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* THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Tuesday, September 2, 1952 Ike Speaks Tn Miami Tonight MIAMI (#— Gen Dwight D. Eis. enhower brings his campaign for the presidency to traditionally Democratic Florida today with whirlwind stops at Jacksonville, Miami and Tampa. The GOP presidential nominee | arrives in Jacksonville,at 3 p. m. | EST following an address in At- Janta. A 30 - car motoreade will escort Fisenhower tnrougn downtown | Jacksonville to Hemming Park | where he will make a 20 - minute | address. State Republican leaders, | including G. Harold Alexander of | Fort Myers, chairman of the Exec- | utive Committee, will meet Eisen- | hower at the airport. The Republican standard - bear- er will fly to Miami aboard a special plane, landing at the East- ern Air Lines terminal at 6:05 p. m. A 40 + car motorcade will ac- company kim on a tour through Coral Gables, Miami and to Mi- ami Beach where he will stay at the Roney Plaza’ Hotel. His address in Miami’s Bayfront Park is scheduled for 9 p. m. and will be broadcast over a statewide radio network. Charles H. Cran- don, former Dade County (Miami) commissioner and long-time Dem- ocrat, will introduce Eisenhower. Harry S. Swann, Republican nominee for governor or Florida, and John P. Booth, GOP candidate | for the U. S. Senate, will appear | on the program in Miami. ~ James L. Guilmartin, executive director of Florida - for - Eisen- hower, said the general planned a “semi-off-the-cuff” speech in Mi- ami and added, “This will be more like Ike.” 3 Guilmartin said this would prob- ably be one of the largest political gatherings in Miami history and motorcades will bring Eisenhower supporters from as far away as West Palm Beach, 70 miles to the north. Eisenhower will spend the night in Miami and leave for Tampa at 8 a. m. Wednesday. Arriving there an hour later, he will speak at Plant Field, home of the~ Florida State Fair. He will leave for Birmingham, Ala., about 10:30 a. m. Florida has voted the Democrat- ie ticket since Reconstruction days except for 1928 when Herbert Hoover carried the state. Da ent dae dn tn tant tod DEATHS > /BRANK H. LADD Frank'H. Ladd, 86, died Saturday afternoon in the’ Monroe General hospital after a long illness. Funeral Services will be held to- morrow afternoon at 5 p.m. from the Chapel of the Lopez Funeral Home. Rev. John Armfield of St. Paul’s Church will officiate at the services. Burial will be-in family plot city cemetery. te Nl Survivors, one sister, Mrs. Grace Winchester, Buffalo, N.Y., Ladd was a former mayor of Key} ‘West, and also County Tax Collec-| EDDIE ALBURY Eddie Albury, 9, died Saturday | evening in the Monroe General) Hospital after a long iliness. Funeral Services will be held to- day at 5 p.m. from the Fleming Street Church where the body will be placed at 2 p.m. Burial will be} &m family plot, city cemetery. | Lopez Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. | Rev, James E. Statham will of. ficiate at the services. Survi wife, Mrs. Virgin two sisters, Mrs. Virginia Osterhoudt, | Key West, Mrs. Sadell Mitchell, Mi- | ami, Fla., four brothers, Paul G. | Albury, Néw Syrmna Beach, Field- ing Albury, Tampa, Fla., and Charles Albury, Miami, F Over 500 Persons Killed Labor Day Weekend By The Associated Press More than 500 persons lost their | lives in accidents over the Labor | Day holiday but the toll was far | below the record of 658 violent deaths a year ago. 4 The death toll for the holiday, the last long week - end of the summer season, was 524. Accidents on the highways, as usual, took the heaviest toll, with 403 killed in traffic mishaps. Fifty- two persons drowned and 69 others lost their lives in miscellaneous ‘accidents, The traffic total compared to last year’s record 461 deaths. It was below the 480 deaths estimat- ed for the 3 - day holiday by the National Safety Council. However, Council President Ned H. Dearborn said it was “a shock- ing thing to think that the (traffic) figure could rise to over 400 on a day dedicated to rest and relaxe- tion. . . . The people of America should wake up to this inexcusable slaughter.” Rainy weather over wide areas of the East and Midwest was con- sidered a possible factor in cutting down the traffic toll, keeping many persons at home. However, the wet highways made driving conditions more hazardous for the millions who made trips. The accident toll covered the pe- riod from 6 p. m. Friday to mid- night Monday (local time). The Safety Council reported that thus far in 1952 there have been 94 traffic deaths every 24 hours. Storm Reaches 138 Miles An Hour Winds MIAM! (#— Winds up to 138 miles an hour were reported today by a Navy aerologist aboard a plane checking the position of the season’s second tropical hurricane. The flier estimated the center of the growing tropical disturbance as near Latitude 23 north and Longitude 63 west and said it was moving northwest at about 15 iniles an hour, “It’s a good ~ sized hurricane right now,” said Grady Norton, chief storm forecaster at the Mi- ami Weather Bureau. “It may turn out to be a pretty bad one.” Norton emphasized that the high winds reported were estimated by an observer in a plane who regis- tered them during brief squalls in the northern quadrant. The storm offered no immediate threat to any land area and was about 1,300 miles east southeast of the Florida Coast. It developed rapidly Monday and by nightfall had grown into a full- fledged