Show ' ‘ f 4 1 a V' 4A I 1 6 S I ' “ 9T- THE OGDEN r A ' : f 1 '-- - a STANDARD-EXAMINE- R OGDEN UTAH THURSDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER ecuirity Program ROOKIE COP REAL HERO- SON NOW TO 8-YEAR-- OLD WASHINGTONi (AP) —Both Sens 'Edwin Brou-ka- l today that there is no daddy in Jrt was positive like whole world his daddy the rookie policeHe saw his father an man capture two bandits at gunpoint on a crowded bus yesterday after a wild auto chase through Chicago’s South Side Edwin who had gone along with his father to' pay some bills saw the entire thriller from the back seat of their car where his father had ordered him to take cover It all began for the two Edwins — Jr and Sr — when they heard a shotgun blast-athey were driving home When Broukal 31 saw that the blast had come from a car he curbed it and found out that the driver Derk E Zwart 35 was pursuing two young robbers who had just stolen $50 from his grocery and meat mart VMy daddy started after the two men and he chased them until they ditched their car and got on the bus” little Edwin said "My daddy stopped our car in front of the bus' shouted to the driver to open the door and hopped aboard with his pistol in his hand "He pulled off those two guys and made them - lean against the fence while he searched them for guns He found a gun on one The other had left his in the car” The bandits Joseph Lecko and Charles Brown both 19 admitted the holdup CHICAGO (UP) — Olin D Johnston and Carlson said today they expect improvements in the Eisenhower administraiion’s employe security program to grow out of their Senate Subcommittee investigation Johnston is the1 chairman and Carlson the lone Republican member of a Senate Civil Service Subcommittee conducting the $125000 ihjtii: (D-SC- ) (R-Ka- n) off-dut- y - i t i:£rrAr xv The senator late yesterday finished three days of public hearings on a series of disputed firings of government employes as security risks Witnesses also offered many recommendations for revising the program set up by President Eisenhower's order1 in 1953 i think the seCarlson said-"curity program can be improved and we can 'make some recom- ' - 'u " I i $ v t mendations- while” S' y lhyvV rpf O n STILL ROLLS OLD-TIME- R Members of the National Model Railroad Assn convening in Baltimore Md ride on the faniousLafayette” locomotive of 1837 which is pulling aiTSImlaycpach of the same erar The '"armchair railroaders” were treated to a day of real-lifrailroading past and presPresidents Conference Railroad ent by the Eastern e 2nd Murder of 4 in Is Slay-for-Pa- gun-man-gamb- in the 1 slay-for-pa- y murder of oil man William P found dead in his exhome May 22 1953 pensive The remaining principals are Clark’s blonde widow Mary 46 and Harry Huggins mobster-informe- r who said Mrs a Clark offered $10000 reward death Both are husband’s for her bond under free Eggleston’s body was found less than a week after his bloodstained sedan was discovered on wealthy Clark A 61 ld a supermarket parking lot here Police said then they believed the little gangster had taken his last ride Another mobster named by Huggins and police iq the Cfark killing Cecil Green 49 was slain in a gangland ambush last May 4 when he and Eggleston drove up to a highway rendezvous Eggleston shot his way out of the trap and was found scared and shaking hours later in a nearby building He had been reported in hiding since but under Intew y Found Dead FORT WORTH Tex (AP) — Police found the’ body of' Leroy (Tincy) Eg49 a shallow well six in gleston miles north of here last night He had been shot in'theback of the head Eggleston’s death left" alive only two of the four principals -- I world sources said Eggleston continued milking gamblers burglars safe men and others of part of their hauls giving them the alternative of losing all their take Oil man Clark wras found shot to death in his home Police first called it suicide but Higgins broke the case wide open last April ‘with his story of Mrs Clark’s reward offer Twelve days before his body was found Clark had petitioned for annulment of his marriage to the shapely blonde saying she into marriage for my "lured me ’ money” His will was changed to allow Mrs Clark only $10 of an estimated $750 OOP estate Huggins fcggleston and Green were charged with murder and later indicted Mrs Clark was charged as an accomplice Despite long hours of questioning however she has maintained she had nothing to xlo with her husband’s death Huggins said Eggleston and Green accepted Mrs Clark’s reward offer and he went along in the belief that the job’ was only — robbery While he searched the house for valuables he told police one of his accomplices took Clark into another room He said he heard a shot and returned to find Clark dead - 22-roo- m I i are' yM fixed for ' that will be 'worth- testimony In the case were out of town thii week Johnston complained at yesterday's hearing that