Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, December 29, 1953, Page 4, Image 4

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    Pat 4
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. Salem. Orer
I
Capital AJournal
An Independent Newspaper Established 1888
BERNARD MAINWARING. Editor end Publisher
GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus
Published every afternoon except Sunday at 444 Che
meketo St., Salem. Phones: Business, Newsroom, Wont
Ads. 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409
Tan bl Win ftarvlM at lk iwkM ttt iri Tlw OaltM mm.
Tn Auocllted Prtu u sxrlaalvtlir uitttlsa t tbt um for aubllutmi af
11 Btwi alapstehw eredlua u It r atbsrwlM fdltid m tola ptast gat
llM Bwt publuhea thfrcln.
rCHAMPION'GATE CRASHER
There arc all sorts of ways of winning notoriety if not
enduring fame, but James Leo (One-Eyed) Connolly, who
died just before Christmas at a rest home at Zion, 111.,
at the age of 84, secured national renown as the world's
triampion gate crasher. Perhaps it was because there
are gate crashers m every community in the land but
few make a profession of it or get away with it long.
Hence Connelly evoked the envy and admiration of a
numerous clan.
For a half century, Mr. Connelly carried on a personal
crusade to outwit the gatemen at sporting events and
political conventions. He succeeded by posing as a ven
dor, iceman, carpenter, or anything else that struck his
fancy. By his own count, he had crossed the United
States 102 times on gate-crashing forays and also had in
vaded Europe and Australia.
Perhaps Connelly also successfully crashed the ocean
liners, railroads and bus lines, for while gate crashing
is a money saver, it is not a money maker, and how else
could he travel first class for 50 years?
Connelly lost the sight of his left eye in a boxing ring
accident when 18 years old. and boasted that he had
' crashed all heavyweight championship fights since 1897
except three he did not care to see. In a newspaper inter
view, ne once said:
"It started with the James J. Corbett-Bob Fitzsimmons
'match in Carson City, Nev. I told the gatekeepers I had over
heard two thugs plotting in town to rob the counting room.
I was Invited through the sates to keen watch for them."
"At the Jack Demnsev-Georeei Carnentier hnnf in 1021 at
Boyle's Thirty Acres in Jersey City I was tossed out of 13 of
me is entrances, out went through the 14th. I borrowed a pail
of coffee and a basket of sandwiches from the telegraph crew
ana me gaieman mougm i was a venaor.
"At the Dempsey-Tom Gibbons fight in 1923 in Shelby,
Mont., I posed as an iceman and carried 80 pounds of ice
through the door for the coolers.
It was not only prize fights that Connelly crashed, but
national political conventions as well. He stated that
"I've used doors, umbrellas, apples, brooms and just
about everything you can think of as props. At a demo
cratic convention in Houston, some fun-loving fellow
handcuffed me to a bench in the hall. I lugged it inside,
obtained my freedom and also a badge to the convention."
Connejly gave up gate crashing eight years ago and he
worked as chef and greeter in taverns, elevator operator
and finally as usher at sports and political events where
he specialized at spotting gate crashers at world series.
He was dismissed when he ejected P. K. Wrigley, Jr. in
1945 from Writjley field in the game between Chicago
Cubs and Detroit Tigers. When the team owner identified
himself, Connelly told him, "That's for the birds."
Connelly showed originality, ingenuity and persistence
enough to have made a success in legitimate industry
but the joy of his life was the excitement of gate crash
ing. G. P.
NEW BONNEVILLE ADMINISTRATOR
Secretary of the Interior Douglas McKay promptly
appointed Dr. William A. Pearl of Washington State
(college administrator of the Bonneville Power adminis
tration as soon as the resignation of Paul Raver had
cleared through official channels.
The public, in Oregon at least, finds Dr. Pearl a new
name and a new face, though he is probably much better
known in his own state. He is a graduate engineer and
educator of long and successful experience, though he
has never before administered a large organization.
The best qualified men by experience are those who
have actually operated electric power systems, but here
McKay must have run into the fact that all of these are
either private power men or public power men. Few
have had experience in both and virtually none hold a bal
anced, objective view, between the two.
