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1954-05-05 · Anaheim Bulletin · page 11 of 14 · OCR glm-ocr
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Editorial Page Wednesday, May 5, 1954 ANAHEIM (Cal.) BULLETIN — 11 Published Daily Evenings Except Sundays and Holidays by ANAHEIM BULLETIN PUBLISHING CO., INC. 822 S. Lemon St. Anahaim, Calif. Phone KB 8-6051 HAZEL D. LOUDON, President L. H. LOUDON, Jr., Vice-President STANLEY LOUDON, Co-Publisher and Treasurer MILDRED TAGGART, Member of Board RICHARD FISCHLE, Jr., Secretary and Business Manager DON SHAFFER, Editor CARRIE LOU SUTHERLAND, Society and Women's Department C. Wm. BLAND, Advertising Manager Legalized in accordance California State Law December 28, 1951. Entered as second-class mail matter August 13, 1923, at the post office at Anahaim, California, under the Act of March 8, 1879. Subscription Rates—1 month, $1.00; 3 months, $1.75; 6 months, $2.08. 1 year, $9.00. No additional charge for mailing within the continental United States. Sales tax will be added to quoted prices on taxable items appearing in the advertising columns of the Anahaim Bulletin, same to be paid for by the purchaser as required by law. NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES WEST-HOLLIDAY CO., INC. UNITED PRESS New York—37 East 10th St.; Chicago—560 N. Michigan Ave.; San Francisco—525 Market St.; Detroit—319 Stephenson Blvd.; Vancouver, R.C.—711 Ball Bldg.; Los Angeles—139 So. Spring St.; Portland—536 W. Sixth St.; St. Louis—411 North Tenth St.; Seattle—602 Stewart St.; Atlanta—926 Grant Building. Six Inches of Topsoil It has been said that "Civilization rests on six inches of topsoil." This is not just a dramatic statement. It is a fact of nature. These six inches are all that stand between us and famine. Many conservationists believe that before this country was settled by whites the layer of topsoil was nine inches thick. Three inches—one third of the original deposit—has been lost forever, through flood, winds, erosion, and destructive forest and agricultural practices. Here is why soil conservation is as important a need as this nation knows: The federal and local governments have naturally played an important role in the conservation movement. But the success or failure of the movement is determined at the level of the individual farm. Each acreage of farm or forest presents different problems. Each requires different treatment. The experts in and out of government can provide invaluable advice and other assistance—but they can't do the job that is the individual farm-owner's and no one else's. Your Birthday WEDNESDAY, MAY 5—Born day, you have one of those "man chanical brains"—are good at firing fires, quick to analyze facts and correlate them, and able to range your findings so that you can write or lecture brilliantly from them! You have an inquiring nature and from childhood will want to know the "why and whereforest of everything. Your ambitions are high and you will want to go far in your chosen field. You will attract and hold persons of similar intellectual tastes. You do not make friends Here is the transcription of the text from the newspaper page: need as this nation knows: The federal and local governments have naturally played an important role in the conservation movement. But the success or failure of the movement is determined at the level of the individual farm. Each acreage of farm or forest presents different problems. Each requires different treatment. The experts in and out of government can provide invaluable advice and other assistance—but they can't do the job that is the individual farm-owner's and no one else's. A comparatively few years ago agriculture lacked the tools for effective soil conservation and improvement. Now it has those tools and they are marvelously swift, economical and efficient. The tractor and all the other machines that come from the farm equipment industry make relatively easy what would have been impossible in the past. We can, and must, save that six inches of topsoil on which civilization rests. Competition Gets Keener The Port Umpqua Courier of Reedsport, Oregon, recently had something significant to say about merchandising and salesmanship. It observed, "The times are just slipping into history when all a merchant had to do was get hold of the merchandise and the customers would fight over who would get it . . . Competition is getting keener all the time . . . The merchants and the salesmen who earn their livelihood in the little towns will have to get on the ball to hold their friends and