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Page 2 Employee Training Continues THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Friday, June 12, 1953 Squabble Over Renovations For Navy Civil Service Workers|Toned Down Rear Admiral Irving T. Duke, USN, Commanding Officer Naval Station, signed a po'cy into effect this month for the continuation of @mployee training. Adm. Duke, a- lert to the need and benefits of ee development training, “atates that the program “shall re- @eive full administrative support. The scope of the employee deve- opment training program is es- tablished by a training committee. The training committee is authori- ged to represent the Commanding Officer on matters® concerning training. The training committee is composed of the following indi- viduals: Commander H. J. Gallag- her, USN, Exccutive Officer; Com- mandet &. H. Pierce, USN, En- and Repair Officer; Commander J. C. Luppens, USN, Public Works Officer; Command- er W. H. Clark, Jr., USN, Supply and Fiscal Officer and J. C. Spe- cht, Senior Training Supervisor. Between June 1953 and Decem- ber 1953 every civilian supervisor will receive 40 hours of Supervisor Development Training. Subjects to be covered are (1) Qualifications of @ good supervisor. (2) Griev- ances and ogee Lge ertag '33) Reductions ‘orce Proc fe ita W(crtiaia Coordination, Military-Ci . he igs these subjects are (1) J. C. Specht, Senior Training Supervisor. (2) Mrs. W. Harvey, Employee Relations Assistant. (3) W. T. Doughtry, Personnel Assist- ant. (4) Cdr. Pierce, Ledr. Lup- pens, Cdr, Clark and Specht. ‘Another phase of employee train- ing is Pre-Supervisory training. Twenty hours instruction will be given to employees who are not supervisors but who have been sel- ected as potential supervisory ma- terial by their departments. Trade apprenticeship training is ‘also being continued at the Naval Station. Applications for appren- ticeships in the trades of Electron- ies Mechanic and Ships Joiner are now being received at the Station, dg. No. 91. : pe Development Training in a Naval Shore Activity is @ function of the Industrial Relations Division. This division is headed at the Naval Staton by Stewart 8. Whiting, Personnel and Industrial Relations Officer. The Training Branch, of Industrial Relations, at the Naval Station, is directed by J. C. Specht, who is Senior Train- t training sessions in Hance with the local training po- ieniice Development training will start with institute No, 1, on Monday June 15, at 8:00 a, m. and continue eight hours per day through Friday June 19, 1953. Other activities of Naval Base enrollment of Al mployees in the program. These pie veptiog U. S. Naval Air Sta- ton 0. 8. Naval Hospital, U. S. Naval Magazine, and it is expect- ed that the U, S. Naval Ordnance Unit, big alg their personnel in the near - etaliation Plan Is Sought By ° ° Birmingham Wives BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (#—The * baffled wives of 42nd Street North today considered a counter-attack on 25 husbands wno say they want a better break around the house. Railroad Conductor J, L. Cald- well, who wants to go fishing this weekend, set off a revolt that caught the women napping yester- He paraded up and down with a sign that said: “On strike—women unfair—Men want a new contract.” ‘Twenty-five husbands any signed a petition supporting well, and he flaunted it in the faces around. “Only one woman called,” she said resentfully, “And she said something about us all going away to an island somewhere.” ‘The conductor's wife wouldn't say in advance what the women were to do to get their husbands back to mowing lawns, painting and mending around the house. “Let the grass grow,” sputtered the 63-year-old Caldwell while a group of housewives heckled him. “It's paint the porch or fix the door, or walk the dog, or mind the babies. Can't a man ever get any peace and rest?” . When the women’s tempers be- gan rising, he wisely beat a re- treat to a man's world—his freight train. POLICE NAB THREE Ayers Says Committee Could Have ‘Said More; Didn’t Wish To Embarrass Cabinet OCALA (#—Rep. Willard Ayres, Ocala, chairman of Ayres Com- mittee of the Florida Legislature -which investigated a renovation, Scholarship Project at the state Capitol, said Scholarships valued at $186,100} today the committee had no in- were awarded June 9 to 60 high/tention or desire to embarrass the school and preparatory school sen- aoe . - might have said more iors who will enter Lehigh Univer-| than it did. 2 Referring to the Tuesday Cabinet sity this September from 12 states | meeting when the legislative com- Dean Wray H. Congdon, chairman| mittee was criticized, Ayres’ state- of the committee on scholarships, | ment says: announced. . “...The 1951 tegislative act only Phillip A, Turner of Key West | authorized the air-conditioning of was the winner of one of the the House chamber on the third competitive regional scholar- floor of the north wing of the ships, valved at $3,200 for a four- | Capitol. The minutes of the meet- year college education. : ings of the board of commissioners Two grants of $1500 each will be| of state institutions clearly show the highest awards. that the Cabinet authorized the They go to David E, Kelley, 7134] preparation of plans for air con- a|ditioning the entire (the word is underscored) north wing of the Capitol before the legislative sanc- tion of any kind had been procured for a departure from the terms of the 1951 act which simply called for the air-conditioning of the House chamber. It was only at a much Jater date tnat legislative committee and the house caucus in Philip Turner Is Winner Of ton; a senior at the Girard School, Philadelphia. The Alfred R. Glancy scholar- ship, valued at $1,000 annually, has been granted to Samuel B. Chy- atte, 535 Fourth St., S. E., Wash- ington, D. C. Tampa were called upon to ap- The first four of the Union Car-| prove the additional expenditures bide and Carbon Corporation a-|... wards of $900 each will go to: “It should further be pointed John P. Chandler, State Teach-| out,” Ayres’ statement eontinues, ers College, Clarion, Pa. “that no reference was made in Peter M. Johnson, 302 N. Moun-! the report of the investigation:com- tain Ave., Upper Montcliar, N, J. | mittee to the fact the purchase of Richard M. Roth, R. D. 1, Coch-|Some $85,000 in air-conditioning ranville, Pa, equipment by the Florida State Robert E. Schubert, 50 Holly-| Improvement Commission, without wood. Court, Rockville Center, N.| Specifically authorized additional 2 ee air-conditioning work, totaling Another initial award, the Allied | further that the board of commis- Chemical’s National Aniline Scho-| sioners of state institutions also larship in chemical engineering | $105,000 by change orders to con- valued at $900 annually, has been | tracts without any competitive bid- awarded to William P. Kutz, 814/ ding. North 9th St., Reading, Pa. ‘If the committee had had any Eight winners of competitive re- intention or desire to embarrass gional scholarships, each valued at | the Cabinet, these facts could have $3,200 for a four-year college edu-| been emphasized in the report of cation, also have been selected,|the committee. It seems to me These are awarded on a purely | that the Cabinet, rather than com- competitive basis and are not tiv-| Plaining of unfair criticism, would en for financial need, but rather have been doing a greater service for scholastic and leadership mer-|t© the people of Florida at its it. Winners of the competitive re-|Tecent meeting had it adopted the The Weatherman Says REPORTS SAY RIOTS (Continued from Page One) maintained Pilsen in a state of martial law for five days. Unconfirmed reports, meanwhile, alleged that Iron Curtain discon- tent also has threatened the Com- munist regime in Bulgaria. Tobac- Key West and vicinity: Partly} eo workers in’ Dimitrovo and cloudy and warm today thru Sat-| Blagoevgrad recently demonstrated urday. Widely scattered showers. | for more bread, which is rationed Gentle to moderate variable winds. | and expensive in Bulgaria. Florida: Gnerally fair and con- tinued warm thru Saturday except for widely scattered afternoon thundershowers. Jacksinville thru the EMBEZZLER RETURNS (Continued From Psge One) Florida | battle among the city commission, Straits and East Gulf of Mexico: | with Louis M. J. Eisner and John Gentle to occasionally moderate | Carbonell, decrying the fact that variable winds thru Saturday, | the thefts. had continued long after Mostly fair weather except for, the woman was suspected of ir- widely scattered thundershowers. Western Caribbean: Moderate northeast to east winds thru Satur- day. Mostly cloudy and scattered thundershowers in north portion, partly cloudy with widely scattered showers in south portion. Observations taken at City Office Key West, Fla., June 12, 1953 9:00 A.M., EST Temperatures Highest yesterday Lowest last night Mean ... Normal Precipitation Total last 24 hours Total this month Excess this month Total this year ... Excess this year Relative Humidity at 9:00 A.M, 10% Barometer (Sea Level) 9:00 A.M. 30.08 ins.—1018.6 mbs. Moonrise Moonset ... TOMORROW'S 2:57 a.m. 4:54 p.m. 000 ADDITIONAL TIDE DATA Reference Station: Key West Time of Height of (bridge) ———oh 10m _—s 9.0 ft. No Name Key feast end) —+2h 20m Boca Chica Station— Tide high water Sandy Pt.) —oh 40m Caldes Channel (north end) regular practices. They also pro- tested the fact that they were not told immediately of the incident, which came to light on April 22. The woman was iirst suspected of embezzlement in February. She was jailed on May 28 on a warrant signed by City Manager Dave King. Jimmy Stout, 39-year old jockey, has led the Monmouth riders four different times - in 1948, 1950, 1951 and 1952. ——_— DR, J. A. VALDES OPTOMETRIST Duplication of Lenses and Frames OFFICE HOURS 9-12 — 2-5 619 DUVAL STREET (Upstairs) TELEPHONE 2.7821 STRONG ARM BRAND COFFEE Triumph Coffee Mill § ™m. at ALL GROCERS For Chev., Ply., Dodge, Studebaker, Kaiser, Nash, Willy’s, Ete. 12 MONTHS ......'$ 8.95 exch, 18 MONTHS wom 11.95 exch, SVEARS Qn ccscnmnne 1785 exch. LOU SMITH, 1116 White Se eR —.....__—_ POOR OLD CRAIG SERVICE STATION Francis at Truman DIAL 2.9193 YOUR PURE OIL DEALER Tires . . Tubes . . Batteries gional awards are: DeLamar.T,..Bell, Jr., 125 N. Passale Ave, Chatham, N. 5. Albert D. Warren, Jr., 250 Cir- cle Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. Dennis B. Mulcare, 1696 Beecher St., S. W., Atlanta, Ga. Phillip A. Turner, Box 915, Key West Fila, Gray A. Scott, 2097 Marlowe Ave nue, Lakewood, Ohio. John T. Hayes, Jr., 17 Rowayton, Conn. Larrimore B. Emmons, 66 Walk- er St., Newtonville, Mass. James B. Clapp, 2017 Gatewood Ave. Oklahoma City, Okla. Hunt St., Three Complete All-Woman’s Air Race Thurs. NEW SMYRNA BEACH (7— Phree pilots. completed the 1,150- mile All-Woman’s International Air Race from Welland, Ont., to New Smyrna Beach in one day Thurs- day while 15 others stopped to spend the night along the route. First in was Edith Long, Char- lotte, N. C.,flying a Beach Bonan- za. She and her co-pilot, Mrs, Helen McBride, Apopka, Fia., made the flight in rine hours and two minutes. ; Virginia Ashelford, Springfield, O., and her co-pilot, Joan Hrubec, Cleveland, came in next in a Piper Tri-Pacer, followed by Doris Lang- her, Chicago, flying solo in a Navi- on 260, The actual winner of the sixth annual race, a handicap event, will be determined after Saturday noon, the deadline for finishing, on basis ef speed and equipment of the janes and actual flying time. Stop over time does not count. ‘The winner gets $600 of a $2,000 purse and the Eddie Rickenbacker trophy. Several fliers spent the night in South Carolina, includ- Mogelvang, Howey Torresdale Ave., Philadelphia, student at the Milton Hershey School, Hershey, Pa.; and Elden B. Kunkle, 335 N. 2nd St., Leigh- and rs. Hills, a N.C., when her fuel ran STATE ROAD (Continued From Page One) road contracts were awarded. These were paid for from the fifth, sixth and seventh cents of the gas tax which had accumulated to the eredit of the counties. EWING’S EXPENSES (Continued from Page One) have at hand the total i recommendation of the committee that it. follow a policy of letting | ,, ‘no contracts, making no purchases, and issuing no change orders to contracts, in excess of the sum of $3,000, without securing” comepti- tive bids, under the-same~ general conditions as now--obtain in con- nection with the State Road De- partment contracts and purchases. Ayres said the statement was cleared with all members of the committee. 12-Year-Old Is Slain By Her Would-Be Suitor WOODLAND, Califii®— A 51- year-old rancher shot ‘and killed a i2year-old girl because she spurned his attentions, Deputy Sheriff Tom Wallace of Yolo Coun- ty said today, The victim was Phoebe Ann Blair, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Irving Blair. Decaillet, had freely admitted shooting the girl several times in her home. Wallace said the girl’s father summoned officers to the Blair home last night, and they found Decaillet holding the dead girl’s sofa. walked into the house after attend- ing church with her parents, who had let Phoebe and a younger Wallace said'the rancher, Henry | j head in his lap as he sat on a} The girl. was shot when she| brother out cf their car and then! (d-)—Plus signs. » Corrections te be added. : LET VOTERS DECIDE (Continued From Page One) walks as well as streets, Rep. Papy said: walks in Key West. Most people drive today and we need wider Streets. Let the owner put his sidewalk down. What we need is curbing and wider streets. | have not had a sidewalk in front of my house since | moved there. The City, however, should repair sidewalks where they are faulty,” he said in answer to a question. The club voted to send a con- gratulatory message to the Key West High School baseball team | for its excellent showing in the present state competition. President Knowles introduced-| Rotary guests as follows: Bob Geh- OFFICE PHONE 2.2741 e } gone on to take some neighbors’ | children home. | Wallace said Decaillet, father of | two children of high school age,| was separated from his wife re-/ cently, ‘ GRISLY moi PAPY SPEAKS aT ROTARY ‘Continued from One’ be whipped, the act at _ for | Ting, Naple; Charles Black, Gaines- administering the punishmeat. | ville; Jack Beard, Beckley; John Teachers and musicians didn’t | Lowe, Middletown, Ky.; and Bob TODAY'S STOCK MARKET NEW YORK (#—The stock mar- ket was mixed and quiet in early dealings today, Motors, steels, oils and rails Among the few large gainers were Pacific Western Oil, 70 1% at 41% and Amerada, ahead la at 162. Stocks showing fractional gains included U, S. Steel, Youngstown Sheet & ube, General Motors, Chrysler, Lockheed, Radio Corp., American Telephone, General Elec- tric, Southern Railway, Northern Pacific and Texas Company. Slightly lower were Douglas, Pacific Gas & Electric, American Woolen, New York Central, Home- stake, Dome, Consolidated Edison and United Air Lines. Although the proportion varies greatly, practically all meteorites contain some irun. Bill’s Licensed PAWN SHOP 716 DUVAL ST. Your Grocer SELLS That Good STAR * BRAND and CUBAN All Work Guaranteed Marine Radios & Asst. Equipment LIABLE FOR PROMPT AND SERVICE — S$! DAVID CIFELLI $20 Truman Ave. (Rear) Dial 2-7637 » . ANNOUNCING NEW LOCATION! 600 TRUMAN AVENUE Corner of TRUMAN AVENUE and SIMONTON STREETS “We only need five foot side- |} Tax Consultation - General Accounting Specializing In STATE AND FEDERAL TAXES ROBERT J. GROVER RESIDENCE PHONE 23640 SAT. - SUN. - MON. - TUES. ee CER SORT a ST 88 hme LAST TIMES TODAY fare so well financially. The faded three months in 1860 drew $50 from the state for his work. A Negro by the name of Anthony who provided music for several days to entertain volunteers being Tmustered in and out of Florida's armed forces got $. All the records are in longhand, some in beautiful penmanship, others almost illegible scrawis.} The state didn’t start using type- writers until about 1890, Dr. Dodd | said. M live World War I bombs any still being dug up in Italy, two ones having been found re- jare cen under mainline railroad wa | Mathews, Salt Air Motel. ine : , Fla., who was forced |ink of one statement showed an| Paul Scher, program chairman, hayfield near Wake | instructor who taught school for | introduced State Rep. Papy, after | congratulating Merville Rosam as new manager of the City Electric | System, Papy reported that 1900 bills jwere considered by the House and }1400 by the Senate in the recent session of the legislature. He repeated that the best result of the recent session was the fact that it did not impose any new | taxes. He pointed to the appropria- tion of five million dollars fot Fio- jtida’s first medical school, con- | nected with the University of Flo- | rida as a great achievement. i | ' | The Boy Scouts of America held jtheir first National Jamboree in Washington D. C. im 1937. i Fox News QUEEN ELIZABETH CORONATION NEWSREEL Cartoon Bex Office Opens 1:45 P.M. CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE Phone 2-3419 For Time Schedule San Carlos Theatre Air Conditioned ‘ Admiral Recalled LONDON —Adm: Sohn Wonil, commander in chief of the South Korean Navy, left by plane today for home on a hurry-up call from South Korean President Syngman | Rhee. Wonil, who came here for the coronation, had originally planned to stay in Britain for another five days. ust before boarding a BAC comet for Tokyo, he was asked for comment on the prospectiv. Korean armistice but sidestepped. “I am not a politician,” he told newsmen. “I only know a unified country is the lifeline for Korea. Without complete unity between North and South, the Korean Peo- ple cannot live.” STRAND Fri. and Sat. Fri. and Sat. 18 TERRIFIC TUNES! .¢ FAIR WIND 7 JAVA CAPTAIN “| (Continued from trunk who took he and to Miami where he cay for Tampa at 7:00 a. m. ing. He is slated to noon today. He is make an extended tour of air bases in connection with a and recruiting program, Tribute was paid to Fernandes at last night’s meeting by State perp corenite Bernie C. Papy, is Carbonell and incoming president Paul G. re Carbonell hailed the visit of the jet ace as the “biggest thing since Harry Truman.” Duke University’s grid coach Bill Murray is a member of the Amer- ican Football Coaches’ Committee on Ethics. Mat. 2. 4:06 Night 6:12 & 8:18 AIR CONDITIONED Mat. 3:30 Night 6:30°& 8:38 AIR COOLED Sun. and Mon.