The Key West Citizen Newspaper, August 20, 1952, Page 6

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vages THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Wednesday, August 20, 1952. Key Wes . E, Miami Lawyer Defends Local Sailors Against Charges Of ~ Assaulting Police Officers 8 ae = i TRIAL OF NAVY MEN ENTERS 2ND' DAY IN CITY COURT The trial of a pair of Navy en accused on four separate arges of intoxication, resisting ‘rest, assault and battery on a slice officer, and disorderly onduct, dragged into its second ay in City Court before Muni- pal Judge Enrique Esquinaldo. he sailors claim they were badly eaten by police in a fight on \ugust 6th. The sailors; Robert P. Sunkel Nichelson, of Miami, who is de- fending them without charge as a matter of “principle.” Nichel- son is @ former Navy submarine officer who served in Key West it : g 8 i F iit g of §: se FE § 5 5 F | | £ “" H aE g Hf i lt i il 2Bo Fe E i i z Hi i : E hab ae gees ‘ i E ; of and ity | ordinance covers _ just Boston | Massachusetts. nei E ¥e 92 He oh si E ae avs # i | Hq 2 E 3 Z L i i e it gt Zz rad e g Ee #j® geez f pe 7 i 13 Floor Fall Kills Miami Man “MIAMI #—A mi from the 13th a moment on the way to the X- room and told a nurse that he felt Svoboda worked as a cleanup man and night elevator operator in the Pacific Buil until about Edelmiro Garcia, an elevator operator in the building, said Svo- | boda got on an elevator about 4 p.m. “How aré you,” Garcia said he asked him. “Fine, thank you,” Svoboda re- plied, and then asked to be let off on the 13th-floor, « = < is her degree the summers at Florid- » which is in Lakeland. Mrs. March is a graduate of Sa’ gent school of Physical education University, Cambridge i CARNIVAL PARTY SET FOR NAVAL HOSPITAL Unit 56 Ladies Auxiliary Fle’ FF [ iH g te tH ge os 2 5 Lf F [ FF H ; &3 & ss F z g if E [ i PH t ff itr | Y i i | Te pz, ft ; i | i l i fi i Ee i I 8 MOST OF THE SHRIMP BOATS leave Key West during the hurricane season because of insur- ance requirements. Normally, the harbor pictured above is filled with shrimpers as well as other type. of commercial fishing craft. ‘COMEDIENNE MARTHA RAYE'S FORMER SECRETARY IDENTIFIES AS JILTED GIRL IN JELKE CASE * PATRICIA WARD WAS HOSPITALIZED MAY 21 FROM TOO MANY SLEEPING PILLS NEW YORK (—Comedienne Martha Ray’s former secretary was identified in newspaper reports today as the jilted girl friend who reportedly sent vice probers into ; cafe society circles after Minot | F. (Mickey) Jelke. Jelke, 22. heir to a multi-million | in Rhodesia, where the company’s | were improperly drawn up. . dollar margarine fortune, was | charged last week with compul- sory prostitution as a city-wide crackdown on $500-a-night call- girls reached its peak, New York City newspapers today paid Patricia Ward, 19, gave wlice, information that led to Jelk arrest, The reports said , the pretty blonde is the myster- | ious “Miss X” who has been held in $10,000 bail-as a material witness and testified this week before a grand jury. The district attorney’s office :ould not be reached for comment on the published reports. Miss Ward was hospitalized’May ‘1 after swallowing a quantity of sleeping pills while staying over- night at Miss Raye’s Hampshire House suite. Police id the girl had written a note indicating she was despondent over a broken ro- tance. Jelke ‘has blamed his arrest on “a disgruntled female who feels she was jilted.” He did not name her. Nor have police disclosed Miss Ward mentioned any .man in her note. |. Miss Raye, who is not involved ‘im the vice probe, said last May that, she invited Miss Ward to after they and | iit PELeerert: i R g s firefighters, | tf a particularly is made harde: F News Briefs LONDON (®~—Sir Ulick Alexan der, who as keeper of the Privy Purse has paid the British roya! family’s household bills since 1936, has been appointed chairman of an African Mining Company, ‘it was announced today, Sir Ulick will have to resign his royal post’.and leave his apart- ment in St. James’ Palace to live headquarters are located. PROVINDENCE, R. I. #—Mrs. Eisenhower Makes First ‘Major Political : Speech Of Campaign Today At Boise, Idaho WILL URGE COURSE *——— | Wht vor =| POdey’s ~ Stock Market UNITED STATES By The Associated Press Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower de- livers the: first frankly political speech of his campaign today—a gee vege 3 raged on sa to reject e “extreme { and right” and follow a course} NEW YORK w — Railroads “squarely down the middle.” senped out in front of the stock The Republican presidential | ™@"Ket today and created a mild nominee flies from Denver to eagioid movement in the rest of #| Boise, Idaho, where—after confer- eee ring with Republican governors of i ten Western states—he plans to pitol steps. Eisenhower’s talks with the gov- ernors deal with Western prob- lems—reclamation, soil conserva- tion, water power. But his Speech later in the day is All-American in scope, aimed at the voters of all 48 states. In an unusual advance state- ment, Arthur H. Vandenberg Jr., the general’s executive secretary, said in his address Eisenhower will: Denounce leftist political _ groups for trying to claim that their way a hs, is the only