neighbors. They will have to give the same service, the same bargains and do the same job of selling as their big city cousins. Salesmanship is a good thing for all of us." This view of a small-town newspaper editor, incidentally, is a pretty accurate reflection of what leaders in the merchandising business have been saying lately at industry conventions and elsewhere. In both chain and independent store groups, the consensus is that there must be better selling—a term that includes both the human salesman, and such inducements as appealing advertising and displays. In most fields, a strong buyers' market exists today, and progressive retailing fully recognizes the fact. Blind Selfishness A country editor recently observed that our present system of agricultural price supports, which has led to ever-mounting surpluses, is certainly unsound and needs correcting. But, he continued in effect, groups which are critical of it—including business and labor organizations—would be on much stronger ground if they showed some willingness to make a few financial sacrifices on their own hook. His point, in other words, Your ambitions are high and you will want to go far in your chosen field. You will attract and hold persons of similar intellectual tastes. You do not make friend easily, but those who are finally accepted into your small circle are members for life. Avoid a tendency to worry unnecessarily. Never cross bridges until you come to them! Very often your worries evaporate before anything serious happens. Take care of the present and you will find that the future is likely to take care of itself! Use your vivid imagination constructively! Among those who were born on this date are: H. H. Bancroft, historian; the Empress Eugenie; Emmer Gates, inventor and scientist; Karl Marx, Frederick A. P. Baard, educator; Tyrone Powder actor, and Christopher Morley, author. To find what the stars have to store for you tomorrow, select your birthday star and read the corresponding paragraph. Let your birthday star be your daily guide. Thursday, May TAURUS (Apr. 21-May 20)—Bein sensible and doing no worrying about things that may never happen is the best possible actice. GEMINI (May 21-June 21)—Diligence and patience on the joys. Hollywood By ALINE MOSBY HOLLYWOOD (UP)-College Gray revealed today she has given up the battle to be a big movie star and is content with being "good actress", wife and mother instead. Colleen was one of the most ambitious actresses in town until she wed aircraft executive Bill Bidlack last fall. They expect a baby in May and "it's changed my attitude," the pretty actress said. "I don't want to fight any more to be a star." "I love work and I want to be a good actress. It makes a person interesting to have outside activity. Then there's my ego and I love to get the money." Blind Selfishness A country editor recently observed that our present system of agricultural price supports, which has led to ever-mounting surpluses, is certainly unsound and needs correcting. But, he continued in effect, groups which are critical of it—including business and labor organizations—would be on much stronger ground if they showed some willingness to make a few financial sacrifices on their own hook. His point, in other words, is that almost everybody, not just the farmer, has been looking for profitable favors and preferential treatment. There is much justice in this view. A parallel is found in the effort to cut government spending--everyone is for it in principle, but cries with pain when it threatens to touch him. And that blindly selfish attitude could ruin this or any country--morally as well as financially. SONGS OF A SONNETEER BY R. LOUIS SCOTT "MEMORY'S SHRINE!" We loved each other for some little while—and found therein a golden antidote For all Life's pain; yet neither rule nor rote Might bind us—nor could nearness reconcile Our likes and dislikes—whether right or wrong! Now, lonely years across my brow have wrote The record of their passing! All my guile Has brought naught but ability to smile At those same things which once I held worth note! I do not wonder where you are tonight, Nor hearken for some echo of your song— For in my dreams I see your eyes alight With native mischief—and, amid Life's throng, Your voice rings clear in every word I write! To R. C. E. Love—6/44 Colleen was one of the most ambitious actresses in town until she wed aircraft executive Bill Bidlack last fall. They expect a baby in May and "it's changed my attitude," the pretty actress said. "I don't want to fight any more to be a star." "I