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Page 12 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Saturday, May 31, 1952 | Fogging On Fogarty Avenue ‘COMMUNISTS’ FORCES IN KOREA 'Harvie. Ward NAVY WAY OUTNUMBER U.N. ARMIES | Wins British | ARRIVALS Golf Tourney | me Ordnance Department ef the S. Naval Station, Key West, is the new duty station for Walter C. bal ond eel ppesdaeced slash he! Defeats Stranahan Johnson, Torpedoman, third class. DD) ed k By 6 And 5 Score A veteran of World War II, John- , . se son saw action in the E i Telco Defeats Coates 12-4 At Bayview Par In 56-Hole All- African-Middle Eastern Aes American Finals j the Asiatic-Pacific Area, and in Riek ee * ALFRED KNOWLES jaddition to holding ribbons for PRESTWICK Yo Scotland uw — those areas, he is also entitled to ing Harvie Ward, Tarboro, N.| Wear the American Area, and Van Fleet Does LIMITS OPPONENTS Not Expect Red Offensive By JOHN RANDOLPH SEOUL, Korea (#—Gen. James A Nan Fleet said today Commu- nist armies in Korea outnumber United Nations forces 2¥ to 1 and “suffer for nothing for combat,” but he does not expect an imme diate Red offensive. The U. S. Eighth Army com mander at a press conference took wp Eighth Army problems. These ranged from the fighting front to the troublesome “‘southern front at Koje Islands prisoner of war compounds. On Koje, Van Fleet said, he be lieves the situation is under con trol and the impending breakup of the huge 6,000 to 8,000 man compounds into smaller groups will be carried off without inci dent. “It is true that the enemy has taken advantage of the long stale mate to build up his power and resources,” the general said “We estimate now that the ene my is two and one half times greater than the United Nations im numerical combat strength “We estimate that he has a two to one numerical superiority in ar tillery. “But he is inferior to us in tanks and air capabilities. “We also believe that if the en emy strikes again, he will use all the air power at his disposal and will use both fighters and bombers to the best of his ability.” Ven Fleet said that any new Communist push would be met by the massed power of the Eighth Army and a rocklike determina tion to smash the Communist for mations as they have never been smashed before. The general’s soft voice sank to a growl as he spoke for a few moments of the destruction his army would wreak on any attack ing Communist army or group of armies. In saying the Reds “suffer for nothing for combat,” the general meant they have all the equipment they need. Van Fleet made a formal state ment of the reasoning behind his belief that the Reds would not be gin an offensive in the near future He said “It is difficult for me to see how the enemy could win “If I were the enemy, I would be extremely reluctant to open a major offensive and I would rec ommend against it “The enemy must realize that the Eighth Army, with its trained divisions, its massed firepower mobility, and its naval support would make him pay a disastrous price for any attempt on his part for any major offer sive “In my opinion the enemy still smarting from | feats last spring, su and I do not think he wants t repeat them.” Van Fleet reitera Eighth Army probably c 1 an enemy offensive more ¢ than was done in the la battles fought in April a M of 1951 He said ywever, ¢ y ¢ is being made to keep the A ican, United Nations Ss Korean forces in the } Of training ’ trand, Islanders Play This Sunday t s od o | Political | Notes | By The Associated Pres | The political weather today: | Squalls in the Taft-Eisenhower re- | gion, especially South Dakota, with increasing excitement as the gen- al nears home more Re. je | publican convention de! chosen gates are Three states—New Mexico, Vir- ginia’ and Georgia—hold GOP meetings to nar presidential- nominating dele; New Mex ico selects 14, Virginia four and Georgia four Ohio Sen. Robert Taft's backers seeme ave the upper hand at the a Va., convention Four at-lar delegates will be named to 23-vote slate, leav- ing two more to be chosen | The Georgia gathering at Atlanta will complete a 17-member pro- | Eisenhower deleg A rival group already has been named by Taft backers A Democratic Carolina overnor primary in North nominates for Congress and Minnesota Dem- 1 two-day cenvention complete that state’s | group by selecting three members Political and ocrat which 26-\ote at open will large storm warnings were Friday after Eisenhower- ‘or-President headquarters dis- | closed that every GOP convention delegate had been invited to call on the general. A headquarters n said visitors could pa: hoisted spokesrr their own way or their