The Key West Citizen Newspaper, January 29, 1952, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

tt Da LY as } L fi vas vel} fact I’s PR ea! flin rm ch wa Bil ne 1 al sett » fe Page 2 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Tuesday, January 29, 175 , Coe Sart West Ciiizert | WiBTSHCd daily (except Sunday) by L. P. Artman, owner and pub: isher, Irom The Citizen Building, corner of Greene And Ann Streets ~. Only Daily Newspaper in bey West and Monroe County L. P. ARTMAN et NORMAN D. ARTMAN = Entered “at Key West, Florida, as Second Class Matter ; TELEPHONES $1 and 1995 Member of The Associated Press—The Associated | Press is exclusively entitled to use for reproduction of #1 news dispatches credited to it} © not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news p iaished here. Edito: Business Manager . tie | Me oe Florida Fress Association and Associated Dailies of t Flot ingle copys 5. 9 Sulcription (by carrier) 25¢ per week, year $12.00, ADVERTISED “RATES MADE KNOWN ON “APPLICATION — ThesCitizen is an open forum and invites discussion of public issu and Subjects ‘of local or general 2 but it will not publis! wor.ymous communications. IMPROVEMENTS Fi , - 8 i. More Hotels and 2. beach and Bi " i fsa %. Airports—Land @: 4 4. Consolidation of County ana City Governments, 5. Community Auditorjun. THE TWENTY-FIVE PER ¢ CENT TAX Limst Pasternak Is Sued For Divorce LOS ANGELES a) + Joe. Paste. ak, 48, producer.) ma9ie(m While. it had seemed that the proposed twenty-five percent tax limit on income: was a, completely dead _ pro- posal, there are now some stirrings to revive the idea. The fight all along has been td gét State Legislatures to ap- piéve the proposal. which would He referred automatic- ally to Congress if three fourths of the states favored the lithjtation. At one time, over ‘twenty. states had voted upport of the limitation. Early, this month, ‘a national news magazine report- _ ed that the plan might be revived, and indicated that there was a chance of its adoption. Of course, the plan is a, deceptive one, in that it w. uld: benefit only about one percent of the country’s in ividual income tax payers. Qnly about 400, 000° of the country’s 42,000,000 taxpay- ers would be affected ‘by the proposed constitutional amendment. All the millionaires, and the big businesses, would eap many happy returns and rewards, while married couples, with two dependents, making as much as $15,- 000 or $18,000, would not experience any benefits what- socver»Sifiglé persons with no dependents would. be af eMESd if their income exceeded $8,000. ElThe Peductions—even though they were confined nilhly’ to the rich—would be’ desirable if there were no a@Mavadntages. But the Government would lose approxi- mPly $16;000,000,000 in taxes, which woyld more thar wf out the recent tax increases yoted after the outbreak ofthe Korean War, Thus, if the revenue Were to be made uigmtare Ihereases even more drastic than. those whict went into effect in 1961 would have to be enacted. =Despite talk of a revival of interest in this proposal. is little chance of its adoption; Perhaps if the-fram- this amendment accept a more moderate goal, say sofiinthing like a fifty per eent Ora sikty or seventy pei cof limitation on iricome tax, { goal will be achieved. v=However, when the twenty- ve per cent Federal tax Kad was accepted as the Boal, that in itself. insurec t-for. the- plan. A twetity-five per cent. Federal tax miay be desirable in, peacetime, bit in an interna- emergency like the present.ond> the average, Alner- icam-would not support, sueh, 1 low’ limitation; } which would allow. record corporation profits, When, the little. askedtp snerigicg his li fe: in ‘Korea. : there. er sec People mvs lose their rem at 5 weenis yg: twige ig aa any aotaits as anylindy, iad :als, has been sued for divarce, by, his wife af 10 years, forraen Ay bile JUNO Y ETS Gel priate With Our Lecal Merchants | and the 1 annual mid-winte: day with a these recor jers is bei ment - e which undermines their of diving,” Winston Churchill z be kas chosen F Prin, MIAMI BRAG ARL, th LO ‘DON ants Better Controls +The att ncourag i ad fer Named | Defense Minister p >of x in that » Britain in mids the | Bill Meyers’ “ommemorating Defend ~ Citizen Staff Phot