The Key West Citizen Newspaper, December 21, 1951, Page 2

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THE KEY “WEST citi Zew » The Key West Cities Published daily (except Sunday) by L. P. Artman, owner and pub isher, from The Citizen Building. corner of Greene and Ann Streets Cniy Daily Newspaper in Key West and Monroe Count) » P. ARTMAN ai ‘OKMAN D, ARIMAN Entered at Key West, Florida, as ecund Class ‘TELEPHONES Si and 1935 Member of The Associated P: Press—The A ‘Associated Press | is exclusively mutied t9 use for reproduction o1 all News dispatches credited to! . not othervrise credited in this paper, and also the local news sublighed here. dember Plorida Press Association ane Associated Dailies of Florids| ubséfipivr’ (by catrier) 25¢ per week, year "ye. Single copy 5 | (ee ADVERTISING RATES MADE KNOWN ON APPLICATION _ the Citizen is an open forum and imwites discussion of public is Page 2 Editor ; Business ‘Manage: | Matter es ind subjects Gt focai or genéral interest, out it will not publis! nongmous communications. ag (P) Wirey Perticones Ot- Was [IMPROVEMENTS FOR KEY WEST ADVOCATED io fror ; | ‘ 1. M Hotel vx ‘i egg REAR ADMIRAL R. E. LIBBY, a member of the UN cease-fire negotiating tear c the Cor . More Hotels and Apartment linist’s prisones-of f fter it was received at Pz , The 1 ig , munist’s ; ner after it was received at Panmunjom, Kors 1 £ = 4. Consolidation of County and City Governments. the t at cers leave the truce-talk tent with pri + 6. Community Auditorium. oner eld The file was given therm i nara s but smalle t pr held by the Reds R : TOE ETERAN GROUPS—STRONGER OR WEAKER? Membership in. the countty’s veteratis. ‘érptinizations hagd. 9 a post-war. iow, the latest polls show,.The four major veteran organizations—American Leglda4 = ; erans of Foreign Wars, Disabled American Veterans ant : Americans of World War Il—have, however, experienced Women In ; different membership trends in 1951. MevvvvvyveveyyvevevEY * » The Legion and the V. F. W. have both experienced | you certainly can’t tell, these + drops in enrollment, while the D. A. V. and AMVETS | days, what's going to happen next i. their membership has been increasing. Two reasons i lanai catia iu aBeley ' peti ; have been advanced for the dip in membership totals in | American Legislation at Helsinki : the Legion and the V. F. W. fa eae nic ele eg oll he j > Some officials say these veteran organizations have Pe ae Rates dcabacata er dalibled too deeply into pclitics, rather than confining in-|be doing a ng except school lk terésts to the field of veterans’ problems. This has led to incigeet Ra : ve: oe rted — some dissension and some drop in membership totals, ac- tong hop fron little ropolis, 5 corping fo dné school of thought. Another reason ad- Ilinois pn eas : ania 2 4 . -yarfeed is the customary post-war drop in veteran-inter- gaits hop Ae ak F caabably 4 est, This may be partly due to an attitude, by some vet- | modest to add that it’s an equally # eraps, that they have realized all or most of the benefits bog ip aaa a ~. y | Coffgress is going to grant veterans of World War II and, | passador or migister in Unc therefor, have little need ior connection with a veterans |Sam’s foreign service ; ~ ; Despite the drop in membership, veterans organiz, | first wotien to enter the American tioks expect a groundswel! of new members in the next | Foreign service field. Her first as . year, A V. F. W. spokesman says the “so-called period of | fevered briioalee / , sree : apathy” has “just about played out.” The increased size | Chile, of the armed services also indicates. renewed interest in| Moving from post | as do P the veterans organizations. A Legion spokesman Ba Uh cap! daalaiaenta pees ad¥aheed enrollments for next year are much higher than! From Valparaiso iss Willis | a Sedr Ago, and that “the best membership start the Le- lor eer Be cry aan widn has had since 1946” has recently been realized bourg and Madric : Bere oto 34 vetmieiaki In 1944, she arr