The Key West Citizen Newspaper, January 21, 1953, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

~ si. i eo Zo UNDERSEAS QUEEN.—Lovely Marna “Toni” Wolfe has been selected as queen of the U.S. Navy Advanced Underseas Weapons School and is a candidate for Queen of the Annual Navy Charity Carnival. She is 18, single, andthe daughter of a Navy..Torpedoman stationed in Key West. For further infor- mation, boys, contact U.S. Navy AUW School at Key West. Please form in an orderly line from the left—Photo' by Fred Cupp. Noon Stock Market Prices NEW YORK (AP) Hupp Cp Atl G Eq 954 TL Cent: Alleghany 4% Int Harv ~ Allis Chal 57% Kresge (SS) Am Alri 14% Kress (SH) : 34% Lehman Cp 41% Ligg & My 53% Lockh Aire 159% Loew's 69. Lorillard 28 Montg Ward 43. Murphy 1184 Murray. Cp Me Nash Kelv hi 554 Packard 16% Penny (JC) 59% Pepsi Cola 39% Phileo 39% Philip Mor Radio Cp Reading Co Reo Mtrs Rexall Drig henley Ind € Chrysler Coca-Cola} Colg Palm Gol. Gas 2WaUn Bag & 32% Un Sarbide 70% tn Oi Cal $9%Ua Pac 59% Unit Airc G79,5Init Fruit BG 3 side boop 75'4"Ves 52\4 Willys Ov 12% Woolworth Gen Milla St Btu Glidden j Goodrich Goodyear | ~ Greyhound SPY CHARGE AGAINST BULGARIAN IN: GREECE ATHENS;*Greece-(?—Press. dis- patches said today a Bulgarian has been arresed in Greece’s north- ern Aegean seaport of Salonika on ¢ -*ges of spying-on U. S. fleet movements for the Bulgarian gen- eral staff. / The reports from Salonika’ said Ivanov. Dimitrov, 24 - year - old Greek-sveaking Bulgar, admitted to security officers he had entered Greece. on a spying mission. A radio transmitter. a code book and a log showing interest in U. S. fleet movements in and out of Greek ports were reported to have been seized. ai LOVELY MISS JUANITA TIF- FANY is being sponsored by the Supply Fiscal Depart- ment of the S. Naval Air Station as a “G « estant for the 1953 Navy ity Car- nival to be held the Sea- plane Base on Feb. 0, and 21. Miss Tif y is ter of AKC fany and i Key West has brown S ja day Ladies Day Returns To .|Golf Course By JACK K. BURKE Sports Feature Writer Ladies’ Day at the Key © West Golf Club is in full swing once 32m | again. Some time back the’ at- tendance dropped off because of the weather and other reasons, but now under the guiding hand of Mrs. Ann Witzel, Mrs. Nell»Lo- pez, and hubby Joe, the fairer sex are again hitting-the’ ball. Yesterday the gals held their own tournament and it proved pop- ular with all 18 participating. Winners of the Class A (low putts) was Julia Nelson with 16; second went to Nell Lopez with 17 followed. by Ann Witzel with 18. Class B winner was Kay Faral- ¥; | do with total score of 54 minus 16 handicap, total 38. Class C winnings were divided 56% | three ways. Virginia Kueberg had ** | a 75 minus 41. handicap, total 34; Pat Freking had 64 minus 30 <; | handicap, total 34; Edith Kossert had 73 minus 39 handicap, total 34, Second place went to Rose- ~ond Refo with 78 minus 43, total | 35. 33 Overall results of the day’s shooting: showed Nell Lopez with # low score of 48. by The balance of the scores are:! Julie Nelson 51, Piedad Archer 53, Ann Witzel 54, Kay Faraldo 54, Pat Harris 55, Maryon Kinsey 57, Hope Marin 58, Rose Gavilan 59, Pat Freking 64, Lou Plumb 68, Lydia Selby 69, Carol Kirk 10, Edith Kossert 73, Virginia Kulberg 75, Rosemond Refo 78, Nancy Mann 84 and Dottie Nickolson n/c. If other lady golfers in this area desire to play in these tourna- ments on Tuesday of every week, contact the club house and give Joe Lopez your name. Gavilan-Cardell ‘Bout Set Tonight Washington, D. C. gets the mid- week nationally televised fight card on Jan. 21 with Kid Gavilan and Vic Cardell providing added action to the Inauguration Week festivities. This 10-round welter- weight match is being offered to the nation’s fight fans on the Blue Ribbon Bouts program over CBS, beginning at 10 p.m., EST. Gavilan, welterweight champion since May, 1951, recently squared the complaints that . arose after his first title defense against |Billy Graham in August, 1951. The Kid soundly trounced the same Billy Graham .in 15 rounds at Havana on October 5, 1952 to get unanimous, unequivocal recog- nition as the best of the. 147 Ib. jclass. This bout with Cardell is serving as an in-the-ring condi- jtioner for his next title defense jagainst Chuck Davey in Chicago fon February 11th. Cardell, of Hartford, Conn, is entering his seventh year of | professional