way to achieve “agreed social goals.” " Citizen Staff Phot Sulphur, and Pancoastal Oil. Corporate bonds were slightly lower in quiet trading. .U. S. gov- ernments were steady and quiet. Contend that the best method ofj SCIENTIFIC STUDY reaching some goals upon which (Continued From Page One) Americans are agreed—employ- | stitute of Technology and the ment and good wages, old age se- |holder of ‘a Masters degree in curity, better education, better| physics from Harvard Colle: ., housing, protection of the rights | Wertheim will remain in Key |-of labor, stable agriculture—is to | West for another month conduct- “follow a: course squarely down |ing his work which is in. the the middle, rejecting both the ex-|realm of the purest of pure treme right and extreme left.” | science. He will return to Harvard Charge that the present admin- | in the fall f work on his Phd. istration is offering new faces but aa o's fourth Wwe only solutions to} Hole, _ pressing problems are “schemes| Financed in part by the Rocke- like the Brannan (farm) plan, S0-| feller Foundation, the non-profit cialized medicine, and bigger and | Woods Hole organization has en- more centralized government.” | gaged in extensive studies of. the Gov. Adlai Stevenson of Illinois, behaviour of the Atlantic Ocean he Democratic presidential candi- and the Gulf, and only recently, late, hid from public and politi- | one of its researchers, Henry Stom- ‘ians on a timbered retreat near = 5 mel, evolved a mathematical. the-' “inocqua, Wis., taking a brief rest ‘of the Gul efore plunging back into the cam- Daily ot tha arecunti bd daign Friday. He scheduled a news welek in the Gulf a sonference during the day—then or more precisely the Florida Cur- planned to rest some more. West and Have- There were indications he will | Tent between Key A open a Western tour with a speech | Na have been taken right here in Following receipt of the Fed Sept. 5 in Denver, Eisenhower’s|Key West since the beginning of eral Warrant, Switz’ will undoubt eadquarters. this month, according to Wertheim. TROUBLES MOUNT (Continued From Page One) delphis to face five indictments on gambling charges is scheduled to take place tommorrow in Talla- hasseee where Governor Fuller Warren has scheduled a hearin; after amended extradition, papers sent from Philadelphis, were ap proved by the state attorney gen eral. Earlier they had turned dow: a petition for the removal of the man when they said the papers edly be arraigned before U, S.Com- Bodyguards Of Margaret Are Criticized Senn cor cond friends and influencing some news- papers in Sweden today. The pa- ‘Washington, the Sta’ partment said the U. S. embassy in Stockholm had denied there had been any cog ne as the The Swedish foreign office also indicated that one of the alleged - instances of mistreatment—news- paper charges that the bodyguards had kept reporters and on raphers out of Stockholm City while Miss Truman visited there— was exaggerated. e foreign office said Miss Tru- man’s 5 reportedly stopped a reporter and a photog- rapher, had not acted offensively. He politely told the men, “No pic- tures, please.” ‘ Miss Truman has been in Swe- den since Sunday on an European tour. Washington sources identified her bodyguard as Secret Service agents assigned by the Treasury Department to protect the Presi- dent and his family. Short. said the checkup hasn’t Department reports from the Swedish police” which haven't arrived in Washington. ment. Jo Farmer's living room had a missioner William V. Albury, Whe. jungle motif she didn’t plan on ther or.not the fact that he has when she returned home Tuesday been indicted by a from a month inne ae af a. The huge’ kudzu way through a slit near a window | this time, grat any attempt on ; apatt of Switz to remain in this its state isa matter for conjecture at Definite word of his program is}The amount of water involved is) iss Truman arrived in Sweden oxpected to come shortly from | tremendous, with about 15,000 mil-/ jas¢ Sunday and left today for tephen A. Mitchell, Stevenson’s| lion gallons of water passing be-|- pinjand. nan Frida ywho takes over formal | tween the two cities each second,| During her stay, Swedish news- ‘ontrol of the Democratic National | the scientist said. Teported that the three ‘* Yommittee today in the capital. The measurements are made and’ with Mitchell, 49-year-old Chicago law- |the data obtained électrically by of these | most covers. her and grew into the living room. She found long. tentacles, entwin- ing picture frames, the piano and other pieces of furniture. PASADENA, Md. (® — Curtis! King, 32-year-old engineer of an. amusement park train, was found innocent of manslaughter charges | here Tuesday night in the death of a three-year-old boy who was killed by the train. The victim was Gregory Robin- son, Washington. | Patrolman William Street testi- fied another child pushed the little Negro boy and he fell across the racks in the path of the oncoming iiniature train. | NEW YORK (#—The Flandre, “rance’s newest liner and beset oy troubles throughout her first voyage, will not make another iransatlantic crossing until Dec. 11. The French Line announced here Tuesday that 11 sailings were be- ing cancelled