Carlson apparently had been receiving information about cases under investigation which the administration was denying to him end to the subcommittee staff He spoke after Carlson had asked questions of i witnesses indicating derogatory information against them j cops-and-robbe- -- - r - - Two More $20 Greenlease Ransom Found Bills From i LOUIS (AP)— The discovtwo more $20 bills of the of ery $303720 Jialf of Greenlease ransom money— third and fourth in recent weeksA—has bolstered the theory that the money is at last being put into circuST- - long-missin- g -- d - bills were found Monday and Tuesday by FBI agents making a routine check but declined to say when the two most recent bills were received by the bank here Previously a $20 bill had been found in the Federal Reserve Bank here and other was found Aug 4 at Minot N D They were the first found in almost two ' years - Death Halts Ship Norfolk Vaf traffic engineers provided this crosswalk for pedestrians in the hope that it will prove popular and be seen more readily by motorists - ' Auto-Lit- e Says Its Pricing Electric Chrysler Employes Get Pqy Guarantee DETROIT (AP) — Chrysler Corp and the CIO United Auto Workers reached a contract settlement today six hours after widespread strikes hit Chrysler plants in six states The UAW immediately sent out orders to all union locals The settlement was modeled closely after Ford and General Motors agreements reached in It comple’ted the early June lineup of the auto industry’s "Big Three” companies on revolutionary new layoff pay plans Like the Ford and GM plans the Chrysler agreement will guarantee laid off workers 60 e to 65 per cent of regular pay for up1 to 26 weeks of idleness It also provides wage increases of six cents an houro all employes for each of ‘ the three years of the contract and up to 38 cents immediately for some workers in skilled classifications Also included in the agreement among other benefits was a clause to eliminate wage differentials between the Detroit area biggest concentration of Chrysler workers and other parts of the country Chrysler said it thus became the first big auto company to do this Chrysler has plants in Michigan Indiana California Delaware Kansas arfd Georgia back-to-wor- k Builders Invito Reds WASHINGTON (UP)—The National Association of Homebuilders has invited Russia to send a group of Soviet housing officials to this country to see how the free enterprise system produces new homes The invitation was issued by Earl W Smith El Cerrito Calif president of the association with advance consent of the State DepartmenJ - Heads Illinois U CHAMPAIGN 111 (AP) — Dr David Dodds Henry today became president of the University of Illinois one of the largest universities in the nation with an enrollment of more than 25000 Henry 50 succeeded Lloyd Morey to become the school’s 12th president Morey’s retirement ended 44 years of service at the uni- CAP) Souther denied his firm has He said Champion and General Motors or its predecessor "had about 90 per cent of the domestic spark plug business” between them when Autolite entered the field in 1936 lie said about 30 companies did the rest of the business Now he said Champion A-and Auto-Littogether account for about 90 per ccntand about 30 companies have had the remaining 10 per cent— in other s words share has crime of two the companies” largest put At yesterday’s hearing the I American Farm Bureau Federation called for legislation that would make labor unions subject to the antitrust laws as business concerns now are A-- — The Co today Auto-Lit- e them’ de- fended before Senate monopoly investigators its pricing practices assailed by an earlier witness Alfred R Brenholts a Columbus Ohio spark plug manufacturer testified yesterday he suspects but can not prove that and the makers of ChamA-and pion spark plugs are violating Federal Trade Commission (FTC) fair trade orders designed to protect small business George H Souther manager of s legal department in testimony prepared for--a Senate subcommittee replied that his company’s objective is' “complete Au-toli- te C C ' C e Auto-Lite’- I Auto-Lite’- (fill' Forrestal to be OK'd NEWPORT NEWS it' Va-(A- P) A naval spokesman said today' the carrier Forrestal’s burned out propellor shaft bearings will be no obstacle to the Navy’s ' acceptance of the shijj “Like- - death and taxes trouble in new things versity is inevitable’ said Rear'Adm R F Stout president of the Navy Fire-Fight- er Hurt trial board of survey and inspecMISSOULA Mont (AP) — A tion which checked the Forrestal’s was reported injured performance during her sea trials this week-late today in battling a ' blaze in the Salmon National —ADVERTISEMENT— Forest of Idaho Identity of the injured man was not known fire-fight- er " 100-acr- e Nagging Backache Slespless flights MOVING? Plan Bxm Packing over-exerti- Baggage Staraga Across tho Strwf or Across th Nation Including Mexico Canada Alaska d SLADE TRANSFER Agent North American Von lines Dial 3944 331 22nd Straat T v ‘rU Nagging backache headache or muscula aches and pains may come on with emotional upsets or day to day stress and strain And folks who eat and drink unwisely Fwrnftvr EUctric lc NEW YORK (UP)— The Army ordered a Europe-bountroop transport to return 60 miles to Newd York Harbor last night so an Iowa soldier Pvt Roger 20 could be taken off and flown home for his mother’s “ funeral -- I conformance” with Jlhe antitrust snd other laws “as we understand hurt small competitors Practice Legdl WASHINGTON take-hom- rested here Oct 6 1953 t lationTwo former St Louis PoliceThe FBI reported the discovery men oL the two bills yesterday at the Dolan Louis Shoulders and Elmer who arrested Hall are Federal Reserve Bank of St serving prison terms for lying Louis x and announced they had about their handling of Hall’s beehtraced to banks in Spring-fielcontained only which luggage Mo and Sedalia ransom the half money when J Earl Milnes special FBI checked after his arrest agent in charge here said the PAINTED FOR SAFETY THE NATION TODAY -- Carl Austin Hall executed with his accomplice Mrs Bonnie of Heady for the kidnap-murde- r Bobby Greenlease of Kansas City insisted that he had most of ' the $600000 ransom money in his possession when ar- rs s DID SOME DIGGING The Kansan did not specify Carlson later told newsmen he what recommendations' he had In mind hut said he had been had no secret information and but-disome digd impressed by suggestions ad- no secret files own on his ging vanced by some of the witnesses The subcommittee concluded ‘SLIPSHOD’ HANDLING1 with testimony from two federal Johnston said in a separate in- employes who were suspended terview that he felt anyone who under the' security program but had listened to the testimony later were cleared and won recould not escape the conclusion instatement that the 'security program has One was Mrir Beatrice Campbeen administered “in a slipshod bell a Negro clerk in the Veter' fashion” ans Administration (VA) 5he He also said the testimony said that she suffered through showed the program “needs a the “nightmare” and “heartgeneral overhaul to protect the break” of four months suspenrights of individuals and also to sion before being restored to her see the government Is kept free job1 of- - any Communists or subverThe other case which'has been sives j widely publicized was that of One of the most frequent com- Abraham Chasanow a Navy Deplaints before the committee was partment employe who was susthat federal workers have been pended for 13 months without ousted as "security risks” with- pay1 before being reinstated out a fair chance to clear them- Chasanow said the experience was one of “indescribable torselves Johnston said the subcommit- ture” for him tee will resume hearings in about James H Smith Jr assistant three weeks to take up then the secretary of the Navy for air ascase of land reform specialist sured the subcommittee that “conWolf Ladejinsky and ‘others crete improvements” had been Ladejinsky was fired by the made in the Navy’s personnel seAgricultue Department last De- curity program cember as a security risk and It was just! a year ago that hired in January with full se- Smithy apologized for the “grave to Chasanow and curity clearance by the Foreign injustice” donfi ‘ hi£Administration announced Two reinstatement Operations Chasanow officials has since Agriculture Department gone into the investigators had wanted for private business Eight-year-ol- d on sometimes suffer mild bladder irritation with that resUess uncomfortable feeling If you are miserable and worn out because of these discomforts Doan’s Pills often help by their pain relieving action by their soothing effect to ease bladder irritation and by their mild diuretic action through the kidneys — tending to increase the output of the 15 miles of kidney tubes So if nagging backache makes you feel restless sleepless nights— don’t wait try Doan’aPills same have enmillions happy relief get the dragged-outmiserablewi- in th joyed for over 60 years Get Doan’s Pill today I r ©©fi “BCJlSIlDfelliS'f SCaoOdC’GCii (J©!7 t ? jT i 7 Standard Opfical Company has for years been the headquarters for children’s visual needs The back-to-scho- ol 1 ns t "V jH ©KEY rj©7C3in© v - with glasses from Standard Optical Company I regis n w f - : i M A UIMI XjQPDQG Ua O ij3 U am R3m unirrai tuftimi i 10 'a J Clthzi JL ' ‘ e)®m iWi tem® UDDfiiianirn nl d tered optometrists at Standard Optical Company understand the visual problems of'sehool children and can properly fit them with glasses At Standard Optical your children’s glasses may be ‘insuredM If they’re'broken during the school term the lenses will be replaced free f charge oVfor maximum safety your child’s glasses can be fitted with unbreakable lenses i at' Standard Optica! 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