The Key West Citizen Newspaper, October 3, 1953, Page 1

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Che Key West Citisen THE SOUTHERNMOST NEWSPAPER IN THE U.S.A. VOL. LXXIV Ne. 235 KEY WEST, FLORIDA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1953 35th Polio Patient, — 3rd Death Reported PRICE FIVE CENTS a 4. C. Hancock, chief of the Civil Aeronautics Authority communications station here sald that « te ee ane = fin'ne ie av at 7:05 acm. ; = i 8.210 Inoculations In Key West Niatesed ts or Safety Council |H G ; ; Miami. Estimeted time of ar- ety Loune ysteria Grips | since Thursday Morning vival was _ a.m. pore i in — Warns Of Fake Dallas; R. nest The ewner of the plane, arms € a as; apist The 35th case of polio, a 30-year-old civilan — “ by 7 i Dr. R, J, Dalton Gerald W. Smith, 14-A Sea- ‘ ee | was reported to County Health Director, Dr. R. Base, wes @ passenger, Safety Agents Flu? GS ; funters by a private physician last evening. the ask ee The patient, stricken with the non-paralytic type of ee Se eee Sune Novy | Council Officers Rewards Offered polio was rushed to Monroe General Hospital where she a are - ' Set F Meet Pass $7,000 Mark is undergoing treatment. for the missing plane, a black | ™ eo a | ire In Search For As the gamma globulin inoculation of 8,210 children ; and yellow wer ipriectd PT | Ease it a «1h — To Complete Plans Sl Of Wom: from birth through 14 and pregnant women wound up in be a a j Nee om SIXTY-NINE YEARS OF SAFE DRIVING are represented by the above men. All employees | The Key West Safety Council of sae omer | Key West last night, Navy doctors finished up this morn- by = State Highway | % Southern Bell in Key West. P. H. Higgs, plant. manager, far left, presented each of the men |ficers and chairmen held their| DALLAS, Tex. i — Hysteria ing with about 50 late comers, making a grand total for Patrol uncovered no trace of | with safe driving awards. In the group are (left to right), C. T. Knowles, L. A. Baker, E. C. Hall, [first organizational meeting Thurs-gripped much of Dallas today a the Navy of 4,250 inoculated since Thursday at 9 a.m. the The Big Pine Key E. S. Loos, Joe Rotz, O. E. Perdue and W. L. Gale, local manager. With seven trucks operating |day night in the office of W. L.|the rapist-killer oi Mrs. H. C. - . r pes ep being checked at | in Monroe County and each vehicle covering 9000 miles per year no traffic accident has been charg- |Gale, President. Parker, 29, pretty dime store cler! Dr. Dalton estimates that the neon today. ed to any employee of the company for the past 13 years. Only two personal accidents have oc- Numerous projects were discus-| eluded hundreds engaged in the| final inoculation figure wift be : Commercial airliners are also | curred within the last three years. Not present at the time to receive his award was C. F. Mc- |sed and the majority present de-,™4nhunt. ill R close te 10,000 when Marathon ‘on the alert for the plane. Cormick.—Citizen Photo, Finch. cided that a later meeting would; There were.numerius reports ot Delaney Wi UM | and Tavernier finish their injec. ibe needed before anything concise could be undertaken, SMES In a release by Asher Frank, Di- U.N. Refuses To Extend Dec. 24 See i asta er Deadline On Explanation Talk is with ideas on how to make the Head For Raiford By MILO FARNETI tion Commission had asked for a community safe are now in the te. Paul “Curly” Schlintz and i Robert “Nature Boy” Garcia [risen ort, counell has been ad PANMUNJOM # — The U.N.