lake Are at 7:43 p. m, Co P Ljntcr and Mrs. Denver Cor off a handsome painting of an
the meeting and during the busi­ theme. In the archway hetween
hostesses will he Mr*. J. P. Hall. dell.
Egyptian in battle uniform
Mrs Claude Herndon, courtesy
ness session it was derided to sell the living and dining rooms hung
Mrs. M. B. Smith and Miss Ethel
The Elsie Knight Circle of the
"Now thl* is what the Phar
chairman,
reported
she
had
sent
metal sponge* as a project. The four white hells tied with oian^e
First
Baptist
Church
will
meet
at
Kiser.
uoth wore and what he will pro
group also voted tw serve supper blossoms and ribbon. In the cen­ three bouquets, three rards to ill
The Camellia Circle of the San­ 8 p. m in the Educational Buihi iluce tor
the picture,” he re
SPRING 'ANi'
to the Methodist Youth Fellow­ ter of each bell was a foitune members, and Valentines to two ford Garden Club will meet at ing of the Church with Mrs. E&gt;
shut-ins. Notes of appreciation'
marked
ship of the Church on Easier Bun­ which the honoree had to Tcad
tell
GitSsnn
as
hojtess.
8
p.
m
at
the
home
of
Mr*.
Ralph
were read from Mrs. Lillian Shin
*'Notire
how-the wings envr
ds y.
Belt*, 1103 K. Fourth Street. Mrs.
SI. Marks Chapter of the Wo
SUMMER
aloud. On the refreshment table
forming a pro
The USO will he staffed by stood a Initial doll surrounded hnlser. Mrs. C. II. Winn and Mr* II. C. Whitmire will be co-hostr'S. man's Auxiliary will meet at 8 lope thrchest,
Ruth Hawthorne for kindnesses
lective
armor
for
him.
This
1*
Guild member* on March S3 by orange blossoms with two met­
Semittola Hrbrkah 1odge No. P m at the home of Mr. and Mrs
extended them, Mrs. Robert Cole
and 5-1, and those volunteering al candlrstocks holding burning
43 will meet in the IOOF Hall at Frank L. Miller. 24IH Palmetto perhaps the first use of wingexpressed thanks for a cmirtcw.
their services are Mr*. Walter tapers. A light refreshment course
Ate. with Mrs. Esther Ridge. Mrs on a uniform "
Mrs J M. McCaskill, Miss Br&gt; 8 p m
He said with * sly smile ’‘ But
Carter. Mis. Robert nillhimer, was served.
1
he
Sanford
Home
DemonslraAmelia Noble will give a lesson
ste Zackarv, Mrs. Claude Hern­
that t'n't the kind of thing we
Mts* Ethel Riser and Miss Mabel
The hostesir* Mrs. V e r n o n don. Mrs. Harry Brown. Mrs. Rov tion Club will meet with Mrs. Bro- ■on E-thtr of the Bible.Members
will ^design for the atr acade
fThapman. Devotion* were given Davis, Mrs. Lavonne Edwards, Ttills. Mrs. Pearl Tyre. Mrs J die Williams, 3i&gt;2 Oak Ave, at are urged to attend
by Mrs. J P. Hall, while Mip. Mr*. Bill Glenn and Mr*. Mil­
2:30
p
m.
Ctr?le»
of
the
Women
of
the
my ”
M. Hayes and Mrs. P A. Rowland
Walter Carter and Mr*. Fred dred Babcock, presented the htm- made donations to the Birthday
'Ihe Magnolia circle of the San- First Presbyterian Churchwill
|a&gt;t month. It Gen
Hubert
DACRON and OR I,ON
Smith gave the program on the orre with a piece setting of her bank
ford garden club will meet with meet a* follows:
No
t
Mr* Harmon, superintendent of the
pew academy nrar Cnlorad
Ralph
Austin
Smith,
chairman
etudy book '‘Chtiitiamly and chosen dinner ware.
The dslc for th* rummage sale
WOOL and DACRON
Wealth” .,
, .
8 p m Roll rail will br answered with Mr* Mary Bolly. Ill- Myrtle
After being taken through the that will he held is to he an­
Following the meeting refresh­ house trailer where Mis* War- nounced later. During the social by stating “ what kind o! program Ate . at 3 p nt ; No. 2 Mrs. W L
ACETATE - RAYON
Roche, chairman, with Mr* lamisr
ment* were served by Mrs. Pun; ninth and her future husband hour a contest was held with Mrs I would like nrx! year.”
The Grammar School P-TA will Carman. 200 W. goth St , at 2 W p
ran and her eo-ho*tcs*e*, Mrs, will make their home, the guejls C. M Flowers winning the prize
J;.rk Huinry and Mr*. John Car­
Refreshments wne served buf­ meet tit Ihe school auditorium at nt ; No. 3 Mrs Claude Howard,
returned tn the Davis residence
Mr*, j L. Horton Sr. and* Mr*
ver to Mis* Mildred Await, Mrs. whe/a they were given a memory fet style fmm a table dreorated 8 p m. All parents arc urged to chairman, with Mr* O H Brown,
MOST PATTERNS
lilt Par* A*r. with Mrs K W I' p. landless visited recently
Evelyn Hoolehan, Mis* Ethel quiz to determine how much they with a SI. Patrick* theme. Cake, attend.
Fite a* co hostes* at 3 p. m., No in Tampa with Mr* Landless'
Riser. Mrs. M. L. Tilli*. Mr*. J. E. could temembrr about the tour. coffee and nuts were enjoyed.
FRIDAY
The Hiblseu* Circle of Ihe Gar­ 4 Mr- 1&gt; l' Howard, chairman, hinihi-iin la" and »i.-tii, Mr. and
Riser, Mr*. J. D. Callahan. Miss
Those
present
were
Sirs,
J
Baitlee Williams, Mr*. C. lo­ Excelling in the unique brain- M. MrCa*kitl, Mrs. Itarrv Brown, den Club will meet at the home with Mi*. .1 L Wilkinson, 120'J Mia. C. It. Noah.
leaser was Mrs. Marguerite Gra­
rn well.
Mrs. .1. M Hayes, Mr*. Zeb Rat- of Mr*. Joe Mcluli cm West First flak Ave. with Mrs. O C. Me
ham.
m .Mr« John Malloy willleave
Ml*. Tom Bolt, Mrs. Walter
inpsd woolcu-daeron cnir.irfiff. Mrs. A. B Steven*. .Mrs. Tom Ml. al 1U a m. A lter* short bust- Bride a* co hostess at 3 p
About
40
guest*
were
present.
h. r
Cirter. Mr*. O. K. Corf. Mrs. J.
Tyre. Mr* J E Courier. Mr* W ness meeting a li.p to Ihe Lee - No 5 Mr» George A. Stine, chairSaturday morning to visit
diitrs nnd ImpicnU, S I2.0.5
lung
miiscry
for
luncheon
will
man.
with
Mr*.
W
A
Ludwig
bos
,laughter,
M.ncmet.
who
i»
a
sluP Hall. Mrs. Fred Smith, Mis*
Ilone* well, Mrs. John Brtdgers.
be taken. Each member
will
nn SI , with Mrs John Kirk a*
,t l lori.la Statu Umvcisdj
Mabel Chapman and Mrs. Robert
and $ Id.1)5.
visitor.
Ml**
Bessie
Zarkery,
Mrs.
Delicious lot Sunday Brunch•
rn-hoslcss al 9:45 a, nt : No. It (,i Tallaliassee,
H’llhimer. Mr*. M, L. Clement of Split English muffins, toast and B V Futrell, Mrs tv. K Rainc.*, bring a tuveicd d -h.
The Duplicate Budge Club will Mrs. Arthur C. Moore, chairman,
Birmingham, Aia., a house guest hutlcr. Spread each hollered side Mr*. Carrie McKenzie, visitor.
of Mrs. Duriran’s wa.&gt; welcomed with deviled ham. top each with
Mis M L Clement of Birm­
Mrs I, J. Bnyelle, Mrs. Roy meet in the \arhl Club vvith scat - with Mr*. It. II McCa*lin. 7041
to the meeting by the member*.
a poached egg and spoon a snap Tillts, Mrs. R. G. Hickson, Mrs. ing to start at 7.45 p. m. and Mrllenviile Ave., with Mrs P B ingham, Aia , i* the bousegurst
play lo begin a\ 8 o'clock.
) Smith as co hostess at 3 p nr,; of Mrs. triad) Duncan,
The rollapsibla metal tube such py rheeie sauce over. Dust with L Knuwle*, Sirs. S. G Harrmun,
The Dirt Gatdencrs Circle o f \u. 7 Mr*. W. I). Simpson, chair
m ,is now usrd for toothpaste was paprika or garnish with tiny Mr*. tV L Wright, Mr* W L. the Sanford Garden Cluh
will nun. with Mr*. A. G Mctmns,
Ilarriman, Mr*. II. W. Dick, Mr*
springs of parslry.
invenlrd in 1841.*
,1 Rrnrtie William*. Mr*. Lula meet with Mrs, Harry Cushing in 900 Palmetto Ave, with Mrs
The Sanford Tourist and Shuttle- T, Meek* and Mr.* Frrd Dud
Stall, Mrs. o. E. While, Mr*. R. hoard
Cluh will meet at 7:30 p. m, ley ** eo-hostfs* at 3 p m ;
F Robhon. Mrs. Claude Herndon,
in
Ihe
Club house with entertain Evening Circle N’n. 1 Mr*, W S
Mi's Aline Chapman, Mrs. Albert
Hickson, and Mrs. C. M. Flowers. mrnt Jove Cardo*o. Stetson Uni­ Brmnlrv. chairman, with Mr*.
versity speaking on "What Arc Mabrl Brown, 1114 Patk Ave with
Flying Saucers".
Mr*. John Smith and Mr* J C Masonic Temple promptly at 8 3c
C
L U
t t
p m All master masons aye cor
Tho Dependable Class of the Waller a* ro hostesses at 8 p m
First Methodist Church will meet Evening Circle No. 3 Mrs. M M dtally invited lo attend.
The American Home Depart
at Ihe Church at 5:30 p. m. and Land, chairman, with Mr* Tltnma*
WEDNESDAY
Ihrn go In McCall's Camp for a Cobb, 915 Oak Ave , at 8 p m.
The Social Department of the
The Central Florida Civic Mu*ic supper and meeting. Member* arc
TUESDAY
SANFOBD
PHONB 1222-.T
Sanfnul Lodge No f,2 will ob Worn &lt;n's 1 tub will have a bridge .Mlfi HAST I’MtST
Association, which prespnt* an­ requested to lauig table scrvire
The Ivor* Cin la of the San­ sene Good Will Night honoring and samba parte at Die 1 ltd)
nually a srries of roncerl* f-r
member* only in the Orlando ford Garden 4 tub will hold it's all Master Mason* from DeBary, House at 1 3n p m Hostesses arr
Municipal Auditorium, opens it* annual birthday luncheon at 12.30 and the Naval Air Station, Supper Mrs .1 E. Bakrr, Mrs I* C, Ho
membership to the public Monday p. m. al the home of Mrs. C. R will be srrved in Ihr banquet hall, ward and Mrs. J 4) Huff.
March 14, for a few day* only un­ Kirilry, Golden Lake. Mrs. Frank
lit Ihe auditorium capacity ha* L. Woodruff 111 will serve a* cobeen reachrd. Tilt* week, present ho'tess.
The Jaearand* Circle of the
member* of the e*sociatinn have
the opportunity tn renew- their Garden Cluh will meet at 7:30 p
membership* for Ihe 1935-38 sea m at Ihe home of Mrs. Joseph
son, and there will be a limited Trriap on Golden Lake.
SATURDAY
number available for other interrvtrd resident* of Ihe Central
Churrh Membership Clarse* for
Florida arra who have not had the boy* anil gnl* of Junior Dvparlopportunity to join In the past, mrnt age at Fir*t
Methodist
4'huich will meet at 10 a. m. in
available next Monday.
Ihe social room al
McKinley
In the past few years, Metropnll
Ian Opera star* Idly I’ nn* Rise Hall.
The Ladies Aid Soriflv of thr
Stevens, Blanche Thcbom, Patrice
Lutheran Church of thr Redeemer
Munsel, Eiio Pint*. Jan Pcerrr,
will nnld a hake sale in front nt
Leonard Warren and Robert Mer­
rill have been presented on the Sears al 8 30 a m.
SUNDAY
aeries with trading symphony nr
High attendance * day will' be
rhrslras of Ihe nation and world observed in Sunday School and
famous hallrt troupe*. Also full Family Day in the morning wor­
opera*, light opera*, famous chor­ ship service at lira Central llapal groups including the Robert list Church.
Shaw Chorale, pianisls Rubinstein
MONDAY
and Arrau, violinists Menuhin and
The WMU of Ihe First Bapti*!
Szigcli, and many other outstand Church inert* at 10 43 a. nt. in
trig attractions.
Ihe rhurch. Covrred dish luncheon
Thrre are nn single admission) at noon. Program at 1 p m Sub
available for any of the concerts, Jeet, “ Building Road* Together"
and admission 1* by membership Program leader, Mr*. \V P.
only. For membership nr Informa
Smooth filling — Prnnry**
tiO-jinilur
Unn. loral members nf this asm
l'Immnur-»hrer
Gavntodr* in
IS-dcnier
rialinn inrlude Mr. and Mrs. R. W
nmnorlinncd lenclh*! H ig h
Rupiiccchl. Mrs. E. B. Cartrr,
IwUt lire* you ■mart «tull
| | ( 1
Miss Dorothy Carter, Mr. and Mr*.
finish. more etatlirilr. Fashion
V J
A-'
R. F. Cooprr, Mrs. Wayrie Ruck­
Circle No Eight of the WSCS nt
er. Mr. and Mr*. Charles MuirIhe First Methodist Church met'
bcad and Mis* Carol Skinnrr.
Tuesday evening at Ihe liunie nt
Mr*. Walter Clapp with Mrs
Hugh Carltnn a* en hoste•».
The chairman, Mr*. J. H Lee
Jr. opened the meeting by learitrif
Hip group In the Lord's Pravrr
The n. W. A ClrrJe of the First Mr*. Camilla Little gave the pm
Christian Churrh met at Ihe home po.'f cf the WSCS
Mr* Norman Williams. 1 vi'itur
of Mri. J. IV Knight. Tuesday. Af­
ter ■ report from the secretary, wa* introduced. Other guett.* were
Mr*. Earl Evan*, the meelinr was Mr*, n. W Herron. Mr* It G
turned over In Mr*. John Golden, Herman. Mrs. Marvin D*al, the
who gave a Missionary talk on In nominating rnmmitter Plans fur
dia and related activities of the Ihe MYF supper In April werr
made with Mrs. A. G Jnne* a*
Mill Iona ry Society.
Refreshments were served tn: chairmen. The regular bustnei*
Mrs. John Golden, Mr*. W, P. meeting will be held Monday from
Yesley, Mr*. V. H. Granlham, to a. m. to 2 p. m. A study, “ In
Mr*. L. R. Rirhards, Mrs. A, B dta Under Thrre Flag*” will be
Hunt]«y, Mr*. B. II. William*, Mr* presented. Further itudy will be
Oicar Pearson, Mr*, o . n. Lan­ on the evenings of March It, 21
drail. Mr*. J. L. Horton Sr., Mr* and 23
It wa* decided hy all In make
J. L. Horton Jr., Mr*. Chandler
Vail, Mr*. Earl Evan*. Mr*. E this month one nf tell denial to
further the work of the WSCS
Htnlz. and Mr*. L. Tharp.
Mr*. A. G. Jnne* prrienlpd the
itudy: “ The Two Ri*t«ri” from
Ihe hook “ The Master Callelh For
Thee” .
How cool con o Rttlo drets bo
a m M McCALL'S
A Market Baikrt Sale we* held
*•••plenty c o o l. . . when it's a
which provrd enjoyable and pro
Final plan* wer* completed (liable.
Delicinu* refreshment*
•*ry much ventilated new nylonTue»day night for the honoring of were served by the hostesses.
oce'ote mesh like thiol FerfecflOO
Ihe Oddfellow* and Rebekah* with ■Those attending were: Mr*. Roder­
a covered dish (upper to be held ick Adam*, Mr*. Charles Atkin­
tailored throughout right down to
al 7 p. m. Monday. Oddfellow*, son. Mrs. Bob Bennett, Mr*. T. C.
Ihe piped poctet and arrow
their famiHei and Rebekah* and Brown, Mr*. Hugh Cariton. Mr*.
Uteir families arc urged to attend Walter Clapp, Mr*. D. II. Flflther,
detailing Ready for everywhere
Th * meeting D for viilling Mr*. Kcnu Green, Mr*. A. G
|The taooew-to!** suit, big newt from this moment on! Superbly,
The mail wanted alin fabric—
i * , every hmel J
member* a* well ai local. Several Jones.
•MlM,
BOB-aUtle,
otter
meticulously tailored of crop, cool Palm Beach cloth to wear right
apeakar* will be on hand and enMr*
C
O.
Jon**,
Mrs
Marvin
need* iron lag! Superb collection
lertainment i&lt; planned. Member* Leddon, Mr*. J. H. Lee. J r , Mr*.
around the calendar never giving a worrisome thought to wrinkle*,
at Penney* . . . trimmed with
of the Oddfellows with 30 conie- Camilla Little. Mr*. E. H Me
writing or upkeep care*. Ingenious Sacony designed it to hold ill
'larea, nlrata, rontrait eoplirutive year* are to be honored al Alexander, Mr*. Ernest South­
aura. 4-gore at) Uaf. White,
fcenutiful shape indefinitely, used the subtle touch of color no it*
tha meeting, which will follow the ward, Mr*. John S. Whit*. Mr*.
colors. 32-44.
■•at little collar and jutting pocket* for added excitement! Propor*
aupper, at I p m.
Blake Sawyers, Mrs. Norman Wil­
1la mktm, petite* end half sue* to fit without costly alteraFor further information contact liams, Mr*. R. W. Herron. Mr*.
'IF* • wonderful hupf*
H. M Jameson, Ralph Spoil*, or H. G. Merman, and Mri. Marvin
J. T. Hard) , _____ ________
D) * l _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Guild To Serve
• Supper To Youths
On Easter Sunday

/nr SLACKS

Party Is Given
A l iss W ar moth

GABARDINES
TROPICALS

(psA&amp;owth

$ 5 . 9 5 t o $ 9 .9 5

JEY’S

JZ o &amp; U W L

Civic Music Opens
Public Membership

M E N 'S
t7 MEM

Will Suit
You For
Easter

W EAR

air-conditioned
nylon-acetate

mesh
with

I* elegant

PRO PO RTIO N ED LEN G TH
G A Y M O D E SHEERS

airs/

Circle No. Eight
Has Basket Sale

Knight Home Site
O f R W A Session

for misses,
petites,
nnd
luil[sizes
too!

Rebekoh, IO O F Set
Special Occasion

M A N Y , ST Y L ES! D A C R O N ’
A N D N Y L O N T R IC O T S L IP S

S «cony suit of Palm Beach *25

1095

- r ^ j

�*

* «*

I Indians Not To Stand Pat
; On 1954 Outfit, Lopez Says
I Drivers Await
• SebringRace
SEBRING, Fla. (/F)— Racing'drlvera from Europe, Can*do, Mexico and South America began converging on thla
central Florldatown today for the Florida 12-hour Grand
prlx of endurance to be run Sunday.
Tha Sebring event Is the only race in thla country in
i

----------------------- —------------_ jkowaa e ,
ge

$400,000 Stadium

which points accumulated count
toward the world apart* car ehem-

...

T
,
*
ft
_ I*_ _ a _ J
I A n A L J ftm C fltfiQ

a team from Caracas, Vencsucla,
the first time thla country ha*
wren represented.
rcprcacfiiCB*
br«n
The Venesuelan team I* eeptained by Chester Flynn, chamjinin sports car driver of his coun­
try. With him came Luis Gonza­
les, who will be hie co-driver;
CLEARWATER &lt;B-Th» city’ * Jesus Reins Morales, a Caracas
iw 1400,000 baseball stadium will attorney, and Edward Munos, his
be dedicated today at a n iid iW - cn-Hriver.
tion gam* between the PhiledeITwo other Venesuelan drivers,
hia Philllci and tha Detroit Poncho Pape Croquer, radio nm
TV sports commentator, and El­
1l«w*
liott Dobbins, air line pilot, arc
TAMPA (It—Harry W. Reaves of an rout*.
Detroit, a police inspector, ap­
The Veneiuelani wtlt have two
peared on the way today to hts Mercedes Bens and one Ferrari ii
eighth national midwinter pistol the race.
ehamplonship.
Lance Mackllon of London ar­
Reevei won the .n caliber pistfll rived Wednesday and will drive
fills yesterday and gained Ml with Sterling Most, British cham­
points in the lour M caliber pion who is expected later. They
matches, two points more than will drive an Austin Henley fac­
William C. Joyner of the border tory car. Another British arrival
patrol at El Paso, Tex. &gt;
wa* Tony Moorewood of Brighton,
22, a driver making hi* first apEGLTN AIR FORCE BASE IB pearanee In thla eountry.
Two Florid* amt an* Georgia
Klxhty rare are entered, with a
bases won besketbsll games lest
night, leaving six club* In the reserve list of 38 other*. Prac­
Southeastern Air Force Third Dis­ tice runs will be held Friday and
Saturday, with tha raca Sunday.
trict Tournament.
A service teem from Washing­
Eilln defeated Weil Palm Beach
AFB Tt-M. Plnecasll* AFB dropped ton, D. C., wee among Wednes­
Orlando AFB 74*5. Turner AFB day's arrivals. Army Major W. P.
Kinrhelne of Washington ami
eliminated MacDill AFB 60-57.
iTyndall play* Wait Palm Beach, Navy Cmdr. Fred Lo**s of l.a
Turner meet* Orlendo, and Pine- Jolla, Calif., will drive a German
gutle tangles with Eglln in games Veritas, with other Army, Navy
today, Tha alx era the only team* and Marina Corn* official* acting
B tu l toe double elimination meet. as crew members.

(

• PANAMA CITY UT—Golfers from
Florida. Alabama and Georgia are
being Invited to the annual wornpa’s Invitation goH tournament at
4Re Panama City Country dub
April t.
, Ann MMsSema* ft Panama City
b defending champion.
’ CLEARWATER IB-Two heats
Win ba run today In the annual
latenuttoaal mldwtntar snipe reMafia but Ted Wetle of Wichita,
tan., tha defending champion, la
eut of tha running.
WaUa lest hla last chance yes­
terday whan he hit a marker and
Was disqualified. Ha stand* 18th
la the field at II.
Harold ailreath of Atlanta and
Francis flaavy of Clearwater were
d with 1,044 point* each at the
d of the second rse*.
GHreath won the only race yes­
terday. The wind died down an ih*
second heat was called off. The
final hast to scheduled tomorrow.

S

MIAMI IB—Iha University af
Miami’s football offsnss wll ba
described to Lxmg Island Ugh
ecbool soachss.
Miami Coach Andy Gustafson
and assistant Parry Moss wilt lec­
tor* during a coodies meeting at
Mafetra College. Hemptsead, L.I.,

Future In Doubt
"PCNBACOLA, Pto. (B—The toamedtoto future at f i t tottoriag
Alahama-Plorida bascbaB league

TUCSON, Aril. IfV—There Is a
mistaken idea, lays Manager A1
Lopez, that the American League
champion Cleveland Indians will
stand pit on their 1954 outfit
“ We’re not set like a lot of people
think,” he explained as the Indiana
met the Chicago Cubs today In the
first of their exhibition games.
"There are several positions yet
to be decided. There are several
young fellows we have to look
over."
Newcomers given strong chances
include catcher Hank Folles. first
baseman Joe AltobelU, outfielder
Ilocco Colavlln and, of course, lefthanded pitcher Herb Score. All four
spent 1954 with Indianapolis of the
American Assn.
Lopez would like a strong lefthanded pitcher to go with right­
handers Bob Lemon, Early Wynn.
Art Houttcmsn sr&gt;J Mike Gau-ia
on the front line. Score might fill
the bill, but Don Moss!, an out­
standing southpaw reliefer last
season, would like lhat starting
assignment. Rookie Hsnk Aguirre,
up from Reading, P*., ia getting
attention and veteran Lefty Rill
Wight, who played for San Diego
last • season, Isn't counted out.
Veteran right-hander Rob Feller
counts on another good season with
spot assignmcnti.
At first base Vic Werta Is No. 1
as expected but Dal* Mitchell, pre­
viously an outfielder, makes a bid
along with Altobelli.
Al Rosen at third and George
Strickland at shortstop appear **•
cure The same is true of Bobby
Avila at second when he signs.
The outfield is filled with talent
so an Interesting battle develops.
Home run hitler Ralph Klner, ac­
quired from the Cubs after 1954.
probably has tha bardeat fight of
ii* career for a regular Job.
Larry Doby In center end Al
Smith in an adjacent field appear
well assured. But fighting for the
other spot along with Kiner are the
rookie Colavlln, veterans Dave
Pope and Wally Weitlaka plus
Harry Simpson, tiring for a big
league comeback after spending
1054 with tndlehipolli. Dave Philley, currently e holdout, played In
13] games lest season, so can't be
counted out.

Or OATLI TALBOT
CLEARWATER, Eli. UR — You
think rou war* surprised to hear
that a fallow named Haro Bmilh
had been hired out of the minor
ieaguaa to manaito the Phillies?
Than how do you think Smith felt?
He'a practically covered with walla
from pinching himself.
"It came right out of tha blue,”
saya tha former outfielder, whoie
entire big league career waa
squeezed Into a brief eeaaon with
the Athletic* in IMS. “ Until I got
that phone call from Roy Harney
(Phils general manager) I had no
more reaion to think I might be
managing thla dub now than you
had.
“ I wain’t even In the Phlla farm
system. All I knew about this team
waa from reading tha box scores—
the aame aa I knew about all the
other learn*. That'* really all I
know about It now, or will know
until wa have played eoma eihlbltion gamr*.
"I know that we flnlahed fourth
la*t year, and that the team waa
ihort on power to go with its good
pitching. It waa ihut out 16 time*,
five time* hy the Giants at the
Polo Ground*. Such things as that
I’ ve picked up juit by reading. 1
expect to learn a lot more aa wa
go alone.”
If the 40-yaar-old Missouri native
sounds engaging, he la. He la
a trim figure in a uniform and hia
smile Is quick and friendly. One
■ensas that ha realises fully the
stern nature of the task confront*
log him—trying to make something
of a club which has wrung out
three managers in as many sea*
sons.
The most important step Smith
has taken to now was in advising
Granny Hamner that he can quit
playing second base, where be waa
ien than hippy, and go back to
playing shortstop, where ha la owe
of the real good one*.
“ That was one thing I had to
get straight before I agreed to
take the Job," Smith said. “ Ha­
rney said that I would be the boss,
and that If 1 wanted Hamner at
shortstop, that’s where he would
play. That was all I needed to
know."
One la free to gather from thla
that Smith Is a rather rtroagmlnded individual, who waa not
too awed at the chance of piloting
a big leegua club to ley down a
condition Wa have aa Idea ha'a
going to do all right.

Oviedo Advances
In State Tourney

*,r*Tt0U
* h,«5

t a tola, hla eanlor year, waa i t Philip*
toUiea agalato Barilla to
tha
grenp aeato at Orsaeont Olty,
K P
Coach Pan! Mlhl.r’a unbeaten
•Hariw played onlmly from tha i S '
tortato to roU ip n 14-14 first

League

Exhibition Contests
By LARRY MERCHANT
With opening day only a month
away, 14 major league teams move
into the Grapefruit and Cactus
League phase of baseball's spring
training today.
Seven exhibition games at* on
order, Ineluding owe after-dinner
affair between Brooklyn and Mil­
waukee at Miami. Five other open­
ers arc scheduled In Florida: New
York Yankees vs. St. Louis Cardi­
nals; Washington Senators vs. Bos­
ton Red Sox; Cincinnati Redlegs
vs. Chicago White Sox; Detroit Ti­
gers vs. Philadelphia Phillies ancf
Kansas City A’a va, Pittsburgh Pi­
rates.
In the three-team Cactus League,
the American League champion

wort Mtg

Cleveland Indiana play the Chicago
Cubs at Tucson, Arts. Tha world
champion New York Giant* cool
their spikes until tomorrow when
they launch their exhibition sched­
ule where they left off In October—
against tha Indiana.
Baltimore, which twitched train­
ing bases from Arisona to Florida
this year, it alto idle. The Oriolei
open with Cincinnati Tomorrow.
Some managers will start “ ex­
perimental” lineups for the lnaugurals but most pilot* are leading
with their acea.
Caiey Stengel, etartlng hie sev­
enth season at the Yankee helm,
went* a fast look-see at his Bittimere Import Bullet Bob Turley,

9*0

fr * A i &lt; s n r w o r l d **
fM fORW SK A T/rtO

CrtAM fVON Si/t^S.
ji

OF COLORADO
SPR/MOU, „
COLORADO, m

M e W/N TMjt
U rttreo s t a t e *

CMAMP/OMSMlP, t r
WOULD O/ViM/M A SfR M tO
O f 0 STRA29M TW 7MAT
M

7DO

Turley, who came to the Yanks In
lhat big winter deal, will pitch tha
first three innings against rookia
Larry Jackson of the Cardinals.
Managen Chuck Dresien of
Washington and Pinky Higgins of
Boston are going w|th a couple of
faitbaUing right-handers, Bob Por­
terfield and Frank Sullivan. Year­
lings Al Scnroll and Al Curtis will
follow tha 5-7 Sullivan to the
mound for Boston.
three rookies will tod for De­
troit as Bucky Harris takes charge
of the Tigeri for the first time.
Opposing them for the Phillies will
be the big guy himself, Robin Rob­
ert*.
Bob Carver, 1M with Denver In

Doris Hart Named
As Outstanding
Florida Amateur
TAMPA IB—Doris Hart of Mi­
ami, the nation's top ranked wom­
en’s tennis player, was selected
by tha Florida State Sportawrltere
Assn, as tha outrtanding Florida
amateur athlete in 19*4.
Mi* ha* won the award beta*.
Al Lopes of Tampa, manager of
the Cleveland Indiana, wa* picked
by the sports writers as tha state’s
top professional athlete.
Closest rivals to Miss Hart tn
the pod were Frank McDonald,
AH Amtriea football ead from 111*
University of Miami and Don Bisplingboff of Orlando, the state
amateur golf champioo.
Other amateur* receiving votes:
John Hunter, softball pitcher fmr
the Clearwater Bombers; Mariana
Stewart, Rollln College golfer;
Connie Meek Butler, Rotllna Col­
lege basofaiU and baiketball play­
er and Earl Pouchar, University
of Florida pole vtalter from BL

*

sudus*
* *
M RSL
t \
iBmTSL ( a
f •
V r^ V iom j 1
•« * * *
A &gt; «

1154, has bean giro* the first to r t*
inning job for Pittsburgh by Tied
Haney. Lou Boudreau, another of
the managers with new taams, will
counter with Marion Friesao, Carl
Dusar and BIU Osier.
Towering Gene Oooldy bus Aawm
the starting aiaignmant far MG*
waukee and rookia Ed Roebuck,
with a highly touted fast baB, lor
Brooklyn.
. . „
Mike Garcia la A1 Lopes’ c h o fct?
to Mart things off lar Cleveland
against rookie Joe Itinka hr M u
Hack’s Cubs.
Virgil Trucks flS-lf) w « bo fee
first of three White Sot pitcher*
for Marty Marion. Art Fowler (lS10) has (ha nod tor Birdie T s b
betta* Bedlais.
Petersburg.
Runnorup to Lopet la Wig pro­
fessional poll waa Andy Ouatanoo,?
University of Miami loofeal seech.
Other* receiving vetes: Early
Wynn, Venice, Revelled batabafl
plthcar; Ben Geraghty, manager
of the Jacksonville batebal dub|
Bab* Zahariae of Tampa, Mar
srumen’s golfer; Butord Long of
Lake Wales, halfback for toe Mow
York Glaala; and Joe Justice,
coach of the Rollins basebal team
which want to the finals of the.
NCAA baseball tournament anA*
Tom Nugent, Florida State lookb al coach.

W A T CH T H IS
SPACE
FOR LUTINGS
GOOD CLEAN
USED TO ES

or

W ELSH T IR E
SHOP

By THK ASSOCIATED PREBB

Prlncnton rooters calebratad tha Tigers' (Ivy League)
basketball ehamplonship today and tha automatic berth in
tha NCAA "Tournament that goaa with It. But their jubila­
tion may ba abort-lived for tomorrow Princeton playi de­
fending champion LaBaila In the regional playotffa at Phlla»

v«if ftrto tuned by* to tha NCAA

w ^
S '
^
}*f **• f .
***
* 58-ysar^-c Id hlstoir« TV
Coll^ l^lla **^ 5*^”
JuTt
sodsnUd triyi* ti*. ssch with n
*0-4 toeord. Columbia dltpooad of

a nuttr camber
I King Diablo
t Uronio SloSa)
Qutnlala (t-S) 111.
■ihTH a t c a - a/s
| Uu**n‘a Caatto I
I sootr
' 0Ku1'B
,, « . r*) IS,
r a
r w

A w t W « t V trgtoU *M l
Tuaaday, has won-10 tonlgkA.
Canlalua and VUlaaorn slash to
the other NCAA regional gam* to
Philadelphia. Donbls-hoadars also
will ho bald to Evanston. DLj
Manhattan, E*a.j sad Corvnllto,
iu .
aRj i , t » A .

W t l g n o m A g s m e y D r u g M to tu

*Oa the Car—

hy the C h fi*

Opening,

I »W t I

6
!
I

Club!

Princeton Takes
Ivy League Crown

Oviedo advanced Into Friday's aeml-flnala of the State
High School Banketball Tournament with an 81-62 first
round yesterday over Wewahltchn.
In yesterday'* action at the University of Florida Flaldhouan at Gainesville, Seabreeze also got past Tat* High of
Gon sales, 68-44; Leeshunr up* -------------------------------------- -------- -•ndid P. K. Yonge, 77-60, and Hubert Priest and guard Freddie
Lallahan nosed out TUu.vllle. 4B- Whe*ton snaring most of tha ro45. Auburndale goe« Int* action bounds and Johca turning thorn
tonight.
Into point*. Tha Lloni really turnother first round games
saw «1 on the heat in the second
Miami outclass Jax Lamton,78- -frame,racing to n 46-11
lead at
H , and Pensacola nip Hills- intermission. Cantor Bobby Leaborough, 61-11, in the Claes AA ter of tho Panhandle Gated was
pairing*. Chattahoochee ousted the only stumbling block to n
O.L.PJL of Tampa, 46-87, In complete Oviedo rout. The Oatod
Claes B competition, and Trenton war* seeking the fourth tonight
routed Bopchoppy, 68-48, in the title.
ether Claes C contest.
Jones, whoa* first half total of
Phenomenal Johnny Jones of 30 surpassed Wewahitchka'a onOviedo established a new state lire effort, cooled mildly ia the
high school tournament scoring last half but the damage had
record for all elaesee by ladng been done. Priest, Wheaton, Kalth
an amaslng 41 points as the un- Malcolm and Ray F o d helped
pretratloue 6-8 forward Joined maintain a20-point bulge with
with hla oapabl* teammates to Oviedo lending 65-46 nt Uto third
completely outclass the defending quarter mark. La*ter tallied M
shamplon Wewnhltehka dub.
and Billy Dickson netted 14 for
Tha previous Ugh point mark tho losers.
had been **t hr Pick Hobnn of a d d o v i k d o t r r a
Atm a-----MIabU Stfciar m W 4iiw w 1 Ii *
tiM »
•I points In Wat year's Claaa AA
?
jTjsns*
^ i *

Major

Sports
Roundup

COMFORTABLY YOURS WITH
J

m

u w

o l

.

SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OTTER
or f in e a u i m i

SSQOO

if*
u
* T x -i i,- . n

p

r

V

\

‘ *; w

- *
—

^
-* :

\
'I * - li

\

•
d&gt;

%

'

■

�r.

W A N T AD
RATES

$-REAl

ESTATE row SALE—I F -

INVESTMENT ”

INVESTMENT

MMFLR m m AD

IN V E S T M E N T

GET axtra e««b for article* you
bo longer uit Place your ad to
A trurly nice 4 unit Apartment
day. Pdcm* 1821.
house in eacellrnt condition and
conveniently located. Ail com­
U H la a id , tutb ai the one above
pletely furnished. Could make
only Me per day on our low 5
someone a fine home pint In­
day earned rata economy plan. sit­
come. Price (23,000. Terma can
ter day for * daya and Me fot
be arranged.
A little apaet like thli will get
your menage before our more
■ nan 10,000 readers Tall 'em to Real Estate — Gen. Inanrance
1 dayl Phone 18M._____________ 201 Edwards' Bldg Ph. IS or 2474
J R Altaandtr
T. M Stringer
The above 4-llna ad can be run
Reg. Real Estate Broknra
ful! daya for only $140, 1 daya
r only $180 and one day for Tic How would YOU like several hun
dred acres fins cattle land right
a : Buy. Sell, Rent, fllra with want
on the St. John'i River?
*
ads, the busiest salesmen tn
We Have It.
town Put one to work for you
I Phone IMi. Wa will be glad to
charge it____________________
Phone 1119 A. B. Peterson,Broker
For only n.00 the abort (-Una a&lt;1 Associates
A B Peterson Jr.
la on the lob for you or ( full P J Chesterton Albert N Pltfa
daya. Only M SS keeps It workina
Garfield Willetts. John Moloch
mr you tor I days 1 dap b only

t

Si

ARTICLM FOR SALK

I* -

RED-t-MIX CONKRETE*

Rmtly Cmmftutf

Loch Arbor

Grease Traps Septic Tanks
Window Sills
Lintels.
Sand, Hock. Cement. Steel. Mortar

MIRACLE CONCRETE CO.

309 Elm Ave

Phona 1333

SEWING MACHINES $2300 up
BERT'S 194 8. Park Phone 1712
17
Mahogany Consoletle Tele­
vision. $70. Call after 3 p m.
2247-W.

JALOUSIES A AWNINGS

SPECIAL B 1 T 1 C P
-14 ■aBOATS . MOTOM
_g*
INCOME TAX SERVICE
lb
Horse
Mercury
Wm. H. Murray
20
$10 per Mark
lilt Celery Ave.
Tel. IM1-X-M 1932Mark
10 Horse Scott
Atw ater
1133 93
CARPENTER WO«B
For quick repair Jobs, or aaaall 1932 » H. P. Seott Atwater *t(«i 00
3 Horse Johnson
$110 oo
building Call Jim 114J.M-4.
Evinrudc Zephsr only
. $49 93
OllLANDO Morning SenUnci, Or­ a AU Motors Guaranteed
lando Evening Star. Call Ralph a or Tnde your motor for a
Ray. IKSJ.
1933 Evinrudc
ROBSON SPORTING GOODS
Special — TV and Radio
304 W. 1st SL
Phone t »

Service and Repair*

RCA Motorola Sales and Service

Life time Glass and Aluminum
Gena's Texaco Service
—Free Estimates—Free Instal­ IU9 Saaford Ave.
Pknne ISM
lation-Telephone 1423 Furnl
DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINES
ture Center. 11* W. First St.
Sales Rentals Service
ACCORDION. 120 Bass. 3 Weeks G A R R E T S
PHONE 1412
old, 9 Switches. Cost $700 00,
Still has Guarantee. $173.00 or
INCOME TAX
best e|»h offer Immediately Tax Return* prepare’) while YOt)
Write Boa (, elo The Hirald.
wait. Room 203 above R L.
Perkins, First SI. rbonr (M*.
METAL ROOFING
Now In Stock 3-V Crimp - I V
Stanley*!! Hike Shop
Corrugated— 2 V Corrucated
310 E 4th bt Tel 2434
Gel all Your rooftne need* *1
A General Repair Keis
Sherman Concrete Pipe Co. Bicycle
Lawnmoucr sharpen A Ser
Out West I3th SI.
Phone 2439
vice.

WHY Sleep on an uncomfortable SWAIN'S BATTERY SERVICE
jicd? YOUR old Spring and Mat­ • Balter) • Generator • Starter
tress can be your down paymrnt
Road service. Phone 317. 402
on a new art at
E. 2nd St.
TWO Inside lots with trees on
paved St. 130 ft. frontage priced
ECHOLS BEDDING CO.
at only $ooo. for both.
Corner 2nd A Magnolia
Pb. till See Us for quotation* all Mlllwnrk
and Hardware items before you
(Bad Bamberger. Mgr.)
buy and be pleasantly surprised
Robert A. Williams, Realtor Regular (1.9*
T-Shirts 9*e
CAMPBELL'S CABINET
Raymond F. Luadraiat, Aaaocla j
Paint
$2.30 gal IB-way 17 92 South
Phone 1441
Phone 1673 AUantlc Bank Bldg
Boys Western Dungarees $1.98
Complete TELEVISION SERVICE
NEW ] BEDROOM, ipaeious meon all makes and models
Pr ARMYNAVY SURPLUS
*onry home, quiet section, near
Phone 1321 SANFORD ELECTRIC CO.
shopping center, kitchen equip 310 Sanford Ave.
IK Magnolia Ave.
Phone 442
ped, a real buy at $12,000.00, re-

Call na about our buslnaaa rates

TWO Lake Front Lots with Treea
Priced $2,300 for both.

The Want Ad D
Department la
openn from S:M a. m. un
until 3:M p
an aaek
hnilneii
A
m aaeapt Bateach builnete day
ay afternoon. Deadline for
urday
foi
week-day Insertions U 2:00 p. m
the day preceding publication
Any ads coming In later
than
t :(» n. m. will be published under
Too Late To Classify.
Advertisers are requested to no
tUp the Want-Ad Department lm*
mediately of any errora la their
•da, ai The Sanford Herald will be
responsible fo* only ooe Incorrect
teiortlon
}
It’a Bo E m j

§
~

VENETIAN BLINDS

21-

U - o m c i K4HRPMKNT
HAYNES Oftier Machine Co
Typewriter*. adding maefllnes.
Sales-Rentals. 114 Magnolia. Ph
44.

RESTAURANTS

YOU! YOU! YOU I

Home cooked Meals
Real Pit Har B Q
Chill, Hot Dogs
All Kinds of Sandwiches
Good Coffee
at Clydes Grill
206 Sanfard Ave.

24 BEAUTY PARLORS -2 4
The National Hair Fashion Guild
•ays "SHORT IIAIR"
Let Our skilled stylists create a
new hair do tn Ratter you. .
Eva Bess Beauty Shop Phone :wi.i

-11 SPECIALIZING In Persona it&gt;
Hair Cuts Lillian McDonald .*
Watch found In ear. Owner may
Beauty Studio In Casselberrv
have same by paying for ad at
Hi-way 17-92 South. Phone W P
Herald Office.
27-2182. (Closed all day Monday)
Drop I n - Free Parking
LOST—Grey and Blue Parakeet
"Chirpy1'. Blue hand on lee EASTER SPECIALS On Perman
Phone 394. Reward —Zellan
ents. 16 30 and $8.50 Includes
Welsh.
Shaping and Styling for YOU
Air conditioned. Sott Water and
Penguin llealless Dryera.
tr— ELECTRICAL SERVICES - C
3 Senior Operators
Kandnll Electric C a
HARRIETT'S BFAtTY NOOK
Uendii and Cros'.ey Appliseer.
We give Unilcd Trading Stamp*
103 South Oak
Phone 971
Youngstovi Kitchen
Kie-ineal ronlrarttec »nd rene”

WILAKA APARTMENTS: rooms,
private bathe. 114 W. Pint st

W

Seminole Realty
W. DIETRICHS
IMt Park Av

F U R N I S H E D kitchenette apt
Slumberland Court, lllway 17*2
South. Phone 1M4W

112 Mnjtnnlla Ave. Ph&lt;me IIS 23- MUNDRY SKRVVICP. _ «
FRIGIDAIHA
-----appliance*
____ •
aales
and service G H High, Oviedo.
Fla Phone 4131 or Sanford •
1642 W after 6 p m
•
•
Sanford Electric Ca
111 Magnolia Ave.
Phone 447
SEE Your General Electric dealer
for TV and Anulianrci.

GOIIMLY INC.

^

Rollsway sad Baby Bed*
Apts.

Efficiency.

Phooc

a .'v f A 'V D 'v lif f iT iX
OUR CUSTOMERS

at I Points, Jets 411 A IT-12

AUUUIIty Teblee

L O W E L L E. O ZIER
Builder — Phone 1331
Custom llomaa and Florida
Builder low coat homes

" “ lamps
T* l lor M 0
1095'earh PlaiUc Cocktail
Chairs
.
• *
1,00
(9.30 Simmons Box Spring
or Mattresi
--•
49 93 Platform Rocker .. 31.30
(4.03 Club Chair
-50
59 30 5 pe. Wrought Iron

BEE Semiaote Realty for Deair
able Homes end Apts. Phone $7

~
P

Golden Jubliee
NQW
.

RAYMOND H. BALL. REALTOR
8. D Higbleymtn. Associate
Phona ten
TRAILER SPACE- Available. $U 104 South Park Ave
Dinette* ....
44
per month. Children Welcome.
69.30 a * 11 Axralnster
C. A W H IDDON , SR.
Lake Monroe Trailer Court
Wool Rug ...............
Reg. Reel Estate Brake*
Phone SIM.
*9 30 Bola Bed .............
H&gt; S Park
----Pa t * i
79.(0 Studio Courn ...
I t o RE ROOM. U sU. 4th and
89.50 Contour Chairm
Sanford. Inquire Jacobson's De
W . H. - B I L L " 8T E M P E R
19 30 Slmmona Sofa Bed 77.50
pert mastStore. _____________
Realtor—General Insurance
GERTRUDE
B.
DINCFELDER.
k
4 Room Apartment (00 Park.
ASSOCIATE
III N. Park Ave.
DOWNSTAIRS Apartment. Large, Phone 11H
clean rooaas. Sun room. SU Park
Whether buying or celling. R will
Ave.
pay you tn see:
GOOD and BAD
J. W. MALL, REALTOR
31 AFT. on Lake Charm.
IU-M E- 1*1 S t
Phone 111
Florida State Rank Budding
__ lodes S Bedrooms and den
Very reasonable. R. A. Cameron. ■Call HaU"__________ Phone lTM
CONCRETE
Oviedo. Phone 4934.
Open for Inspection, 2411 II
Ready Mixed Conerrle. Concrete
Ave. Two Quality Built 3
Two hetRoom furnished apart­
Block. Sand. Gravel, Cement
masonry-constructed h o m e s
ment CIom In. UT Oak Are.
Concrete Pipe to Meal All Quail
Ceramic Bath, vinyl Ule or oak
Phone SIS.
ficationa.
floors, screened porch, Carporu
Phone 24*9
S ROOM Furnished or Unfurnlih
Unfu
I-arc* loti, Terms. L. J. Rlsnsr.
Sherman Concrete Pip* Ca
#d Apartment Phone 13*6
Builder, (420 Holly Ave.
UN West Utk s t
OR SALE— S Room Home In Os 3 BEDROOM,, separate dining
teen. Furnished or unlurnlshed.
room. Large corner lo t (421 SMITH CORONA Portable Type
a Acrte of tend. Call 920-R.
writer. Perfect condition Phone
Princeton Ave.
lCT-w after « p. m._________
SETTLED Couple. Ctoan a Room 3 BEDROOM Houle at Laka Mary.
Apartment. Private Bath, an
BARGAIN—
( Burner Perfection
City watei.
--------------■ici. *Large
rooms, closed
kerosene kitchen Range, Like
trance. Apply aos Elm Ave.
garage, laundry room, flowers.
Phone
new. Phone 736-H&lt;4.
una 162Q-J-1.
Two room furnished apartment
FOR SALE: Bargain. 4 Burner
on bottom Door. Phone 1003-J.
i f rr IS REAL ESTATE
Electric Bange. Deep w e l l ,
ask Crumley A Mewtekk
HOUSE Furnished. 1805 Elliott
Itoraga cabinet, excalleRt condi­
•I 111 8o«Ui Park P M a * m
tion. Phone llli-R-g.
__________ They Knew__________
Gerage Apt. UP! Magnolia.
Used
tonltura.
FIVE Room furnished
led Ap
Apartment MODERN New Horn* With it
etc Aougtitr H eii
1*0.00. ( I l l 6. Palmetto.
Ol last lot

VtJ

-«
“ Your Hot Point Dealer"
I!— IT Sill—Plano Technician
US Palmetto Ave.
Ph. 778
Phona 2164 Houle L Sanford
flvto s e r v ic e

•“W S

?

Maihor Of Sanford

OR ISASI, Package store and The Florida Timas Union.
Grocery. Seven room living
quarter# overhead. ExceUent k?
cation 3 miles east of Sanford
Write 2*03 Smith Atlantle. Day
Iona Beach. Phona Ml"

R c RE^RICH Hammock Land,
f t Acres Tiled and Cultivated l

a M V E t;

- Super Trading___
Th#^
n*din* Posi,_1 _
mils
South of Sanford oa IT-n.

Bacv*Hy Am IUm * Caalir

"Your WtsUngnouse Dealer"
Maytag Wsabers
1U Magaella Ava
Ph

KENFLEX VINYL Asbestos Tile.
H i Houm en a large
fcrath of Sanford. U? W. First St.
Unfurnished, kit-

Phone IMT

AIR CONDITIONING
Room or House

jt a

ro p E

co-

Math F ait Ave.

Corner lot
haply U K

in c

Fhiana I

- Factory to Ye* -

lovely ( bedroom
J fkitn. Lifetime HeohaHh
iPRHltOB.
No hotter US-114 Meet Rad S'
celery and
irrtV A R orn xs
"
“Wood*.
Native tad
and Foreign
See Them At
Via. Ca* he had (er leu than
Pipe C a

--1S SSESHPiualkr

Plowing, discing, grading Tree
snd shrubbery moved Dewii
Hunter 401 E » ih St

RANDALL BLECTRIC^ CO
T V SERVICE CENTER

• Factory Supervised Service
• House calls 9 a m till I p n
(All makaa and models)
IK Mag Ava
Pbons B40u

Hanford
Vacuum Cleaner Servica
Pboae 114 X J
Parte and Supplies for Aii Makes
-R e n ta ls-__________
HALL'S GARAGE for general Au'
repairing Also Wrecker Servlr
401 Celery Pb ItWO-M - 1*W
Nights

PLUMBING

Umtraet and rcaitr work Fr*
eiUmstci g L Harvey
Sanford Ave Plsnna 182a

&gt;

ENVELOPES, letterhead*, stote
masts, invoice*, hand bill*, and

s j= g S
PIANOS WANTED. I’ll Buy Any
Plano worth Fixing L. L. SUL
Phona 2144.

need— Reed
Reap book*,
book act as
I Eapeitenccdtr. Meet public.
public, Must
v
cashier.
have
experience. Year ’round. EatabIshtd local company. Reply g|v
6

*°x ^ e/#

Day end Nlahl drivers. YeUow
Cab Co., I i f S. Magnolia Ave.

Boyd * Wollaci

§

’OUNO single maa to tear*
printing trade, apply at Herald

ir a M S r W S S T F S S T B
GIRLS!

GIRLSI

N/°te 2SJ52l

Warm.1
2 1 * °^ Drive

" a id till * o m j * Sat/cafl b ^
■ imihI ^

•1

x

Phone (44 1 \

CASH and TRtADE-m
paid for used B R N I

A FA RM

u

NIX REDDING MFG. CO.,

b o o k u Erkpe
i
________
JR

IK Hagaella Ava_____________

NUN

UPHOLSTERY- Slip cover* made |
tn order at

ADDING NMACHINE?DTypowrit

Fowali’s Of flea Supply

--—* — -JW71. f*|VW. KUI
p e r f e c t . No eneuaberance.
Herbert O. Crippen. owner. Ill
Ckapnsan Av*.

Phoot 111.

SEWING MACHINES- Repalrtu
or rehuill Alan
AI
machines for
aale.JI3.0U u( _____
1777-X M Box (49. U ke Mary

Your Morainf Papor.

Oamdr. end family desperately
need unfurnished I or 4 bedroom,!
Hbatn bouM. i. A. Wilson, *27 TOP CASH nricti paid for F iS ff
J CatjUpa Dr. Phone 64AM, I

i

Phono 14*1.

flo u W d l

INI Sanford Avo.

OR IM .E:
. ,
-------'re lived to^Florf
** *PT 1 7 #lr- fhla ia • v««r
irmsnd poai&amp;oi. No drift
given -—

UM *orr1

Ml OC

ftB L 'S * or Sale. Houm TraiUr. so foot

a a S jh ffrK -rurvUlO-AUTOMORlLH DMA!
naserences nooa U J.

."""B E L L Y O f W E S

^ . ^ a a f u S U f C k S n a S T t I CLEANING WOMAN. Call TM-M-4.1

83

FOR
SUDDEN
SERVICE

H IL L LU M BhK &amp; SU PPLY Y A R D

LARGE suppry of Orangeburg fl
bre pipe and fittings for vour
sewer needs.

IW) Sanford Av*

Phone 2489

f

FHA
Financing
For Remodeling snd repalri
Nothing Down-Small Month!)
Payments
Ont Weat IIlk

H E E D S

CA LL THE

One hour
Wain and Damp
Dry
One hour H
Wash and Dry
Fold
Finished laundry
Sanitone Dry Cleaning
Soul M i l e lau n d rom a t
South Side Food ms rt Bldg.
IN East Ulh Rt

NUMBER
n -

B U U O iN G

Out Went 13th St.

Sherman Concrete Ca

*»

A N O

SHERMAN CONCRETE
PIPE CO.

Ished. Reasonable terms. In buIneis atnee 1920 Old floors mac',
like new. E F Stovens; Ron’
L Boi H7: Phone 7K-R-4.

WE Need Your Listings—

L. M. PARSONS REALTY

Day, Week or month—Tai 1413.1
Fnmitnre Dealer IK West First |
Avalea

T. W. HERO
17

SMALL BUSINESS
If ynu have a sm-11 business tn a
secluded part of town and are
interested In getting customers,
list the service you offer In the
Classified column of the Sanford
HerLid. Call 1*11.

LOST AND FOUND

Ilke rent*3’*00 °° down' b*l,nee (Nationally Adv
I\ M CAMPBELL
Rolla-llead)
General Contrarlor
Manufactured In Sanford
To Plied A Want Ad
"Homes of Distinction"
11,3001» down bura this almost
no!# Venetian Blind Ca
Ju&gt;t Call 1821 and ask for completely furnished I Bedroom Semi
Phono till
n o West Srd St
Phone 2*3 HI Way 17 91 .
home. Owner anxious for lmtka Want Ad department
FLOOR
SANDUIO
A
Finishing
mediate
a
a
I
e.
therefore
h
a
t
USED TRACTORS
Sanford Herald
Oak floors furnished, laid A fin
Prif«l ,lhU home at $9100.00.
Britt Praetor Co
which Is about 1*00 below lo- Miway IT *
d e j’s market

THE SANFORO HERAT.D
Thurs. Mar. 10, 1955 Page 5

i S u L d * ! A . *iTlUh

/

9

A

�•J*

P.-Ke fi

TTiunt. Mar. 10. 195S TTTF RANPORT) HERALD

Freed American
Declines Interview

T ELEV IS IO N
m ih to - t v

m il,a n n o

ri in I'fcsnar Wllhnat Mvtlrvl
Till (HUH P.M.

TAWIM W ri.A -T V
T ill tt*t&gt;.41
t tn. T m I P illtrs
Uoldan IVIndova
**lilM Uuldsnri
Cuncarnlng Slim Marina*
linn kin* Kalla
First Lora
Tha World of Mr. Hmrtncr
Modern Romance*
l.lllla Itaarala
Wilma lha Clowu

"Sir

iiml M rs"
Dlev»t
IlmwInK ‘runnit with KUInr
rurtinin I ’nrnlvnl
Klim Fact A Fancy
A.lrtnttir- with Unciv Wall
n u lh r r , Sfw i. Kpnrta
Indu-lry nn Parana
lluntlna anil Fishing with
l&gt;nn
ttu-lial Varlatiaa
Austin PrM H Il
•Inhn Dal* N »»»
Inina Itanarr

Itnwrilv 1toady

r.ln Tin Tin
lluma Edition— Xawa
llama Edition—Fporia
lioma Edition— Waalbar
Sherlock llolmta
Dinah Ahnra Show
N ta i Caravan
Groucho Mari
Jualloa
Drngnot
Fotd Theater
I.u* Vlada Theater
Kina'* Croaaroada

Anvia V And?
Cllmaa
Hum. and Allan
lllnarld* with tha Tlaatlm
Kawa-Snorla-VVaalhar
Towar Thaatar
Flan m l
rtllIM T A. 44.
Flan On Troaram Itaaasat
N*wa-W*athtr
Mnrnlna Hhow
Klim Vara
Taal rattrrn
r i i i i M t r.w.

Tonight

Sian on program naauma
Xawa-tVanllirr
Hollywood Than and how
Thia Land of Oura

Radio

S4WHR.TV JAtKaORVtf.I.E
|lil&gt;|rrl la C b i n i W IIS iil Rallaal
t m c r s d a t f .m.

S AD Rrlghtir Day
Sill Secret Hlorm

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On Your Account
Portia Kacll Llfa
Keeking llaart
Gary Moore
wave, Weaihar. Sparta
Lana Rangar
Gim Talk
I
Jana Froman
llonrrninon Holiday
Cllmai
O itl- A Harriett
Slii Erwin Show
Mr Dliirlct Altorm
Naw» and Waathar
Kama That Tuna
Sian Off

1:10 Eddla Flihar
Till Dial ”11” for Mutl*
»:80 Night Edition
*11 United Nation!
S:t4 H i D inntlm *
10:18 At lloma With Muila
IOiSS Niwi
11:08 Laymm'a Call To Trayar
11:044 Sign Off

KniiiAf a.M.

T an Taltinr
Morning Show
Dob Croiby
Shoppara Guide
Shoppara Outda

( 08
4:81
4:01
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FRIDAT A. M.

Sign on
tdiymin'i Call to Trayir
Dawn Dm kara
Nawi
Waitira Jamhoraa
Nana

'» Riven O'clock Club

r.M.

Valiant *Lady
Lova af Ufa
Saarch for Tomorrow
Ouldlng l.iaht
Kite hi n Show
wilcema Travalari
fobart U- LawU

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Opan House
LETTER FATd OFF
BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (9 —Alton
F. Niles, 4*. of Newtown, wrote a
note to the "Live Letter” column
of the Bridgeport Fost recently
complaining that all girls are
"goM-dlggers" and not desirous of
a home and family.”
Hla letter draw a reply from
Mrs. Marla F. North, 10, of Bridge­
port, who haa been a widow for
three yeara.
They met three weeks ago.
The society column in yester­
day’s Bridgeport Telegram carried
an announcement that Mrs. North
and Nllaa will be married March
19 at hit boms.
The first professional league
(on a organised baala) was the
Nut IonaI Basketball League atari*
ed in 1198. It lasted ealy Twe aae*
sons.

Nawa
■ Hporla At A Glanca
Jockey1# Cholci
Morning Davollana
Morning Milodlti
World At Nina
Muila For Ladlaa
.1" Hymn Tima
» :ll For Lgdin Only
1S-.08 Huilo For Tou
l«;»o Neve
10:11 1108 Club
11:10 Gim i of Mflo|ty
11:00 World Al Noun
H ill Radio Farm Dlgoat
11:10 Friday Matlma

WASHINGTON ( 9 - Two key
DcmocrsU predicted the House
will approve today President El­
senhower's program to boost the
pay r.f career military servicemen
from 6 to 23 per cent.
Chairman Vinson (D Cs.) of tha
House Armed Service! Committee
and Rep. Kilday (D-Tex), a senior
member, said they had heard of
no important opposition. The mea­
sure would add 742 million dollars
to the annual (ive-biliion-dollar
military payroll.
A House vote is expected In late
afternoon. The Senate has not
acted.
The measure calls for an aver
age increase of 11.9 per cent foi
enlisted men and warrant officer
with over two years’ service and
officers with over three years
duty. An estimated two million
men would be due to raises on the
first if tha month after the Presi­
dent signs the bill.
An Army private with over three
years' service would get an added
*7 *0 per monlh, or *101.40; a first
lieutenant with over three years’
duty would get *61.23 far 1332.40
monlily; a brigadier general with
over 22 years* service would be
jumped *48 92 to **50.20 monthly.
No increases are provided for
men with less service. Adminis­
tration spokesman said the main
purpose is to eneoivage trained
Crippled Children’s Commission men to make a career of military
which referred him for home
treatment to the Easter Seal Society's Mobile Therapy Unit currcntlv operating In the Ferry area,
providing a practical demonstration of cooperation between stale
and voluntary agencies,
Governor Collini, who ti honorirjr president of the Florida Socjct jor crippled Children, auto. ...
' , „ ,
’
* » P h«* ,h« L i,[er * * « d * • «
it to Buddy as • keepsake.
Vaeanclea for qualified woman
are still opan In the United States
Marine Corps according to Major
W. F. Lane, Officer In Charge of
Leatherneck rechtJUni tn Florida.
An attractive career for women
eighteen to thirty. Inclusive, ia
offered high school graduates who
PORTLAND, Ore. (9— Firemen like to Wavel, meet new friends
continued to search for bodies |&gt; and learn valuable skills. Such In­
the ruins of (he Lind Hotel, dr teresting plaeei aa San Francltce,
stroyrd by fire yesterday, but the Loa Angeles and San Diego on the
death toll remained at five.
west coast are among tha cities
Several others were still Hated where Women Marines serve.
as missing. Official! said, how­ Other stateside eltlee Include
ever, they apparently got out and Boston, New York, Philadelphia,
moved elsewhere. The two-floor Chicago, Washington, D. C. and
hotel located on the fringe of the the Florida cities of Miami and
waterfront area, was tenanted Jacksonville, to name a few.
mostly by elderly men.
Oversea!, Women Marines are
Police blamed the fire on a cig­
fining
billets In Hawaii and many
arette, and filed manslaughter
charges against two tenants who of tha European capitals. Travel
epportunlUei «uch as these a n
escaped with minor Injuries.
They were Russell Arnold U’ ren commonplace to Women Marine*
42, end Ann Alexander, 4*. Asst. and provide that "one* In a lifaFire Marshal C, W. Stlckney said
U’ren told him a blanket eeagM
fire as he smoked In bed. U’ ren
told tilm he doused water oa the
blanket, and then dumped the
blanket out in a hallway, Stickney said, adding that the lira
started there.

Gov. Collins Gets
Buddy Hunter, 10 year old Ferry
outh. is shown presenting ■ kinglie Easter Seal lo Governor Lctoy Collins at the Governor's
tension in Tallahassee to open
te annual appeal of the Florida
oclety for Crippled Children.
Buddy, a victim of Ferthes diease, waa confined in bed for two
ears during the past five, but now
i attending school and playing
Dwboy In spite of crutches and a
ling to hold up one fooL
Ha la a patient ot the Florida

Seed

Vacancies Open
For l). S. Women
In Marine Corps

Firemen Continue
Search For Bodies
In Hotel Rubble

NATURALIZATION COURT
GOES TO LADY
NORTHF1ELD, N.J. (9 - The
four-man Atlantic County Natural­
isation Court traveled 12 miles
from the eounty seat at Maya
Landing to administer the oath of
cltlunihlp to a chipper, bedridden
old lady. Mra. Daisy Loveday Lewia,. 71, born In England, is
it parpar­
alyzed in the right side and could
not go to court.

WASH1NOTON (9-John J. MeCloy, board chairman of the Chase
National Bank, laid today the
United States ts becoming econom­
ically more dependent on Its al­
lies “ a* the free work! grows
stronger."
McCloy, former U.S. high com­
missioner for Germany, told the
Senate Banking Committee this
trend works the other way t o o The three chief fe m e of bflthat other Western countriei Inllarda In the United Statea ere
balkline, g-enablea and pocket bll- cretalngiy need tha support of the
American economy.
Tha eommlltae, headed by Sen.
Fulbright (D-Ark), called McCloy
and Marrtner I . Eeries, former
Federal Reserve Board chairman,
as today’s witneasea In its weekold "friendly study” of the recent­
ly tig-sagging stock market.
Shire prices dropped sharply on
the New York exchange for the
aecond day yesterday although a
fairly broad recovery followed.
Fulbright stood by hla conten­
tion that the Senate inquiry didn't
cause the price break.
McCloy waa asked to testify
about tha impact of foreign par­
ticipation In tha Amaricaa stock
market. His reply, te prepared tes­
timony, was that It's not very
gnat and a m a ra to have been
decreasing tn recast years.'
"At the end of 1989,'' he said,
“ foreigners were reported by the
Department of Commerce to bold
U.S. stocks, common and pre­
ferred, valued at (3.400,000,000.
This was equal to only 2.* per
ernt of the total value of stocks
hated oo the New York Stock
Exchange.1'

TORECLOSt

sofAsy

Few Oranges Left
Compared To 1954
LAKELAND OP)
- Florid*,
which began the seaaon with an
estimated record Ofl million boxes
of oranges to market, now haa
fewer left to use than a year ago,
Florida Citrus Mutual says.
Tha U. 8. Department of Agri­
culture later reduced Its estimate
to 01 million boxes and still later
to 89 million.
Robert W. Rutledge,
general
manager of Mutual, said only
about 38U million boxea of or­
anges remain to be marketed.
“ This Isn't quite aa many aa
were used last season from thia
date on,” ha said, adding that pro­
duction of orango concentrate, the
major factor tn the Florida citrus
industry, apparently will be loss
than last season-

Merry 20 Club
Has Routine Meet Director Declares
The. Merry 80 Club met recently
at tha heme ef Mrs, Bernice War Not Inevitable

m tm a m

* IR VIN G BERLINS * #

MIAMI BEACH (9) — The di­
Jonea, No, 14 William Clerk
Court. Plena weiw made for the rector ef defanw mobilletslon. Dr.
club to attend the 10th anniver­ Arthur 8. Fleming, declared boro
sary of the ACL Sunday at 1:10 leet night that war la not Inevi­
table and • militarily and spirit­
ually atreag America la the heal
way to prevent It
Dr. Flemming said the natlon'r
civil defenee program “has a long
way te ge” aa far aa getting siltearn te pertkipute to ceecerntd.
Hla roeaeu far feeling that war

Sava Almost •/• on fhooo folding

Hostess TV Tables]
[ f

Y

• $195 r e ta il

ftp AM YMtet RUto# tomorrow.'
Shi it ■due ia S u Tranche*
■bout March X .
In &gt; brief handwritten note to
The Associated Press, Mrs. Rick*
etl said she felt further Interviews
with newsmen would only be “ repPUSAN, Korea
Mrs Adele Itlmn ” She turned down a written
Rlckett, 23-year-old scholar en
route to San Francisco after 34
years in a Communists prison, to­
day declined further interviews
“ with the reactionary press."
Mrs Rlckett is a passenirr on i v c n r * T o r T s s r r o r v r r
jr n r ,r . e r w iv o i.r c s r m ,
the freighter Fine Tree Mariner o(
•T4TE OF FLORIDA. |S FRO.
the Far East Pacific Lines. It is
0 4 TIL
IX
RE THE ESTATE OF
taking on supplies here and leaves

MT

vice. These skills are la gnat
demand in civilian life and pay
high wages, eapodally to woman
who hav# a background of train­
ing and service with tha United
States Marine Corps, Major Lana
concluded. For further IntermatlM

Floyd Palmer It
In San Francisco
K A N F R A N I 8 C O , C a lif.Spatial agent Floyd A. Palmer,
tha Prudential Insurance Com­
pany’s representative te lanferd,
has arrived te San Ptaaclseo far
a conference of the compeay'a ex­
clusive “ President's Club” , March
P-lt,
A number of company Mflrlala,
ln h fju
Prudential w u l f n t ,

ROMAN
CLEANSER
BLEACH

MV
U. S. Economic Aid
May Receive Boost

servlet. The President' strongly
backed it.
KJlday said he expected some
attempts on tha House floor to In­
clude raises far the lowest ranking
enlisted men. There may alto be
criticism of increases tn haxardoui
duty bonuaas.
Vinson laid in a separata intarview the proposed ralsei were pro­
moted by the high costs of provid­
ing teplacemrnts for what he
termed a heavy turnover of serv­
icemen.
A committee report said that of
about one million men eligible to
leave the services by next June
only about 200.000 are expected to
re-enllst. and It added:
“ If this re-tnllstment rate could
be Increased by 100,000 individ­
uals, the savings In training costs
alone for replacements would bttremendous."
Tha measure also would estab­
lish a new “ dislocation allowance"
equal In ona month’s basle pay
for families making a permanent
change of station In peacetime; in­
crease travel allowances from *9
daily to IU ; boost retirement pay
at least * per cant; and raise aervice school cadets from 1*1.12 to
*111.12 monthly.

Matusow Says Feat
O f 'M cCarthyites'
Cause O f Lying

Legal Notice

FLOSSIE MAE FRtOR

Legal Notice

DETROIT UB - The b e l sounds
neat week hr the opening round
la the HO United Auto Workers'
showdown fight far a guaranteed
annual wage ia the auto tedastry.
The union announced te Joint
statements with General Motors
and Ford yostarday that "txpla.
tory" talks will be bald thoa—sep­
arately with each company.
Tha CM and Ford talks will cov­
er roughly half a million workers.
They will aptathtsd a drive which
the union bones wiU win a guar
anteed annual wage for more than
a million auto workers and per*
haps many of the CTO's four mil­
lion ether members.
The UAW Is demanding contract
guarantee* that any seniority work­
er who works any part af a week
wffl ha paid far a tell 48 hours.
Ha alio would ho guarantood a
seriate part el hla fuQ wag* far
a wuek when than la na work far
him at an.
G«Mral Meters' five-year eontract with the union expires May
JO. n * Ford pact runs out June
1. Formal aagoUationa with tha
two biggest auto producers era

Nntlna la hereby «leea that OORDON V. FREDERICK rtlad till final
noort a« Admlnlatratar « f lha a*,
ilia r.f FLOSSIE MAE TRIOR, da.
r t i n d ; lhat ha fltid hl« pillllnn
far final dlerhare*. and lhat ha win
apply In tha Ilannrlhla Ernitt
lln&lt;iih"ld»f. County Jnds* of Himlnnli raunly. Flmlda. on tha lit
d«y nf April, ISIS, far apprnval
of aama and far final dlirharga aa
Administrator of lha eetat# of Floi■I* Mia rrfor. d*&lt;-*aiid, an thla
til diy of Marih, ISIS.
/ » / Gordon V. Fred»rlr%
Admlnlitraior of lha ailala
of FLOSSIE MAE TRIOR,
dereaeed.

IV TME CIMrPTT COMIT. WIVTM
jrn trtA i, c im it it iv avd rn a
■ GMIvm.E COI'VTV, FLORIDA.
■k c ss4 m t b y v o . eree.
DAN STEVENS.
T lllatlffi

ELIZABETH
VENS.

NGTIGE JR IIERERT GIVEN
that purmant to TOiptir t il.
Florida ftlatutaa. ISIS, tin follow­
ing daarrlhrd land! In R*-i|nnta
GmjBly. Florida, will ha offorad for
aala at puhllcnutcrv for lha hlgli••t and noil raih hid it Ihi frjnt
dnnr nf Hit Romtnnla rnunlr r'aurt
MOittt. ii Finfard. higlnnlng ml
li lt s A M., on Monday March Stlb
a. d . m u
R t8i* ft of Lot IT RtorV 1 Palm
Tirraca T in Book S Tagu II A

EL PASO, Tax. 1 9 - Harvey Ma­
tusow, who says ha lied In testify,
ing for the government tn anti­
communist hearing! and trials,
II
aays he wa« afraid to tell the gov­
Lot I Work SS H ay Spring Flat
Rook 1 Tag* It.
ernment he lied because he feared
*Di nt Lnti ITS O ITS O F
the “ McCarthy crowd.”
Rwopi Land Ena. f l i t Of Rlark
First ha testlflad In general that
llammork ria l Book * T agu
118 O III.
ha faared for hii life if he told
I-nti a. T. IS * IS anutk Park
government officials he lied. Later
TUt Rook a T ag! St.
I-Mi 8 * 1 8 King Taro SaVhe modified the itAlement with the
dlvliloa Plat Book 4 Faga f.
comment concerning Sen. Joseph
f^ta t. T * B Block I Allaa’a
Flrit Addition tn Waaklagtna
McCarthy (R-Wla) tad Ms RadHatghta. Tint Book t Pago SI.
hunting committee.
w u of nvr M of a w % J
NIT M Baetloa IS Township i *
Matusow was scheduled tn testi­
Sonlh Rang# 18 Eail.
fy again today la • fadaral court
I aHi A B G A D R i n k 4T
hearing. The hearing Is on o reAmandid Flat of Cryatal Laka
Rhoraa,
plat Reek S Faga II.
quest by Clinton Jsacks for a new
Lot 18A Block It rroamwold,
trial. Jencks is formar president
ru t Rook a Tagu *8 * II *
Flat Book 4 Tagu S8 * It.
of Local *90 of tha International
O. F. Iliralon
Union of Mine, Mill and Smaller
r'lark of th* Elnnit
four! Stmlaolo County
Workers, Bayard, N. M.
Florida
Jencks was sentenced lest year (Circuit Court
Rial)
to five years In prison for swearin
n
s
cocwt
a r n &gt; ro rw rv
ing falsaly la a non-Communist af■Jt’IKJE. snwikOMB OOV 1 T T ,
•TATE
n
r
EXOklDAfidavlt required of union leaden.
Testimony by Matusow, who ha* IN1Rn rPRORATE.
TUB ESTATE OI*t
ilnea u ld ho lied, waa used to
GERTIE A. WILSON
DacoAMd.
eoavktlag Jencks.
PINAL RO«CM
Notice la baroby elvan that tha

Annual Wage Fight
O f Auto Workers
Opens Next Week

Dereared.

TO A M . W HOM IT M A T C O T C K R R l

tindaralanad will, on tha 17th Say
of March. A. D. ISIS, prraant to
(ho Honorable County Judto of
Som:nele County, Florida, bar (Inal
raturn. account and vouch ore, aa
Eaacutrta et the Eatate of Gartlo
A. Wllaon, dacaaaad, and at said
tlma. than and tbara. make appli­
cation to tha aatd Judn (or ■ final
aattlomant of bar adnil nlat rat tea of
Mid oatAto, and for an nrdar dlacharting bar aa auch AdmtnUtraIrts.
Date* thla tha 14th gar et Feb­
ruary, A. D. ISIS
I.uclIU Faalar
Aa Eaacutrla af tha
Batata nf Oartle A.
Wllaon, t l M l i i i i
R. W . Wara. Atioraay
far Esocutrla.
Woodrulf-Parking Rid.,

TATT ERROR

RTM-

Defendant.

ROTICM TO DF.FEVn
BTATE o r FLORIDA TO EMEA RETM PATTERSON STEVENl,
whoia realdanea fa unkytwa,
Tou will lake notice Shat a sworn
hill of complaint haa ham filed
agalmt you in tha rircnlt Canrt In
and for Samlnola County. Florida,
In Chaneery; that lha natnra of
•aid i-tll la an arttan for ilvorc*.
lha aharl tllla of which la PAN
ATEVENS. TIi Inti If. V EI.I7.ARKTII TATTERUON STETENS, De­
fendant.
1
THESE PRESENTS era ta aammind yon ta flla your nniwar or
othir planding with thi Clark ot
thi circuit Court of R*mtnnlo O n *.
iy at Sanford, Florida, and aarve
n aapy af tha aama an FlalatlfTa
attornay, an ar hafnra tha Hat dap
of March A. D„ 1*11.

BUYING
A CAR?

*SA N F O R D
Atlantic

naii O

ku . ban

yoursnog-yotrHhammomebm
&lt;gk. by'pit tedding day

�«

r W « o tfi« r

Stop md S w
In Sanford
•
ExtabHzshad 1908

Collins Names
M en
To Barbers Commission
TALLAHASSEE (&amp;) — Gov. Colllne named two new
members of the Barbers Sanitary Commission and said he
expected the new board to look into reported sale of barbers
licenses.
The new members arc Green H. Ashmore of Miami and

Stro llin g
In Sanford
Appetite-teasing aromas may be
floating over the air tomorrow In
«filcase you're In the vicinity of Fort
^Mellon Park between the houra of
11:30 a. m. and 12:30 p. m. Why?
Sanford Girl Scout Troopt One and
Two will be staging a hobo cookmil at they add a final touch to
tha observance of National Girl
Scout Week.
• • •
Mitt Caroline hlclnnli, daughter
V of the Rev. and Mrs. A. G. Me
lnnlt, hat been elected vice- presi­
d e n t of the Woman's Student Coun­
cil at Stetson University in DeLand for 1933 and 'U. Mitt Mein
nil u alto president of the Tri
Delta Sorority at Stetson and presi­
dent of the Westminister Fellow­
ship for he Synod of Florida,
whlcn Is a Presbyterian Organiza­
tion tor carrying on the work ol
pie Presbyterian Church on the
College campus.
• • •
Miss Margaret Malloy, daugh­
ter of Mr. and Mrs. John Malloy,
has one of the lead parts in the
Florida State University’s speech
department production of Arthur
Miller’s “ Crucible” , Miss Malloy
will portray Abigail Williams in
tha presentation which will run
March 11, 12, 14. and IS in Con­
rad! Theater with curtain time
at S ill p. m. Director of the play
to Dr. Paul Davee.
*&lt;• .
---------------------

Engineers Eying
Widening Crevice
In N iagara Falls
NIAGARA FALLA, N.V. (It Niagara Falls may be In for an­
other spectacular face lifting.
engineers eyed a widening crevd e e extending about 10 feet back
Irora the ereitline of the Amerlean
aide of the falls today and laid It
"ikreateaed a new roekfatl.
The Niagara Frontier State
Parks Commission said last night
ttat the crack wai an old one that
had been observed before, but it
apparently had been growing big­
ger in the past day or two.
“ If a rockfaH occurs, H will
..m a k e another definite change In
Vflhe face of tha falls,'1 Joseph
Davis, commission chairman, said.
A park policeman said that an
unfamiliar spume of water "kick­
ing up in the air” from the Ni­
agara River eurrent drew his at­
tention to the widening fissure,
about to to Ti feet offshore Cram
the Americas mainland.

DR. n.VRRY JE8SOP will b#
the guest speaker et the Sun­
day morning a m ic i of the
Church of the Natarene. lie
will also be heard at a apcclal
afternoon union aervice of the
Free Methodist Church o f San­
ford, tha Wesleyta Methodist
Church of Paola, and the Lake
Mary Nasarrna Church. The
Rev. Robert Spear Jr* pastor
of the hoetesa church, has lavltod the public to attend these
eervkoo.

City Board Okays
Zoning Variance
For Dr. Saunders

Jack Carter of Orlando. He win
make another appointment later to
replace C. R. Rankin of Monticello.
Ashmore was named to replace
Joe L. Smith of Miami who was
removed by Collins yesterday af­
ter a hearing, and Carter we* ap­
pointed to succred A. I.. Dickinson
of Orlando who resigned.
At the hearing, Smith xaid he
had evidence and was willing to
present it to a grand jury that a
Miami “ racketeer” had been sell­
ing barber licenses.
Collins said he was not ready
now to ask a giand jury indict­
ment but added:
t
“ I shall expect the new board
to obtain advice from the attorney
gcneral'a office as to what remedi­
al and corrective steps should be
taken.”
Answering a question by Collins
as to what he had done about
alleged sale of barbers licenses,
Smith said he and Dickinson had
gone to Ally. Gen, Ervin and re­
quested an investigation. He said
Ervin advised against it because
“ it would planter tha papers and
blast the administration”
of
former Acting Gov. Johns.
Ervin said in Miami that “ noth­
ing lika that happened.”
“ He (Smith) and another hoard
member did come to me for legal
advice on a purely internal matter
in their board, their belief that a
secretary was wielding too much
power. I did suggest that they
take their problems to the gover­
nor as I believe ha would straightir it out,” tha attorney general
said.
“ Rut they said nothing about
the grosa irregularities n o w
eusrged. Had they mentioned that,
I definitely would not have rouncried against an investigation.”

SANFORD. FLORIDA,

County's Schools
Offer Cooperation
For Polio Vaccine
Full cooperation wfth health of­
ficials in planning for possible
polio vacrinations in Saminola
County, elementary schools was
pledged today h.v R. T. Milwee,
superintendent of schools, follow­
ing a meeting with Dr. Terry
Bird, county Health Officer or
physician in charge.
“ If the Salk polio vaccine M
found effective amt it licensed,
we will be prepared immediately
lo start vaccinating 1730 children
in the first and second grades of
every public, private and paro­
chial school in Seminole County,”
said Milvsce,
The vaccina will he furnished
to Health Departments by the Na­
tional Foundation for Infantile
Paralysis without cost few the
product. It will be part of a 99.000,000 supply purchased with
March of Dimes funds.
“ The size of this job and the
need for advance preparation can
be realized when you consider that
this involves 32 classes in 14 pub­
lic schools throughout our coun­
ty,” Milwtc continued. "Some of
these rlssses are in small achoola
and children may have to he
transported to clinics held in big­
ger schools.
“ A polio vaccine program of
this sire is a challenge principals
and teachers are eager to mret
because it present* an opportunity
fur widespread health education."
Miiwee said he has held meet­
ings with principals to discuss with
them details of the program. All
plans must be finished in advance
of the possible starting data for
vaernations.
No eligible children will rcoclve
vaccine unless their parents first
sign a form requesting it. These
firms will he distributed through
tha schools during tha third week
ul .March.

Federal Reserve System Effects
Daily Lives O f U. S. Citizens

Southern Bell Fays
Large Income Tax

toea

Bit.
- -

**

7, wV.'VjjJ.

S3

Defend
Withouv
America
Papers Report'
Maneuvers Hekl

EACH YEAR THE Pilot Cluh sponsors the stuffing o f Easier Seals. Here Home of (he
m em bers gathered last night nl the hom e o f Mm. G eorge Stine. L eft lo rigid are Mm.
n u n c wno
s erne .siesscnKcr,
e rry , air*.
1 . |„
Kultnrn
Stine
who is pnriiiniy
partially otwcureii,
obscured, .uni.
Mm. Verne
Messenger. air*,
Mm. j.1.. rI’.. p
Perry,
Mm. 3M.
I.. Kahnrn
Sr.. .Mr*. Sue Stephenson, Mr*. I.eon Ilrynn, and M m . liarses* Swanson, nlso partially oharUred. (S t a ff P h o to )
'
-_____________________:_______________________________

Unnecessary Costs

O R L A N D O (/I*)— Tho nli.xeiu-e o f a lien and recov ery pro­
vision in the old orb assistance law m akes Florida’s welfaru
pniRram Unnecessarily costly, says Chairm an Charles O.
A ndrew * Jr o f the M a te W elfa re D epartm ent.
R eporting on n survey o f 111 * titles having » lieu law, hu
s*id those
have million, o f , --------ue status
alu
for pernor- [&gt;&gt;,
i
Wteiv more,
mo!t,aValla^|i!
--------------of r~.p
n need or
.... e- of
... mmos
......... ..{'•
of non-eshimtlal recipients from
Ihe rolls slid freoveiy nf purt of
the money spent on sol.
Andrews said lie mude tho lorvey to answer riilirUm of a propoxed anirmlmtnl l&gt;y State Hep.
Ilsrry Uleaton of Citrus t'ouitiy.
The amendment would give I lie
department a lien agnlnxt proper­
NEW YORK r Waller Wineltell
ly of recipients Mild rouble the
slat* to recover all or putts of says he's quilting ABC radio anil
amounts paid in old uge assist­ television t&gt;v nest Christina* af
ance giants after pi tor claims ter iii»&lt;l) 33 years with the net­
were settled.
work
(•teuton atrurk at a contention
He said last night he u-ked for
Stint She ainemlinvnl would save
and
received a release from a con­
the atata money and forre the
children of parents on welfare to tract running into six figmcs in a
supitort them. “ In a very few letter Fell. 10 to the American
cases this might he true,” he anid, Broadcasting Co.'a directors.
"Bui la moat eases tho children
The commentator experts to
hava thrtr own fontlliea to look
after and thia plan would im&gt;4 he slay on th* air rither with another
network or iruducing hia own
practical.
Furthermore, H would l&gt;« un­ newscasts.
fair berauxa a person not owning
WinrheN said an accumulation nf
any property could draw ax much
haaiatanr* aa a properly owner gri*vnnr*i resulted In hi* requert
and not hava to pay anything for a contract reloaie and added:
bark at alt.”
’ T m very grateful to ABC for
Andrew* as Id welfare director!
granting m* what I requested. If
of Hen tow atete mad* vh&lt; x« comnnbmly want* me to radio or TV
mantel
South Dakolai “ Wa catimata I’ ll just do my column in the New
(bat our caseload would he about York Daily Mirror."
ona-thlrd largar tf w* had no lien
Winchell's dally column also Ir
law. Tha tow ia generally accepted
widely syndicated
by tha old peopla aa aomething
ABC President llobcrt H Etnt
they aan pay in part and have
aome pride in th* fact they are nvr said:
"ABC regret* th* termination nf
helping themselves.”
Montana: “ Th# Hen law dls- Mr. Walter Winrhrll'a long rela­
murages persona fiom applying tionship with its netwigki.
for asiistaner who have adequate
resources and pravents children
fiorn profiting as heirs through
their failure to aurport their parcute.”

SH S M usicians
To Give Recital

Old Icebox Tokes
liv e s Of 2 Youths

T» !•**»

Anmriatcd P i t * I n w d l ^ T

Easter Seal Drive
Appeal Is Made
Seen In O ld A g e Law
To Help Children
Soviet Government
Publicly Admits
Shortage Of Food
Winciielilu Quit
ABC Network
By Next Christmas

d-High Winds Rage
w ith Vicious Farce

■ M l 71 to U , low tonight mV'

tt M toft ito H
M ilt ana t o f t .