It is akin to the difficulty a president finds in appoint
ing a secretary of labor. Labor leaders are of the A.F.L.,
C.I.O. United Mine Workers or Railway Brotherhood
groups. Each has his loyalties and his aversions. It is
virtually impossible to find one who is looked upon as fair
by the others. For this reason most labor secretaries
have come from outside labor ranks for many years past
and it is probably just as important that a Bonneville
administrator come from outside the active power ranks.
Dr. Pearl is evidently satisfactory to the private power
interests and therefore unsatisfactory to the public power
interests. This is to be expected, for while the Eisenhow
er administration expects to continue and to expand the
Bonneville operation it will no longer be used as a medium
for propaganda in behalf of public power. It will be oper
ated as a government business, serving the region, and
incidentally the taxpayers of the entire nation who put
up the money that created it.
Dr. Pearl will evidently administer Bonneville accord
ing to this pattern. If he does we believe the results will
be satisfactory to most of the people of the region and
the country. There is no occasion for Bonneville to be
operated for the promotion of socialism in electric power.
The people elected Eisenhower, not Stecnson as presi
dent. SLOTS LEGAL IN ONLY ONE STATE
Slot machines have been legal in only two states in
recent years, in Nevada without restriction and in Idaho
under certain circumstances. Municipalities could decide
by local option whether they wanted them. Nearly all
the larger cities voted them out, but many smaller towns
tolerated them in order to collect revenue. Some taxed
slot "take" as high as 50 per cent.
Last week the Idaho Supreme Court unanimously de
cided that the slot machine is forbidden by a state consti
tutional provision against gambling. This has been in!
lorce lor many years, and district judges have from time
to time ruled that it applied to slot machines. But the
cases were never appealed by the operators, who studi
ously kept the issue from reaching the highest court,
whose ruling would establish the law for the entire state.
Finally this happened and the result was as expected.
Slot machines are illegal. Prosecuting attorneys of the
various counties have been setting deadlines after which
the machines would be raided and confiscated. Hun
dreds of them are reported being hurriedly transported
to Nevada where they can continue to operate.
w nether slot machines will soon begin reappearing in
the back rooms of some of the places from which they
are now being removed is a question whose answer is not
now at hand, but the constitution is not self enforcing
in Idaho or anywhere else. And the usual experience is
that law enforcement or lack of it closely follows local
attitudes.
So it will be no surprise if slot machines continue to
operate in some of the "back country" points in Idaho
while they remain banned in the larger towns where
sentiment, has already been demonstrated as atrongly
agait.'t them.
IKf, AND KOREA
AN TAUM (By
WlNS) NUt
Bl6 NEW H
53 - BUT
AAEMORV
BRING UP
M AftOKTMeNT
OF HAPPENINGS
A YOU LOOK
BACK OVER
THE MONTHS
. Haw f arnsvXCav M
RANDOM MEMMORIES OF 1953
V ' BFMEMRFR. TUI BERLIN -'AT
FOOD PARCELS ?
-AND THE
REDS WHO
Stood ok
THE5IS
AMENDMENT
mi
i act mm
THERE vwefcc THE
TRAVELERS
WIRE ALWAVS
COrAlNC H6ME ,
W 10 K6POI!,
P&TI(Z
GOING DOWN
IN CUROPCS
WHO CAN FORftr
THE TALK-TALK-TALK
FROM THE PANMOMJ0M
MCUTNT'
REMEMBER
NATHW6
OF 0UCEN
Elizabeth?
CORONATION ?
WHO "'Su
M am . . ..
iCC V BRIBE
IiHaTaMilTl 1 .XK"t. 4?- XXI
jBiinin m at m
A NEW
FAT MAN
CAME
, TO THE
HEADLINES- (j
W T7 I I'
WEPT
IN
'AND WINNierHE
CREW HISTORIAN,
WAS STILL
MAKING HIS
OWN HIST0RV
POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER
Hal Forecasts the Future,
But in a Whimsical Vein
By HAL BOYLE
New York Wl What lies in
store in 1954 for all us surviv
ors of the debris of 1953?
Well, our clouded crysal ball
seems to have more smog in it
than usual, but here are a few
fuzzy forecasts of what you
can look for in the coming
year:
The sale of wheelchairs will
rise and the sale of diapers de
cline, as the population gets a
bit older.
Five new sure cures for fall
ing hair will hit the market,
and 10 million American men
will go on getting balder and
balder. More women will be
gin going bald, too, as then
campaign for equal rights with
men moves on to a new frontier.