because of repairs the ship needs. On her recent maiden voyage, the Flandre was delayed by vari- ous mechanical difficulties and had to be towed to her pier here after | arriving in the harbor. HOLLYWOOD —Aly Khan is heduled to fly tonight to Chi- »go, after spending several days ore visiting with his estranged ‘fe, actress Rita Hayworth. There was no word of a recon | iation. ADMIRAL DUKE (Continued From Page One) rd to hearing Admiral Duke ee Cut) Many of the members are frop land cities in Florida and they ave expressed pleasure over the pportunity of sharing the evening vith the military in the Southern nost city. The theme of the bus ness women for the year and for his particular oceasion is, “The Ramparts We Build”, and the pre sence of the esteemed Naval Base Commander will add significaner to the program, Rear Admiral Duke is a nativ of Richmond, Virginia, and wa: graduated in 1924 with distinctior from the U. S. Naval Academy Annapolis, Md., standing fifth inz | class of 521 members. He was cor missioned Ensign on June 5, 1924 His nomination to Rear Admire was confirmed on July 27, 195 Since graduation, the Admir: has been assigned to the US Tennessee, submarines of the Cor trol Force, USS Tuscaloosa, US Helena.and has served at the Nz val Proving Ground, Dahigren, Vir. ginia, and the Navy Yard, Wash yer, succeeds Frank E. McKinney, | determining the voltage between The federal government does not President Truman’s chairman, who | Key West and the Cuban Capitol. have’ to follow regular extradition says he will turn over a “‘blue-}'The Western Union which has of- procedure to remove a fugitive >rint of victory” to his successor. | fered the use of their subma from the state. However, Switz The program calls for over 1% | cables is cooperating in the could be tried in this state, de- nillion dollars worth of radio and} An electrode has been pla pending on where the indictment television time already contracted | the sea at the Havana terminus was returned. His attorneys eould ‘or in the months ahead. the cable and another at have trial set-in the State of Flori-| Vice-presidential candidates of} of the line. Briefly, the da on the basis that his assets are| both parties were on the move— | electrical energy, which in this state, Sen. Richard M. Nixon, the GOP | duced by the motion of ~ Meanwhile Assistant District Af-' nominee, to Hampton Beach, N. H. | over the earth’s mai torney Vincent G. Panati of Phila for a major speech, and Sen. John | the same as electricity delphia prepared to fly to Tallaha J. Sparkman, Democratic candi- a generator, is recorded on hagse today to represent the state date, on a swing through Alabama. tomatic voltage indicator. of Pennsylvania at tommorrows . Nixon said Eisenhower plans to | ¢-mation is collected and hearing. Switz is to be >y-pass labor bosses—who, he said, lated by Wertheim. Certain na represented by his attorney Albert favor Stevenson—and go direct to phenomena, such as varial D. Hubbard. the workers themselves to win the ihaeat tin aa ic field, In a statement issued yesterday, labor vote. Nixon said his speech antes Sou “sync Panati commended Circuit Court today will follow a favorite theme: |The erat ponies Judge N. ome. Hawthorne me pe is pont ee the éhth “his fairness and the impartial atkman, on a fo - 24 nanner in which he heard the evi :oming sweep through his home| | Roughly, the amount of flow lence and rendered his verdict state, made a triumphant return | ; to Hartselle, where he was born a in a log farm house, bond which has been.<set for the son of a tenant farmer. In an 350,000 for the fugitive when he said address at Arab, Ala., Tuesday he | tute. that he doubted if Switz “would promised a “crusade of truth”' In commenting on the appear in any court” if it were which he predicted would bring | Wert c’ » said, “The Gulf reduced. vietory to his party. has fas ‘ated the world Attorney Albert Hubbard said at! State primaries in New York and | time of -e discovery of the hearing he wanted Switz re- Wyoming gave voters a workout. | Ponce «> Leon first described leased from jail so that he could Early returns showed: after having sailed around Cuba take him to see Governor Warren New York—Four incumbent Re- | 1513. Beajamin Franklin to show that he has led an ex- ublican congressmen won renom-|a chart showing the extent of the emplary life since coming to ‘nation and two fell by the way-| Gulf Stream as an aid to navigat- Florida and entering the shrimp Side. Hottest race in the state found | ors around the time of the business. i Rep. W. Sterling Cole winning eas-| tionary War. Accurate measure- Switz and his lawyers said that | lly over Edwin A. Hall in the re-| ments. of the stream, he would not jump bond if it were @ligned 37th district. Incumbents | were begun by the U. 8. Coast reduced to the point where he could Teno’ fe 3 ese z £ bets Bits = 8 Bg ye Lay iH rie variations in the voltage and made E ah John C. fled Philadelphia because of gang-‘ R. Pillion. John | ster threats, he might be loathe | John C. Mundt for the GOP bid in ‘o return there. the new 15th district. Chester C. 5 # H Hf aa taf : oil Hi 8 THRE ue I

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