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sevens ay Page 2. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ___ Ohe Key Mest Cingen Publishes daily (except Sunday) by L. P. Aztinan, owties 2nd pub ‘ishet, from. The Citizen Bui , corher of Greene And Ann Streets Only Daily Newspaper’ in Key West ahd Monro County Thursday, Merch-6, 1982 “LP. ARTMAN -—— Editor NORMAN D. ARTMAN Busindss. Manager, Entered at Key West, Flotida, as Second. Class Mattet saab of The nenctited ‘Associated Press is exdlusiv. Fiititied to use for reproduction of all news dispatches ctedited to “not otherwise credited In ‘hie Paper, ahd also the loral new: “published ‘here: epee ee tt nt Member Florida Press Aseociation and Associated Dailies of Flurid: tiption (by carrier) 25c per week, year $12.00, single copy Bi itt AARNE. SN RANE ES ADVERTISED RATES MADE KNOWN ON APPLICATION The Citizen is an open forum forum and invites discussion of and invites discussion of public Issue issue ‘and subjects of local @ general interest, but it will not publish anonymous com x tlie abot A "Ye Joe Abram’s “Florida, Politi. cay Survey and Poll” is ‘running as,true to form. as it has in prt‘e- vious elections, it . looks: like “Dah is the. Man.” According to Joe’s latest ‘report, Dan McCarty is leading his op- Botents by a very comfortabie OISES IN | STANDING 0 Undoubtedly, a ia mi every Citizen reader may proves the action of. the’ ing the operation of sound truc consistent, further action | of other noises. hey _. *& tourist, who, said Ate is a hin fifth winter in ~Key West, had a letter-in The Citigen a‘ few days ago ~~ vomplaining about the noise” made by scooters in the vi- ‘ einity of his home. What is true of his vicinity is true also of all Key West. When a scooters shoots by, it makes as much“noise as‘a tank charging in hattle. The. tourist «-@omplained so bitterly, you could read betweer the lines’ hat, if the scooter noise is not stopped, he will look ‘for’ dther place to.apend his winters. He wished t# know why scooters are permitted ta’ ‘un. without mufflers, He could have followed sip that question by, asking nother, “Are scooter riders. a “privil-J '“eged. class?” If dman‘drives a).¢ar without a ‘muffler | city policemen will. watn him.to gét one and, if he does. “not heed the warning, he will-be arrested for eausing a. . Nuisange. Why discriminate? What applies to him ‘should’ also apply to the scooter rider, : But the hoise made by a scooter while cunning is of little consequence as noises are hotched up, one after an: | other, compared to the roating of outboard motors in | “Garrison Bight every “Sunday. ‘That’ roar, ¢an be heatd within a radius of a mile. The noise is as loud a8 a squad: ron of airplanes passing over the housetops. But Key Westers, particulafly ‘the oldtimets, should not: be impatient or inconsiderate’ ‘The: Citizen has: heard some them remark, “Key, West is not lik it used’ to be,” SNo city, growing as fast asiKey West h V “the last decade, can be as ‘it uded* to b —~Sgrowing pains.” and the grunte caused by somé of the “Pains are disagreeable, We can’t have theyqu Horse- and-buggy days at.a time when we get ‘ dind pulling’ power from the. gasoline: mot of Key Westers— his: own percenthte—Ap- ‘Commissioners in prohibit- in our streets, but, to be areas. he taken ‘to rid the city " forial candidates as: follows: \f. Dan MéCarty—Rural vote, 20 perce’ city vote, 25 percent, : gain in 30 days, 3 percent; total, 45. percent. 2, Alto. Adams—Rural vote, 14 percent; city vote, 13 percent; RUSSELL KAY in 30 days, 8 percent; total, | ‘percent, 3. Brailey Odham-—Rura] vote, 10:,percent; city’ vote; 13% per- | epnt; gain in. 30 days, 7's percent: , 23% percent. Other candidates and unde- voters—Total, 4'2 percent. ~The first primary is still two months off and the boys are just ginning to°get out arid cam- daign in earnest, They all havea Bondi and rugged road to travel | ind anything can happen be-| ided, though, ‘that a’ motor can ‘he. 80 ‘well th Ween now | and rhe REBES: like & purring kitten. Yet, if all motors, a McCarty, Jeeding” in @ of ting kitte a ild have other, things to, complain reer 87 counties and in about bechundi ey dre partivand pares ‘of growth’ and Reet Pein. Beech. Pr Plone | eR Side i ver Beach, St. Petersburg’ and | In view’ of those facts, we should, not be tod: critical He has, not, lost of the City Commissioners. The fast growth of Key Wes poses problem aftér problem. for the Commissioners, and: its humanly impossible for them to sblve all prbbleins at the same ‘time, Try ‘gs hard, as. the. ‘Commissioi rs may, some inconsiderate critics; standing, ‘oh the: side! nes, des|" niand why this or-that is nothing done when the doing; in many cases, involves stms of money far beyond the city’s means, and in of. 3 percent cast ams, reported’ in secs | ‘strong in) north, gen eet pie la oe 5 ‘arger erowds than ‘either of his} ‘pponents and is putting plenty j f pep and fire in his campaign. le is reorted as leading in only | hree counties, however, al-| rough he has a good following | THE DEATH OF A HERO margin in both the city and rura! | ‘The latest poll rates ‘guberna- | announced State Railroad and Public Utili-! | Tommy, to train dogs for the afmy, was Se. toe rt a dog tracks offered no. and their operatio: ‘omfort to those whe like he meant what he said. On the controver: ingicated that voters are opposed ago. ‘Ferguson of Miami who recently as a cancidate for | ties Commissioner, and while” he gives no figures in this race, interesting from point. every as we roll along toward And, by the way, if you want to VOTE. ‘Dog Trainer Bites SINGAPORE (4)—A_ British whose mission in life is {convicted himself corporal. The soldier, a member of the of biting a ‘ | Army Guard Dog Unit in Singa- pore was sentenced to 84 days {detention for assault, absence without leave and creating a dis- | turbance. His court martial was told that when he returned late one night from leave, he objected to ques- tioning from a corporal and a struggle ensued. During it, came the bite. UNDER-EIGHTEEN RESTRICTION IS PROPOSED CALGARY, Alta. (#)—Recom- mendations that no girl under 18 be allowed to accept jobs as counter girls, waitresses or hotel jchambermaids without written \ permission of her parents was passed by the Alberta Council on Child and Family Welfare here. Mrs. Harold Riley, president of | the council, said temptations for teen.agers today were greater than ever before. Major George A. Davis, Jr., who is now presumed to be dead, passed from the scene of today's tragic events in heroic and typical fashion, The thirly-one-year-old fighter pilot from Lubbock, Texas, shot down two MIG- 158 over Korea before a third got in behind him and finally brought the war's greatest ace down. The Sabre jet ace had knocked down eleven MIGs and Communist bombers in the current war. In addition che had done more than his duty in World War II, also having shot down seven Japanese planes. Major Davis was a hero in every sense of the word. “He was a squadron leader who inspired his fellow pilots and whose reported,loss cast a pail of gloom over the en- tire Air Force in Korea and Japan, Few citizens back home will realize what thé initiative and courage dis- played by Major Davis means. He inspired an entire Air n all sections of the state and is ‘xpected to pick up rather than ose votes in the weeks ahead. Other candidates in the race | how little strength at this time. Indications are that the fight vill develop into a first class | lugging match before it is over. Qdham has been taking pot shots at both Dan and Alto and all! hree are pointing fingers of; ‘corn at the Warren Administra. | tion. Adams and Odham are both ‘ugged hard hitting campaigners and won't waste too much am-! ‘munition on each other until! they shorten the distance. be self forced to take off his coat < ~ “S| and start sluggin’ before it i Force, and an entire country whose greatest asset is its|ovér if he wants to retain t citizens like Major Davis. lead. Dan kicked off his cam- eek paign in. Ft. Pierce last week | with several thousand enthusias- tie followers beating the tora-tom |and ringing the welkin. Speaking at Ft. Pierce Dan The happiest person in this community is probably | made it clear that there wouldn't The one who has helped the mast people, in ar * or} be any “Mr. Big” in Florida it ‘w= Not every dog that bites a man is to blame. “another. }fernorship, and his remarks about tween themselves and McCarty | Géfitleman Dan may find him-| .he is entrusted with the Gov-! OIL Brooms Waste Baskets Canister Sets Bread Boxes Key West 211 SIMONTON STREET niin the state's May | “Joe tips his hat to Judge Tom | Political) ‘Notes By. The Associated Press What they’re doing and saying in the presidential campaign: In general: Democrats and Republicans are \ stepping up their efforts. to. win the \first Iap in the preferential pri- | | aiary sweepstakes. That’s next | | Tuesday’s. eclectic in New Hamp: | shire. | Jack Bell, Associafed Press | itieal writer, reported from Con- ‘cord he found evidence indicating | | due voters are undecided on whont | * j to choose, in eitehr the Republican - Democratic columa: | Democrats: | Seott Lucas of Miinois, ‘Sonate majority leader, opened | “resident Truman's New Hamp. j shire campaign by saying the Pres- ‘ident is juour of peril’ and musi be per suaded to run again. Jolin L. Sullivan, former secre- ‘tary c the Navy, urged at Durham, {1 | Committee was oct its pow- |N; H., that Mr. Truman be |“a vote of confidence” or it |be the best news (the Kremlin) | has received in a long while.” Sen, Estes Kefauver of Tennes- | see launched