The Key West Citizen Newspaper, March 7, 1952, Page 8

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Detroit, Mich. thee! Pege 8 Visitors At Key West C. OFC. Charles Farr, Woodbridge, N.J. Mr. and Mrs. W. McGovern, Saranac Lake, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Steele, Springfield, Ul. Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Chambers, Dunbar, W. Va. Frank E. Douglas, Brunswick, Maine. Solveig M: Weber, “Minnea- polis, Minn. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Carlson, Minneapolis, Minn. Mr. and Mrs. Mohall, N. D. Harry C. Schritzinger, York, N. Y. Charles Naegele, N.Y. : Floyd Allen, New New York, ’-Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Smith, Pittsford, N. Y. H.. Lee McCoy, Knox, Ind. Emlyn M. Besse, Wareham, Mass. Miles’ N. Underwood, Jr., Hialeah, Fla. Clarence A. Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Cor- biii, Manchester, Conn. Mrs. Ralph Button, Marathon, Fila. Carl Detroit, Mich, Jordan, Niles, Richell, Jr, is AN, ed ab Indiana- polis, Ind. Mrs, Wm. Standard, York City. _E. L. Buridy, ‘Quaker’ City, Ohio. < Gites a. “Burns, Grosse Point Park, Mich. “Mr. and Mrs. C. F.. Roetzel, Kansas City, Mo. obert J. Knott, Rockford, Ill. r, and Mrs. Ted Ortlieb, vigeville, N. Y. ir. and Mrs. E. L. Osterhuge, Terre Haute, Ind. “Mrs. George C. Cortright, bcs Fork, Miss. ‘Mr. and Mrs. John Fiedler, Dalton, Obio. Mr, and Mrs, Tom Brooks, St. Petersburg, Fla. Mrs. H. P. Stouker, Pawtucket, RT Alton. Hewitt, Ann Arbor, Mich. Henry Nystrom, Minneapolis, Minn. “Ernest Thompson, Minneapolis, Minn, Mr. and Mrs. O. Geldmacher, New D. Guttin, Clayton, Mo. F/O R. J. Thompson, Green- wood, Nova Scotia, Canada. F/O E. Birch, Halifax, N. S. Canada. Robert J. Phillips, St. Charles, mW. Mr. and Mrs. Justin Aldrich, “Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Van Hook, Gala. City, Okla. _ Mrs. C. A. Crockett, Okla. City, 4 and Mrs: Gerald Foote, Satfordy Ariz. ° Mr. gr Pr a D. E. McCoy, Al- tadene, Cal = Mr. and” Ses Franklin Metcalf, Oberlin, Ohio. Vern Losef, Springport, Mich. John Weidenwe ber, Pitts- John Good, Joliet, Il. Edwin J. Buezek, Joliet, Il. Mr. andMrs. Willard M. Curtis, Reed. mw Mich. ‘Mrs W. M. Foster, Clifton, Cc: pee ser ‘Greenblatt, © Potsdam, Mr. and Mrs. M. E. ; Mich, “Johih" “Hondowicz, N. J. Mr.and Mrs. D. B. Andrew, Rocky Mount, N. C. Miss Mary L. Swift, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Rathbun atid Phil, Battle Creek, Mich. Mr, and Mrs. R. B. Hemenway, Unjon City; Mich. Hugh Campbell, Chicago, Il. “Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Beeks, Grand Rapids, Mich. Althaus, Cranford, Saginaw, Mys. W. H. Birt, Ft. Wayne, Ind, : ‘Mr. and Mrs. Glenn D. Birt, Ft. Wayne, Ind. ‘Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Ebergee, Lyon, Colo. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Chorn, Broadwater, Nebr. Mr. and Mrs, John King. St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada. Mr. Dutk, Norpeth, Ontario, Canada. Mr. and Mrs, M. Groner, New- ark, N. J. Michael Pausch, Hillsdale, N.Y. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Reynoldson, Madison; Wisc, Mr. and Mrs. William * Northampton, Mass. Miss June Wright, tm. Mr. and Mrs. G, C. Fox and sony Daebeau, Ontario, Canada. Mr. and” Mrs. Mort Kaye,! Stamford, Conn. *Mr. and Mrs, Clair Carleton, | Kalamazoo, Mich Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Zinn, Ka-| lamazoo, Mich, —___ Easter Island, lonely South Pa-) cifie speck. is smaller than the Dis-! trict of Co PY EPPO Ne EY THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ELECTION LAW IS ATTACKED State Argues Money Does Not Have To Be Given Candidate: Be Informed Of Same TAMPA es big contributors have penses of candidates for high offic ’an assistant Florida attorne: general said Wednesday in defens of the campaign spending law. John A. Madigan Jr., along with State Attroney General Ervin, defended the law in a ing before Circuit Judge Henry C. Tillman. Kenneth Ballinger, Tallahassee, tion of Broadcasters, attacked it. City, contending the law violates constitutional provisions of freedom of speech. Principal point cf argument was | whether the election law prohibits a private citizen from purchasing radio time to air views on a candi- date without pruchasing it through the candidate's treasurer. Ballinger contended the law means a citizen must purchase jit u the treasurer, therefore losing ccatrol of his money and | being hampered in free speech. | | “The treasurer could. take his joney and never purchase radio}. ae the citizen desired,” Ballinger id. ' He also argued the law could put a station in violation of the Federal Communications Commission rul- ing that staticns must give or‘ sell the same amount of time to an opposing candidate as given to one attacking him. Madigan interpreted the law as requiring a citizen caly to re- Port purchase of radio time to the candidate’ streasurer as a contri- butica, then go ahead with his Speech and pay the station. Judge Tillman did not rule im- mediately. and Mrs. Clarence P.