hurricane. Its position was about 200 miles southeast of where the first hurricane was spawned just a week earlier. “This new one certainly blew up in a hurry,” said Meteorologist Allen Marshall. Early Monday a ship reported a strong easterly wave with winds of 39 to 46 miles an hour about 400 miles east of San Juan. A plane | flew into the storm and reported winds reached 75 miles an hour— minimum hurricane velocity. A few hours later the winds had | increased to 90 miles an hour. Officer Missing With Huge Sum MADRID (#— European police searched today for Capt. Julian Rodriguez Pastrana, chief pay master of Gen. Francisco Fran- |co’s War Ministry, reported miss- | ing with at least four million pes: etas ($360,000). Army officials said the captai failed to return Aug. 27 from 5 - day leave. An investigation AP Science reporter CHICAGO \M—New ears made from knees were described today to the International College of Sur- geons. The ear is fashioned around a | piece of cartilage, shaped like a | half - moon, taken from a joint in the knee. It supplies a natural half - moor shape for the ear. The knee cartilage is obtained j from knees lost through amputa- | tions, or taken during surgery to fix “trick” knees, New Ears Made From Knees, Using Knee Joint Cartilag Moon Shape, Surgeons Told In Chicage By ALTON L. BLAKESLEE x- The cartilage is quick - frozen and kept in a bone bank until the plastic surgeon needs it to build a new ear to replace one lost by accident, or to give ears to chil- dren born without them. Skin is grafted around the car- tilage to form the artificial ear. The ear cartilage supplies a soft, flexible, normal - feeling ear, said Dr. Leslie H. Backus, University of Buffalo Medical School. * New ears also can be made from rib cartilage, or from things like ivory, rubber or plastics. None give perfect ears, because ° | of difficulties in grafting skin to give all the contours of an ear. The artificial ears are far better than none. They don’t affect hear. ing, for ability to hear depends upon the inner ear. TROPICAL TRADER 718 Duval St. Phone 1000 RATES REASONABLE alee OE VE , Three Flights Daily TO HAVANA ue Arrive Flight Key West Havana 952 -10:15 A.M. 11:00 A.M. 954 1:45 P.M. 2:30 P.M. 956 «= 4:00 PLM. 4:45 P.M. TO KEY WEST Leave Arrive Flight Havana Key West 951 9:00 A.M. 9:45 A.M. 953 «12:30 P.M. 1:15 P.M, 955 = 3:00 PLM. 3:45 PLM. | Phones: 162 - 488 - 1106 THREE HOTELS IN MIAMI at POPULAR PRICES Lecated in the Heart of the City ROOMS for RESERVATIONS with BATH and TELEPHONE Ritz Pershing Hotel Hotel Hotel 132 E. Flagler St. 226. N.E. 1st Ave. 229 N.E. Ist Aye. 102 Re 100 Rooms 80 E Elevator Rooms Heated AEROVIAS “Q” S.A. ROGELIO GOMEZ, Agent \F e With Ears Half- | Reforms Are A Backward Step TUNIS, Tunisia @— A commis sion of leading Tunisians declarec Monday night that Paris ‘propose reforms for this troubled french protectorate represent a backward step for the Tunisian people, Thc commission advised they Bey of” Tunis to rejeet the plan. The French claimed the propos- als by Foreign ‘Minister Robert Schuman would give Tunisians more control of their own govern- ment. A French Resident - General now administers the country, though the aged Bey is the nom- inal ruler. Tunisians have been agitating for independence in a campaign marked hy considerable violence. Dr. J. A. Valdes Specializing in Eye Examination and Visual Training COMPLETE SERVICE ON DUPLICATION of LENSES 20 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN THIS COMMUNITY We Use Bausch and Lomb Products Exclusively °4 Hour Service On Any Eye Glass Prescription OFFICE HOURS: 9 to 12 A. M. 205 P.M. 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Sic |showed he had prepared a pass- | |port and other travel documents | for an extended trip — destination | om .....- ee UN Welcomes Korean Armistice UNITED NATIONS, N. ¥. — | Secretary - General Trygve Lie said Monday night that public opin- | fon in most of the United Nations | would enthusiastically welcome a Korean armistice. arranged ap proximately on the basis of pres nknown, | Rodriguez apparently crossed |the border into France several ldays ago police reported. ANYTHING CONCERNING AUTOMOBILES SEE. THE EXTRA FANCY CALIF. TOMATOES... . . bb. 2% ——— FROZEN FOODS ——— RASPBERRIES LEAN, ESH, REGULAR TASTY, TENDER tte ta | — = 29¢ General Assembly which convenes here Oct. 14, Lie said repeated dis- appointments in the Korean truce negotiations had “given rise to im- patience, resentment and doubt." Most of these reactions appear, he added if the truce were successful.” “If an armistice should be con- eluded in Korea on the basis of approximately the present battle line,”” the 382 + page report said, “available evidence indicates that public opinion in the great major- and EQUIPMENT 126 Duval Street Phone 250 Just received a shipment of EATON AND WHITE AND WYCKOFF STATIONERY SEE OUR BARGAIN COUNTER! MANY ITEMS AT COST METAL AND WOOD DESKS FOR, i “,.. and these, young man, are the uppers ! was on before I developed my business with q loan from City Loan Co.” e You'll find the friendly folks at City Loan are always ready to help you through any financial emergency. Try ‘em! CITY LOAN CO. CAPE ANN BREADED—10-0Z. PERCH FILLET . . pkg. 35c SWANSON'S A LA KING—I1-0Z. CAMPFIRE GATOR ROACH HIVES MARSHMALLOWS ity of member states would wel IMMEDIATE DELIVERY j LLB. ] ite weet cay cot aut| "" Nermages || 524 SOUTHARD ST. 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