boxing. He will be |meking his second appearance in a Blue Ribbon TV Bout having last appeared two vears ago j against Ike Williams. The young- | ster has been a worthy jover the years for all the welter- jweight big-shots, including Ba- isilio, Turner, Herring, Minelli jand Ike Williams. This non-title jencounter with the champion sizes up as an “everything-to- gain, nothing-to-lose" proposition ana (or Cardell | Chicago uses 2,000 tons of cosl The WEATHERMAN — Key West and Vicinity: Partly cloudy to cloudy with indications of scattered showers or thunder- showers prior to frontal passage. Warm and humid today, clearing and colder Thursday, Moderate to fresh southerly becoming norther- ly winds by Thursday. Florida: Considerable cloudiness and scattered showers and thun- dershowers clearing over extreme north this afternoon. Thursday clear to partly cloudy. Cooler north and central portions tonight beginning in extreme north this afternoon. Slightly cooler south portion tonight and Thursday. Jacksonville thru the Florida Straits: Moderate south and south- west winds shifting to northerly extreme north portion this after- noon becoming north to northeast elsewhere tonight. Moderate north to northeast winds Thursday. Con- siderable cloudiness and scattered showers and thundershowers to- day. Thursday clear to partly cloudy weather. . East Gulf: Moderate south to southwest winds occasionally fresh north portion shifting to northerly over north portion this afternoon and elsewhere tenight. Gentle to moderate northeast winds Thurs- day. Cloudy and clearing in north portion this afternoon and else- where Thursday. Western Caribbean: Moderate southeast and east winds tonight and Thursday. Clear to partly cloudy weather. Key West, Fia., Jan. 21, 1953 Observations taken at City Office 9:00 A.M. EST ‘Temperatur es Highest yesterday ... Lowest last night ... Mean Normal Precipita' Total last 24 hours Total this month .. Deficiency this month .. Total this year . Deficiency this year .... Relative Humidity at 9:00 A.M. 90% 3.82 ins. 2.58 ins. 3.82 ins. 2.58 ins. Barometer (Sea Level) 9:00 A.M. 30.04 ins.—1017.3 mbs. .} at 8:30 p.m. when the .{ orators of Cuba will gather and . | offer addresses on the life of Mar- . | ti. In addition, entertainment from Moonset ‘ (First Quarter Moon Jan. TOMORROW'S 2) (Naval Base HIGH 2:46 a.m. 2:28 p.m. 000 ADDITIONAL TIDE DATA Reference Station: Key West Time of Height of y) Low 7:40 a.m. 9:54 p.m. Key (east end). —+-2h 20m Chica Station— Tide high water Sandy Pt.) —oh 40m Caldes Channel (north end) +2h 10m TEMPERATURES "AT 7:30 A.M., EST Atlanta .. Augusta Billings at : 30} good condition both before the pick- Ladies May Attend Dinner Thursday Because of the great demand from the ladies, arrangements have been made whereby wives attend the Thursday night ner meeting of the Presby- terian Men‘s group. Tickets may be Purchased by contacting Mrs. Raiph Noble, 1101 Truman Ave., phone 2-5711. Speaker for the meeting is R. W. Wall, Jr., FB! agent from Mia Passengers Think Boat Mishap Is Part Of The Fun BRADENTON ® — A charter fishing boat ran aground in deep fog near here Tuesday night but for the 60 passengers aboard it was just a lark. Two other fishing craft took them safely ashore and they never were in danger. Their 65-foot boat, the Capt. An- derson II, remained stuck fast in a sandbar a quarter mile off Anna Maria Island in the Gulf of Mexi- co and only two to three miles from its home port. Capt. Joe Pennington and his crew of four stayed aboard. A Coast Guard cutter stood by to ral the boat off at high tide to- lay. Names of the passengers were not available. The water was calm, the weather mild and they were close enough to shore to realize they were not in peril. All were Galveston Jacksonville Kansas City SY WEST... Key West Airport ..... Louisville New Orleans .... |New York ....... Norfolk on Okla. City ... Pensacola Pittsburgh -... | Roanoke | St. Louis ; San Antonio San Francisco . Tallahassee - Tampa ... Washington TRACK OPENING (Continued from Page One) jtrack customers will also run jnightly starting at 7-00 p. m Over one hundred employees, 85 per cent of them Key have been retained by the Ken just for the generation of | Club for the duration of the racing ! electricity. t meeting. Westers . adults except a 6-year-old boy. The Mobjack, captained by Steve Goodrich; and the Tomahawk, un- der Capt. Andy Rasmussen, took the passengers ashor TOP CUBAN OFFICIALS (Continued trom Page One) Grand Masters of Key West’s Ma- sonic Lodges. At 11:00 a.m. the group will go to Bayview Park and to the City Cemetery where floral offerings will be made at Marti’s statue and at the Maine Plot. The dedication of the, cemetery monument will take place at noon. The Key West high school band will play throughout the proceed- ings. In the evening, at 6:00 p.m., there will be a Spanish language movie, free to the public at the San Carlos Theatre. The San Carlos Institute will be the scene of a huge patriotic rally foremost Cuba will be offered. Key West born pianist Miguel Mariscal will also perform at the meeting. MYSTERIOUS FLYING (Continued from Page One) pearance or brilliance of the ob- ject and its color scheme.” The object increased speed and Baleslee made a_ second ap- vanished in 30 seconds. proach, five minutes later, with all lights on. This time the object disappeared in five seconds. The Air Force said a rotating cluster Jan. 9 near an air ‘base in northern Honshu “was observed visually by a pilot of an F-94 jet interceptor for approximately one minute ... Radar contact for ap- proximately two minutes was veri- fied by both members of the crew.” The F-94 carries a radar observer. The report called the object ‘“‘a j light that appeared tc continuously change in color from red to white | to green.” | The pilot, Lt. Melvin E. Conine hometown unavailable) said, “I immediately turned into the light but lost sight of it sbortly after ... 1 searched the area but made no further contact.” The radar observer, 2nd Lt. Walter D. Lawley Jr., of Tusca- loosa, Ala., said the radar “blip was unlike regular return usually gotten from another aircraft, be- ing very weak and fuzzy instead of sharp. The radar set was in up and after.” resentative of our company will be glad to assist yeu with your financial problems. SAVE TIME By CALLING 2.5684 = ~ 40wai Filmuice Uo. Of Key West WA Duvai Ph. 2-560 Today’s Stock Market NEW YORK w—Steadiness: pre- vailed today in the stock market as the list held tightly to gains made yesterday during the Eisen- hower inauguration, A ‘great Many leading issues remained unchanged from the pre- vious close. Changes either way were largely in the smaller frac- tions. Packard Motor Car, which has been the most active issue in the list for the past six sessions, start- ed off today with a block of 0,500 shares unchanged at 6% and con- tinued trading at that high for 1952-53. Advancing were Canadian Pacif- ic, U. S. Gypsum, Homestake Mining, Studebaker, and Douglas Aircraft. Lower were Southern Railway, Westinghouse Electric, Internation- al Paper, Republic Steel, Goodrich, and Sears Roebuck. SOVIET PUBLICATION BLASTS BEN-GURION MOSCOW (®—A leading Soviet Publication today blasted Israel’s Premier David Ben-Gurion, For- eign Minister Moshe Sharett and late President Chaim Weizmann as tools of American-British im- perialism. A long editorial in the foreign affairs weekly New Times also charged the Zionists with support- ing a policy to establish “bloody, Fascist regimes permeated by a spirit of racial bigttry, including anti-Semitism.” It _was the most severe attack on Zionism yet to appear in the Soviet press. KEY WEST AQUARIUM (Continued from Page One) Key Westers have never seen one of the marin monstrs, he added Eight men were required to tran- sfer the huge turtle to the tank he occupies at the aquarium. He was first raised on the winch of the shrimp boat and then transfer- red to a truck and lifted into the tank where he began his enraged battle against captivity. His arrival there has created something of a personality clash, It seems that “Jumbo”, a 350- pound green turtle who has been a favorite of th eaquarium staff for five years and who shares the tank with Meatball has objected to the invasion of her privacy. Where formerly she was very tame, she will now have nothitig to do with the staff and has not eaten for two days in a petulant display of temperament. Known scientifically as the “Der- mochelys Coriacea”, the species is the largest of all turtles, reaching a weight of over 1500-pounds. SCHOOL ATTENDANCE {Continued from Page One) the State Board of Health in Jack- sonville said Tuesday that some kind of cold virus seems to be spreading over the state, but it is not known what it is. Dr. L. L. Parks, director