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‘Thursday, April 20, 1953 EISENHOWER TO OUTLINE CHANGES IN SPENDING FOR DEFENSE AT PRESS PARLEY By ELTON C. FAY ruanowee tas oe on way |Elderly Widow what changes he wants to make in ness, efficiency and economy” in : ° the military. Ad As a forum for'what the White In justment House billed as Be erent nouncement, the Pres ose his weekly news po erege ns By Preteen dog made clear in advance that he, 4 would say how much he thinks can’ The elderly Net peered _ safely be trimmed from the 46, ® harder time bui aoe 6 eee es billion dollar military spending, han any ‘other per- aeeetcatome, 02 (me Truman "This is especially true it she is As a prelude, Eisenhower told'# Woman who has‘ done the U. S. Chamber of Commerce ‘uring her adult life except keep last night there is ‘‘no excuse for, house for her family and —_ a wasted penny.” But, he added, finds herself suddenly faced \ he will never consent to cutting; the oP cigar of finding gainful peepee defenses below the point / ‘She i a a mush harder pes te af ing ‘for employment bureaus p uae ts det she forth! han a as mah wre may ie ies,” he | Suffe m age ‘mities oe, of our liberties,” he! GH Menthe dxoetienee Of 8 Fst To lay the groundwork for the! time of employment. saebiaaaes. he rg lied two! Even a woman who has had White House meetings this morn-| Working experience finds herself : one with Republican congres-| UP against a prejudice on the part | 2 of employers for’ young pretty recommendations throu; Con-| sitis. gosh aad the” other Sith the} Employers tell __ employment National Security Council, which’ %eTvices that older women are too advises the Chief Executive on|S¢t in their ways and that they foreign and military policies and | Want people who will be with them relates military plans to the°eco-|# long time. They say their cus- nomic and military capabilities of | tomers prefer to deal with younger THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Page 7 the nation. I advance of the news confer- sas ves 5 Hild g. HOLLYWOOD #—Claire Trevor aas won an Academy Award and a tidy fortune from playing fallen women on the screen, but her fam- ily can't: get used to the idea. “T have some aunts and other relatives in the East,” said the actress. “Very dignified people. They often write me and say, “Why can’t they let you play nice girls in pictures, dear?’ ” Her 83-year-old father feels the same way, only stronger. He was @ conservative Fifth Avenue tailor to highbrow New Yorkers. He was taken aback when his daughter went on the stage, “When I first started smoking at the age of 22," she recalled, i “he was shocked. He told me, ‘If you must smoke, don’t do it in my presence.’ I had to smoke in my room after that.” He has seldom mentioned the fact that she was in the movies, | much less the kind of roles she plays. } Por a gal with such a conserva-/ tive background, it's remarkable | that Claire, has been repeatediy | east as @ woman of elastic virtue. | She traces it back to her early | days under contract to 20th-Fox i One | you wom: Gaplcvmeni services find they begin to have trouble placing secretarial workers, for instance, at around 35. In these cases, say sociologists, nothing is likely to do much good except a determined drive to change employers’ atti- tudes, A few agencies are reluc- tant to accept older job hunters as clients lest they become known “old folks’ agencies.” In spite of the prejudice against older women, the woman how to do something ich better position than who can do nothing house. why sociologists look on the growing ten- of women to work for at year or so between leaving and getting married. Be- sides giving her technical exper- git et ie’ errtil a i herself. That's a major problem faced! by employment counselors in find- ing jobs for the elderly—their lack of self confidence and their feeling they're too old to learn. Actual wage earning isn't always the elderly woman’s problem. | There are plenty of lonely old! ladies who have enough moneg to live on but have nothing to fill their lives, Their children have ‘grown up and left home, their hus- bands have died. An old man in the same situation often will put in hours on a sunny beach gossiping with his cronies and no one will give it a second thought, But society doesn’t expect its old ladies to do that. Being a “foster grandmother” is rewarding for those who like chil- dren, In the average neighborhood you don't need to look far to find grandchildren to adopt. The little! fellow who comes up to inquire what you're doing when you're} He'll keep coming back to see how they’re Perk up their appetites . . . pamper their tastes! Score a smash hit at every meal... with top quality foods at money-saving prices! AT ANY ONE OF THESE ARCHER'S 814 FLEMING ST. SHORTNING SWETMEING 3LRCAN “Qe CLEANSER 2 CANS 23 KRISPY 22¢ LG. BOX HEINZ — 9-Oz. Jar ‘MUSTARD 2" 29¢ like “Bat T was afraid of term con-/ mid-March and mi tracts after my experience at | at 4 polnt 10% per Fox,” she said thused about me when I signed! Raly produces shout 130,000" of pasta a year. “Nobody was en- | @ year ago. 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