A restaurant chain will feat
ure a five-cent hamburger,
served with a 3D polaroid lens
to give it an air of realism.
A new breed of hunting dog
trained to find a car parking
space will be developed. This
loyal animal, after locating a
place to park, will bay the
news to its master and fight
off other motorists with its
teeth until its owner can drive
up.
The $2 haircut will make its
appearance, and then a thous
and editorial writers will la
ment, "Whatever became of
the good old two-bit haircut?"
Wives will begin cutting their
husbands' hair.
On Jan. 23 a man in Zanes
ville, O., will claim he saw the
first robin of spring. The next
day Pravda will denounce him
as a capitalist tool, and point
that the first robin of spring
actually was glimpsed by a
Russian serf on January 4th
near Minsk in the year 1602.
Pravda will also recall it was
the Russians who first invent
ed popcorn, the five-cent ci
gar, Christmas tree lights and
the safety razor.
Mink coats again will be
come popular in the nation's
five innings of baseball, and
just to keep things even, each
side will have 10 men.
The movies will make a real
comeback in the entertainment
world with still another gim
mick by adding a fourth di
mension to Marilyn Monroe.
Radio will fight television by
putting out sets with a screen
that never lights up and on
which you are positively guar
anteed you will never see any
thing. You just look at it and
enjoy your own thoughts.
The Army will come up with
a new dehydrated combat ra
tion in a plastic container.
You remove the food, put it in
your rifle and fire it at the
enemy then eat the contain
er, which contains a drug to
reduce overweight, cure hic
cups, and give a soldier a feel
ing of general well being.
As to the problem of com
munism, international crises,
taxes, the weather, and the
common cold they'll be as
Issues in 1954
WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND
McCarthy's Richest Backer
Makes Million After Taxes
By DREW PEARSON
Washington The fabulous
wealth of Senator McCarthy's
chief backer, Texas oilman
H. R. Hunt, has been made a
matter of official public rec
ord. Oilman Hunt has just
been awarded a television lic
ense at Corpus Christi, Texas,
and in order to get it, had to
list his approximate net worth.
Hunt filed in a sworn state
ment that his net income after
taxes was "in excess of one
million dollars a year."
A few people in the U.S.A.
have an income before taxes of
$1,000,000 a year. But by the
time they pay taxes in the 80
or 90 per cent brackets there
written b SL"! Nr
Sector o SZt
"nun,
and there Is no Incentive to
stage oratorical gymnastics.
The other day, however, Sen.
Wayne Morse of Oregon made
an unpublicized itatument be
fore the O. C. committee which
may set an important precedent.
ue i-uMiiniiirc naa oraered ' -wiio WlBt
Commissioner Charles Mahaf- ecled " your lnfl?"
fie of the Interntat. Pnmn,.. " wroni. Th. T"i
commission, plus two ex-com- m1cnt. ." " "bout wJL i
missioners, to appear before it f1uld. eC lZ J
to explain why they had made "tela' wh wishes toJ"'
a certain rutins nffariiin th. anonymous in """m
Capital Transit company which me" may rest .
supplies bus and streetcar serv- elther outright lyin. .
ice to Washington. ',ng to hit meon
R mnv Mn,.n. uam mbush.
--j m . iiviii Wlllt , i.eni.
rial a . -
swenng a etter r- nt, fc
Cap.talJournil,r " l th.
tf. Plr 1,
mai you u,..u l
isn't much left. Hunt, how- ials have been indiscriminately . lne Board of Cmtii , .
ever, testified that his net in-' hauled before Congress since y ,ute "Sency whui. "
come was "in excess of one Mctartny set certain preced-1 HK vc ,ucn prom,
above $9,000,000 in order to
have a net income in excess of
a million dollars. The 27 H
per cent oil-depletion allow
million dollars after taxes for ents that no one worried over
each year of 1951 and 1952." the propriety of quizzing quasi
Of course his taxes are a bit, Judicial officials. However,
lower than some people's be-! as the hearing was about to
cause he gets the benefit of the . 'tort. Senator Morse lnterrupt
27 depletion tax allowance ! ed.
on oil wells. "This committee has no
But if Hunt were in a non-,Pwer. he said, "to summon
preferred industry he would ny judicial officer who is not
have to make a gross income .under impeachment proceed
ings.
"I will be no party to break'
ing down the traditional icd
aration of the judiciary from
ance which helps him is given other branches of govern
oil operators because it's an ex-' ment," Morse continued.
tractive inaustry. in otner; "The Interstate Commerce
words, oil does not stay in the commission is a quasi-judicial
ground forever. Coal, also an. tribunal, and we of the Senate
extractive industry, gets only have no right ,0 que,tion iu
a 10 per cent depletion allow- members on how they arrived
ance, while granite, gravel, I at a decision regarding the Cap
marble get 5 per cent. , itai Transit company or any
Hunt uses his fabulous other company. We can ask
fabulous wealth partly to back 'their views about needed legis-
ssenator Mcuartny, also nnance lation, but we can t question
the "Facts Forum" TV pro- their decisions. They are sym
gram; and finally he's the big- bols of the judicial process.
gesi conirmuior to "America "Furthermore, they have no
for Americans, a group of pre-, riKht voluntarily to answer
isolationists wno PUlltkcw nctinn " h n,....
institution and thThL2"l
the mana.in. Jr..boul l
By RAYMOND MOLEY
There is something refresh
ingly new in the aDDroach of:war
President Eisenhower to tough money 'nt0 e.ycry camPa'K,n last ' senator continued. "We cannot
nolitiral .hln.. Th. mnst 1 1. i. i"ff establish a precedent here for
r " ' , :io iioerai wnaiora. breaking down separation of
recent example of that is the Featured on Hunt's Facts the three branches of govern
program of generalities that! Forum TV program is Allan' ment."
came out after the recent ioll wnose American patriot-1 senator ucaii or Maryland,
White House conference of Pe-! lsm w?.5 put on the attorney i who presided, immediately con.
gcnci ni a luuvnaivc iai. sin-
ong the books recommended to
viewers are those of Merwin
K. Hart, whom Justice Jack
son described as "well known
for his pro-Fascist leanings."
On the Facts Forum advisory
committee is Gen. Robert E.
Wood, the Sears, Roebuck
publican leaders. It is clear
that the President and his im
mediate official White House
family feel that it will be very
effective to have a nice list of
laws passed by the forthcom
ing session of congress and to
go forth next autumn and tell
the people all about them. This
is a fine thought to have
around this holiday season,
but, like some Christmas neck
tfes, these hopes will be limp
and faded by Easter. And then,
come Labor day, it will be
the fierce attacks of the oppo
sition that will make the is
sues.
The best thing that seemed
to come from the White House
parleys was the manifest good
will in which the conferences
were held. In that the presi
dent is a master, however
....L. 1 1 , 1
hofnr. hrn,,nh 'KA u I '""til lie may ivt iu learn
ably just as alive in '55. SUJ "? ,y!1 f. ".fi
Salem 37 Years Ago
By BEN MAXWELL
December 29, 1922
George E. Halvorsen, retir
ing mayor of Salem, had said
that the city would be ready
soon for a change from alder-
manic to a commission form of
government. (This was consu
lt a ted 25 years later).
Oil leases had been filed
covering land southeast of St.
Paul and northeast of Wood-burn.
All clerks and carriers at the
postoffice had received a neck
tie apiece as a gift from the
G. E. Johnson clothing com
pany on State street.
W. M. Hamilton had been
nominated as Kins Bins Rill
capital as people realize that the Third of Salem Cherrians
this fur, once the badge ol ant would assume the roval
Democratic opportunism, now purple come Tuesday.
is a sign oi itepuDiican pros
perity. As a matter of fact ev
erybody will be wearing mink
coats but the minks them
selves.
As television sets get larger
and new homes get smaller, a
combined product will appear
a TV set which actually
takes the place of a living
room. You live inside it, and
the screen serves as a window.
You can add other rooms a
kitchen, a bedroom, and bath
room as your family increases.
The first model will sell for
$5,000, complete with a free at which women's three-quar
elm tree to shade it. j ter length plush coats, regu-
Sclence will come up with a j larly priced at $32.50 were re
cheap home hydrogen bomb duced to $14.75.
kit. This will enable every-
body who doesn't like the com-1 Prayer week In Salem had
munity he lives In to make his been set for the week begin-
own bomb and blow nil netgn- ning January 1, 1923,
bor off the map.
