The Key West Citizen Newspaper, April 8, 1952, Page 2

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@) Wirephot:. FRED BURDELL (handcuffed), North Braddotk, Pa. police- man, turns to face Mrs. Craig Saul, wife of.a Butler.coal op- erator, before a hearing in Butler, Pa. in connection with a $115,000 robbery. Mrs. Saul says Burdell entered her home last month, beat her and then took money from a safe. Burdell ‘the charge and was freed on $25,000 bond. At right, be- side Mrs. is her husband, Behind Burdell is a policeman. Airports To Be Ordered and New York In- ternational, (Idlewild). Aroused: by Saturday’s flaming air crash into a crowded residen- tial. center of Jamaica, Queens, the four said they will” put their as demand before the City Council at His Bp pon barely a nificently city ‘administraton to take steps za oe Dee 7 el tn tr lege ‘ s jo. I'm re; bg Naan oo geave to | Perate the two huge airports to vote and adult members of my family are registered to — f ecems t0 | Incoming and outgoing planes [fetes Hah of Kay Wan, 4 fouls of Pear 0: Peet aa eis owe Amr Knight of Tampa, who fr Tan for office and was have five sons and | meanwhile, Rep. Arthur G. Klein elected, was one of the at who ever lived. daughters ranging in age| (pw. y.), ‘member of & When he bean tampsigning, Be won to any, “Bore, I'm leven ceaeata Gaur, | secnaa eaten cae looking for votes again, so I got to begin my back-patting. the ia te After Election Day, i stop back-patting and yelling, “Hel- lo there!” till the next campaign rolls around.” TALLAHASSEE w— Florida's candidates for gover- $4,400 2 day last their campaigns financial statements sub- secretary of state -that Alto Adams, and Brailey Odham Of $30,781.91 or $4,- leaders in the race Democratic nomination in ‘ay primaries deposited a to- $31,535 in their campaign accounts. icCarty was high man in the spending department. He listed ex- penditures of $13,377.21. Adams re- ported $11,831.48 paid out the third straight week that his spending i t i i i hi ii bit ebet at REE i ’, a. 24-hour continuous question and answer ses- Primary May 27. Bentley reported that the total of $500 was paid by Raleigh Petteway. i sfx i i F i [fra at z i g Fr é g & Thomas S. Ferguson, Miami said he spent $1,787 the past-month in his campaign for the railroad com- mission. He listed no contritutions. Peaslee Streets, Lake Park, list- ed expenses of $835 and deposits . | operate with the police and teach Today's Mirror By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK (In the spring a banker’s, merchant’s, epgineer’s, railroad man’s, salve salesman's, home gardener’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of novelty. And some are preity good. Thus: Banks should have a vice-pres- ident in charge of robberies—pre- vention, preferably. Railroad cars should have an im- proved lavatory foot pedal mech- anism. Steve delivery trucks should have two-way radio communication sys- tems—to deal with the situation when the man of the house an- swers the doorbell and says, “What ie —!" Engineers should teach their secretaries a thing or two. Home gardeners should apply this or that growth stimulator— and then run for cover or else get crushed by the. burgeoning growth of folifge, vegetables and fruit. It's spring, or thereatouts, and all the above ideas are budding, cae place or another in this great land of ours. The banking suggestion comes from the American Bankers Asso- ciation’s insurance and protective department. “Protection is a vital part of life,” says ABA. “Mechanical in- stallations aren’t enough. A bank protective program to be reliable and dependable requires personal attention. 24 hours a day.” ABA urges banks to name an of- ficer, preferably one who is in- terested in foiling crimes, to ¢o- bank personnel how to-deal with hold-up men, check forgers, swin- diers and sneak thieves, President Gustav Metzman an- nounces the New York Central Russel] To Tour Florida OCALA @—Sen. Richard B. Rus- | sell of Georgia will bid for Florida | support for the Democratic pres- idential nomination in a ten-day tour of the state starting April 25. His state campaign headquarters announced here that the tour will start in Gainesville and wind up in Miami May. 5, the day before the Florida presidential preference primary. out, Russell would make 25° major speeches in the state and appear on television programs in Miami and Jackscaville, Russell will speak April 26 at ceremonies dedicating a new four- lane highway at Ocala and will be honored April 29 at a “Cracker Day” celebration at Deerfield but the announcement said The full itinerary was not given | § | Reported Missin; Beach. Georgia ‘Crackers’ now living in Florida arranged the | event and plan a luncheon for 8,000 people. | } as far as the nation’s business of- | fices are concerned,” says C, King | Woodbridge, chairman of National | Seeretaries Weex. And Secretary | of Commerce Sawyer chimes in today with the “suggestion em- | ployers take a look at the older worker for the job. “A good look- ing girl doesnt always make | a good secretary,” Woodbridge | agrees, Companies short of engineers | should take a look at the secre- taries of engineers they have. Sometimes ‘the gals are smarter than you think, says John H. Per- ry, a Du Pont Engineer. He writes in the house organ of the Interna- tional Correspondence Schools, “teach them to make the graphs and such,” and let your engineers stick to engineering. A department store in Allentown, Pa. (Hess Brothers) is installing j Railroad in its “never - ending search for the perfect ride’’ has come up with several outstanding triumphs. A minor one is ‘an im- Proved lavatory foot pedal mech- anism.” “The three most. critical short- ages in the cold war are secre- taries, stenographers and typists, spent $625 and deposited nothing. Courtney Campbell, first district, spent $1,738 and deposited $1,190. Adams listed maximum contri- tutions of $1,000 from both M. Abod and Elizabeth Abood, Jack- sonville. He reported $900 reported by Payne H. Midyette, Tallahassee and $800 by Leslie Scott, Fort Pierce. Contributions of $500 each were listed from William Bailey and Robert E. Clark, both Miami; R. F. Murphy, Harper G. Smith and Mrs. Ethel Miller, all Tallahassee; Rudolph Mattson, Fort Pierce, L, H. Armbruster, Miami, F. D. Har- rison and Edgar Brown, both Jack- sonville. Other contributions to Adams’ campaign included: Everett Rus- sell, Jack Esformes, Vero Beach $300. Sam Seigel, Fort Pierce $400, Dan Seott, Fort Pierce, $300. McCarty reported a $500 contri- bution from M. Bernard Waldin Homestead. He reported $350 from Perry A. Nichols, Miami, $325 each from Clinton Green and William C. Gaither both Miami and $300 from Nelson Mason, Tampa. Most of Odham’s contributions were for less than $100. But he listed $900 from James A. Hen- derson, Miami, $250 from N. J. Menges, Oriando. at ALL GROCERS two-way radios in its delivery trucks, so it can re-direct them, or deal with customer problems along the routes. Battelle Memorial Institute, Co- lumbus, Ohio, has developed a plant food which the NACO Fer- tilizer Co. markets as nurish, and says will give any dub gardener— -box or large scale — a green thumb. ‘ African natives who lather them- selves with animal fats should be taught to use American vaseline instead — so thinks Basil Emery, a vice president of Chesebrough Manufacturing Co. pe i heading | for the back country with a series of short commercial films to show tribesmen the social advantages of non-rancid petroleum. Well, it’s spring, and time for (RY Witephoto LT. JAMES A. VAN FLEET, IRy (above) son the U.S. Eighth Army Fae ae was listed as missing in action by the U.S. Fifth Air Force. The 26-year-old officer was piloting a B-26 light bomber on a night bombing mission over North Korea. CAP Buys Share : . Of Airplane At the last meeting of the Civil Air Patrol, it was decided by the cadets to buy one share of the Plane the Civil Air Patrol is pur- chasing. The. tadets appointed to collect the money are Richard Morgan and Jack Knowles, A radio script committee was formed by Lts. Irving Higgs, George Gibson, Sheila Sweeting and Bernard Srodulski and also Cadets Richard Morgan and Yo- lahda Garcia. The cadets received news of the drill competition that they are plan- njng to enter. It concerns the re- quirements for entering ete. At the Sunday meeting, drill was cancelled becanse of rain, Lt. Shep- brought a couple of walkie- | talkies and the cadets learned how to use them. The executive officer of the CAP, Lt. Claude Rese, came to the meeting and told the cadets goodbye as his work is taking him away from Key West. Before he left, he for re- ports from all the GAPC: ‘ Some 300 institutions were granted $3,750,000 for cancer re- search by the American Cancer a change. Society last year. famous Round Bobbin ble Electric rebuilt Porta @ New Speed Control, @ New Sew Light @ New Luggage Type} Portable Cose Liberal allowance on your old machine 24% New Low Price Bang For Limited Time Only! price | Attention developments came as in- | of $1,102, including $1,000 of his Human nature admires frankness and shrinks from pee ge solperd ae Maced hen ene Seanez s08 D. & (Den) Dane what it can easily spot as forced goodnature. Key West- i. Dyrredin agree spiey-ve finial gor ers admired Peter Knight's frankness so much they lined- running for railroad commission. that he didn’t give them the .| The Philadelphia Athletics will | There is no report yet from incum- up and voted for him, aware < si play 33 spring exhibition games. | bent Richard A. Mack who is seek- “glad hand” just because he was running for office. “ Nine of them will be against | ing re-election. ‘oters, white colored, with rare exceptions, can erican League teams and nine| William A. Gaston, who is run- be foaled by polls! hand-waving or ballyhooing. For- ve dee Lae eee meee % ocratic nom- Te Ee ere, ee erent | sone see i be Segeeed Ob reeel te lee otek eee not running for office, Among Key Westers particularly, | enndren came in and wished me | ¥' ¥ beng Tegnires 6 $0 eon- —_ en =. knows _ ip stp an with all‘ coliers See Maret ace a Cancer Society esti- tpibution from John W. Davin, folly for a candidate to try to be other than what he “AN Notre Dame football play- Monthly reports from congres- is. 0 ore taught that when meet pectin but it + ae doe rigs ry jeventh dis- Four weeks from today is First Primary Day, and PBecragglhasitoes g : Sangalo di fully well. His children are happy, | trict, spent $1,048 and deposited the tempo of electioneering will be stepped till the polls ty old's him os “sin” ota spontaneous, and secure. Frank is | $235. 6. As democracy manifests itself in elections | Leahy. 2 affectionate toward them. As | Lex Green, Eighth district, spent close on May v its | His children do that, too, al-| 1 started to leave, he turned to | $1,723 and deposited $1,500 of his by what the majority says, we must abide by the resu though one of his daughters’ told | iv Jimmy and said: ove fame f is whether or not we like them. Here again human nature | nim recently, “Daddy, really, that Pt sap He you tell us your Ss Metntvon, fie ditciet, is put to a test which few candidates can withstand in full ft eereeery for a girl to do. et pa haired Jimmy looked up and} D. R. (Billy) Matthews, eighth measure — be a good loser as well as an elated winner. Leal tee & women ? district, spent $1,602 and deposited ip ed nk 3 5 ole je — PI Nearly every person likes to imagine that his, or her | '¢* Poe pollagidl fir oR praorey Seat, soot $1,957 and deposited Drain power is immense. mom in the whole world. | $4,079. sever & we |S do the other Leshy kids. And Rep. Bob Sikes, third district, age ag loge Thay Re 'S al works togeth- 2, the way old-fashioned fanilies used to do when having eight kids wasn’t such a rarity. The Leahys want to have as many children as they can. As another friend of Frank's once ob- served: “He never was one to hold down the score.” MONROE ..2\' COOLED eee tata Tuesdey - Wednesday Test Tube Babies & Must See Picture Study of Medern Married Life ADULTS oni Coming: THE LAST OUTPOST Ronald Reagan sed Rhonda Sample OvER se TO ALL CANDIDATES Ballots 2c EACH NOW AVAILABLE At The ARTMAN PRESS CITIZEN BLDG. FOR FREE HOME OUR KEY WEST Phone 136 17 W. PLAGLER ST. 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