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Carmichaels Released On $10,000 Bail Miami. Attorneys Arrange For Bail; Carmichael Sr, Once Large Property Owner By AL PALMER Carl Carmichael, 43, and his son Carl Jr., left Key West late esterday afternoon for Miami rt being released on bonds of 000 each. The men were held here in County Jail on murder rants in connection with the h of Allen Harris, 23, whose nude body was found last Friday morning on the Gulf side Stock Island near the General Hospital. Miami attorney and his partner George Everett were in Key West yesterday to nge bail for the men. The Al American mi t yesterday’s hearing, held Judge Aquilino Lopez’ cham , Hubbard revealed that Car michael, Sr., suffered from stomach ailment. He also that the man at one time owned considerable property on Grassy Ke Surety Company a The Carmic! Is were engaged in dragline operations near the spot found. There has been no official report of the autopsy findings | revealed so far. It is almost | definite that the man was not | drowned. A pathologist, brought into the case, is ex- pected to give his report to Coroner Roy Hamlin on Jan. | 2nd. A Coroner's jury is expected to complete its investigation | early in the New Year and al] hearing will be set then State Attorney J. Lancelot} Lester did not reveal the state’s evidence in the case at yester- day's hearing A sailor, who chose to with- hold his identity, is expected | to be the stafe’s star witness. | It has been reported that the sailor was given a ride by the | Carmichaels on the night pre- | vious fo the discovery of Har- | ris’ body. Sheriff Berl al led which Sawyer search sulted n where his t The Carmichaels. brough Wednesday from Miami by puty Sheriff Tommy Dixon, peared briefly in the office yesterday afternoon sign bond papers Hubbard said yesterday, haven't discussed this case the Carmichaels so r. I make it a point never to discuss things | like these in a jail.” The Carmichaels went to Hub- bard’s room at La Concha deed immediately following their ap: sheriff's | to} with | jease, Hubbard stated that they | would clean up, have dinner, and | drive to Miami with the attor- neys. GRUNEWALD (Continued from Page One) astray from any legitimate purpose for power possessed by the Con- stitution of the United States.” Grunewald’s name popped up all along the line in earlier digging by subcommittee into the sensational | “shakedown"’ story told by “Abra- ham “Teitelbaum, Chicago lawyer | 2 and sometimes counsel for the late | Gangster Al Capone. | Teitelbaum said Frank Nathan, ) | { Pittsburgh net i K. Naster, sought a half million dollars from | him under threat he would have “bad tax troubles’ if he didn't come through with it. Teitelbaum also said he got a} telephone call from a man who | identified himself as ‘Mr. Watson”’ and advised him in a gutteral voice with German accent that he had; better “play along’ with acca | and Naster The committee got testimony | that when T. Lamar Caudle, assist- ant attorney general since fired | from his job, first heard of the | Teitelbaum story last August he commented that the gutteral voice ‘might’ have been Grunewald’s. It was Grunewald’s third appear ance before the subcommittee. It first sought answers from him in hospital here Dec. 12. He refused to talk. Then he was closeted with mem bers in closed session an hour ‘and a half Thursday but did not answer a single question. Committeemen | coneeded he was not even sworn in Maloney did the talking inside | and outside the committee room Thursday Holiday y + Guests In Gibson Home Miss Frances Schutt of Miam rived here Wednesday for se’ 1 days visit with Miss Jesse Gib- son and her parents, Mr. and Mrs H. A. Gibson, 1401 Pine street Also spending the holidays with the Gibsons is Mrs. niece of Mrs. Gibson, who arrived here today from Houston, Texas. of | Monroe | Hubbard | id was @rranged by the Pan- | of said | jtrek to bedsides | Dorothy Rayr | cause he |L. Smith, QM1; | when the Andrew Dean, | | BMi nks PAUL SCHACK, Where Haile, pody wes | Spee tal Interest-€ ‘ooking Group » Gives Party At Naval Hospitat: nterest cooking group of naval officers’ wives’ i goodies to patients at the Naval hospital in: a jay night. They visited the, various wards ng tables, distributing homemade candies, pies, cake, cookie ther delicacies with coffee and ice cream. The group headed ay Mrs. 4 coe K. L. Pl sisted wae é |by a committee composed of Mrs Gilmore Officers R. D. Chandler, Mrs. Jack Caran¢ = é & Mrs. John E. Campbell Guests Tonight aby Those who heipec an ule d Mrs. J. R. Bedford Cocktail Party Bowling, Mrs. D. E x Pn | : | John A. MeFerron and Mrs. Jerry Cat. A.H. Dropp, commanding | Boyd officer of the submarine tender, R i |U.S.S. Howard W. Gilmore, and Red Cross attaches oe tibals ie day season by giving a cocktail fh ae id avon of | pa tomight at