Coach Frank Leahy and Ca
sey Stengel will be rival stra
tegists in the biggest contest
of 1954 a match between
Notre Dame and the New York
Yankees. This will settle the
hottest question In the field of
Farmers living In Polk and
Marion counties and within the
trading area of Salem were re
ceiving $250 daily for paper
wood delivered to Oregon Pulp
A- Paper Co.
A warranty deed had been
filed in which the McCornack
building (Miller's store) had
been conveyed to Dr. B. L.
Sleeves and W. W. Moore.
People's Cash store had a
pre-inventory sale underway
Ben Rider, Homer Best and
W. F. Crane, Salem boys, were
to enter the New Year's Motor
cycle run to be held in Eugene
January 1.
First Methodist church at
sports whether a top amateur j Woodburn had received a $300
football team can beat a Cham-1 gift by terms of the will and
pion professional b a se ball testament of James A. Austin
team. The fame will consist of who had recently died at
two quarter of football and Woodburn.
curred. Apologies were made
to the three ICC commissioners
and they were excused.
Note The above precedent
will be important. Senator
Welker of Idaho tried to vio
late it in Denver recently by
quizzing U. S. District Judge
Ritter during the probe of FBI
executive and former head of'absention from the Smaldone
America First. Wood Is now
honorary national chairman of
"America for Americans."
Note Sitting on the Federal
Communications comini s s i o n
when Hunt was given his TV
license for Corpus Christi was
Robert E. Lee, the McCarthy
disciple appointed to this key
spot by President Eisenhower
despite the fact that he was
featured in the Senate report
on the unfair 1950 Maryland
election.
TROUBLE IN EUROPE
Confidential diplomatic ca
bles about two of our best
friends in Europe
jury-tampering case. He was
promptly cracked over the
knuckles by Judge Ritter.
tics He will nperi all nf that
fund of good will as things un- more arming than the news
fold in the months to come, "ports and they are alarming
Fnr nn miction. lilr the enough.
amendment of the Taft-Hart-L Ambassador Clare Boothe
lev act. farm luooort.. tariff Luce ha cablin8 the State
reductions, and foreign aid, the Department from Italy that
differences between the presi- h.at country may go commun
j ,,. .T- , ; ist unless the controversial
:.:;. b T" - ; Trieste question is settled,
. 5 "' Some observers consider her
w..,.. .., w.u ...u uccp. reporU , littie on the alarmist
mere is still a resentment ,jde, but unquestionably the
mat approacnes omerness drift in Italy is toward two
about the utter failure of the savagely different political
administration to make any camps. The Fascist right and
considerable progress in rid- the Communist left. The cen-
ding itself of personnel in the ter parties no longer control.
departments who find it easy In France likewise Ambassa.
and convenient to frustrate ef- dor Douglas Dillon has report
forts to carry out campaign ed to the State Department that
promises. This resentment is the presidential stalemate tore
not entirely because so few France apart even more than
jobs have been provided for appeared on the surface. Right
Republicans, but it is also be- wing Gaullist and other anti
cause the administration, ex- Communists were so sore at the
cent for a few too people, is Communists that they even
much the same as it was when discussed subduing them by
Candidate Eisenhower in 1QS2 lorce.
promised to clean it out. I wnat made tne anu-iom-
The attacks of Senators like ' " rTZlZJTL?'
i:ih mat ju vie, miimr
sador Vinograd was directing
French Communist strategy in
the presidential voting. He
knew that a deadlock would
split France wide open.
Note Meanwhile John Fos
ter Dulles' veiled threat to
France to join the United Eu-
UNITED FUND SUCCESS
Bend Bulletin
The United Fund drive
hasn't taken long, not nearly
as long as the procession of
drives for this and that cause
or activity used to take.
Moreover, it has been suc
cessful. When charities and social
and health programs were fi
nanced one by one through
are even ! public subscription, success
was by no means uniform.
Frequently a drive petered
out far short of the mark.
People became fed up with
Morse, Kefauver and Humph
rey will grow in intensity, and
we can have a fairly good idea
now of what they will be. The
old spectre of "big business"
will be prominent. In many
states new dealers will be cam
paigning vigorously on the is
sue of electric power. They
will say that the administra
tion has "sold out" to the "in
terests." Morse will be even
more the incorrigible nuisance
than he was in the last session.
He claims that he has traveled
more and made more speeches
than any other senator in the
recess. Those speeches were
made to local audiences and
fortunately have not encumb
ered the Congressional Record
as yet. He says that he in
tends to oppose practically ev
erything, particularly any ef
fort to remove people not un
der civil service. The theme
of his story will be that the
country is unhappy over Re
publican rule and is waiting
for the first chance to change
it all.
Kefauver is running not only
for re-election to the Senate,
but undoubtedly for the pre
sidency in 1956. Hil attacks
upon Republican policies will,
except in the south, be much
ropean army has boomeranged
like the Viscount Ishil state
ment in Japan that an act of
Congress barring Japanese im
migrants would be considered
unfriendly. The U. S. Congress
Immediately passed the Japan
ese immigration ban as a slap
at Tokyo, and it looks like
France was reacting to Dulles
in the same way. No country
likes to be bossed.
MORSE SETS PRECEDENT
The Senate committee on the
District of Columbia seldom
makes headlines. People don't
vote in the District of Colum
bia, so no politics are at stake
more vigorous than the mild
banter of Stevenson.
Faced by such opposition,
Republican candidates will
build their own arguments.
They are not going to cam
paign as the White House dic
tates. They will fire with what
ever ammunition they find to
be most effective.
in.titutionVThTS,!,,,,,
uch program ,J Un
ing of the board htj
potheen Introd
"It now appears that u
questionnaire referred to i,Z
betag circulated to sStJ?
partments by the Diyitk,
Purchasing for the puZ J
obtaining informstlon mI
rh'nab!the Division toi
a better job of buyui,
for the use of th, mJJ
Department has no Met Z
tention of propoiim sun
manufacture of paint An,or,
reading the queitionniin
could not possibly read into
any connection with iti. ...
ufacture. We are quite m
that, should we propose uch i
program, the legislature would
refuse funds. It is certainly the
sort of specialized operation
that could cost the state a Urrt
amount of money, without th
assurance of bettering our rit-
uauon.
"We are now buying satis
factory, and in most cases,
highly satisfactory, paints
from Oregon manufacturen.
nearly 100.000 gallons from a I
Salem plant in a present con-1
tract. This product Is the best
tested by the state for its pur
pose and was purchased at a
price higher than several
brands of less quality that wen
offered in bids to the state. It
is a fine product.
"We have in most cuts,
found the paint manufactures I
honest and dependable in their I
offers to the Purchasing DM-1
sion. You should tell your in-1
formant to come out fromVt-l
hind the mask if lie his y
thing to offer of benefit to the I
state. Such a man cannot be a I
good servant of the people."
MORE "KNOW HOW"
Gresham Outlook
Now that rationing mil
government controls have dhv I
appeared, know low
coming back Into Its own
again and is replacing "snow
who" as a means of fetting
things done.
WHAT! NO COMICS!
i.n. An spies (UJS Seven-Ten
drives the people whose old Dennis Jensen nsd W
-iu..i: . ... - u. ..jlnno rnmnlaint after ne was
..viiiii luuiiuiia nuc luugui awu
the people who asked them.
No wonder. They went on
through the year; the solicit
ing, committees were often
made up of men and women
who had served only a week
or two before and who pres
ently would be asked or pres
sured into serving again. In
evitably the sources of dona
tions were the same from one
campaign to the next,
Now one drive does it. 'A
little clean-up work and this
United Fund, like the first
one gathered last year, will be
complete. A fine response by
a wide range of donors and a
well organized, coordinated
job by the UF committees are
to be credited with the result.
struck by a streetcar nd takea
to a hospital in a fancy new
ambulance.
Ambulances should be equip
ped with comic books,
Dennis.
HUNTER HITS OWN CAB
Trenton, Ont. OIB - BwU
Sinclair spotted m rtJeet
the bush while huntlnl I at"
here, fired a volley oM
shots and then ran to see
he had bagged.
It was his automooue.
WASNT PEACEFUL
Detroit MWmeM'P"?;
30, was placed on six o"
Probation for disturbing la-
peace.
faU aSwmmmrt) mmm
mmimm
- Mat sn i Mmmmm
Prevent Eye Injury I In the shop, ht
sports, or whila driving, wtor rite new
Unbreakable Glasses that won't shat
ter .. . won't break. Ready in 1 day
at Sender Optical.
Liberal Credit
NO EXTRA
Charge
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