expenses | would be borne by local—but not | national Eisenhower organiza- | Before the Eise commit tee denied the natic unit would | pay for the trips—there will be 1,206 GOP delegates — protests | broke from two ters Day nal Taft-For- Presid F called the | plan “pretty to efforts at bribe His statement asked} whet G George Mick- . € Dakota “paid his | own € P earlier this Gael § itical manager for De tie $ Estes Kefau t y.” H the Justice De part h ate to de- | te e “the extent of viblation of | t Pract Ac | Wes I director the } ‘ ters t ! false local ‘ sual | 12-4, | Bayview Park game last night. | scored nine runs in |came back in their | third TO SINGLE HIT Exploding for ‘fourteen bas hits, in the first scheduled doubleheader game of a at the Alfred Knowles limited the Coates to one hit, but wildness caused the Coates to score their four runs. Knowles had a no hit- ter until Powell doubled in the fifth. He struck out nine and walked eight as he notched his second victory of the season Telco scored a run in the first on Kell hit and an error. The added two more in the second on two walks and Kelly's double Three hits and an error netted Telco three more runs in the third. In the fourth, Telco iced game when Kelly, Cabot, Villareal singled, and doubles by Maynard and Parks and Roberts provided them with four runs Two singles and Roberts’ doub! gave Telco their final two runs in the fifth, Kelly, with a double and two singles in three trips to the plate, and Roberts, with a triple, double, and single in four trips to the plate, led Telco’s fourteen hit attack. The score: Team— R. H. E. Telco 123 42—12 14 1 Coates 003 02— 4 1 4 Knowles and Maynard; Balok Lemieux (4) and Piper. In the second game, Coca Cola the fifth to defeat the Naval Hospital, 14-3. Coca Cola scored two in the first on a walk, an error, and D. Cc single. Naval Hospital half of the first and took the lead on a hit batsman, an error, and Oisted’s tremendous homer. Coca Cola tied it up in the on Robert Lastres’ single, a walk, and a double steal. John Cruz’ homer in the fifth featured uz’ {the big nine inning rally which clinched the game for the Cokes. The score:* Team— REE Coca Cola 201 29-14 10 4 Naval Hospital 300 00-3 5 2 Curry-D. Cruz (4) and D Norberg-Reese (5) and Oisted TRANSFERS At the beginning of the war Johnson was stationed at Reciefe Brazil, an@ since that time been continuously at sea. In he was designated a subma and saw duty on the submarines USS Marlin and USS Salmon. Be transferring to Key West, he tioned aboard the Des y don (DD ar er, USS fore ive of Miam!, Johnson ts the son of Mrs. R. E. Lee and the Mr. Walter Johnson of 726 3rd street, N.W have reported sear the M r. of F Kansas: As I ker of G er, Oh Fdward W. Ne Sk M gan. ve \ 4 yaa Telco defeated the Coates, NO, IT ISN'T A MYSTERY THRILLER —or a scene from “Third Man Out.” on Fogarty avenue with the new machine recently presented to the County Anti-Mosqu Even the comera shows how Board in particular are asked to proceed very cautiously. down a pedestrian in this dense fog and} dense and opaque a mist th as it is easy to Citizen Staff Photo It’s just Fogging Contro his machine throws and bump into a tree or car or knock WASHINGTON lightning si -» lurking at the mmit of Communist high com- mand has struck in Romania, top- pling Ana of Joseph Stalin, from her party jobs The news that she and other key Communists had fallen was re- layed from the U. S. legation in Bucharest. It may be the beginning of the end for one of the most feared and powerful women since the Middle Ages sway of Lucretia Borgia and Catherine de Medici. Mrs. Pauker was a leading mem- ber of the Politburo (political cab- inet) of the Romanian Communist |Party. This writer interviewed her and saw her frequently at public functions while a correspondent jin Romania after the Reds took jover. She was then considered Romania’s leading Communist. | Official information thus far in- |dicates Mrs. Pauker still has her government jobs as vice premier jand always Reports in Vienna newspapers said she already had been swept from government as well as party of. \fice. Th ld be in line with usua Con ist practice—real authority rests on party position which, once lost, carries away the facade of e ve government of- fice But big, mannish Ana Pauker is a woman—now in her 50s—who clawed her way up from the wretched ghetto of her native Bu charest to me Comm nbership in the world mand.She reported isband shot when ionist” tenden d route, one only nd resourceful figh travel ld not be wise to count it is known defi a Communist du geor be e a plied them y er ‘ Political & Pauker, ruthless