his windup campaign |in New Hampshire with handshak- | Washington” 16 primary. | they indicated the name of Gov. ee a business of “going to the | ie filed “instead, What he had to say about cer- | Republicans: tain political clinches wasn’t } very complimentary either, in|in Ney Hampshire where he con- fact he told ‘em they could geo get lost or drop dead as far as|found the voters somewhat apa‘! he was coricerned and talked! thetic to his appeals. Sen. Leverett Saltonstall of Mas- | Eisenhower’s New Hampshire cam- }to win.” Harry Darby, former | “invaluable to us in this | ay Aad decided not | Adlai Stevenson of [llinois would and we have to have their votes | national commit- WASHINGTON 4 — House i. vestigators demanded ap ci ty spot expianation from~ Attorney General McGrath today for Justice ‘records io theii.: The situatian contained the cie- [ments ofa new and explesive con- test between: the ‘Fruman. adminis- po. | ation and a commitiee of Con- | gress digging into cliarges of cor- |ruption and irpegularities in. gov- | ‘nment. - Rep. Chelf (Di-Ky.), chairman of a special judiciary subcommit- tee investigating MeGrath, threat- ened to use the subpoena powers ;of Congress or go directly to the President. if vee persisted in , his refusal to Chelf’s statement came Wednes- | day night toiiowing a hastily called commiitee. session ta, consider a letter from Assistant Attorney Ger-* eral Joseph .C. Duggan. Duggan, acting fof MeGrath, ‘contendéd the ers, . ry | Moreover, Duggan. ia the Chelf | committee—ji'st staring ‘ifs in- quiry into’ aeGrath’s. eondict of offiee—that the! exediitive branch of government” was, “independent a ing visits to Newmarket, Dover) iS | and Pootsmouth. bea and equal!’ ta “Congress and Oregon Democrats announced | “In any event, We could nat com- that “after conversations with! bly with any Such -request.”’ MeGrath hinisélf) was out of, Washington, But Chelf ‘issued a summons today: to the attecney general—or to his deputy, if Mc- Grath cannot ‘he located. | As to the challenge to tie com. | mittee’s authority, Chelf reported Harold E. Stassen, campaigning | “Not caly does the committee have |the authc-ity, but it-intends to ex- cedes he is third choice, said he‘ ercise that authority.” The committee last. month re- | quested the department to list ‘eases submitted in the past six 1 issues it| sachusetts carried Gen. Dwight D.| years by other federal agncies | which were quashed, prosecution to FEPC, don’t want state ownec |paign to Claremont, He said the |Tefused, or returned. It also re- liquor stores, favor the Jax-| general is “the one Republican | @ested a record oF cases in which Miami Turnpike by a small mar- | who appeals particularly to the , nO action has veen taken in the gin and are not quite as down | independent voters of our ecaptry | last year. ‘on Fuller as they were a month! Duggan’s refusal was based in part on the contention it would mean digging into voluminous files covering half a million cases. That, Department refusal to open up its 1 he will probably cover it in his next report which .ought to be plenty stand- ; teeman for Kansas, said in Phoenix that Eisenhower “will be back in, this courtry at the right time’ to °| speak for himself. Paul G. Hoffman, former econo- mie co-operation administrator, told reporters in Philadelphia he is convinced Eisenhower can win he contended, would impose an ‘intolerable burden” | partment. on the de- HOLLYWOOD): The fun is just starting and it! should get merrier and merricr May 6. have’ you REGISTERED? Better do it now in Ankara; ing to the United States?” plied: to the United States.” Sen. Robert A, Taft of Ohio, ex- pected to give Eisenhower a nip- | and-tuck fight in New Hampshire, campaign. | sponsor, Fred E. Epton, to with- draw his name from that state's | primary. Epton said he would con- {sult with other MacArthur spcasors before deciding. John Chapple, national president of “Fighters for MacArthur,” said to accept a GOP presidential draft. said there, would be no ccnment. Goy. Barl Warren of California |said in Sacramento the ‘‘independ- | ent oil crowd” is pouring money jinto a California campaign to de- | ‘Pit his candidacy fc> the top nom- ination. Warren plans to fly to Wisconsin prior to that state’s April primay. He said he will announce today whether he will enter May 16 primary. Gleanings: Rep. Clinton McKinnon, a Demc- ory announced he will run for UL S. both the Democratic and Republi- jcan tickets in the state's June 3 | primary. PAINT! WHITE PAINT INTERIOR — EXTERIOR BASE $298 gal. WEEK END SPECIALS Reg. Now 98 -79 39 19 79 49 .98 49 Supply Co. TELEPHONE 378 the Republican nominaticn without returning to the U. S. to campaign. Across the Atlantic, Eisenhower was asked, by a Turkish reporter. “When are you return- He e- “I have no plans to return is due there Thursday to open his! Gen. Douglas MacArthur said in New Y -*k he had asked his Oregon in Washington he is convinced MacArthur will “feel called upon” A MacArthur aide in New York Thursday for a 4-day speaking tour Oregon's senator from California on NOTES By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD — (®—‘‘Romance and ballet do not’ mix too well,” sighed Maria Tallchief, latest of the ballerinas to be imported by | Hollywood. Miss Tallchief, one of the stars {of the New York City Center Bal. |let, was brought here to portray Anna Paviova’ in “The One Piece Bathing Suit." Her Indian-soun@-' ing name is the McCoy; she was born in Oklahoma to an Osage fa- ther and a Scotch-Irish mother. The young dancer isn’t like the aloof ballerina of - legend.) She |Howise Group Threatens To | ‘Subpoena MeGrath Unless He Produces Dept. Records pany tours Europe for five months. | How could I explain that to a Lus band?” 1 Miss ‘allehief' added that ihe) most likely mate for a ballerina, would be someene whe was also connected with the ballet, She tried that herself, but failed. Her mar riage to George Balanchine, the famous ballet director, was ali nulled. We talked about the ballet boom, ahd Miss “Yallehief allowed that} the movies, particularly “Red) Shoes,” had a lot to do with it. Another important factor is the American housewife. “L have talked to: many, men who told me that they, woulda’t have \ thought of going to the ballet vol untarily,” she said. “But their wives dragged them ia it, and ihe} men stayed to enjoy it. | * The balerina punctared some be- | fiefs about the ballet, particularly | | concerning. temperament, 3 oldtime ballerina = who would blow up at the slightest. mis- hap is a thing of the’ past,” she femarked. “Dancers don't. make big scenes backstage. any more; the companies. just won't put> tp with it, that there is no temperament in the ballet. Naturally, when you get so many sersitive’ people “together, thre is bound to be some tempér. But they are generally minor flar-. ups over such things: as’ the or- chestra tempo: not bei right.” She added that the name-phang- ing fad in the ballet lias been gone for several years. In the old days, a dancer named John Smith would generally alter his handle to some- thing like Igor: Petrovitch, or some| , Sch Russianism. | “When I started: in the ballet in 942, no one suggested that I |change my name,” she. said. ; “However, there were those who thought my name was: Talchieff, which was the name of a Russian general.” Miss Tallchief had nothing bui praise for American male dangers and said that the supply of talent was getting more plentiful. “But there have ‘been handicaps,” she said, “In France and England, it is cansidered ah honor when a boy becomes a ballet dancer. There | s been an unhealthy attitude toward male ballet dancers in this country.” talked animatedly on many including matters of the heart. . “Of course, some people in the ballet do get married and have families," she remarked. “My 8i8- ter, who is a’ dancer, married and has a child. Moira Shearer (who was working én the movie s next door) also has a husband is expecting~ a, child. But people find that mixing ballet marriage. is too difficult. “For instanee, when I am doing a night performance, I generally have dinner at 4 o'clock in the afternoon. ‘Then T have a bite to cat after the performance. It would cnaersand auttadiint wo ch of | understand and‘ adjust to such habits. “A ballet performer would bese little dime to devote to a hoi | what with’ practicing and rehe: ing. Then there are the tours. | will be leayiig soon when our com- Terrycloth B REG. aa Eutaling » $14.95 For Only $7.95 HAND SCREENED. FROPICL PRINTS .. . in White Yellow or Green each Robes | HELIO (MONI) GOMEZ {-——-~ 4 “Of course, F don’t mean to say | Political Announcements DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY, MAY 6, 1952 For Stare Representative BERNIE C. PAPY “For Re-Election” For Stete Representative Jj. Y. PORTER For State Aitorney For State Attorney J. LANG ELOT LESTER | For Clerk of Circuit Court EARL R. ADAMS For County. Judge RAYMOND. R. LORD For County Tax Assessor CLAUDE A. GANDOLFO For Sheriff LOUIS M, J. KASNER ee _ For Sheriff JOHN M. SPOTTSWOOD tse. For County Commissioner CLARENCE S, HIGGS Third District GERALD H. ADAMS Setond District ‘or Member of School Board WM. BILLY FREEMAN Second Digit For Member School Board ULIO. CABA’ IR. . Fourth District hay For Justice ut the Peace iA F. ALBURY For or Re: For First | For. County 5 HILARY U. ALBURY Put Re-Election For Jee of oe Peace LIGHTBOURN F FORT For Jonteg of tha Pana ROY, HAMLIN For Re-Election E. WILSON (For Re-Election) For County Tax GEORGE G. GOMEZ Thursday + Friday - Saturday ‘T WANT you with DANA’ ANDREWS AND ROReTHy Meauine Coming: Pi THE varie DUTCHMAN ane samen Masod