The Key West Citizen Newspaper, June 2, 1952, Page 1

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The Assecisted Press Features Tetatyne E. and Phete Services ; country, with a fenge of only Average Fabroninvit For 72 Years Beveted te the Best interests ~§ Key Wee 5 The Key West THE SOUTHERNMOST NEWSPAPER IN THE U.S.A. KEY WEST, FLORIDA, MONDAY, JUNE 2, 1952 ve PRICE FIVE CENTS Truman’s Seizure Steel Industry Declared Illegal By SupremeCouri Blonde Bidder And Others At Couniy Tax Sale *ehPeee - Ip Memorial Day Traffic . —~¢ hev't Will Have eel Te Surrender County Tax Sale Draws Active On Land | Ownership | Of The Mills WASHINGTON ®— The Supreme Pi Pine Toll A lively crowd of Key (“wrt today struck down Presiden Westers and some persons | Truman's seieure of the steel im By The Associeted Press from out the county bic on | tustry, The vote was 6 to 8, Death rode the nation's highways tax delinquent property this Justice Blac® deuvered the his morial week noon at the courthouse. toric unemimeous decision which is new ~~ — Eddie Ciesinski, under. | simost certain t touch off ancth- water diver, and A. H. Mil. (er quick strike by some Gi0,000 The toll of dead from traffic) ie, Floridian Motel owner | CIO steelworkers. crashes during the three-day holi-| were among the most active The court's ruling means the day skyrocketed to 360, an all- eee government will have to surrender ti for Memorial | 3 ether men jownership of tho mills nd thus weetead, in the ation’ hstry,| Sd women who bid tow tn will be unable to grant the wage | terest rates on parcels boost Truman had ised the The previous all-time high for 2| tang will have to wait two |union ia getting it wo call off a pe Memorial Day weekend was 347 soaye ‘0 mneusttin #8 tho gone three-day strike early last month. ‘itizen Staff Phote | @nt owners can redeem In addition to the majority opin- ‘The 53 MRS. SHIRLEY VOSBURGH, blonde, center, bidding on some . a. eo wins Gianaie aaa e victed of Jots at Big Pine Key at the county tax sale this noon, She was advertiring costs, .f notfbid- Justices Frankfurter, Douglas, socks and one of scores who showed up to bid on some of the numerous ders then bring suits to clear | Clark, Jacksen and Surten. — gee a cred t,| parcels of land whose owners have allowed taxes to become title. } Black's opinion said Truman's eins, Reson delinquent. Al Mills, Key West realtor is left of Mrs. V., and to PB. Sinn ing et April 1 order toe selmure’ of the i shoppi her right is Mr. Vosburgh, whom Shirley met when she came was es Tax ry “cannot properly te cg ~ aah down here on vacation six years ago. She hopes to build at ba oy al ag antes prs FE caine fale "Allen, who will be sentenced | least a Jog cabin on Big Pine Key if the owners do not redeem group resident's military power as com- “tomorrow, was foun’ guilly of| the property in.two years. 12 noon shar cweaeg_ | mder in chiet of the armed for- breaking the lock on Calleja’s around him holding their. co- - grocery store at the corner of The Citisen before nny 24 Patce Lt mess coe» KW Graduates |Regi . Saeed mtieg aft tee to finding’ the man in| #69 ra tes egistration properties as ‘hey were bid. The list of bidders wh. bid with in one dollar blocks of Win $1400 In Two Girls, Two Boys Get College Level Awards For Teacher Training And Gov't Service Four Key West High School graduates have been awarded college scholarships on the basis of tests given April 1, it was an- nounced today. Nancy.Lou Watkins who grad- uated in February won the $400 @ year Lewis award which will carry her through teacher tri ‘The six-man jury, took another view of the situa- tion and found him guilty. The 31 men chosen for jury duty this term will be questioned Thursday before qualifying to try ‘the Hill case. Defense Attor- neys William Albury and Enri- que Esquinalde have been pre- paring their case and County So- licitor Allan B. Cleare, Jr. i: lin- ing up state witnesses at the present time. Hurricane Drill To Be Held Here A hurricane drill will be held at the Naval Station sometime this week the Navy announced today. Purpose of the drill is to ac- quaint new personnel, both civilian and military, with the procedure carried out under the Naval Station Hurricane Bill, and to check the adequacy of the hurricane drill. The burricane drill will be signi- fied by a ten-second blast on the -fiaphone, Two blasts on the dia- stipulations of the. scholarship. — J al the end of the | Accidents Kill 9 Announcement | Dr. R.C. THOMPSON, In Cty. Since Jan. Chiropodist studies on the scholarship. Other students winning Degtoff. Elizabeth graduated in the University of Florida. Cre- mata graduated last week. James Roger Cooper won the Senatorial scholarship which will give him four years at a state supported institution of higher learning. He must train for municipal, state or national Gov- ernment service according to the Monroe county reported nine | deaths from highway accidents for NOTICE! WANT A NEW ROOF OR REPAIR AT Low cost? NO OVERHEAD NO. 1 GRADE Roofing Material THE KEY ROOFING CO. All Work Gueranteed Phone 1404.8 Diseases of the Leos and Feat | Wishes te announce the jthe first three months of 1952, ac- teording to the State Department ! removal of his office (of Public safety | The fatal accidents were slight from 613 Fleming ly more than one-seventh of the to- Street to 324 tal of 60 accidents taking place on tre {the Overseas highway and nty Mar yaret Street [reads running off it During the Sra 688 Period 4 pon fetal accidents j= Key West were reported to the Department of Public Safety Throughoat the state of Florida | there were more accidents in cit- | tes, 10,775 than rural areas, 5,577 5,577. Your children re- ceive individual at- tention in beautiful spacious home - like urroundings at the Casa Marina Annex Nursery. PHONE 1369 ing bachelor of arts or science { n work, and through a master of| Republican, you have to stick by arts or seiences degree. She must] that until after November 4,” he teach one year for each year she | said. the} and give their new addresses if Lewis scholarship were Vincent/ they have moved since register- Young Cremata and Elizabeth V.| ing. May, 1951, and took her test 2t/ election are residence in Florida Registration opened today for the November 4 Presidential election, it was announced by Supervisor Sam Pinder before he left on a month’s vacation. Deputy registrar, Mrs. Edna Mae Bullman ‘is in charge of the office in Pinder’s absence. She will register all who qualify and who did not register or vote in the 1950 election, Pinder stressed that citizens ‘annot change their pay affilia- r. After the election they can. “If you registered Democrat or He urged citizens to come in Qualifications for voting in the one year, in Monroe county, six months, citizen or naturalized citizen. Those who have become nat- uralized Americans must bring their official papers with them when they come to register, Pin- der said. Office hours for registration are from 9 to 12, ani 2 to §, five days a week. The registration books close on October 1. Carrier Siboney Arrives In KW The USS Siboney, CVE 112, ar- rived last Saturday morning Tt will stay at the Naval Sta- tion for an undetermined length of time. Meanwhile many of its ctew are enjoying liberty ashore: Last night Key West streets were thronged with the new sailors. OL RT LTT eT TE POOR OLD CRAIG SERVICE STATION MAC'S PLACE Boca Chica Becch 1S NOW OFF THE WIL BE OPEN EVERY Dry AND NIGNT UNDER THE MaA* GEMENT OF THE SCLE Ow MARKET. Rik. & MRS. MAC | } | | Dr. John Dewey w-| Dies Of Injury Formerly Lived Here For Years Near South Beach John Dewey, famed educator and GA Lacat S27 at the came weal, said: “Truman had better not invoke the Taft - Hartly Act now. But if he does, the people will see how vicious it is.” Thorsen’s Throat Cut Saturday Olaf Thorsen, 2bout 53 years of age, ‘stuck an ice-pick down his throat at about 1 p.m., May 30, while he was aboard the boat “Lucky Lady” located at the foot of Simonton street. He is alive but in the Monroe Gen- eral hospital for observation. George Johnson of the boat “Smitty” called a Lopez ambu- lance and Thorsen was taken to the hospital. 2 Witness to Thorsen’s act was Henry L. Zipperer, 411 William street, who is employed by C. Hak Sheffield. Thorsen is unemployed. Sheffield, who owns the boat, lives at Pearl Trailer Court, Lot No. 25. Justice of the Peace Ira Albury Teported the case today. It was reported that Thorsen was unconscious at the time of philosopher died Sunday. A former Key Wester, Dr. Dew- ey is remembered and loved by many local people. Years ago he first lived at the corner of Tele- graph Lane and Greene. The resi- dence where he spent most of his time however, was on South St. near Duval. in town. John Dewey was known as the father of progressive education. His philosophy of education was the subject. It took about fifty years for his “new education” could do much to | prepare a child for life in an in-{ dustrial society. He also said: “School was a pretty deadly world we lived in. Discipline was | then the key to education. Disci-| Pline inflicted with a rawhide or | admission to the hospital and had |# Tuler. | convulsions. On regaining con-| “I remember how glad we were sciousness within the following | When vacation time rolied around. | 48 hours, he claimed to have no| We would sing “Goodbye school, | knowledge of his act. Laem teacher, damed old fool.” | Ford | / jat3 pm 1M? CHEVROLET Seden $315 Down Ld atm wwe == / Monroe oe ee eee a) --. 1948 FATT eer SOF Bal. ne. « \ é vetie 3 Fad / UNTIL / 3 Other forms. of violence claimed at least 146 lives, including 84 by drowning and from miscellan- comparison. Commission Meets Tonight At 8 P.M. will attend. be discrssed are: tect their passengers. consumer's use. Traffic regulations will form an important part of the night’s dis- cussion. Peeping Tom” Charge Filed eous causes. There are no author- itative comparisons for the over- all traffie-drowning-miscellaneous- An important meeting of the City He has two daughters, Mrs. |Commission will be held tonight Granville Smith and Miss Jane | beginning at eight o’clock. It is ex- Dewey, who spend each winter here | pected that many local residents Most important of the subjects to An ordinance relating to taxi cab that emphasis should be placed on | insurance. At present taxis are not the individual child rather than on | required to carry insurance to pro- Another new ordinance will at- methuds to gain general accept-|tempt to declare the water situa- ance. On his 90th birthday, in 1949, tion here in town as requiring Dewey . said, however, that his | emergency action and will regulate There is also an ordinance per- place when I attended. What we | taining to the closing of bars by learned had no relation to the |2 pm. that-is highly controversial. Stock Marke NEW YORK (#—Steel stocks moved ahead quickly and activity perked up on the stock market to- | day immediately after the Su preme Court ruled government seizure of steel mills illega:, Immediately after the Supreme Court decision, U. S. Steel, Beth- lehem, Republic, and Jones and Laughlin advanced fractions while Youngstown gained better than a point at times. The entire market felt the effect of the long awaited decision and many issues that had been back- ing away began to gain ground slowly. Railroad stocks continued among the stronger groups. Northern Pa- cific, Santa Fe, New York Central and Union Pacific all advanced. Among the wider movers was Barber Oil, which jumped four points at one time. Among the losers were Chemical, Westinghouse, Morris and Johns - Manville The curb market moved ahead a bit, but with very little spirit, | }on the first day of its extended closing hours. Advances were mostly fractions Dow Philip in the quiet market. The gains in-| A colored man, Herman Davis, | cluded American Republics. Ana was picked up as a Peeping Tom | con Lead, Consolidated Mining and! Saturday morning at 3:30 a.m. on | Smelting | Angela Street by Police Patrolman | Mesabi Iron A Perez Davis was charged with being a Peeping Tom and will come up for hearing in Municipal Court teday the 1 peny and Cit There has wave cf at recen end his Ietin Am-rican Band Evcry Saturday Nite 9 P.M. til 1 A.M. a 5 been in Key West for hs and is employed by Construction com been 2 Creole Petroleum and! | On the bond market, corporate | issues were firm and trading was! slow. U. S. governments steady. were | FOR HOT BOLLOS and SHRIMP CROQUETTES ' Try | ELPASAIE | RESTAURANT 1995 Truman Ave. is 2.4 ¢s.24 for 6 reopen on Tuesday, July Sth stitution,” e i dent’ power fo see that te fees are faithfully executed refutes. the that he ix to be a lawmaker.” ‘Wa ews 's ruling and would turn the mills back to, their owners and then see what happens, At the same time, however, the President still insisted he has the inherent power to seize private in- dustries in ar emergency and that nobody—neither Congress nor the courts—can take that power away from him. As to what he would do if the high tribunal ruled flatly that the President has no seizure power— as it did teday—Truman said he would cross that bridge when he came to it, Black’s opinion today declared: “The Constitution limits his (the President’s) function in the law- making process to the recommend- ing of laws he thinks wise and the vetoing of laws he thinks bad. And the Constitution is neither silent nor equivocal about who shall make laws which the President ts to execute.” Black said the power of Con- gress to adopt “such public poli cies as those proclaimed by the President's order is beyond ques- tion.” He went on: “It can authorize the taking of private property for public use, It can make laws regulating the relationships between employes and employers, prescribing rules | designed to, settle labor disputes and fixing wages and working con- ditions in certain fields for econ- omy. The Constitution did not sub- Ject this law-making power of Con- gress to presidential or military supervision or control. “Tt is said that other presidents (Continue ! On Page Three) ES RARE } Turkey Supper Thursday, June 5th NCCS Bids 1021 Ouval St, Serving from 5 to 8 PRICE $1.50 Catholic Daughters of America — «i Css Ciner val summer vacation. Béth places will ions fer enroliment in Applic the beauty schoo! will be accepted beginning July 8th. SOUTHERNMOST SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE enone

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