The Key West Citizen Newspaper, July 1, 1953, Page 2

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ré Pope? ~ THE KEY west CITIZEN Wednesday, July 1, 1953 Citizen Adds “Don Winslow” To Its Comic Strip Roster Next Monday will be a great day— for ‘all Key West Citizen readers | The Citizen. exciting new role of Comman- \Battle Ope i He 7 i i i i i ii E E & 3 lI i i ! g F re a i Fgas efit igs! A He HE fe & fein i ‘af01 LYWOOD NOT i + = ai By BOS THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (#—Off we go into the wid space yonder . . . That theme song may nct be far according to experts who are on a tiim about space is strictly a engineering. Space travel at the same place where tom ib was im 1940. Sci- know it can. be done.” Buttner has been advising technical aspects of “Rid- the Stars,” waich producer Ivan Tors calls a science picture. Not science fiction, mind you. He — it's for reci. ba li . The idea is to learn why rockets crystallize above certain aititudes. “The selection of personne! to travel in space flight will be a major task,” assured Dr. Buttner. must be smaller than aver- in weight and , but not too small so that they have in- . They must be atured but not physically. They must ve a college back- x bly in astro-physics engineering. x also have high moral will have to posess personalities and be tisk their lives for the Siodmak, who wrote the the notion ‘that be the first space smaller, weigh I : el i belie vi FE Ej .| Minister Winston Churchill Wed- nesday for criticizing South Ko-| 18 - | munist Korean War prisoners from pro- | ordering the release. Rhee, in writ- g 2 accuracy. There is virtually coufitermeasure for such a pon. “It would be a means for in- suring peace.” *COPTER SAVES BOYS HALIFAX, N. S. (—Two boys, Andrew and Charies Bower, drifted out into Halifax harbor on a make- 5 8 4 Z E a i pay 4 ge F | If E A Hl ify i i it i i | i oes Hi i # i 5 : 4 i if -| this was not so and “he (Clark) ar] Ne SE“"~, ARY OF -«anued From Page One) «aat information in the testimony itself that the weapons still were TODAY'S STOCK MARKET t .| NEW YORK #—It was another called for classification under se- 2 nay to the quiet curity roles. | market with prices barely moving either way. WHEAT CONTROLS |" Price = were all in the (Continued From Pzge One) | smaller fractions with many lead. price support rate. Supports would eg Boer egies bor gage vod |be at 9 per cent of parity, Or! yancing tendency as did the cop- jaround $2.20 a bushel, if quotas|pers and most chemicals, but in were approved. But they would | the absence of any vigor the move- drop to 50 per cent of parity, or | ments of these sections Jacked sig- around $1.22, if quotas should be | aificance. rejected. Parity is a price said by| The opening of the market was law to’be fair to farmers in terms | uninspiring with few blocks on the ‘of prices they paid for things they |tape. Among them were |“Desert Song” Will Show At Strand Theatre As an important vehicle for its new lyrical team of Kathryn Gray- json and Gordon MacRae, Warner Bros. has selected a new Techni- buy. Quotas were last imposed on j tric wheat in 1942, Acreage planting allotments were iast used in 1950. | Meanwhile, the department an-| nounced that the support rate for | 1953-crop wheat will average $2.21 a bushel, the miaimum set last fall under a forward pricing pro- vision of the law. U.N. FAR EAST (Continued from Page One) “in his own hand” another state- | ment of South Korea's stand on a} truce and Robertson is awaiting | this statement. | The source made it clear the Robertson mission is the only one which will negotiate with Rhee be- fore an armistice is signed. If this attempt fails, there will be no more. There was no official confirma- tion of reports that a mutual se- curity pact has been drafted, but a U. S. news correspondent saw a document titled “Military Alliance Between the United States and the Republic of Korea’ lying on a table in the South Korean Defense Ministry. ‘He did not have an opportunity to lift the cover. ROK officers snatched it from the table and car- ried it away. Rhee has demanded a security pact before a truce is signed, Pres- ident Eisenhower, in a letter Rhee June 6, promised to negotiate | a pact after an armistice. Any such treaty would require U. S. Senate approval and there were reports from Washington that sen- ators would turn down a pact call- ing for American soldiers to start shooting again in Korea in the event war breaks out once more. Rhee attacked British Prime rea's release of 27,000 anti-Com- U.N, stockades. Churchill said he was “shocked and grieved” by Rhee’s action in ten answers to questions submit- ted by a correspondent for the don Daily Herald, declared: “TI must say we were quite shocked by the remarks of the British Prime Minister, Sir Win- ston Churchill. All our people take them as. insults.” Rhee said Gen. Clark made a “mistake” in accusing Rhee of violating his promise to the Allied command by releasing the cap- tives. The South Korean.President said Clark apparently thought the pris- oner release was an initial step toward pulling the Rox Army from the U. N. Command. Rhee said should have reported that his charge of violation. was not cor- rect.” . Summerlin quoted the high source, who asked not to be named, as saying Rhee is “stubbornly turning against the spirit of ‘ree world unity.” Asked about Rhee’s public de- mands that he needs “something concrete” to show his people be- fore approving a truce, the source replied: “He has everything he needs to show his peopie.”” Rhee often has called for a 90- day limit.on the post-armistice Rhee both the U. S. and South Korea might walk out of a con- ference within 90 days if they agreed that the Reds were using the talks to “obtain ends they were not able to obtain otherwise.” “It is too early to say it (Rob- ertson’s mision) is a failure,” the source said. He added that “no time limits would be set” on the Rhee-Robert- gon negotiations and the “door *| not closed.” NEW CASUALTY LIST WASHINGTON &—The Defense Department today iaentified 189; Korean War casualties in a new) list (No. 846) that included 30 dead, 126 wounded, 17 missing, 3 cap- tured and 13 injured. Alabama Woman To Die MONTGOMERY, Ala. —The Alabama Supreme Court yesterday upheld the poison conviction of Mrs. Earle Dennison and ordered her electrocuted. Aug. 21. “The 35-year-old nurse was con- a drink at nearby Wetumpka insuring the child for $5,500. The unanimous decision is the first time the Supreme Court has/ ever ordered the electrocution ct a white woman in Alabama. 1,500 shares of American Gas & Elec- unchanged at 28%, and 1,500 shares of New York Central up % at 24%. Also higher were Santa Fe, Southern Pacific, Kennecott Cop- per, American Smelting, Allied Chemical, and Chrysler. SHIRLEY COWAN (Continued from Page One) that he had no driver’s permit. He is charged with reckless driving, causing an aceident and with hav- ing no operator’s lic. ase. He is a laborer on the Naval Station. The car, a Plymouth sedan, is owned by Oscar Milian. Shirley’s father Frank Cowan, is the supervisor at Reynold’s Con- struction company. ‘ SHOWDOWN IS (Continued from Page One) believe he will yield in a show- down, In their view, he is bargaining for the best possible concession from the U. S. in terms of future economic and military aid and an ironclad defense ract pledging U. S. assistance in- the event the Communists renew hostilities after a truce, Bill’s Licensed PAWN SHOP 716 DUVAL ST. sei i (Raymond Massey). y El Khobar is the timid Paul Bonnard, tutor {o Margot, the & AMERICAN caeusan COFFEE —TRY A POUND TODAY—— STRONG ARM BRAND COFFEE Triumph Coffee Mill at | ALL GRoceRS POOR OLD CRAIG SERVICE STATION Francis at Truman DIAL 2.9193 "YOUR PURE OIL DEALER Tires . . Tubes . . Batteries + « Accessories RADIO and CIFELLI'S tric "Factory Methods Used — All Work Guaranteed Marine Radios & Asst. Equipment FOR PROMPT AND RELIABLE SERVICE — SEB... DAVID CIFELLI $20 Truman Ave. (Rear) Dial 2-7637 rere BATTERY Kener, Neshe Wits: ten” 3 YEARS 1785 exch. LOU SMITH, 1116 White WHATEVER YOUR NEEDS IN THE LINE OF COME TO THE TROPICAL TRADER 718 Duval 82. Dial 2-6262 ANNOUNCING NEW LOCATION! 600 TRUMAN AVENUE Corner TRUMAN AVENUE and SIMONTON STREET Tax Consultation - General Accounting Specialising In STATE AND FEDERAL TAXES ROBERT J. GROVER OFFICE PHONE RESIDENCE PHONE 12-5022 2-3640 * ~~ Naw bar bey oar LO BOX OFFICE OPENS 1:45 P.M. CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE PHONE 2.419 FOR TIME SCHEDULE BOX OFFICE OPEN TILL 9:00 P.m. @&specting Freneg, Saul, dressed SB the robes of the fearless El Kho- baz, gathers his Riff riders to storm the Sheik’s palace. They de- stroy his army, but it remains for El Khobar to rescue his beloved Margot from the, vengeful Sheik. Without his disguise, Paul profes- ses his love for the beautiful French | girl only to find that she is in love | with the adventurous El Khobar. | Not until Bonnard sings the roman- | tic “One Alone” does Margot re- alixe that the two men are one. “The Desert Song” also brings back to the American scene such familiar Romberg melodies as “The Riff Song,* “Romance,” | Marines said today. Mat. 3:38 Night 6:90 & 8:30 AIR COOLED SAVAGE | THE MUTINY | SAVAGE with Chas. Charlton with JOHNNY WEISMULLER, ANGELA STEVENS ACKBE SPI

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