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SOCIETY Happy Couple a Maid’s Night Out By RAYMER “MONKEY BUSINESS” at San Carlos Theatre, The plot isn’t exactly new, but that doesn’t stop the laughter. Here is one of the funniest comedies of the year with thos old hands Cary Grant and Ginger Rogers squeezing every antic and line of the rol- licking fun. Cary is an absent minded research man who is hot on the trail of an elixir which will -juvenate. His spur of the moment is Charles Coburn, his boss. Mari- lyn Monroe comes in for her share of the scenes and a look at her ‘jusually requires no elixir for the ;|Men. Citizen Stait Photo NEWLYWEDS MR. AND MRS. JOSE A. CISNEROS pose the wedding cake at the reception following their cember 20 at the home of the Oscar Milian of 1100 Whitenead Ti bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Street where the r also took place. The groom is a Naval hospital employee. They will be at home after Wednesday at 404 Grinnell Street. Round Up Of Christmas Festiviiy Includes Reunions And Receptions Yuletide parties lent sparkle to the past week with its happy | holiday mood. Some were open house affairs, others smaller family | group gatherings, All were festive and in keeping with the joyful homecoming of relatives and visitihg friends. Army Wife Faces Court Martial TOKYO (# — The court martial of Mrs, Dorothy K. Smith, charged with murdering her colonel hus- band, will begin Jan. 5 in Tokyo, the Army announced today. Mrs, Smith is the daughter of Gen. Walter Krueger, Pacific war ~ hero, and former Sixth Army com- mander. Her husband, Col. Aubrey Smith, was stabbed in the right side with a hunting knife about midnight Oct. 3. He died in a few hours. The stabbing O¢curred in the Smith’s Tokyo home:' ‘ ° Coming Events MONDAY, DECEMBER 29— Alcoholics Anonymous, Key West} group, meeting at 8 p.m. Special preview of new art ex- hibit at East Martello Tower, 8 p.m. for Key West Art and Historical Society members and guests. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30— Kiwanis Club, dinner meeting 6:30 p.m. Youth Yor Christ Bible Study Methodist Church, 729 Flem- ing street, 7:30 p.m. Ft. Taylor Duplicate Bridge Club, 7:45 p.m. Beginners’ Bridge Group, Ft Taylor Officers Club, 8 p.m. Opening to the public of Con- temporary American Gulf Coast Art Association exhibit at East Martello Gallery, daily from noon to 5 p.m. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 31— Navy Wives’ Bowling League, Naval Station Alleys, 1 p.m. Meeting, Junior Ch. Commerce at clubhouse, 8 p.m. Island City Navy Wives Club No. | 88, meeting at Bldg. 178. 10:30 a.m, Ladies Golf Tournament. K. W. Golf course, 9 a.m. Handicraft Group, Naval Station Libraty, 2nd floor, 8 p.m. THURSDAY, JANUARY 1— HAPPY NEW YEAR! MOST MEETINGS SLATED FOR THIS DATE ARE CANCELL- ED. CALL YOUR ORGANI- ZATION PRESIDENT TO CONFIRM ANY MEETING, FRIDAY, JANUARY 2— Old Fashioned hymn sing fellowship program, Poinciana Baptist Church, 8:30 p.m. Knights of Pythias, meeting at Pythian Hall, 728 Fleming, Appearing in the floor show will be a number of local high school students who have demonstrated their talents in several shows ear- lier this season. Basil Tynes and Marna Wolfe will repeat some of their popular pantomimes. The Cuban band which was a hit in the High School operetta, “In Gay Havana,” will appear again with authentic Cuban cos- tumes, instruments, and music. In the band are Robert Lastes, is also the vocalist, John nell, Aldo Vidal, and Mari Shirley Trudeau's of Dagmar reading ‘‘A Visit from St. Nicholas,” which was heard in the Senior Class Christmas show, will be on the bill. A comedy dance from the same show, featuring three hillbilly dolis in “A Barn- yard Christmas,” will also be seen. These dancers are Dal. Mitchell, a Perez, and Dolores Tay- or, The Barbershop Quartet the Sophomore Class Conch € rs will sing in true Gay Nineties style and costume. The quartet members are Jack McDonough, Burhl Knopp, Carl Graham, and Ray Hand. There will be orchestras, Stanley’ The setting for the dance is the | La Concha’s colorful Rainbow | Room. : NAT'L GEOGRAPHIC’S (Continued from Page One) plant. The pool is st ed with} water-hyacinths. j Marden took ov: tographs. Mrs. R Gene Otto, who wai charge of the show, c re-checked with the pl writer on every detail. The cle and are exquisite, but in con the elaborate show it the work which Marden, by Key Westers, put irt posed story, the exactly from music by one of them two Mark | 500 color pho- Goulet and} in over-all} reflect er a and | + 3 p.m. * Fern Chapter, No. 21, Order of Eastern Star, Scottish Rite Temple, 8 p.m Officers’ Club, Fern Chapter No. 21. O.E.S. 8 p.m. Key West Amateur Radio Club. National Guard Armory, p.m. SATURDAY, JANUARY 6— 7:30 Youth for Christ Rally. Fleming, . Street Methodist Church, Fleming Street, 7:30 p.m. Apply To Wed Raymond A. Mathieu, 21, USS Jack W. Wilke, and Claudia Johnson, 25, 506 Fi have applied for a at the office of County Judge Ray mond R, Lord. ‘jaround for a formula, Anyway, while Grant is fumbling a very “muggsy” chimpanzee gets out of its cage and with broad saitre, unconscious on the ape’s part, imitates a scientist mixing up a batch of potent brew. The chimp |puts the result in a water jar. You ean guess the next move. Grant i|takes some of his own formula, followed by a drink of the magic i| water. ina few minutes he has the im- i|pulses of Joe College. He gets a crew haircut, a loud sports jacket, doesn’t need his thick lensed glass- s and is a real Hotrod Harry jin a snappy little car with Marilyn in tow. The effect wears off and he becomes himself, the staid, serious professor again. . .but the wife, Ginger that is, doesn’t want him to go in for any more experi- ments with the blonde around. She takes the stuff which is believed to be the formula, swallows the water which really contains the youth-giving stuff. . .and then takes off in a wild flight of juvenile emotion. She gets her poor tired husband off on a second honey- moon, . .and therein lies the most hilarious of all the sequences of funfestival. It gets more hilarious as time goes on and the two revert to childhood days playing Indian, fighting and squabbling in the way of the very young who like each other but don’t want to admit it. Howl of the show is when Ginger finds a baby in her bed and thinks her husband has gone back to in- \fant’s stage. There’s a slapstick ending with all the laboratory crew and the }chimpanzee having a last spree just before the formula goes down the drain. It’s ‘not a plausible plot, of course, but its’s potent and won- ‘derfully relaxing. DEATH MRS. ROSA CASADO Mrs. Rosa Casado, 67, died Sat- urday night at Monroe General Hospital after a long illness. Funeral services will be hled to- day at the residence, 1208 Varela St., at 5 p. m. with the Rev. Manuel Figueroa of the Cuban Methodist Church officiating. Survivors include the husband, Federica Casado, Sr.; three sons, Federica Casado, Jr., Manuel Ca- sado, and Pedro Casado; two daughters, Mrs. Dulce Hopkins and Mrs. Leduvina Molina; five grandchildren and eight great grandchildren. HEART DISEASE (Continued from Page One) percentage breakdown there is no way to compare the Monroe county death rates with those of other counties. Infant deaths have been teadily dropping since 1941 so that ewide there are 33 per thou- sand today compared with the |national rate of 29 per thousand. nal death rates are 1.4 per jousand live births, compared to the national rate of .8 per thou- nd, The report shows progress in control of various diseases through- out the state. An all time low was -|reached in TB control. Only 513 -|persons died in Florida. Herat disease the number one killer is getting new attention from the Florida Board of Health. The Naval School of Aviation Medicine and the State Board of ‘Health started in 1949 to study a/ presentative sample of school children in Pensacola to determine if there were many cases of un- wn heart disease; and also es- standards for electro car- m and heart size in healthy iren 10 to 20 years of age. 2800 children have been ex- and 22 were found to have | heart disease. These ex- tions confirmed the belief tie fever is found much n hern states than areas. s Key Sewage Treatment nd Peary Court’s are both ed in sanitary engineering. St project is designed to 0 persons, according to report; the second to serve ) i Ss control researchers 3 1 a ten per cent increase ts, two psychiatric Ts and three psychia- s are circular son; curly hairs are oval. Rockets May Soon Reach Point Of No Return In Flight By ELTON C. FAY AP Military Affairs Reporter WASHINGTON — American rocket experts and military scien- tists are moving closer to the time when they can fire a missile so high it will never return to. earth. The latest hint of this step to- ward the eventual development of an experimental satellite to move around the earth as does the moon came in a recent address by Sec- retary of the Air Force Finletter. The secretary said he foresees the development of rocket engines producing 500,000 pounds of thrust. With such a propelling force, he an hour will be reached. The alti- tudes reached by such rockets “will, of course, take them out into space,” he added. This estimate was somewhat un- der the 25,000 miles an hour which many scientists estimate will be required to accelerate a rocket to the point where momentum would carry it across the boundary of earth’s gravity. The first objective in creation of an unmanned, artificial satellite would be to provide an eye-in-the- sky with which to watch what hap- pened anywhere in the Northern Hemisphere as the satellite orbited estimated, a speed of 20,000 miles | Marshall Islands HONOLULU \%—The Hawaiian Sea Frontier reports a typhoon hit Eniwetok Island yesterday and caused some damage but “no seri- ous casualties.” mid-Pacific base for testing atomic and other secret weapon: A Navy spol sage from the island, 10:13 p.m., EST, last night, ported most of the island was un- quired. Will keep you advised.” . A kind of camera ically to the earth say. While scientists think they have solved many of the maj i neering projects artifical satellite aloft and on sta- tion in space, it would cost big y. Estmates range from nparatively modest un- manned satellite. But the building of a test missile to prove whether an object can be fired into ‘space presumably will cost considerably less. It probably is much nearer attainment. Subscribe to The Citizen Typhoon Strikes In! There are about 500 U. S. mili-| {tary personnel on the island, a re- | der water. A later message said, | “No im mediate assistance re--| would serve as the eye, scientists | i- | 1 BASKETBALL RESULTS COLLEGE BASKETBALL By The Associated Press HOLIDAY FESTIVAL (First Round) {Depaul 63 La Salle 61 Utah State 67 NYU 61 Manhattan 75 Cincinnati 60 _|Miami (Ohio) 68 St. Johns (Bkn) BIG 7 TOURNEY | (First Round) Yale 56 Colorado 54 Kansas State 93 Oklahoma 69 SOUTHWEST CONF. TOURNEY | (First Round) Arkansas 68 Arizona 51 Southern Methodist 57 Texas A&M | OTHER GAMES }Towa 69 California 6¢ | Oregon 66 Wisconsin 64 nois 87 Ohio State 62 tre Dame 63 Butler 49 lich. State 52 Northwestern 47 ulsa 66 Idaho 56 " |Marquette 88 Bradley 77 itt 72 Harvard 48 | Seattle 90 St. Josephs (Pa) 77 Eastern Ky. 69 Brigham Young 67 rth Carolina, State 96 Dartmouth 0 Columbia 65 Miami (Flay 59 | West Virginia 71 Syracuse 63 Fordham 69 Temple 58 St. Marys (Calif) 68 Canisius 57 {Seton Hall 67 Iona 54 Monday, December 29, 1952 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Page § Gators Star Center Will Not Start In Cage Tournament JACKSONVILLE BEACH, Fla. w—Florida’s star center Riek Casares won't be on hand-he’s being saved for football-but the Gators still rule as favorites in the Gator Bowl Basketball Tourna- ment opening here tonight. Other teams in the event, one of the features of the annual Gator Bowl sports festival, are Georgia, Georgia Tech, and Georgia Teach- ers College. record, and Georgia Teachers, play at 7:30 p. m. Florida, and Georgia Tech, 0-3, clash in a second game. | The winners meet Tuesday night for the tournament championship now held by Florida. Standout players who will be in action include Curt Cunkle and Sonny Powell, Florida Pete Silas, CCNY 81 Tufts 58 UCLA 69 Oregon State 61 Sou. Cal. 65 Wash. State 47 Wichita 94 Springfield (Mass) 74 Chicago Loyola 75 St. Thomas (Minn) 44 San Francisco 87 Fresno State 74 Stanford 67 Los Angeles Loyola 57 Georgia, which has a 3-3 season's } Georgia Tech Zippy Morocca, Georgia; and Horace Belflower, Georgia Teachers. There has been speculation that Casares would play both in the basketball tournament and for Florida in the Gator Bowl football game against Tulsa. Football Coach Bob Woodruff, however, de- cided it would be best to confine his fullback to football. GEORGE LE MAY (Continued from Page One) awaiting action by the coroner's jury. Homestead Peace Justice Vernon Turner will call the inquest tomorrow probably. No warrant has been filed against young Bar- ker as yet. He is being held merely on investigation of murder. The international ramifications of the disappearance of young Huguette LeMay were the last Puzzles worked on by the now dead former deputy. Barker had made his name known through- out the world when he worked on the slaying of Harry Oakes in the Bahamas. The arrival of George LeMay in Monroe county may or may not touch off a reconvening of the Grand Jury which made an in- conclusive report on the LeMay case last spring. At that time Bar- ker testified in secret before the grand jury. Now his complete files of the case are with State. Attorney Santa Clara 58 San, Jose State 42|J. Lancelot Lester. | Enjoy... 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