the Fort Taylor ee Sere Officers’ Club. Guests will be the: The preparation ere mace 1D | Gilmore officers’ and their ladies. th ffice and kitchen of th Capt. J.W. Davis, commanding Cross building with trays, of officer of Submarine Wauadron | loaded on to the serving | Four and Mrs. Davis, will also be the coffee and ice cream cont ts at the holida i d and The ts group bega patients shortly | d were still serving | imple after 7 p.m at 9 p.m | Accompar Ps were | reporter, who took pictures f and Al Palmer | of some of the servicemen | In ward C, with a normal capa- | city of 45 men, William Kogel, re-| putedly called “the Problem,” be- | ts to get up and move | around after two months in bed, | }posed with Miss Lansden of the | |Red Cross. Kogel, RD3, USN, is | |from Jamaica, N.Y., and has been | in service for three and a half years. He wanted to know what ! organization was xz g the treat, | saying, “It’s one of the best.” | Another group included Daniel | Dick Stine, SOSN; | SA and John Hom James Hoar, mond, GM2 In Ward Baker where long per iod cases are treated, Paul Schack, | BM1, posed with big Joe Craw-! ford, SH3. Joe is no relation to} Broderick Crawford of. “Mice and Men” fame, but he’s -about“the same giant size, standing six feet j four and half inches .in, his socks and weighing 225 po Munch ing a piece of fudge, he said “Yeah, and I’m thifner becau I've been’on a diet, He's from e and Bert /|ler, Miss. Schack spent nine and | pouring in to this €o Florida businessman, |half years in the navy, has been | mannervin Which our |through campaigns in World War | II in both the Atlantic and the Pa- cific. His home is 7281 S.W. 14th! street, Miami, Fla. Unmarried, he | expects his mother and father and } maybe a brother to visit him for | | the holidays | Another patient, C. G. Cantrell, | ;SN, had just been admited for ex amination. He hails from Denison, Texas, north of Dallas and near Oklahama, so he expects to chat | }with Miss Lansden who used to} |live there. Cantrell, after two) years in the navy through 1947, | just re-enlisted in September The party was still in progress Christmas heart- felt greetings were 'UN Giles America | ‘Confidence Vote PARIS (®—The United Nations Political Committee gave the Unit- ed States a vote of confidence to- day by rejeeting Russian charges that the U. Swas supporting anti- Kremlin plotters on Soviet soil The vote was 39 against the Rus- sian resolution, five for it and 11 abstentions An American spokesman said -|the vote backing up U. S. denials of the charges would have been even larger except that several pro-American delegations had al- ready left Paris for the Christmas holidays. Dumas’ “The Count of Monte} Cristo” came out in 1845. Pie And Coffee In Ward Baker Schack’s home is at 7281 S. Ww. i | Store owners who are illegally sell- ing |The firecrackers -- {sale of pyrotechnical devices but [made towat | by perhaps with a reprimand. The citizen staffsters left for | be |other committments, and the Merry | stressed the fact that law enforce- Citizen Staff Photo and Joe Crawford, SH3, before it is devoured l. The special interest , ice cream, pies, a to the boys at the hosr ».in Ward Baker, where coffee a Mississippi: boy: Music for the party will be fur- | ness. Tells of Increasing Businessis picking up at the Chamber of Commetce office these days according to president Edwin F, Tréyor.':Mail inquiries before and: the umber of tour- ists visiting the Chamber office for information exceeds other same: petiod Jast year 237 were received, A total of 559 ters - for “Chamber's * information desk compated with -}60 during the same. period, last year. Mrs. Jo Garland, office secre- tary said ‘that, mail inquiries |range from school children . who are writing school papers. about the island to< possible investors desiring. tion about” ‘the Keys as. es bien, Lig a rat from preset Ph oe number for support of “the* . organ on and pointed out.that ‘based upon current .“survegs; ‘Chambers’: in cities the size of Key, West aver- nished by the Salty Six, from the: Gilmore GIBB OURS Firecrackers on Christmas! Gosh but I'd like to catch the them to kids and stuff the blasting things down their throat: not the kids. There is a law, an ordinance, or something against the private there doest’t be any effort | it. This is | es! We tu More and mo officer are handling tourists -- or it would be more correct | ;to say -- automobiles carrying out- of-town license plates. The general idea seems to be that partiality being shown to local drivers with respect to the violation of traffie ordinances. If they do something wrong, they get ; Stranger gets a summons to coutt, Chief of Police Joe Kemp might find it interesting to study the per- centage of “foreign” and “local” traffic summons issued by his mien. (ff there has been a tendency to show favoritism, something done about the matter. Several times this column has | ment should be twice as strict to-| |ward a local person as it is to- ward comparatively new residents or tourists. The local person sets anexample that is usually follow- ed by people new to the town. For instance, if you go to Kala- mazoo and observe that city’s re- sidents ignoring speed limits, the chances are that you yourself will figure it is all right to keep up with the flow of traffic. And if a op singles you from amongst ten or fifteen others for a citation, you’re going to be plenty sore - evel though you are perfectly willing to admit your guilt. It goes back to that old saying: “It's the principle of the thing.’ THE AGONY COLUMN There is a letter on. my désk from a Private in Korea. He says: a friend told him that Key West was a nice town and he would like to correspond with anyone here who cares to write. According .to | age a in ot -over 400. has TAMPA’ Ub Alte ‘Adaag ays he “will not foletate the. menerine. extrava; and de- liberate protesting ei go on in Tallahassee today." A candidate tee governot, Adams spoke .befote the Juniof Chamber of Commetee hete Thursday night. He critieized excessive govern- | mental spending and the “‘ineffi- | elency and petty-finagling at every jlevel of: government.”» ~ He said thete ate top® many boatds my state t and | foo rasapeiie agencies wi wiih spend <i lots of money até anawetdble ont to--the ‘governor. He advocated giving the; Cabinet more say-so over administrative powers and taking the “balance of power” in administration away The aid Adam s, can- not ‘himself, but the Cabinet: mem- bers “must look the Fate in bg Booty be og ee pits al- wed the 6 are increasing faster than: ‘ever! Tomorrow Is ‘Shortest Day Of Year 1951 MIAMI (#-Saturday will be the shortest day of the year, but you won't be able to tell the difference in Florida. At. 11:02 a. m. (EST) the sun will end its southward movement. Florida will have 10 hours and 31 minutes of sunshine, exactly the Same as it's been getting since Tuesday and will continue to re ceive.until. Christmas Eve. R will mark the beginning of winter, Summer begins next June 21, when the longest day of the MARTHA WATKINS HOME FROM COLLEGE | Miss Martha Watkins. student at | Florida State College, Tallahassee, has arrived here to spend the | Christmas holidays with her par- \ents, Comdr, ana Mrs. J. M. Wat- kins, 1409. Reynolds. | year will bring 13 hours and 46 minutes of sunlight. Longest and shortest days mean comparatively little variation in hours of sunshine in Florida, only three hours and 15 minutes, be- the equator, Farther. north the variation is greater. Minnesota has eight hours and 14 minutes of possible sunshine on the shortest day of the year and 16 hours, 18 minutes on the longest. ‘| Admiral ©. cause of the state’s proximity to | Ma + pk MR Oke Lat Friday, Deceriber 21, 1951 For Adm. meee Military burial services for W. Brunsun, who died suddenly yesterday morn- ing, will be held at 2 o'clock | Monday afternoon in the Nation- al Cemetery at Arlington. Admr. Brunsun was the hus- band of the former Miss Lulu Navarro of Key West. Mrs. Brun- sun's brother .sand>sister-in-law, THe KEY WEST CITIZEN: bese 4 Funeral Monday {Fire A fire was reposted at 12:58 p.m. small store room room at. ave- nue blazed up briefly. ss Firemen who the call found the fire _ and slight damage was teported by Lafe Antonio, owner of the store- room. of Mrs. Paul Vecker Key West. Admr. Brunsun died on a plane enroute to. Wi dD Cc, Mr. and Mrs,.Dam Navarro, plan from Seattle where he was to |to attend the. funeral. ,services. | attend the. | Mrs. Brunsun is. also a: niece of} his. daughter, Mrs. L. C. Brinton and a cousin | Bruce Sullivan. eSeuthern Fried Chicken Grilled Floride Lobster edumbe Shrimp eCubsn Sandwiches 528 Fleming St. HOME COLLETTE'S Formally 917 Simonton St. ‘al AK rie vy: 3} 1209 Virginia AT BENNY’S Orders to $0) SIMONTON STREET PERKY a Acres oF — es With Outboard Mot CONTINENTA weer ne — Famous For — Wishing Everyone A Very Merry Christmas and A Happy New Year RESTAURANT YOU'VE NEVER EATEN REAL key WEsT snnine, UNTIL YOU'VE MAD SHRIMP IN THE BASKET. PA Key West Turtle Steak Filet of Fish eHome Cooking Always oKey Lime Pie Tel. 232 SPECIAL! BREAD, Blackout ¢ Koaney @CHOPS ROLLS Saturday bara, to M. A ORTEGA, Prapeiote ZING IN: DAILY BUSINESSMAN'S SPECIAL @ STEAKS MADE AND dinner we settle mikey from 2 to 1005 Truman Avenve KEY WEST'S FAMOUS SPANISH REST. SPECIALIZING ir NATIVE DISHES, and CUBAN HOTEL LA CONCHA COFFEE SH PASTRIES ‘For that special anniv a family re-union, or , on CANDLELIGHT. DINING R WE ARE FEATURING A COMPLETE HOLIDAY — DINNER ROAST DUCKLING or Street AKING CAFETERIA Take Out HARRY. ? esa soumupe— Outboard Motors — A- iS SIE A MRR ti st Po ed DGE 0 RESER VATIONS NOW Everything Served in An Atmosphere of DAILY CHICKEN oY ae goes