|deadline extension because of de-| Command today refused to extend|lays in getting the explanations the nude Negro prowler, or prowl-| Against Carbonell City Commissioner Jack De- laney, qualified for re-election Friday, it was reported by City Clerk Victor Lowe. Delaney announced that he will run-in Group Five, oppos- ing Commissioner John Car- bonell and Charles Mendoza. Delaney, who is serving tions Monday at 5 p.m, Meanwhile the third death from polio in the county was reported ers, seen in Dallas fcr months by terrified women, but police attrib- uted at least part of them to in- creasing panic. Mrs. Parker’s | mpe-murder Wednesday night threw the city jinto a frenzy and cent citizens buy-| ing guns, dogs, ammunition and/ afety devices for their doors. \There was talk of vigilante action jand at least two neighborhood “vigilante patrols” were formed. vised that a group of these ‘Sno’ left today for the State Prison ‘hirds” have been working in and at Raiford to begin serving around Pensacola, Fla., but are on terms given them last week in [the move elsewhere in the state. ithe 34th polio case, a non-paralytie patient, a 25-year-old Navy wife, She is undergoing treatment at the jt ir| his first term on the Commis- beyond the official Dec. 24 dead-|Program underway. Neither the) Criminal Court. Women slept with guns by their Naval Hospital, Registration lin the period in which the Allies|Allies nor Communists would ac-| Sheriff John Spottswood is |'and gives nothing mad from ane ees 20d the lights on. Some hus-| Sion, was one of two commise [Nar mportance of the tnocule- Books Close At and Communists may try tolcept compounds constructed for| personally escorting the pair to \word” receive Set ee eee emt Work 0) esped anech iy” lesiletivs Toda change the minds of war prisoners|the purpose. The 90-day period for| the prison. rere, INCreUae acai nel | alters this’ year. Me ‘originally 5 P.M. y who have refused to go home. explanations was to have started! Schlintz, former manager of ancelled and officers worked cal waste have had two more Clark’s refusal was sent to the i | hasiade it necessary for him lied opposition to extension of the|repatriation commission—ot which| child molesting charge pate | See “explanation.” be- Garcia will serve oUF @ At least two residents of East An employee” of .the Navy — at_pcanders Jast,nisht! here, Celaney: resides at 12g" + ; Said’ both apparently; Varela Street. missed their tatgets. One man shot (Continued on Page Two) charge in connection with « robbery try. Both will be eligible to apply for parole after one-third of their terms have been com.” pleted. {Dallas .. eee The Neutral Nations Repatria- Parents Still said he was shocked at the blood- shed in prisoner compounds guard- jed by the Indians. Acting Foreign Minister Cho lating approximately 8,210 children’ and pregnant mothers after 5 p.m. ast ngiht, The County Health Clinie staff rst Ca inet ? lists as a result of a rul- e State Attorney Gen- that residents on cer- ernment reservations cai because they do not live of Florida. an expected 70 per vote, the number of persons ‘to the polls in the Novem- ber election will probably fall’ e 1951 vote of about 4,- i z > tl i : FRESE i ¢ : i ts. slate of City Commis- (Continued On Page Two) Extension Of Duties For Gale ‘The Coral Gables District Office @f the Southérn Bell Telephone and Welegraph Company assumed jur- fadiction over the Key West tele- exchange effective October 1953, according to Jasper N. Dor- , South Florida Manager for! Bell. J. J. Partin, District Manager the Coral Gables Office stated that William Gale, Key West man- Hopeful Of Son’s Safety KANSAS CITY (®—What is the fate of 6-year-old Bobby Green- lease? This is the sixth dsy since the boy, son of wealthy automobile dealer Robert C. Greenlease was kidnaped from the French Insti- tute of Notre Dame De Sion, a private Catholic school, Yet his disappearance and its ramifications have become even |more puzzling daily with rumors and numerous tips adding to the complexity of the case. A family spokesman denied pub- lished reports that $500,000 ransom had been demanded and that the parents have been in contact with the abductors, The mother and father said again pre night they were only waiting a Chief of Police Bernard C. Bran- non repeatedly has said his de- \partment's chief concern is to get |Bobby back unharmed. “I haven't been in contact with the family since they asked us |Monday not to intervene,” he said. Police say only routine tips are being run down, | The child was taken from the ‘school on a ruse by a woman pre- |tending to be his aunt. A taxi- ‘Chung Whan called the