love work and I want to be a good actress. It makes a person interesting to have outside activity. Then there's my ego and I love to get the money. Wanted Fame "Once I had visions of being a great actress," she said. "But you have to do a lot of sacrificing to get to the top. You have to give 100 per cent of your time to a career with no time for personal happiness. "I don't feel that way any more now when I look at some of the great stars on top. You can't tell me they're happy. They're alone. And if a big star isn't alone, she often has a shaky marriage." When Colleen first invaded the film business in 1944, she had starry-eyed visions of her name up in lights. At last in 1947 she was starred opposite Tyrone Power in "Nightmare Alley." "I drove to Grauman's Chinese theater and there was my name in big lights," she said. "But it felt so flat. I said to myself, so this is what you were looking forward to! So what?" Happier Now Colleen feels if she kept scrambling she could wind up a big star. But she's happier now making her own maternity clothes and helping her husband build bookcases in their house. "After the baby is born I want to go back to work," she added. "I'd like to keep working steadily in television and movies. But I'm not knocking myself out to be that all-important star any more. "Besides," she grinned. "Now I don't have to act like a glamour star in public. I can go to the supermarket and shop for bargains!" SOMETHING TO EXPECT The David Lawrence Dispatch By DAVID LAWRENCE GENEVA, May 5—A complete reappraisal of the policies of the United States in the world seem to be in the offing. Whether one likes it or not, the fact is there has been an overestimate of the capacity of Great Britain and France to support the United States in Asia. There may even have been an overestimate of what these two nations can do to defend Europe. So far as land armies are concerned, Soviet Russia and Red China have more manpower under arms in Asia than the Free World has assembled. So far as Europe is concerned, despite the new weapons and the "New Look" in American military planning, it is a question whether London and Paris have any real confidence in their own defense setup. This may be the reason why Prime Minister Churchill has begun to deliver speeches about making peace with Moscow despite what he calls "The Perils and Contradictions" of such a move. America faces the unhappy fact that England is no longer master of a big empire and that France's empire is crumbling or being nibbled away by insurrections in Indo-China and Anti-Colonialism propaganda in Tunisia and Morocco. Small wonder that France worries about her inability to go alone in Indo-China and that Defense Minister Alexander of Great Britain complains that British military forces are scattered too far over the world and should be brought back to protect the home front. This is not a time for partisan needling in the United States nor for such defeatist comments as have come from Democratic National Chairman Mitchell, who speaks about Dulles attending "his own funeral at Geneva." This is a time so much more serious for the future of America than the politics-as-usual behavior of some of our public men would indicate that real patriotism at the moment requires some concerted action by the lead-capitol Hill. The essential America's desperate effort to deterrent force in Southeast have been known to lead both parties for several but it has not been desired make public statements about delicate situation in which has been involved in Indo-Unhappily, some member Congress have oversimplified situation as being a case of sending American boys far-off war in Indo-China. As what is involved is a major step now rather than to an inescapable situation to do For if the Soviets should strive our position as one of necessity, it might lead to overby the Communists that bring on World War III over If the big war is to be prevast military forces have to assembled in the world under leadership of the United There must be a search for Allies, especially in Asia. The test is whether, under the ship of an unselfish, non-nation like the United States peoples of Asia who claim want freedom are willing to retain it when they have given independence. America quite willing to supply armies does not feel obliged to armies, believing instead Asians must defend Asia. We can military missions would furnished and a training commissioned and non-co-sioned American officers, since General Van Fleet utilized acessfully in Greece, would brought into the picture as the native authorities