of the bureau of preventable diseases, said, “If it were real influenza we'd expect some deaths from it. So far, none has been reported.” The board has sent virus speci- mens to the U. S. public Health Service in Montgomery, Ala. The Service says that a few days will be necessary to complete the tests. MARCH REPORTS (Continued from Page One) ty Superintendent of schools and non-paid Board Members as a | method of improving education by | removing some of the political in- | fluences. They reported a need for a higher salary scheduled for the purpose of keeping the teachers we already have/in Florida. At present, the states from which we used to obtain teachers are now paying them more than Florida and our teachers are returning to | their home states and some Flori-} da teachers are also leaving Flo- | rida for higher salaries. Business transacted at the Coun- cil meeting were the election of the following slate of officers for the ensuing year: Leland S. March, president; Mrs. Amelia Camus, vice presi- dent; Tony Martinez, treasurer. The Board of Directors includes the officers and Judge Thomas S. CAro, Judge Eva Warner Gibson, David McCurdy, Ed Schweitzer, Louis Rockoff, Dr. Lucille Caver- ly, and Mrs. Mary Milner. The plans for detention facilities for juveniles in the County Jail were discussed with the proposed plans to be presented to the County Commission. All civic organizations and ser- vice organizations are requested to send a representative to all future meetings of the Juvenile Council to keep them informed on what is being done for the benefit of children in Monroe County. More twins are born with both of the same sex than with one twin a boy and the other a girl. BE QUICK Chronic bronchitis may develop if your cough, chest cold, or acute bronchitis is not treated and you cannot afford to take a chance with any medicine less potent than Creomulsion which- 5 beaasd the bronchial system to help mand expel germ laden phlegm and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed, bronchial membranes, Creomulsion blends beechwood creosote by special process with other time tested medicines for coughs. It contains no narcotics. No matter how many medicines you have tried, Creomulsion is guaranteed to please you or druggist refunds pootied Creomulsion has stood the test of many millions of users. (Adv.) WHY PAY RENT? We offer an excellent two bedroom home with tile bath, large kitchen with breakfast area, living room—din- ing room combination, utility room, and large screen porch. Yes, the yard is a-beautiful choice corner lot. PRICED RIGHT FOR IMMEDIATE SALE — $9,750.00 - $3,050 CASH Balance Only $59.00 A Month JOHNSON & JOHNSON 419 DUVAL STREET PHONE 2.2831 ASK FOR KNIGHT JOHNSON — SALESMAN Overseas Transportation Company, Inc. Fast, Dependable Freight and Express Service MIAMI between AND’ KEY WEST Also Serving ALL POINTS ON FLORIDA KEYS Between Miami and Key West Express Schedule (No Stops En Route) LEAVES KEY WEST DAILY (EXCEPT SUNDAYS) at 6:00 P.M. Arrives at Miami at 12:00 o'clock Midnight. 4 LEAVES MIAMI! DAILY (EXCEPT SUNDAYS) at 12:00 o’clock Midnight and arrives at Key West at 6:09 o'clock A.M. Local Schedule LEAVES KEY WEST DAILY (EXCEPT SUNDAYS) at 8:09 o'clock A.M. and (Stops At All intermediate Points) — at Miami at 4:08 o'clock P.M. M. LEAVES MIAMI DAILY (EXCEPT SUNDAYS) at 9:60 o'clock AM. and arrives at Key West at 5:00 o'clock P...... 1.2. 5 7~ as 7S FULL CARGO INSURAN MAIN OFFICE and WARFMOUSE: Cor. Eaten and Frarcis Sts. AL 2-706) i Wednesday, January 21, 1953 THE KEY aes CITIZEN Page d pe Sa 3 tarry CAs Bs “I do wish you'd get loan trem CITY LOAN for a new bed! You/wake me-every time you fall thrgugh that one. put your mind ills, They're wlieve in helping you.\ AG CITY LOAN CO. OF KEY WEST 524 SOUTHARD ST. DIAL 2.5681 FOR HOME or COMMERCIAL USE... We Are Prepared To Furnish You With Clear, Pure Cube Crushed ICE Thompson Enterprises, Inc. (ICE DIVISION) DIAL 2-6831 KEY WEST, FLORIDA Above is pictured Richard Stimps, who after 3% years of factory training with the J. Bean Visualiner equipment is now in charge of the Visualiner department at Navarro, Inc. This process is your guarantees of perfect front end Front Wheel Balance, Including Weights $8.95 MAVARRO, INC. DIAL 2-7041 Front End Correction, $03 DUVAL ST. . ner ent on ae cad the Classified Ads ia The Citizen

Other pages from this issue: