The Key West Citizen Newspaper, April 21, 1952, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Page 4 Sea Scouts To Tortugas By BERNARD SRODULSKI ( ‘Yeoman i +At 7:15 on Thursday morning, @ group of boys from Sea Scout ship 250, gathered in front of the ‘Coast Guard building for their trip to Dry Tortugas. While they " pe a fla F ‘THE KEY WEST CITIZEN HE Ht : & 8 g ti HOLLYWOOD “NOTES — By BOB THOMAS other teen-agers might consider a devil of a life. Anna, who gave her first concert at 6 and is an international ce- ketball. If I do, I Se perspire, I might catch 5 I catch cold, I wouldn’t be able to sing.” Anna’s life is pretty much laid out for her. She must spend three hours in school every day, taking lessons from a studio tutor. Two or three other hours are taken up ye | with vocal and piano lessons. Now round code jractice. helped us at messages. We 3 zt i E ‘ : < i : » most of the boys fishing. Quite a snappers were with a few yellow- it was getting late J the long trip back ning, some of the ed to turn in on the were provided to us park service. At six Friday morning we we our breakfast and pack to get ready for the E s ase EER anf 5 Cs é 528 cit Everyone hated to leave that island and they looked ‘sad us we left the dock at We headed straight for Key where we pick- Coast Guard there. ‘The sea was yery rough most of the way back and five of the boys who went got sea- Around 12 o'clock the sea started to calm down and most} of the boys sighed a sigh of re- lief. We pulled into the Coast Station at five minutes of Guard for taking us and we are | all hoping that we can go again| cause of the abundance of wild and spend more time. nine | men | she’s even learning to dance and will perform a number in her next picture, ‘“‘The Stars Are Singing,” with Lauritz Melchoir. Byt you don’t hear her com- plaining about the rigors of being a concert soprano. In fact, she’s' a bit amazed at the freedom that U. S. teen-agers have. “In Italy, most girls do not have dates until they are 18 years old or more,” she remarked. “In this country, girls even leave home and live by themselves when they are 48. Italian girls never leave home way.” Another thing she can’t get used to: The teen - age car drivers. “When an American boy gets into remarked. “An Italian boy would Italians are too poor to buy cars for their children.” Among the other things I found out about Anna was that she can’t sing operas in the morning. “Oh, I could if I got up early engagh,” she said. about three hours course, I can sing popular num- bers in the morning. I envy singers like Bing Crosby who can sing any time.” | Her admiration for the groaner, | with whom she appeared in “Here Comes the Grom,” is boundless. She told of teaching him an Italian song for a broadcast with him re- | cently. “Bing doesn't know a word of Italian,” she marveled. “But all I had to do was go through it jonce for him, and he knew the song. He's amazing!” America was called Vineland by the Vikings and others be- grapevines in many areas. Rebel Convicts Air Grievances SIGNS FASHIONED FROM BEDSHEETS | tered windows of « Rahway after 232 unruly < in sy a. Jersey's Trenton State Prison. The “Ostx of the signs is the name of an Association , Welfare. State troopers man the parapet high school, he wants a ear,” she | and Monday, April 21, 1952) GRADE “A” AND MRS. CANO’S SUPER “‘A’s” Citizen Staff Photo ‘TOP: MRS. PROCESO CANO holds store-bought and her own homegrown variety of eggs. Bottom: Close up of same eggs. (For story, see Bill Gibb’s column “This Rock of Ours,”) THIS ROCK OF OURS BILL GIBB us them and send | until they get married. And if Only a Texan would lay claim to that, since it| Marg no schid they stew any-|having finer chickens or larger eggs than those raised by Mrs. Mrs. Cano has a flock of appro- ximately sixty Red Rock chickens usual es’ eyes when Mrs. Cano display- ed a sample assortment of eggs here in the office. Even Albert Pi- |ta, our photographer, interruped his work to lick hungry lips. OLD HOBBY For years, Mrs. Cano’s hobby has been taising chickens. She cre- dits the Biscayne Hatcheries, Inc., of Miami for providing her with invaluable service toward solving feeding problems, etc. \ “I like to grow poultry — Mt. Cano likes to eat it,” she said. Not ; 2 bad combination if neither per- son goes to extremes! against keeping roosters within the Chief Topic MIAMI BEACH (#—Unemploy- | ment in the textile industry will be the chief topic for discussion at the 12th biennial convention of the United Textile Workers (AFL) which opened here today. There is a Key West ordinance | city limits. Therefore, Mrs. Cano/| with a newspaper to imports fertilized eggs for hatching | tastes. Unemployment Is | 2,000 Beds Will purposes. She kills off all males -- (Writer’s note: isn’t that just like @ woman? This world hasn’t been safe for men - animal or human - -Since the days when Carrie Nation weilded a hatchet and Su san B. Anthony the First fought ider | her “Suffrage” battles.) JAXON’S POETRY I like the “pomes” written by Gladys. Here is a sequel to “Acre In Eden” that ran in last Fri- day’s Rock. AFTER EDEN What is the penance, Eve? Can it be this? Adam’s strong arms that hold My share of bliss? A garden where serpents Coil in despair Roses and hollyhocks Blooming so fair? A cottage where Love lights Twin flames that blend In one white holiness Faith will attend? This is the penance, Eve Fear, is the Key Lost in the tall silk grass Under the tree, Watching and waiting, I Polish the lock, Knowing that one may come Who need not knock. NEW CITIZEN FEATURE Next Saturday, The Key West Citizen will begin a new feature page. Dedicated to homeowners and those interested in real es- tate, it marks another step to- ward providing Key Westers suit all Be Given State ORLANDO — W. T. Edwards, chairman of the State Tuberculos is Board, told some 1,000 persons at the fifth annual homecoming of the Florida Federation of Florisan Clubs here Sunday that opening of new hospitals in Tampa and Tal- | Most snails have a shell which is | lahassee May 15 will give the state coiled to the right, but in some | 2,000 TB hospital beds. species the direction of the coil is | reversed, ; | \ He said “our only problem now is oper- ating funds.” ‘Downed, but not out... McKee cut down his assailant in an effort to save Steve's money and the Diamond R Ranch. once the greatest in the whole Bend country. but now om the verge of bankrupicy. Here ts © fast-moving. exciting story of the cld West —e Blend of fiery romance and savage violence: of murder and reckless courage, It is the story of a woman who hated the West and its rough. bloody life. and of the man who loved her —but who would stop at nothing to save the land his father and grandfather had fought! and died for. Read . , , DOOMROCK The New Western Starting Tomorrow (Tuesday) in The Citizen By FRANK CAREY Associated Press Science Writer WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. VA. @—The first use of a ment in the fact that life was maintained—even though tempo- rarily—with the aid of a “substi- tute” heart and lung system out- side the patients’ own bodies. Dr. Robert Janes, head of the department of surgery at the Uni- versity of Toronto, said the tech- nique was developed by Dr. W. T. Mustard of the university staff. Although the work has not yet been described in scientific litera- ture, Dr. Janes n-entioned it brief- ly at a meeting of the American Surgical. Association here. He had beep commenting on a scientific paper by Dr. Willis J. Potts, Chicago, describing success- Governor's Race Today By MALCOLM B. JOHNSON Associated Press Staff Writer This may be the crucial week in Florida’s governorship cam- ‘The bandwagons of all three ma- jor Democratic candidates seem to be rolling, but the election is two weeks from Tuesday and now is time to whip up the horses— and guard against stumbling. big question is how much Odham with his talkathons Alto Adams with his relent- attacks have been able to i down the lead that all hands conceded was held by Dan McCarty a few weeks ago. No one has challenged McCar- ty’s leading position, but Odham last week claimed he’s now second and moving up fast. Adams people ful animai experiments with “sub- stitute” lungs. cases where temporary stoppage of the patient’s own heart and lungs offers the only chance for successful surgery. He stressed that the Canadian work and that of other investiga- tors in this ‘substitute’ system field is still in the experimental stage. : Several investigators have kept animals alive for long periods with such systems, and