enlist necessary manpower. There reason why America cannot Allies in Asia instead of try depend on the troops of Europe. So far as Europe is conceived America may have to recount also how many of her troops Hollywood Film Shop By CLEMENT D. JONES United Press Staff Correspondent HOLLYWOOD—(UP) — Today's hep teenagers who take lavish screen musicals for granted probably never think that this popular type of entertainment did not exist 28-years-ago. When you listen to the great tunes by Gershwin sung by Betty Grable, and watch Marge and Gower Champion do their breathtaking dances in lavish Technicolor musical such as Columbia's "Three For the Show," it's somewhat hard for youngsters to realize the overwhelming impact on audiences when Warners presented the first movie musical. That was the The Jazz Singer' in 1927, in which Al Jolson sang five songs. Women's Work By GENE HARRIS United Press Staff Correspondent PHILADELPHIA — Sixty-five year-old Mrs. Alice Thompson of West Chester, Pa., goes places—and takes a crowd with her. As It Was Told To Me By HARMAN NICHOLS WASHINGTON (UP) — What's new around Washington: Walter Robertson, Assistant Secretary of State, likes to tell this one about the time he was listening in on the exchange of prisoners in Korea. He was interviewing a lad who had been behind the barbed wire in North Korea. "How do you feel about being freed?" Robertson asked. "I feel fine, sir," the soldier replied. "I'm from your home town, Richmond, Va. I feel like I hope you do. I never want to go north again." Justice Stanley F. Reed of the Supreme Court was asked by a friend the other day if it wasn't pretty nice to be known as the first citizen of his home town, Mayville, Ky. "Don't know as I am," he said. "Seems there is a young lady who has beat me out on that honor." The justice was asked if he On the docket of the United States district court for the district of Columbia the other day a domestic relations case law Justice versus Justice. Counsellor one of the litigants said in adding the bench: "We ask that the court give this motion in the interest of justice." terested. So she hired a bus ranged for hotel space, and one including her 85-year-old sin had a rip-roaring time. Husband Stays Home She decided more tours at the same line would be fun started planning them after son and his family, who had When you listen to the great tunes by Gershwin sung by Betty Grable, and watch Marge and Gower Champion do their breathtaking dances in lavish Technicolor musical such as Columbia's "Three For the Show," it's somewhat hard for youngsters to realize the overwhelming impact on audiences when Warners presented the first movie musical. That was the The Jazz Singer' in 1927, in which Al Jolson sang five songs. "The Jazz Singer" actually was made as a silent film, with the songs and a few lines of dialogue added. When the customers stormed the boxoffice, Hollywood turned to making all-sound features. Broadway singing stars and composers came west, and the musical movie rush was on. In 1929, "The Broadway Melody," which starred Bessie Love, Charles King and Anita Page, introduced a sequence in Technicolor. A few months later, "On With the Show," a musical with Betty Compson and Ethel Waters, was made entirely in Technicolor. The public showed an immediate love for musical movies, for they were a vast improvement in entertainment over the silent screen's versions of Broadway tune shows in which the actors worked in pantomime and a pianist pounded out the show score. The ability to sing and dance made many new screen favorites. Ruby Keeler and Dick Powell became stars in "42nd Street." Gene Raymond and Dolores Del Rio were toplined in "Flying Down to Rio" but the public flocked to it because of a pair of newcomers to pictures, Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. Joan Crawford became a greater favorite than ever, hoofing and warbling in "Dancing Lady". Marion Davies drew on the talents that made her a famous Ziegfeld girl for "Marianne" and "The Floradora Girl". Rita Hayworth, several years later, danced to fox office heights in "You Were Never Lovelier" and "Cover Girl." Women's Work By GENE HARRIS United Press Staff Correspondent PHILADELPHIA (U)—Sixty-five year-old Mrs. Alice Thompson of West Chester, Pa., goes places—and takes a crowd with her. Mrs. Thompson is a travel agent, but a rare one. Maybe the only one of her kind. She doesn't have a formal organization, and she doesn't make money. "But," she says. "I sure have a lot of fun." In the last six years, the tiny energetic woman has taken thousands of tourists on trips along the eastern coast from Quebec, Canada, to St. Petersburg, Fla. Dues Seldom Pald "About 160 trips," she said, some long, some short. She is founder of The Friendship Travel Club, an unusual and loosely knit organization with no charter, an everchanging membership, and does which hardly anybody pays. Anyone who been on a tour can consider themselves a member." said Mrs. Thompson. "Members are supposed to pay 25 cents a year but they rarely do." Mrs. Thompson doesn't care. She just wants to travel and she doesn't like to travel alone. That's why she began arranging tours. "If by some chance we do get a little money in the informal treasury, we turn it over to a needy family," she explained. Mrs. Thompson hadn't been out of West Chester before she got the idea in 1948 for her travel club. One of her cousins, who was 85, asked her to go along on a trip to Atlantic City. Mrs. Thompson thought the trip would be more fun if they could a crowd. She ran an advertisement concerning the proposed trip and found others interested. So she hired a bus ranged for hotel space, and a one including her 85-year-old sain had a rip-roaring time. Husband Stays Home She decided more tours at the same line would be fun started planning them after son and his family, who had with her moved to Germany. She put another ad in the order, Mrs. Thompson and a load hit the road again. Now, she knows members chambera of commerce, hoteliers and restaurant men throng out the East. Mrs. Thompson says that even for her wanderlust, she's an fashioned" woman. She did drink or smoke and prides herself on being a good housekeeper cook. Her husband, Frank, a druggist appreciates her home-making than her hobby. He has only one trip with her. "He enjoyed it," said Thompson. "But he enjoys ing home more." Ten Years Ago Charles Horton, husband Thelma Zimmerman Horton, embarked for his assignment India with the American Baptism Missionary Society. Mrs. William Cook was inster president of the Anaheim Ju Ebell club in formal ceremony Tuesday night. Tax collections in Anaheim high, states A. S. Tuma, college There remains only $670.26 un Esther Eberhard has been nin president of the VFW Auxiliary Past President's club. Science Dispatch WRENCE Hapit Hill. The essentials of America's desperate effort to form deterrent force in Southeast Asia have been known to leaders of both parties for several weeks. It has not been desirable to take public statements about the delicate situation in which France has been involved in Indo-China. happily, some members of Congress have oversimplified the situation as being a case merely sending American boys to a off war in Indo-China. Actually, that is involved in a major plan save Southeast Asia by timely steps now rather than to permit linescapable situation to develop. If the Soviets should misconceive our position as one of weakness, it might lead to overt act against the Communists that could go on World War III overnight. If the big war is to be prevented, most military forces have to be resembled in the world under the leadership of the United States. There must be a search for more allies, especially in Asia. The acid it is whether, under the leadership of an unselfish, non-colonial nation like the United States, the peoples of Asia who claim they don't freedom are willing to fight to retain it when they have been taken independence. America is late willing to supply arms but does not feel obliged to send them, believing instead that wars must defend Asia. Americans military missions would be finished and a training corps of commissioned and non-commissioned American officers, such as General Van Fleet utilized so successfully in Greece, would be brought into the picture again if native authorities enlisted the necessary manpower. There is no reason why America cannot obtain allies in Asia instead of trying to send on the troops of European states. So far as Europe is concerned, America may have to reconsider how many of her troops she WASHINGTON—You might call this a clinical report on Secretary of the Army Robert Stevens, who's been bombarded now by the blue-white lights and the bitter questions for six long days. He doesn't look so good. At the first session late last week, Secretary Stevens walked dapperly into the Senate Caucus Room to face accuser Joe McCarthy. He was wearing a fresh shave and a handsomely tailored suit of gray serge. He has worn these same clothes daily ever since; his coat is now wrinkled; the crease long since has disappeared from his pants. His suit looks like he's been sleeping in it, but Stevens doesn't appear to have slept at all. His shave still is close and his gray hair is slicked back carefully, but look at him sideways for a glimpse behind his horn-rimmed spectacles and you'll see the puffs swelling under his eyes. The peepers themselves aren't the brilliant blue they were a week ago. The poor guy's tired—and no wonder. In all my years in Washington, I don't believe I've seen any other man so constantly under the sunlamps of the cameraman and the questions of the Senators. No official third-degree ever lasted so long. The official record already totaled 1,000 pages and there was the secretary on the sixth day being cross-examined by the committee's counsel, the Tennessee trial lawyer, Ray H. Jenkins. Counsellor Jenkins seemed brutal about it. He wanted to know, and he demanded a yes or no answer, as to whether Stevens had planned on removing Maj. Gen. Kirke B. Lawton from command of Ft. Monmouth, N. J., where Sen. McCarthy charged Communists were working in the secret radar laboratory. Secretary Stevens almost seemed to sputter. He said he couldn't answer that, yes or no. The moisture from his breath glistened in the brilliant light. Jenkins still insisted, and he was none too polite about it. "It's terribly hard for me to answer these questions, because before I answer one, you start on another," pleaded Stevens, taking another sip of ice water. Jenkins kept on pounding. "Let me remind you, my friend, that this is not a murder trial," interrupted the Army's attorney, Joseph Welgh. "You are examining the Secretary of the Army. It may be fun to jump down his throat, but this witness is entitled to ordinary courtesy." The ensuing rumpus gave Stevens a chance briefly to shut his eyes against the glare. Chairman Karl E. Mundt, (R., S.D.) ruled that his committee intended to treat generals and privates, Senators and secretaries, exactly alike. The inquisition (and I believe that's a fair word) of the secretary went on. Sen. John J. McClellan (D. Ark.) finally took pity on the suffering Stevens and asked him if he wouldn't like to take a recess. Maybe get a little rest, while the Senators turned to some other witness. Stevens thanked him and turned to Attorney Welch, who said the secretary would be pleased to go on if the Senators—and in particular Sen. McCarthy—would make it snappy. Sen Joe said he wasn't promising anything. He said he was tired, himself. But he didn't know how much longer he intended to ask questions. He turned to Stevens, who sighed, and the verbal battle went on. I doubt myself, whether the secretary can take it much longer. Ambling With Ann By Ann Wardell Saunders "In real life, the most interesting women are the ones who are completely unpredictable: The ones who change their hair styles, their type of clothing, their whole look." The same applies to a screen career. You should keep the audience guessing, never let them know what to expect." So said Marilyn Monroe, explaining why she fought so hard to land the role of the frontier girl in 20th's "River of No Return," a complete switch in screen characterizations for her. "It's nothing like the slick chick parts I've been playing," Marilyn declared. "It's an outdoor picture. It gives me my best romantic scenes to date with the most rugged men Robert Mitchum and Rory Calhoun. It definitely isn't a Marilyn Monroe part. And everyone is in for a surprise." Jean Peters, Maggie McNamara and Dorothy McGuire, who portray secretaries in "Three Coins In the Fountain," were talking about their characters on the set the other day. Dorothy observed, "Laughing at the boss' jokes takes real dramatic ability, for simulating laughter is the most difficult job an actor can be asked to do." Maggie was of the opinion that saying the boss was out when he was in and telling the various fibs, white and black, which are part of a secretary's routine must require great dramatic ability. "I've never been able to tell a convincing lie," she said. "If my job depended on it, I'd probably starve." Jean Peters thought the steady, impersonal pleasantness required of most secretaries would necessitate fine dramatic talent. "When for any reason I'm not feeling well, it takes every acting resource I have to appear cheerful," she explained. "I sometimes have to do it on this job, but between Sen Joe said he wasn't promising anything. He said he was tired, himself. But he didn't know how much longer he intended to ask questions. He turned to Stevens, who sighed, and the verbal battle went on. I doubt myself, whether