deaths of anti-Communist prisoners “crimin. al acts of murder.” “We wisn to solemnly warn them (the Indians) that if they do not rectify immediately the be forced tc take up arms against them,” Cho declarea, The acting foreign minister charged that “The Indians profess to be neutral but are acting really as Communists. “We demand that they frankly Chinese Communists by sending their armed forces and fight against us,” he declared, Clark’s refusal to extend the ex- planations period wes sent to the repatriation commission after the 'U. N. commander had conferred with Gen. John E. Hull, his suc- cessor, and other high ranking offi- cers, As Clark and Holi wound up a brief tour of Korea, both advised trust the Communists and to be ready for anything. Brig. Gen. A, L. Hamblen, who handles prisdher matters for the U. N. Command, velayed the Al- lied refusal to extend the persua- sion period in a letter to Lt. Gen. K. S. Thimayya, Indian chairman of the five-nation repatriation com-. mission. Hamblen said the Korean armi- stice specifically fixes periods for (Continued On Page Two) evil acts being committed we shall side with the North Koreans and| fighting men on the front not to| ribbean. Hurricane “Gail” Is Discovered In Atlantic MIAMI (Hurricane “Gail”; was discovered far out in the At-; lantic by a passing ship today. The storm was centered about} 1,500 miles east southeast of San Juan, Puerto Rico, which placed it about 2,500 miles fram the Flor- ida mainland. Its position as reported by the ship, the SS Thorbjorg, was at! latitude 14.6 n., longitude 42.9 W. The vessel reported a barometer reading of 29.12 inches, with winds that veered nearly around the com-' pass as the ship progressed. Walter R. Davis, storm forecast- er in the Miami Weather Bureau, said “there’s no doubt that a hurri- cane is winding up.” Of more immediate concern to Davis was an area of suspiciion ‘composed of squally weather ex- tending from Abaco Islahd in the Bahamas’ across western Cuba to Swan Island in the Western Car- definitely “It’s a_ suspicious’ area,” Davis said, “but there is (Continued On Page Two) Warren Leaves Brita‘n Said Calif. To Take (Aimins For Over New Job Deac’ sek Break to guard personal liberty and dig-'ing the nity with “the best in me,” TALLAHASSEE—Acting Gov. Charley E. Johns holds his first since taking over to succeed the late Gov. Dan McCarty. Secretary of State R. A. Gray, Johns, Atty.-G Supt. Thomas D. Bailey.—() Wirephoto. * Pichard Ervin, { By GENE KRAMER LONDON (—Britain reportedly, SAN FRANCISCO #—Promising is pushing a p!aa zimed at break-| The Russians have warned the| com peace conference|Conference may never take place) Earl deadlock by letting both sides in-| meeting with the state cabinet L. to R., Comptroller C. M. Gay, Treasurer Ed. Larsen, School broadened. It proposes, they said, that the Peace conference as a whole—the Communist side as well as the U.N. side—now, agree to invite the neutrals to join in the talks.’ The U.S. has agreed the confer- ence itself could invite outsiders: —but only after it begins its de- liberations. E peace parley will have to be | | collected all the supplies from the Convent of Mary Immaculate, Key West High School and Poinciana where the injections were given yesterday. The Convent figure was 373; Key West High School, 349; 'Poinciana, 585, and County Health Clinic, 104 yesterday, The Navy had completed 4,202 {inoculations at the Naval Hospital, Ward A, by 4 p.m. yesterday, according to (Continued on Page Two) Regatta Winners Awarded Trophies By KW Lions Club The presentation of the trophies to winners of the Lions Club Re- igatta held recently by the Key West Outboard Club was the highlight of Thursday night’s Lions Club tation to Bascombe Grooms, Staggs, Cecil Cates and Gerald \Schneedelback. Each had won his particular racing event and so was the Lions Club for that special event by Frank Wayne of Evans Enterprises, Thursday, October 15, has set as Ladies Night and all are invited to“bring their unless the U. N. adopts their pro-'dinner, Only one guest per Coggin Is Named To Head C. OF C. ‘posal that certain Asian nations —such as India, Burma and Pakis- tan—sit in, The U.N. majority voted against; ager, assumed the responsibility;cab driver who had the wo for ‘Matecumbe and Key Largo|a fare said she was auiny,. ” telephones, as well as all other/good looker” with clear skin, Qelephones on the Keys, at the time| about 5 feet 5 inches tall and not Miss Rosam Will Act As Adviser — prepared: Uday 9 TRC ite certain: rieu'aley taciatitg ioe ibecome chief justice of the United dia, to joiu the deliberations. States. Minister of S'2t2 Selwyn Lloyd In an emotional <dalihitatalen ‘ : ing at the Den Monday, a parking lot a few blocks from i “If through the years its work is ee (Continued On Page Two) ‘at 7 p.m. ’ this change becomes effective. more than 35 years old. The woman W: {who has bes got the child out of school by tell- For Local cso In Marathon aD Fresimy pony sy dill Si —— ing a un his mother was il Monroe County Engineer John|Court “‘the interpreter and defend. jo ™<: Saucy Oct | cabbie, Willard P. Creech, 63/ Miss Cl ; therine|P. Goggin has. been elected presi- Constitution.” Sage tila = Bie FOR SALE drove the woman and the boy to/Street, preg mange ry Senior dent oe the Marathon Chamber of ied ae. was Be nie BEV d 10, 2x8, 2x6Floor- (Continuea On Page Two) ythe school. He last saw them| All Shelving, Show-| Cases, Counters, 2 x}; adviser of the local chapter of the Girl’s Service Organization (GSO) at the USO-YMCA Club, by Edwin F. Trevor, chairman of the Club's. Operating Committee. ‘The Operating Committee through lits chairman thanked Miss Rosam| ‘Commerce for the second time in ‘three years, it was learned when! ee were counted Thursday: 7 it. Clifford Hicks, assistant Mana- ger of the Overseas Road and Toll Bridge District, was named as vice well done,” he added, “the home lot every American will always be his castle. Every human life will have dignity and “here will forever be one law for all men.’ ‘plane t>72y from New York to con-| fer with Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, Lloyd was summoned yesterday | after diplomatic informants said jout the new Korean strategy. The 62-year-old Republican gov- wi Although no official details were | the Churchill Cabinet had worked] . The Following Change In SIGSBEE PARK BUS ROUTE Will Be Effective Monday, Oct. 5, 1958 |for her years of volunteer service’ president. tas a GSO member and as a senior; The five men receiving sufficient volunteer. votes to assure them of seats on) Miss Rosam is assistant manager|the Chamber board were W. A. of Sears, Roebuck and Co, in Key|Parrish, realtor; Ralph Cunning- West. jham, attorney; outgoing Chamber’ GSO is the official group of young president Fred Center, owner of a ladies of the community which as-iboat rental service; Russell Hill, sists the club staff in planning pro-\co-owner of the Marathon Sundry Sram and which assumes major Store; and Phil Sadowski, aig ore roles in conducting program and per services for the members of the; Goggin, Hicks and Center were He is scheduled to fly to Wasb- Arnséd Forces and their families, | (Continued On Page Two) (Continued On Page Two) “] will be happy to devote the remaining years of my active life to this cause. . , to give the best available on the plan, the inform- ants said it was based on the {assumption that the proposed Ko-| Leaving Southard and Duval Streets 20.minutes after each hour. Arriving Sigsbee Park 40 minutes after each hour. Leaving Sigshee Park on the hour. Route: Southard and Duv: Duval te Eaton; Eaton to Simonton; Simonton to Fleming; Fleming to White; White te Palm Avenue; Paim Avenue to Boulevard: Boulevard to First Street; First Street to Flagler; Flagler to 13th Street; 13th Street to Sigsbee Park. Return by same route to White and Southard Streets; Southard to Duval. Mosquito Season BUY SCREEN HERE! STRUNK LUMBER 120 SIMONTON STREET Near City Hall Warren was named « j by President Eiseah day. His resignation as governor becomes effective tomorrow at

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