The Key West Citizen Newspaper, June 4, 1953, Page 7

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)

Thursday, June 4, 1953 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN EISENHOWER PLEDGES “NO APPEASEMENT” Page 7|8 Hundreds to choose from! Get’ Ready For Your Vacation With A RELIABLE USED- CAR 1951 Dodge, 4-dr. Sdn. Here you are, Dad, as tne. 1948 Mercury, Cony. Cpe. Tremendous get-a-way power at your com- mand, 1950 Plymouth, Suburban _____ 134 You won't have to cram the fam 1949 Chrysler, 4-dr. Sdn. 124 Not a noise mai 1950 Austin _ 7 Talk about jazzy! 1938 Plymouth, 4-dr. > The car with character. 1948 Pontiac, Sedan __-.---.......-__-- 3 A family’s best friend. 1947 Plymouth, Sedan a, A good tall man’s car. 1946 Plymouth, 4-dr. Sdn. a A busy businessman’s best bet 1947 Studebaker, Sedan A genuine gas saver. 1949 Chevrolet, Truck Easy to buy, if you get here 1950 Chevrolet, Suburban __ When you own a station wagon, you rate. 1946 Ford, Sedan _ Stop looking, this is it. 1949 DeSoto, 4-dr. A lot of car for a little money. 1951 Plymouth, Tador __- Sure starting engine, for the man n who uses his car every Rater; Sedan ee car gives you amazing s: Morris Minor, Conv. Put the top down and let the world g go by. Plymouth, Cl. Cpe. -. ss No strain, No pain, Lo pric Chevrolet, 4-dr. _____ Priced to fit your family budg Nash, Rambler -. = Ready to go North—it ‘s even n pointed that way. Plymouth, Suburban Come to the Biggest, for the Best. Plymouth, 4-dr, _. ‘ Our motto: Keep them low, sell them fast. Studebaker, 2-dr. We have only three prices—low, lower, and lowest. Plymouth, 4-dr. Why anyone would want to p beauty like this is hard to und Plymouth, Suburban Our doctor (of Mechanics) says, Dodge, 2-dr. There is no sul you're buying a car. Plymouth, 4-dr. _. Hates the sight of repair shop: Chevrolet, Pick-up 1951 1952 1950 1949 1951 1950 1951 1951 1949 109 . &z payments. 1949 1951 1949 1946 1950 7.00 7.00 7.00 47.00 897.00 697.00 447.00 447.00 897.00 1197.00 7.00 1197.00 1047.00 1297.00 1397.00 1397.00 1397.00 This one hasn't been away y from its mother very long. 1946 1951 Buick, 2-dr. _ Fits any size family. Chrysler, 4-dr. _.._. ‘ Cash and carry—this one‘ll carry you any- where and you don’t need much cash. Plymouth, Suburban _....------ ss: 139 This one’s travel happy. Studebaker, 2-dr. 109 Start that trip today. Our cars are ready to go. Chrysler, Cl. Cpe. - 279 The winnah! Yes sir, it’s a dashing thoroughbred. Dodge, 4-dr. Sdn. - 269 Save money on your vacation trip. Dodge, Panel Truck Always dependable, ready to go. Ford, Panel -_. A motor that perks along. with plenty of spark in the spark plugs. Chrysler, 4-dr. - Smooth - swift - silent, like gliding on a breeze. Mercury, 4-dr. Bee Packed with power. Ford, 2-dr. 149 Does everything but sit up ‘and beg. Wag. you can count on, Chevrolet, 4-dr, Why drive a worry wagon? Chevrolet, Belaire The kind of appointments women appreciate. Plymouth, Cl. Cpe. Style with a capital S. Chevrolet, Panel Truck Brings you home refreshed. Plymouth, 4-dr, You can’t drive this car to a funeral, but who wants to go to a funeral? Dodge, Panel Truck 1950 1950 1952 1953 1950 1946 1946 1951 1951 1949 1950 1952 1950 1949 1946 109, 189 119. 19 1948 59 797 7.00 7.00 7.00 7.00 7.00 397.00 7.00 7.00 347.00 7. 5.00 7.00 5.00 7.00 7.00 7.00 A DEPENDABLE truck Is your best INSURANCE. 1950 1950 Plymouth, 4-dr. LONG on SERVICE, Studebaker, 2-dr. If this baby was going to have a rattle, it * would have it by now. Pontiac, Sedan ‘The one we'd keep personally, ‘if we didn’t have a car already. Ford, Victoria “Groovy” that’s what the girls will when they see this one. 119 109 1937 1951 169 say 197 7.00 7.00 00 7.00 NAVARRO, Inc. USED CAR LOT 424 SOUTHARD STREET Telecast Gives | Fireside Chat | New Dimension | ‘By ED CREAGH | WASHINGTON (® — Dwight D. | Eisenhower inaugurated a new era jof presidential contact with the people last night—pledging on a |“family circle” telecast there | would be no appeasement of com- munism and “no risk of a general | war.”” | Surrounded by four members of j his official family, and inviting his | millions of