} Bailey, | Chicago, ' WAP Orr E Lampesoewe Govt Relaxes - Bldg. Controls WASHINGTON \# — The govern- ment yesterday eased building controls on housing, commercial highway and school projects. The National Production Author- ity, dropping an é@arlier plan to limit the size of dwellings and re- 1, March 7, 1952 “It is common | knowledge that in this state a few | all too often | paid the bulk of the campaign ex | Richard |? Mo, | when Gray tried to escape. Lee attorney for the Florida Associa-| -omove his clothes, was handcuffed The arguments came in an action | ; ke him confess to a burglary.| brought by W. A. Smith, operator | apa" o1080, of radio sattion WPLA at Plant Iw { } ,the steel which a home-builder [White Jury Freed Five |eowboy belts Wednesday and then tock her own life the same way. Neighbors found the children hanging from the bed posts in their downstairs bedroom .Upstairs, the mother had used another cowboy | e her own life. {ened that any of the deputies | Pelt 10 take | were he ry G.| ook part in the whipping. | Klemm, 30, and Frank Jr., 6, Rich- ee, testified he was forced to) 5-4 4, and Margaret, 13. mcaths. The father, Frank J. Klemm, a draftsman, was working in New York City when the tragedy oc- curred. Later, Klemm told police his wife had been “acting nervous” ‘and had an appointment to see a psychiatrist next week. He said she had threatened several times to take her life. Klemm said his wife seemed all right when he left for work \ Floeging Negro Prisoners JACKSON, Miss. ® — A whitex- | jury took only 45 minutes to return m7 rights trial of five Mississippi law Hangs Children; officers accused of beating a hand- | cuffed Negro prisoner. Former Sheriff Robert E. Lee,| en all counts at the end of : Her Own Life day trial Wednesday. ROSLYN HEIGHTS, N. Y. w—A } he trial was highlighted by con- | ilicting stories givén by Lee and|L°58 Island . mother hanged her j an Eighth Army truck driver| own here from Korea to testify. Lee said he whipped Gray with “slap stick”—a leather strip |a verdict of innocent in the civil ‘Then Takes and four deputies were acquit. | the Negro, Murry (Sunshine) Gray, | | about a foot long with a handle— to a pine tree, and was flogged The case started in July, 1950, hen a filling station was burglar- ized in the small South Mississippi |town of Magnolia, Gray, then a civilian, formerly had worked at) |the station and was arrested for questioning. The next day, Lee test- jified, Gray told him, “all right, | I'll take you where the money is | hidden.” . _|Wednesday morning. A telephone Lee said he and the deputies/ a1) to hee early in the aay, He drove Gray to,a, remote wooded! said, indicated she was “fecli area’ where the tiboaer. said the fine.” elng money. was. The deputies) “Later calls, however, were not | spread out the under-} answered, Klemm said. It was then j brush, Lee Continued, while he re- ary A Gray. them or impose any further res, r sheriff ‘said Gray} gtrictions. aan so ran about 50] The major changes in the hous- to 15 Fa he could over-| ing regulations, effective at onee, take him. ‘They Began fighting, Lee} include: added, and he used the “slap i An increase to 2,300 pounds of stick” to “subdue the prisoner. steel per dwelling unit in the amount which may be “self-au- thorized’"—that is increased pro- portionately for 2-family, 3-family and 4-family buildings. A decrease cf 25 pounds of cop- per to a total of 135 pounds per dwelling unit, for housing equipped with copper water piping systems. However, copper usage is in- creased where local building codes require that metal in underground connections. For alterations or enlargement of existing dwellings, builders may use up to half the materials which are permitted for new dwellings. construction controls into a single document. It increases the tonnage of steel automatically allowed for commercial, school, and other smaller non-residential projects, as well as roads and highways. As originally proposed, the or- ders were intended to curb con- struction. But they were revised frequently during two months of discussion with the construction industry. Meantime, shortages of steel and aluminum eased notice- ably. NPA’s announcement today sadi: ‘Florida Doesn’t Expect To Be Affected "Too Much This Season By California’s| ‘Abandonment Of Citrus ‘Agreement | LAKELAND (® —Dropping of x- | the Federal « Citrys Marketing | Agreement in California and Ari- jzona means more fruit is going | | to move from those states at lower | | prices, says, one Florida citrus | ‘man. J. C. Strickland, head of Florida | | Citrus Mutual’s Fresh Fruit Divi-, ; sion, says Florida oranges will boa be affected too much by atandon- | ment of the agreements right away. | However, he says the situation ‘next fall may be’a diftérent thing. |be shipping ‘out*+its” valencia or- | |anges full force «while this state | | will be starting out, with its early | | season varieties of fruit. | The U. S. Department of Agri- culture announced Thursday the | | Cailfcrnia-Arizona agreements are | commitment to prison to serve a | being abandoned Saturday, because of a lack of interest among grow- ers. enough growers voted in a recent referendum on continuance of the agreement to justify keeping it. The California agreement deals almost entirely with oranges; the Arizona agreement with grape- fruit. In California, Arizona and Flor- ida growers voted whether to put an agreement into effect. Under such agreements the volume of citrus is controlled by regulating sizes and grades of fruit. Citrus Marketing Agreement | Committees administer the agree} ment, but their acticas are subject} agriculture: Right, now California “is shipping} the Eastern and Northern. markets. Florida is just beginning shipment! of its better-paying variety, valen-' cias. that he called a neighbor and asked her to investigate. At the Klemm home the lights | were on and the television set was operating — but the doors were | locked. Forced ,entry through a storm windcw disclosed the bodies. The mother had covered the children’s bodies with blankets. Her own body hung from a hook in an upstairs closet. Contents of notes left by the woman to her husband and par- ents were not disclosed. i “Most of the changes in the con-| ‘The non-residential controls fol- . +a strict new bone to 1% bathrooms | iow a similar pattern. Subscribe to The Citizen each, issued: ee eee = ei 1. A new,’ one-package housing order increasing by 500 pounds may use without applying to NPA. 2. An order combining all other struction regulations liberalize con- __ trols rather than tighten any of | { } compliment to your new ensembles, most flattering footwear. j { | PEARLMAN’ © INCORPORATED “THE STORE OF QUALITY" Key West's Largest Ladies’, Misses’ and Children’s Store Presidential Weather Is Now Here and so is Our Complete Stock of WARM WEATHER APPAREL Large Showing of COTTON DRESSES — $5.95 to $19.98. ALSO.— SKIRTS ... BLOUSES’... ‘ SHORTS ... HALTERS.... PLAY - SUITS...SLACKS AND ALL KINDS OF BEACH ACCESSORIES Fashion Craft is the perfect It’s the season's GET THE HABIT of SHOPPING at PEARLMAN’S nee no matter Ps ° ‘For action or relaxin’, shorts! styles. T-SHIRTS $1.25 how you look at them you just can’t beat Arrow shorts for comfort . sHorts $1.45 up Famous contoured ‘seat panebiand pleated crotch make sure these shorts *won't ride up or cut. Trimly Arrow-tailored of fine Sanforized fabrics that give lots of Wear: také lots of laundering. Full’ cut for maximum freedom. Come in today—take your choice of And don’t forget to pick up your Arrow cotton T-shirts and athletic shirts. WS For the Brands You Know! “6G ot EWINSKY’ S iss The department explained not; its navel variety of oranges into’; t } | | t te approval. of the secretary of;/ weekly ni x publisher con- three small -ch%dren with their | Then, he explains, “California il 7 newspeeee | also showed further reprieves for {Marie Orr, |law violators. who were sentenced , you're at ease in Arrow ATHLETIC SHIRTS $1.00 Phone 146 stacex Warren Gives | ‘Reprieves To | Many Persons TALLAHASSEE «® — Emmett Caraker, reputed Polk County bo- | lita king; Reubin Clien, Miami | victed cf contempt of court, and | ithe Miami telephone girl bra bri- gade all have received reprieves {from Gov. Fuller Warren. Warren granted Caraker a 60-day reprieve Wednesday to delay his | one-year sentence for lottery law violation. Caraker also was fined $5,000 after pleading guilty tq the charge. Records in the secretary of State’s office diselosed that within | the past week the governor had given a new 60-day reprieve to Clein, who was sentenced two years ago to serve 30 days in jail for refusing to disclose the scurce of a story on secret grand jury deliberations. The secretary of state's records Ruth McNabb and Betty Col They were sentenced to serve cme year each November, 19: for. stealing joins from the*Southern Bell ‘Fele- hone Co. in Miami and em out in their bra: ' The governor granted their ree prieves to: E. J. Becton and Charlie Kuhn, ! convicted Orange County lottery in January, 1951, to serve a year | jin prison. | James McCaffery, convicted liq- | | uor law violator, sentenced tc serve Appelrouth’s Shoe Center in Hi HOME OF fh County. le ana ee, poe is |] RED GOOSE JOHN C. ROBERTS GRACE WALKER under a 10-year sentence imposed | 604 DUVAL ST. in Walton County in the fall of | 1950 for assault with intent to rape. eel $17.95 i Nomen ry] | he Duis Dadian embroiders : uniors . re ' @s seen in Seventeen Featuring Red Goose and Sundial Shoes for Children. See our collection of Ladies dress and play shoes, in all styles and colors. Exclusively with us, Deb - Connie and Jacqueline shoes. Daily arrivals in Children’s Easter dresses in lovely Pastels and hats gaily trimmed. UBIN APPEL PHONE 1672 92% DUVAL ST. ee nna oe rs —

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