there have been three cases where humans have been kept alive for short periods with the aid of purely mechanical systems. But the Canadian work is the first in which the lung of an. ani- mal has been used as an experi- mental substitute for the lungs of a human. contend their candidate fs as good as in a run-off with McCarty. Odham has abandoned the 24- hotr radio talkathons which pushed him up into contending pos- ition, and has started a new series of shorter, three to five-hour ques- tion-answer programs for this week in Wesr slorida, the Games- ville-Ocala area and Polk County. McCarty is shaking hands along the Florida Keys and will speak in Key West today before hopping back up to North Central Florida and the Western Panhandle for the rest of the week. Adams is in Palm Beach County today and will continue working the vote - heavy southeastern tip of Florida with appearances in Broward and Dade Counties Thurs- day and Friday and a stump tour around the southern rim of Lake Okeechobee at weekend. Adams shifted his attack on Mc- Carty into a new gear Saturday in his native West Florida Walton County. He dug back into McCar- ty’s legislative voting record and said the former House speaker had supported the “silk stocking” crowd. At the other end of the state in Dade County, McCarty was strik- ing at Odham’s legislative voting record again. He made much of Odham’s switch from a “no” vote to a “yes” vote after final roll call on the 1949 omnibus school bill, and Odham’s votes for a bill to permit betting on harness racin; and to grant tax leniency to some dog tracks. : Odham staged the first of his junior talkathons from Tallahassee and Quiney. At Tallahassee, where the state’s Fiorida A and M Col- lege for Negroes and: Florida State University both are located, he told questioners he favored raising FAMC’S facilities to the standards of the white “institutions and giving Negro college professors the same pay as white professors with the same qualifications. A fourth candidate, Bill Hendrix ran into trouble in Dade County. A permit granted the Florida Ku Klux Klan grand dragon to use e Hialeah city park was revoked by the City Council. He showed. up de- termined to speak anyway, but he reported to police later that an hour before the rally was to start three men seized him at guupoint, slugged him, took him 25 miles out of town and left him on the high- way. Fur seals can dive more than 200 feet in search of food, We Service Ali Makes of Cars, Specializing in... CHRYSLER PI Bill's Southernmost Garage BILL TYLER, Owner 107 Whitehead St., Corner Ange!s ATTENTION! — Mother and Housewife — Sanitation is very important, for the protection of your and your family, when you're washing your laundry. The children Bendix is sure of eliminating impurities. Bring your laundry to 516. Southard Street across from the Bus Station. Use our fast service wash and dry. TWENTY-FOUR HOUR SERVICE PICK-UP and DELIVERIES Managed and Operated By Navy Man and Wife Bendix Launderette SHES THE SAFEST LADY ON THE ROAD _ With Chrysler POWER STEERING plus Chrysler POWER BRAKES At the wheel of a new Chrysler, you have quicker, surer, control of motion than you’ve ever had in a car. You can’t imagine what it’s like till you drive it! With this full-time power steering, hydraulic power does 4/5 the steering work at your gentle pull on the wheel! You also turn the wheel 1/3 less distance. And on rough roads, soft shoulders, snow or sand, “wheel fight” just doesn’t happen. Your hand actually has five times the usual steering control, through every minute of every mile . . . with the same sure “wheel feel” at all times! Rae er aad With this safer way to steer, power brakes make stops at all speeds safer and easier, too. Power from the engine “boosts” every touch of your toe. Actually you stop with up to 2/3 less foot pressure than non-power brakes. You can bring your Chrysler to a halt from full speeds in many feet less distance than other cars of comparable size can stop. See your Chrysler dealer soon. Feel for yourself why thousands of owners say Chrysler offers the two greatest advances in many years in driving CHRYS: | the finest car America has yet produced NAVARRG, inc. 601 DUVAL ST. Drive « CHRYSLER Todey . + « Learn the Difference!

Other pages from this issue: