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Monday, June 8, 1953 THE’ KEY WEST CITIZEN THEN AN anery ROAR! ‘SPITTING A TRAIL OF WHITE FLAME, SHE LEAPS OUT AT THE STARS LIKE AN AROUSED WILOCAT/... BE DICE VARious WoRLDs? y ' BEN BOLT HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPION = FIGHT 19 ONLY ONE MINUTE OLD. BUT /T HAS FURIOUS 60 SECONDS SINCE 4N AROUSED JOE LOUIS MASSACRED MAX SCHMELIN. (LL TELL ¥! HAN ..OUT/ AMONG THE STARS ! FASTER THAN! SHED -HER ENGINES COULD ORIVE HER... FASTER THAN VISIBILITY... AS FAST 4 UP. UP... SOO MILES.« THE GOAL FOR THE TRIAL FLIGHT!... BUT THE UNEE MISSILE KEEPS CLAWING AT OUT PAST THE PLANETS... ee RELEASE THE ) PUT OUT THAT LIGHi, ToRPepo? f YOU FOOL! HERE SUPPOSE I OON WISH 70 GO-- WHICH I OON'T- ra BEN WEAVES AS RED THROWS A SHORT, HARD RIGHT IT CATCHES THE CHALLENGER HIGH DKERCH MIND (T NONE -- WHY DON'T YE DO TH PLOWIN' FER MIZ SMIF SOMETIME 2 i NICE PLACE ) REFRESHMENTS) | YOU HAVE HERE = S ra ING FO? WANTED: TWO ABLE= BODIED YOUNG MgN TO. SAIL BOAT TO BASKING BEACH. GOOD Pay. THAT FLING ANO ABLE GUS THAT's Probe Of Locn | Of Currency | Plates Asked By G. MILTON KELLY WASHINGTON «—Sen. Mundt (R-SD) said that he has ordered a new investigation of how the Russians were able to use plates borrowed from the U. S. govern- ment to ‘‘print money by the bale” which this country nad to redeem. Mundt said prior inquiries have | established that ‘‘someone in the | government” lent occupation cur- renly plates to Russia in 1945, bht that no one has ever developed the inside story of how it was engi- neered. The senator, who has been in charge of the inquiry for the Sen- ate investigations subcommittee, said he plans a thorough grilling of past and present officials of the International Monetary Fund about the loan to Russia of printing plates to produce ‘occupation cur- rency” for the Allied forces inj Europe during and after World War II. Mundt and Sen. McCarthy (R- Wis), chairman of the subcommit- tee, said they plan extensive ques- tioning of Frank Coe, the fund's former $20,000-a-year secretary who refused last week to tell the subcommittee whether he ever | spied for the Communists. Coe is to return to the witness stand at a public hearing today. The two senators said they also} | plan testimony by William H. Tay- lor, assistant director of the middle | East Department of the fund. | Coe, pleading at Friday’s| stormy hearing that replies might tend to incriminate him, refused | to answer 51 questions as to wheth- | er he had been a Communist or 2 spy, or had connections with Com- munists. But he said he was a good American and no espionage agent. He refused to say whether he knew Taylor or was a fellow member of a spy ring with him. | McCarthy called Coe “an ex tremely dangerous individual,” and | said the government ought to close | the U. S. borders to him. The tall, | fidgeting witness flung back that! this was “persecution.” The televised hearing was ca to explore whether as ssire tary of the monetary fund, tried in vain in 1949 to block devaluation | of Austrian currency. The deval-} uation was described as a blow to! Russia, partially made necessary by the loan of the occupation cur- rency printing plates. j Coe denied having any hand in jthe devaluation negotiations. | WOLNVHd AHL NOaUuOD HSV14 NVIDIDVW SHL JAVYAGNVYW L108 Nad Did Ned pi H Louisa’s Letier | Usa § Lericr Dear Louisa: { My husband ts very st t! the children. In fact, so much so that his methods seem} to be doing the very thing that he is trying to prevent. } He does not allow our high| school daughter to have dates or | go to parties nor dues he let our} sixteen year old son drive the car. They must be in bed at ten o'clock week days and week ends. The children have gotten very rebellious here of late and the boy has threatened to stop school and go off to work where he can ha some fun. Our daughter is lutely boy crazy and deceive by meeting dates in the movi I am very much distressed over the whole situation because I know that my husband is doing what he thinks is best for the children but what I think is ruining them. What course must I take? MOTHER— CONN. J > z r 4 ™ < : hi YAHLVA dN ONIONING Answer: ti Your husband is still living inj, a world of the past. He fails to | realize that people have learned that the proper way of rearing children is by guidance and love rather than by force. | We may lay down a thousand tules and try to keep our lambs from the temptations of the world but it will be of no avail if we have mot. earned their trust and confidence. It is impossible to pr children from the tem the world and our best safe for them is to teach them independent. Show them b and precept the right way to jand then give them a normal t™m/ amount of libert ; You are certainly Child no good if you run away from h unprepared to he has never had a with freedom and is to some bad end. And ithing applies to » | Mf she i jwith boys a | friends. | them r a first rotten ap; a little bit of excuse the girl idates on does ber or her | > = 4 your | the «i aM WUVZO Whereabouts “| olic Church still had no knowledge > ‘his brother Robert, 11. were taken jlater baptized ikept, despite the fact that they ;/Grand Rabbi added, he could not | ; been reached between the Catholic Chapter 35 “] SUPPOSE so. He had money in this bank and must have’ been drawing it out on Monday. I saw him when I came to ar- range to have my box drilled— somehow I'd lost my keys—but he didn’t see me.” ; ~“Did Durst always bring in a load of aliens himself?” “Almost never. He had a kid to take chances for him. But the}” kid got drunk that night, so Durst brough tne boat in himself.” “And he made you go along,” Brindle filled. in, “just in case you got any ideas about tipping off the cops that a run was bei: made that night.” “Yes. He trusted me only so far. He had already managed to draw me into he thing so that I couldn’t afford to go openly to the authorities. But I suppose he often feared I'd turh against him somehow.” Ranson's cigar had gone out and he struck a match te it. “It was when I saw the old man killed that I arrived at a plan,” he continued. “He was wearing a foolishly conspicuous hound’s-tooth jacket, so I bought one like it. Wednesday I hired you—I confess, you saw through my _ motives. “That same morning Frances was driving to Ensenada for lun- cheon with Quan Chee—he was) very fond of her—and after my} appointment with you, I drove down with her, I mailed you a | straw donkey and was planning to use Senor Solares to send you other clues &s you needed them, but of course, uu didn’t.” “T can take a hint,” Brindle told! him. PARIS —The Grand Rabbi of France angrily complained last week that Roman Catholic author- ities have failed to seep promises to produce two Jewish-born but Catholic-sheltered orphan boys who sappeared after a court ordered them into the care of their Israeli aunt, A representative of Cardinal Gerlier, Primate of All the Gauls, declared, however, that the Cath- of the boys’ whereabuuts and is as unhappy as the Grand Rabbi over the failure to tind them, The boys, Gerald Finaly, 10, and into a Catholic orphanage in France after their Austrian refu- e parents were executed by Na- is during Wirld War Il. They were into the Catholic Church, ~ Sam The Jews contend Catholic priests rance into Spain three months} go after a French court gave cus- tody of the boys to their aunt, s. Hewig Rosner, of Gedera, Israel. In a public statement, the Grand abbi said the Catholic church had d him to believe that the boys would be returned to France, “Despite three months of wait- ” the statement continued, “the promises of reoreventatives of the Catholic hierarchy have not been have on several occasions been} reaffirmed, their accomplishment each time being imminent.” Under the circumstances, announced ai the refrain from “‘questoning the de- | ee of sincerity which motivated | eer xe statement revealed for the time that an agreement had Church, the Rabbinate and the Rosner fomily to allow the boys, | after their return, to be brought up / France without interference until aching their majority. They ould then be permitted to choose their: religion. The spokesman for Cadinal Ger- lier, Father Pierre Chaillet, said jit was “inadmissable of the Grand Rabbi to doubt the motives of Cardinal Gerlier and myself.” Tie priest added that the Primate was ‘waiting with as much anguish” as the Grand Rabbi for news of the “Who's Mavor? | - { RONCEVERTE, W. Va. i#—Res- | { this Greenbrier County munity are finding it tough to up with who's mayor. y've had three in five days, another change is coming up. order E, C. Baker explains} way wo Jasper C. Bostic qait | because City Councilmen man and Wheeler Wykel j a policeman Bostic had | j the recorder, sutomatic- noved into the vacant mayor's | t 2s owt of town on busi the week, so Council reday night and) Wiseman Mayor. He'll) June 3 whes Bostic’s| . ' Yates, elected mayor in| = Tuesday, will} is! eh rEg moment to buy a pack. . “We Grove ‘ben to San in the afternoon and in time for our di ment with you. “Thursday night I accident, By that derstand, I knew rotten and { Hl He # i i i #E i lt ett 4 i 88m oF iE : i : it H i 8 z coor epee would at I was missing, an argument with’ hi me in a rage, and I the spot, I set the charge a piece of my jacket a it on a nearby inch.” “Yes,” Brindle put in. “Frances found it later that ht.” Ranson straightened. “Then 1 8 & ee a i i538 ie gardiless of what. knew that his son’s murder hurt plenty. “Tell me,” Ranson asked, smil- ing again, “how did you know I was alive?” Brindle smiled, too. “I suspected) it from the first. The old man’s} hi body was discovered about eighty- five miles south of here. Your) ‘accident’ took place on Thursday night. The ly was discovered late Sunday, three days later.| dathonnd suleke sameamaiaaeee out! motor, you couldn’ ae ‘Hed tthe 7 gotten very far—ci ertainly ing like eighty-five miles. Rocks (THE END) Of Orphans To Be Checked | Appropriations —_| Bishop Oxnam To For Two Depts. Answer Charg WASHINGTON (@— The Senate will have a $3,444,145,000 appropri- ation for the Treasury and Post Office Departments before it this week, Its appropriations committee last week approved the measure just as the House Lad passed it, with $611,895,000 for the Treasury and $2,832,250,000 for the post office during the fiscal year starung July 1, The post office estimates it will operate at a deficit of about 600 million dollars, repaying the rest of the appropriation from reve- nues. This will be the third of the 12 regular government appropria- tion. bills to be acted on by the Senate. The House has passed eight. Trusties Needed TRENTON, N. §. \—The State of New Jersey has a number of jopenings for trustworthy farm workers. No particular farm work ability is required, but to qualify the worker must first be sent to state prison, and then be deemed as fs | disinclined to escape. Then, Acting Warden Lloyd Mec- Corkle has plenty of work for on the Leesburg prison farm, he reports a shortage of prisoners to work the confine. Oh, You Woman Rosie Aren't you getting Johnnie and Bill confused? Mary — Yes, I get Johnnie con- fused one night and Bill the next. i i Fi Hi . i i a]