friend | | museum to be built in the general’s | minister of foreign affairs. | Pauker, Six Others Booted Out Of Office By Soviets ‘Train Crash Kilis Fourteen TOLUCA, Mexico “ —Fourteen persons were killed Friday night and 21 were injured when a train ploughed into their bus at a grade crossing 45 miles northwest of Mex- ico City. No one aboard the train was hurt. Ike’s Relics To ‘Be In Museum LOS ANGELES ® — Historical relics collected by General Dwight D. Eisenhower will be placed in a home town, Abilene, Kan. The general is expected to attend the cornerstone laying next Wednesday, said Welton Becket, who an- supervisory architect, nounced plans this week. trait—is slowly mastering the So- viet regime After a stormy and Jail-ridden | Pauker | career in Bucharest, Mrs and her husband, an engineer,went to Russia in the early ‘30s in ex- change. for Romanian prisoners held by the Communists Tuliu Maniu, the Romanian peas- t leader, defended her at one trial when no other lawyer would touch her In 1947 the regime in which Ana Pauker held high office in Romania sentenced Maniu to life in prison Almost nothing has been heard of the frail old man since. Romanian friends of the writer assume Maniu is dead Youth Drown BALTIMORE — His high | school companions thought Edward V_ Gunther Jr.. 19, was k iwhen he doubled up in lup to his neck at Sun Rise Efforts to revive him w ’ late Friday, and he ? land's second drowning vi a the holiday weekend. Edward ws to have been graduated from Poly |technic Institute next month was It has been estimated that the | European corn borer de:tr d about 35 tuillion bushels of corn & the United States in 1951. | The ruins of Jarmo in Iraq, un- jcovered recently by archaeolo- gists, are remains of a village believed to have thrived be- tween 5,000 and 6,000 B. C. Sinclair Pete —By J. O. Hamilton | | | a " OM | think the trouble vacuum pump! Get down to “bare facts’ we'll hunt down the trouble and make you pleased at your choice of service U. 5. No, 1 Terminal Service Station Key West, Fla, Phone 1512 is in the See the new idea in Venetian Blinds C., spiked Frank Stranahan’s bid | World War Il Victory ribbons. for a third British amateur golf | missed six he | a half feet holes. championship ced the 6 when today and 5, All-Ame finals. n, former \the v. streak He of was birdies four and pars. from 14th hoies. the through the to become the first proved his undoing He missed almost half the fair- Ways, banged into a half dozen j bunkers, once drove into a sand dune and repeatedly caught the j rough on his drives Ward, ignored when the United ,, |States was picking its Walker Cup team Am ast year, becomes the 1th rican to win this trophy since ling | Jesse Sweetser brought it home in | This was the third straight All- American final and the fourth in the last six years The harassed Stranahan, who nildn't get the bugs out of his ving swing, the 3st on green when he was stl five feet from the cup in four. | was ten feet | | Ward, meanwhile, away in two. The handsome new champion, a | favorite with | couldn't make his 15 - year - old, picked-up putter behave in the early stages of the match and he ANYTHING CONCERNING TOMOBIL SEE THE au TWINS 30 870-1871 Toledo, Ohio, million- in the scheduled} a squared five times before Ward went to lunch with a two-hole lead at the halfway point. year-old Southern broker- winner of . intercollegiate crown, shook off an early case of putting jitters to finish with a spectacular 13th before he finally started click- ing. Then he won four holes in a row to go two-up and he was never i under fours—the |in danger after that. goifer's yardstick of excellence— | 27th | and then it became a matter of how soon the holes would run out for player who has his eyes on dupli- cating Bobby Jones’ grand slam of 1930. Stranahan, winner of this historic | event in 1948 and 1950 and bidding American ever lto win it three times, suffered a| treak of wildness off the tee. 7) conceded the match | Scotch galleries, | Putts of under four and during the first nine As a result the match was He was two down through the He went six-up after 27 holes Stranahan, an_ international TRAVEL INFORMATION - TICKETS SEABOARD RAILROAD TICKET OFFICE AGENTS ALL SCHEDULED AIRLINES HAVANA-NASSAU HAVANA ROUND TRIP AIR $20.00 TOURS FROM $33.00 Direct Flights from Miami Round Trip $115.50 ALL EXPENSE TOURS TRAVEL AGENCY Opposite Greyhound Bus Station 510 SOUTHARD STREET PHONE 298 MNualhac YT LL USION HALF -SIZE/ DRESSES prerty stitchery... gentle witchery in washable Gecremeed by Coot mmenne riod SS eres A Otner Martha Mamarey Seyler om Half Sram and Prsstes from $8.93 e design!