hing ¢ i | INTEREST ON THE NATIONAL DEBT Ve piciraby Es tae bata ephadices : During the last seven months, dur national debt has | £uropean affairs. In 1947 she be inereased by about $4 billion. This amounts to a boost of [Game BTS Seceretary of ne sai for each man, woman and child in the nation r er pre ignment in q «. It is now becoming apparent that our national debt | February last will reach its present legal limit of $275,000,000,000 in wwe at Nia he ; pe ae N abput one year. “Fseem t n discriminated : It is worth noting that $1 out of every ten paid to the |fOrNOt against.” she says. ail Fefleral Government in taxes is used to pay the interest lightful Sg inc kote tat on-our national debt. Unless we can get on a pay-as-you- | been in the service nearly § gorbasis, it is very unlikely that our taxes can ever be sig- Orillia; (a: ganentalleseu a nificantly reduced. The {ingrigan taxpayer pays ‘the m- You, really: fall in love a te st on the Yiltional debe : eoued te set perpen hel A sense of humor eases life’s hard knocks, and pre- e and tJ independence VVVVV VY VV VY YY Yr The Nens a of CM dance, intain their sturdy de * sonville lon Of DDT Is Removed By Navy SAN. FRANCISCO (WH molition experts removed TNT prepared today proximately ing in the The about Thursday Navy a ton of mine and ap: remain- de- from a floating to detonate 1,500 pounds mine was mine found three beached} miles south of here Navy officials said it probably came from a World War Ill mine field planted to protect the Golden Gate entrance to San Francisco Bay College Receive $10,000 Donation JACKSONVILLE - M Swisher, chairman of Junior College Board of Trustees, announced the St. Joe} * Paper Company, headed by Roger] Main, has given the college $10 000 to help with its building pro- gram -Carl “S$. the Jack- tour. In six weeks, she s the dancers had visited and perform ed at 25 universities and colleges from Maine to Missouri. The group, about thirteen in all, with Mrs Oram, traveled by chartered bus,| stopping with faculty members, at sorority houses and campus dormi tories. With a smile Mrs. Oram says ‘The fast p: no long lunch hours, no afternoon sies were the things about America that seemed to impress them most And, according to Mrs. Oram, these accomplished exponents of move. ment and timing wound up breath » less and bewildered in Washington D.C., at the end of the tour. However, they were delighted with the reception they received as exponents of the modern dance. - Mrs. Oram says that there has been no audience in Brazil for the mod since Brazilians are very much pro- ballet. i heeled et kettle dtums ‘and’ § Series of mall | tambourinelike drdms:*Also‘a-Ser? ies of dented peices-af wood which Brave Subzero Winds To Find Water Meter Man BILLINGS, tive George Mont. \(?—Detec- Cunningham and a colleague braved subzero winds and snow today to ir stigate a report of an attempted service station robbery They found tracks in the snow —but here it is, right from Cun- ningham’s report “We took this track and fol- lowed it all around the Graham Lumber Company, the Scoop, the Angle Inn, the Central Gro- cery and the Hoy Service Court, keeping where it crossed went up alleys “The tracks led several back doors of residences as if the burglar were casing the plac- es. The tracks finally led west up an alley, and we caught up with the man in the alley be- on the streets ra” and to | tween Sixth Street West and Sev- énth Street West. We were in a low degree of being frozen. “It was the water meter man.’ Eruption Of Hibok Hibok Is Predicted T oday MANILA \ ernment o! ficial today recommended perma nent evacuation per cent of the 46,000 population of voleano devastated ( uin Island in the Philip Southern pines Arturo Alcaea Philippines Weather Bureau geophysicist, said Hibok Hibok Volcano continu. ally emitting smoke and oceasion ally disch incandescent ma terials’? 17 aare after an explesive eruption buried Northern Cami guin under a blanket of hot ash . howd &death ~ toll’ hhs reached 476 and hundreds. of other bottles “still are*believed buried in the volcanic wagtes. veBts embarrassing monerts when substituted for irrita- ee aye iret, the players rub together with a{ Alcaraz predicted another major : tidn. pt ype toe % a will to.| Plain stick to get & kind of click-' eruption of Hibok Hibok within i s = See uglier ard the. Unit jing sound nine months « Despite all the talk of new and fantastic weapons, agen en esas American soldiers are still squatting in the mud with ri- | are high 1 were the B-é 29 Cc lrashes, Demolishes Home fds, killing and getting killed in the same old fashion Ps ae Lape: ee Pe sional and px and oceupy| land are becomir mportant in! d to be for men only V points out} that ha jentists are doctor she! ad The e women,’ Miss W n Minois She received her A d Ph-D degrees { University in Califor had been a lege B an ist} Vassar entered ‘ the foreigr kpects to : spend family EDITORIAL WORKER Mrs. Mary ¢ h ion in ; : her job : INENT i--and inter- ‘ stone « © country with} “§ s wzilian dan 4 educated in 4 d that she 4 Was i his assign & ment “*WHO'S THE NEW SQUADRON LEADER 2" She de whirhwind} the Shreveport, La. and skidded into the house W. C. McDANIEL (left) inspects wreckage of his home which was shouldered off its founda- tion during the night when a B-29 crashed short of the Barksdale Air Force Base runway at McDaniel and his wife were asleep in the house at the time. Both were hospitalized later for shock and minor jnjuries. Two members of the crew were killed and eleven other injured Sou. Metiacth ‘Challenges ‘Pres. Truman (P) Wirephoto find A family Man oo! | Dares Chief Executive fo Campaign Against | | Him In Wisconsin | WASHINGTON —#—Republican j ISen. Mec rthy, who is bidding for} | re-election next year, today chal-) : jlenged President Truman to cam- 1 ainst him in Wisconsin. } Commenting on Mr. Truman’s 3 | reported assertion that MeCarthy : jmust be defeated and that the ; | Democrats have a good chance of | unseating him, MeCarthy told i | newsmen t | “All I can suggest is that if 1 |the President or some of his |friends want to come into Wiscon- | t there is#very good mink hunting F there. I would we:come them in ‘ |the state.’ \ | McCarthy's mention of mink d huntin; as an allusion to mink 2 coats spotlighted by congressional z : Ei E i inquiries into tax scandals and on- | y blitz of books and other activit! pores h erations of the Reconstruction Fi- | snacking at howe in liemphis, Tenn, nance Corporation Testimony 1oterevele to his one remaining coll-_ 2 showed they were bought for of- | s asked to leave a second college i ficials’ wives. Deh] als learned he was taking full® y Mr. Truman way quoted Wednes. pa oth—< naking good grades at that. Starr, ad-; ; Gay as having said McCarthy ha iti Ww ports editor of the year books at both coll-> * to be defeated. The. account was, G!Wonaity, Was ®t Se RS ie given to reporters by Mrs. Daniel} eges, columnist for the school papers at both ¢o| leges, a newee acs ps W. Hoan, Democratic ‘national! paper correspondent, was working on a novel, and curing his >" a }eommitteewoman ‘or Wisconsin,! first semester } rked 48 hours a week.in an ice cream plant. ‘79 after she and her husband, for-} To complete the picture here, wife, Norma; feeds one jg g mer mayor of Milwaukee, had | of the babies, while the other plays wighsa toy. j talked with the President at ot a | White House. E {| Mr. Truman, the Hoans said, ts usban e agreed with them that defeat of M 1S waren ti | a ; McCarthy would be in the national | * enta in interest Wi fe’ D a In welcoming the Presigent to| Are Lowered For | Wite's Deat the stump against him in Wiscon- FORT PIERCE w—Zia Brant) e sin, McCarthy recalled. he chal. * A ] d . oe i pe ‘ je lenged Mr. ‘Truman last Auenet | rmy nau tion {was held in county jall today 1s to a showdown at the polls in 1952 _|ing a complete investigation A on the issue of MeCarthy’s Com- | WASHINGTON (~The cases of: the death of his wife, Mrs. « k munists-it-government charges. some 300,000 men—who previously ‘Markovich Bram, 55, yee: a McCarthy said today failed to meet mental standards | 2S found in her home . a “I'm still willing to let the peo- ie : iit, hoc xe night fy ple decide the polls. The over- | for military service—wil he xe ‘A coroner's jury heard teathadlge, ‘i riding issue of the 1952 campaigns jopened by draft boaras, starting; +o several witnesses ay a will be the administration's Krem- | #€Xt month vand then recessed until Sat : V lin-shaped foreign policy and the| Congress lowered — minimUM | Witnesses testified that Bram had: v widespread evil effects: of it.” | mental standards when it revised ltold them his wife previously’ hi nr On another front, McCarthy said | the draft act last summer. ‘attempted suicide. e he still hasn't detided whom he! Selective Service Director Lewis “Bram said he found the “a - e will back for the Republican pres- announcing Thursday \nen he returned home. He. Wap i idential nomination S of about 300,000 men Gioted as saying she was lying ie Organized Republicans support- | Will be re-examined, made no es- 4.4. bed with a bullet wound 4 ing Gen. Dwight D.. Eisenhower i timate of how many may be found i, per chest. . g for the party’s nomination an- | fit for service under the new sland- Pp nounced, meanwhile, that a Wash- | ards. : 1 of ington campaign office will be| Cases of older men involves will app Heads ids F a.” si opened formally Saturday. - | be re-examined first. Men between = v Sen. Lodge (R.-Mass.), cam-| 18% and 26 are eligible for the C 8 aign manager for the group, said | draft. | | Power ‘orporatio i) One | Selection of a staff has not been | -_ &, a completed but that the capital | 58 C: bl 3B ST. PETERSBURG wW—Willi headquarters is being opened aap ampbiers BUY |; Clapp, 49, is the new*presid N way, “so work can begin at once | s of Florida Power Corp., : d to co-ordinate nation-wide Repub- iF, d ] § ‘serves 31 Florida counties. Clap ‘ lican activities for Dwight Eisen- | edera tamp who went to work for the fe hower for President.’ ! years ago as an engineer, st t Eisenhower has not said pub-| JACKSONVILLE he Inter- ceeds W. C. Gilman, who beeo ti licly whether he will be a candi-|nal Revenue Bureau h vied 258 chairman of the Executive Comm: date, but Republican supporters of ‘gamblers occupational tax stamps’ mittee. the general are convinced he will in» Florida. Seven were Sree be available. Thursday. : : | : | STRONG ARM B? AND COFFE : « Wanger Will Be | ee € | Air | 8 Sub | STRAND q..3ihcn0a || a : | | | sikentineeatiaasietieoneeesae | i : ubpoenaed Wed. (["saaeauaae || ; | LOS ANGELES — Actors’ TWO TICKETS ALL GROCERS c Agent Jenni! Lang is to be sub- W. poenaed to appear next Wednes- TO BROAD AY 9 day at Walter Wanger’s arraign- TONY wine es JANET : ° ment on charges of shooting him AGH t with intent to kill b) Dist. Atty. S. Ernest Roll said Coming MR. UNIVERSE 1 * v he would serve the ae : Jack, Carson: nnd jianin Page eens ‘ establish the jurisdiction of my of- fice in sie uy * AIR ' pe GORDON — 1 cf SOOLED |}, ; i, Gti referee hi & NE I Actress Joan Bennett, may ioe j Formerly - ph ? \the. hospital today or Saturday, { 8 doctors said. The district attorney EYG\AND VISUAL. DIAG t has not been able to question Lang Complete Optica : |about the shooting. | Laboratory . s ¥ 35 Coming: AT WAR WITH THE ARMY 824 Duval St. r Dean Martin and Jerry Lewi« 1 ee 1 i UNO AUAUUGUU ‘ ” MAXWELL CO., : Specializing in . All Types of Hotel. Restaurant We are now in the position to serve your needs with any type of equipment you may need. We can fully equip restaurants with all necessary require | ments, which include... @GLASSWARE @DISHES @SILVER @ KITCHEN EQUIPMENT —_—_—_—_—— RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT and SUPPL erence: the MAXWELL CO. ine. Furniture and Furnishings PHONE 682 4 909 Fleming Street. Corner Margaret St. ior VENETIAN. BLINDS|[IIf

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