The Key West Citizen Newspaper, September 5, 1952, Page 6

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“wage 6 ‘THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Friday, September 5, 1952 JOHNNY DELGADO APPOINTED CAMPAIGN MGR. BY KENNEL CLUB; $300,000 IS RISKED Use Of Track Is Planned During Off- Season The Key West Kennel club today launched its cam- Ppaign for Monroe county votes in the September 30 dog track referendum . through the appointment of Johnny Delgade as cam- . paign manager, Abe Arono- ‘witz, president of the club announced, Aronovitz, who flew in- to Key West yesterday, will ~ spend at least two days each week here during the cam- paign, he said. The track by 500 feet. Between racing sea- sons that can be used by some local group for swimming, regat- is and other ,”” Aronovitz id, “This will be free of charge.” Miami attorney is a band shell the Alcazar, was | went HURRICANE SAFETY RULES BY THE UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU ee ee ee Approaching Hurricane Are by Keep your radio on and listen for late warnings and advisories. Ignore rumors. Rely only on the official Weather Bureau advices 2 and warnings. 3. weather out the storm. Board up windows or put storm shutters in place. When you board up, use good lumber, securely fastened. Makeshift board- ing may do more damage than none at all. Have strong bracing for outside doors. Get in extra food, especially things which can be eaten without cooking or with very little preparation. Remember that electric Get away and stay away from low-lying beaches and other locations which may be swept by high tides or storm waves. If your only passage to high ground is over a road likely to be under water during a severe storm, then leave early. Don’t run the risk of being marooned. Jf your house is up out of the danger of high tide and is well built (securely anchored to foundation and with a good roof also securely fastened), then it is probably the best place to power may be off and you may be without refrigeration. If emergency cooking facilities are necessary, be sure they are in working order. Sterilize the bathtub and fill: it with water. Also sterilize and fill all jugs, bottles, cooking utensils. and other containers, since water service may be disrupted. Even for some time after service has been. restored, it may be wise to boil drinking ‘water, unless you are sure the supply received from the City's mains is safe. Have a flashlight in. working condition and keep it handy. Be sure that a window or door can be opened on the lee side house—the side opposite the one facing the wind: center or “eye” of the sturm passes directly over, there be a lull in the wind lasting from a few minutes to half an hour or more. Stay in a safe place. Make emergency repairs during the lull if necessary, but remember the wind will return suddenly from the opposite direction, frequently with even greater violence, What To Do After The Passage Of A Hurricane: Seek medical care at Red Cross disaster stations or hospitals for persons injured during the storm. Don’t touch loose or dangling wires. Report such damage to the light and power company or to the nearest police officer. Report broken sewer or water mains to the water department. Save water stored in bathtubs and other receptacles until you are sure that a safe water supply has been restored. Guard against food spoilage in mechanical refrigerators if Drive automobiles cautiously. Debris-filled streets are danger- keep your eyes on the road. Along the coast the soil washed from beneath the pavement, which may col- lapse under the weight of vehicles. Be alert to prevent By RADER WINGET NEW YORK #—Quiet week-end seHing pressure depressed the stock market mildly today. around, and steels and motors Tight slong on the downward Lowered water pressure makes fire difficult after storms. Gator Workouts Lanford. all categories the upswing was By The Associated Press Thundering ovations echoed be- hind Dwight D. Eisenhower today as the Republican presidential can- didate carries his “crusade” for world peace into the Midwest. And Gov. Adlai Stevenson flies to Denver to hit back at the Re- publican theme that it’s time for a change. Fresh from a triumphant 2-day air tour of the Southland, Kisen- hower won new plaudits Thursday night from a wildly cheering crowd of 17,500 in Philadelphia’s Conven- tion Hall. They howled approval when’ he declared - America .can lead the world to peace and that “it is a cause for every American.” “Well, then, let’s get going,” he said. “Don’t wait for tomorrow, Let’s get going tonight.” Peace, Eisenhower said, can be achieved only by throwing the “wasters, the bunglers and the incompetents” out of office in Washington. Charging the administration “has bungled us perilously close to World War III,” he said, “we will dedicate ourselves to a pro- “| gram for peace aimed to prevent future Koreas and the honorable end of this Korean War.” The speech marked the formal launching of Eisenhower's cam- paign. This morning the general flies to Chicago for talks with Re- Publican leaders from Illinois, Michigan and Indiana. Tonight he talks with ward and precinct work- ers in Cook County (Chicago). Stevenson’s Denver speech to- night (8 p.m.) will be a departure from the pattern he has been fol- lowing. That pattern has been one of enunciating his own principles, with only occasional sharp digs at the opposition. Up to now Ste- venson had paid little heed to his GOP critics. But in a 9-day air tour of nine Western states, the Democratic nominee intends to carry the fight to the Republicans, answering some of their arguments and at- tempting to mow down some of their major contentions. The ‘Den- ver address will be aimed at the GOP battle cry, “It’s time for a change.” Stevenson’s running mate, Sen. John Sparkman of Alabama, ac- cused Eisenhower of lacking both hindsight and foresight as far as Russian-U, S. relations are con- cerned. He quoted the GOP standard bearer as saying at a Moscow news conference in 1945: “I see nothing -in the future to prevent the United States and Russia from becoming the closest of friends.” The same year, he said, Eisen- hower told a congressional com- mittee that “nothing guides Rus- sian policy so much as a desire ' for friendship with the United States.” Sparkman svid Eisenhower, in his campaigning. forgets his own foreign policy predictions and com- plains of the administration’s poor judgments. Sparkman made the remarks while canpaigning in New Mexico. His Republican opponent for the vice presidency, Sen. Richard Nix- on of California, told a GOP con- vention at Hartford, Conn., that “Eisenhower must be elected to “clean up the mess in Washing- ; | ton.” Election of Stevenson woud mean “bossism in the White House,” he said. Other political developments: Connecticut Republicans today pick their candidate for the short- term Senate seat left vacant by | the death of Sen. Brien McMahon, a Democrat, Prescott Bush, a New York investment banker, is the likely choice over former Con- gresswoman and Author Clare Boothe Luce. Jonathan Daniels, former Demo- cratic national committeeman ‘from North Carolina, said he con- sidered Gov. Allan Shivers of Tex- | as violated a pledge given the Cre- | dentials Committee of the Demo- cratic National Convention in re- fusing to support Stevenson for President. But a Shivers aide, who asked |} that his mame be withheld, said Daniels was “absolutely, siap-dab wrong.” “Shivers” only pledge at the National Convention was to the effect that he would see to it that | the Democratic nominees were on the Texas general election ballot,” At Miami the furniture volome dropped off 28 per cot and 9 at Tampa. Department store sales in- The ! “WEATHERMAN Says cerca Key West and Vicinity: Partly cloudy with scattered showers or thundershowers through Satur- day; little change in temperature. Gentle to moderate northeast and east winds, freshening near thundershowers. Florida: . Considerable _cloudi- ness and occasional showers and thundershowers over north por- tion and partly cloudy with widely scattered afternoon thun- dershowers over south portion through Saturday. Little change in temperature. Jacksonville through the Flor- ida Straits: Moderate, occasional- ly fresh northeast winds over extreme north portion through Saturday. Moderate northeast winds elsewhere becoming gen- tle to moderate northeast to east Saturday. Mostly cloudy in ex- treme north with scattered show- ers and thundershowers. Partly cloudy with widely. scattered showers elsewhere, East Gulf: Gentle to moderate northeast to east winds through Saturday. Cloudy with occasional showers and thundershowers in extreme north and partly cloudy with widely scattered showers and thundershowers elsewhere. Western Caribbean: Light to moderate northeast to east winds through Saturday except vari- able over extreme south portion. Scattered showers. and a few thundershowers, otherwise partly cloudy, ‘Weather Summary for the Tropical Atlantic, Caribbean Sea Area and Eastern Gulf of Mexico: Except for hurricane Baker in the Atlantic there are no tropical disturbances or suspicious areas evident this morning. Winds are mostly gentle to moderate from the east or northeast over the subtropical belt. ADVISORY MIAMI WEATHER BUREAU ADVISORY NO. 15 BAKER 11 A.M., EST., Sept. 5, 1952 The position and estimated Movement in the last two ad- visories was based on very meagre data and was given as too far to the northeast. Recon- naissance aircraft location of the center had not been completed by 11:00 a. m., EST .., 16002... but it was estimated to be near latitude 33.5° N., longitude 71.0° W., or about 300 miles east- southeast of Cape Hatteras. High Pressure to the north is tending to block its northward movement and it is apparently Moving to- wards the north at only 6 or 8 mph. Highest winds estimated 110 mph. and hurricane force winds extend out from the cen- ter 70 miles to the north. A very slow. northward movement at not more than 6 or 8 mph. is ex- pected for the next 12 hours. A northeastward trend is not in evidence at this time, MOORE, Weather Bureau. Observations taken at City Office 9:00 A.M. EST Key West, Fla., Sept. 5, 1952 Temperatures Highest yesterday ___. Lowest last night Mean ____ Normal 91 78 85 83 Precipitation Total last 24 hours _ .03 ins. Total this month _ 1,74 ins. Excess this month -63 ins. Total this year _ 21.83 ins. Deficiency this y 87 ins. Relative Humidity at $00 A.M. 18% Barometer (Sea Le Level) 9:00 A.M. 29.95 ins —1014.2 mbs, _ Tomorrow's Almanac Sunrise 6:10 a.m. Rei: ae p.m. | Moonrise 8:22 p.m. 8:42 a.m. creased 16 per cent at Tampa, 12 jat Jacksonville, 11 at St. Peters- i burg 10 at Miami and ¢ at Or- lando. i TWO SCIENTISTS AT UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA DISCOVER WAY TO' USE ORANGE IN ICE CREAM . T. Lamar Caudle Helps Congress Group Investigate Department He Once Headed War Roundup SEOUL, Korea (#}—Some 20 swift U.N. Sabre jets today shot down three Communist MIGs, probably destroyed one and damaged three, the U. S. Fifth Air Force said. That raised the 2-day toll to 16 MIGs destroyed, one probably, and six damaged. Allied losses, if any, will be re- ported in a week-end summary. The U. S. fliers today engaged the Russian-built MIGs in seven dogfights over North Korea. Other U. N. warplanes plastered a North Korean mining center and supply dumps. U. N. infantrymen and artillery hurled back eight Chinese col- umns which staged desperate new assaults on blood-soaked Bunker Hill in a flareup on the long-dor- mant western front. U. S. Eighth Army staff officers estimated 400 Reds were killed or wounded in two hours of bitter pre- dawn fighting. The Reds stormed through intense defensive fire to within hand-grenade range before their columns were smashed. At sunup, two waves of fighter- bombers hurled 227 tons of explo- sives and fire bombs in 326 sorties against a concentration of ore proc- essing and mining buildings at Sin- hung, in Northeast Korea, the Fifth Air Force said. Pilots re- | ti ported they demolished 35 build- ings and damaged 33. Gen. James A. Van - Fleet, Eighth Army commander, told a news conference Communist troop strength in Korea has increased slightly the past few months to more than a million, Although U. N. air attacks are hurting the Reds, he said, “the enemy has rather ample’ stocks for an offensive.” Van Fleet said, how- nig he does not expect one this all. The ground fighting, within sight and sound of neutral Panmunjom, flared into an infantry-artillery battle. A Chinese division—by Allied es- timate—sent parts of two regi- ments into a serious attack to try to retake Bunker Hill. Guns and mortars thundered on both sides. The Chinese alone fired 3,000 rounds against Allied troops holding the bloody bunkers. Seven straight assaults hit the Allied ridgeline frontally, while an eighth column tried to flank the position from the rear. A U.N, staff officer said “These attacks were made by elements of two regiments, co-ordinated by a division. . . It shows they weren't planned by some glory-hunting bat- talion or regimental commander.” The renewed fighting on Bunker Hill was an ominous warning that the Reds still want the hill back. U. S. Marines stormed the ridge the night of Aug. 11. They broke seven Chinese counter-attacks to hold it the next five days—always under concentrated enemy artil- lery and mortar fire. Although the area involved. is small, the intensity of the assaults | ; has been compared to the savage trench fighting of Flanders in World War L Some Marine vet- erans of World War Ii said that man for man it matched the fury of Tarawa and Iwo Jima, 6-Engine Bombers Flying Again TAMPA (#—B-47 Stratojet bomb- ers which were kept out of the , killing four airmen. Two children were killed by falling WASHINGTON # — T. Lamar Caudle goes behind a judiciary committee’s curtain of secrecy this afternoon to help a congres- sional investigation of the Justice Department he once served as a top official. - The one-time head of the gov- ernment’s criminal and tax pros- ecuting agencies—dismissed last November by President Truman because of outside activities— Bromised his fullest co-operation. Caudle came up with his offer of help after the committee aired charges that high Justice officials had a hand in getting a St. Louis grand jury to go easy with an in- vestigation of tax. scandals there last year. Caudle’s name was mentioned along with those of former Atty.- Gen. J. Howard McGrath and one- time deputy Atty.-Gen. Peyton Ford, among others. Ellis N. Slack, another Justice attorney, has testified he was sent to St. Louis at the direction of Ford. He denied, however, that | he was responsible for a grand jury report to District Judge George H. Moore which one of the jurymen described as “‘a white- wash.” Chairman Chelf (D.-Ky.) re- vealed that Ford, in response to an invitation by the committee to comment on the hearing, wrote a letter in which he denied any wrong-doing in connection with the case. Chelf said Ford told the investi- gators he sent Slack to St. Louis to help, not hinder, the investiga- ion. Caudle already has discussed his connection with the case, Chelf said, ‘‘and so far has given us no information that would specif- ically incriminate any present or former high officials.” News Briefs CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind. — The Rey. Cornelius L. Airhart, 91, Sunday will observe the 70th anni- versary of his ordination with a sermon in Brown’s Valley Primi- tive Baptist Church. NEW YORK #—Bernarr Mac- Fadden, publisher and physical culturist, who celebrated his 84th birthday last week with a para- chute jump near the Seine River in Paris, arrived home today by plane. ROME ®—Count Carlo Sforza, 78, who served Italy in diplomacy for a half century and twice was foreign minister, died Thursday. OMAHA #—Jake Rachman, 68, columnist and drama critic for the Omaha World-Herald and for many years columnist and critie for the Omaha Bee-News, died Thursday. WASHINGTON (#—The National Labor Relations Board today di- rected that certain employes of Hills Brothers Co., Bartow, Fia., hold another election within 30 days to select collective bargain- ing representatives. } | i A ill F) ibe i | é i | | i | i H i | f |! [ Tempts The Eye And Palate With Rich Colors GAINESVILLE — And now— tempting, delicious orange ice cream. : At long last, a satisfactory way of using Florida’s most famous product in the manufacture of America’s favorite dessert has been developed. by two scientists of the University of Florida. The ice cream developed by Walter A. Krienke and Leon E. Mull of the Experiment Station Dairy Laboratory tempts the eye and the palate with its contrasting bright gold and rich cream colors and its flavor combination of tangy orange and vanilla. Pure natural orange juice, with its high Vitamin C content, fresh milk, with its high calcium and Vitamin A, and the ever-popular vanilla are used. Already someone has said the ice cream would be ideal for junior’s breakfast in that he would get calcium, vitamins, and energy foods in one tasty dish. For years folks in the ice cream and citrus industries have been talking about citrus ice cream, and numerous ‘attempts have been made to develop a satisfactory recipe. Up until now, none had turned out satisfactorily for com- mercial production, but Krienke and Mull and those who have sampled their product believe theirs will turn the trick. The big difficulty in the past has been the tartness and acidity of orange juice and the fact that it doesn’t naturally combine with milk, but Krienke and Mull have developed a fruit juice that is al- together compatible with the ren when introduced by their process. Not only have the two scientists worked out a way for making or- ange ice cream, they also have produced flavorsome and colorful lime, tangerine, and lemon ice creams by the same method, Krienke has been invited by the International Association of Ice Cream Manufacturers to tell about it at the organization's annual con- vention in Chicago Sept. 23. Condition Of Perry “Fair” NEW YORK (#—Publisher John H. Perry, head of the John H. Perry Newspapers. was reported in “fair” condition today after be- ing flown here from Paris. Perry, 71, suffered a broken hip Aug. “13 when he fell aboard the liner United States while en route to Madrid, Spain, for the wedding of a son, Farwell W. Perry. Perry, who has a home in Palm Beach and owns several Florida newspapers, was treated at the American Hospital in Paris before being flown back to New York Thursday. He was taken to the Harkness Pavilion upon arrival at Idlewild Airport. John H, Perry Jr., another son, said his father’s condition was “fair—and good enough for tray- Thomes K. McCleary Word has been received here of Knowles. Funeral services will be held Tuesday from White’s Funeral Home, Belle Flower, California, hassee, last year’s Florida State University student president, will be assigned to the Pensacola office. Robert H. Tully, Tallahassee, Florida State University football Maj. Gen. Michael Montgomery Aiston-Roberts-West. of to i Fie Fit grits ii i r r i i &8 5 “a e : i I | i i EEE ict Ff i ie Loh)

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