Chinese Determined
To Fight For Posts

Tho City Board of Adjustment,
at a public hearing yesterday,
granted the request of Dr. Frank
K. Saunders for zoning variance.
The board gave Dr. Sausdcrs
permission to use not more than
2S per cant of the ground floor
MOSCOW t# — Th# Soviet govarea of his residence at 901 E.
eminent, openly admitting food
LONDON
IW
—
Sir
Alexander
Uth St. tor an office.
shortages, today ordered tlx farm
Tbe variance la effective for Fleming, 73, the Scottish scientist system revamped to give the man
tha term of his lease or for tha who discovered penlrllln, died un­ r.n the land more ehanra for in­
term of his lease or for three expectedly of heart disease at his itiative in rrop planning.
At the same lima state farm
years, whichever is the lesser home today. He always ascribed
the discovery which made him fa­ managers were warned they will
time.
mous to “ pure luck.”
be held strictly arroontshlr for
In other action, the board ap­
Hii finding of the drug which any fsilura to meet production
proved tha request of Nina Black
for permission to construct a hat played a vital part in man’s quotas.
Ths decree, signed by Commu­
building at 1003 Bay Ave. The pro­ battle against Infectious disease
perty Is owned by Hattie L. Reed, brought him worldwide fame, in­ nist p u l) rhief Nikita S Kliroscluding (lie 1943 Nobel prise hw chev and Premier Nikolai Bulganin
of New York City.
Ib e board denied the applica­ physiology and medicine. The prise aimed at derentralizalion of plan­
ning which the upper echelons have
tion of Clyde H. Bears, 441 N. was shared with two coworkers.
Shine SL, Orlando, Who asked to He had been knighted In 1944 In hitherto controlled.
It was seen as another attempt
be permitted to build a duplex recogniUon of hli discovery.
Sir Alexander first produced pen­ to use ths private profit incentive,
house on tha southwest corner of
icillin In 1928. He did not devote which Khruschev has been plug,
23rd St. and Sanford Ave.
going over the past year to prod
Deferred until the next meeting his entire attention to It until Russia's lagging livestock produc­
was tha application of Otto Bora- World War II heightened the de­ tion.
dorf and his son, Robert for per­ mand for antibacterial remedies.
Tha new directive told coltectlvea
He was doing research at St.
S r THE ASSOCIATED PRESS mission to start a nursery at 233T
state farms and machine and trac­
Mary’s
Hospital
In
London
whrn
Tornadoes and severe thunder- Palmetto Ave. for the tala of
he noticed mold spores appsrrntly tor stations to use their own Judg­
storms spawned in Thursday'i un­ plants and flowers.
dissolving birteris and killing It. ment. This apparently mould end
seasonably warm weather ripped
the old system of faraway bureau­
This
was tha way ha described the crats overruling the man on the
BOY FOUND DEAD
through Indiana, Ohio and Pannfind:
AFTER LEAVING HOME
sylvania today.
scene and ordering him to grow
“ It was pure luck that a culture
RACINE, Wis. Utv-A 19-yasr-old
crops k« feels ar* not suitable,
Tha waathar Bureau said they
boy who ran away Monday In plate of staphylococci got contami­
“ Serious shortcomings and mis­
were heading east.
nated with some mold spores, and
- fa Violent winds demolished a shaiw over his bad grades was It did something In the staphylo­ takes have been observed In tha
practice at agriculture,” the de­
•fcchool in New Philadelphia, Ohio found dead late yesterday on the cocci which was vary unusual.
and Knocked over a signboard that rocky shore of Lake Michigan. There are thousands of molds, but cree said.
Kenosha County Coroner William
But despite foe secant on toes]
fataUy crushed a woman la lanRatten said Richard Bents Jr. ap­ this happened to be tha right one. enterprise, th* new minister of
kin. Pa.
“ 1 might have been la a bad stale farms, Ivan A. Benediktov,
parently toll into tha lake and
A severe power lin e. In Union
tamper and missed H.H
drowned.
in a s e p a r a t e announcement
City, Id., started a fire that
warned state farm managers they
swept through a business block.
must meet production qutnsi nr
Winds up lo to miles an hour
fere public reprimand or dismis­
uprooted trees, blew roofs off
sal.
homai and farm buildings, over
turned parked semltrallrrs in Con
)
^wrsvllle, Ind., flaw a freight car
^Mff the tricks. A 330-foot television
tower was snapped olf in PUtaWASHINGTON (It - Tha other and credit, can make It harder nr
burgh.
day John Smith, proprietor of a easier for you to buy things, and
The Waathar Bureau said saver* thriving little hardware store in lo soma extent can datarmine
On* ml the largest tax-psymsnt
thunderstorms, high winds and Centerville, U.S.A., went to sea his how far your pay check will checks received by Bis Stale nf
possibly hall ware etpecUd today banker, as ha does each year about stretch.
Florida la payment of public uti­
I n Massachusetts, Connecticut, this time.
Take another example:
lities taxes was rielivarrd to Ihe
Rhode Island and Naw Hampshire.
Joo Jones went lo sea his broker. State Treasurer todsy from the
Smith wanted to arrange his an
nual 00.000 Inventory loan. Like Jones had his eye on a certain Southern Bell Telcphoea and Tele­
The aoloisl* of the Frininol*
most businassmeo, ha borrows to blue-ribbon industrial stock, lls graph Company.
stock ap bis shelves sad repays bad so much faith la this stock
The payment totaled 9a39.t17.79 High Band will present a recital
that ha wanted to buy as mach at and was delivered by Southern Tuesday night at 8 o ’ clock at
tha loss oat at hia sales.
it as be possibly could.
Bell Representative Don Rirkstt Soulhaid* Primary Rshool.
Smith got his loaa this year, but
If he paid rash tor it, he would to M C. O’Berry. Gasoline. Auto­
A vrytng program has been
(her*
was
a
surprise.
Ha
had
to
BOWDON. Ga. Ilk- Two small
only be able to buy thre* shares. mobile, Transportation sad Utili­ plaaned by band director Ernest
children, playing hlda-aad-aaak, pay • quarter of a per cant higher But by buying on margin like
H. Cowley and will feature both
ties Tax Representative.
smothered to death near ban yes­ totare* than last year.
making a down payment on a
Southern Bell is one of Florida's reed and brass Instruments. High
“ Too know, John, tha reserve refrigerator, the rest to bo paid
terday when they wore trapped In
lighting the performance will ha
a discarded icebox.
yard has beta tightrneng things later ho could get title to five largest taspsyers. Today's check tha tympani which ie In ha ar"
-T
t
of
an
estimated
93.I0O.000
Donnie Rickey Baleagar, 4, tad up,” his banker told him. “ Money's shares.
•* be Bade by Southern Bell to rorapanied by a brass octet. Sev­
error than It was.”
Ms sister, Gwoods Faya, «. war*
“ A month age. before ’ tha Fed' inc aisit- ol Florida and Its coun­ eral ensemble* will he presented
playing with thatr 9-ysar-old sister
Smith wanted tha loan for six raised the margin requirement
ties xnd cities for tha yaar, axrhi- in addition to the solos.
Carolyn LyaM, whoa tha tragedy
oaths, so the added Interest cost from M to to per cent, you could
No admission will he rharged
sUo of ineome, social security,
him tm. Baitb has (rimmed most have bought sia shares on margin
and escisa tax paymeeta to the and Director Cowley hae cordial­
at his prices this year, but that lor the same money," Jones' Federal Government.
ly invited tha public to hear
|to coat at doing business told him.
teaoo young musician*.
HHbanm, Ala., a sanaO hapt
topt ton price at many Wings la
Or maybe yea ana a housewife
abawt tow mllaa woet hie
kla shop
i
a penny ar so higher Wan like Mrs. James Johnson, who had
WOMAN LEAVER HOSPITAL*
LIMIT 18 n r r
■ 1 0 * have keen.
wanted a new living room suite
INJURED GOING HOME
ON JURORf MEALS
for several years. Mrs. Johnson
PEKIN. Ill lit — Appalled at
LOUISVILLE. Ky. ti* Mrs.
maty bay Dam a amrehaat who favored saving up the money, so claims tor 94.99 steaks served Jury Elisabeth Saalya loft tha hospital
dona, yea art sflactad by tha poL they could pay cash and save members, th* County Board of Su- after trestatent for an ankle trac­
* heeding charges. Mr. pervlaers has placed a Mseit of tate. Fifteen minutes later she eras
•t
Johaooa wanted to hay Rm fond- M
meals tor Jmeve. Tks bach—with a wrist fracture sefhalf the beard has also denlad a claim tor fered la ae auiomobls
Aa ton aattoa’s eaartral hash. R
a 0 4 * 10 t e a waftaaa

Penicillin Founder
Dies Unexpectedly
O f Heart Disease

■*

Ik rw it Eatarday, k l |t N i 4 0 f

®

FRIDAY^ MAR. 11. 1955

1

to partly steady amt r

^ a n f u r t i If c r a ld
AN INDEPENDENT DAD.T NEWSPAPER

cv*.

n ,,. tov, Easter Krai drive will
^
Mjl'rih 1S
4i5u0
............... ..

Semmole Cuuply tcd.1.■..(«. It was
annou.ic ' W r y by Mr* Harold
Apptch), chairman of the cam
paten
The money turned In to W .1
Peacock Jr. of the Florida State
Hank and treasurer of Ihe drive
will go tjiwurd Ini) mg braces,
(silicon, pay niuhls' salaries, inis
drivers' salaries school honks, and
help iure needed udJilinn.il leach
er* among ninny other things
which will hem fit exceptiunul
children Inside each envelope
mulled out there will he a return
addle** lu winch contributions may
hv sen I

“ In this (.'omitv alone there an
17 cnlldrcn, while and colored” ,
slated Mrs Appleby, “ who an
transported daily liy ihe Seminoh
&lt;'mini) Si Innil Hoard In the Forext
Park School
f.,r Escrptionnl
Children and Ihe Eeelestnn lluspi
tal for I on* Jilcxccnt t'olirnl ("rip
pled Children winch is located in
Orlando.”
“ These children must ham phy­
sical and occupational therapy
uml need your donations now. Any
contribution made wilt help Hie
youngsters in our County »• will ax
uountlrss numliers througleut the
cniin'ry, eontinurd Mrs. A|iplehy
who r,,minded by saying, "Givu
genvroudy nr.d help a ellild.,,
II OCCUPANT* IAFC
CUU.MAN. Ala. W)-A CJII troop
trans|M(it returning to its home
field at Sew art Air Foire Base,
Tenn., rrashed and burned rnxtrrday. All tt oernpantx para'hlitrd
In safety. The pilot amt i ser­
geant wen- re|Hirted injure,'

First Lady's Health Controversy
Indicates Republicans W ant Ike

WASHINGTON 'it - Political
-quahhling over Hie stale of Hie
First Lady's lieallh pointed up Inday that many llepublieans wan
President Eisenhower lo run in
I9.'&gt;(i while sum* Memorial* may
hop* hr won't.
Republicans attack and Demo­
crats defended Hi* latest statement
yesterday by Democratic National
Chairman Psul M. Butler on an
issue that ssploded in Congress
with GOP erics of “ smear" and
“ scoundrel ”
Butler said there had been “ pub­
lished reports . . . Mr*. Eisenhower
has not been in robust health, that
h*r strength has been taxed by
her official duties and that h»r
mother does not want h«r to live
in tha Whits Housa for another
four years.”
Butter said that “ if ths** re­
ports ar* true, I would think they
would exert some influenr* on her
husband" when he decide* whether
he will seek a second terra.
S*a. Bridges (R-Nll) said But­
ter's statement “ shows etesrlf
that Mr. Butler and hit partjr don't
la ha * asato

date tierause thiv think Ir will
v.in and the wish is fattier to Hie
Himtght lie won't rim."
Ken. Km Itel ( It Calif) saif In a
separate interview that vuornus
COP rear Iion in the Senate i and
House yesterday to Hutlcr'i j sug­
gestion demonstrated Hrpiitl|rani
hrlievr Eisenhower would &gt;* re­
elected “ and they want him lo be
a candidate."
Sen. Core ID Tenn) t-i&gt;| hr
lound “ nothing insulting" n But
ler's statement
“ 1 doubt if the whole iicldent
has much sigmfirancr," |t&gt; said.
' Heaven knows we all lu|i« Hte
Prrsidrnt and all of the nt'inbers
of his family enjoy Ihe &gt;cst of
hea'th."
Elsenhower himself went to Wai­
ter Bred Army Hospital yesterday
to begin a new series w treat­
ment* for bursitis in hli right
shoulder whieh has (moblid him
occasionally fur years. Mrs Eisen­
hower was reported “ uurh im­
proved" ia a bout with a cold or
mild (fifteens*. Pres* JxcrtJiry
James C. Eagerly said th*' except
tot mat sHaafc k »

T A IP K I. Kormraui UP) -x
Ciiiiiiiir K ai-shek'* r h in o s
Nntinnnliwt* nrn ili'torniimv
t•» fijrht for llieir off-sh ore it
IpiiiIs , (Juemny Rtnl Mirim
with or without Anu'riraj
support, Prem ier O. K. Yd
ms.xcrtmi today.
• Nationalist
ilrlciniiiiatln*
to defend I ho islands Is nil
solute, tin- Premier told llic I.cgii
tallve Yuan Parliament ia rcp|
to questions
Two newspapers reported wit!
out confirmation that units of it
I'. S 7th Fleet amt tho Nationall
navy hid conducted mancuvc
March 4 to off Formosa.
1,'-‘ report
report sain
said me
the e combine
p,i|l;i,rd the gro.it armad
) 'hir" evacuated Nationall st fore*
from the Tachen Islati
Maud* la&lt;
month
A» Yul spoke, fresh warning
sore Pined of danger nf air a(
lack* against Formosa. The Red]
are reported moving air strengtl
southward and building a huge aij
tone at l.urhiao. Tto miles nortj
of Formosa In Chekiang province
Yui said (tie Nationalists ban
proved Rich determination to dn
fend gummy and Mat.su sine# laU
Kept. 3. the dn» the Reds pouree
niton shell- Into Dummy, killing
two American officers in Ihe tup
rage.
Yu, slid liut since then the N'»
tici.ai. i i-u Ifurnmy, .. SUsquaiOi
mile inland 120 miles %re«t of Fop
n'«*a. had retaliated shell for shell.
“ Our determination lo continue
•idling luck," he said, “ lux md
rlianged—and vsill not change "
The renewed warning again*!
possible air raids was followed hv
.&lt; sla'einent by W.tvor han Vu-sliu
that r.npci's shelters would aerommodale onlv Tinioihi md of a
population nl 700.0UU. lie suggested
that oinc 3oo inki old people, Wous***** children lie &lt;lu -ed ax nonsenliul and moved out of Ui*
city.

Cooperation Need
Reported To Place
Burden On Florida
TALI AIIA.SKKK I.IV— Gov. CoL
litis ea* been told that lark of r&lt;»operation nf centralized admlnlsU
in,tilisti,iim was placing an unites
ration of Florida's public tuallti
fin anrlal harden on the slate
The re|mrt was made yexlerdaT
by a rllUens nxnmitlro wtiieh ha*
been looking Info put,be health
protitems,
'The uoin luit tee recommended
that there be a well organized and
rvntralized administration ftvr xurh
imdlt'ilions as Ihe menial hospitals,
the liilierridosia hospital*, and
farm colony and the Crippled
Children's Commission, Cuunrll
for Hie lllind and lit* vocational
rehabilitation division.
Reporting that per raphe is .
penddutes for pulilir lieallh had
•n ett dei lining in Florida silica
1 ‘i.ai Ihe committee urged H,«
te-gislatiNc to reappraise e\|u ndU
line ot *l„to fund* for all servierg
in Hie light nf their relaUve im­
portance.

Progress Report
Meeting Scheduled
A progress report meeting of at|
Red Cross rampaign workiwa wilt
be held at 10 a. in. Tuesday in Hia
City Com mission room at City
Hall.
The meeting was railed hy tha
Rev. Milton Wyatt, campaign
chairman.
tie urged that all winkers a9C
tend in order that it may h« deter­
mined how many ronlaelx ha* a
been made. Contribution* will ha
tunicd in at the time.

R. A. Patton Dies
After Long Illness 1
After a lengthy Ittne-s K A.
Patton Sr.. 13. died Wednesday a!
bis borne in Valdosta, Ga.
Kervlvors Inr hide th* widow,
Eiree children. K. A. Patton ir. of
Montgomery. A la, Mia. Loroy
Chilty ot Albaoy. Ga., and RawM
Fatten at fanlrax^.
The fvmwat w fl te WM t o n t »
mm 0 9 0 1 9 1 • •
•

b

•.vl

-3Kt- •v .;

'TPt Dm ' i 4

.'i* •

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P.-Ke fi

TTiunt. Mar. 10. 195S TTTF RANPORT) HERALD

Freed American
Declines Interview

T ELEV IS IO N
m ih to - t v

m il,a n n o

ri in I'fcsnar Wllhnat Mvtlrvl
Till (HUH P.M.

TAWIM W ri.A -T V
T ill tt*t&gt;.41
t tn. T m I P illtrs
Uoldan IVIndova

"Sir

iiml M rs"
Dlev»t
IlmwInK ‘runnit with KUInr
rurtinin I ’nrnlvnl
Klim Fact A Fancy
A.lrtnttir- with Unciv Wall
n u lh r r , Sfw i. Kpnrta
Indu-lry nn Parana
lluntlna anil Fishing with
l&gt;nn
ttu-lial Varlatiaa
Austin PrM H Il
•Inhn Dal* N »»»
Inina Itanarr

**lilM Uuldsnri

Cuncarnlng Slim Marina*
linn kin* Kalla
First Lora
Tha World of Mr. Hmrtncr
Modern Romance*
l.lllla Itaarala
Wilma lha Clowu

Itnwrilv 1toady

r.ln Tin Tin
lluma Edition— Xawa
llama Edition—Fporia
lioma Edition— Waalbar
Sherlock llolmta
Dinah Ahnra Show
N ta i Caravan
Groucho Mari
Jualloa

Anvia V And?
Cllmaa
H u m . and Allan
lllnarld* with tha Tlaatlm
K aw a-Sn o rla-V V aalh ar
Towar Thaatar
Flan m l

Drngnot

rtllIM T A. 44.
Flan On Troaram Itaaasat
N*wa-W*athtr

Fotd Theater
I.u* Vlada Theater
Kina'* Croaaroada

Mnrnlna Hhow

Tonight

Klim Vara
Taal rattrrn
r i i i i M t r.w.

Sian on program naauma
Xawa-tVanllirr
Hollywood Than and how
Thia Land of Oura

Radio

S4 WHR.TV JAtKaORVtf.I.E

|lil&gt;|rrl la C b i n i W IIS iil Rallaal
t m c r s d a t f .m.

S AD Rrlghtir Day
Sill Secret Hlorm

4 SO
I ;A0
S:|l
I,so
*no
S:40
TM

On Your Account
Portia Kacll Llfa
Keeking llaart
Gary Moore
wave, Weaihar. Sparta
Lana Rangar
Gim Talk
I
Jana Froman
llonrrninon Holiday
Cllmai
O itl- A Harriett
Slii Erwin Show
Mr Dliirlct Altorm
Naw» and Waathar
Kama That Tuna
Sian Off

1:10 Eddla Flihar
Till Dial ”11” for Mutl*
»:80 Night Edition
*11 United Nation!
S:t4 H i D inntlm *
10:18 At lloma With Muila
IOiSS Niwi
11:0 8 Laymm'a Call To Trayar
11:044 Sign Off

KniiiAf a.M.

T an Taltinr
Morning Show
Dob Croiby
Shoppara Guide
Shoppara Outda

( 08
4:81
4:01
. tn

:i

M

■ trlka It Rich

FRIDAT A. M.

Sign on
tdiymin'i Call to Trayir
Dawn Dm kara
Nawi

Waitira Jamhoraa

Nana

'» Riven O'clock Club

m i n a v r.M.

Valiant *Lady
Lova af Ufa
Saarch for Tomorrow
Ouldlng l.iaht
Kite hi n Show
wilcema Travalari
fobart U- LawU

B
iv p
Opan House
LETTER FATd OFF
BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (9 —Alton
F. Niles, 4*. of Newtown, wrote a
note to the "Live Letter” column
of the Bridgeport Fost recently
complaining that all girls are
"goM-dlggers" and not desirous of
a home and family.”
Hla letter draw a reply from
Mrs. Marla F. North, 10, of Bridge­
port, who haa been a widow for
three yeara.
They met three weeks ago.
The society column in yester­
day’s Bridgeport Telegram carried
an announcement that Mrs. North
and Nllaa will be married March
19 at hit boms.
The first professional league
(on a organised baala) was the
Nut IonaI Basketball League atari*
ed in 1198. It lasted ealy Twe aae*
sons.

Nawa
■ Hporla At A Glanca
Jockey1# Cholci
Morning Davollana
Morning Milodlti
World At Nina
Muila For Ladlaa
.1" Hymn Tima
» :ll For Lgdin Only
1 S-.08 Huilo For Tou
l«;»o Neve
10:11 1108 Club
11:10 Gim i of Mflo|ty
11:00 World Al Noun
H ill Radio Farm Dlgoat
11:10 Friday Matlma

WASHINGTON ( 9 - Two key
DcmocrsU predicted the House
will approve today President El­
senhower's program to boost the
pay r.f career military servicemen
from 6 to 23 per cent.
Chairman Vinson (D Cs.) of tha
House Armed Service! Committee
and Rep. Kilday (D-Tex), a senior
member, said they had heard of
no important opposition. The mea­
sure would add 742 million dollars
to the annual (ive-biliion-dollar
military payroll.
A House vote is expected In late
afternoon. The Senate has not
acted.
The measure calls for an aver
age increase of 11.9 per cent foi
enlisted men and warrant officer
with over two years’ service and
officers with over three years
duty. An estimated two million
men would be due to raises on the
first if tha month after the Presi­
dent signs the bill.
An Army private with over three
years' service would get an added
*7 *0 per monlh, or *101.40; a first
lieutenant with over three years’
duty would get *61.23 far 1332.40
monlily; a brigadier general with
over 22 years* service would be
jumped *48 92 to **50.20 monthly.
No increases are provided for
men with less service. Adminis­
tration spokesman said the main
purpose is to eneoivage trained
Crippled Children’s Commission men to make a career of military
which referred him for home
treatment to the Easter Seal Society's Mobile Therapy Unit currcntlv operating In the Ferry area,
providing a practical demonstration of cooperation between stale
and voluntary agencies,
Governor Collini, who ti honorirjr president of the Florida Socjct jor crippled Children, auto. ...
' , „ ,
’
* » P h«* ,h« L i,[er * * « d * • «
it to Buddy as • keepsake.
Vaeanclea for qualified woman
are still opan In the United States
Marine Corps according to Major
W. F. Lane, Officer In Charge of
Leatherneck rechtJUni tn Florida.
An attractive career for women
eighteen to thirty. Inclusive, ia
offered high school graduates who
PORTLAND, Ore. (9— Firemen like to Wavel, meet new friends
continued to search for bodies |&gt; and learn valuable skills. Such In­
the ruins of (he Lind Hotel, dr teresting plaeei aa San Francltce,
stroyrd by fire yesterday, but the Loa Angeles and San Diego on the
death toll remained at five.
west coast are among tha cities
Several others were still Hated where Women Marines serve.
as missing. Official! said, how­ Other stateside eltlee Include
ever, they apparently got out and Boston, New York, Philadelphia,
moved elsewhere. The two-floor Chicago, Washington, D. C. and
hotel located on the fringe of the the Florida cities of Miami and
waterfront area, was tenanted Jacksonville, to name a few.
mostly by elderly men.
Oversea!, Women Marines are
Police blamed the fire on a cig­
fining
billets In Hawaii and many
arette, and filed manslaughter
charges against two tenants who of tha European capitals. Travel
epportunlUei «uch as these a n
escaped with minor Injuries.
They were Russell Arnold U’ ren commonplace to Women Marine*
42, end Ann Alexander, 4*. Asst. and provide that "one* In a lifaFire Marshal C, W. Stlckney said
U’ren told him a blanket eeagM
fire as he smoked In bed. U’ ren
told tilm he doused water oa the
blanket, and then dumped the
blanket out in a hallway, Stickney said, adding that the lira
started there.

Gov. Collins Gets
Buddy Hunter, 10 year old Ferry
outh. is shown presenting ■ kinglie Easter Seal lo Governor Lctoy Collins at the Governor's
tension in Tallahassee to open
te annual appeal of the Florida
oclety for Crippled Children.
Buddy, a victim of Ferthes diease, waa confined in bed for two
ears during the past five, but now
i attending school and playing
Dwboy In spite of crutches and a
ling to hold up one fooL
Ha la a patient ot the Florida

Seed

Vacancies Open
For l). S. Women
In Marine Corps

Firemen Continue
Search For Bodies
In Hotel Rubble

NATURALIZATION COURT
GOES TO LADY
NORTHF1ELD, N.J. (9 - The
four-man Atlantic County Natural­
isation Court traveled 12 miles
from the eounty seat at Maya
Landing to administer the oath of
cltlunihlp to a chipper, bedridden
old lady. Mra. Daisy Loveday Lewia,. 71, born In England, is
it parpar­
alyzed in the right side and could
not go to court.

WASH1NOTON (9-John J. MeCloy, board chairman of the Chase
National Bank, laid today the
United States ts becoming econom­
ically more dependent on Its al­
lies “ a* the free work! grows
stronger."
McCloy, former U.S. high com­
missioner for Germany, told the
Senate Banking Committee this
trend works the other way t o o The three chief fe m e of bflthat other Western countriei Inllarda In the United Statea ere
balkline, g-enablea and pocket bll- cretalngiy need tha support of the
American economy.
Tha eommlltae, headed by Sen.
Fulbright (D-Ark), called McCloy
and Marrtner I . Eeries, former
Federal Reserve Board chairman,
as today’s witneasea In its weekold "friendly study” of the recent­
ly tig-sagging stock market.
Shire prices dropped sharply on
the New York exchange for the
aecond day yesterday although a
fairly broad recovery followed.
Fulbright stood by hla conten­
tion that the Senate inquiry didn't
cause the price break.
McCloy waa asked to testify
about tha impact of foreign par­
ticipation In tha Amaricaa stock
market. His reply, te prepared tes­
timony, was that It's not very
gnat and a m a ra to have been
decreasing tn recast years.'
"At the end of 1989,'' he said,
“ foreigners were reported by the
Department of Commerce to bold
U.S. stocks, common and pre­
ferred, valued at (3.400,000,000.
This was equal to only 2.* per
ernt of the total value of stocks
hated oo the New York Stock
Exchange.1'

TORECLOSt

sofAsy

Few Oranges Left
Compared To 1954
LAKELAND OP)
- Florid*,
which began the seaaon with an
estimated record Ofl million boxes
of oranges to market, now haa
fewer left to use than a year ago,
Florida Citrus Mutual says.
Tha U. 8. Department of Agri­
culture later reduced Its estimate
to 01 million boxes and still later
to 89 million.
Robert W. Rutledge,
general
manager of Mutual, said only
about 38U million boxea of or­
anges remain to be marketed.
“ This Isn't quite aa many aa
were used last season from thia
date on,” ha said, adding that pro­
duction of orango concentrate, the
major factor tn the Florida citrus
industry, apparently will be loss
than last season-

Merry 20 Club
Has Routine Meet Director Declares
The. Merry 80 Club met recently
at tha heme ef Mrs, Bernice War Not Inevitable

m tm a m

* IR VIN G BERLINS * #

MIAMI BEACH (9) — The di­
Jonea, No, 14 William Clerk
Court. Plena weiw made for the rector ef defanw mobilletslon. Dr.
club to attend the 10th anniver­ Arthur 8. Fleming, declared boro
sary of the ACL Sunday at 1:10 leet night that war la not Inevi­
table and • militarily and spirit­
ually atreag America la the heal
way to prevent It
Dr. Flemming said the natlon'r
civil defenee program “has a long
way te ge” aa far aa getting siltearn te pertkipute to ceecerntd.
Hla roeaeu far feeling that war

S ava Alm ost •/• on fhooo folding

Hostess TV Tables]
[ f

Y

• $195 re ta il

ftp AM YMtet RUto# tomorrow.'
Shi it ■due ia S u Tranche*
■bout March X .
In &gt; brief handwritten note to
The Associated Press, Mrs. Rick*
etl said she felt further Interviews
with newsmen would only be “ repPUSAN, Korea
Mrs Adele Itlmn ” She turned down a written
Rlckett, 23-year-old scholar en
route to San Francisco after 34
years in a Communists prison, to­
day declined further interviews
“ with the reactionary press."
Mrs Rlckett is a passenirr on iv cn r * T o r T s s r r o r v r r
jr n r ,r . e rw iv o i.r c s r m ,
the freighter Fine Tree Mariner o(
•T4TE OF FLORIDA. |S FRO.
the Far East Pacific Lines. It is
0 4 TIL
IX
RE THE ESTATE OF
taking on supplies here and leaves
FLOSSIE MAE FRtOR
Dereared.
TO AM. WHOM IT MAT COTCKRRl

MT

vice. These skills are la gnat
demand in civilian life and pay
high wages, eapodally to woman
who hav# a background of train­
ing and service with tha United
States Marine Corps, Major Lana
concluded. For further IntermatlM

Floyd Palmer It
In San Francisco
K A N F R A N I 8 C O , C a lif.Spatial agent Floyd A. Palmer,
tha Prudential Insurance Com­
pany’s representative te lanferd,
has arrived te San Ptaaclseo far
a conference of the compeay'a ex­
clusive “ President's Club” , March
P-lt,
A number of company Mflrlala,
ln h fju
Prudential w u l f n t ,

ROMAN

CLEANSER
BLEACH

MV

U. S. Economic Aid
May Receive Boost

servlet. The President' strongly
backed it.
KJlday said he expected some
attempts on tha House floor to In­
clude raises far the lowest ranking
enlisted men. There may alto be
criticism of increases tn haxardoui
duty bonuaas.
Vinson laid in a separata intarview the proposed ralsei were pro­
moted by the high costs of provid­
ing teplacemrnts for what he
termed a heavy turnover of serv­
icemen.
A committee report said that of
about one million men eligible to
leave the services by next June
only about 200.000 are expected to
re-enllst. and It added:
“ If this re-tnllstment rate could
be Increased by 100,000 individ­
uals, the savings In training costs
alone for replacements would bttremendous."
Tha measure also would estab­
lish a new “ dislocation allowance"
equal In ona month’s basle pay
for families making a permanent
change of station In peacetime; in­
crease travel allowances from *9
daily to IU ; boost retirement pay
at least * per cant; and raise aervice school cadets from 1*1.12 to
*111.12 monthly.

Matusow Says Feat
O f 'McCarthyites'
Cause O f Lying

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

dereaeed.

IV T ME CIMrPTT CO M IT. WIVTM
jrn trtA i, c im it it iv avd rn a
■G M Iv m .E C O I'V T V , F L O R ID A .
■k css4m t b y vo. eree.
DAN STEVENS.

Tlllatlffi

E L IZ A B E T H
VEN S.

NGTIGE JR IIERERT GIVEN
that purmant to TOiptir t il.
Florida ftlatutaa. ISIS, tin follow­
ing daarrlhrd land! In R*-i|nnta
GmjBly. Florida, will ha offorad for
aala at puhllcnutcrv for lha hlgli••t and noil raih hid it Ihi frjnt
dnnr nf Hit Romtnnla rnunlr r'aurt
MOittt. ii Finfard. higlnnlng ml
li lt s A M., on Monday March Stlb
a. d . m u
R t8i* ft of Lot IT RtorV 1 Palm
Tirraca T in Book S Tagu II A

EL PASO, Tax. 1 9 - Harvey Ma­
tusow, who says ha lied In testify,
ing for the government tn anti­
communist hearing! and trials,
II
aays he wa« afraid to tell the gov­
Lot I Work SS H ay Spring Flat
Rook 1 Tag* It.
ernment he lied because he feared
*Di nt Lnti ITS O ITS O F
the “ McCarthy crowd.”
Rwopi Land Ena. f l i t Of Rlark
First ha testlflad In general that
llammork ria l Book * T agu
118 O III.
ha faared for hii life if he told
I-nti a. T. IS * IS anutk Park
government officials he lied. Later
TUt Rook a T ag! St.
I-Mi 8 * 1 8 King Taro SaVhe modified the itAlement with the
dlvliloa Plat Book 4 Faga f.
comment concerning Sen. Joseph
f^ta t. T * B Block I Allaa’a
Flrit Addition tn Waaklagtna
McCarthy (R-Wla) tad Ms RadHatghta. Tint Book t Pago SI.
hunting committee.
w u of nvr M of a w % J
NIT M Baetloa IS Township i *
Matusow was scheduled tn testi­
Sonlh Rang# 18 Eail.
fy again today la • fadaral court
I aHi A B G A D R i n k 4T
hearing. The hearing Is on o reAmandid Flat of Cryatal Laka
Rhoraa,
plat Reek S Faga II.
quest by Clinton Jsacks for a new
Lot 18A Block It rroamwold,
trial. Jencks is formar president
ru t Rook a Tagu *8 * II *
Flat Book 4 Tagu S8 * It.
of Local *90 of tha International
O. F. Iliralon
Union of Mine, Mill and Smaller
r'lark of th* Elnnit
four! Stmlaolo County
Workers, Bayard, N. M.
Florida
Jencks was sentenced lest year (Circuit Court
Rial)
to five years In prison for swearin
n
s
cocwt
a r n &gt; ro r w r v
ing falsaly la a non-Communist af■Jt’IKJE. snwikOMB O O V 1 T T ,
•TATE
n
r
EXOklDAfidavlt required of union leaden.
Testimony by Matusow, who ha* IN1Rn rPRORATE.
TUB ESTATE OI*t
ilnea u ld ho lied, waa used to
GERTIE A. WILSON
DacoAMd.
eoavktlag Jencks.
PINAL RO«CM
Notice la baroby elvan that tha

Annual Wage Fight
O f Auto Workers
Opens Next Week
DETROIT UB - The b e l sounds
neat week h r the opening round
la the HO United Auto Workers'
showdown fight far a guaranteed
annual wage ia the auto tedastry.
The union announced te Joint
statements with General Motors
and Ford yostarday that "txpla.
tory" talks will be bald thoa—sep­
arately with each company.
Tha CM and Ford talks will cov­
er roughly half a million workers.
They will aptathtsd a drive which
the union bones wiU win a guar
anteed annual wage for more than
a million auto workers and per*
haps many of the CTO's four mil­
lion ether members.
The UAW Is demanding contract
guarantee* that any seniority work­
er who works any part af a week
wffl ha paid far a tell 48 hours.
Ha alio would ho guarantood a
seriate part el hla fuQ wag* far
a wuek when than la na work far
him at an.
G«Mral Meters' five-year eontract with the union expires May
JO. n * Ford pact runs out June
1. Formal aagoUationa with tha
two biggest auto producers era

Nntlna la hereby «leea that OORDON V. FREDERICK rtlad till final
noort a« Admlnlatratar « f lha a*,
ilia r.f FLOSSIE MAE TRIOR, da.
r t i n d ; lhat ha fltid hl« pillllnn
far final dlerhare*. and lhat ha win
apply In tha Ilannrlhla Ernitt
lln&lt;iih"ld»f. County Jnds* of Himlnnli raunly. Flmlda. on tha lit
d«y nf April, ISIS, far apprnval
of aama and far final dlirharga aa
Administrator of lha eetat# of Floi■I* Mia rrfor. d*&lt;-*aiid, an thla
til diy of Marih, ISIS.
/ » / Gordon V. Fred»rlr%
Admlnlitraior of lha ailala
of FLOSSIE MAE TRIOR,

tindaralanad will, on tha 17th Say
of March. A. D. ISIS, prraant to
(ho Honorable County Judto of
Som:nele County, Florida, bar (Inal
raturn. account and vouch ore, aa
Eaacutrta et the Eatate of Gartlo
A. Wllaon, dacaaaad, and at said
tlma. than and tbara. make appli­
cation to tha aatd Judn (or ■ final
aattlomant of bar adnil nlat rat tea of
Mid oatAto, and for an nrdar dlacharting bar aa auch AdmtnUtraIrts.
Date* thla tha 14th gar et Feb­
ruary, A. D. ISIS
I.uclIU Faalar
Aa Eaacutrla af tha
Batata nf Oartle A.
Wllaon, t l M l i i i i
R. W . Wara. Atioraay
far Esocutrla.
Woodrulf-Parking Rid.,

T A T T ERRO R

RTM-

Defendant.

ROTICM TO DF.FEVn
BTATE o r FLORIDA TO EMEA RETM PATTERSON STEVENl,
whoia realdanea fa unkytwa,
Tou will lake notice Shat a sworn
hill of complaint haa ham filed
agalmt you in tha rircnlt Canrt In
and for Samlnola County. Florida,
In Chaneery; that lha natnra of
•aid i-tll la an arttan for ilvorc*.
lha aharl tllla of which la PAN
ATEVENS. TIi Inti If. V EI.I7.ARKTII TATTERUON STETENS, De­
fendant.
1
THESE PRESENTS era ta aammind yon ta flla your nniwar or
othir planding with thi Clark ot
thi circuit Court of R*mtnnlo O n *.
iy at Sanford, Florida, and aarve
n aapy af tha aama an FlalatlfTa
attornay, an ar hafnra tha Hat dap
of March A. D„ 1*11.

BUYING
A CAR?

*SA N FO R D
At l a n t ic

n a ii O

k u . ban

yoursnog-yotrHhammomebm
&lt;gk. by'pit tedding day

�«

Stop md Sw
In Sanford
•
ExtabHzshad 1908

Collins Names
Men
To Barbers Commission
Strolling
In Sanford

TALLAHASSEE (&amp;
) — Gov. Colllne named two new
members of the Barbers Sanitary Commission and said he
expected the new board to look into reported sale of barbers
licenses.
The new members arc Green H. Ashmore of Miami and

Appetite-teasing aromas may be
floating over the air tomorrow In
«filcase you're In the vicinity of Fort
^Mellon Park between the houra of
11:30 a. m. and 12:30 p. m. Why?
Sanford Girl Scout Troopt One and
Two will be staging a hobo cookmil at they add a final touch to
tha observance of National Girl
Scout Week.
• • •
Mitt Caroline hlclnnli, daughter
V of the Rev. and Mrs. A. G. Me
lnnlt, hat been elected vice- presi­
d e n t of the Woman's Student Coun­
cil at Stetson University in DeLand for 1933 and 'U. Mitt Mein
nil u alto president of the Tri
Delta Sorority at Stetson and presi­
dent of the Westminister Fellow­
ship for he Synod of Florida,
whlcn Is a Presbyterian Organiza­
tion tor carrying on the work ol
pie Presbyterian Church on the
College campus.
• • •
Miss Margaret Malloy, daugh­
ter of Mr. and Mrs. John Malloy,
has one of the lead parts in the
Florida State University’s speech
department production of Arthur
Miller’s “ Crucible” , Miss Malloy
will portray Abigail Williams in
tha presentation which will run
March 11, 12, 14. and IS in Con­
rad! Theater with curtain time
at S ill p. m. Director of the play
to Dr. Paul Davee.
*&lt;• .
---------------------

Engineers Eying
Widening Crevice
In Niagara Falls
NIAGARA FALLA, N.V. (It Niagara Falls may be In for an­
other spectacular face lifting.
engineers eyed a widening crevd e e extending about 10 feet back
Irora the ereitline of the Amerlean
aide of the falls today and laid It
"ikreateaed a new roekfatl.
The Niagara Frontier State
Parks Commission said last night
ttat the crack wai an old one that
had been observed before, but it
apparently had been growing big­
ger in the past day or two.
“ If a rockfaH occurs, H will
..m a k e another definite change In
Vflhe face of tha falls,'1 Joseph
Davis, commission chairman, said.
A park policeman said that an
unfamiliar spume of water "kick­
ing up in the air” from the Ni­
agara River eurrent drew his at­
tention to the widening fissure,
about to to Ti feet offshore Cram
the Americas mainland.

DR. n.VRRY JE8SOP will b#
the guest speaker et the Sun­
day morning a m ic i of the
Church of the Natarene. lie
will also be heard at a apcclal
afternoon union aervice of the
Free Methodist Church o f San­
ford, tha Wesleyta Methodist
Church of Paola, and the Lake
Mary Nasarrna Church. The
Rev. Robert Spear Jr* pastor
of the hoetesa church, has lavltod the public to attend these
eervkoo.

City Board Okays
Zoning Variance
For Dr. Saunders

Jack Carter of Orlando. He win
make another appointment later to
replace C. R. Rankin of Monticello.
Ashmore was named to replace
Joe L. Smith of Miami who was
removed by Collins yesterday af­
ter a hearing, and Carter we* ap­
pointed to succred A. I.. Dickinson
of Orlando who resigned.
At the hearing, Smith xaid he
had evidence and was willing to
present it to a grand jury that a
Miami “ racketeer” had been sell­
ing barber licenses.
Collins said he was not ready
now to ask a giand jury indict­
ment but added:
t
“ I shall expect the new board
to obtain advice from the attorney
gcneral'a office as to what remedi­
al and corrective steps should be
taken.”
Answering a question by Collins
as to what he had done about
alleged sale of barbers licenses,
Smith said he and Dickinson had
gone to Ally. Gen, Ervin and re­
quested an investigation. He said
Ervin advised against it because
“ it would planter tha papers and
blast the administration”
of
former Acting Gov. Johns.
Ervin said in Miami that “ noth­
ing lika that happened.”
“ He (Smith) and another hoard
member did come to me for legal
advice on a purely internal matter
in their board, their belief that a
secretary was wielding too much
power. I did suggest that they
take their problems to the gover­
nor as I believe ha would straightir it out,” tha attorney general
said.
“ Rut they said nothing about
the grosa irregularities n o w
eusrged. Had they mentioned that,
I definitely would not have rouncried against an investigation.”

^ a n fu r ti Ifc r a ld
AN INDEPENDENT DAD.T NEWSPAPER

SANFORD. FLORIDA,

County's Schools
Offer Cooperation
For Polio Vaccine
Full cooperation wfth health of­
ficials in planning for possible
polio vacrinations in Saminola
County, elementary schools was
pledged today h.v R. T. Milwee,
superintendent of schools, follow­
ing a meeting with Dr. Terry
Bird, county Health Officer or
physician in charge.
“ If the Salk polio vaccine M
found effective amt it licensed,
we will be prepared immediately
lo start vaccinating 1730 children
in the first and second grades of
every public, private and paro­
chial school in Seminole County,”
said Milvsce,
The vaccina will he furnished
to Health Departments by the Na­
tional Foundation for Infantile
Paralysis without cost few the
product. It will be part of a 99.000,000 supply purchased with
March of Dimes funds.
“ The size of this job and the
need for advance preparation can
be realized when you consider that
this involves 32 classes in 14 pub­
lic schools throughout our coun­
ty,” Milwtc continued. "Some of
these rlssses are in small achoola
and children may have to he
transported to clinics held in big­
ger schools.
“ A polio vaccine program of
this sire is a challenge principals
and teachers are eager to mret
because it present* an opportunity
fur widespread health education."
Miiwee said he has held meet­
ings with principals to discuss with
them details of the program. All
plans must be finished in advance
of the possible starting data for
vaernations.
No eligible children will rcoclve
vaccine unless their parents first
sign a form requesting it. These
firms will he distributed through
tha schools during tha third week
ul .March.

FRIDAY^ MAR. 11. 1955

Federal Reserve System Effects

Southern Bell Fays
Large Income Tax

**

7, wV.'VjjJ.

•.vl

-3Kt- •v . ;

'TP t D m 'i 4

.'i* •

S 3

Defend
Withouv
America
Papers Report'
Maneuvers Hekl
T A IP K I. Kormraui UP) -x
Ciiiiiiiir K ai-shek'* r h in o s
Nntinnnliwt* nrn ili'torniimv
t•» fijrht for llieir off-sh ore it
IpiiiIs , (Juemny Rtnl Mirim
with or without Anu'riraj
support, Prem ier O. K. Yd
ms.xcrtmi today.

• Nationalist ilrlciniiiiatln*
to defend I ho islands Is nil

EACH Y E A R T H E Pilot Cluh sponsors th e s t u ffin g o f E asier Seals. Here Home o f (he
m em bers gathered last night nl the hom e o f Mm. G eorge Stine. L eft lo rigid are Mm.
n u n c wno
s erne .siesscnKcr,
e rry , air*.
Stine
who is pnriiiniy
partially otwcureii,
obscured, .uni.
Mm. Verne
M essenger. air*,
Mm. j.1.. rI’.. p
Perry,
Mm. 31
M.. |„
I.. Kultnrn
Kahnrn
Sr.. .Mr*. Sue Stephenson, Mr*. I.eon Ilrynn, and M m . liarses* Swanson, nlso partially oharUred. (S t a ff P h o to )
'
-_____________________:_______________________________

O R L A N D O (/I*)— Tho nli.xeiu-e o f a lien and recov ery pro­
vision in the old orb assistance law m akes Florida’s welfaru
pniRram Unnecessarily costly, says Chairm an Charles O.
A ndrew * Jr o f the M a te W elfa re D epartm ent.
R eporting on n survey o f 111 * titles having » lieu law, hu
s*id those
have million, o f , ---------ue status
alu
for pernor- [&gt;&gt;,
i
Wteiv more,
mo!t,aValla^|i!
--------------of r~.p
n need or
.... e- of
... mmos
......... ..{'•
of non-eshimtlal recipients from
Ihe rolls slid freoveiy nf purt of
the money spent on sol.
Andrews said lie mude tho lorvey to answer riilirUm of a propoxed anirmlmtnl l&gt;y State Hep.
Ilsrry Uleaton of Citrus t'ouitiy.
The amendment would give I lie
department a lien agnlnxt proper­
NEW YORK r Waller Wineltell
ly of recipients Mild rouble the
slat* to recover all or putts of says he's quilting ABC radio anil
amounts paid in old uge assist­ television t&gt;v nest Christina* af
ance g i a n t s after pi tor claims ter iii»&lt;l) 33 years with the net­
were settled.
work
(•teuton atrurk at a contention
He said last night he u-ked for
Stint She ainemlinvnl would save
and
received a release from a con­
the atata money and forre the
children of parents on welfare to tract running into six figmcs in a
supitort them. “ In a very few letter Fell. 10 to the American
cases this might he true,” he anid, Broadcasting Co.'a directors.
"Bui la moat eases tho children
The commentator experts to
hava thrtr own fontlliea to look
after and thia plan would im&gt;4 he slay on th* air rither with another
network or iruducing hia own
practical.
Furthermore, H would l&gt;« un­ newscasts.
fair berauxa a person not owning
WinrheN said an accumulation nf
any property could draw ax much
haaiatanr* aa a properly owner gri*vnnr*i resulted In hi* requert
and not hava to pay anything for a contract reloaie and added:
bark at alt.”
’ T m very grateful to ABC for
Andrew* as Id welfare director!
granting m* what I requested. If
of Hen tow atete mad* vh&lt; x« comnnbmly want* me to radio or TV
mantel
South Dakolai “ Wa catimata I’ ll just do my column in the New
(bat our caseload would he about York Daily Mirror."
ona-thlrd largar tf w* had no lien
Winchell's dally column also Ir
law. Tha tow ia generally accepted
widely syndicated
by tha old peopla aa aomething
ABC President llobcrt H Etnt
they aan pay in part and have
aome pride in th* fact they are nvr said:
"ABC regret* th* termination nf
helping themselves.”
Montana: “ Th# Hen law dls- Mr. Walter Winrhrll'a long rela­
murages persona fiom applying tionship with its netwigki.
for asiistaner who have adequate
resources and pravents children
fiorn profiting as heirs through
their failure to aurport their parcute.”

SHS Musicians
To Give Recital

Old Icebox Tokes
liv e s O f 2 Youths

T» !•**»

l^ T

Easter Seal Drive
Unnecessary Costs
Appeal Is Made
Seen In Old Age Law
To Help Children
Soviet Government
Publicly Admits
Shortage Of Food
Winciielilu Quit

d-High Winds Rage
w ith Vicious Farce

Daily Lives O f U. S. Citizens

■ M l 71 to U , low tonight m V '

tt M toft ito H
M ilt ana t o f t .

®

Anmriatcd P i t * I n w d

■*

to partly steady amt r
Ik rw it Eatarday, kl|t N i 4 0 f

Chinese Determined
To Fight For Posts

Tho City Board of Adjustment,
at a public hearing yesterday,
granted the request of Dr. Frank
K. Saunders for zoning variance.
The board gave Dr. Sausdcrs
permission to use not more than
2S per cant of the ground floor
MOSCOW t# — Th# Soviet govarea of his residence at 901 E.
eminent, openly admitting food
LONDON
IW
—
Sir
Alexander
Uth St. tor an office.
shortages, today ordered tlx farm
Tbe variance la effective for Fleming, 73, the Scottish scientist system revamped to give the man
tha term of his lease or for tha who discovered penlrllln, died un­ r.n the land more ehanra for in­
term of his lease or for three expectedly of heart disease at his itiative in rrop planning.
At the same lima state farm
years, whichever is the lesser home today. He always ascribed
the discovery which made him fa­ managers were warned they will
time.
mous to “ pure luck.”
be held strictly arroontshlr for
In other action, the board ap­
Hii finding of the drug which any fsilura to meet production
proved tha request of Nina Black
for permission to construct a hat played a vital part in man’s quotas.
Ths decree, signed by Commu­
building at 1003 Bay Ave. The pro­ battle against Infectious disease
perty Is owned by Hattie L. Reed, brought him worldwide fame, in­ nist p u l) rhief Nikita S Kliroscluding (lie 1943 Nobel prise hw chev and Premier Nikolai Bulganin
of New York City.
Ib e board denied the applica­ physiology and medicine. The prise aimed at derentralizalion of plan­
ning which the upper echelons have
tion of Clyde H. Bears, 441 N. was shared with two coworkers.
Shine SL, Orlando, Who asked to He had been knighted In 1944 In hitherto controlled.
It was seen as another attempt
be permitted to build a duplex recogniUon of hli discovery.
Sir Alexander first produced pen­ to use ths private profit incentive,
house on tha southwest corner of
icillin In 1928. He did not devote which Khruschev has been plug,
23rd St. and Sanford Ave.
going over the past year to prod
Deferred until the next meeting his entire attention to It until Russia's lagging livestock produc­
was tha application of Otto Bora- World War II heightened the de­ tion.
dorf and his son, Robert for per­ mand for antibacterial remedies.
Tha new directive told coltectlvea
He was doing research at St.
S r THE ASSOCIATED PRESS mission to start a nursery at 233T
state farms and machine and trac­
Mary’s
Hospital
In
London
whrn
Tornadoes and severe thunder- Palmetto Ave. for the tala of
he noticed mold spores appsrrntly tor stations to use their own Judg­
storms spawned in Thursday'i un­ plants and flowers.
dissolving birteris and killing It. ment. This apparently mould end
seasonably warm weather ripped
the old system of faraway bureau­
This
was tha way ha described the crats overruling the man on the
BOY FOUND DEAD
through Indiana, Ohio and Pannfind:
AFTER LEAVING HOME
sylvania today.
scene and ordering him to grow
“ It was pure luck that a culture
RACINE, Wis. Utv-A 19-yasr-old
crops k« feels ar* not suitable,
Tha waathar Bureau said they
boy who ran away Monday In plate of staphylococci got contami­
“ Serious shortcomings and mis­
were heading east.
nated with some mold spores, and
- fa Violent winds demolished a shaiw over his bad grades was It did something In the staphylo­ takes have been observed In tha
practice at agriculture,” the de­
•fcchool in New Philadelphia, Ohio found dead late yesterday on the cocci which was vary unusual.
and Knocked over a signboard that rocky shore of Lake Michigan. There are thousands of molds, but cree said.
Kenosha County Coroner William
But despite foe secant on toes]
fataUy crushed a woman la lanRatten said Richard Bents Jr. ap­ this happened to be tha right one. enterprise, th* new minister of
kin. Pa.
“ 1 might have been la a bad stale farms, Ivan A. Benediktov,
parently toll into tha lake and
A severe power lin e. In Union
tamper and missed H.H
drowned.
in a s e p a r a t e announcement
City, Id., started a fire that
warned state farm managers they
swept through a business block.
must meet production qutnsi nr
Winds up lo to miles an hour
fere public reprimand or dismis­
uprooted trees, blew roofs off
sal.
homai and farm buildings, over
turned parked semltrallrrs in Con
)
^wrsvllle, Ind., flaw a freight car
^Mff the tricks. A 330-foot television
tower was snapped olf in PUtaWASHINGTON (It - Tha other and credit, can make It harder nr
burgh.
day John Smith, proprietor of a easier for you to buy things, and
The Waathar Bureau said saver* thriving little hardware store in lo soma extent can datarmine
On* ml the largest tax-psymsnt
thunderstorms, high winds and Centerville, U.S.A., went to sea his how far your pay check will checks received by Bis Stale nf
possibly hall ware etpecUd today banker, as ha does each year about stretch.
Florida la payment of public uti­
I n Massachusetts, Connecticut, this time.
Take another example:
lities taxes was rielivarrd to Ihe
Rhode Island and Naw Hampshire.
Joo Jones went lo sea his broker. State Treasurer todsy from the
Smith wanted to arrange his an
nual 00.000 Inventory loan. Like Jones had his eye on a certain Southern Bell Telcphoea and Tele­
The aoloisl* of the Frininol*
most businassmeo, ha borrows to blue-ribbon industrial stock, lls graph Company.
stock ap bis shelves sad repays bad so much faith la this stock
The payment totaled 9a39.t17.79 High Band will present a recital
that ha wanted to buy as mach at and was delivered by Southern Tuesday night at 8 o’clock at
tha loss oat at hia sales.
it as be possibly could.
Bell Representative Don Rirkstt Soulhaid* Primary Rshool.
Smith got his loaa this year, but
If he paid rash tor it, he would to M C. O’Berry. Gasoline. Auto­
A vrytng program has been
(her*
was
a
surprise.
Ha
had
to
BOWDON. Ga. Ilk- Two small
only be able to buy thre* shares. mobile, Transportation sad Utili­ plaaned by band director Ernest
children, playing hlda-aad-aaak, pay • quarter of a per cant higher But by buying on margin like
H. Cowley and will feature both
ties Tax Representative.
smothered to death near ban yes­ totare* than last year.
making a down payment on a
Southern Bell is one of Florida's reed and brass Instruments. High
“ Too know, John, tha reserve refrigerator, the rest to bo paid
terday when they wore trapped In
lighting the performance will ha
a discarded icebox.
yard has beta tightrneng things later ho could get title to five largest taspsyers. Today's check tha tympani which ie In ha ar"
-T
t
of
an
estimated
93.I0O.000
Donnie Rickey Baleagar, 4, tad up,” his banker told him. “ Money's shares.
•* be Bade by Southern Bell to rorapanied by a brass octet. Sev­
error than It was.”
Ms sister, Gwoods Faya, «. war*
“ A month age. before ’ tha Fed' inc aisit- ol Florida and Its coun­ eral ensemble* will he presented
playing with thatr 9-ysar-old sister
Smith wanted tha loan for six raised the margin requirement
ties xnd cities for tha yaar, axrhi- in addition to the solos.
Carolyn LyaM, whoa tha tragedy
oaths, so the added Interest cost from M to to per cent, you could
No admission will he rharged
sUo of ineome, social security,
him tm . Baitb has (rimmed most have bought sia shares on margin
and escisa tax paymeeta to the and Director Cowley hae cordial­
at his prices this year, but that lor the same money," Jones' Federal Government.
ly invited tha public to hear
|to coat at doing business told him.
teaoo young musician*.
HHbanm, Ala., a sanaO hapt
topt ton price at many Wings la
Or maybe yea ana a housewife
abawt tow mllaa woet hie
kla shop
i
a penny ar so higher Wan like Mrs. James Johnson, who had
WOMAN LEAVER HOSPITAL*
LIMIT 18 n r r
■ 1 0 * have keen.
wanted a new living room suite
INJURED GOING HOME
ON JURORf MEALS
for several years. Mrs. Johnson
PEKIN. Ill lit — Appalled at
LOUISVILLE. Ky. ti* Mrs.
maty bay Dam a amrehaat who favored saving up the money, so claims tor 94.99 steaks served Jury Elisabeth Saalya loft tha hospital
dona, yea art sflactad by tha poL they could pay cash and save members, th* County Board of Su- after trestatent for an ankle trac­
* heeding charges. Mr. pervlaers has placed a Mseit of tate. Fifteen minutes later she eras
•t
Johaooa wanted to hay Rm fond- M to ea meals tor Jmeve. Tks bach—with a wrist fracture sefhalf the beard has also denlad a claim tor fered la ae auiomobls
Aa ton aattoa’s eaartral hash. R
a 0 4 * 1 0 t e a waftaaa
B it .
- -

Penicillin Founder
Dies Unexpectedly
Of Heart Disease

r W «otfi«r

cv*. 1

ABC Network
By Next Christmas

n ,,. tov, Easter Krai drive will
^
Mjl'rih 1S
4i5u0
............... ..

Semmole Cuuply tcd .1.■..(«. It was
annou.ic ' W r y by Mr* Harold
Apptch), chairman of the cam

paten

The money turned In to W .1
Peacock Jr. of the Florida State
Hank and treasurer of Ihe drive
will go tjiwurd Ini) mg braces,
(silicon , pay niuhls' salaries, inis
drivers' salaries school honks, and
help iure needed udJilinn.il leach
er* among ninny other things
which will hem fit exceptiunul
children
Inside each envelope
mulled out there will he a return
addle** lu winch contributions may
hv sen I

“ In this (.'omitv alone there an
17 cnlldrcn, while and colored” ,
slated Mrs Appleby, “ who an
transported daily liy ihe Seminoh
&lt;'mini) Si Innil Hoard In the Forext
Park School f.,r Escrptionnl
Children and Ihe Eeelestnn lluspi
tal for I on* Jilcxccnt t'olirnl ("rip
pled Children winch is located in
Orlando.”
“ These children must ham phy­
sical and occupational therapy
uml need your donations now. Any
contribution made wilt help Hie
youngsters in our County »• will ax
uountlrss numliers througleut the
cniin'ry, eontinurd Mrs. A|iplehy
who r,,minded by saying, "Givu
genvroudy nr.d help a ellild.,,
II OCCUPANT* IAFC
CUU.MAN. Ala. W)-A CJII troop

trans|M(it returning to its home
field at Sew art Air Foire Base,
Tenn., rrashed and burned rnxtrrday. All tt oernpantx para'hlitrd
In safety. The pilot amt i ser­
geant wen- re|Hirted injure,'

First Lady's Health Controversy
Indicates Republicans Want Ike

WASHINGTON 'it - Political
-quahhling over Hie stale of Hie
First Lady's lieallh pointed up Inday that many llepublieans wan
President Eisenhower lo run in
I9.'&gt;(i while sum* Memorial* may
hop* hr won't.
Republicans attack and Demo­
crats defended Hi* latest statement
yesterday by Democratic National
Chairman Psul M. Butler on an
issue that ssploded in Congress
with GOP erics of “ smear" and
“ scoundrel ”
Butler said there had been “ pub­
lished reports . . . Mr*. Eisenhower
has not been in robust health, that
h*r strength has been taxed by
her official duties and that h»r
mother does not want h«r to live
in tha Whits Housa for another
four years.”
Butter said that “ if ths** re­
ports ar* true, I would think they
would exert some influenr* on her
husband" when he decide* whether
he will seek a second terra.
S*a. Bridges (R-Nll) said But­
ter's statement “ shows etesrlf
that Mr. Butler and hit partjr don't
la ha * asato

date tierause thiv think Ir will
v.in and the wish is fattier to Hie
Himtght lie won't rim."
Ken. Km Itel ( It Calif) saif In a
separate interview that vuornus
COP rear Iion in the Senate i and
House yesterday to Hutlcr'i j sug­
gestion demonstrated Hrpiitl|rani
hrlievr Eisenhower would &gt;* re­
elected “ and they want him lo be
a candidate."
Sen. Core ID Tenn) t-i&gt;| hr
lound “ nothing insulting" n But
ler's statement
“ 1 doubt if the whole iicldent
has much sigmfirancr," |t&gt; said.
' Heaven knows we all lu|i« Hte
Prrsidrnt and all of the nt'inbers
of his family enjoy Ihe &gt;cst of
hea'th."
Elsenhower himself went to Wai­
ter Bred Army Hospital yesterday
to begin a new series w treat­
ment* for bursitis in hli right
shoulder whieh has (moblid him
occasionally fur years. Mrs Eisen­
hower was reported “ uurh im­
proved" ia a bout with a cold or
mild (fifteens*. Pres* JxcrtJiry
James C. Eagerly said th*' except
tot mat sHaafc k »

solute, tin- Premier told llic I.cgii
tallve Yuan Parliament ia rcp|
to questions
Two newspapers reported wit!
out confirmation that units of it
I'. S 7th Fleet amt tho Nationall
navy hid conducted mancuvc
March 4 to off Formosa.
1,'-‘ report
report sain
said me
the e combine
p,i|l;i,rd the gro.it armad
) 'hir" evacuated Nationall st fore*
from the Tachen Islati
Maud* la&lt;
month
A» Yul spoke, fresh warning
sore Pined of danger nf air a(
lack* against Formosa. The Red]
are reported moving air strengtl
southward and building a huge aij
tone at l.urhiao. Tto miles nortj
of Formosa In Chekiang province
Yui said (tie Nationalists ban
proved R ic h determination to dn
fend gummy and Mat.su sine# laU
Kept. 3. the dn» the Reds pouree
niton shell- Into Dummy, killing
two American officers in Ihe tup
rage.
Yu, slid liut since then the N'»
tici.ai. i i-u Ifurnmy, .. SUsquaiOi
mile inland 120 miles %re«t of Fop
n'«*a. had retaliated shell for shell.
“ Our determination lo continue
•idling luck," he said, “ lux md
rlianged—and vsill not change "
The renewed warning again*!
possible air raids was followed hv
.&lt; sla'einent by W.tvor han Vu-sliu
that r.npci's shelters would aerommodale onlv Tin io ih i md of a
population nl 700.0UU. lie suggested
that oinc 3oo inki old people, Wous***** children lie &lt;lu -ed ax nonsenliul and moved out of Ui*
city.

Cooperation Need
Reported To Place
Burden On Florida
TALI AIIA.SKKK I.IV— G o v . C o L
litis ea* been told that lark of r&lt;»operation nf centralized admlnlsU
in,tilisti,iim was placing an unites
ration of Florida's public tuallti
fin anrlal harden on the slate
The re|mrt was made yexlerdaT
by a rllUens nxnmitlro wtiieh ha*
been looking Info put,be health
prot items,
'The uoin luit tee recommended
that there be a well organized and
rvntralized administration ftvr xurh
imdlt'ilions as Ihe menial hospitals,
the liilierridosia hospital*, and
farm colony and the Crippled
Children's Commission, Cuunrll
for Hie lllind and lit* vocational
rehabilitation division.
Reporting that per raphe i s .
penddutes for pulilir lieallh had
•n ett dei lining in Florida silica
1‘i.ai Ihe committee urged H,«
te-gislatiNc to reappraise e\|u ndU
line ot *l„to fund* for all servierg
in Hie light nf their relaUve im­
portance.

Progress Report
Meeting Scheduled
A progress report meeting of at|
Red Cross rampaign workiwa wilt
be held at 10 a. in. Tuesday in Hia
City Com mission room at City
Hall.
The meeting was railed hy tha
Rev. Milton Wyatt, campaign
chairman.
tie urged that all winkers a9C
tend in order that it may h« deter­
mined how many ronlaelx ha* a
been made. Contribution* will ha
tunicd in at the time.

R. A. Patton Dies
After Long Illness 1
After a lengthy Ittne-s K A.
Patton Sr.. 13. died Wednesday a!
bis borne in Valdosta, Ga.
Kervlvors Inr hide th* widow,
Eiree children. K. A. Patton ir. of
Montgomery. A la, Mia. Loroy
Chilty ot Albaoy. Ga., and RawM
Fatten at fanlrax^.
The fvmwat w fl te WM t o n t »
mm 0 9 0 1 9 1 • •
•

b

�*3*

F a re 2

TH E SANFORD B R R A tD

F t!. M ar. 11, 1955

The

AH Church Notice* muit be pre-unted at
10 a. m un the day before publics-lion.

THE CHRISTIAN AND MISSION
ARY ALLIANCE CHURCH
Park Ave. at Fourteenth fit.
Pastor, David S. Carnellx
Sunday School and Morning
Worship Combined Service 9:45 a.
m. to 11:30 a. m. "Worship Period
begins at 10:40 a. m."
Alliance Youth Fellowship fi 30
p. m.
Evening Service 7:45 p. m.
Wednesday Mid-Week B i b l e
t i n ; MUST BAPTIST CHURCH Study 7:43 p. m.
OF OVIEDO
Rev. Louis Pay, Mlnlitrr
T' p.t.'i a.ni. Sunday School.
LAKE MARY BAPTIST
CHAPEL
Like Mary, Fla.
1111', FREE METHODIST
Paalor — Rev. H. A. Frilb Jr.
*.
ch u r c h
Sunday School 9:46 a.m.
* r « r . VI. Foitrlh SI. Lanrcl Ava.
Morning Worihip 11:00.
*
C. Eldon 10Inc. Minister
Training Union 0:30 p.m.
Sunday School 9:43 a. m.
Evening Worship 7:30.
. Morning Worship 10:43 a. m.
, Evening Worship 7:20 p. m.
Trayer Meeting Wed. 7:30 p.m.
«*■ Prayer Meeting Thursday 7:30
"p m .
CHULU0TA BAPTIST CHURCH
CJl
Walter A. Routb Jr., Pastor
ch u r c h o f g o d
Sunday Sche*i-1 W m .
,
Frtnrh Ave. atul 17art fit.
Morning Worihlp Service U a.m.
.Jtev, II. w. Ilcndcraon. Pastor Sermon by the pastor.
&gt; Sunday School 9:43 a. m
Evening Worship Service 7:10
»
EvangcllsUr Service 1:30 p. m. p.m. Sermon by the pastor.
** Mid-Week Service Tuesday 7-10
Prayer Meeting Wednesday T:3o
p.m.
? P• &gt;"•
■ Young People Service ihuratf day 7:30 p m,...
FIRST CHURCH OF THE
eNAZARENE
V
( UURCli OF CHRIST
"Sanford's Singing Church"
2nd fit. and Elm Ave.
Corner of Second and Maple
V
Ralph Brewer Jr. Minister
R. H. Spier Jr..
Pastor
wr Sunday
"Prayer la the Christian's Life"
*
IjiMo School 10.00 a. m
.
la the title of the Sunday-School
JT Worship 11:00 a. m.
lesson to be taught this Sunday
^ Worship 7:30 p. in.
morning at 6:30 a. m. You will
u ,Tuesday
be welcomed into a clasa your
i.*: l.adics' Bible class 3:30 p. m.
own aga and made to fail at
Wednesday
heme. Mr*. George Pittard ant
l rajcr mceUag l 30 p. m.
the Junior Girls are the featured
SOUTU SIDE BAPTIST CHURCH part of our Sunday-School this
week.
East 27ih Street
Tb* Heevenly Harmoneera guar*
W. L. Stephen*. Faster
Milton HJgianbotbam
tat will b« singing in both the
f un lay School Smw»riJ&gt;teada»f
marring and evanlng services
Welcome to Inn church,
10:46 a. m. and 7:30 p. in., re.
Sunday School 10 a.m.
ipectfully,
Morning Worship 11 a.m.
D. Harry E. Jessop, well known
Evening Worship * p.m.
Prayer Meeting WedneidlF t holintta expositor, author, lectur­
pin.
er and president emeritus of Chi­
cago Evangelistic Institute will
ST. PAUL’S LUTHERAN
be our guest speaker at the mom
in—In
Elavil
fit. Luke's Lutharai
Ing worship service at 10:46 and
(near Ovvledol the Rev.t. Btephei a special afternoon aervlceat
pastor. Morning werahl]
Tuhy. pastor.Morning
M. Ti
fi:3»
Mission
broadeaa
8:30 a m Radio M
ittion-------.. p. m. for all who would like to
at 0-30 a rn over Wojtjf (740 ke); hasr Dr. J*m «P without mining
Bun la y School for all aga group*. their own aarvlcef.
0:So a.m. Christian Day School
Regular Dlble training group*
(All elementary grades and kinder*
t ‘ eartenl, Monday through Friday, meet each Sunday at 6:45 p. m
A i8:30 a.m. Children’! program, “ fit. and prayermeatlng la yours to an
g J.uko'a Chapel," Saturday 10:16 jpy at 7:46
46 p. im. each Wednesday,
r a.tn. over WTRR, (1400 ke.)
Enjoy spiritual
ritual feed hot In
s,
,
v congenial
atmosphere.
N* tipping,
enjal
_
,
r
jmcap
■
i
r
stlaaaa Just
lit*! watt
m*isS (kill
pita*#;
pay goup
bill.
LUTHERAN o A lR O T
I*
I
OP THE REDEEMER
FIRST
CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
t. Rev. Phillip Scbletsruaa. MlaM
1406 Sanford Ave
Services at Ik e Yacht Oak
unday School 6:16 a.m.
John R. Golden,
Minister
buren Eorvlee 10:30 a.B .
Sunday 6:46 a. m. Bible School
10:60 a. m. Worship and Commu
THE CHURCH OF GOD
nlen Sermon, "Gdd’a Faith In
of PROPHECY
Man,"
2503 Elm Ava.
6:30 p. m. Chi Rho and C. Y. P,
I .
Bishop A. W. Stover. Paata*
0:43 a.m. Sucdsy School.
Meetings
It a.m. Morning woratup. S6r&gt; 7:30 p. ra. Worship and Sermon
num by A. W. Stovar.
Subjoct, "The Propose of Chris
7:30 p.m. Evangellstlo Hour.
tianity.”
7:30 p.m. Tuesday Evastag
*4riea. V.L.II. Leader Joe Musa.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
v 1:30 p.m. Thursdi
Thursdai
Park Avenue at Sixth Street
* Missionary Hand Lead
1 *W. Stover.
W. F. Brooks Jr., Paater
Everyone weleoma.
John L. Millar, Mlaiater of Edo.
Butk E. Archer, Director of Moslc
fif
EBENEZER ME1
"Wa Saved A Plata For You"
CHURCH
Barly Morning Worship 6:t3 a. ra.
d im s Heights
Sermon—W. P. Brooks Jr.
ttr Rev. Edward Murfte, Si» - * ‘v. Sunday School 10 a , __
m^Slf- Sunday School 6:46 a. ra.
lord ...
E. M
Johnson,
supertntandant
1,. ,«m
U4W.UU, mimiuiandl
Bring All The Family—Father,
’’.'.Pleaching Seme* U a, or.
Mother, Sitter, Brothar, and the
M Y F 5 p. m.
Baby too. Wa Provide for Every
* Prayer meeting, Thursday,
Member of tfaa Family."
«% trt
Morning Worship 31:00 a. sn.
*«
. (fev ELDER SPRINGS BAPTIST
CHAPEL
M Uponsired
provide f&lt;
Member of the Family In Train*
Ip# Union."
Evening Worship T:M p. m.
' Sfrmoa—W. p, Brooks. Jr.
Falfiwshlp Hour aftarUu I
In r Service in the Memorial
m e » o d !s t ^ 3 r c i
R ueatlooal Building. Tonight
» trill have a Ungiptratieo mi­
di r the direction of our Musk
■V l i V f i a r i
D roctcr, Mias Archer.
’
):oo p.m. Worib
Wei teaday Evening Service T:N
p, m.
COTJI
Nursery open lor an aorvieea.
or
Earphones far tha hard*of-haariog.
Wilfbma.
t o n S s / Kid #i W&amp;1yi H a iu S &amp; f
orlura.
CONGRIGATIONAL
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
» Park Avenae and S4th BL
J. Bernard Beak
MlaUta,
■ CLNTRAL BAPTIST CTIUHCH
tRev t W Parham, pit tar.
*5 f'«r. Fourterntb fit,, Oak Ava.
JjJ Sunday School 3:13 a. m.
Morning Worihlp Service U:00
;a . m,
f, Training Union 0:39 p m. Il'a a
laniily affair.
,
Evening Worship 7:30 p, in.
t "Como thou with us and we will
•'do thoc rood."

*

f

w is r

Herald office by

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST
SCIENTIST
509 EAST SECOND STREET
Sunday School
0:30 a. m.
Sunday Chuirh fiervlee 11 a. m.
Wednesday Testimony Meltings
8:00 p. m.
Free Reading Room 104 8. Park
Ave, —Second Floor
Open Monday Through Friday
From 12:30 to 4:30 p. m.
The foot that health and holi­
ness result from spiritual
un­
derstanding of God's nature will
bo brought out at Christian Sci­
ence services Sunday.
The Lesson • Sermon entitled
"Substance" will Include the fol­
lowing passage from
"Science
and Health with Key to tha
Scriptures" by Mary Bakar Eddy
(241: 16*21, 23*24): "Tha aubstance of all devotion it the x
flection and demonstration of
divine Love, healing ileknese and
destroying s i n .............. Ona'a aim
i point beyond faith, should b*
to find tha footsteps of Truth, tha
way of haalth and holiness.”
The power of God Is alio stres­
sed In selections from the Jama*
King Version of tha Blbl# Includ­
ing the following (H*bT*w* 4:16)i
"For God Is quick, and powerful,
and sharper than any twoedged
sword, piercing oven to the di­
viding asunder of soul and spirit,
and of the Joints and marrow,
and I* a discerns of the thought*
and Intent* of the heart."
SANFORD SEVENTH • DAY
ADVENTIST CHURCH
700 Elm Avenue
W. J. Oetmin Miniate*
Sabbeth School (Saturday) 6 : »
a, m.
_
Worship Hour
11:00 a. m. Ser­
mon: "On Holy Ground-”
Wednesday 7:30 P- m. Film, Ih*
Signs of Tha
praMntef
by Eldar W. V
g*me
Missionary Secretary of Flori­
da Conference.
\
Day School Monday through Fri
day 8:00 a. m. — 2:30 p. mA cordial wajeoma o t n M
J*
all, to came and worship with
lift*
FIRST MF.THODINT CHURCH
MUIon H. Wyatt, MtaUlar
Richard O. Knight, A»*a.
6:45 • m. Church IchoM. A CJiw
for avtry •!*- .
M v.
11:00 a. m. Morning Ww»HlF
Sermon: "All Thing* Ain Youra"
6:00 p. m. Methodist Youth Fallowship Supper
7:00 p m. Evening Wof»Wp
Sarmop: "The Qodl Ya H i**
Chosen" Y " t . H *
(Brusdcait over WTRR)

This young lady might mlis the next step arid taka a tut&gt;iy
tumble!
O f eourta har partrits wouldn't draam o f letting bar tty
those stairs alona until they had taken every precaution, to
teach her how to manage them carefully and safely. *But re­
gardless of precautions, sooner or later she has to run the risk
of trying them on her own; __
Every adventure In groyfrig up has its element of danger,
ana wish parents are very careful to see that the child shall be
trained to meet these dangers with the least risk to.her phys­
ical health. ^
But what about*the far greater’ H»k to this child’s moral
and spiritual health when she has to face the really big periis\
of life on her own? When not a broken bone or.two but her/
character la at staka—what then?
. - The Church will give your chltd-wkhd help yon give your!
'child—the care and training she needs for meeting life’s great?
eat risks safely and triumphantly.

HOLY CROSS CHURCH
(Eplaaap#l&gt;
Rev. H. LytHatatt BlmtaapM*.
g. d . Rt t f f
8:00 a. m.
* Holy Euchariat
6:16 Family Sarvica and Church
School
11:00 Morning Pray** * M Bar­
man.
Berries* through tha weak:
Monday through Thunder and
Saturday — Holy Communion—
7:80 a.’ m.
,
,
Wednesday — Evanlng Prayer,
Litany and Sermon — 6»00 p. m.
Friday — Holy Communion—6:10

S « ® g i FOR a l l

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Friday* — Chunk Behaal Leaten
Sarvica — 8:30 p. m.
Friday — Bactor'a ftudy d a ta —
8:00 p. m.
. „ .
Saturday — {lacramant ad Faganea - M p- BFIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH

Frayer"ln* tha” Sa*aion Room
11:00 a. m. Morning Wonhlp

This $erles
Ministerial Association, and is Sponsored by the Following Business Establishments;

E S T e ^ 'a i r f r
FLOpUna 8TA1B BAMS

LAMIV M Y CMPAIIBK#

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Samoa
Rav. Mclnnla
Chunk Nunary 10:41

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6:60 y. ra. Ftaaaa*
0:60 p. m. Sanlar
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Sparrow Gabgjal
FionaarChoir
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THE SANFORD HERALD !|
Frl. Mar. 11, 1955
Page 3

County Personals
Longwood News
Longwood w it well represented
at the County Commissioners meet­
ing this week, when Mr. R. C. Carl■j§. Preildent oi the Longwocd
town Council; Mr. Linton Cox, Preudent of the Longwood Are* Clum­
ber of Commerce; md Mr. Sam­
uel Johnson, Chair-of the Board
of Trusted, of the new Medical
Building, to be erected In town
toon.
T’ .e County Commissioner! gave
thc.r final approval so that the
building may be started. The Build­
ing Committee hooe to b r e a k
ffi-und very soon.
^ruatees include, Mr. Johnson,
Chairman, and Mrs. John Carhart.
Mrs. Bobbie Joe Hunt, Mr. R. C.
Carlson and Mr. Ross Mobley.
These TruC.ces weic elected at a
recent meeting of the Longwood
Area Chamber of Commerce.
The Lcngwood Volurteer Fire
Dept was called last Sunday after­
noon to a grasa f:re on the Old Dix4 1 Highway near Lyman School.
Tit - rrarir fire-bad~mvrr si si ted
and due to the wind ignited the
near-by grass The firemen extinqutfhed the blaze before excessive
damaged eccured.
The Firemen are still burning
anyone's fields that so desire.
Should you like to have your fields
burred, call. Chief John Farina,
at W. P. 26-3131 or 23-2313 and ar­
rangements will be made to to
tjr n under the supervision of the
flu
ire Dept
Mrs. Charles Nichols home was
the place of the Woman's Auxili­
ary of the Christ Episcopal Mission
meeting on Wednesday afternoon.
Guest of honor was, Mrs. Wil­
liam Kirschoff. Orlando deanry
chairman, who demonstrated the
proper arrangement of flowers for
the church and altar proper.
Refreshments were served by the
UHlcsi, Mrs. Nichols and 3!rs
Chailes Searcy.
Rock Springs was 'the location
chosen by Den I Pack 313, Cub
Scouts for their first hike of the
season. On last Saturdiy they made
the excursion.
Cubs attending were. Roger Mob­
ley, Freddie and Richard Grant,
Tom Milwee, Roy Goodwin, Tom
Stevens, Keith Willis, Richard Pea,^|ck and Johnny Hines, also Den
lief Ronald Wlckl.
The Cuba were accompanied by
their Den Mothers, Mrs. Ralph
Stevens and Mrs. Ross Mobley.
Who had prepared • delicious lunch
the Cubs enjoyed after their hike.
Mrt. Cassia Maiers left for Calif­
ornia Saturday morning to spend
the month of March with her dau­
ghter and family In Lony Branch,
Cr"L
*•” r. and Mrs. Howard Warren
end Mr. and Mrs. Ward Stevens
of Molnar Street are spending sev­
eral days in St. Petersburg.
" Mr and Mrs. Charles Bisbee of
Williamsburg, Massachusetts, who
have been spending their vacation
Jn Orlando for the past few weeks,
and calling on friends In Longwood,
frequently, are returning to their
home in Massachusetts on Wedflesday.
VjBelton Helms was home over the
Wee
reek-end with his family from Fori
Jackson, South Carolina.
Mr. and Mra. Richard HaDbeck
and daughter, Luann, from Port­
land. Oregon, arrived In town on
Monday to spend some time with
toe latter* parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Garland Shaw and family.
Mr. Louie Knoll was host to the
laturday Evening Pinochle Club,
on the 5th of March, at hit home.
most enjoyable evening was
T a d by the following members, Mr.
and Mra. Charlie Wales, Mrs. Mau­
de Tupper, Mra. E. Ayers, Mrs.
“Florence "Sonderlin
Ionia and* Mr.
" J.
‘ Hol­
lister.
This Saturday the Onb win meet
at the home of Mrt. Florence Sun­
derlie.
Mr. and Mra. B. Byron, who are
wintering in town, have taken a
few daya trip to St Petersburg.
Kr. and Mra. Ereat Harris, who
w reside In Maitland, were in
town visiting old friends, on Wad-

«
t

W ELL DRILLIN G
H ow ard C. L on g

f

Phone
207

B.

388

Cowsuserrlal

neiday.
Mr. and Mrs E. R. Moore, who
By ADDIE PREVATT
nave been in Orlando for several
weeks, guests at the Angebilt Ho­
Rev. Kite of Jacksonville eontel, while visiting friends in Long­ ducted the services at the Baptist
wood and other near-by cities left Church Sunday.
for their home in Granley, Connec­
The Home Demonstration Club
ticut, last Friday morning.
was hostess to a chicken supper at
The residents of Wildraere Ave. the community hall Friday even­
have won their long fight to have ing. One hundred and seventythe name of their street changed. three dollar* wa* taken in, with
Due to the simularity of the names the proceeds going toward the im­
of the two streets, Wildmere Ave provement of the hall.
and Wildmere St., there has been
Mrs. Ina Batts had a* her
confusion in town for several years guest* Thuraday, Mr*. Herman
Just the past two weeks an ambu­ Tcre and daughter Lorraine of
lance was called to WilJmere Ave. Chuluota.
to take a seriously ill man to the
Mr*. Walter Yarborough re­
hospital and the driver was direct­ turned home Tuesday after spend­
ed to Wildmere St. After a dalay ing sometime in Louisiana with
of one-half hour the driver fin her daughter, Mr*. Denny Whit­
ally located Wildmere Ave.
ing, who underwent an operation.
Town Council today made it pos­ M r * .
Yarborough's grandson,
sible for the streets name to be Tony accompanied her home.
changed and henceforth, will be
Mr. and Mr*. Louis Markham
known as, 31am* Street, in honor and family have as their guests
of the rniny former resident* o f|for a few- day*, Mr*. Markhams’
the state of Mstee. vho now re­ brother, Harold Caldwell of At­
side in the local' of this street.
lanta, Ga.
Mr*. Paul Eurmaiter. Chairman,
The Home Demonstration Club
of the Antique and Curio Exhibit, met Tuesday at the community
held a meeting of her committee hall with twelve members present.
cn Tuesday evening and announ­ Miss MjTtie Wilson, the county
ced that several persons had ask­ •gent, spoke on drape.* and cured to enter with their material.
'•in*. The hostesses, Mr*. T. W.
The Committee will begin early
Prevatt and Mrs. Ed. Fulford
;n the coming week to gather the
served cake and coffee, after the
articles to be shown and to begin
meeting.
their arrangements for the opening
Mrs. T. W Prevatt and children
on the 16th.
Addie and Carlton, and Mrs. Ed­
There Is still time for anyone
ward Yarborough, attended the
to enter their exhibit and they may
do to by contacting the Chairman wedding of the former Mist
Beverly Eaton in Zcllwood, Thura­
or the committee.
The show » ‘U open on the 18th day evening.
Friends of Mr*. Loren McGill
through the 13th from 2 till 9 p.m.
each day. Tickets are 23oenta per will be glad to hear that she la
person and al! proceeds from the getting along fin* after under­
Exhibit' will be donated to the going an operation at the FernaldLaughton Memorial Hospital last
Medical Building Fund.
There will be refreshments ser­ week.
Miss Nancy Butler spent tha
ved for those that may care for
them under the Chairmanship of
vlsitora of Mr. and Mrs. P. T.
Mrs. John Reams.
Tonight, the Senior clan of Ly­ Piety.
Denny Hutchinson and Taylor
man School will present, Lights
Out, a mystery-comedy in three Griffin of Quincy were dinner
guest* of Mr. end Mr*. J. S. Pe­
acts by Paul S. McCoy.
The play will *&gt;* directed by Sirs. terson and femily, Sunday.
Lewis Sweigart of Pine Beach,
Elmlna Bisbee and curtain time
will be 8:15 P. M. In the school N. J., has been visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Frank George.
auditorium.
Frank George and Lewis Swei­
Seniors participating in the piay
are, Peggy Tipton, Melva Jcane gart spent last weak in Home­
Carver, Haroll Helms, Dean Bar- stead.
Mr. and Mra. B. F. Burke
wick, Dcbby Blanton, Danny Hop­
kins, Laid Bennett, Karl Morris, dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Baker, Lucy Nowell and Allen Wilbur Loyd of New Smyrna,
Sunday.
Thomas.
Mr. ar.d Mrs. Joe Stewart and
daughters, Angie and Connie, of
Sanford, ware supper guests of
By MR3. KING ALLMAN
her parents, Mr. and Mra. B. F,
The W. M. U. o f the Baptist Burke Thursday.
Church observed the Week
of
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Koleff
Prayer for Horn* Mlaiions, Tues­ have moved into their new homa
day and Thuraday at th« home of at 1622 Douglas A ve, Sanford.
Mrt. B. F. Burks. Tkott taking
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Mattalr
part on tha program, “ Christ Sr. ware dinner guaeta of thstr
Crowned Through Servica1*, were daughter, Mrs. 0 . A. Harris and
Mrs. George Hlrt, Mrs. Harry family of Sanford, Sunday.
Osteen, Mr*. Charles Brown, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Haneoek
E. W. Smith, Mr*. R. H. William*, and boys, Curtis and Albert, Lar­
Sir*. A. C. Ty»on, Mr*. E. H. ry Rigr.ai, Charlotte Bowen, Mrs.
Cohen, Mr*. B. F. Burke, Mr*. J. Mary Bowen and son, Jay and
S. Peterson, Mrs. Herbert Gld- Herbert Cohen of Orlando, Mr.
dens and Mrs. King Allman.
and Mra, Ted Cohen and daugh­
The R. A.’» of the Baptist ter, Linda of Water Oak and
Church met Monday evening at Mrs. Eva Cohan and daughter,
the church. Plana were made for A lie* of Seville, called on Mr. and
the boys to go to the R. A. Con- Mrs. E. H. Cohan over tha week­
great In SL Petersburg In April. end.
The boys all took part in reading
the book. “ Gold la Alaska.”
The following R. A. a and their
counselor were present: Jimmy
and John Allen Peterson, Joe
Frank Tart, Bobby Schultz, Lee
Glddena, Edward Hirt, Herman
LAST TIME TONIGHT
Allman and Rev. L. F. DeLoxier.
STARTS l i t
The Sunbeams of tha Baptist
Church mat with their counselors,
Mra. E. H. Cohan end Mra. B.
F. Burke Wednesday afternoon.
Those present were: Edgar and
Alice Sutton, Donna, Maxine and
Don Btowall, Janette Hoseck, Kir­
by Osteen, Shirley Albritton, Di­
ana and Lynn Jones, Carolyn
Jett and Jeanette Clark, Mrs.
STARRING
Georg* Hlrt and Mrs. B.
F. JOAN
JACK
Burk* prepared the refreshment*. FONTAINE
BALANCE
Tha Osteen Methodist Church
FEATURES M
Tilt
?
n*«
cleared around 11300 on their
baked food tale Saturday.
J, E. Hemmorle
of
Sanford
bald ft demonstration dinner at
STARRING
tha home of Mr. and Mr*. Dick DEAN
Jonea Tuesday evening. Tha fol­ MARTIN
U
IARTTN
lowing guest* were present! MrIEATOIE ONLY Or..
and Mra. J. B. Paterson. Mr. and
_ CARTOON — N E W
Mr*. B. F. Burk*. Mrs. John Helm
SA T U R D A Y
ONLY
end Mra. Georg* Hirt
STARTS M l
Mr. and Mrs. Jo* L. Moor* of
Stony Point, N. C., Mr. and Mrs.
» .
1 11 1.
J. L. Holloway of Mayfield, Ry.,
a n q u is h
and Mr. end Mrt. Brllay
of
Washington, Iowa, were recent
i &lt; 1111111iii u

Geneva

weekend in Chuluota with Mia*
Loretta Fore.
Mr. and Mr*. Waiter Bell hare
at their guest* for a few day*,
Mr. and Mra. Van Aba of Albany,
N. Y.
Mr. end Mr*. Ed Putman had
aa the! rrecent visitors, Mr. and
Mr*. Arthur Gallogy of Ft.
Wayne. Ind. They returned home
Thursday.

Legal Notice
NOTICE TO A rp rv m
TO: JOHN VV. KIRKl'S.
silts
KIRKl'iiES: —
GREETINGS: Thl* I* to alve you
notlr* that on th» Jrd day ot
March, 1SSS. ault was commanred
In th* Circuit Court of-tha Ninth
Judicial Circuit of Florida In and
fer Srralnola County. Florida, al
Fanford, Florida, by Mary Luclll*
Klrkua. alia* Klrku»*i a&gt; plaintiff
aralnat you. John vv. Klrkua, allar
Klrkufta. aa defendant. Th* purpo»* of th* rult I* for dlrorc* and
property a*ttlcm*nt and accounting
Th* *ild rult la pcr.dln* *t Fanford.
Florida You ara h»r»hy r*nulr*d
to appear and ftl* whatever written
defmrra you h a '* to th* raid fult
with th* Clark of th* ahnv* named
court on or b*for* th* Ith day
of April, left ar.d file a copy of
raid dcfrrr* upon th* attorney for
th* plaintiff. II F Mohr, whoea addrte* la HO Cohway Road. Orlando,
Florida, on or hefor* tha tail m*ntton*d dat*. Fall you rot htnca a
Peer** Pro C*at*r»o will h* *nt*r•d asalnat you and th* *ald caua*

will proceed
■d export*

WITNESS my hard and official
acal of th* Circuit Court. F*mlnol*
County. Fiat* of Florida, at Fanford. Pl*rtda, thia trd day of
March. ISJS.
(Clerks Fell)
O. P. H*rndon
Clark. Circuit Court

S U P E R I O R SUE S

• Fail-Saf* Alarm System • Counterbalanced Lid
• Positive Action Latch • Removable Baskets
• Selective Temperature Control
m m cotm erf iw o t s-f cussr aw vmMT f&amp; £!egt&amp; ■

'SIMON!*

V

11*

1

.

PAYNE
_

AUT OMAT I C

CONTEST

°

Win o Fine

FROM

WA S H E R S

$1QQ95
I U v|

««&lt;*

* &lt;U&lt;t

■t
t ,v

-• M r t U‘ ( u 4 c r

SEE THE NEW G-E WITH

BEAGLE
PUPPY

Filter-Flo*
WASHING ACTION!

■ANEW/ World's Finos! Washing Action

Over

50% MORS

NEW! Automatically ejects send from the washer ...
+ NEWI Traps lin t. . . and soap scum carried away from
Wri*l
WA 7J0M _
.
clothes.

$ 10.00 DELIVERS
$ 2 ,2 5 Weekly

MOM CIOTHH CAPACITY
TV»N f * lN T C H t t

autoMtnc wasHtrs

Chairs

All Steel

20
P R IZ I PU PPIES
Q IV IN

NOW
ONLY

Htra Is How fo Win
It's eeayi So boys end girls, enter
Superior Sue's big news contest at
once. Win one of tbe 30 fine, pedi­
greed Beagle puppies given *i
prizes, lech Beagle puppy Is pedi­
greed, et least 3 month* old. In
fine condition end will have Ameri­
can Fennel Club reghtreHon papers.
All you have to do b go *o the
■tore selling Superior ice
Qet • free Superior tee
aenfoat blank. Than read
the vary easy o n to* nrfa* and sand
In your entry. Hurry— the contest
closes April 15th. There la nothing
to buy,— no boat tops— no wrap.

vofue

• tugged oll-staet conttnxtloq
• Tough, baked enamrl frkh —
your choke of red or Breen
• No-snag rolled edges

Thij sturdy lawn
fiiaix is built to give
'ou years of eoraiott! Get it NOW

at thisbargainprice.

$1.00 DOWN — USY BUDGET TERMS

| NAr yet tart not a genufna
g o o d

BOY9-OM1S
HURRY
ConHftt ends April 15th
O«t Contest Blank
At Superior l a Cream
Pm Ii h Taday

A ganutna %6 95

/

v e a r

XTRA MILEAGE
TREADS

“ " “a i u , ? : " ,y n n 4 4
A U -W M T H E S
And your
•Id bo Ngry

power parked for fatter ttart*

(s liiO D / V E A R

H u rry -S p e c ia l lasts 10 days o n lyl
£L 00 DOWN DfUVKJL$. . . pay as little as $1J 5 a week]

r&gt;OF JLA1 6.00 x 16 SIZ1

______ j a n
STERLING

1 ror 9 is tt-.\

2 Tor a.'IS t-*rh

FLUB

“ TA R ZA N AN D
TH E A P E M A N ”

LET

STARRING
JOHNNY WEISSMULLER
-MAN HUNT IN
AFRICAN JUNGLE"
CHAPTER NO. g
_ '
CARTOON_________
SU N D A Y — M O N D A Y
•TART* M l

Weekly

BIG N E W

Osteen

Ifej?
&lt;2Sh**

AS LOW AS
$2-15

3 For 8.15 each

US CHECK YOUR

4 For

BATTERY TODAY

plus tox and iwcappabift tirft
Hera'r flutitaikting value. Taft UV

COMPLETE

BATTERY

bully get Dew Urc tractloo— D*w
lire appoarsnoa on all four whorls
at this sexvuttorul low peto* Hurry
—dco'l msu this big econoeny buy!
s m i t e to i o u n i tta «
aooas oa ro ro u t o w e tuuti

SERVICE

U Ooed Pood for
Im y M y

$1.00 DOWN DEllYtU

At little as *1.25
par week buy* 4

The word for See Ice
b Superior. Buy
■• flh b ,

BERRY'S WAREHOUSE
F U R N I T U R E C OMP A NY
room

imt

eei w.

i ,t

st.

‘

* •

G O O D Y E A R

food at your daalar's to-

T A T T L E l Q U EEN "

S E R V IC E

ora
m aal
m Superior hi PlnK,
Gghml Cup*_end H OcUon

113 SOUTH PARK AVENUB

•TABBING

S#S
4V,
CARTOON

-JF *

W fii ‘

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

as.
■urn

•4

ST O R E

SANFORD, FLA,

PROVFR

222-22

�*y»

For Better Government
'

One of the new recommendations of the
Hoover Commission on governmental rcurganiiatln. headed by former President Herlk&gt;rt Hoover, has a good chance of adoption.
This Is a plea for more political appoint­
ments fot high offices, doing away with
dvil service restrictions for these posts.
Conjrrcns and the political brass are always
willing to open more positions to political
influence if in the process they can escape
too much .odium.
Tho idea Is that such posts are policy­
making. and suuld be held by sympathisers
with tho party In power Actually there are
very few such positions. Most important of­
fices call for experts, who may tie Republi­
cans or may be Democrats but do their
work without regard for parly necessities.
If they were replaced by party workers, ef­
ficiency would almost certainly tie less.
Another recommendation is sounder, but
on that account may have hnrd going. This
Is a plea to put United States marshals and
customs officials under civil service. The
Trumnn administration tried to do this, but
was rebuffed by Congress. It will bo Inter­
esting to see it this recommendation can get
more support now.

Railroad Progress
Six of the nation’s lending railroads have
decided to pool tfiuir experimental facilities
for a study of new, high-speed passenger
equipment.
The co-operating lines arit the Pennsyl-

The Sanford Herald
i* I'M I « f f i r *

•(

lit l- r f.

rt«rf* a ,

«i

•r ('••«•«« it l i n t a, ie

r x e n re n K ix e , m i i m
JACK InU TRKXU XO

The "souped up" nulomnblle, which has
been tinkered with so that it can produce
supernormal speed, incidentally dismaying
pedestrfans and traffic offlrers alike, has
given ideas to people In other lines of sport.
Robert W Konwurlhy. a New York City re­
tired Air Force Colonel, makes "souped up"
golf balls, which ho says will travel 30 to 40
yards farther than regulation balls, lie bus
just given a supply to President Elsenhower.
The spread of this Idea may affect golf
an the introduction of the lively ball, how­
ever brought about, has changed baseball.
Tho frequency of the homo run and tho es*
tnblishment of records like Bnbc Ruth’s, are
definitely attributable to the lively ball.
President Elsenhower's future gulf
scores will be watched with Interest.

•■* n

Mechanized Dinosaurs

Friday, Mar. 11, 10R8
TODAY*

B IB L E

VERSE

Be ye Ihereforo ready also,—Luke 12 ;40.
'Abraham Lincoln said I will jrct ready and
may be my chance will come. A chance al­
ways comes to th« men who are ready.

SAM DAWSON

van!*, the Baltimore and Ohio, the Chesa­
peake and Ohio, the New York Central, the
New Haven and tho Santa Fe. The various
lines will purchnsc and test new equipment
and share Information on engineering and
economic results as well as on passenger re­
action to the innovations.
In recent years the transportation in­
dustry has become highly competitive and
there have boen algna that railroads have
been falling behind. Forward looking rail­
road men have been making a determined
effort to reverse the trend. They know that
only by offering passengers more for their
money can they hope to compete.
The results of the plan of the six partici­
pating lines should mean Improved service
for passengers Lung range results may
bring the nnswer to the question of what
role railroads will piny in our future. Offi­
cials of the six lines are displaying vision
and faith in tho soundness of their industry.

"Cara 10 font long, weighing two tune,
ara used to run a 118-pound houaewife three
block* to the drug ntore for a two-ounco
package of bobby plnn and lipetick." This la
tho Idea of tho modern automobile oxproaacd
by George Rnntnoy, president of the Ameri­
can Motor* Corporation. In an addrena at
Detroit. He went on to call today's automo­
bile "mechanized dinosaur*."
In many conch ies of Europe the bicycle
doe* most neighborhood chore* for which
we uao the automobile. In England a baby
automobile serves the same purpose. There
the high cost of gaaoliuu is given as the ex­
planation. He that as it may, the American
use of tho car for ail purposes seem* a prolty
luxurious proceeding. It hns almoat super­
seded the habit of walking t

Many Watching Senate 'Study'
NEW YORK!I*)—Many an Amer­
ican ta watching Ihe Senate's
"friendly sludv" of the bull markat in stock! today to see if he
can pick up any tips on the mar­
ket.
This Is only natural, human na.ure being what It Is.
The Senate Banking Committee's
slm la to see If prtres rose too
fast and arc In danger of going
too high
Rut many a stock buyer or
would-be buyer Is watching the
testimony of the witnesses — men
who ought to know about the
market — to see if they believe
slock prices ere about as high now
as they’re likely to be, or whether
bargains ere still to be bed.
When tb* presidents of the New
York Stock Exchange and the
American Stock Exchange testified
that they had been buying stocks
and planned to continue to do an,
many another stockholder prob­
ably felt reassured.
The presidents of the Midwest
Stock Exchange of Chicago and the
San Frxncisco Stock Exchange
chimed In with thdr belief that the

Many Kept Guessing
•The Eisenti keeping
not Just the
il It Will (to
ck Ihe Quei now held
Itself may
. Secretary
mwida .elk
•rpreltd as
hnwer still
id.
*&gt;kr of itu&gt;
i ctefenitina
the future
Dulles have
na« at ate'

. _ , .
Red Chine
p CC*
t escaciores
1 ml1** ott'
. .
* .,rM ,r
perlal rcio*"M —j!
cd Chinese
. .
1?,
Cbiang-held
1 «? , „
pending on
ire necei*
ormosa and

i
1
|
f
i

,

r

!

C

‘
J

;
1
.

}

Look high
and low.

S

Nobody enacted te' breach the Ibnl lamt ftfmur m 'M mil km l l
ancient barrier of the K' i Im ex­
pert as a m u lt of a mighty effort.
A big plan ltd i I m laid to make iH A ir wai present when Bradley,
ihnl Mapt- highly delighted, heard the news.

When Ala officer minimised tha
imports*** of the brtdge'a caplag K didn't fit tote "the
* - the Montgomery ntontodlgnantly demanded:
the h*n do you want ua

LIV IN G
h bd

;iifJeSw
i | pi
'll

berk to ihe Fchnixry speech,
Secretary of Defense Wileon, at
a now* conference yesterday, »*id
Kikcnhowcr is the only one who
can "clarify our Intentions or
plans."
Rut Dulles appears concerned
that the people o( Asia may submil to the Red Chinese if they
feel the Uitlle.1 Stales i* talking
big amt doesn't back it op.
On Tab. IT he saM • great
"dsngtr in Asia is Ihe fear of the
eiany non-Communlsl people that
‘ he United RUtce has no reel In, f ntlon of standing firmly behind
them."
Last night, two days sfter re­
turning from Asia, he said the
people of the western Pacific end
jg,u,h lilt Atll wm ••quickly lose
their freedom If they think that
our jova lor
mean) peace a|
any price."
Why then, If the admlnletration
has decided to defend Chling's off#jj0ri ja|amj , from Red etleck,
doesn't It eey eoT This ie an empty
question, since no one can be eure
anjr clecleion at aU has been made.
If the Rede are kept guessing,
they may not attack. As long a*
inis country doesn't say it will
defend the Islands, It could trade
,hem
j|,B n d , _ chleng could
hardly veto that since he depends
on ,he united States — If the Communists would
____ agree
„ to ceasefire. Maybe Util's the answer.
TO R n V M M N I
DULUTH. Mina. Wk-Albert W es­
son. 101, last Civil War Union
Army survivor, will be well enough
to return home In a few daya.
Hospital spokesmen said bs appar­
ently has recovered from the lung
congestion that put him la the
hospital Friday.

Surprise Capture Accepted Feat
Hocnhowei himself saw tha milllory poislbilitlca at once and ordered Ihe bridgehead strenL_____
uncd
Immediately. Later, overriding hla
SHAKE staff exponents of "lha Big
Plan." he sided with Bradley and
othara who had favored a double
plnrara stuck across the Rhine.
In his mbmolra Eisenhower cred:U the Remagen bridge seizure
with shortening the war.
Thus did a relative handful of
iroopi, men with the courage and
enterprise to Mize • golden mom­
ent, change hlitery.
Today many of the survivors

ROOM
room

neada of the exchange* that stock
prices aren't out of tine with the
economy was siren as ■ defense
,t* the ways la which the market*
art now regulating themaelvei.
It doubtless wain't Intended at a
tip on whathei you too should b i^
xtocha.
"

SH O ES
FOR MEN

FOR LADIES

• Nonn-Busk
• Freemen

• Paradise
• Neterallier
• American Girl

• Robb*

FOR CHILDREN
• Poll Parrot

IVEY'S
"Where equality U higher than price’

JAMES MARLOW

HAL BOYLE

But Gen. Omar Nalson Bradley
NEW YORK (IB) - The aurprlie
capture of the Remagen bridge and other American field com­
•crois the Rhine 10 years ago I* manders ravored another plan.
now accepted aa one of tha stun­ Bradley himself wanted also to
Croai the Rhine with hi* group,
ting feala in military history.
But when It actually happened tt awing north, link up with Montla hard to isy who was dismayed ornery amt thus pocket the Ruhr,
most by It — the German enemy or eraany's industrial haart.
•erne of the lop Allied strategists.
go the luue stood — still unde­
At an anniversary reunion this cided—on March Tlh. Then dough­
week President Elsenhower bon- boys and tankment of the eth
ered l l heroes who were among A r m o r e d Division dramatically
the first to cron and selte the changed the picture. Traveling ao
bridge. Warmly he aiaured them swiftly they actually had gone be­
that their action typified "the daah, yond (heir road map*, they arthe Ingenuity, the readiness at the rived at tha Rhine. Startled Ger­
drat opportunity that characterises man anglneers, trd by e major,
the American soldier."
frinUcidy triad to destroy (he
But diplomatically he refrained Ludendorff railway bridge. Two
un mentioning that this sudden explosions weakened the ptaicture.
Uleflrid prise became for a few But before they could complete the
;
days quite a hot potato at hlaJob,
ownAmerican gunfire drove them
Wartime headquarters. The big off. Tha Yanks raced to tb* far
question: What to do with the aid* of the Rhlae.
bridge?
Should tha small American spear• Borne military strategists, like
Wise* at houMcleaning lima, hate heed have Mixed the bridge on ill
change their t|dy plana, no mat- own UilitaUveT One offlcsr, who
r (or whet r e is a , That’s why knew e l Use Impending big crossing
the unexpected capture of the Re- planned farther north by 8HAEE,
M M * bridge upset tnd even an- confessed laUr hla first, momentiry rtfello* Ie the news hla men
Ro/ed soma Allied chieftains.
^ H tre w u the tftoaUoa in early bad aetied a bridge latact w u this:
"Whe* did the bays ge and do

stock market Is still quite healthy.
They however, added the warning
that stock prices can go down as
well as up — a truism with which
all active traders In stocks have
been made aware at tome time
or other
The general reassurance by the

I*

to n f t *

FINANCE
NEW

REAL SAVING
Wirt A

BANK AUTO LOAN!
Before you buy your next cor ask ui for facte and
figures on our economical financing plan.
• . . . We also maka loom on late model used cart

�.-J

S o cia l £v&amp;nldu

Calendar
1

FRIDAY
Ths Duplicst. RriHgs Club wit'
niMt in tbs Yacht Club wilh •ent­
itle to start at 7:45 p ra. and
play to bsgin at 8 o'clock.
Tha Dirt Gardener* Cirela of
the Sanford Cardan Club
will
meat with Mr*. Harry Cushing in
hostesses will ba Mr*. J. P. Hall,
Tha Sanford Tourist *nd Shuffleboard Gub will mset at 7:90 p. m.
in tha Club house with entertain­
ment. Jose Cardoso, Stetson Uni­
versity speaking on “ What Ara
Flying Saucers".
Tha Dependabla Class of the
First Methodist Church will meet
at tha Church at 5:30 p. m. and
than go to McCaU'a Camp for a
supper and meeting. Members are
requested to bring table service
Tha Jaearaoda Circle of the
Cardan Gub will meet at 7:90 p
as. at the home of Mrs. Joseph
Terlap on Golden Lake.
SATURDAY
Church Membership Classes for
boys and girls of Junior Departme nt age at First
Methodist
Church will meet at 10 a. m. in
the social room at McKinley
Hall.
The Ladles Aid Society of the
Lutheran Church of the lledecmer
will nold a bake aala In front of
Rears at 1:90 a. m.
SUNDAY
High attendance day will be
observed in Sunday School and
Family Day In Lhs morning wor­
ship service at tha Central Bap­
tist Church.

F r« a t

t O

Back

N e w

B O

m

The regular monthly meeting ol
Cirri'* No, Nlnp of the WSCS of Ihi
First Methodist Church was held
Tuesday morning 9:30 at ihe hnnn
of Mrs. J. M. Blsnlon, m2 W. 20!h
St. wth Mrs. Robert Mitchell at
co-hostess.
The meeting was opened by the
chairman. Mrs. Marvin Dyal, who
Introduced and welcomed Mr.
Grady Herman as a special guest
Mrs. Herman then gave an In
aplratlonal devotion taken from
Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Great
Slone Face." After the devotional
Mr*. Wilma Colbert conducted
the atudy taken from "The Master
Calleth Thee" entitled "Mothers
and Wives.*
Mrs Dyal gave several report*
including visit* to the circle shutin, Mias Sally Gray. Mrs. P. H
Colbert and Mr*. Rnhert Parker
are In cnarge of thii month’*
visits.
It was announced that the WSCS
was holding a rummage sale on
March 19. Also announced was a
study of India to he held Monday,
March 14 at the church. This Is in
he a combined meeting with the
regular buslncia meeting and a
covered dish luncheon. The studs
th-gins at 10:30 a rr These,stud
les are to he conducted at the*
church on the evening, of March
16, 21 and 30 from 7:30 till 9
o'clock.
It was also announced that Cir­
cle No. Nine was to have charge
of the supper for the Young People
on tha night of March 27.
Mr*. R. W, llerrnn was also In­
troduced aa a special guest who
with Mra. Herman and Mr*. Dyal
are the nominating committee for
the coming year. Mr*. Herman
spoke on hehatf of this committee
on the changes In the different cir­
cles and asked for Idras and sug­
gestions.
The April meeting will be held
at the home of Mrs. Roy Wall with
Mr- R, B. Williams assisting.
Delicious refreshments of dough­
nuts, nuts and coffee were served
by the hostesses to the following:
Mrs. P. H. Colbert, Mrs. Wilma
Colbert, 51rs. John Crawford,
Mrs. Ralph Dean. Mrs. Dyal.
Mr* Charles Meeks, Mrs. J. W.
Messier, Mrs. Broughton Watkins,
Mra. Ted Williams, Mrs Harold
Whltlern, Mrs. ft. It Williams,
5tra. Boy Well, the hostesses and
Mrs. Herman and Mrs. Herron,
guest*.

Gleaners Class
Holds Meeting
Mr*. V. G. Hatty, satiated by
Mra. A. Kendall, were hostessea
to the Gleaners Class when It met
at the First Baptist Church annex
Tuesday evening. Mrs. W. (1.
Rumhley president, called on Mrs.
91. N. Cleveland for the opening
prayer. Evangelism was the them*
nf the devotional presented by
lira. Fred Myers.
As tha roll wss called reports nf
absentees were given and sugges­
tions for gttlng them to attend
were made.
Tha principal items nf business
were the varlnus welfare activi­
ties In whlrh the rises Is partici­
pating In rnnperatlnn with the
rhurrh program. Mra. Myron
Smith closed the business meeting
with prayer.
A short social period followed.
Refreshments wer» served hy
Mrs. Hasty and Mra. Kendall to
Mrs. A. J. Peterson, Mrs. M, N.
Cleveland, Mra. W. P. nrook* Jr..
Mrs. C. C. McManus, Mrs. Myron
Smith, Mrs. Fred Myers, Mrs. J.
L. Jackson, Mra. W. McLellnn.
Mra. J. F. Lewis, Mrs. Myrtle
Moore, Mra. A. J. Walker, Mrs.
R. I . Peurlfoy, Mrs. T. A. Stiles,
Mrs. Rinis Bella Cistern), Mra. H.
H. Martin, Mr*. H. B. Carter. Mr*.
W. O. Rtansell and Mra. W. C.
BumblerTop squares of left over ham
loaf with slices of canned penchesj blend a little of the peach
syrup with prepared yellow mus­
tard and spoon over the garnished
squares. Bake in a,hot oven, bast­
ing a few times, until
hot
through.

(• end 10 year) will meet at the
church at 2:30 p. m.
The rtrit Baptist Intermediate
G, A.'s will meet et the churcn
et 4:00 p. m.
The First Baptlit Carol Choir
will hold rehearsal at 4:14 p. m
The Firil Baptlit Junior Royal
Ambassadors will meet at the
Church at 7 p. m.
Tha Men'a Brotherhood of the
riret Baptist Church will have
their monthly aupper and program
meeting beginning at 7 p. m. in the
Memorial Educational Building.
The Firit Baptiat Church Chohr
The PtrsTSapUePJunior G. A.'a will hold rebaarul at 7:10 p. m

D G E

• ffe r s
fo r

*S 5

MONDAY
The WMU of the First Baptist
'Church meets at 10:45 a. m. in
lha cnurch. Covered dish luncheon
at noon. Program at 1 p. m. Sub
Ject, "Building Roads Together"
Program leader, Mrs. W. P.
Brooks Jr. There will be a church
nursery for small children.
A covered dish supper will be
held at 7 p. m. In the IOOF hall
honoring all Oddfctlows and Rebekahi Members are urged to at­
tend. Rntertalnment Is planned,
ment of the Sanmrd Woman's Gub
will meet at 8 p. m. In the Gub
house on Oak Ave. The program
will be a muslclal variety program
with Alison Lee, Don Breckenrldge
and a dance trio from the Duxbury School of Dancing. Hostesses
will b« Mrs. Willis Paacock chair­
man, Mrs. H. H. Grier, Mrs. W
P. Lanier and Mrs. Denver Cor­
dell.
The Elsie Knight Circle of the
First IUp{/tl Church will meet at
R p. m. In tha Educational Build­
ing of Ihe Church with Mrs. Estrll Gtisson as haslets.
St. Marks Chapter of the Wo­
man's Auxiliary wilt meet at I
p. m. at the home of Mr. and Mrs
Frank L. Miller, 2418 Palmetto
Av6. wit! Mrs. Esther Ridge. Mra.
Amelia ( 'a will give a lesion
on Esther of the Bible. Members
are urged to attend.
Circlet of the Women of the
First Presbyterian Church will
meet as follows: No. t Mrs.
Ralph Austin Smith, chairman,
with Mrs. Mary Roily. 1112 Myrtle
Ave., at 3 p. m.; No. 2 Mra. W. L
Roche, chairman, with Mrs. Louise
Carman, 200 W. 20th St., at 1:90 p.
m.; No. 3 Mra. Claude Howard,
chairman, with Mra. G. H. Brawn,
1114 Park Ave. with 5tra. K. W
Fite as co-hostess at 3 p. an.; No.
4 Mrs D. C. Howard, chairman,
wilh Mrs. J. L. Wilkinson, 1209
Oik Ave., with Mrs. O. C. Mc­
Bride as co-hostess at 3 p. m.;
No. 3 Mrs. George A. Stine, chair­
man. with Mrs. W. A. Ludwig, 808
E. 4th St., with Mra. John Etck as
co-hostess at 9:45 a. m.; No. f
Mrs. Arthur C. Moore, chairman,
with Mrs. H. H. McCaslln, 1041
Mellonvllle Ave., with Mrs. P. 8.
Smith as co-hostess at 3 p. m.{
No. 7 Mrs. W. D. Simpson, chair­
man, with Mrs. A. G. McTnnlt.
900 Palmetto Ave., with Mra P.
T. Meeki and Mra. Fred Dud­
ley as co-hostess at 3 p. m.;
Evening Circle No. 1 Mrs. W S.
Brumley, chairman, with Mra.
Mabel Brown, 1114 Park Ave. with
Mra. John Smith and Mrs, J. C.
Waltsr aa co-hoateiaes at 8 p. m.
Evening Circle No. 3 Mrs. M. M
Land chairman, with Mra. Thomas
Cobb, 111 bak Ave., at 8 p. m.
A course on China wilt begin at
the regular monthly bualnesi meet­
ing of the WSCI of tha Pint Meth­
odist Church at 10:18 a. a .
TUESDAY
Sanford Lodge No, 61 will obaarve Good Will Night honoring
all Master Masons from DaBary,
and tha Nival Air Station. Suppar
will ba served la tha banquet ball
Masonio Temple promptly at 1:90
p. a . All master masons ara cor­
dially invited In attend.
The Fidelity Gasa trill meat at
I D. m. with Mr* W. R. Wlllia,
4M Scott Avi. Group its Is In
charge of tha party. Mrs. Buford
Brown la chairman.
Tba Golden Circle Gaaa of the
Firtt Baptist Church will meat
with Mra. D. 8 . Watton at 801 I ,
Hth Street.
Tha W ira Bible G m win have
a covered dish (upper at MeKlntay
Hall at 7 p. m. Hostesses are Mr.
and Mra. W. A. Tyre. Mr. and
Mra. Jack Burney, Mra. J. R,
Moolshan, Mrs. C. Chorpcnlng Sr.
Tha Cruaadar Choir (Junior
Boys) will hold rehaarsal at tha
First Baptist Church at 9:90 p. ra.
Tha First Baptist Intermediate
Boyat Ambassador* will meet at
tha church at 7 a. m.
Tba Pint Baptist Concord Choir
,wiO hold rehearsal at 8:10 p. m.
WEDNESDAY
Tha Social Department of tba
Woman'a Gub wiU have a bridge
and samba party at tha Gub
House at 1:90 p. m. Hostesses a n
Mrs. J, B. Baker, Mrs. D. G Ho­
ward and Mn. i . o . Huff.
Tba Vint Baptist Junior 0 . A.*e
(11 and IX year) will meat at the
church at 1:90 p. m.
Tha t i n t Baptist Carol Chohr
will hold rehearsal at 4:11 p. m.
T U First Baptist Prayer Meet­
ing service will begin af 7:90 p.
m. We, oostiimss with the atudy ad
"A Winning Witness."

Mrs. G. Herman
Is Special Guest
Of Circle No. 9

o r i

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THY 8ANTORD HBNALTT
Frt. Mnr. 11, 1955
Page f

Wednesday evening Ihe Business rd by different members. Mrs.
Women's Circle of the Lake Mary Cochran wilt make the coffee and suppers In the church were dleMrs. Thomas C. Blalsdell re­ Presbyterian Church and hus Mrs. Anderson will take charge cussed and their need stressed.
turned yesterday from a three hands met wilh Mr and Mrs P of Ihe pies.
The April meeting will be with
weeks visit at Indian Rocks Beach D Anderson. Mr*. Walter I. Pip­
Mr Piper has already arranged Mrs. J. M. Thompson.
At ihe conclusion of the business
er, president presided over the the program, which will Include
Mr*. Bessie Wlrimian flew back women's meeting. The hostess led Dr. It W. Rurker. soloist from session Ihe hostess served coffee,
to her home in Pittsburg, Pa. the devotions ami Mrs. S. P. Fow­ Snnford. a quartet and reader and fruil iulce, angel food, fruit cake
yesterday after spending seven ler. secretary, road Ihe minutes of Harry Wester, pianist. Mr*. Evan* and mints to the Rev. and Mrs. J.
weeks with her brother and sister- the previous meeting which were a-kcil the ladies present lo assist M. Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. Wal­
in law Mr and Mrs. Frank Lloke. approved. Mrs. Frank Evans re­ her, March 15. at the annual Pio­ ter I. Piper, 5Ir. and Mrs. Frank
404 Palmello Ave.
ported a balance in the treasury neer Night A harbeque supper for Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Zimmer­
members and husband* was plan man and guests, Mr. and Mra.
of over $80.
Mr and Mrs Samuel Cartrr nf
Mrs J. M Thompson, retiring nod for a later date, al the home William Ferguson of Afton, New
PeBary hat e as Iheir house guests, president read two letters of thanks of Mrs. If. M Cochran She was York, Mrs S. P. Fowler, Mra. H.
Mrs. Mary Gulnan and Mrs. Agnes one from the church supported appointed chairman and wilt pick M. Cochran, the Bcv. L. W. Scott
Klcrs. nf Brooklyn. N V. who will Mission School, at Sunset Gap, her own assistants. Fellowship and P. D. Anderson.
be visiting fiw two weeks with Tenn fnr orange* sent them in
Ihem before leaving for Fort January and Hie other from the
Lauderdale and Miami where they Migrant's Workers' staff for
will visit for about two weeks
Christmas gifts fnr migrant child­
ren sent them in December. It
Duncan I. Hasell. brother of was learned that Ihe church's
Mrs. Eleanor Ravenri nf Sanford, quota of Overseas Sewing had al
21 Jones St. N. Y.. Is crilirallv III ready been met. without help
In Bechman Hospital in Manhat from the Business Women's Cir
tan.
dr
Ladles Aid o f the Lutheran Church o f the
The secretary was authorired
Mus Mary Allen and Mrs Sloops In send Mrs L. W. Scoll, absent
Redeem er, will hold a hnkt mile, 8nturd»jr
and danghler, Patricia, were due to illne's, a get well card
guests of Mrs. F.lirabelh Colley which should also express the
of 240.7 Stevens Ave. this past &lt; groups appreciation of her work
m orning nl 8 :3 0 in front o f Senr'a Itoehuck
week.
as chairman of the World Day nf
Prayer program for I.akc Mary
nnd Co.
Friends of Wllllsm F Ravenri Another card was directed to Mrs.
Jr. will be sorry In hear that he E K Loyd Jr who has been ab­
Is In the Orange Mrinnrlal Hos- sent for several months, due to
pital In Orlando.
illurss
Final plan* were made for the
Mrs John Galloway has gone lo annual Community Slug, schedul­
Alexandria, Va. lo visit her sister, ed (or March 2t Mrs J M. Thom
Mrs. E F. Campbell. She will be p-nn was appointed chairman, as
gone about a month.
sl»tcd hy Mrs 11 M. Cochran
and Mr*. P. D Anderson. Each
now.
Roierl W. Ohm and Mrs Varl- member will bring a pie. Other
Chariri Wllkr'i hark In elrcula na Ohrn of Westfield, N. Y., are items, such as napkins, plates, cof
tlnn, an all nf yon girls with your visiting Mrs. F J. Willink and fee, cream and sugar were dnnatfine to expansion of our buslnese
secret crushes on Charles won't Mr. and Mra. Grover Williams.
have to keep it a secret any long­
wo have moved into larger quarters —
er. . . Larry Rales' got a dale
Mrs Newton Evans, has return­
with Snn|a Mnnfnrtnn for their ed to her home in West Palm
Circle No, Two of the First
parly Intilghl. and Sandra's got a Beach after spending a wrek with
date with Terry Smith nf rourse tor mnthrr, Mrs. Josephine Jonra, Methodist rhurrh met Monday
afternoon at the horns of Mrs. A,
Sandra Peterson and David Hos- on French Ave.
J.
Collum.
ark are going steady at last, and
The meeting was opened with a
Ihcy sure do make a mighty rule
prayer hy the chairman, Mrs.
couple. Nancy While and Alan
ROOMS 200 - 202 MEISCH BUILDING
Alhcrl Hickson, who also rend a
Maffott are still going strong
poem entitled "Talents are TieaHigh* now nothing could break
Formerly located at 110 North Park Ave.
Ihem up.
Members of the Women's Bible sures". The study eoursa was
Ronrrt Harvey and Barbee Class of Ihe First Baptist Church given hy Mr*. O. E. White. Re­
Brown see slill a darling couple, met Tuesday evening at the home port* were made hy the secretory,
and slill Just as craiy about one of Mrs. Voile Williams, (Wt9 Mag­ Mrs. Zrb Ratliff, the treasurer,
★
------------------------- ★
another aa ever. Linda Kanncr Is nolia Ave. A short business ses­ Mr*. J. It Nicholson and the
slill moonry eyed over Gene sion was condurled hy the presi­ Courtesy chairman, hits. Claude
Phara, and I think that she's fin- dent. Mrs. J. B Fields during Ilemdnn.
All payments should ho mnde at our
Members • ••• ••minded of the
ally winning her battle to eap which some old and new matters
diffeient
events
In
take
place
in
luring hi* heart
were discussed.
now location or ntnil to P. O. 857
Roger Garnrr lost his ear Wed
An interesting letter was read Mnrrh and report* wrr* given nf
neaday night, and finally found It from Mrs. George Dixon, who is visits to the County Home and the
hy the third hair on the haachilt now living In Arlington, Mass. shut-ins,
I
Delicious refreshments of Iced
field next lo the school There will Mra. Williams closed with prayer
tea Slid pie were served by Die
be a llheral reward for any In­ for alrk memhrra.
formation at In who pushed the
The social chairman, being ab­ hostesses to the following! Mrs.
rnr,
sent because of sickness, could not P 1m Barks, Miss Ella Holton,
Carol Null and Jimmy Owen plan games, so the memher* rm Mi*. Tutu t'hnpnmn, Mrs. W, I’ .,
are a rule couple, hut Jimmy lakes joyed an hour of chll-rhal while Chapman. Mis A. J. Collum,
spell* when he won't even talk to the hostesses served delicious re­ Mrs. J. E. Courier, Mu. Claude
Carol What's the matter with you freshment* to the following mein Herndon, Mr*. Albert Hickson,
Rnoma 200 . 202 Melech Bldg.
anyway Jimmy. I know a doxen hers: Mr*. ('. R. Kessler, Mrs. It. Mr*. L. t. Hughey, Mrs. W. It.
boys who would like to be In your It. Beck, Mrs. J. B. Fields. Mrs. Klrhy, Mrs. J. II. Nicholson, Mrs.
boot*
A B. Lovrjoy, Mrs. G. S. Selman, Peter Monje, Mrs. 7.eh Ratliff,
Telephone 1600
Couple of the .wrek: Marty Mrs. W. M. Volt, Mr*. LKtrrll, Mr*. C. tj. Pale, Mrs. O. E. White.
Catnernn and Al Phillips, congra­ two visitor*, and Mr*. Tony Pitch- Mr*. I* E, Whits. Mra. Henry
tulations to you two
ford, Mra. O (1. Ilnller.
Lumb, and a visitor Mrs. Norman.

*
.
.. tm i.K N
With six-weeks exams over with
once again, all are looking for­
ward to a big weekend to celebrate
their good-fortune, or their last
night of freedom for the next sixweeks.
Ba-.eball practice has started
once again, and quite-s-few- hoys
are tryinc out thl. year. Wl'b all
the new enthusiasm, we should
have a team that'* "tops".
The hoys who have been late
to classes, and caught skipping
hase been gUrn the Joh of raking
ths yard, and since the faculty
thought tl unfair to only have a
Job for the hoys they are thinking
about something suitahle for the
girls.
The hand sounds heller Ihan
ever this -year after all its hard
practice. One thing for certain
is thal they’ re going to walk away
carrying all the honors at district.
Now for some gossip; Robert
Samuel and ttarhara O'Barr have
Item hitting II off quite well late
!y, and Robert's walking around
the hall like he’ s in a dare, and
I might say the same thing about
Barbu* Dallas Turner and Gerri
Spivey are having one of those
"off and on" romance*, hut I
think It'll turn out mostly "on " In
the finale.
Sue Hayes and Joe Fisher are
slill going steady amt 1 think ll's
Hunt* lu hi- that. »* y for a long
time, an all you girts with rrushe*
on Joe Just might as well give
up. ft won't do you a hit of good.
Ronnie Rnhlsnn it walking one nf
our new girls to elasaes every day

BAKE SALE

WE’VE MOVFrM

Has Study Course

Our New Location

Williams Home Is
Scene Of Meeting

Oaklawn Memorial Park

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T H E SAN FORD H E R A LD

M . M at. I t , 1955

N CAA Tourney Action
Is Scheduled Tonight
By 0RLO ROBERTSON
T ie Associated Press
The NCAA Bsaketbill TournaBunt' swings back into action on
lour regional fronts tonight with
LaSalle’s defending champion* In
sight, of a record-tying perform­
ance- highly regarded Kentucky
-trials to break Its own scoring
lark and No. 1 ranked Sin Franiico bucking a 15-year-old jinx.
Out o[ the play In the regional
competition tonight and tomorrow
at Philadelphia, Evanston, 111.,
G om llii. Ore., and Manhattan,
Kan., will come the four winners
for the semifinals and champion­
ship rounds at Kansu City March
bft-18.
| If LaSalle, led by AU America
Tom Cola, gets p u t Princeton,

Ivy Leaguo Utleholder, at Phlla
delphla tonight and then beat* tho
Csnlsius-VUIinova winner in the
regional final tomorrow night, the
Explorers will tie the Oklahoma
Aggies at eight for the greatest
number of NCAA Tournament vic­
tories without a defeat.
The Aggies won three In each
of their 1!HS and ’46 championship
years and eaptured two more In
1949 before losing to Kentucky In
the finals. LaSalle piled up five
victories en route to the title list
y u r and ilresdy has beaten West
Virginia this year. Last year w u
the Explorers’ first experience In
the tournament
The first point Kentucky scores
against Mirquctta tonight it Evan­
ston will be tha 1,000th for the

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Wildcats in 18 games of NCAA
championlthip play since 1942.
Iowa, Big Ten champion, tackles
Penn State In the other half of
the Evanston double-header. Penn
State's attack la built around 6-3
Jest* Arnelle.
At Corvallis. Ssn Francisco will
be trying to accomplish something
no West Coast team has been able
&gt;o do since Stanford won top hon­
ors in 1942. Since then not a West
Cosit five n il reached the finals.
The Dons, headlining All Amer­
ica Bill Ruisell, hive lost only
one game while piling up 23 wins.
But they will be meeting a tough
jutflt In seven-ranked Utah (23-3),
the Skyline champions.
Oregon State, presenting 7-3
Swede Hslbrook u its No. 1 of­
fensive threat, carries the banner
of the Paclfie Coast Conference
■gainst Seattle, a team the Beav­
ers beat by five points without
their star during the regular sea­
son.
The survivor of the double-head­
er at Manhattan almost certainly
will bear a "dark horse" Itbel in
tha championship finals. The top
entry, based on tha Associated
Press poll, it 15lh-ranked Colorado
1 18-5), the Big Seven champion.
The Buffaloes meet 16-th-rated
Tulsa ( 2M ), eotitliit of tha Mis­
souri Valley Conference.
The other game sends Southern
Methodist (18-7) Southwest Conferrnca cbtmplon, against the oftbeaten Bradley (8-19), runner-up
to LaSalle last year. But fans
point out that Bradley alio was
lightly regarded last year yet
moved Into the finals.

r m iT r a c e —«/t«i— rim* m
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Thursday's
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DALLAS—
Btrmlniham,
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WEST PA1

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10 10

4 Unknowns Clamp Down
As Cards Blast Out 7-0
*

By ED WILKS
The Associated Press
Larry J a c k s o n , Floyd Wool­
dridge, George Scholls and Hero
Moford may not be names you'll
find in a kid’s autograph book,
but you can bet the rent money
they lulled Eddie Stanky into a
nice restful sleep last night
Not that Stanky hasn't been
sleeping well of nights, but after
whit those four right-handers did
to the New York Yankees yester­
day the St. Louis Cardinals man­
ager must have dosed right’off.
Tba l o u r unknowns clamped

down on the Bombers and gave
up just a sheepish infield single
while the Lards wero batting ou:
a 7-0 decision. The Yanks man­
aged to get only five balls out of
the infield, all easy flies.
Bob Turley, the young right*
nander the Orioles traded.off to
the Yanks much to the disappoint­
ment of Baltimore f a n s , was
clubbed for five runs in the second
inning and two in the third.
Bullet Bob Is the guy who’s sup*
posed to b r i n g the American
Leagua pennant to tha Yankees.
The f o u r Card newcomers

weren't tbp only hurlers who got
off to a good start, but there
weren't many more.
Boston slammed 13 hits and
Washington 10 In a game won by
the Red Sox 6-3; Cincinnati and
the Chicago White Sox stroked the
same number as the Pale Hose
won 10-7; Pittsburgh got 15 and
the new Kansas City Athletics 12
before the Pirates won 9-8 In 10
innings; and the Chicago Cubs outhit Cleveland 15-9 but lost 9-7.
. The only other pitching perform­
ances p o p p e d up as Brooklyn
caught up with Milwaukee 5-3 In

Sports
Roundup

a night game and Philadelphia
heat Detroi, 4-3.
Robin Roberts fanned the aide
after a tea doff triple in the first,
and although the Tigers got a 2-1
iead against him and Herm Webmeler, Willie Jonea dumped a
bases-loaded double in the eighth
to give new Alanager Mayo Smith
hi* first victory.
Pinky Higgins, the new Red Sox
manager, alto got off on the right
foot with Ted Lepclo and Milt
Bolling giving him a push. Lcpcio
had threo bits, including a homer,
and Bolling hid three rum batted
in.
The Brooks got some help from
rookies' and Sandy Amoros, till]
trying to make the grade in the
outfield Dm Zimmer tied it with
a two-run homer and Charlie Neal
tripled to acore the winning run
on Amoroi single.
Shortstop Dick Groat, back from
the army, broke up the game (or
Pittsburgh, dropping ■ single to
score the winning run against tlic
A’ l.
Rookie Bill Meyer stepped In to
save the Indians after the Cubs
got to Bob Hooper for four ruqi
In the ninth.
Minnie Mlnoio grand-slammed
for the White Sox. The Redtegi,
who used six pitchers without
much effect, were chirged with
eight errors.
Torn between two sportj care­
ers—pro basebtU and pro basketball—Dick Groat plans to stick with
baseball U he has a good year
at shortstop with the Pittsburgh
Pirates.
The basketball AH American,
who jumped from the campus of
Duke University to the majors in
1953. Is back with the Pirates aftei
two years in the Army. He turned
down a winter of basketball with
the Fort Wayne Pistons of the NBA
Jo give basebsll "the big try. ’
"This Will be the first time I’ ve
ever started a baseball season
fresh and ready," he slid at the
Pirates' training eamp. “ Always
before I had Just been through a
strenuous basketball season. 1 want
to find out for myself U It really
makes any difference."

By GAYLE TALBOT
TAMPA (ft — This being a day
when good relief pitching becomes
of greater Importance with each
passing season, as witness what
Hoyt Wilhelm and Marv Grissom
did for the Giants, wa expressed
the thought that Birdie Tebbetts
might live to regro the day he
parted with Frank Smith, who ap­
peared In 50 games for him last
year.
In exchange for Smith, the On
cinnatl manager acquired title to
Kay Jablonski, a third baseman
who unloaded 104 runs batted In
for the SL Louis Cardinals, and
Gerry Staley, who was a stand­
out pitcher a few years ago and
still la young enough to make a
comeback. Birdie, who hsa Just
been rewarded with a new threeyear contract for having raised the
Redlegi up to fifth place in the
National League In '54, said yes,
there always was a chance of mak­
ing a mistake in inch a deal.
"But it was a chance I couldn’ t
turn down, getting such a slugger
as Jablonski into my lineup," he
said. "1 know 1 already bad pow
er, but you can never get too
much. There’s a possibility 1 will
find myself another reliefer as
good as Smith was, but how often
are you offered a hitter who can
D A D A N D D AU G H TER — Ken Chapman, Infielder for the
knock in over 100 runs?
R ichm ond V lrglnlanii, poaea with hlo daughter, Eleanor, at
"It could help both clubs, and I
the tu rn 's spring training camp here. (S ta ff Photo)
really mean it. Tha Cards were
badly In need of a man who could
gtvo them a One inning or two
near tha end of a game. They moat
have lost 35 er 30 because they
didn’t hav* such • pitcher last
year. If Smith can do for them
what be did for us the first half of
the aesaon, they’re In better shape.
He seemed to tire, but ha eould eral manager.
Honk Greenberg, who mid*
come back strong, and I hope be
quite a reputation ai an authority
AUGUSTA, Ga. (£*) — A pair o f long-driving Georgians, defend­
on the homer from the batting
ing champion Louisa 8uggo of Sea Ioiand and Mary Lens Faulk of
end a lew years back, oaid It won’t
Thomasviiie, today led a picked field Into the second round of the
•urpriae him If the Indites collect
Women’o Tltleholdero Golf tournament.
about IN horoere to eclipse the
Mioe Suggs, showing no aftereffects of the Tirui end asthma
mark at 163 oet by the New York
that sidelined her loot week, ’
1 — ...................
..............
Yaskaaa in m
knocked a stroke o ff par yesterday which caused her to mils the last
That year the Yaska bad ouch
with a first round 71 that barely two tournaments, matched par for
■lugger* a» Lou Gehrig, BiU Dick*
edged Mies Faulk for tho lead.
nine holes but faltered and took a
ey, Red Rolfe and a rookie named
In third place with 7S was hefty 39 coming back for 7S and e tie
Joe' DiMagfio.
Jtcki* Pung, tho hard-swinging for fifth. Tho Bab* Is looking for
It would pleat* the Isdlaai greet*
Honolulu houiowife, whose play her fourth Tltieholders crown,
ly if tom* of tha home run power
shows today since they opes the
has been steadiest of all tho top
Mlsa Berg, a winner hen f i n
sprint exhibition series with the
female pros on tha winter tourna- times, carded a 88*31— 76.
ment circuit.
Marilyns S m i t h , attractive
New York Giants st Phoenix. New
York, ell recall, took four straight
Two veterans, who with Min blonde from Wichita, Kan., crowd*
from the Tribe la tha World Serial
Suggs have captured ID of the 15 *d into tho leaders' company
prestlge*hiavy Titlaholders chant- largely on the strength o f e seaDuring the spring training senptenshlns, remained very much In aational 84 on tb* first nlns. She
contentions.
slumped to 40 on the way beck son, National League teems will
Mrs. Dabs Zaharlai, still weak when her putts began going play in SI itetee end the District
from n severe bout with n cold1astray.

Although Groat Is all wrappc-J
up in his baseball career, he is
curious to know how he would go
in a full season with the Piitons.
In the winter of 1552, Fort Wayne
(lew him to and from the Dike
campus to play several games and
he averaged 13 pointa per game.
He realiies that his best chances
ul a financial stake for the future
ta in baseball.
Groat had a .264 average for 95
games with the Pirates in 1952.

STO PS
It ta i________________
_______________ b old
_
Chronic bronchitis may develop if
your cough, cheat cold, or acute broo*
chilis is not treated. Get Crtomnlaioa
nuickend uac asdirected. 11soothes riw
limit and chest membranes, loosen*
and helps expel rermy phlegm, mildly
relaxes ivitcmlc tension and aids
nature light the cause of liritstioo.
CreomuUion b guaranteed to plcaaa
you or druggist refund! money.

C R E- O- ,M
U L 'S IO N
Ckul CM*. Aeate Imcfctia

S P E C IA L

SALE/

You vet m en power p«r pound .T . mow a
flM h in f V-8 . . . o r thrifty Six. New, b
n o o th tnv«L Drive the M ierf car . . . •

ui aftiziif iiv
npir labrleait
fir iitlurfil

COMPARE IT

•••

Bif-oerriaotodatykt LookttthopriMtag! Stud*
in tho low price field! Yes, the price tag tells you. , •

why the gmort cmr to buy to

• » l v w u r h u ffin g

• • t ill m i l

P I

r-t-y:

_r

:- *

ttjt

E M U

r h

�WANT AD
RATES
$
I

t-R X A l OTATE TOE 1 U IE -I
Church Building #nd Comer lot
12th and Laurel. Apply Ul&gt;
Laurel.

U M U MJNE AO
GET i n n cash for articles you
INVESTM ENT
oo longer use. Mae# ynor ad to­
INVESTMENT
day. Phone 1*0.______________
A S-Uo# ad, roch as the ono above
G only Me per day on our low 5
Say earned rat# economy plan, 43c A truely nice 4 unit Apartment
house In excellent condition and
r day tor I daya and sic for
conveniently located. All com
day.________________ __________
plctcly furnished. Could make
A littl# tpae# like this wiU get
someone a fine home plus In­
your mceeag# before our more
come. Trice 123,000. Terms can
than 10.000 readers. Tell am to­
be arranged.
day! Phone UU.
*f*6fU
oaI R
m
aU
f
TO# above 4-lln# ad can b# rua
S full day* tor only 52.40, a d a p t Real Estate — Gen. Insurance
d r only jlJO and ona day tor T2c 201 Edwards' Bldg. Ph. IS or 2474
J. R. Alexander
T. M. Stringer
Sell. Rent, Hlr# with want
Reg. Real Estate Broken
the busiert talesman la
town. Put on# to work tar you.
Phoo# llX t W# wlU b# glad to How would YOU like several hun­
dred acres fine cattle land tight
chart# U.
on the St. John’s River?
We Havt 1L
For only *3.00 th# abov# S-Une ad
ta on th# Job for you or 5 full
gays’ Only 33 23 keep* It working
fir you tor S days. 1 day U only
Me,___________________________ _ Phone 1U9 A. 8. Peterson,Broker
Associates - A. B. Peterson Jr..
Call ua about our business rat##
P. J. Cheiterson. Albert N. Fitts
Garfield Willetts. John Meiscb
The Want Ad Department Is
.- n.
Loch Arbor
Sat.
tor TWO Lake Front Lots with TTae*
Priced tt,500. for both.
s a w r a s # . j n « v m.
tka day preceding publication.
Any ads coming In later than TWO inside, lots with trees on
paved St. 150 f t frontage priced
1:00 p. m. will be published undeat only $900. for both.
Too Lata To Classify.
Advertisers are requested t# n »
tliy tk# WasbAd Depsrtmept ltn&lt; Hobart A . WUlinmn, Realtor
_________
in th
mediately, w
d w
'
Ray mead E. Uadewiat. Aaaocla.j
heSanford Harald w U l-. Phone 1173 Atlantic Bank Bldg.
ads,
Is tor only ona incorrect
rat
NEW 3 BEDROOM, spacious ma­
sonry home, quiet section, near
It’s So E « y
t4®
o Pl*e#
A W ant A 4
ri
,t Call 1131 and ssk to r
ulring IJ.IOO.W down, balance
T i n t Ad department
ke rent.
(heford Herald
$1,300.00 down buys this almost
completely furnished j Bedroom
■ W H IP "-

INVESTMENT

P

I ♦'

■a

St&gt;John

AIR CONDITIONING
Room or House

n. B. POPE CO. INC.

20# South Park Ave.

Phone 144#

61 VARIETIES PANELING
Native and Foreign Woods
See Them At

Sherman Concrete Pipe Co.
Out West 13th St.

Phon# 2499

TOP Quality Pork for Home Freez­
ers. Meat Lockers. Call 1S02-J-1.

RED-I-MtX CONRRETE
Greasa Traps • Septia TankaWindow Sills • • Lintels.
Sand, Rock. Cement. Steel. Mortar

MIRACLE CONCRETE CO.

309 Elm Ave.

Pbooa 1333

SEWING MACHINES 135.00 up.
BERT'S 194 8. Park Phone ITU

JALOUSIES ft AWNINGS
Life time Glass and Aluminum
—Free Estimates—Free Instal­
lation—Telephone 1423. Furni­
ture Center. 11* W. First St.
ACCORDION. 120 Bats. 5 Weeks
old. 9 Switches, Colt *700.00,
Still has Guarantee. $175.00 or
best cash offer immediately.
Write Box 3, c/o The Harald.

METAL ROOFING
Now In Stock. 3-V Crimp —1U”
Corrugated— 2 's ” Corrugated.
Get all Your roofing need* at

Sherman Concrete Pipe Co.
Out West 13th St.

rhune 2189

WHY Sleap on an unromfrrtebla
bed? YOUR old Spring and Mat­
tress can be your down payment
on a new set at

ECHOLS BEDDING CO.

Corner 2nd A Magnolia
Ph. 1232
(Bed Bamberger, Mgr.)

ItA HELP WANTED (Female) 1#A 19—AUTOMOBILE DEALERS—19
GIRLS!
GIRLS!
GIRLS!
SELL YOUR CAR TO
Good Hours. Good Wares. Ap
Roy RrcFa Used Cara
ply In person at Seminole Drive
Sanford Ave &amp; 11th SL
In. Ml East First St.
BOATS - MOTORS
IIWOBK~WANTEP
-1 1 tft16 Horse Mercury
.Mark 2 0 .......... *10 per Mark
COOK to work davs. Experience.
1952 to Horse Scott
References. Thone 54-J.
*139 93
Atwater
CLEANING WOMAN. Cell T3RM-4 1952 5 H. P Srott Atuater *100 (V)
Horse Johnson ... ........ *110 0&lt;»
1 4 - SPECIAL g g lT IC M - 1 4 5Fiinrude
*49.95
7,cph&gt;r only
• All Motors Guaranteed
• INCOME TAX SERVICE
• or Trade ynur motor for
Wm. H. Murray
1955 Evinrude
UU Celery Ave.
Tel. U41-X-&amp;!
ROBSON SPORTING GOODS
304 TV. 1st St.
Phone #99
CARPENTER WORK
For quick repair Jobs, or
building. Call Jim 1143-M-4.
21t aST AND FOUND -21
ORLANDO Morning Sentinel, Or­ Watch found in r.ir. tinner mav
lando Evening Sur. Call Ralph
have same by paying for ad at
Ray. llto J .
Herald office.
Special — T V and R adio
LOST—Grey and Flue Parakeet
"Chirpy". Blue band on lee.
Service and Krpalrn
Phone 391. Reward —Zcllah
RCA Motorola Sales and service
Welsh.
Gene’s T eu co 8ervlee
UM Sanford Av#.
Pknoc l*&gt;* T9— ELECTRICAL SERVICES —21
DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINES
Randall Electric Co,
Kales - Rentals • Service
GARRE-TS
PEIONE 1422 Bendit and Cruilry Appliuires
YuungslurL Kltchc.v
l-Iirctnral cn^trarllne »nd remir*
Sfanley’n Hike Shop
112 Macnnlii Ave. Phone 113
310 E. 4U&gt; St. lei. 2434
Bicycle &amp; General Repair Keys
sates
Launmowar sharpen 4* Ser- FftlGIDAlHE apollancae
and service G 11. lUgh. Oviedo.
vict.
Fla. Phone 4131 or Sanford
1642-W slier 6 p.m
SWAIN’S BATTERY SERVICE
• Battery • Generator • Starter
Sanford Electric Co.
Road aervica. Phone 317. 402
It* Magnolia Ava.
Phone 442
E. 2nd St.
SEE Your General Electric dealer
for TV and Aoullances.
8#a Ua for quotations all Millwork
and Hardware Items before you
buy end be pleasantly surprised.
GORMLY INC.
CAMPBELL’S CABINET
“ Your Hot Point Dcjllor”
Hi-way IT-93 South
pfcooa lift 311 Palmetto Ate.
Ph. 77*

Regular U N
T-Shirts Me
Paint ........................ *2.30 gal. Camplate TELEVISION SERVICE a ! - ' o f f ic e 1 EOllPMBV*' ^ 2 3
on all makes and models.
Boys Western Dungarees $1.M
HAYNES Office Machine Co,
SANFORD ELECTRIC CO. Typewriters, adding maeatnes,
Pf ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS
11# Magnolia Ave.
Phone 442
Kaies-Renteia, 914 Magnolia, Ph
310 Sanford A\c.
Phone 1321
P. M. CAMPBELL
24beauty parlorr
-a t
Gtaartl Contractor
V E N E TIA N BLINDS
“ Homes of DliUncllcon"
(Nationally Adv. Rolla-Headt
The Nitionsl'HaIr Fashion iuilct
1411
11-Way 17-92
Manufactured in Sanford
aays "SHORT IIAin"
day’s market
Seminole Venetian Blind Or FLOOR SANDING 4k Finishing. Lei Our skilled Myllsla create a
new hair do to Hotter you. .
SR) Weat 3rd « t
Phan# M3
Oak Qoora furnished, laid 4 (in Eva Bess Beauty Shop Phone 563
Ubed.
Reasonable
terms.
In
bus­
- W, HEl
USED TRACTORS
s .'w p a :
t wPben*
" " °27
iness alaca 111*. Old floors made
Britt Treater Oe.
Uka aevr. E. P. Stevens; touts
"w E N e e # Y our'U stlnssU t i l IT-a* "
t. Box 221: Phon# TT9-R-4.
L. M. P A 880N B REALTY
FHA Financing
at S Petal*, Jets. 41# * IT-tt.
Foe Bamodeling and repair*
LO W ELL E. OZIER
Natklag Down—Small Moethly
M YEARS OP SATISFIED
Builder — fbepa 1159
Payments
SERVICE AND VALUES TO
Custom Rome* and Florida
S h a m a n Concrete Co.
OUR CUSTOMERS
Builder tew cost homes
Out Weat 13th
Phone 24K.
WA8
NOW
1.93 Utility Tablet ............ 4.30
RAYMOND M. BALL, REALTOR
LARGE suppry of Orangeburg fi
1.50 each Modern Table
8. D. Htghleyraan, Associate
bre pipe and fitting* for your
Lamps ............... 2 for 1.50
104 South Park Ave.
Phon# M&gt;
sowar needs.
1995 each Plastic Cocktail
Chairs ............ 2 for ll.oo
C. A. WHIDDON, SR.
41.50 Simmons Bex Spring
Rag. Real Batata Brakar
or Mattress ............ 31.50
ll# 8 . Park
Ph. im i
4S.95 Platform Rocker . . . 39.50
54.93 Club Chair ............ 31.30
W . H. -B I L L - 8TEM PEB
1007 Sanford Ave.
Phone 1113
59.50 5 pc, Wrought Iron
Dinettes .................. 4450 SEWING MACHINES— Repaired
M40 9 x 12 Agmlaitar
or rebuilt. Ala# machines for
Wool Bug ................ 50.00
aale. 911.00 up. Phone Houeaird
Phoae *lHAM&lt;I u ' ^ Park Ave.
40.50 Safa Bad ............... 52.50
1TI7-X-M. Box 249, Lake Mary
T9.50
Studio
Courh
.
.
.
.
59.50
Whether buying or sailing. M wQl
M.50 Contour Chair ...... 69 50
UPHOLSTERY- Slip covers made
59-50 Simmons Sofa Bed . 71.50
to order at
BALL REALTOR
249.50 Simmons
Florida Stela Bank Building
NIX
BEDDING MFC,. CO. 3
Hlde-a-Bed
1M.50
' Call Hall”
Phone 1T3I
1391 Sanford Av#.
Pho#e 1M J ca

S

t fUi BR U
n kitchenette n
t
F
N ITS iHnEt D
apt
6lumb#rland Court. Hiwsy 1T-W
South. Pita## IM4-W

Avalon AMs.
for Da#to
Si
tttAlUER SPACE- Available. P
per month. Children Welcome.
Lake Monro* Tr alter Court
Phone SM0.
______ _

V K U A SJ
4 Room Apartment 300 Park.
DOWNSTAIRS Apartment Large,
class roams. Bu* room- «u Park
Ave.
U R G E APT. on Lake Charm.
Includa* 3 Bedrooms and den.
Very reasonable. R. A. Cameron.
O viedo.------------- *
Tut heftnnm ft—‘-1—* ‘ r*~*
menL Clesa In. « I Oak Avm

Seminole Realty

flsrage Apt 1201 Magnolia.

THE SANFORD RERAIJ)
Fri. Alar. 11, 1955
Pag# T

-24

SPECIALIZING In Personality
Hair Cuts. LUliao McDonald's
Beauty Studio In Casselberry.
Hi-way 17-92 South. Phone W. P
27-2192. (Closed all day Monday)
Drop In— Free Parking
EASTER SPECIALS On Perman
eats. *8 so and *9 59 Includes
Shaping and Styling for YOU
Air conditioned, Soft Water aud
rcngiun Heatless Dryer*.
3 Senior Operator*
HARRIETTS BEAUTY NOOK
We give United Tradinc Sismp105 South Oak
Phone 971

TRAUNT POEGIVEN

RICHMOND, VA. ( # ) - Tha
school folks war* not tough with
Berkley Henley when ha cut his
eighth grade claiiti. Berkley spent
the summer on hn uncle’s farm
and got interested In retting tebacco When the rnirkit opined her#
—on a school day — Berklay told
*243 from the patch he cultivated.
A book-rasding feel
Think* eur tleulftad t mre

More anII(Mining than n Hm I.

15— LAUNDRY BERWICK ~V&gt;
• One hour
Wad) and Damp
Dry
Waib and Dry
• Onr hour H
Fold
• Fmi*h»d Laundry
• Sanitnne Dry Cleaning
Southwide
Ijiundrom at
South Side Food mart Bldg.

•F YOUli AD WE
SPACE n WO
EVERYONE'S
THU HAS k~

IN East 2*th fit

r iPI.mvO SERVICE
-27
L. k
Sill—Piano Technician
Rhone 2154 Route 1. Sanford
re—

RKSTAURANTS

YOU!

-7 1

YOU! YOU!

Home cooked Meals
Real Pit Bar-B Q
Chill, Hot Dug*
All Kind* of Sandwiches
Good Coffee
at Clydes Grill
206 Sanfard Ave.
K E R O S E N E
17c PER GALLON
IT YOUR
IM PERIAL
SE R V IC E STATION
1209 S PARK AVE.

II «lt| par YOU to nee (JR
b*(or# yau k«7- Upa# fi'an in i*
and Sunday*.
Ka.l.ide Trailer Sale*.
I’ alalka, Fla.

AN O B U U O tN G N E E D S

SHERMAN CONCRETE
PIPE CO.
Out Wept 13th 91-

FOR
NUM BER

2

GOOD and BAD

M3-M E- lit BL

Phone m

grading. Troaa
and _
m#ved. Dewitt
Hunter. 90| E. 39th SL

RANDALL ELECTRIC CO.
T V SERVICE CENTER

• Factory Supervised Service
CONCRETE
BEDROOM,, taparata dining
• House calls 9 a. tn. till 9 p. m
Mixed Concrale. Concrete
room. Large center lo t 2423 Ready
(All makes and models)
Block, Sand, Gravel, Cement
Princeton Ave.
Phone 3400
Concrete Pip# to Meet All Quali­ lift Mag. Av*.
fication*. .
SRRmrfl
PIMM 2449
Vacuum Cleaner Berate#
garage, laundry roam, flow-era. Sherman Control# Pip# Co.
Pho&gt;# TI4X-J
Phone 1UD-J-3.
Out Wait Util 84.
Parte and Supplies for All Make*
—Rentals—
SMITH - CORONA Portable Type­
writer. Perfect condition, phone HALL’S GARAGR for aenaral
__ Auto
199T-W after 8 p. n*.
Service.

• ir a is s w f c s a
CLEAN and Attractive
lira or upstaifa. —

grave. Eaay tenea.

■new.
IBPhon#
S M 7M-M-4.
B M S r t lS

PLUMBING

{ I K ,M a r t ’s WFBNCk!

OR LEASE, Package ator# and FOR SALE; Bargain. 4 Burner Contract and renvir work. Tree
estlmatea. R. L Hervey. SM
Electric Rauga. Deep tw e l l ,
Grocery, Seven, room,
Banferd Av#-, g » n e 1|34
tioTVhMeb
ENVELOPES," '^Iteritei dkT 4 ~
meats, invoice#, hand bUla.

J -ror eaccrt, euFEC

-Sts

CJINtripsNTiAL., PBOjrfiT a CAPE A! I»MT

mm

i## Union.

true

3sp-‘
-ten. 122-M.
. . . ___
fine Large Lot
SUNBEAM IRONS
ehade and fruit
.
Near 114.93 Value— 110.12 including tax.

rooms

'

55T

M M M
ISa f e
*"

" r ;*

'

Chrome dinette #xteniion
iblnct, metal top
suite . . . .
.reduced

22.50
22.30
Moo
409

M i W teisiu In*

'

Hmmtr

Boyd'W allace

n S in

"■aair

“

"-■Y tZ

A FARM
‘

jsa.er

~

$ 1

lS 5^ B e,S F t * S 2
! P r in t C o. Di

Iran. Yellow

_____ Trailer, 10 feel
Ltins^Mr*. Purvis, £an-

r. *
-

•4

i

1

” ■■■—t »w# BrAum«u....r

Q

^
3

5L0DLN
W ^V JC f

H ILL LUMBER b SUPPLY YARD

ftiu lM

Mather Of Sanford

Phon* 2499

C A LL TH E

Golden Jubliee

masenry-conatrucied h o m o #
Ceramic Bath, vinyl til* or oak
oorl, screened perch, Carports
lota, Terms, L. J, RJiner,
T, 9420
Ave.

HOUSE Furnished. 1303 Elliott

BEAUTY PARLORg

r But t p o n 't uNPee3TArut&gt;...\vwiir

,UAt£g» RCFM '.F SO IWtWTANT7

�I

Page S

FH . " r jr . 11. 1»5*» T H E S A M -O K H U b stA L D

'3

T ELEV ISIO N

I

UtJb -T l

?;*4 P#|t Ihe Clofk
t nn Jickle tllrteon
9 on Two For Th* Money
1110 Mv Favorite 11unbend
I ProfVtftfltiOal Father
in in Pay ftnleer fhow*
11: no ftop th# Mu»lc
12. U fiten Off
%r%D4 t i.n .
a
T#rt Pattern
IA:A4 f#3imp Un»o Iff Feet
in in peft«r Home* for Better
Llvlnp
MsAn 5 H pre* by tern Churrh
11 nn 3*r.UP Pefleril Inrame Tai
tr s n u pm .
Carnival
12 *a
L%*rie
;

CVUKUO

4ftiit&gt;|*M to '"IsaKf 44ifii*iil
F H in u r n .
» n &lt;1 MP&gt; "

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I

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o c s rn t*h4i
&lt;*
r * *-!vit
r ,* ? » 't 111 f l 3 ‘ T
Acva-Mgpo •*
1’ *&lt;*!* 44**JI
H *%*s #r -‘S* » 1 - $■p&lt;if t §
f**.%»*r tfmsthtr* n#p«rti

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"E*&lt;*luilv#'— Fulton L*«ih
Jrhn D»ly K«wi
t r »P ▲ fUronft
&gt;! »*••*
T'rp
r i
&lt;&gt;t Si at*
Ts* Vi**
Th* L1p&lt;mid
porson to Paraon
Inn*r Sanctum
» w
W#tthnr
T mt#p TP^fttrr
N*» ) ' 3I
B iff • ** ■t
• ATI * n * T

1 .1 Norihw t #t

S 1A MnmpMe

4 fA
4 20
^ AA
« *t

? *A
7:SA

K f w i ‘ W « i i 'h * r
3 A er&gt; Mr, Wliarrt

t An
1 '0

1« JO Jlnpalnnc CaaftMy
Si An Winky*Dli»W *n4 T«n
IS mi&gt; fr-Minr E'l* Q m i
is • Tfc* P c '•op
S ATI ft D IX P H.

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What 1* Th* Worl&lt;I
Y«uth T*Va A Stand
/?
/ l "0 Tro Bavkothall
f I o DiiRftroua Afpicnmcnt
I A Art Pavla
a a®
I 19 Central F t . Sh-'r**!*
? ' A i.r ! aft a T ft 'i s * Show
T 1 Li .» of p H«*/
1 I o J,*rk # G l* A f*D
OM#mnbll«» OM*Sp* uewtatf
1 ' ‘ n 8* r vIr * 1* Our B«itun**»
1 A If If Parade
Si *a EliU* Gftftor Sht&gt;«st *a C ?'*•*»repe
1. «i f *“*ji *r Thal
: ' *» v # ».j w »«th*r
S.AS fiifP G!f
%l M I U I’ it.
J ',1 8 » n On
1'
4V*athrr-N*w* Brief*
5 '•1 Thl* If The Life

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s:

Msft1u m &lt;1* r*rty

a f r- • !f

.1"*

u ttn ii-T i'

lE u M .n

ft t A f irf tin Gallant

w I't.w i &gt;mir*i
r » ! U l v P.w.

7 *n &gt;»e*» rorllr* Arrher
7 *A Sir Peeper*
ft '*A Go’ fat* Corned* Hour
A *T T#’ ev|*lnn Plavhotjft*
|A AA Ln^etta Tounr Show
to 1A Pari* Preoinrt
11 *A N# w#
II "J Punday Theater
13 II New*
ii in Bian Off

port it Fi'*# Lifa

•1 II Rrid of Life
i *a Otrrv M«*i*
i An v#m We&gt;r,rr Spnrir

i ’.A ivyitern PI i iouia
7 ao v
Little SfTrcia
7 :(1 r &amp; s .TV S'a%t
i 7 It Ferry Crmo
\S aa Mj rr. i

5 f'O Tapper

y no pii *«Vi*e of tft.tr*
, A: SO 1*10 BrenV*
fn The Lineup
1A
n*20 perren to perils

/
(

i AO jlfr* l 1-4 M eythtf
i SO* Ll»#

«*

a

M * a ' » At ivier*

tfirn Of*

«4Ti %n i t i . il
T#M Ptit#m
IMurtry on Ptrtd*
pin Tin Tin Jr.
tftory Tln*r

1 10
S IS
tf ao
0 *0
is

f . - . O e r Sill C ir to n n a

1A f'O C r*»* F ?4S h
3 a * A f --;:r.n c
M r if f.c 'l

II fo

fi .flVy pu k

IS ! 0
la -to

inO Y*u

C»rt. MlOn.cht
inir Top

fttTl HD AT IML
tftirff Cirru#
f ; * i r I To»l Lrnon
f t
Cs V 'r i'tf
J r ?*• stikatkilt

1 so
7 *A
t.f'O
l *A

'4 so

f #

1 fc f 0 Itu r o

Life nf Riley

4 A Stiver of the Town
4 A Rev Refer* Rho»

o v \ !L i.c

4 1A On S'n’j- A^’ etjr.t

2 II

rn Te»! Pattern

F in d *
I *A
I 'A Hallmark Mill of F*m*

I nit Itrlftrr r&lt;4T
4 }fc Secret «|nrfy»
f AA

TAMPS U FI, A-TV
r n ill %3

A *A r&gt;*ar Phr.ehe
A A Cft-aleade of tfrort*
in II .t i - Murray Time
I! fO Kina'* Crortfoirii
n a Tonlcht
1 "A Jv:«"tvm .i nd We i they
1 AS Bltflt tiff
*
e IT 1 ftIHT
1 AO Teit Pattern
f A *. \ n tt’krlftall Game
I A FVv K •* r
ft 1A Li r o 0 . i rter
• &gt; }r ien«’e *Mki
a ; a H me r.dillon—New #
4 IS Home KdHion—8 port*
7 no TV J*pofte Cliib
7 “A Hfirtr# Held! Show fflfOB
ft 'A Sllekey Roonrv Show
1 A f t Thl* f* Hollywood
,0 A Slit L ihirin tfpeetacuUr
. 1 T r u- M ♦ Pirade
1 *0 H*! vw ood At rertllrf
2 rn New* i -1 Weather
nr*
11 AS—•tflfn
!
M M UT
1; AA Te*i Pal tern
1 m Amerloan Fertini
4 ‘ 0 Juvenile Jury

Sun Off
h
•in\OAT % 11.
a *n J '.p G*
Y#IT»*
a s ,V• * t T* * |f h * T
* i Mr fair y too nr
f
T :.r F»r*
t i n T» it P|*?#ri
y n v tiA l M t
1 &gt;0 First On Pray ram ft*ftgm•
S'#
w
i
*Wait her
a *'
Rer#rt C
i ift K#Uywee4 Tw#- 13*1 K*W
&gt; if» Brh C**•V•, fhrw'
M i "Mr. a « ”l Mr* *

is

a

9

1 fernaO

f7

tsin K»wi A fp^rt*
tf I I P r d r t r h i m
I ‘ J Bineitir u#4ihey
i i fo ftort## of C*f.tury
t ;n T irtiin BrtiOnrk
7 fO P e irp o rt T o P t n c e r

Id }

TH.I'CL

* eo The pir F»ory

? 'OA'*
ymcm*
A IK |!e*t ♦ Or*a#s»ra
if '7 A&lt;V*BhP*
I 31 p ,T 1-4 »w* Mery
14 ?.rt T 1** »#ir«*h
A il AMon /. rm lillo
i n virtnrv ai fan
a 'o Mar flin a r i'i
a *a t» 4 f e r f rent
— T A T*-rl* •-* Funny
\ 7 -A Fr i f ' Serretirv
1 l i t nf fi% T o w n
t. ''A O t Ti-M Ff
n in Fatr*r Knewr*
' A ft r•i V the S i’*#
Sr * A

F*r»4ln n*l!ant
Pamir of the Juncle
r»mnibut
3 *U Arm Ther*
F* rd Theifer
•lank H»nny
Tea*t of the Town
r, K Theater
tftare 7
Father ICnowp B#*t
M bit# Sly Line
Bundiv S '* ii BpeeiaS
?*• rhriftropher
Tr % U The Life

0 *:d#r. SVIodnw*
C \rr,pu*
F^neerrlna Mi«* STaj'tow*
Hiwk'rt F*»’i
firtt t#flv*
Th« world of Mr. tfween«i
Modern Ftom antea
1,11tie Ra«i nl*
\V11mo tbe t*1tiwn
Ifnwdv PnodV
# r.n Te I Beverly Show
4 SO H me Kdltlnn—New t
4 10 Horn* FdlMon—tfpArtft
4 -A Ho —e Edition— W eith*r
7 A pride nf the Family
7 *A r.ddie Fieher
7 IS N'ewe Caravan
i on Red Button* Show

.

t

txcessive Drinkers
In Stale Top South

2 An Ln?U Fofijtn
2.20 Million f Movie

A.\u

0 f j a &lt;*o

§

: *n 3 *ir Home Today

ff iS

Cl
nl
fc
El
It

*** Lake Mary

•

r ( V - » 0 1 KEF5 ri'JTl MAN
O^'EROAME BY C,AS
t/)Ul.VVILLE, Ky. (# - When
Pivm'.rfl Stiver*' name » a » railed
over a lrut-sprsVcr f«r a special
j'&gt;h at Siiadiford Field, it prnbihly u v H his life. T«&lt;* trllnw
t mplnyrt went lnnkina fr»r him and
!&lt;vmd him overcome by sewaee
n s in the airport’s underground
•e-rjje rurrp stat'in, where he
"jd j'v'.c ta rhorV two motors,
Tiremen revived him.

A must for the «h n 1« family, a
movie filled with the rireua at
ll’a best. Starring Itean Martin
and Jerry Levis. See “ Three Ring
rireu a" innight at the Mosieland
Drive In Theater

Radio

r ~ BTRK — 1400 Kilm-yeJe* '
4B
4 21
I 13
ft ct(t
I Of)
4 l.a
« iA
4 41

FRIDAY P.tf.
N »*e

Orr*p Interltid*
Claud* 11. Wolf#
Tlih Bbvthm Hour
World Al Sit
Twilight Song*
Sport * Book
ilu*ir*i ir n t n m

7 AA ftriftinr On A Gfetid
7 14 Ho#p* For A Lndv
T:3A

HI.I "M

For Dual#

• fid Sin‘it Edition

I 1.4
A 2d
in 3d
1AM
11 AA
II Aft

« A*
4 A1

&lt; Aft

United Nation*
Jt * Ii'inr-ftflm*
At IInme With If upIet
Newrp
laiymrH*# Call to Prayer
Flue Off
A4Tt II na T A.4ft.
B en f In
l.ivm*n,p C.ill To Priiyer
Hi wn Hrukfif*

,S‘ eR*
W#i»*r« Jimbor**
S*w§
7 Ad Fe%en 0 ‘Clork Club
T. 'ft N*w *
ft &lt;&gt;d BDorf* A* A GUar#
• A.4 Jnekfy** Choir*
ft 'd If or nine Fjev-oMon*
ft Ift M« rning Melon**
t ttoftd At Nine
A |S M'lflr for I, i die*
a jo
IIAd Club
4 3d

I H

« :»l

in Ap Muilr for T hu
1A 1ft 14"d Chib
Id id New •
1A 44 linn Club

» 1 AA Child reb * Cla»*1r Ilmar
! 1 2d V«rleti**
II i, Town a Country
11 ift I.ftytnen a Call to Prayer
12 n« World A! Noon

* ATi h p a y r n
1? II Radio F*rm Dlg**t
12 2A P.-iftirday Mdtlne*

1 2A New*
1 ift iMr .Von* B »n* h
2 an World At Thre#
2 14 Ndllorial Gut*rd Show
2 3d 14A*» chib
I 3d New *
4 ft ttrg.in Inferludn
4.4ft Claud* H Won*
• d The Khvttm Hour

4 rn
4 ift
4 jn
4 (4
7 Art
7:14
7 d

World At Sit
Twilight pong*

Legal Notice

8 port ■ Bonk,
Muairal Program
Drifting On A Cloud
N'inday Krhool Leeron
JuVe Ro* tfat. Kit*
P ad New*
ft 1ft Juke Dos Pit. Kit#
|n 3d Al llom* With ftluaio

tn si

New
w,|
Th*
&gt;• l.irm in 'i Call ta fra r.r
11 Aft ftlgr
in nrf
11 Ad

t l M l t t A.M.
Fix* On
Fr*rr*m
7 U Hymn Tim*
7 Id Th* Go*p#l Hour
I Ad Niindiy Mir nine if ua leal#
ft 3d J K Cole
A; Ad World at Nil)#
7:Ad

7 aj

OLDEST SCHOOLHOtlRE
PUT UP FOR SALE
A Ift
REVO, Nev.
Reno’s oldest A 10
1A
•chfv'Vhnyje. Vii’.t in 1*^7 at a cost 11 :3ft
Aft
r j &lt;: ion. m is pit up for sale yes- 12 ao
&gt; rd iy . V vcra l rooms had been I 21
ldded and the property ha* in- Lift
1 Ift
creised in value. The price today:
2. Ad
IM.dnn
5 •A

F&gt; mphoneit*
Sunday Morning Mual#
Go* fi* | Ptnger*
Churrh Barvlre*
Bundnv P#r*n*d*
■flRtia Y •*.*4
Brnru At A Olanra
Nava
e.renada In Rlua
Hunttav Mstlnea
rreeilftm 5lorv

1 tft Murlral rrngram

General

Insurance

H. JAMES

GUT AGENCY

2 A
4 *ft
4 2A
• Ad

ft *A
ft oft
ft Ift
ft id
ftiis

7 Aft
7; IS

I Aft
ft 14
ft Ad
• 4d

M 2 EAST FIRST STREET
PHONE 78

By VIRGINIA P. ANDERSON
Mrs. .1. L. BuilaH left Friday
for Jarkfonvllla where aha will
visit h*r sitter, Mrs. Matr Wilson,
who was injured In a recent fall,
Mr. and Mrs. Grant McLane and aJ
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kube are £2
home again, folloning a trip to ««
Tampa, K«rt Myers and Mara­
thon.
Miss Olive HunsvII arrived Mar.
2 from Crown Point. Indiana, to
visit her parents, Mr. and Mr*.
H. T. Russell.
Mrs. B. B. FraaUxn r ^ u r w Mar. 4 from Corpus Chriitt, Tex­
as. where sh" had visited rela­
tives.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brarht e*
GAINESVILLE. FU. e -F lo rid i
Flint, Mirhigan. hava purchased his in estimated 91.000 to W.000
the Harold Siebert house on excessive drinker*—“ far ahead of
Country Club Rosd and ara In other Southern ititei but still well
the proress of moving in.
under California, the Midwest and
Last week, Mr. and Mrs. L. C. New England," says a University
Btittriek visited friends in SC of Florida sociologist.
Petersburg and Clearwater.
Dr. John M. WaeLaehlin told
The newly organized Brownie the Florida Conference on a
Troop is busy practicing for their United Program for Beverage Al­
investure service. Because o f the cohol and Narcotics Education
illness so prevalent among the 'hat he and hia staff found this
school children the weekly meet­ out in a survey of ali Florida
ing has had to be postponed. counties.
They aro happy to report another
-iN.r, Csmthla Bowman.
and daughter. Frances and grand­
Mrs. Gua Nelson son Lewis Carter, Mrs. Joe Forin bear that she is tirr, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Airey,
..proving following surgery at Mr, and Mra. William Erlel, Mrs.
thn Winter Park Memorial Hos­ •loan firern and daughter, Rose­
pital. last Friday.
mary and Charles Sinb!"m.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bullard and
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Fay hav*
son, J. Ft. Bullard, of Plant City moved into the Trua house on
and their son and daughter-in-law, Crystal Lake Avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. Caray Bullard of
.Mr. and Mra. S. Pierson who
Arcadia rpent Sunday with their have occupied the A. F. Brown
cousins. Mrs. Frank Minshew and h-mie during the winter, left for
Mrs. W. P. Burke.
! their home in Ashley Falls, Mass.,
Mr. and Mrs. William Ferguson Thursday, via SL
Petersburg,
of Afton, New York ara spending where they will visit friends for a
a few days In Lnko Mary, renew­ week or so.
ing old friendships. They moved
Friends o f Hubert Young will
away from this section more than he sorry tn hear that he suffered
2Ji years ago.
a heart attack recently and his
Mrs. Dsn Waits who with her besn moved to tha Sanford home
husband and sons left Lake Mary nf Mrs. B. A. Howard, 203 East
tn l'J.17, is spending some time Tenth Street, where he asd Mrs.
with Mr. and Mrs. G. R. Best.
Young will remain during his conMrs. W. P Burke and Mrs. I- valescense.
C. Tillis went to Jacksonville,
Mrs. Marlin Salter i» spending
Monday, the former to visit her soma tima with her grandmother,
sunt, Mrs. Mary Wilson and the Mrs. J. L. Bullard.
latter to see her cousin, Mrs. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Cosier and
L. Clark. They returned Tuesday, son have rented the Million house
jrrompaniod by Mrs. Burke a and moved from Sanford to Lake
mother. Mrs. J. L. Bullard.
Mary. Mrs. Cosier will he remem­
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Dlx are bered a* tha former Daria Sjoannouncing th* birth of a son, blnrn.
Mrs. J. J. John* o f Brooklyn,
Martin Robert at tha Halifax
Hospital, Daytona Beach, Feb. 24. New York has arrived, railed hera
Mrs. I)ix will he remembered aa hy the death o f her aistrr, Mrs.
Archie Franklin. Archie Franklin,
the former Natalie True.
Saturday afternoon, the Sunday inn of Mra. Franklin has also ar­
Frhonl of the Chiirrh of the Neta- rived from hit homa in Arlington,
-ene held a picnic on the church v *Mr. and Mrs. Walter I. Piper
lawn. Following the covered dish
►
upper, the group enjoyed a song attended the choristers' rehearsal
service in the rhurch. Attending nf the Bach Festival at Rolllna
were R»v. and Mrs.' L. A. Peter- College, Tuesday.
tnn and children, Paul, Dannie
and Joyre, Mr. and Mrs. L. C.
Tillis ami children, Byron, Bobby,
Dannie and Frances, Mr. and Mrs. isr r m r r i T r o n t r o f n i n t h
j h u k i a i , r iH c r iT o f r i.o t s i.
W, P. Burke and daughter, Gayle,
DA. SKM iroi.E c n i m . CHAN­
Mr, and Mrs. Paul Brown and son,
TER ▼.
Charlie
W . Oihlelde
Paul of Fern Park, Bill Nord­
rtalatMt
strom, Mr. and 5Irs. W. Dorton -vs-

French Stulls

Cuest Eniar
*
U«slc U v u i Pregraa A'-» Maria Hnur
Ferwarn Karrb
Wnrltl At till
fa f .lv t’rngram
.'nnrert en tha Fntiimaa
Oeo Bmjlhen
Oueat Uivr
jA
fh'ireh Sarelea
’ ■*
Hair n ^i*.nrte'l m . v '
H»r» • tn Va*i
r
rmuhlv vv. Hall
Plat - 1|" Fnr Mlisle

in ns
in to
II no
l l : 0a
• ns
Sint
S ns

( rn
&lt;11
s ss
Tins
T tt
ft.SO

News
WrMera Jamborsa
New ■

Fcvcn O’clock Club
Nsws
frnrts At A (Ilansa
l nt Jnckiv's Chnlie
ft■to Mnrnlna Devotions
l i t ! Mornlna Mrlndlsa
ft no World At Nine
ft it Muslo For Ledles
s is Hymn Time
S &lt;t For LaSlee Only
! ' *s Murte For Tou

t* IS tins elub
te ts News
te It linn Club
11: 10

13 lift
11-11
II It
t ts
lift
i no

t ns
1:1ft

JAMES j k GUT

H. JAMES CUT

At Items With Musle
Mlitntcht Minister
News
Sign Off
s n .t n t T A.M.
I l m on
Ijiv men’ s (~sll Te Pesrse
Iisun Dresksrs

Gems nr Mslody
World At Notin
■KINDS V F.ftft.
Radis Farm Dtaeet
Monday Matisse
News
Bar None Stark
Bar Nobs Ranrb
World At Three
Musical Pro*ram

HEATING

M. G. HODGES
WELLS DRILLED — PUMPS

SATURDAY ONLY
T

ro#

Legal Notice

MOTOR

t w

DOUBLE FEATURE
AN ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATION

a f e .

4 t*»4t»—— M

i

x
rB

Plat# half lb* neotflti kt hurie^tl, l-ouart baklnq tkvK. Eover wrtH
lavar of half the tuna and Borden’* Cotisj#
Cbotta Btpoif layart. Malt fat. flrmov* frona
heat. Blmd ,n flour arvt seasomogv. Gradwally
fttir in rmlk, misinq until wall blrndrd. Ralurn
to heat and rook, vtiinna eonttanlly until tmo*
tuia tbickent. Pour over noodte mixture.
Sprinkle top with paprika. Bakg In moderate
oven U 7S* P. I for 25 minute* or until be Fed
through. Mala* 4 fto 6 tarvtngft.

Thl* Nolle* shall b* p-iMIshtd.
a* required by law. In Ilia panfnrd Mrrald, a poo-naprr of gonoral cirri,lotion publlahad at Han­
ford, Florida.
VVJTNLKS th* hand «r tha Clork
and th* Foal of aald Court, this
th# 47th day of Fohruary. i»»t.
fl P. HERNDON,
clork of Circuit Court
By a L. Hunt D. C.
IClork’# Basil
TT. A. PATTIdHALL
Attnraoy at U v
*0 N. Court nt.. Rm. T
Orlande, Florida

*

4 !.: v

T3ordensc

• *■ ■ ■ ■

0

WASHER BUY OF THE YEAR!

20% SAVING FOR YOU
ON THEBR NATJONALLT. ADYKRTWKD'

—

y «

A

TYPE

Llmltsft

Tlsts

Fitraltor*

Only —

Compaar
Oaa

Waakara. D m Ta Tha Low Prlca — Tha Sanford Faraltara Coaipaay Cannot Usa Tha

.

m m

Maaafactarar’a Naaia* B at Y o n ll SacagalM It A a. T h *

* ' BOftDiAxr

m s W 'im 'C U M E )[r

.

Brand Your

Mother aad

Load T a W ash Y O U R Baby O rth o s!

For The “Buy of the Year”
-DEANJAGGER^-im-ftrlRVlNGBERLIN.

F w aR ara C t

M ad ivdh
COLOR

UlV IN i

CARTOON

rr.

tm

r “ r a * d * Y « H 8 m * U p Tho S s t Ib c b O f Tha Tear.1*

Sanford Furniture Co.

IM • till • I N

AND

• • #

■o Ir ttfL

sift

%

•*
mx

•##«*«•* «#&gt;t
K NlihM I
aw fayrik*

• SEM I-A U TO M ATIC

FEATURE TIME

V H (^

819 E . F inrt S t.

O f Aawrica’s Oldest W u h ln r Machine M anu factom a Thaaa NaUoaanr Adrtrtlaai

A lso

w. m

BOARD OF

, &lt;#* hi*#, tfr#**#ft #*ft Hifttft
M«. I0RMH1 COITAQI
CHIIII

you

•

d H S s r s S jl

mi

Seminole
County |
Motors *

OF

• W RINGER

bw o

C O M P A N Y

,

• A U TO M A TIC "

JAM ES STEWART
REARW W DOW '

F U R N I T U R E
ph o n e i«ar

THE

'

Elsie’s Favorite Recipes

Haa Parchaaftft F ra n

W A R E H O U S E

lDNI

CHU YSLEH
4 Door Sedan

Rr H. SI, WEIR
Administrator

G REEXVILUL INC. a Oteonlvoa
rnrporatlnn unitor Iho laws nf
Couth Carolina: alt parttes having
nr rlalmlng In hava any right, till*
nr Inlorost In ana tn lands In ftemlnolo County. Florid*, drscrlhod aa
Th* gniithrsst Quarter (8K&gt;. &gt;
nf
th#
b’nulhwoit
Quarter
l e w ; I nf tho Knuthoau Quartor (khV*! nf ttm-tlnn I*. Townehlp )1, doiith, Itango th. Cast.
Tou. and rach of you, aro horobv nntlflad in dorand a atilt that
has bsan fllsd against you In th*
Circuit Court of StemlnoT* r„unly.
Florida, tho ahbrovlatod ItH* nf
whlrh la II. C. PAItKEG and KATR
A. P4IIKKR. tils wlfa, nlolmlMs.
va. F, R. LYNCH, at al , dolondanla.
Chanrary No. I*n*. soaking tn quirt
and confirm th* till* of plaintiff*
to the obovo lands, and you ar# roto flla your *n*wor or othor
aulrsd
stents with tho d ark ef said
Court at Hanford, Florida, and to
*»rv* * ropy thoroof upon th* plain­
tiff* attorney. W. A. Pattlshall. at
th# addros* shown brlow. on or bofnr# th* Sftth day of Marrh. 1SSS,
tn default nf which, a dacro* pro
roafasao will b* antorsd agalnat

B u fo rd

B E R R Y ' S

10.M

DODGE
i Door S#dan

yrASHERS

TmVyhg

iSSr ^

lB.Vt

PLYMOUTH
Sport Coup«

Firm n-iorntlons will ba ranalvod
br Iho Flnard nf Trustees of ,p#
SrmlnoU County Puh|le irospllal
no nor. In th# oHtee of Harrv VVoir,
Admtntelrainr, Kd wards tlulldlnc
Fanford, (Florida, on nr before
April ft, 13ii for th* furnishing nf
Group II oqulpmsnt r.onslstlr* nf.
I. Rr, option Room Furniture
J. o f fir* Furniture
I. Slsltrosso*
Spoelllraiioro a n d
»"»dlt!nws
Ihorsln mar ho ob'alrod from tbs
hospital offlra. Room Jna. Ed­
ward* Building. Sanford. Florida.
For

rOMTAVr

IIL'H

Legal Notice

Tr.rSTCE.n

J

PO N T IA C
4 Door Sedan

Alpha Gamma Rho and Alpha Ep­
silon Pi, 224; Phi Della Theta,
2 22: Lambda Chi Alpha, 2.20 Del­
ta Tau Delta, 1.19; Sigma Chi.
2 17; Sigma Nu and Phi Gamma
Delta. 2.16; Phi Kappa Tau, 2.14;
and Alpha Tau Omega, 2 13.

I . r . I.INDFKT ant N 7*. RAlOtet
and aarh nt thorn. If Itelnjr. ani if
iteail, iholr ro»poctu* unknnwn
hotel, dtviiooo, logatoot, nr aranteoi; all pirtloa claiming IntorooM.
by. tlirourh, uniter nr agvlnot tho
aalit I. C. LINDSEY anil N p»
n.lKEH or olihrr of lh»m: yOUTH-

FRN

USED
CARS

April I. He has been a coach and
scout for the last 10 years, with
Pittsburgh and Ihe Yank*.
"Thoie 10 years have been with­
out a vacation or a Sunday at
home and I'm going to get a little
rest," said Herman, who was rated
as a zanv character while a play­
er. but far from it when it came
to making and saving money. Babe
has no financial worries, owns lots
of property and grows turkeys.
"I'm going to be real lazy now
and maybe do some of the fi-hlng
I've* wanted In do," he said.

ROTICR TO DRFESO

TO:

3 BIG DAYS &lt;

Tiegea&amp; Aygut!
A1J I M G B ER U N S 1J ; .

BAD DAY AT Bl Al h FCHh

PHONE TM

(Bean

ft F. Herod**
Aa Clerk t m M Cir­
cuit Court.

GAINESVILLE, FEB. — Uftiversily of Florida cocdi hive agjin
teppH mala itudrnti in scholastic
averages, according to lijts for
first semester 1954 55 just released
by the student organizations office.
The women’s average was 2.34 as
compared to the men’s average
of 2.13. Student body average was
2 17 (According to llhe University
grading system, a 2 0 average is
equivalent to a straight C aver■fie).
With a 2 M average as a whole,
fraternity women topped grades
made by my eef the following
groups: All women, non-fraternity
women, all men, fraternity and
non-fraternity men, and (Indent
body.
Of the 12 sororitie*, Alpha Epsi­
lon Phi led the ratings with a 2M
average for members and pledges.
Others in the top half, respectively,
were Delta, Delta Delta, Alpha
Delta Pi and Zeta Tm Alpha, each
with better than 2 &lt;4; Chi Omega,
2.4(1; and nelta Phi colony. 2 3S.
Pi Lambda Phi wai listed first
of the 28 fraternities with a 2.32
average. The lop half of fraterni­
ties included. In order. Beta Theta
Pi, 2.31; Tau Epsilon Phi, 2.28;

THE CREATEST GIFT OF ENTERTAINMENT
THE SCREEN HAI EVER BROUGHT Y O U ___

K R E fiK Y

PAOLA ROAD

rimer. 1M»

STARTS
SUNDAY
L A S T TIM E TO D A Y

PLUMBING

Iteatrlca Oartruda O'Shleldt
Defsadaat.
KOTfCB TO AFFF.Ut
Tha Ittale of Florida to: Beatrice
Gertrude O'gMelds. w-bese place et
residence te No. 1 0S( stile Street.
Charlotte 1. N’nrlh Csrollns:
Tou are hereby notified that e
suit has been brought against you
Is the above entitled Court hy
Charlie W, O'fthtelds. and that the
relict caught la e divorce, and yen
are hareby required end summoned
le aarve apse Ernest Houshnlder.
plslntltrs attorney, whnae eddreas
Is P. O Box HO. Sanford, Florida,
and tile with the Clark nt the
ebove Court, et Sanford. Florid*, an
wnewer to the hill of complaint
which la htrawlth served upon
you. .on or before the Jllh day nf
March. A- D. l» t l. If you tall to do
ae. derrae pro eenfetae will be
entered sgalnat you ter the relief
demeaded la tbs bill of complaint.
The title ef said suit Is as above
elated and la designated as Chan­
cery No. ITU.
,
witness my hand pad efflrlal
seal ef a*Id Court, at Banferd.
Florida, thl* th* llth day ef r ^ -

UofF Coeds Top Herman Retiring
Yankee Scout
Male Students AsGLENDALE.
Calif. ift-Bahr
Herman, one of baseball's better
sluggers, is retiring as scout for
In Averages
the New York Yankees, effective

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L ooking Over

Proceed At Your
Own Risk

All Florida

■y W OO PSO H T. A U IN

According to the Gaines­
ville Sun, there was quite a
flurry down at New Smyrna
Beach recently. It seems
that a leopard got away
from a circus down there,
and took to the timber.
Last 1 heard, he was still
A.W.O.L. It’s easy to under­
stand why anyone, leopard
or man, would decide to set­
tle permanently in such a
charming location, but it
seems that the residents are
a bit doubtful o f the eti­
quette of the situation. Upon
meeting a leopard for the
first time, does one bow po­
litely and say, "Y o u stay
here. Leopard. I'll change
M Y spot"? Or does crtie
make an abrupt departure
for a point three counties
away, and wire his apolo­
gies?

Oh, for the life of a pirate! It s strictly for the birds, however, as far as
Smiley Burnette is concerned. Smiley, famed radio, movie and television
comedian and singer, recently visited an old friend, Boas Allen, whose Rep­
tile Institute at Silver Sprinp boasts two new non-reptile inhabitants. They
are Dutch and Beauty, a pair of valuable macaws Rom recently brought back
from South America. Beauty (right) is reputed to be worth dose to $1,000.

There’a an ancient story
about a simitar escape, and
it will never die while col­
umns remain to be filled. It
had to do with a tiger, but
under the circumstances,
let's change it to a leopard.

■o*

\

T h is m a n -k ille r broke
loose frdm a circus, and a
keeper set out in hot pur­
suit. U p hill, dow n hill,
acroaa fields, and over fences,*
the attendant just managed
to keep him in sight. A t last,
the animal ran into a yard
and leaped through an open
window, Into a house.

AN Y W EEK. Many (in
fact most) o f the state’s
prominent public officials,
both past and present, will
be in attendance at Belle
Glade on Mar. IB, when one
of the world’s largest pump­
ing stations will be "unveil­
ed" to start operations for
the Central and Southern
Florida Flood Control District. At the same time, the
last bond o f the old Everglades Drainage District,
now officially a thing o f the
past, will be burned. All of
the Everglades District as­
sets have been taken over
by the new Flood Control
District. All Florida Maga­
zine will have a picture-story
o f the new pump in next
week’s issue.
Located at Twenty Mile
Bend, the new pumping sta­
tion will be equipped with
six 116-inch pumps, capable
o f producing in less than
two minutes all of the water
used by the City o f West
Palm Beach in any single
day.
e v e

TO TMf
OHM COUIMMST TO
ANOTHCB
Mr. Woodson T. Allen.
All Florid* M isu ior,
110 K. Washington St.,
Ocala, Fla.
Re: "A * Author U B onT-A P M ,
Fat*. IS, lM f.
Remarks: I leva you.
u in u sn tv .
lab* CSy.

a *

a

excuse

it,

ptiAse

W ! F K t TMg S A M I

We receive News-Journal I Day-

I a n interested in tho atory re­
I diui. Eioicli 1,
cently started In All Florida M agsW * do read it, carefully. Two of tin*. "Steamboat* in tba Hya­
ua. W# are unable to And the a s s a y ______
_______________
____________
cinth*."
A te n d In Daytona
Beach
you mention in "Looking Over All
M (k* g m installment aiid I
Florida" column on honey.
have aaksd her to aave each inue
W# do sri orange bloaeom hooey, for me.
Florida of roam , In combination
a . 1 h n otr Floridmn. I feel that
with other natural vitamin**, n in many o f us da not know a crest deal
Roldra Gift orange Juice of DrLand, .h m i the hiriory of our £ n Sato,
it would bo interesting to kaow and
can laam much of iolareat from

ATTMTION, CtAPT VttlAOI

la All Florida

I an vary much lataroatad in
T h e panting pursuer saw tha Wary at tha Craft Villas* "«a r
St. M w A u n by Oartral* Uoro.
a man working in a field,
I would lika to sot In touch with
and shouted; "H e y , is there n n r of tha worker*, a* I hava accan to a ruppiy of wall oaoaom d
anyone in that house?"
(aural and rhododendron wood from
"Y e p ," was the reply. " M y tho Blua ftidft Mountain* of North
wife and her Ma'a in th ere.'" Carolina.
. I bop* aom* of than will writ*
"F o r Heaven's sake, come about thk wood, if yon will Madly
a n d help. A wild leop ard print Lhia letter,
*

*

*
a

*

a

*

THfY A l t CUTE
The picture of the baby flying
squirrel. which appeared in the Feb.
I I issue of your otagaiino, caused
mt Ui Aop and m senber HBuldiit,M
Seputnber in lftS3 mm* a M l and
wild month her*, and the cats
brought home several flying aquirrela, all dead. Bat one day I heard
mother's cat crying n ah* bad den*
when ah* had carried her kitten*. I
nnhad out and waa in U an tn re­
move a tiny aquireri from bar mouth.
It waa unharmed far tha cat appari be a kitten,
i incubator far

I te d away attract!«a atariaf la

ju st went in th ere."
" N o t m e, mister. 1 ain't
responsible. Your dam leop­
ard got in there by himself,
and he'll ju st have to get
Mit the beet way he c a n ."

N .C

*

"sreAMfiOATt" aououer

What aa oajaynhia way t* loara
tho Mat my of our otatel 1 refer la
la tho Hyacinths," io

I k m o f a Florida rac­
coon-hunter who owned a
raaaarkahto ’coon-dog. Bach
night, ba'd turn tha dog out,
than atari chopping any
convenient am all tree. B e-

: V
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OUR COVER
We have received num­
erous requests "for more
pretty girls" on the cover.
Maybe this will answer that
call. She la Shirley Deas, a
native o f Gainesville, and a
girl who is rapidly becom ­
ing nationally known aa a
cover girl and beauty queen.
She peead for the picture on
the cover recently after
being crowned Florida’s 1955
Tangerine Queen.

m f iin n m A

F liv n lU l

Total

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Hi* M on W ho gorfced A

12th CENTURY
PUZZLE
A

By MARY HELM CLARKE

. llen C arswell., master p roject nnd selected the

stone mason, watched the Florida site, near n proposed
crowds com ing and going Inter-American Cultural nnd
through the historic gate Trade Center, as a choice
into the Monastery Gardens. setting. Then they looked
No douht he remembered around for the best man to
the words of Ezra who said re-assemble the stones in a
that the people o f ancient 20-acre garden. They selec­
times "weakened the hands ted Allen Cnrswell.
of these who sought to re­
Carswell hod reached the
build the Temple" by troubl­ top o f his profession by ac­
ing them in the building and complishing the impossible.
frustrating their purpose. In 1932, he was assigned the
Carswell had encountered no task of erecting a memorial
organized trouble makers to Admiral Peary, discoverer
but surely no group of build­ of the North Pole. The proj­
ers ever encountered more ect, which won to be created
frustrations and insurmount­ as near the North Pole as
able obstacles than those possible, called for the re­
who reconstructed an an­ moval of granite from wind­
cient monastery from loose swept mountains o f Cape
stones in thousands of boxes.
What would you do if you r
were given 36,000 stones of
varying sizes, shapes and
textures; a c o l l e c t i o n of
photographs showing the
original structure which had
been taken apart in Spain
and shipped in boxes to the
United States; a crew of
workmen who had never
seen a 12th century monas­
tery much less one made of
Spanish field stone; and
then you were told to recon­
struct a Cistercian Monas­
tery just as it had been built
over 800 years ago? No doubt
your knees would tremble
and your hands would shake,
and you would a n s w e r ,
“ W ho? Me? Not on your
life!"
York, using labor which haid
In January, 1955, the An- to double for crew on the
cient Monastery of St. Bern- construction ship. To quarry
ardofSacramenia celebrated the granite and raise the
its.first a n n i v e r s a r y on shaft between July, when
American soil. The original the ice harrier broke, and
m o n a s t i c structure was September, when the polar
bought by William Ran­ regions would again be in
dolph Hearst a quarter o f a darkness, called for adminis­
century ago. He had it dis­ trative genius as well as
mantled and shipped to craftsmanship. With Cars­
America. Now it can be seen well supervising, there arose
in all its glory in North' a towering shaft with a great
Miami Beach.
marble "P " and a metal cap
T he Carswell construction which gleams as a beacon for
story began when the stored aviators crossing North
boxes containing the Monas­ Greenland.
tery were purchased by four
Of the many difficult and
people who recognized the important assignments, such
value o f the beautiful build­ as the Peary Monument,
ing and cloisters as a tourist Carswell admits (hat none
attraction.
WUUam 8 . Edgem on, E.
Raymond Mom, Carrol Mucc i a a t d E . K Bludworth in­
vested fabulous sums in the

THI MAN who ’ worked a miracle" of building. Alim Carawetl, n ahown (above right) directing workmen in rearremWing atone* of ancient monaatcry Completed building (below) I* open lo the public al North Miami Reach

-i*- ;

(Continued on p i p 14)
AN AtnAL view of the 11th century
M M M irf M l Is Spain by monk*,
loro O m and n u irwHid In If JJ
in Heeida

V* i - f w
AN t lend a Magaime-PAGC I

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�I V I y Florida friend stopped his car
!&gt;eside a field and we got out to stand
near the sea of waving, sharp-leaved
foliage. I was breathless at the sight
of so many flowers.
‘‘ Why the surprise?” my host
asked. "Y ou didn’t think oranges
and grapefruit are the only things,
we grow in Florida in the winter,
did you?"
Up north, we order "glads" from
the florist m winter, nnd grow our
own in summer, in the gucden. I it
short order I learned that "glud"
growing is a big business in Florida.
In Fort Myers, for instance, glndiola growers plant millions of bulbs
a week during the growing season
from October through early spring.
One grower told me that, nation­
wide, "glads" account for about 150
million dollars worth of business an­
nually— the lion’s share of the cut
flower business. Florida "glads," he
said, are responsible for about 25
per cent of that cash register music.
Florists confirm the gladiola suc­
cess story. Many flower shops have
standing orders for "glad s" to he
delivered regularly to hotels, restau­
rants, and homes. "Restaurants nnd
’ hotels prefer them," one florist told
me, "because they hold up so well
and never drop their petals."
With the long stalks cut short, I
was told, “ glads" can be arranged
in low bowls, or the individual flor­
ets and petals can be made into
glamorous corsages.
'
In Florida, where the gay flowers
grow in the winter, they told me the
greatest demand by northern cus­
tomers is for plain, solid colors.

THttt WOCKMtN are taking butte am of the ground lor a four month ‘
br replanted and product another crop.

period Thay • *

One big favorite is the Picardy
Glad, a pure peach color. Other big
sellers, according to florists’ orders,
are Snow-Princess, pure white with
pink stamens; Hopmnn’s Glory, a
butter yellow iilossom: and Valeria,
a brilliant Bcarlet. Other varieties of
the same 25 commonly grown "glads’’
are Rosa Van Lima, a creamy pink;
Minuet, dark lavender; and Mnrgaret Beaton, white with a red
throat. Ah yes, they are as bright
as a Bunny day in Florida.
Although gladioli cnn he grown
in most sections of the country with
some success, they prefer a damp,
humid climate and plenty of hot sun­

shine. Florida fills the prescription
and supplies florists the country over
during fall, winter and spring. .
Inasmuch os the flowers can’t wait
when harvest time comes, they are
cut nnd shipped immediately to
avoid huge loss. Big growers have
direct Western Union lines and tele­
type connections with all sections of
the country.
After I saw how my winter gladi­
ola Imuquet was produced, my Flor­
ida friend said to me, " I f you can’ t
get down here next winter, maybe
you won’t feel so bad when you re­
member that plenty of Florida
"glads" go north for the winter."

STILL In the bud rtage. there "gladi" are being barrelled lor ihipment Within 34 to 31 houri

they »UI be In lull bloom in a Northern home, or florin ihop

AN UNUSUAl light in Morn!* 11 a l&lt;eM. inch it thll. gladioli in full bloom
cut lor thipment »Hilr In the buit tlJgc

Olid* mull hr

AFTH barrelling. the "glad*" ere graded and ihipped 10 market! over the entire nation ?be&gt;
are graded b» italk length and number ol budi per ilalk
All llorlda Maganne-PAGt $

�Florida ^Offers N&amp;tion’s Playwrights
Chance For Cash And ‘ Big Tim e’ Fame
By CONNIE WOODWARD

W h en the curtain rises
in a Gold Coast Community
Theatre in April, a young
Kansas playwright who
journeyed to Florida for the
occasion, will he seated in
the audience to witness the
premiere performance of the
play he authored.
“ Summer Cruise,” a play
concerning Naval Reserv­
ists written by William J.
Sollner of Arma, Kans., was
chosen as the 1954 prize­
winning play from entries
submitted by dramatists
from nearly every state in
the Union, to the Norton
Gallery Players* fourth an­
nual Playwrights’ Competi­
tion in West Palm Beach.
T h e Players were men­
tioned in a recent issue of
"Thearte Arts" as the only
Florida theatre group, and
one of only 10 theatre or­
ganizations in the entire
country, offering play con­
tests as a hope for new play­
wrights.
Folders are mailed by the

Players each year to over
700 individuals, universities
and theatre groups in the
country announcing the
competition rules, deadline
and awards. This contest
has achieved such wide­
spread notice that inquiries
have been received by the
West Palm Beach group
from as far as Canada, Eng­
land and Madagascar.
The Players, keenly aware
of the publicity value of the
competition, follow this up
with a direct mail project
which sends programs of
each production to theatres
and universities all over the
United States. This may
.well account in large part
for the fact the Players is­
sue tickets each year to
subscribers in 10 states and
fill their theatre with audi­
ences representing all 48.
The competition, begin­
ning Apr. 15 and closing
Sept. 15, is open to all ama­
teur and professional play­
wrights submitting a full-

length manuscript that has
not been previously pub­
lished or performed.
The manuscript, suitable
for Players' production and
having the most outstand­
ing qualities, is selected by
the Norton Gallery Play­
wrights’ Competition Com­
mittee, composed of three
or four qualified members
and the managing director,
from upwards of 75 entries
annually.
Upon announcement of
the award, a $200 cash prize
is given the author. Under
normal circumstances this
is followed by the award­
winning play presentation
as one of the Players’ seven
winter productions.
The Norton Gallery Play­
ers, Inc., a non-profit organ­
ization, was organized in
1940 by a dozen members
for a premiere season of two
plays on two-night stands.
It now boasts 200 general
active members and the 81st

1

(Continued on peg* 1$)
H it EIREHENCE with lb* Player*
bat 1*4 Ann Wharton. tbown In •
tern* trow Georg* Bernard Shan't
"Caetar and Cleopatra'", to lull llm*
acting In radio g
SCENE CHANGES at Norton Gallery
Playert It right up to prolettlonal
tlandardt. There men ran change
tcenery In tecondt with a rolling, or
turh at therm her*. •

*
0

ACTOR, detigner. playwright and public!»l aHrolled Into one
rtxffrr who It loading Iho dettMuet oi the P1a&gt;cri and who
imtwr of amateur* lo find their way lo the prel***ional rank*
riayor* lake their acting tenoutly ai evidenced hr the
Mt.. from MacBeth Abe**. thf flavor* hold a port
motum aftor tho flay.

AR f lorm m Magatrrw-fAOt V

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Exterior Scenes
THE "WAV c( Life" plan at Paradise Point follow* that of native
dwellers of the tropics—high above low lying dampness, heal
and humidity, seeking a comlort level, using nature's own air
conditioning. With natural landscaping instead ol lawns, it is
"bringing Florida back to Florida."

l i r r i R PA1IO Inghl) titfMftJ through
g l j t f |jloiifir» ot the living room it j
part ot the &gt;rjr ‘round outdoor living
p l a n of the " U j &gt; ol l lie'
It it
•Cfrrned on thre e t id e t and above,
with fibre glatt on aluminum Iramet
Broad o p r e t t tlept (above) rtte from
a lower palio to thit level iTrvtial clear
w ater t ol the tir ea m (below) reflect
thit built lor comlort houte thowing
the t l o p i n g root and two ttor&gt;
screened patio section tvpical ol all
dwellings at Par adite Point

IAVCS FROM overhanging root ol five inch thici
O p r e t t give tilling level protection * g * in it the
t u n 't glare a t well at agamtl rain

O’

a

Photos by TRENT ROGERS
Sy LILLIE MAY MARSHALL

“ A

x x . way of life’ - h e calls
it—**a way which, followed,
will make people into hu­
man beings!"
A way of life which haa
attracted the president of a
large eastern daily news­
paper, the vice president of
one of the country's largest
industries and a retired army
colonel, who was a leader
in the Korean conflict,
among others.
A way of life which will
work for man, instead o f
man's working-the rest o f
his time for a way man has
established and followed.
This philosophy, Sam
Pickard, a native of K an­
sas—a radio pioneer and
co-founder o f Columbia
Broadcasting System-made
the nucleus of his Village of
Picardy at Paradise Point

Florida Homes Designed For Florida Living
Provide ‘ Fishin* Hole’ Right In Front Yard
on Crystal River, where
every home has its own
spring fed navigable stream
in which fish, large and
small, "go swimming by"
and sometimes pause to nib­
ble at the bait on a hook;
and where every home has
its own boat slip.
Speaking o f this, his re­
tirement colony, Mr. Pick­
ard says "W e.are bringing
Florida back to Florida, us­
ing what nature offers and
building in conformity rath­
er* than changing* natural
Florida to fit into man­
made plana."
In this endeavor he is as­
sociated with Qeorge Ely,

St. Petersburg industrial
designer, whom he credits
with supplying the "way of
life" theme.
The germ for this "w ay
of life" village was born sii
years ago when Mr. Pickard,
having retired before reach­
ing the age of 40, and living
at Miami, became restless
and rented a cottage on
King's Bay, where hundreds
o f small gushing springs
feed into a stream that flow*
* to the Gulf o f M eaico-a
lasy sort o f place, a good
place to think and dream.
Many men have dreamed
dreams, and there they have
ended. But Mr. Pickard did

f A6I a—AH florid* Uagann*

something about his, and
brought it into reality. He
and Mrs. Pickard bought
land and planned a quiet re­
sort at which their friends
and acquaintances, teo,
could catch flah and watch
eagles, otters, manatee and
alligators, in a climate where
spring waters maintain a
year around temperature of
70 degrees.
.
Today, nearly three years
after the opening of the
first villa under the name of
Paradise Point, Mr. Pickard,
in partnership with Mr. Ely,
has turned his hobby into a
business, the eaeential pro­
gram of which will cost

more than $1,500,(KM) within
the next year.

Mr. Ely, who haa designed
many homes in the vicinity
of St. Petersburg, as well as
commercial developments,
says o f his style of architec­
ture employed: “ Natives of
the tropics, by instinct,
have always built their
dwellings‘ up’ —away from
the humidity, dampness
arid low-lying heat, seeking
a comfort level. We have
learned from their innate
know-how."
He has found many fea­
tures of the dwellings in
Manilla o f the Philippines,
Hawaii, Mexico and other
points in the Caribbean,
adaptable to Florida.
Let's take a look at a typ­
ical structure—one employ­
ing the basic principles,

though each is custom tail­
ored as to detail.
A long, broad driveway,
permitting ample space for
visitors to get off the road,
leads to the masonry garage
or carport. There’s also a
hobby room, or guest room
with private bath, on the
ground floor.
Rising from a patio at one
side arc broad cypress stairs
-with steel hand rail, leading
to an upper patio. Fibre
glass over aluminum frames
screens this two-story sec­
tion on three sides and over
the top. The house, built of
termite-proof and mildewproof cedar, cypress or red
wood—known as the eternal
woods—has a roof of cypress
five inches thick, with a
four-inch overhang on all
(Continued on page 10)
AN florid* Maganne-rAijl 9

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W AY Off LIFE
(tTonrinuri) from p»g» 9)

I
‘

nides Lo keep out both nun
and rain. Awnings are unnecessary. Marble, bonded
for 25 yearn, but eipected
lo endure for 35 to 40 years,
covers the cypress.
In this way of life, main­
tenance is kept to n mini­
mum. The natural wood fin­
ish of the exterior, panelled
interior walls and cork cov­
ered fioors, eliminate the
necessity for painting, plas­
tering and frequent clean­
ing.
The need for furniture is
also held to a minimum.
Cabinetn line the walls of
all rooms, built from the
lower level of the jalousied
windows to a distance of
about six inches from the
floor. A section of the liv­
ing room cabineta opens to
become a writing desk and
a similar arrangement in
the bisiroom discloses a van­
ity table with full size mir­
ror.
The living room, over­
looking the lower patio and
entered from the upper one,
ia jalousied with glaaa, front
and aide, revealing a picture
painted by Nature in its
moat perfect form. A stream
flows lazily along between
the tall trees and is finally
lost from view as it goes on­
ward to the gulf.
An eye level bar separat­
ing the living room from the
kitchen becomes, on the lat­
ter side, an arrangement
which to the woman who is
happiest when in the kitch­
en, a dream really come
true. For that one who
cooks because it ia a neces­
sary part o f life, this "w ay
of life" kitchen is geared to
easy performance.
Constructed in the kitch­
en side of the dividing bar
'is a refrigerator, between a
freezer accommodating 250
pounds of food and a full
size oven with broiling unit.
All three, built on eye level
j i o that no stooping is re­
quired, have stainless steel
or copper doors. A couple of
steps across the room is the
full size range, sink and dis­
posal unit, all a permanent
part o f the kitchen struc­
ture.
The dining patio opens
off the kitchen, witbin the
screened portion, its floor
supported by steal beams
bolted to the roof and im ­
bedded in concrete.

tMOk10—AMHwMs Msgsrtw

interior Scenes
COMPLETELY BUILT-IN kltrhtn with Itttztr. rrfrlgcritor »nd rye lrv*f
ffvrn (tbovr) It Ih* hout«wl(r't delight Sink, dltpotal unit and range are
conUnacted into appetite tide of the compact cooking room jutpended
cabinet! around the wallt of living room and bedroom (right) bring furni­
ture requirement! to a minimum. Wooden louvert below the cabinet! per­
mit floor level natural ventilation. A picturetque corner of the living room
(below) ahowt room partition# which ttop half a fool thou of the ceiling!,
to that air flow throughout the houte it unimpeded

Closets, the delight of
every housewife, are large
and plentiful. They are also
suspended siz inches above
the floor for air circulation,
and are closed by Japanese
panelled sliding doors.
There's a built-in headboard for the bed, with its
shelves for hooks, radio, bed
lamp and other appoint­
ments.
Continuing around th*e
walls in all rooms, from
floor to the bottom of the
suspended wall cabinets,
wooden louvers, controlled
by a crank at hand level,
give cross ventilation in all
directions—air conditioning
by nature!
Mezican tile lends color
to the bathroom, where
sliding doors of opaque or
colored glass make o f the
tub area practically another
private room.
Grounds, like the house,
require a minimum of main­
tenance, since natural landscaping is used, employing
plctureeque trees and shrubs

native to the environs, in­
stead of man-made lawns.
So Mr. Pickard, with a
desire to get away from the
"rat race" that life so often
and easily becomes, and Mr.
Ely, determined to build a
"way o f life” rather than a
house—where every line has
its own purpose and there
is no affectation—admitting
that most men build their
homes as monuments to
their ignorance, have built
upon a philosophy which
rules their own way of liv­
ing.
There are villas for vaca­
tionists to occupy by the
week, month or season.
And there's the Y-shaped
two story hotel overlooking
the hay, complete with all
hotel accommodations and
facilities. The lobby and
cocktail lounge follow the
pirate theme in decoration,
commemorating the days of
Jean Lafltte when he and
his fellows used to come
into that point for fresh
water.

�1
I

FLORIDA'S

GOLDEN FAIRWAYS
By B O B BAIFE

-LV ouipa, which helped de­
velop the industry of min­
ing gold out of golf courses,
finds itself caught up just
now in the madcap whirl of
big-time tournament golf.
The peninsula is the fair­
way of the nation's winter
golfers, and as far as head­
lines on the sports pages are
concerned, this dates back
to 1923, when Walter Hagen
and Gene Sarazen played
their "world's champion­
ship" match in a series on
courses at Sanford, the Hilt•
more links in Coral Gables,
and Pasadena at St. Peters­
burg.
“ The Haig," who was
president of the Pasadena
club at the time, won the
title, and since he and Sarazen at the moment were

«• an et-POA champ lommy
wir. (inirt) famed at player and leacher, not* intfruclt the "dubt" af
Boca Baton Club
I A Sf Prteribiir g rem it ni, Chick llarbe rt

All Merid a 1 p e r i l Editor

poll's bin names, Florida be­
calm' iiliiliaU'd in the public
imagination with tops in
golf.
It may have been fiction
then, but now it is fact.
Florida has d e v e l o p e d
liner golf links, employed
the best professionals as
teachers, mapped a yearround program of tourna­
ment piny. On the competi­
tive schedule, this spring's
jackpot of $11(1,5(10 for the
man and women profession­
als is proof enough that
golf has become one of the
slate's biggest seasonal di­
versions.
Two new tournaments at
Si. Petersburg and Miami
Ilea eh were added this year
to the record-breaking $250,000 winter lour of the Pro­
fessional Golfers Associa­
tion.
After cross-country slops
in California. Arizona, Texas
and Louisiana, the higname men pros arrive al St.
Petersburg for the new $12.500 Open, Mar 17-20.
Then they swing cross­
state to Palm Peach lor the
Seminole Club’s annual
$10,000 Amateur-Pro. Men
Hogan goes to Palm Peach
annually to sharpen Iuh
game for the limited num­
ber of tournament appear­
ances he now makes, ant]
the Seminole tourney marks
his annhal debut
From Palm Mt'ach the
pros go to the new Miami
Peach Open, a $12,500
A N &gt; W H tltt IN M orulj in t r it o n &gt;ou
f i n (inri t r r n r t u icti i t Ih it (b rlo w )
with g illr r &gt; it r i Ir .iln ij) Ih r Inn n im r
you t l i r t

event which replaces tin In
teruational Four-Pall
Florida gull addicts have
more than a passing inter­
est in some ol tile brighter
stars. Italic Zaharias until
recently was owner of a
Tampa golf club, the Mailer
sisters, Alice and Marlene,
live in Sarasota; Sam Snead
is a combination golfer-fisheriuan living in Miami;
Tommv Armour, one of the
game’s great tem hers, has
been pro at the Moca Malon
club since 1929, ami lives
at Delray Peach, just a tee
shot across a canal from the
home of Toney Petina, an­
other veteran ol the links
wars. At clubs nearby are
such famed pros as Claude
Harmon and Hobby Crnickshank.

“ MR 6 0 1 1 h iim rll, Mrn
pick* Palm Beach tor hit ,tnmi,ti
I lineup

vrr like (hi*, according to Jackie Purtg one ol iht L
hifirrs of the feminine fairway fiend*

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The faBt growing towns along the
St. Johns forced the steamboat lines
to offer regular services to the
upper reaches of the river. Operat­
ing on Lake Monroe, the sidewheeler
Volusia was one of the first of the
boats to navigate the uncertain
channels.
When small trade boats had
taken on their wares after meeting
the steamers, the merchants would
blast on conch shells to let the set­
tlers know they were ready for busi­
ness.
Immediately prior to the steam­
boat era, Astor had built a railroad
from the town of Astor to Lake
Eustis. Now that the steamboats
JOHN WILSON SOMEEVIUE
brought people to this part of the
AHD
state, Astor promptly set out orange
ELLA TEAGUE B E BERARD
groves to make the citrus industry
profitable. He was probably among
c/ . V jTcy.ViT r/*ViT:V*V;TcV*ViYrv.V,T r/A ^ fc /A ^ T r /w V ,
the first industrialists to subject
WHAT HAS OONK JIEFORK: Durini vinced was an illusion, he found . himself to a squirt in the eye from
l he early ■teamboatini ara along the St. later that a manatee had taken the juicy grapefruit. His appreci­
Johna River, eimraion boat* brought north­
ern vialtor* to the area to escape the rigora of refuge in the otherwise calm harbor. ation of the delectable item added
The tourists, with fair weather, it to .the breakfast tables of the
winter. Induetriee sprang up and banka were
organited. Jacksonville waa eatabllahed in fish and fun at their disposal along nation.
1032 aa port of entry to Florida. Tranaporla- the river, kept the boats so crowded
Hamilton Disaton, a saw manu­
tion of timber, naval atorea and citrua fruit to
facturer from Philadelphia, also
that
it
was
necessary
to
put
six
o
f
market resulted In founding of an eitenaive
industry supplying fuel Tor the wood burning them in operation between Jack­ realized the possibilities of develop­
veaaele. Enterprise, DeLeon. DeLand and sonville and Palatka, to make the ing Florida. His negotiations with
other towns wars founded and eitenaive orange round trips daily.
Gov. William Bloxham gave Disgroves were operated nearby. DeLand and
ston the ownership o f 4,000,000
Bands
were
hired
to
play
on
Stetson Universities were established II. A.
Del .and founded Lake Helen, which became board the steamboats. Musicians acres of Central Florida land for 25
with stringed instruments were en­ cents an acre. This deal helped to
a popular winter resort.
gaged on some of the boats. On soft put the state on a sound financial,
«
C h apter V
warm winter nights, as the steam­ basis and made Disaton the largest
X o accommodate the hoat of new boats moved along the river be­ landowner in the state, now with a
citizens, Lake Helen opened a gen­ tween banks overgrown with hibis­ population o f 269,493.
The progress rushed along with
eral store, a grocery and a shoe cus, lilies and sweet grasses, the vis­
and clothing store. Prom the South itors thought they were in a heaven amazing speed.
With the advent of electric lights
Florida Nursery thousands of fruit on earth. When the sun dazzled on
the golden water in the daytime, and the telephone, Florida could
trees were sold.
see what it was doing to make itself
The First Congregational Church they were sure o f it.
Two daily mails from the North, great, and could tell the rest of the
erected an edifice, and a newspaper
together with the matter o f a four- world about it.
was started in the town.
The telephone brought into com­
Two and one-half miles east o f hoqr run to Jacksonville and a oneBlue Spring Landing on the St. hour run to the most fabulous fish­ munication countless numbers o f
Johns River lay the town of Orange ing grounds in the state, made people. It rendered a priceless serv­
ice In time of sickness and of death,
City, which was 168 miles by river Orange City a desirable stop-over.
and 113 miles by rail, from Jackson­
ville. The Atlantic and Western
Railway accommodated it to the
mutual benefit of road and town.
Orange City water found in a stra­
tum of white sand proved to be free
from lime and as pure as any free­
stone water in its natural state.
Within the limits of the town plat,
there were more than 20 living
springs.

IK THE

'•

In the vicinity o f Orange City was
Blue Springs, a m apim oth spring
which discharged more than a mil­
lion gallons o f water per minute,
sending out a four-m ile current, a
river o f a volume to float a ship.
In winter months the shad used
the river for 200 miles. A t Blue
Springs Run the bream and bass
Seemed to congregate for a conven­
tion o f fish.
One day a steamboat pilot, turn­
ing into Blue Springs, was pussled
at the agitation In the d e a r blue
water. fTfcmieriag
fAOi 13—ASfMSs

I

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of sorrow and of Joy, and the instru­
ment made neighbor* o f all the peo­
ple on its line.
The telephone waa brought to
Jacksonville in 1880 by John G.
Christopher, who was among the
pioneer subscribers, with Leopold
Furchgott, John H. Gay and R. N.
Ellis. Grace McDaniel, the first girl
operator, soon became accustomed
to a type of switchboard which re­
sembled n woven square lamp shade
with a maze of dangling string*
snarled around.the base.
The first telephones in Jackson­
ville were on a private line connect­
ing the office of A. M. Beck, with
the Inland Navigation Company.
The first personal telephone was
owned by Capt. William Davidson
of People's Line o f boats. .
Early in the year 1880, John G.
Christopher, o f the firm of Wightman and Christopher, became inter­
ested in the establishment of a local
exchange in Jacksonville. To this
end B. D. DeForrest, assistant sup­
erintendent of the Southern Bell
.Telephone and Telegraph Company,
was sent from Augusta, Ga., to so­
licit for subscribers and to build the
exchange. The exchange was opened
on May 24,1880, with 34 telephone*
installed.
A. B. Hernandez and Henry Simonds were the first operators and
Charles A. Clark, the first night op­
erator.
In 1884, it was decided to use
female operators thereafter, and
Grace McDaniel was the first of
thes»
i
Robert B. Rood was appointed a*
.the first telephone company man­
ager. On Nov. 1, 1887, B. F. Dillon
relieved Rood as manager and wa*
in turn succeeded by Gay, who con­
tinued as manager until the end of
the century.
(Ta k* laaMaaaS M

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MAGAZINE

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F lo r id a

-A t t r a c t i o n ^

w shouldm ..
Mar. 13-17 — D ctrint Tiger* play
nightly at Henley Field, Lakeland.
Mar. 14-19—Florida Sportmcn's F.xpotition and Lake County Fair,
Eustis.
Mar. 15—Horse Racing Finals. Sun­
shine Hark, Oldsmar.
Mar. 13-17—1"Guys and Dolfs," Pea­
body Auditorium, Daytona Reach.
Mar. 16—Vagabond Players, "Lo anti
Rehold," sponsored by B.P.W
Club, Pensacola.
Mar. 17 — Horsemen's Trail Riile
Umatilla.
Mar. 17-19—Automobile Show, Fort
Lauderdale.
*
Mar. 17—Rt. Petersburg Symphony
Orchestra, St. Petersburg.
Mar. 17-18 — Full Moon Singles,
Shuffleboard Tournament, Lake­
land
Mar. 17-20— Men's $15,000 Open
G olf Tournament, Lakeland Golf
Club, St. Petersbburg
Mar. 17—Irish Festival, Hollywood.
Mar. 17—Concert, Nikita MagatofT,
pianist, Pensacola.
Mar. 17—Florida Education Associa­
tion, Ft. Homer Hestcrly, Tampa,
three days.
Mar. 17—Tampa Mid-Winter Trap
Shoot — Cigar City Gun Club,
Tampa International Airport, four
days.
Apr. 17—"Florida Aflame," Indian
drama, nightly 8 :1 ) except Mon­
days, Safety Harbor.
Mar. 18-20—State W omen's Bowl­
ing Tournament, Ten Pin Lanes,
St. Petersburg.
Mar. 1 8 —Seventh Annual Boys'
Club Circus, Tam pa,4w o days.
Mar. 18—Pittsburg Pirates vs. Mil. waukec Braves, Fort Myers.
Mar. 2 0 —12-Hour Grand Prix of
Endurance, Sebring.
Mar. 2 0 — W ater Ski Show . Lake
H ollingsw orth, Lakeland, 2:30
p.m.