the birthdate of eft to right: Former Mayor Oscar Morales: Arturo Sawyer Post. American From le Consul i Detmer De As Qualified | ” ‘ Submarines E ee J son gf \ ulign Detmer Jr, ald N & agen venuie, has recently in ified in Sybma “rv. Detm is currently at Amberjack graduate of ylown, avy January . De‘mer is engaged to Miss oa bone ue. Hamann of New Rochel- < i ee Hopef ul ‘off spring MIAMI, (#)—Of the 101 \inations for Hialeah’s im nso S: , three horses he offspring of former Flamingo inners. Brookmeade ted and William A Requisition. were j Requested. Mrs. M. J. Bad Rack is the son of Dis pose, al ‘McMahon Bowl Seventh 300 nom- ; Ziegler, sired by enated | New | Stable's | Hoydic’s |, | LH Buddies Are Recovered From Chi cago Fire SINT A O's ~U rt the ic iy. today rom the ru axes aked de- rv: of the Mo iday. ist rected to find the missing and the tangled ind wood. oughout the -~zero tem- spent Seven Malmquist wou%d allow fire- to search the ruins. The first bodies taken out were s |those of a boy about 6 and a girl, |3. The little girl, found on the ,Steel springs of a crib, clutched | a doll so large firemen ¢ thought | they had found two bodies. None om | the bodies was identified immedi- ately. rican Red Cri sing six adults, two teen- vers and nine small children. | Malmquist explained combing o the wreckage would be a long and |tedious job. At the artment, the roof and beth floors | collapsed into {trable mass. { {is Standby se lines, quelling ; small blaz as they sprang yp in the wrecka complicated the | Search. The-water froze almost as | I - Londoners ang visito: 7 would have a hakd: “time the im- | portance of En« h kings with a | dozen memorialized in statues j about the city. The most recent is that of George V in Westminster. The j oldest outdoor is atue in London id to be that of King Alfred, {erected in 1395. Other English mens archs so honored are Charles Iand WW, Henry I and VIII, ; George II, II, and IV, James i, | Edward [1 and Edward the Con- fessor | Pownall Ts To Top tich Fla-| are | & Sulky Driver | GOSHEN N.Y. (#4) — Harry ' Pownall, trainer-driver for the | Arden Homestead able, was; | the leading py ntage driver on arness racing’s Grand Circuit in i 1. The Brooklyn-born Pown- am had an ayetage' of .482. He raced horses at 14 of the 16 rand Circuit stops in '51 and iled 37 wins, 36 seconds and :partment | edge | crane ,with | gutted walls | ss listed | rear of the} an almost impene- | ‘Grocery Baskets 'To Be Awarded Leader At Protest Meeting Song — » a iF TH VATICAN. (eP) Wirephal ds t THE REV. KENNETH OHRSTROM cf Ye ‘ singing at a meeting in Constitution I ashington, D. Gy | called by the American Council of C a Churches to pro- | test the appointment of a U.S. Ambassador to the Vatican, Signs ; | similar to the one in the foreground were carried by some per- sons attending the meeting. Those in the background are not identified. iThe Ey s Have It ( ng “dee Royal Children Win Praise ATHENS, T Tinney isn’t LONDON.—(#) —Britain should | about the loss of an eye ‘howe He be OK when King Charles NY is|thought it might have made him on the thron?, according to P. H. usel s a football player—un. Mitchiner, senidr vice-president til he heard from Bobby Dil of the Roval Colleve of Surgeons, | Dillon is the fellow who Welcoming Princess Elizabeth ' all-American although he to honorary’ fellowship college, Mitchiner said: | “Prince Charles has an inquir- : ty of Texas and one. of ¢ ing mind anc a clear blue eye, finest defensive backs in thé eonable of an unwinking stare. tory of the Southwest C | These augur well for the future of once, He had lost his eye | ve country under King Charles childhood. “Princess Anne I have seen! only asleep in her baby carriage. * sucging by the tendency dis- played in many of her photo- i graphs to push her parents and relatives trom her, she will coubtless develop a fine inde- j;Pendence of character, coupled | with a forthrightness of speech,” 114 Casualties | Told By War Dept. WASHINGTON (® — The Defense | Department today identified 114 ad- Tinney is a junior high seh d player here. He lest an @& when a fragment of a shell pet traced it. But then came an encburagi letter from Dillon together wit an autographed picture, Danny feels all right about, the whole thing now. : Tuesday and Wednesday LOST CONT with ditional battle casualties in Korea | CEASAN HOMERO END . in a new list (No. 488) that reported | bauer y °° a) 23 killed, 78 wounded, three miss- . eas ‘ ¥ ing and 10 injured. It also listed Comibge yeernanD, THE eight dead who were previously} Robert Tiylor and Denise reported missing in action. Davect MONROE .-5i0 Tuesday and Wednesday BREAKTHROUGH with DAVID BRIAN AND JOHN, wAR Bushel baskets of groceries will be given away as door prizes to the lucky holders of the right num- bers each night of the Navy’s Char. ity Carnival. Drawings will be made at 10:30 p.m. on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights, Feb- cuary 14, 15 and 16. (Normandy Rastle) Coming: APPOINTMENT WITH DANGER Alan Ladd and Phytlin Calvert Citizen Staff Phot ¢ {s ; Seven thirds. Thus Pownell de- Le throned Del Miller whose .302 RUMAN L. AMY. of the Keys | Rogklet Ou | se 302 a cat Séivice = Over at: 423 ooklet Uul CHICAGO, (#)—Junie Me-|mark was tops for '50. at ees . ff Fle ceases Eas: AURA ae . fs ahon’s 300 game, rolled in the | eS Oe ee | SinignianStresk just atl Blew ex otie K ey est pcblehed by final round of the 11th annual] | ing and right next door to booklet has just been published by, 411"< bowling tan Freshman sears Roebuck is a 5 s its author William Meyers, Key ey nodern businessman ¢ West writer and driver. ei ee event soneganed, Ber ‘i is a acked with some of the more fect game of his career pul Co es Through citer : famous Key West legends, and him in a tie with Walter Ward : hie ae eres our Stories about flora and fauna in the Cleveland for third place! EAST LANSING, Mich., (4)— eee Peay Island City, the booklet has many ®Mong 300 bowlers. Hank Mari-;Tom Payette, Michigan State genial Optician, and i photoer aphs as well as te no ot Milwaukee holds the-rec-, freshman swimmer, set a new specialist in his line. He has sub-titie on the booklet is ord with 11 and George Billick! meet record for the 100-yard free Movida State license and Ree West, An Island Thrice Ble { Old Forge. Pa., has eignt. style event the first. time he s year's experience. | ed. A Veritab' idise {swam in varsity competition. foliowing the pre Mtyer on mea The residue from menkaden, a |The Spart wel yn to aeteat scription of your eye doctor, | cles for The Citizen and other news- species of fish, is ground into meal | Bowling Green by a score of 66- he Will also heip you to select | papers for farm animal and poultry feed. | 27. thé proper framcs to suit your a ve pe features, and your lense . Mr. Amy from Grand | | : Rapids, Michigan, but that was | ; |. i ivy a long time He ¢ame, to | rie, o™ : Fort Lauderdale in 1940. and é » stayed until 1947, at which} ery ee Ss a i 1 time he came to Key. W The was located ' Keys. Optical: § ice} at 110 Duval street: | before moving to its present Tocation. Keys Optical Service also has a full line of Zenith Hea A id supplies. It also stocks batteries for all other | makes of Hearing Aids. Political Announcements DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY, MAY 6, 1952 For State Representative BE RNIE C. PAPY For Clerk of Circuit Court EARL R. ADAMS ; anty ‘Tax Assessor - GANDOLFO | * “For Sheriff LOUIS M. J. EISNER Fos Sheriff JOHN SPOTTSWOOD + For Céiinty Commissioner Third District | GLARENCE S. HIGGS | Fee Member School | Board | Second District } GERALD #. ADAMS yor tel ag pr SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY the service. eve part of the family budget rowing, too y ° ite and the cost is up far less > } ° . ! Lt than prices in general! ms “LADIES” already! My, how they have grown! And " u can say the same for Florida’s telephone service. IN JUST FIVE years in Florida, the number co? H ephen:: you can call has more than doubled. * BEST OF ALL, the price of this bigger, better “pack- ¢” of Service has gofie up on the average far less than ices in general... and less than our cost of providing ~n ALWAYS a bargain, telephone service is today an en better buy than it was ten years ago, and a smaller J. B. KINCAID, South Flo, ida Manager LONG DISTANCE CALLS go through faster when you give the operator the out-of-town tele- phone number. “a in the only one eye. 4 I Bobbv played at the Universiy :

Other pages from this issue: