The Key West Citizen Newspaper, April 7, 1952, Page 3

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> estern employes, whose phone serv- Were prepared to respect the Western Electric picket lines. But the prospects were that Bickets would not be posted at all | @ffices at one time. This was the | “hit and run” tactic used by the @nion in a 1959 strike. his stotement shortly after talks for installa%os | workers broke tose Be OS | ora ie ase g talks also ended in a adiock. Bath sides and federal negotiators said they would remain on hand in New York if a need for new talks be. @omes apparent 1,000 ARE HOMELESS (Continued From Page One) % between the two cities was elosed and the Northern Pacific Railroad's mainline was cut by the food. Pumps at the Mandan weter- works were shut down temporarily Sunday when the marky flood Started to seep in. Officials seid | tion have been al there was no immediate threa: to | the water supply because reser-° toll 7 Communist-led rebels in North Indochina’s Red River | Seemed Headed For GOP Deadlock By JACK BELL of the campaign to go, Sen. Rob- Today's Stock Market NEW YORK #—Prices fell frac- . | tions ta around two points on the j stock market today in the face of widespread strikes and threats of strikes. A walkout in the strategic steel industry, set for midnight Tues- day, was the major factor being discussed by traders. Steel stocks, rail issues and mo- tors were under pressure. Activity in the market generally was mod- erate. While most of the losses ran from fractions to around two points, a few occasional wide mov- ers dropped deeper. Texas Pacific Land Trust fell four points at one time and Amerada dropped five at times. Some of the railroad stocks were among the heavy losers. Northern , | Pacific and Santa Fe were off he probably > New ier 5 ary. Taft’s attempt to withdraw it. ; indicated eer ans cated republican ns believe they have a : Seis hands and don’t want to get n too my last week was accom- on a basis permitting the of the group to jump fast an Bandwagon that gets h nal convention. back Taft, There claims about of the unpledged hey caught the Taft in Iowa and walked h 15 of the state’s 26 dele- the Taft camp came to rack up all of Ida- This see - sawing battle might 1 ange if Eisenhower 4 Me le poy om and ‘ane 7 camp: . Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge 4 .» Of Massachu- setts, er's national mana- ger, ave got some kind of on that score in a week- ” Brig. P. Ni Negotiations on the prisoner ex- Stall ticers spportual ts additional revenues for -t| Rattler Bites minutes Monday "but agreed A Snake Handler agai lay. Each side Nag rhe Okla. @—A veteran tion gn the issues pure , Russia a 15,000 hunters captured 1,684 re: by an excited, swift,moving R ay rebuild mil-| tiles alive in the 13th annual rattle- | snake roundup. pinned its head to the horn, 47-year old veteran of 16 roundups and last year’s winner. First aid was administered im }1?, a Watonga Eagle Scout, who brought in this year’s champion Strayhorn was embarrassed. “Tt was a damn fool stunt,” he said. “This is the first time I've jbeen bitten.” He refused anti-venom ferum maintaining stoutly that the “cut | and suck” method is the best rem edy for snake bites. Doct 5 he was fot seriously hurt HANOI, Indochin @ — The | ¥25 hauled onto Okeene’s m | street. Shipman and a friend, Jim French Army claims a coma | Davis, captured the 1 int. The se hes, was sna’ AF Spa |ley Sholtess, Longdale saw al ei poy the fee |total catch weighed the rich rice region. | WEE the winter sca Gen. Gonzales de Linares, | The bite victim is the French Army commander in the | >¢* of the Order of the Wi a series of |? society of victims of previo Preach "ak Vistopmsee sections | Rests. sists March 1 have ctet t6 rebel) on . 433 suspects have been arrested. TAIPER, Formosa voirs large quantity already | were no bills to pay n° oo today in Formosa At Sioux F workers concen- | ment-endowed hospitals trated on gging the city’s| The Chinese Natinoalist gov waterworks and well field, pear | ment picked a Be Fae Seput outee. Boat erbeie of ‘wer health dents the nearby - }tion day” to the Unitex acuate | World Health Or i support of health pr ighand, more than 100 a if the waters conti * | around two points at times. In the automobile Gener- al Motors, Chrysler, Packard and aker were down fractions to around a point. Other losers included Goodrich, Sears Roebuck, Douglas Aircraft, Zenith, American Telephone, Ken- necott Copper, Dow Chemical, General Electric, Standard Oi (N. J.), Cities Service and’ Johns- Manville. The curb market followed the same downward path as the “big board” with oils and gold stocks showing the greatest activity. The declines included Canadian Southern Qils, Consolidated Min- ing and Smelting, Creole Petrlo- eum, Imperial Oil, International Petroleum and Thiokol. Prices on the bond market were County Spelling Bee Tomorrow At KWHS, 8 P.M. ‘The Monroe County spelling test sponsored by the mi Her- ald will take piace tomorrow night at Key West High school, it was announced today. The contest, plus music and a chorus of the 5ih and 6th grades of farris elementary school will pro- vide a full evening’s entertaniment. Mrs. Marian Stark, KWHS will be the pronouncer in the contest. Jadges for the winning spelling bee contestants are W. Curry Har- ris, Retary Club; Stuart Whiting, j Lions Club and Will Aibury, Kiwa- nis Club. i Miss Irene Russell, reading su- For State Monday, April 7, 1952 Key West and Vieinity: Mostly cloudy this afternoon and te- night with slowly rising tempera- tures this afternoon. Partly cloudy and warmer tomorrow. Moderate north and northeasterly winds becoming northeasterly to easterly on Tuesday. Florida: Clear to partly cioudy perviscr of county schools will| Fot Clerk of Circuit Court in the north portion through serve as recorder. Horace O’Bryant, superintendent of schools will make the presenta- tion of awards: Rabbi Abraham Schwartz will give the invocation. The public is invited to the con- test which opens at 8 p.m, Court Order Is Needed Before oye. *}- Jailing Of Child TALLAHASSEE (®— A court or- der is needed before a child may be confined in a city jail, Attorhey General Richard Ervin ruled to- day. He said the Juvenile Court Law pe by the 1951 Legislature for- ids children to be put in jails, police stations or patrol wagons “exci on general or special or- der of the judge.” The opinion was given Juvenile Judge G. Bowdon Hunt, Polk County. He said children may be taken in custody, however, and the sec- a mixture of gains and losses with | tion of law which forbids terming activity light. Long-term U. S. gov- | Such action an arrest doesn’t pre- me visit to the general’s head- | (Kills Girl handler was bitten in the} rattler Sunday after better than} ta }macy w watched frazen | Campbell, Lucky said. with fear as it suddenly slipped’ from beneath a metal fork which | platform. | It struck swiftly at Russel! Stray- | . | mediately by Vern Dale Shipman, | EARL R, ADAMS For County Judge HILARY U. ALBURY RAYMOND R. For County Tax Assessor FRED J. DION BS & GARpoLrO For County Tax Collector GEORGE G. GOMEZ ~Fot County Tax Collector HOWARD E. WILSON (For Re-Election) For Sheriff LOUIS M. J. EISNER For Sherift For Clerk of the Criminal Court C. SAM B. CURRY ernments were steady while the | Vent putting children in custody.) For Clerk of Criminal Court Short-term issues were down frac- tions. Texas Company 50 Years Old — NEW YORK #—The Texas Co., which started out with $50,000 in borrowed capital half a century ago, celebrated its 50th birthday foday with assets of 1 % billion dollars. The history of the huge petrol- eum company — now the sev, largest manufacturing corporation in the nation — will be revigived tonight at a series of family par- ties in 29 U. S. cities for veteran Texace employes. The company was started by Joseph Stephen Cullinan, Hard - fisted, rough-and-ready oil drilling boss, and austere, polished Arnold Scblaet, New York banker. With $50,000 in borrowed money Cullinan and Schlaet undertook te develop a corner of Texas’ boom- ing Spindletop Field. They founded the Texas Fuel Co. in a two-room shack in Beaumont. COTTAGE GROVE,Ore. M— A 15-year-old boy lured an 18-year: old deaf girl into the woods ta pick wild flowers and then fatally shot her, a district attorney re- ported Sunday. The youth, Elmer Belcher, shot the girl, a deaf mute, nts directed at him about her * District Attorney C. ugh he admitted did not admit inti- the girl, Mary Elien The Veterans Corner n t interest to fo to halt} The prohibition against calling it an arest is intended only to keep the child’s record free of such a stigma, he said. Truman Principal Returns From Meet Wilbur S. Franklin, principal of Truman . Elementary School has just returned from the con- ference on Elementary Education at Tampa, it was learned today. “It was an honor for Franklin to be invited to this conference,”|— Lejgid March, assistant superin- tendent of public instruction said. The conference was held over the weekend, he said. Plane Crashes LOS GATOS, Calif. —A Navy Reserve transport plane, groping through rain and fog in the Santa Cruz Mountain area, smashed into a 400-foot knoll Sunday nigh.t Three bodies had been removed from the tangled wreckage. Navy officials at Moffet Naval Air Sta- tion said possibly a fourth was in the stattered debris of the R&D, similar to a civilian DC-3. Names of the dead were with- held. > MP Kills GI HOKKAIDO, Japan W—A First Cavalry Division soldier was shot and killed by a military policeman during a tussle outside a beer tay- ern here April 2. The division reported today Cpl. Otis Smith, 24, Ludowici, Ga., was shot in self-defense by an MP when he refused to button his , blouse, then knocked one MP un- conscious and knocked another to the ground. The fallen MP drew his gun and fired, the announcement said. Smith, struck in the neck, died a few minutes later. The soldier is survived by his | mother. | 100 Released F rom Movie Jobs gressicnal committee whether be as a Commun ey are suing Jarrico T 2 movie. For County C i JQE ‘A aula Com oe fe Daa MILTON 0. PEACOCK For Juvenile Ji EVA WARNER GIBSON va ge eee JULIO For Be. Fourth District For School H. EARL DUN » IB. For Justice uf the Peace TRA F. ALBURY First District For Re-Election Fog Inston of the Boog LIGHTBOURN FORT Second District For Justice of the Peace District Second ROY er Betecton For Justice of the Peace R. D. “Ze” Zetterower For Constable JOE A. JOHNSON Second District For Constable Second District For Constable CAPT. “ANDY D. M. ANDREWS Third District Tuesday. Mostly cloudy in the south portion today and partly cloudy Tuesday.. Siowiy rising temperatures beginning this afternoon. Jacksonville thru the Florida Straits: Moderate north to north- east winds today becoming light to moderate variable over the north portion Tuesday and mod- erate to occasionally fresh north- easterly ee easterly winds e Florida Straits Tuesday. Fair in the north and considerable cloudiness in the/ i southern portion. East Gulf: Moderate north to northeasterly winds becoming northeasterly to easterly on Tuesday. Partly cloudy weather. Observations taken at City Office 00 AM. EST Key West, Fla., April 7, 1952 Highest yesterday Lowest last night Mean ... THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Modern Painter Miss Jeane Kirke Opens Art Shew '' Young sodern painter with « of Absteaet Art, Miss Jeane Pigter Rinke. hb at ihe Kees Stadio, "tee Dapral Drawings, pen amd ink j scrateh-board teshntque, a few oi!- water qoilors and twe lovely « After April 18, Miss Kirke « Pects to Laye a show larg oils at West Martello ip. Ths current exhibition chiefiy from her recent France, Spain, italy and wane she Seen two years in tra. vi Hours for the daily show are 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. A detailed review of the will appear tomorrow. Miss ‘se unusual of color com- pretation in a! imagin- . tive and sttmeiating. The most unusual medium is the Serateh- ves piac- ma with the the design by scratching black surface with a. p implement like a pen fo a Se Saas ace, es| the intricate lines. ad HOPES DIM (Continued From Page One) ted.” He eae that a strike defense. Normal Total last 24 hours 01 ins. this month — .29 ins. ficiency this month — -1.03 ins. Total this year —___. . 4.51 ins. Deficiency this year __ -0.48 ins. Relative Breuity at 9:00 A.M. Barometer (Sea Level) 9:00 A.M. 30.22 ins.—1023.4 mbs, Moonset 8:38 1. affEon 9:16 p.m. 2:42 p.m. apomioya ung Dara ne He las es son eT a aoe * Bondy Pt) —oh 40m (north end) -+2h 10m | +14 ft {(—)—Minus re yt Correction (+)—Plus 9 w be added. Subscribe to The Citizen i el A organized into 61 chartered sions. There is one near fj tget ATTENTION! — Mother and Sanit is sure of eliminating ii 8 if laundry to 516 the "Bes steticn, Use our fast Housewife — is very importent, for the protection of your and ea family, when you’re washing your laundry. "The bondi rd Street from service wash . TWENTY-FOUR HOUR SERVICE PICK-UP and DELIVERIES Bendix Launderette PHONE 585 Three Flights Daily TO HAVANA Leeve Arrive Flight Key West Havers 2 WIS AM 11:00AM. 4 1:45 PM. 2:30 PM. 336 400 PM. 4:45 PM TO KEY WEST Leave Arrive Flight Havens Key West ost S00 AM. 9:45 AM ss3 12:30 PM «(1S PM. 335 200 PM. 145 PM Fly to Havana Also For witeeate United States on Scheduled Airlines Call at 721 Duval St. Next to Margaret Ann Store AEROVIAS “@” S. A, ROGELIO GOMEZ. Agent Phones: 162 - 448 - 1106 Airport: 483

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