the secretary can take it much longer. Old To Me MICHOLS Old recall the lady's name. He didn't rightly remember except that her first name was Rosemary "she's a singer, I think," a friend refreshed his memory: "first name of Clooney?" Reed he guessed that was correct. For a long time visitors have trouble finding the finance of at Fort Belvoir, Va. So Mary Roosa of Alexandria, Va., drop a note in the suggestion box. Idea was quite simple. Just up some signs. For that she a $10 award. In the docket of the United States district court for the Dispute of Columbia the other day was domestic relations case labeled vice versus Justice. Counsel for all the litigants said in address the bench. We ask that the court grant motion in the interest of justification. So she hired a bus, armed for hotel space, and every including her 85-year-old couch had a rip-roaring time. Husband Stays Home He decided more tours along same line would be fun, and used planning them after her and his family, who had lived cross-examined by the committee counsel, the Tennessee trial lawyer, Ray H. Jenkins, Counsellor Jenkins seemed brutal about it. He wanted to know, and he demanded a yes or no answer, as to whether Stevens had planned on removing Maj. Gen. Kirke B. Lawton from command of Ft. Monmouth, N. J., where Sen. McCarthy charged Communists were working in the secret radar labora-scenes I can go sulk in my dressing room." The three gals agreed that ing secretaries than to try to meet they'd rather be actresses portray-the dramatic standards of secretarial work. "Unless," postscripted Jean, "a gal could have a boss who looked like Gregory Peck." Anne Whitfield, who appears with Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye in "White Christmas," will have her photo on a tag attached to six dresses for teenagers being introduced by a national manufacturer. Anne styled the frocks herself as examples of what a 15-year-old needs in the way of clothes. To see Lotte Gooslar, with her clowning and merry pantomime at the Turnabout, is always a refreshing experience. It's a good show all round, with Gilda Gray still showing her famous shimmy—The West Hills Hunt Club gifted Club President Dan Dailley with a gold hunting horn—Ann Bancroft, born Anna Maria Louisa Italiano, revealed her marriage to Marty May—Nina Pooch is all set to marry stage actor James Lipton this month—Nancy Sinatra and Vic Damone are seeing a lot of each other. Mark Twain said: "Don't part with your illusions. When they are gone, you may still exist, but you have ceased to live." Farmer McCabe The real reason for this McCarthy-Stevens Television Show is that somebody in the Army didn't want McCarthy to investigate em... By Grannies, ifen I wuz in a Cabinet position I'd welcome sech an investigation, cause either I'd get a clean bill of health, or else I'd find out about all them folks that wuz working "on" me insteadda "fer" me. Farmer McCabe (all rights reserved) We ask that the court grant motion in the interest of justification. So she hired a bus, armed for hotel space, and every including her 85-year-old couch had a rip-roaring time. Husband Stays Home She decided, more tours along same line would be fun, and needed planning them after her and his family, who had lived her moved to Germany. He put another ad in the paper answers poured in. In short, Mrs. Thompson and a bus hit the road again. She knows members of members of commerce, hotel owning and restaurant men through the East. Thompson says that except other wanderlust, she's an "old moned" woman. She doesn't drink or smoke and prides herself being a good housekeeper and husband. Frank, a druggist, associates her home-making more with her hobby. He has taken one trip with her. He enjoyed it," said Mrs. Thompson. "But he enjoys stay-home more." Ten Years Ago Charles Horton, husband of Anna Zimmerman Horton, has worked for his assignment in with the American Baptist Sign Missionary Society. William Cook was installed assistant of the Anaheim Junior club in formal ceremonies day night. Collections in Anaheim are states A, S. Tuma, collector, remains only $670.26 unpaid. Eberhard has been named assistant of the VFW Auxiliary President's club. The real reason for this McCarthy-Stevens Television Show is that somebody in the Army didn't want McCarthy to investigate em... By Grannies, ifen I wuz in a Cabinet position I'd welcome sech an investigation, cause either I'd get a clean bill of health, or else I'd find out about all them folks that wuz workin "on" me insteada "fer" me. Farmer McCabe (all rights reserved)