$•• All of Florida but by all means
$•• beautiful

CYPRESS GARDENS
4 WATER SKI SHOWS DAILY
Where the famous motion picture Cinerama teas made.

mm
AH Florida M*f*tine-FACF II

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�QthCENTURY PUZZLE
(Continued from p a s* J)

1 1 1 * 1 1*

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BUILD SAF( with I/.*

HURRICANE
BRACE r

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Shopper) Mart “ c/o ALL PLOAIDA
MAGAZINE. P Q l o t J6T. Octlt,
rto.-T od a y !

SPORT WATCH

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of them presented the frus­
trations he encountered in
re-assembling what is called
the giant jig-saw puzzle of
the ages—the Ancient Mon­
astery now standing in Flor­
ida.
Having engaged Carswell,
the new owners of the Mon­
astery stones turned over to
him the carefully coded blue
rints which had been made
tn Spain. Code marks cor­
responded with similar desig­
nations on each of the 10,751
boxes. No one contemplated
any m ajor problem s in re­
mirth
.&lt;•*.*£r?*
assembling the structural
A SCENE In the potto of the 13th century monoatery ahowtnf the hind
corved. pink morbt* well covering In the center.
materials. But when the
boxes were opened, Carswell
discovered thaFthe stones in classifying construction the design o f 12th century
rarely matched the coded materials. In fact, the initial kitchens. Fortunately the
blue print or the picture. “ O” had been used to desig­ kitchen was not necessary
nate the stones for both east to present to the public a
What had happened?
Uncle Sam and his workers (oriente) and west (oeste) work o f art which can be
had, with the beat o f inten­ walls. It was Carswell's task known aa the oldest building
tion, made a mesa o f every­ to help these men recognise in the United States, cele­
thing. According to Federal atones in twelve classifica­ brating its first anniversary
ragulationa th e h a y from tions and place them in units as an American Sanctuary.
Sanctuary it is, even though
Spain, with which the boxea of twenty.
Further complicating the it is a commercial attraction,
had been packed, could not
Be brought onto Am erican construction, Carswell dis­ for no one enters the Monas­
•oil because o f a dangerous covered, was the fact that tery G a r d e n s to stroll
threat to Uve stock. T he the west wall had been built through Its cloistered patio
boxes were emptied and re­ seventy-five y e a n before the without standing in awe be­
packed with approved ma­ south and aaat walla. T h ey fore its altars.
terials, bu t, unfortunately were different in design. Not
T o the hundreds o f visi­
the packers ware unaware only that, but the north wall tors, who come there every­
o f the necessity for getting was m ining. This p a rt o f the day, it is a miracle of sheer
th e atones in th e coded monastic building had been beauty. T o Allen Carswell
boxes. C onsequently, when attached to the living quar­ it is also a miracle. In spite
the boxes were opened it was t a n o f the m onastery, and o f his troubles, frustration
discovered th a t th e coded th a t part o f tha structure only strengthened hia hands

blueprint was o f Uttle use. waa atiU in Spain. C a n w ell
Fortunately, th e photos used Florida's limestone, the
taken o f the original Monas­ nearest thing to Spanish
tery were clear and detailed field-atone, to close the north
and the giant jig-aaw puttie wall. Only by close inspec­
began to ta k e shape in spite tion is it possible to detect
the minute shell formations
o f apparent chaos.
In their s t u d y o f the that characterise Florida's
atones, workmen discovered contribution to the w all.
Ceilings presented stagger­
th at each m onk o f th e C is­
tercian O rder had been as- ing construction problem s.
rigned a trademark by which Cloister, chapter house and
hia work could be tallied . refectory have vaulted ceil­
T h is mark was carvad into ings held In place b y Intri­
the block aa it waa m ade. c ate, interlocking sto n e
T hey also discovered that Arches. There are seven tyeach capital on the more five o f th ese arches in the
than fifty columns outlining chapter house alone end five
th e cloiaered p atio had an •tone double arches, weigh­
original design. N o living ing seven tone each, support
creature a p p e a r * in the the ceiling o f the refectory,
sculpturing but m any fruits now used as a m u seu m o f
11th century art items.

’ The next obstacle was en
administrative one. It in*
volved the use o f laborers
were unfamiliar with*
the technical markings and
native Bpaakk Hmeatnpei.

At long last the Monastery
was re-eammbted, all but the
kitchen. No pictures o f the
kitchen had been taken and
the atones were sadly jumbled so tha blaa print waa
toetudy

P M IIM I

TOTAL FAMILIES
in FLORIDA

914.000

FAMILIES IN

A U FLO RID A

494,000
•

53 . 9 %
COVERAGE

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WANTED: PLAYWRIGHTS

C L A S S I F I E D

(C c n lin u r d Irpm p e g * 1 )

ADVERTISING
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ti-UNCLASsmn)
R H E U M A T IS M '
i jnu auffirf with irthtitit, K im c i. nru
' Itii, m t i l i i i , lumbago cx with a ihronii
| m t of ill ncalih aatouatcd with, of tontibutablt to th ru nuiixn' Write rod*? for
itt booklet SO U TH ER N CRO SS HOS.
IT A L * C L IN IC . 1124 Gtand Central,
imp* 6, FU
S - flM A t i H W 1
, [,IR 15 T O M O I r t l f.H T V .how i. Ii.h
J on iho w i I'lt lit ll S ttfc n . Firm (mu;
. Who. J , II ? E Fonith, Ju k u in x llc
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^ADDRESS BOMlb It home E lm $1 u»m
H n i.ii.m f u l l oidtr t n r iit d Inittudiom
® l i Rtfumliblf Btttntt, Trmron l. N J
I I —M USIC D A N C l ORAMATICS
—RECO RD LO V ER S’ Lairv pop. and il»»V o . on 41, E P and L P m o ld . R C A •
umbia-Cjpial, rtc Mail u. )out li.t
I Jwith S i 00 drpowt W t »hip nf .1 day. fillante C O D Poilagt pud on ofdff ol 10
m o fd t S P E C IF Y S P E E D and A R T IS T
W E D O N ’T SELL ?• R E C O R D S Tunr
" S p in Rnotd Center, 140) Atlantic. Jack| tonnllr ?, &gt; i
I Cnmptcie te tti.r fix S n n g a in rt, W titr
" IIE L E N irS " R eed in g Sio.1. .. tot Hail
I find A w . Ottima Day Inna Beach. 11a
S O M iW K II 1 R s n P P O R T U N IT V 1Coiatjnirrd Actum lin o Ciuild Itinad
I can. and Tap* Submi.ti.in Set, n r W titr.
National Sttngurnri, (io ild
South
I Atlanii. A re . Deltona Hra.li
| A J-O W T S

”

M EX IC A N hand tooled hag«, billfold.,
j bamboo and fibre miniature (of ra ilin g ,,
palm halt .apt wholctalc only Rcuurtl
catling Ftancitco L de A ikot, 904 Scott
S t . Liifd n . T e i
M -R U S4M H S O PPO RTUN tTni
B U Y M Y 1 10AX&gt; apartment equity lot
11.000 each; attume 11,000 moitgagr (A )
munthlyi ad,turn auditorium, 4 unit!
tented 12 VU monthly; othet teimt potttblc
Addrett Boa )IM Daytona Beach, Flood*
W A N T U P to 1100 weekly depotked in
yoat mail boa? Detail* free. Aldemmith,
2704-F Ladrta. San Bernardino, Calif

M A K E S H ELL J E W E L R Y fat pattimt ot
fettle at a profit Sm tattonally lowef p f x f i1
Whnleule prurt on ^uanntiet Many new
item. 6al modem k in (al iota of miteriali
only) illuttrated in new 19)1 catalog ~ 2 V ,
credited on | l order. Don-Let Shell.taft,
Boa 1247AFM, Daytona Brack, Fla
P U N T 1 ,r M I I

j

FA N C Y UafCaladn.nl BuRm. miaed colon
with at owing inttruitiont, pet 100 poatM in * ) 10. I in S I M , IH m * • 00.
2 in SHOD A tum Atnrt, Sebting, Fla
H Y B bT d A M A R Y L U S Bulba, ready in
bloom 4 - 1 )9 1 , S-16.10. 12-1991 Fon­
tana Nutarry, Rt I , Boa M2. Ocala

R ilB B I
&gt;

M AY t HELP Y O U ?
A penotal meaaage fat yon Your 19)1
F o m in , chat Kite analytic, yuuc lucky dan,
nunhrrt, colon . . . My clientele includer
.how buatneu, tocicit and buiinrtt leaden
in reefy field. Send date o f b oth with 10c
fat each date wanted
ZO D IA C HOUSE
P. O Boa 2201
Miami Beach, Fla
v&gt; DIFFERENT FOREIGN STAMPS 20c
Apfeueala accompany Carolina Stamp C o .
IE Broadway, Athetillt. N . C
VISIT the beautiful Q og irol Garden &lt;d
Eden aa Bnrnoi, f i g . m the gopher lift**
ike wood ike Ark w*. made of, the kinkplace o f our fit it p e ctin

*

items

11,000 SA BLE and muaknt coat, liar 16.
full length pfht, worn only twice, will tell
fie *100 Oettact editor All Fkeida Magi
tine, 110 F. Wathington. Ocala, phone
MArion 2 1610
D E S T R O Y U N W A N T E D H A IR FO R ­
E V E R . Tempwary ith tf i» net enough
W ith Formula 711 unwanted hair it gone
fierce* if uwd a. directed Pamlct. -Safe-Effluent Money Back Guarantee if u fade
Sepd 1 2 he grnrtou. .upply Formula
111 puwpiid ie c m G O D pluc po.tagr
chaigrc Lrmcn Rrtearih Lahoratiei, Bo.
741. lake W .etb. Fla
FR E E W H O LF5A LE C A T A L O G
Saer up to MY* on .tandatd brand., appliaru n . household iirms, rtc D fiirt. TTie
Pmemawer, R l l SW, Oakland P u k. Fla
I 0 F —IU S IN IJ S PLACES FOR RENT
FO R R I N T Sioit and O llu r Sp ur in
largr budding located Sebting, l l a . one
blink Horn I’oci O llier Sebnng it glow­
ing ispnllt due iu luge real eclair drvrlop
mem C n m i.t W II H riihcnng ion.
Ilighlindt Count, N r * ., Sebnng. lla
IC M - M o m s 4 T R A B M C O U IT I “ ~
IN T E R F 5 T F D LEA SIN G modem motel,
peiteniagt bttn glut, income R F I mm.
211 Collrge A ee, Panama C m , Fla
flS-d N C O M B E BU s Tn CSS P R O n ST Y FOR SALE
MOTEL, modern I unit and I rm Owner*
apt, A l location ee&gt; U S I in W en Palm
Beach High income, pfice |16,noo. E n y
irtm i Phone 1-9I70, E Mueller, 2W0
Brutdway, W rit Palm Beach, Fla
— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — w

111—INCOME A BUSINESS PROPERTY
FOR SALS
D E LU X E A P T H O T E L
In popular law growing Naples. D a .—67
beautiful, ultra modern uniti —| run.000 OCJ
- ir tm i ro hr arranged Stile Sale. —A ll
Type. Internment Pi open x i
We Sell FWida Nationally
Wane fix National Maiketing Plan
T H E K E Y E S CO
2)4 Bistiyne B l.d
Miami, Fla
SIX FLO R ID A O FFICES
Nalunal Affiliate* in 21 Majxx Ciitra
G IF T S P O R T S W EA R SH O P Oppwtite
pot to (Tue and thtaitr $6,000 including
new Saturn, supplin and merchandise
Write J G Dtrka. 142 W Indiana A i t ,
DrLand. Fla
120—AUTOM OBILIS FOR SALS
W E SELL all make, and model, auiomo
bile. VCc bu&gt; all make, ami modeli JA R
R A R D M OTORS, lo t » Vt'e.i Cianlen S t.
Pensacola. Fla Tel &gt;v r _ l
U S —M ISCElkANtOUS FOR SALE
SI N D in I I
hiring li-imr
.ir .lu on lin t
W hitt D ik e .

N IS for w ht.lrialr catalog
n n .fi it a fiig lacing. It
onlct llaigatn llo u cr. 1)1
Tallaha.cce. Lla

1 2 4—REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
I A K Itl: fiuilihug .unable lot officei ix
More, in I’almeiio, lla ( om plcirli ir
mo-frled Opening of the new Skyline
Biidgt make, this peopctiy te l. aura.tier
Contact Jot.Ian ami Sipes R ealm !., Pal
metro, I'll
u

&gt; -^ « »

a “^

ps“

r

F L O R ID A County Map. Ideal hunting,
fishing map. Later detailed lakn, tirram i,
trail*, road. Send county name and $1 00
to Godfret's Map Serene, Winter Haven,
Florida^

E X C E U E N T SCH O O L O R
B O YS CAM P
Former Baptnt Quldrtn'i Home in Arcadia,
Fla 60 Kara land-12 room aetidtner and
140—REAL ESTATE
doamitoatet—attractive campua Piu rd to
aril aa |4 6 2 U )-H alf C-uh Sure Salea-AII
O CALA and Matun County uffrt wixuter
Type* Intrtimen* Propertie.
ful real ruate bun Smith 4 Oprda Realty,
We StU R u n Ji Narunally
Ocala, Fla
Write fa* Natuaul Marketing Plan
T H E K E Y E S C O . Realtori
FO R IN F O R M A T IO N about M txrlt.
2)4 Baaciyne Bled
Miami, Fla
Acreage, Timber. Rancbea and Giuee. See
So Florida Other*
Al Biealy, Stleea Spring!, Florida. Phone
Naranal Affiliate* in 2* Maine Ciuea
i MA 2 )947________________________________
ICY* NF.T LEA SE-BA CK
Canning (^aitk Frerae Flant. South Flotida
w ll Ili1 ,ta n lO-yrat Iraw hatk at S22.100
net D tprriiiiiun afftwdt r.celltn t l i t ad
.im age “ We tell Florida Nationally “
Wane for National Maikrnng Plan
T H E K E Y E S C O M PA N Y
2)4 Huhaync B ird . Tel *2 )192. Miami
Sea Flutida Office.
National Affiliate. 2* Map* Cine.

BEST VALU ES in hornet, farm., lake and
invrMmeni properties cnnract Fhinda Real
E u it r Serene, l ad, IM Fait Ocklawaha

M O D ER N M O TFL
A T SILVER SPRIN G S
One of F k xid j'l finetl —AAA ap pnnrd2* umta— h u ll in 1911—1 1 ,100.000 tan
annuall. in are* Aif-tnndiimned. healed,
new film ed pool Pticr 1211000-tun
able trim . Btochutt audible H R Stub
fn , Ja., State S a le .-A II T .p e . In.rum ent
Ptoperrie.
We Sell Florida Nationally
W ine fat National Maikrnng Plan
T H E K E Y E S CO
2)4 Ihnatne B l.d — Miami, f it
S IX FLO R ID A O FFICES
National Affiliate, in 2* Mapn Cine.

FLO RIDA Iota fix aak1 Free illutatated color herehurt and infix met xxi package Now
you can bet in brautiful Flocida Jhocn
tumfixtably aa Law m u F .ira hag rr.idennal kxa on imptoied m t t ii 129) told
in pain A rropwal wixufatland
fishing.
ipocta, bathing ix . wixld'a lafest ocean
btaah Wnte today fot F R E E detalltFLO R ID A SHORES, New Smyrna Beach
M 12, PU

p r o f i t a b T f.

W A TER FR O N T H O TEL
Ft Myen. Fla —a New England Inn midst
a iiiiptcal setting E.crlie n t condition,
modern pool. 4* moms wnh barb. 2-bedroom apatimena manager Nett | l aa *1*.
price SI 71.U0U, * 21.0011 ta.h Stale S t ir. A ll Type. Inwwment Propernr.
We' Sell Floodi Ninunally
W n lf fix N iih x c i I Maikrnng Plan
TH E KEYES CO
214 Bmayne B M - Miami. Fla

S»« FVxxli Ufficr.

_ _ N aixxul Affiliate, in 2a Mayor Cine.

in rehearwal. Thirteen
prodiictiurui, inchuiing seven
winter sho w B, one revival,
two Rummer productions
and three children's plays
will lie produced during this
14th season to an annual
audience of over 13,000.
Sets, costumes, proper­
ties, lights, stage managing,
and many other behind-thescene jobs plus the actual
acting roles are handled by
volunteers of all age groups
and vocations.
Casting sessions are open
to the community at large
and the choice is made with­
out specinl reference to ex­
perience or training. Sumo
are seasoned performers
with experience on Broad­
way, in summer stock and
foreign theatres, while oth­
ers make their Htage debut
with the Players.
It was during the Players'
10th anniversary season
that the board of directors,
realizing that some sort of
recognition was due new
plays and authors, brought
the Playwright's Competi­
tion liefore the voting membent for consideration. Thus
the cuiii|&gt;etition was created
and the players became one
of the few organizations in
the field.
The first award-winning
play, "Underground,’’ a
drama of the Ukranian re­
sistance movement follow­
ing World War II and writ­
ten by Ray Lapica of White
Plains, N. Y., was produced
in February of 1952.
The contest hecame an
annual affair with the sec­
ond premiere production in
April, 1953. "I.over Hoy,"
authored by Kerry Shaw o f
Los Angeles, Calif., dealt in
comedy form with certain
aspects of resort high life.
Miss Shaw has since had
several of her plays pro­
duced.
During the same season,
major productions were
placed on the present eightnight, split week basis. Also
Innovated was an annual
Actors and Artists Costume
Ball, only one of its kind in
the area.
"Not All of Me Shall Die,"
by Leslie G. Cameron, of
Ann Arbor, Mich., was pro­
duced last April as the third
annual award-winner. The
drama was based on the
medieval romance of Heloise
and Peter Abelard.
In a 1953 "Theatre Artu"
rIto w

MAT-MU^

B U Y , SELL ut R E N T Mutnn County'a
large.! independent agency Oua polity il
to giee dienit all the tad. without tetereatmn Ft King Real Estate Agent y. 10 E
Ft. King Aee, (X ala, Da

survey of 54 little and com­
munity theatres throughout
the country, the most fre­
quent reasons for not pro­
ducing original plays were
economic ones. Yet th. Play­
ers, even with the expense
of the Playwrights' Compe­
tition, are 98 per cent selfsupporting. Only the re­
maining two per cent of ex­
penses nre defrayed by pat­
ron donations. Subscrip­
tions, ticket sales and ad­
vertising provide the bulk
of the theatre's revenue.
There is little doubt that
the Players' program of
recognition for an unher­
alded author has made many
friends in Florida and all
over the country.
Most important to the
author is the invaluable ex­
perience he receives watch­
ing his piny come to life in
rehearsal and witnessing
audience reaction to the ac­
tual production. The Play­
ers also invariably supply
the winning author with a
general evaluation, news­
paper reviews, a tape re­
cording and sheaf of photo­
graphs from the production
for future study.
Following the production
of "Summer Cniise" in April,
the Players will again open
their Florida doors to new
authors over the country.
The winner will not only re­
ceive a catih prize and the
thrill of seeing his play pro­
duced but will probably
spend some time in Florida
on b "working vacation."

FRENCH
O N T U lflO R tD A

• U*Rh*4rt

». 0. M l 4 MUiVNW, I U .

BaBaWaa 4 Ottauaku

ALL FLORIDA
M A G A Z IN E
t k * lar^M i CW wUtak P uU ku tiax In
S a t U a - l f f a a n fit 29 Nawapapara

TU* Wp*4 WHfi ISE.4S0 CWtuiut.au

Classified
RATES
1 UNI MINIMUM
M— MUM f W O R M PER UNI
I

Wmk 20 c per « u r d . .1 2 0 0

4 W eek* lift dwriHinl . . 7.20
H W eak* 15T dlacwunt . , 13.GC
13 Wapka 2ST dtacuunt . . lb Ml
(Plaaaa an d *** ckaek wM t a«dat|

AH Florid* M*( aim*-PAG! IS

■*rvv/r"li

�f

M
*

.

1

’ V'

*
/
*

�Shop and Sav
In Sanford

Wtdrter

i&amp; c m lf t

H a n fo rd

INDEPENDENT
DAILY NEW
j AN
jN W
D K P g j g ^ T DAF1.T
N EW SPAPER

8A N F 0R D , FLORIDA.

Plan
Gwen
By PAR
TAMPA — The difference
between what Florida motor­
ists pay lit taxes and whnt
tliey net in new roads “ should
shock ns nil” into support of
the objectives of the Project
Adequate Roads (PAR) com­
mittee of the Florida M rIiwny User* Conference, Wil­
liam J. Harritt Jr., chnirmnn,

Fehr n»4 cwtiww d roey w n
terwegh Tartdav, high IliD aft***
■no* 77 tn M. low tonight » ki N .

•

MONDAY, M AR . I I . 19S5

A m r ia M

Pi w

i

l-fiw d

No. 111

W irt

9 Southern States
Affected By Strike
P - lB —k t

$ Telephone
Officials j
Confer

~~

said yesterday.
The contrast was po'nti-.t up, he
said, by lh« almost simultaneous
release of figure* on Federal eolATI.AN” ! A f.-V)—Southern
Iretionx of ta\e* fmm Florida
Roll Telephone t'«*. worker*
highway* user* ami the adoption
In nine state* struck today I
at tlie Florida Komi ltoard'a an­
nual budget.
,
after more than eight months
of negotiations failed to pro­
Motorist* and other highway
user* in Florida pay well over
duce n new contract agree­
•ISO million every year In all
ment.
form* of motor vehicle and furl
IIKV. II. L. ZIMMHUM AN
A continuous 20-hour ses­
taxes—but less than ftOO million
(Staff I’ hate)
sion between representative*
of their mony goes to improve tha
of
the
company
nt
,the
CIO
road* on which they operate their
Communication Worker* recessed!
vehicles, llairitt pointed out.
at 7:30 a. m. to tic resumed *t 2
The Florida I’ AR committee,
p. m Hath sides issued stairmen's j
headed by Sydney I). Chase Jr. of
expressing hope that an early arSanford, is proposing a two point
cnnl could be reached. Thor.' was
“ more-roada-without-mor# taxes”
no specific sign, tlimigh, tint they
progiam which includes:
were any neaicr agreement than
1, Restoring to road-building
they were a day, week oc month
purpose* that portion of motor
ago
vehicle license tag money remain­
CWA leader* said that as far aa*
ing after school tmllding bond
they knew the walkout was ap­
The Rev. H. f.ylfletnn Zimmer­
requirement* are met. (This sur­
proximately too per cent effective
plus tag money, which totalled
among Ihe SO.OiXl employes eligible man pastor of Holy Cross Epis­
about $UI million last &gt;enr. now
for union membership. The com­ copal Church in Sanford has been
roe* into the general revenue
pany reported that tome worker* chosen tn attend Ihe College of
fund.)
remained on Ihe job but gave nn Preachers in Washington I). C. as
2. Reorganising the Stale Road SPEAKS AT SERVICES HERE — Dr. Harry E. Jeosnp definite figures
a Fellow.
A company statement called the
Department to provide gicatrr ef­ (right), president emeritus of the Chicago Evangelistic In­
The nomination of a prieet to
ficiency, with *ricntific suffiri- stitute, is greeted hy the Rev. Robert Spear Jr., pastor of Ihe strike “ a tragic thing" ami said it one of these Fellowships is at
had
done
all
It
routd
to
prevent
it,
ivicy rating* a* Ihe basis for new Church of the Na/.nrene, where l&gt;r. Jessup spoke nt services
one# a compliment, since the op.
including “ a mod generous wage portunity U offered only to men
construction and with staggered yesterday. (Staff Photo)
oiler, plus many contract improve­
terms for board member* to as­
who, in previous visits to the Colments.” It reiterated that a settle­
sure continuity of administration.
Irge have given evidence of markment
could
he
quickly
arrived
a
if
Chairman Chase ha* emphasised
•d ability and responsibility, ft
the union will accept a no-strike
that this program would not ef­
involves sacrifice, Imth personal
clause.
fect present Constitutional alloca­
and ofiieial; hut to the parish and
'Die CWA countered that the re
tions to schools and County gov­
to the individual, H means an in­
maintng
diilerrnces
“
are
several
i' ijinabie gain.
ernments. but would merely ie,.
, . .
t .
in number and vital In their scope
store and surplus of inotot ift'A*
ail* net I fill ptivide prayer w.m nuphnalxc. yesterday Mllt
w laia our faith in m.r ahlFatiier Zimmerman has been
paid taxes to Ihe Road Drpail- by Dr. Harry h. Jt**i*op, president omi ritu.* o f the (-'IdeaKir ,iy i„ ,Paih *„ accord in the very invited to attend in the tosni of
nient for primary road construc­ Kvnngclintir Institute.
Oct. 3 to Nov. IH foliowing the ar­
Imar future."
tion. Nearly 900 Florida organisa­
rangement that allow* men, who
Speaking
nt
till*
uturmiig
jwrvlru
of
the
First
(’
llunit
of
The
union
reported
that
at
(lie
tion* have endorsed this program
|iequest of the federal mediation an- invited to become Fellow* of
tfce
Nasalertc,
lie
pointed
out:
*
for preaentatlon to the Legisla­
|service both sides had agierd not the College, to attend the fall, win­
“ When the door of youi room I*
ture, Chase added.
lo discuss Hie tsssue in dispute in ter or spring term*.
•hut, it ta not long lo-foiw spiri­
piililir statement*. The mediators
To h« chosen oiler* a priest a
tual thing* t»*gin to happen.”
fell, said a union spokesman, that short period of intensive study, an
He motioned against hcroming
with this curb an agreement might opportunity for intellectual and
m i busy that time i« nut taken to
more easily he rea rlieiV
spiritual renewal, further develop­
get in touch with lioil.
The union olfeied to piovlde man ment ol special gilts he msy
“ You ham often hcaid the
power for emergency service tint have, attending lectures, reading,
|ihrai&gt;e: ‘All work and no play
Southern Hell reierted Hie ulfer and the submitting uf a short
The present policy of providing make* Jack a dull hoy.' Well, nil
The rompany said there is no way
city nervier* In outlying area* wink and no prayer mukca a
I'laiis to conduct a Teen-Age lo tell an emergency call from any thesis on the subject ha lias cho­
Driving Hoad e u were announced other and that witli such help ■« R sen to vtudy,
will be reconsidered by the City Christian's soul dull."
,, .
, A Idler to Father Zimmerman
Commission at H* regular meet
by
the Svinimile Cimiit) Junior
Dr. Jr*»op built hi* sermon
may he able to command it will f,Uni Theodore o. We.lel, warden
ing tonight. Tlie meeting will be­ around tha topic: "The Closed Chamber of Cuminerc*.
handle
all
lo
the
best
of
our
o*
i|lv college, states:
gin at 8 o'clock.
The Itoad-e-o will roii-Ut of a ability.”
Door."
“ We hope mo&gt;t sincerely that
Under discussion wltl lie fire
written examination and a skill
Emphasising that tho rinsed
you may he able to coiue to us.
and police protertion, hydrant*,
door ta “ unv of the mightiest test involving driving through
You may be sure that a warm
and water, sewer amt garbage ser­
prescribed exercises such as park­
bh'stinga," he said that it is pos­
and must cordial welcome awaits
ing, smooth stopping and oilier*.
vice*.
sible, however, to close the door of
&gt;ou at the College if you can ar­
The CommUsion will sward Ihe your room and “ leave the door of
The local winner In (hi* national
hid on gasoline for the Police De­ your soul wide open."
Jayrre contest will receive a
Robert Johnson, of west Cam­ range to come.”
In an answering letter. Father
partment and will discuss a sug­
Ha said many person* eloso up watch front Wert’* Jeweler amt eron A v e . was placed In Hie Zimmerman r e p l i e d : “ Many
gestion that the Civil Servire Com­
will be eligible In compete In the County Jail last night on a charge
their
offires,
but
continue
to
mission he increased from three
stale Itosd e•«. Stall* vuntiiT* com. of enteiing without hn-sking, the thanks lor the invitation— the
rally on business in their souls.
privilege of which 1 am acutely
pete lor fa.ooo in scholarship* in Sheriff* office reported.
to five members,
They wrestle with so many busi­
The office said Johnson was ar- aware I cannot begin to tell yon
It will al&gt;o consider die request ness problem*, he said, that the a national contest July 25-29 In
imtering of the home of Mrt. Jack how jwaU'ful 1 am tor this oppor­
of A. B. Peterson to purchase suf­ door of the room "might as well Washington, I). C.
tunity . . . I «in quit* curtain
Herbert Hollar, Inca) Jayrre Ha*ty on Cameron Ave.
ficient land from tha city dump ha open.”
president, said six sub committee
Mrs. Hasty said she found a faat I will be able to accept )o «r
area south ef 25th St. and west of
Hn urged his listener* to “ get
U. S Highway 17 92 to build a alone aud praelire getting Ilia have been organized to carry out Negro in the bedroom of her home. invitation. , , “
the varioti* aspect* of the pro­ She said Ihe man, who had enter
road to tha Druid Park area.
spiritual door shut.''
gram. “ Ry emphasizing the rules ed the house through the back
Prayer will be led by Ihe Rev.
Ha admitted that it I* often
Chester Plank of the Geneva Hill- not aasy to get alone because of nf tbo road and the skills needed door, left by Ihe same way whan
fur safe driving, we Intend to give ■he aaked “ what he was doing.”
crest Church.
tha fact that the rooms of modern
local youth* a chance Ui prove
humes open into one another. Ha that some of America's best driv­
FARM BUREAU TO .MEET
Became of the current telesaid, too, that someone is always ers sre teen agers,” Holler said.
lloaaer L. Carter announced to­ Phone •trike Af. L. ftaliorn Jr.,
“ turning on the radio and it be­
Last year 250,ono teen ager* took day that the Seminole Com ly emergency eo iwdinator, aniumncgin* blaring awray."
part in Teen-Age Road e o in more Farm lluieaii will hold * mem- [ •’■l H'dav dial the Sanford Am*,
Citing the need for private de­ than touo towns and cities. Spon­
votion, lie said it must be based sors of the National Teen-Age hersliip meeting at the FFA build-! I,'ur R-'dm Emergency t’orp. will
ing, two blocks we.-t of Seminole ' “ 'id am emergency messages ia
on certainty of divine recogni­ Itoad e-o arc the U. S. Jayrers,
High School, touioiiow •tailing ***" “ Ul of the state,
tion and divine reward.
Liberty Mutual Insurance Com­ with » covered dish supper at 7
The message may be left at the
“ When the door is shut." he panies and American Trucking
Chamber uf Commerce
ji . iii . and a bu*ine»» meeting at 8 Junior
said, “ we la-roiuf conscious of Associations. Inc.
o'clock.
v
' building.
Jesus, the risen Lord."
Dr. Jessop also spokp at a
special afternoon union service at
the church. Guest c-hun-lie* were
Freu Methodist Church of San­
ford, the Wesleyan Methodist
Remember the flying saucers? xen*". He went on to *sy that his! 'the government didn't believe la
Thu controversial subject wa* own rxjrrirnrr* in the Air
Church or l'aola, and the lake
ln -j*,,4'h object* and said they didn't
irvived by Jotc Cardoso Stetson Diligence “ have led ma to be-1 f*'.*1’ b,,t b»
Mary Naxareue Church.
»° "iaiiy reporta
Ur. Jrssop's topic was “ Holi­ University freshman, at Friday lievr that there are such thing*." lisd coinr In from so many sources
Tourist and Shufflcboard Club.
ness in Action.”
a project wa* opened to dig inia
“ In 1947 Kenneth Arnold, a cap­
The Rev. Robert H. Spear Jr. Tourist nd Khuffcllioaid Club.
the detail* and find the expianla*
tain flying over Waihingtnn, sight­
is pastor of the rhutrh.
“ Strange objects have bean aeon ed nine round object* over Mt. Lion
in the sky since Biblical days," turner'' Cardoso said, “ lltey were
“ Recently," he went on. “ a ra*
Cardoso said. He sited “ the burn­ doing an ealimalcd apeed of 1.000 dar station outside Washington was
ing chariot” and Ihe other unex­
going through Ihe usual routine.
Mi'll."
plainable thing* recoided In the
Any object within 150 miles is re«
Hy
tin*
time,
ho
went
on,
"peo
ilihl*. A Do the refolding in the
crusted on a radar screen and the
pie
were
getting
Hie
"Flying
Sau
An Important called meeting of ship log* of “objects In the sky”.
only spot oa the screen was tha|
tha women In the outlying com­ Through the ages up U
1955 ter Scare". Even the U. S. Air of an approaching air craft. Sud­
I'orre got mlereatrd when “ lo my denly without any warning there
munities of Seminole County will stories have been told.
be held tomorrow at 2 p. m. at
“ What are flyllg saucers? Who knowledge” the first tragedy oc appeared five spots 10 miles out­
tha County Commissioner*' room knows? May lie I won't be able to cuder when Capt. MantsU, flying side the caprtol.”
In the Court House for tha pur answer the question, but when I one uf the first jets, reported an
Cardoso then went on to tell ad
pose of organizing a permanent am through you might know just object uf ‘huge six*' and followed tiie strange happenings of tho fivp
it
to
his
death
at
20,000
feet
up.”
county-wide Seminole County Unit a litle more of what the general
saucer* that had Iraveltd 150 mi log
“ In 1950 two reports wera glvaa ui the 20 seconds it took for tha
of tha Amcrieao Cancer Society.
public ought to know.”
Irving Dry or. County campaign
He commented that the Infor­ by pilots and It passeugtra of a hand oa tee screen to go eroaod.
chairman, railed t h a meeting mation he was giving tho club had lung cigar shaped object glowing
"As the aiea watched, one M e­
through tba rooparalion of R. T. to bo cleated by the government. purple all over and lighted with in rer slowly meandered
which
“
was
coming
at
the
plan**,
Milwee. county superintendent of
Ho reported eight sighting! on
While n«*M sad i
public Iaatrue tin*, and Miss Myr­ which to base tho fact that thsro •topped suddenly and was flying Hof “
tle Wilton, bum* demonstration •ro flying sauce ra. “The sightings with Ova plane instead of epetaal
•*TW Heref
agent
IL ft then took cdf fa a totret
Mrs. Julius Dtogfeldar, prasU-

Sessions Resume
This Afternoon

O’ER TIIE HOUNDING MAIN—Carl Overwtreet, Interpid Or raid reporter, proves he’s as
Ahnndv
handy with an oat as a typewriter as he ahoota acrom Lake Monrot at a fast clip. (Staff
W \Photo)

Solo Trip Is Made Dr. D. H. Mathers
Across Lake Monroe Sanford Delegate
Contradictory To Many Opinions,
To Sf. Pete Parley
1 Perilous Voyage Takes Short Time
Rotary Club Hears
Volie Williams Jr.
Discuss Legislation
“ At llie present lime, business,
commercial and unimproved proptrty ia carrying an unfair aharc
of tho tax load," State Rep. Voile
Williams Jr. told the Rotary Club
today
“ Gotr. Collini recommend* the
creation of a tax commission whose
duty It would be to establish a
yardstick by which local tax aslessors would assess property,” he
&gt; added.
t
’
“ Tills would not remove home­
stead, but would assist materially
fa providlilf adequate monies to
flnanqi the cost of our evar-facreasing school population.”
Williams spoke at the club*
club * weekly luncheon meeting at
the Yacht Club.
Ha discussed legislation coming
op this year, including constllu
tlonai revisions and reapportion
m ment of representatives.
W The five most populous counties,
next IS counties elect two and the
William* said, elect three repre­
sentatives for cacti county. T)
remainder, one. On this bails, he
said, 48 per ceot of Florida's popu­
lation receives only SO per cent
of representation.
Williams aald he bcReved
consideration should be given to
more even representation.
g. Williams spoke of the various
* appropriation* with which he waa
not in agreement. He cited the
appropriation of ISSO.OOO for hog
cholera atnim a* m example of
tends that could be wed far bet­
ter purpose!.
The people should coma hrM,
be declared In amphaaising the
need for additional facilities for
fat Insane and ror the SM &lt;Mdran awaiting admission to the
te Farm colony.
Ha spoke briefly on tee Mato
Prison at Rakford where, he said,
five prisoners are confined in
cells built to accommodate two.
Me aald first offenders are thrown
fa with hardened criminals and,
as a result, “come out of priaoo
much worse than when they enter
#d."
Pointing out that education takes
/ M per cent of the state budge,
# Williams aald that more authority
should be given teachers to Insure
disciplinary measures.
“ Parents are to blame for much
of our Juvenile delinqulejr,” he
•aid, “ because of not giving
teachers enough authority.”
Williams criticised the 53.soo.wo
appropriation far text books. Ho
said school buildings are needed
worse.

«

* Pioneer Night Set
A t Lake Mary Hall
The 90th annual Pioneer Night,
sponsored by Frank Evans, will
ha held tomorrow at the Lake Mary
Community HalL Tha event wffl
begin at T:S0 p. to.
County Judge Ernest Housbolder
wtU be the speaker. Judge Houa
. . holder spoke at tha first
V night fa IMS.
«
Evans Invited

By CARL R. OVERSTREET
Herald Staff Writer
Lindbergh croised the Atlantic
alone tn “ The Spirit of St. Louit“ .
I rrosied Lake Monroe alone In
“The Spirit of Sanford.”
Rut Llndy had an easier lime.
He, at least, had a motor to help
him. I made my crossing totally
under my own power.
‘ The Spirit of Sanford” was a
rowboat.
Looking very much Uka a boil­
ed lobster, I fell ashore on tha
Volusia County side of the lake
exactly one hour, 12 minutes and
three seconds after leaving the
new boat basin here Saturday af.
temoon.
” 1 never realised until now,” I
gasped, “ how Columbus felt when
he sighted land.”
I waited for the photographies
to raeve In and eapturd my expres­
sion for posterity. 1 made an at­
tempt— a somewhat futile one
to look like a combination Jungle
Jim, Flash Gordon, and Captain
Video.
Fame and fortune, I derided,
were my buddies.
I had become the first person to
officially row aerosa tea lake aTimekeepers and witnesses fa a
speedboat followed me serosa the
four miles of water. They watched
me like a bug under mlsroscope
I got the idea they eapected me to
poll a motor out of thin air. Un­
fortunately, I hid left my Mondial
book at home.
I oared my 14-foot metal boat
away from the boat basin at 2:20
p. m. after shaking hands with
Earl Higginbotham, president of
the Chamber of Commerce, who
wished me lock. I knew I would
need it
“You handle teat boat Itee a
sailor,” one man (booted from
shore.
“ Yeah, Mr a satlnr with two
broken arms,” I replied as I Km
bled with tha oars.
I had planned the solo voyage
far a couple of weeks. I waa at the
lakefrost every day, looking across the broad expanse of water.
People began to think I was a
Volusia County man fa axils.
I might have backed out of tha
stunt aid traded In my yachting
cap, but I had been bet a dollar
I couldn’t row across the lake.
My honor was at stake. I had to
save face. Even If my faee wasn’t
much to sava.
I studied up on yachting. Each
-morning I read a little more. Then
my seaman’s education cams to an
abrupt end.
“Hey, huh, qrit raidin' those
magaslnet,” the aewsatond at­
tendant yelled at me. “ You've
beau here so fang I’m going to
list you on my Income tax form
aa a dependant.”
I put the magaslne back in tha
rack after alyly turning down a
comer ef a page- I Just bad ta
know how Captain Faariaaa escap­
ed form those polar bears fa the
Arctic.
I want fa training for my lake
After a while, I couldn’t
tha aars ia my heads. I
mad gloves. Blisters proactect cushions.
“Gel* plenty of Insurance?” a
follow newspaperman asked ma.
“Met as tend,” I said gfaclag
around. “ Bememher, tha walla
farM O T j aad salesman operate
It waa great being out on the
lake The wind was blowing—la
tea wraag direction. The saa waa
JnM right—for malting atari.
I w f i d l i a d warn aa asbariaj

JACKSONVILLE. Or. Daniel II
Mathers, of Sanford, will be Ih
Seminole County Medical Society'*
official representative at the Bis
annual meeting ot the Florid?
Medical Association being hch
April 4-fl in SI. Petersburg. I)r
Samuel M. Day, the Association’,
secretary-treasurer, announced to
day.
Dr. Mathers has been electad by
members of tha local nicdiral so
ciety as a member of the Associa­
tion's House of Delegates.
Dr. Day stated that Dr. Mathers
together with representative! of the
other U county medical societies
determine the policies of the As
sociation during a term of one yen
beginning In April. There are a to­
tal of 141 delegates. They ronvrne
once each year at the time of the
annual meeting.
Various raporta and recommen
dationi prepared by committee- ap­
pointed by the Association's presi
dent. Dr. Duncan T. McKean, of
Orlando, are to be presented to the
delegate* for their consideration.
The action taken la reported by
them to their county medical so­
cieties for the benefit of physician*
who could not attend the session,
Dr. Day pointed out.
In addition to aesalonx of the
House of Delegates on April 3 and
•, the program for Ihe annual
meeting features H scientific . dd
reise* being presented by eminent
authorities from Florida a n d
throughout the country, Dr. Day
stated.
The list of speakers ioclud** Dr.
Elmer Hesi, Erie, Pa., president­
elect of the American Medical As­
sociation; Dr. Alton Oehsner,
founder of tha Oehsner Clinic In
New Orleans and Dr. Claude J.
Hunt, a member of tha Hunt Surg­
ical Group of Kansai City, Mo.
Beginning April 2, medical and
surgical specialists and physicians
who engage in general prartire at­
tend annual meetings of the group*
corresponding to thsir particular
field.
All members of the Association
am not expected to attend the
meeting. Dr. Day stated. There are
more than, 2,coo. Those who do at­
tend will make arrangements so
that their patients will have adequ­
ate medical ears during their ab­
sence, he said.

★ ★ ★
Rev. Zimmerman
Chosen To Attend
Washington School

Dr. Jessop Tells Need of Prayer
At Nazarene Morning Services

Jaycees Announce
Plans To Conduct
Teenage Road-e-o

City Commission
To Discuss Policy
Of Town's Services

Breaking Charge
Placed On Johnson

Amateur Radiomen
To Take Messages

Cardoso Tells Of Strange Objects

Women To Start
County-Wide Unit

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