television watchers to think of themselves as fellow- | dwellers in “the national house,” | Eisenhower gave these assurances |in a precedent-setting White House |report to the nation: | “We are going to keep our tem- |per; we are going to build our | strength.” “We are not going to cripple this {mation and we are going specific- | ally to keep up its air power.” | “Our effort is to secure peace— and prosperity in peace.” So, in easy conversational style, and passing the ball repeatedly to |his Cabinet aides, Eisenhower met {head on the accusations aired in Congress only a few hours before that his Air Force budget cuts are imperiling the nation’s security, He did more than that: By in- | troducing the TV presidential panel | Program, with free technical advice from some of the highest-priced | advertising experts in the business, |he gave a new dimension to the “fireside chat” invented by Frank- lin D, Roosevelt and adapted for radio and television, now and then, |by Harry S. Truman, Eisenhower’s audience, estimat- jed in TV circles at 50 millions, saw little hint of the backstage paraphernalia—the three red-eyed TV cameras, the big white cards with the panel members’ cues, the glaring lights. And, naturally, they }saw nothing of the two intensive earlier rehearsals designed to ;make the show look spontaneous |and unrehearsed, They saw and heard the Prest- dent, a little fidgety at first but calm as you please later, lean on |his desk and talk . . . tell them, |with a reference to the 1938 con- | cessions to Adolf Hitler that sowed tie seeds of the last world war tand became a symbol of appease- | ment: | “There is going to be no new | Munich and at the same time there jis going to be no risk of a general | war, because a modern war would |be too horrible to contemplate.” Then they saw him, rather like a principal introducing the teach- ers on parents’ visiting day, intro- |duce the four department heads. | George M. Humphrey, secretary of the Treasury, spoke first. He |said—as he has said before—the | budget should be balanced a year | from now unless the Russians upset | the applecart. And that, if Congress |keeps the excess profits tax for | another six months, there'll be a }tax cut for everybody, at the be- | ginning of next year. | “Mr. Secretary,” said Eisen- |hower, “I endorse every single |word you say.” | Then, with the camera moving swiftly, Eisenhower introduced the others to say their pieces—Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby, chic in a blue outfit with pale blue perky hat; | Secretary of Agriculture Benson, |promising a “grass roots” ap- |proach to the farm surplus prob- |lem; Atty. Gen. Brownell; prom- lising to uproot every bad security risk in the government “‘in the next few months.” Nobody talked very long. Charts and graphs appeared on the screen in profusion, to hold the attention of TV watchers. For further variety, Eisenhower fished a letter from a pile of 3,000 that he said flooded into the White House in a single week. It was from a Pawtucket, R. I., housewife—not named—who said the government's sj are so huge she finds it almost impossible to grasp them “EL might tell the lady,” hower said dryly, “so do Many a member of Congress | wheat moulding and crops spoil-| watched this panel production— which, the President said, is the) first of a series. Republicans generally found it Grade A “An exceptional presentation,” | said Sen. Carison (R-Kan). “Clear, understanding,” said House Speaker Joseph W. Martin (R-Mass). Democrats were less ready to cheer “1 don't see anything to com- ment on,” said House Democratic Leader Rayburn (D-Tex 1), however a very effec advertising agency ts assistance in e telecast i was one of our best Saud ef security a ms nding figures | Eisen- H Pravda Criticizes Soviet Theaters MOSCOW — The Communist party newspaper Pravda severely criticized two of the Sviet Union’s outstanding drama theaters today for failing to be a model to other Russian theaters in developing new plays. The paper said all kinds of good new plays are need- ed. The editorial blasts were aimed at the Moscow Art and Moscow. Maly Theaters. Pravda