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st i tee Published daily (except + indi) an L. P. Artniiip, ‘igen from, ‘he Citizen Building, comer of Greene sey . " Vermont, oti 3 48 8 ie: o “in athe in oa Life after 4 “ widely he looked nee The Citizen tnatntains th how an election, Sel or naj ly, { who.seemed sure-to win b out ¢ eiid When the bi e Ciliz of tie instance where t str nt in a ait. |™ ferent cases indicated that 2 ce int a Mh a Mon-' roe county election, would” win, gount | Showed he had lost by 1,088 votes. Even before that time, the present pulblichae of The ‘itizen established a rule ‘not to pub stories about straw alloting because he felt that, li ‘ Fs aa ! ‘a AA #3 ity vote, as a rule, js the silent ve and the silent | inex vote has upset many a calculation. Aj t +a be noted that the silent voter does ‘hot aed teu iy straw ballot. | ins ing. The person Who ‘always says what het r. ein rt HRRpa. Winks is hon- ae pd all our standards. Nobody , er really knows what space an ime are, except by the old ses rich eo By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK ii — Pace is tio idngersa matter of ‘distance. Fo onquer the gap between us. aiid ‘fe moon is now a matter of money, relatively no ‘more, expen: t da. ‘ y they can reach the __ | mega — and they will. “Pheaige of the “rovketeers” has tneasures of how far the heart you | waht! to te with is from you and how‘ileag it takes to reach. her. ace ahd time are words its Use to’ measure the d ey are shrinkin 8 | a “drying apple ne, ve omaieciag the old bar- | a t space, but wheth- | ting closer to the sieire aigire ‘rocketeers ré- n, Tia you of two personal in’ time and space to pois iiiy' deg 45-mile ri og my ‘tine | leitto wad wa \ weuttiér-cracked, Pord ‘steering g) le ‘vaguely a. a own, but 8. Our . | Arkansas, Missouri, Tennessee and | it ive for the Amercian nation Lape t AT THE LEFT IS JACK WATSON, protector of thé Key deer, a tam, assistant” director of the U. S. Fish and Wildlife the antlers of a mainland deer killed thirteen miles south of those of the aa Key Deer. Service, [es : Citizen Staff Photo nd on the right is Clarence Got+ Washington. Watson holds Miami and Cottam is holding Tornado Hits Arlidngas, Tennegsee, o:| Missouri, 1 illing. At Least 116: | Hundreds Injured; Damage Great LITTLE ROCK, Ark, (®—Spring-|trail frem Southwest Arkansas to tornados zig-zagged a path of|the gtate’s northeast tip. death, destruction and human Hardest hit was the strawherry- ery, ee sas ae etRy states: wrodycingd areg jof White County, late e num- | Ark., where 62 dead were counted. | ber of ted dead ‘stood at 167. |The towns of Judsonia and Bald! Hundreds of others were injuréd 'Knob, about 50 miles northeast of | and ‘still more were left homeless ; Little Rock, were practically Jev- by the black, whirling winds’ in |eled. The only building unscathed in’. Judsonia was the Mississippi. Property and livestock Church. _ losses were tremendous. A portion of Searcy, the county ‘The death toll was ‘expected to scat of White County, was dam- mount as rescue operations eX-jaged but no deaths were reported panded at daylight in a score w, | there. more of devastated towns. “The damage and human suf- The Little Rock Gazette oe aber is” terrific,” said Marvin the dead in. Arkansas alone at Crittenden, director of relief serv- based on reports from its Feporters|ices for the Arkansas Welfare De- and ‘correspondents. An area-by-| partment. “The whole highway a checxtist compiled hy. sdutn irom Séarey looks: like pic- ted Press listed 103 in ark ture-show scenes of battle fields. i It's awful.” ri ioe 14 dead in tha! Goy. Sid MeMath, who ai an ers | lat Searcy early Fiiday i id the ruin and sufferitig in t 1s_ terrible, Jerrible.”’ . The. pee Red Cross re- ae it ‘had ordered disaster ss “trent all over the coun 5 n of ‘gravity. as bitid 8 dough: Ruped watchtower holding 36 io can het down as they | nor art! ery two hours their’ Enid diesen Ya- contol the ‘Wh enemy just ne t hide any he said. “We could call : on him wherever he was. t ¢ build this space station, will sooner or Jater.”’ erinba tp Says He can safely and back’ from this — Sea tery trip te “Phiut! Is? be a fraction of thetAmétical military budget.” Ron had no feel- at his project could poles But I had no sense of pena over space. I only felt de- be m If We! F Braun is voted the mone; pei bees bold men carry on Successfully, they will batet ao ited the obstacle of the Tigh when, 30 years ago, I made a emi trip into the unknown to visit my father's birthplace there a ee Marathon: Plans In Other Cities vocal. shape after his ordeal * of the air waves, Odham went to ie Park and talked for an- | JétheF hour to some 1,000 persons. During his broadcast, Odham eels nomination as gover-}aske@ for small donations ‘with it to bed Friday night, ho Strings attached” to help him ed about it, non-stop, with his campaign. He said hun- 25 hours. © J@reds of dollars were pledged. He Odham went on the radio at 8 Called them ‘‘dollars for decency” p. m. Thursday. ‘He said the’ people | and se he woyld use the money were entitled to know how he stood. finance other réund-the-clock | on everythi is in the Tampa, J: ackson: | shoot auestions at" and Orlando areas. Eat He estimated he got 2,000 que: jdhiam answered questions atou tions, asking what he thought jing. He even told one lis- abeat such things as sales taxes, |tener that if he had to choose be- ; i tween his twc opponents, Dan corruption in government, the 14 ou oe erty heals Ci pate Fea] added hasti- 1 he could do a better job RU Klux Klan ar interest” onal pdliticiahs dq jent. <n ope milk ices are two to Heavy eyed but sflil ip good six cents higher in Florida than Methodist | Roundu | By STAN CARTER SEOUL, Korea @—U. 5S. jet planes—outnumbered 31 to 75—hit | b JOHN three Communist MIGs in a swirl- jing air battle over Northwest! Ke rea late Friday, climaxing one: of thehir most successful weeks of the ‘air war, the J. §, Pifth Air Force reported today. After as 30-minute battle high over Sinanju American *-86 Sat re pilots claimed one MIG-15 probably destroyed and two ethers damaged. During the week ended. Friday U.N. pilots destroyed nine Russian | -built fighters, probably destroyed three and damaged 26. Only four planes of the Fifth Air Force were lost—one in’ air | combat, two, fo*Red ground ‘fire jand cne for an unknown’ reason. | Overéast’ skies Saturday kept {most “Allied warplanes on the | ground and limited the ground | fighting to a few desyltory Red} | probes, 84 Thunderjet fighter-bombers. fe a few. clése-support. strikes st Red front-line positions on east coast’ ‘They destroyed and trenches and three hammered both Korean id. ‘iday. anes from the American car- Valley Forge and Philippine Sea roamed deep into Commufiist territoyy on the eastern coast. Pi- jlots reported’ 120 cuts in the bat- tered Red rail system and heavy atiacks ca rail installations at Hungnam, Kilchu and Hamhung. ‘The United Nations plane lost in | air combat was a propellor-driven F-51 Mustang, considerabiy. slower than tke sleek Russian jets. Ine of the MIG damage claims was made by .a Mustang fighter, It jis rare when a propellor-driven, | plane can get inte position to dam- age a jet, but it has been recorded two or three times before in the Korean War. ;most other states and advocated removal of price-fixing powers. of the State Milk Commission. The Sanford businessman de- clared he was onpoets tas to the idea jot: “sales” eee oe riever necessities of. “On the. juestion a oe hignayn: he 1 should said the 4-laning of U. be completed as soa as’ pos- | sible. £ reir Booby Trap Blast Kills Robbery Witness ‘a8. Sameone we had come far and | | dlls discomfort tc see, eee mney's end, up ae ee? PRESIDENT EN ENDS (Continued From Paye One) the Chief spoke at the Thursday aos conference. ‘The President began } week of the 11th woe kth ace i a walk ound Key est tl Morning. iy eee at the Little White et Howse st 20 bose | when he . is personal plane The Inde- from Boca Chica Thuts- pram speed NAVAL HOUSING (Continued From Page One) ¢ proba le _{aXition on these wae on cf tius “Lester City employing Me- yy and Company. fiscal agents for ‘the ‘handling of the doliar bond issue for Electric System expan- B the fee for wntalasion, of a light delivery truck wrecked by a dynamite booby nt, 42, and his wife, Ophel in, New Haven, Feb. 27, ia, 41, in New “Haven, Conn. and was scheduled to testify liberty on, bail after his arrest in‘connection with’ the attempted Saiparancty WA Bet t6.go oft with tl Wright's body is at left, ‘foreground. ihe touch 6f the truck's starter. Communist | ~ DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY. MAY 6, 1952 For State Representative BERNIE C. PAPY = Re- Election” . Reprecqpiibives Ni Y. PORT TER / .. Aitorney HO (MONI) GOMEZ For State Attorney TER Fos County Judge RAYMOND R. LORD gunty “Tax. Assessor D J. DION For County Tax Auseiior | CLAUDE A. GANDOLFO For Tax Collector _ GEORGE G. GOMEZ For LOUIS M. J. EISNER For Sheriff : SPOTTSWOOD For Clerk of the Criminal Court ‘C. SAM B. CURRY For Clerk of Criminal Court HARRY DONGO First District Commissioner MAES, JR, First District For Count J. M1 For Cou} CLA Commissioner CE S. HIGGS Third District For | County Commissioner ird. District _ CHARLES Ww. | WELLS For Member of School Board WM. BILLY FREEMAN Spend Disttins ee JoLto CABANAS, JR. For Re-Election Fourth District For School Board H. EARL DUNCAN Fourth District For Justice of the Peace IRA F. ALBURY First District For Re-Election Fog dates ot. abe Peace cil LIGHTBOURN IRN FORT For tone of the Pesce Second District ROY HAMLIN ‘or Re-Election For Justice of the Peace R. D. Bi 5 Zetterower - District By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK (® — A steel price hike—and the companies say there must be one if a strike i. leg and the unions get what the’ Wage =a prdéposes— }industries as well as to consumérs. The buyiig pubilie. ithe find prices: going up ca ling’ ist of products into which steel enters— | autos, zippers, stoves, baling w: |But a large part of the buying public already finds the price of |many goods. too rich for its blood. , And that’s where the manufactur- ers’ headaches start. A steel price hike might mean an additicaal cost-squeeze on many a manufacturer who already finds costs risen so high they threaten his break-even point. If he can’t |pass on additional material costs to his customers in higher prices, the’s stuck. The long list of price-cut an. nouncements, apd the sporadic orice wars, show hcw hard that's likely to be. And the declining profits in many industries show what they are up against, There's an alternative, industry point out. general: round of y hikes, a reb other boost ‘in’ the for everyone. Both the unions and_the Wage. Stabilization Board chairman deny that th steel wage hi tng ace e cr Toainet Bf of tion. They point to the changed industrial conditions generally— rising supplies, declining demand— as a natural economic trake on inflation: And the union contends that Steel profits, though dowh from 1950, are still high. But steel management cites the upcoming wage negotiations with John L. Lewis’ coal men as certain to follow the pattern the steel set- seament may set. And they note He rubber workers can reopen their ccatract at an early date. So can eleciric workers, :! mill workers and aircraft ui ‘That sets the inflation stage, manage- ment argues, ‘The question in the eyes of in- dustry narrows down to how muich of a price hike is to be part of the package deal, if a steel«strike is te be held off after the latest postponement expires. Steel man- igement says that the $2 or $3 a ton hike offered under the C, hart formula is not enough, formula allows cost increases to last July 26 to be added to prices. The steel industry says demand fer steel is easing and that the fast increasing mill capacity is "| bringing the day near when ste will ‘no longer be scarce, Some point out that, if this is true, steel companiés won't be too ous to avert a strike if it means wage boosts they consider tco high. * But some smart cookies in Street think a deal has alres been made—that now that unions have been given the ernment’s blessing to wage they find acceptatle, the price bilizers will announce formulas rajsing steel prices high to satisfy the conibanies’ dem: Acting on this belief in. a deal, some traders “in “Wall Street up the orice of. steel shares poten ip the oie af eal hares 5 If there is to be no strike—still i “haste at AT these traders argue. have always chloe. ave not always ae hit sas. And these traders © that a deal in ‘steel will dee for other i " jabor disputes are in offing. Labor peace will be cat for 2 economy as a whole, they out. And. further seem likely, they a stock prices up with it. _SUBSCRIME TO THE CTEM A tematic ee any in ‘i Coming: CALLAWAY WENT Vred Mae y Ge MeGulre neat ae = COOLED Last Times Today WA oe ,