complained that playwrights do not get close enough to life, that their plays too frequently do not have a ring of reality about them. “It is time for the theaters and dramatists to remember,” Pravda declared, “that no matter how great is the love of the audience for the theater, they will not at- tend bad and boring plays.” Anti-Semitism Charge Lodged CHICAGO #—The World Jewish Congress today accused the Com- munist regime of East Germany of a vicious anti-Semitism causing Jews to live in térror. Events of the last three months show conclusively that Jews of East Germany are being singled out for discriminatory treatment, said the report released by the congress’ Chicago office, Those events were listed as: Seizure of all property of Jewish families who fled to the West; widespread purge of Jews holding even minor jobs; secret orders to the Communist party calling for removal of all Jews from public office; cross - examination of all Jews on possible Western connec- tions; and repeated police raids on Jewish homes and the seizure of documents, PUBLICITY TO BE GIVEN TAX CASES WASHINGTON — Atty. Gen, Brownell says his department now is making public its settlements of civil and tax cases. Any such cases settled by the Justice Department without going to court will be “made a matter of public record,” Brownell said yesetrday in a talk to members of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity, Brownell said there would be an exception to the publicity rule for minor cases, defined as settle- ments of less than $10,000, Minister Churchill. and whatever premier the French have chosen by that time: “T am going over to Bermuda to meet with some of our friends and talk over these things. But re- member, {fn these vast problems that affect every one of our lives, there is no thought that you can cut the knots; you must untie them slowly and laboriously.” Eisenhower went on, interrupt- ing himself to call on the various Cabinet members, to a discussion of other problems: The deficit: “During 17 of the Past 20 years we have gone into debt. borrowing cheapens money. That {s like water in your coffee.” Economy: “These expensive mil- itary establishments are going to be maintained in the most econ- omic way possible. You are going to get one dollar's worth for every dollar we spend. I am going to keep that promise.” The excess profits tax: “It is in- equitable, it fs unjust, it is clumsy, and it is awkward. But . . . it must not be taken off until we} Jean Teduce the individual income | taxes.”” | Agriculture: “We are going to jhave stability in farm income and we are going to do it with no farmer being taken over by the | government. —unconscionable as I see it—that “|}the United States should have jing and people—friends of ours— should be starving in the world.” | Government employe security: “We go after the weeds of dis- jloyalty but we don't want to up- root a single good plant... . The | Seat mass of your federal employ- es are a wonderful, dedicated group of men and women whose; | jobs are going to be protected.” Then, with time running out, the President promised that “we are going to report to you from time to time—with these or other people with me—so that you may know what is going on nk you for being with us. ower concluded. “Good God biess you.” DR. J. A. VALDES OPTOMETRIST Duplication of Lenses and Frames OFFICE HOURS 812 - 25 oi? OUVAL STREET (Upstairs) TELEPHONE 2-787! « It is unthinkable | U.S. GOVT. GRADED GOOD ; : CHUCK ROAST » 29¢ SWIFT'S PREMIUM FRANKS EGGS € IN CARTON OZ. S6< DELICIOUS BARBECUED — Ready to Serve Pork Loin ROAST «89c Waldorf Toilet Pabst Blue Ribbon Tissue | BEER Coffee 3 i 1QeE| awss 8925] 2 We SUGAR = 39 Premier Tiny Tot Pack O° Eight Stokely C. S. PEAS |(CornFlakes| CORN nm M5e|2 »~ 49e|2--29e FRESH COUNTRY ROLL BUTTER IDEAL DOG FOOD ..... 2 cans 2% Gro-Pup ARMIX SHORTENING. Christian Bros. Table 69c Soap Powder FABULOUS FAB ....... *% 2c Hartley's Select 29c MARKET M & 802 White St. Dial 2-7633 GR. A LARGE C.D. M. LB. 1-LB. BOXES Ls. CAN 3 Georgia ; PEACHES » 1% Firm Ripe BANANAS 24» 19 303 Size CANS

Other pages from this issue: