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Page 10 THE KEY WEST CIT! 1ZEN Friday, October 16, 1953 | Big Three Ministers Seek Cold War Problem Soiution | To Prevent Trieste Hot War § By SEYMOUR TOPPING LONDON #—The Big Three for-} eign ministers resumed their col- lective search here today for a step-by-step approached toward a solution of cold war problems. Their major task was how to keep a hot war from starting over Tri- este. | U. S. Secretary of State Dulles, | British Foreign Secretary Eden and French Foreign Minister Bid- ault planned three days of confer-} ences in Britain’s gray and gloomy foreign office. Dulles, arriving in London last, night, warned they would not pro- duce any “magic formula for peace” But he said he was “‘confi-) dent this exchange of views among} three friends will advance the) cause of worldwide peace and bal tice.” i In addition to Trieste, they were) to take up their new overture to; the Kremlin for Soviet Foreign) Minister V. M. Moiotov to discuss} Germany and Austria with them,/| the next moves in Korea and Indo-| china and other pressing problems! around the globe. Prime Minister Churchill was ex- pected to inject, through Eden, his proposal for the West’s top leaders to meet with Soviet Premier Mal- enkov, Dulles was expected to look on this British idea with a wary | eye. anatise last night emphasized his view that the way to peace is through “continuing” painstaking efforts to deal concretely with ac- tuat complicated situations which could become the starting points of war.” The current meeting, he said, “is part of that continuing pro- cess.” Bidault, arriving several hours later from Paris, also said: “We musn’t expect any spectacular re- sults from this meeting.” Both men—and informants close to them confirmed this—obviously were more intent on specific ways of dousing brush fires around the world than upon making any dra- matic new gesture to the Kremlin. There were numérous sugges- {chiefs might do to keep the peace in Trieste, where the British-Am- erican decision last week to turn their occupation Zone A over to Italy brought a threat from Yugo- slavia’s President Tito to move in his own troops from Zone B which they already occupy. These were some of the ideas reported under consideration: 2. Delay withdrawal of the Anglo American forces from Zone A. 2. Try to persuate Italy to send only police, not trowps, into Zone A, and then try to get Tito’s agreement. | 3. Agree to Tito’s proposal for a conference of Italy, Yugoslavia, | Britain and the United States, | with France a possible fifth ‘at- tendant. | Presumably such a conference | would require considerable arrang-| ing. In Rome yesterday Premier Giuseppe Pella told the Big Three's | ambassadors that Italy would take! Part in the get-together when she} and Yugoslavia were on ‘‘equal) terms”—with Italy in Zone A, or with Yugoslav troops out of Zone B And at the United Nations last | night Chief Soviet Delegate Andrei Vishinsky, pressing a Russian Res- olution for an internationalized, in-} dependent Trieste, warned the So-} viet Union would not tolerate any arrangement in which Russia{ didn’t have a hand. Before taking up Trieste, the ministers were expected to ap- prove the draft of their newest note to Russia. Reportedly it pro- poses that Molotov meet them in Lugano, Switzerland, about Nov. ‘9 to discuss Germany and Austria. | From Moscow, however, it was! reported that diplomatic sources) there expressed grave doubts the} Kremlin would accept the bid.| These sources figured the Rus-| sians still have Kast-West rela-| tions in the "deep freeze,’’ and are concentrating on such pressing} domestic problems as the raising of the living standards of their) own people, | Dulles dined last night with Churchill at his office residence, ! 10 Downing St. tions of what the thtee diplomatic 20-GALLON HEAVY-DUTY OIL WATER BASE OIL - INTERIOR and EXTERI LAMP SHADES . ALL-PLASTIC SEATS METAL 10-YEAR GUARANTEE We Have... 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Sells For Service GIRL SCOUT BRENDA STICKNEY sold the first package of Girl Scout cookies to Mayor C. B. Harvey in front of city hall yesterday afternoon, marking the opening of Nationaf Girl Scout W The cookies will be on sale throughout the coming week with one-eighth of all proceeds going to the troop making the sale. All other profits will stay in Key West to aid in Girl Scout work here.—Citizen Photo, Finch, In Search For Body Of Marsh KANSAS CITY W—Investigators | planned today to reopen the lime- | to woo them- back to communism! Mac McWhorter, 63-year-old Dal-|filled eave in ene ean S and the interviews were delayed las, Tex., truck driver, was equal|kidnap victim Bobby Greenlease until tomorrow. |to the occasion yesterday when his|was found. ‘The 1,000 POWs sat tight for five eucmiaed rales araced ona we John Downs, Buchanan County | hours in their tents within sight of ar “ere, spilling a cargo Of prosecutor, ordered the grave re- armed Indian guards. Finally the #PPles. Uninjured, he gathered up a gr x explanations were postponed. |the salvageable apples and set up jcuene Just on un off-chance' | . : a roadside apple stand while wait. jhat Thomas Marsh’s body might/ i e there. | Carl Austin Hall, who icsateasedl LEGAL NOTICE kidnaping and slaying 6-year-old| |Bobby, first said the child was! | o llanassee, Florids,|shot to death by Marsh. Later he b * 193 absolved Marsh, saying he alone| By Refusals To Participate By GEORGE MCARTHUR PANMUNJOM (#—Defiant North} WASTES NO TIME Korean prisoner flatly refused to- patriation Commission (NNRC), of which he is chairmar, would con- sider how to enforce its rule that the POWs must attend the inter-/7, views. The rule was backed by the! NOTICE ICE ts hereby given that the/shot the boy. | Fund of the State of Florida,|, Officials have speculated that] rs ant to Law, will off for|the missing Marsh, an ex-convict, | Reds but strongly opposed by the ‘or Objections Only, also had been ki‘icd. Allies. r 20th, 3, the followi Held in the Jackson County Jail : toc: {deseribed la n E COUN- ‘ 23 1 _ Thimayya said the commission inte eed ag Ma a COCN-|here with hall is Mrs. Bonnie | is empowered to use force if neces-| Brown Heady, who admitted lur- sary. Dor der ne ape arena 2n jing Bobby from his school Sept. | As soon as the guards withdrew,} ots 1 and 2 of ane 28 and turning him ever to Hall. | the North Korean POWs trium-| 63 ‘South Tea! ownsnip | The grave is in the yard of her phantly marched from their tents} ots com: amon ae Joseph, Mo., home. Downs said | singing and waving flags. Thimay-| :0 County. Kaen ian: [the reopening wes merely a dou- vrs Width [ble check and that he believed the| ya said they later began digging ¢ ard \ trenches between the tents. ; paseiot ope lcriie Tad been dug con enough R ners ca i | proximately on the | ‘obby’’s body was re-| neutral obeervers were daked to] Gertesz-boqia™ jee feeton [ewvered to mule out the Bossi return tomorrow. | to ZERO at the southwest | anything else being buried there. | Dp —— The Reds asked that Chinese) a tots of 56.0 acres, more Guns; basa’ "35 |B] Logan Sues POWs. be sent to temorrow’s ex-| planations, presumably in hopes of| | Accurate description to be fur- nished with deed. meeting less resistance, g | SANTA Mi if. U—Al- Thimayya said: “We’ve done all Se ee er is required to Pay ileging Rie Lo: a the appealing we can (to the North|tary stampae ne Oe Mh AecumeP las sued movie producer Fred Koreans) . . . We showed a threat d hall Finklehoffe for divorce. | of force and they still refused to ?°, ** or the! In her complaint filed Wednes-| come out. d | BRGED Bate talnerely 80d ree and day, she asked reasonable support, He said Maj. Gen. S. P. P. Thor-| thereunder. estimated her requirements at at, the Indian troup commander,| The Trustees of Internal Im-|$2.000 a month, plus a clothing al- | ver Fund g hi would try to meet with the POW Sv sjec¢ tne salen “"® TS" lowance and requested a division |leaders, |_BY ORDER of the Trustees of the of community property. She said | ly today is AN Me! * ae x ing- on how to force the North Koreans ‘ Govera’r town Pace foreign. be pees from their compounds. ae tiaot. Sec. |house furnishings sadenver al The repatriation commission {s;Trustees LJ. Fund. 4 16.953) horses, holding 14,600 Chinese and 7,800| aires cies: Heoas North Koreans to hear the Red ef- forts to coax them home. The U. N. Command has said it is in no hurry to start interviewing the 23 Americans, 1 Briton and 335 South Koreans listed by the NNRC as unwilling to go home. A battalion of crack Indian troops was posted around the barbed wire stockades of one com- ind of prisoners scheduled for erviews today. fhe steel-helmeted soldiers lay on embankments outside the wire fences and pointed their rifles at the prisoner tents. But the 500 REVIVAL Come! See! CHURCH OF GOD 1008 OLIVIA STREET mademotselle Rise and Twine The light - looking shoe, an up and com- ing fashion for pret tier feet! Graceful in motion—with slender straps of suede to hold them on. These are the shoes that lend dramatic en- chantment with your new fall fashions— deliberately reveal. ing—and ever so flattering! $16.95 mademoiselle dn thee, Exclusively Ours at 926 DUVAL STREET ae « 4 * % <4 Never finer in quality... never more outstanding in value... FLORSHEIM SHOES Ae Koreans inside refused to judge. An NNRC spokesman said two anti-Red Chinese who attended Thursday’s explanations and re- d safely to their compounds sent into the stockade to al- y the fears of the North Koreans, sed to budge. ya said the North Korean had refused to inspect the nation sites, as he previously had announced. MEDICS TO KOREA TOKYO W—Maj. Gen. Earle Standlee, the Army’s chief surgeon in the Far East said today volun- J rgical, medical will go to Korea s to aid in caring for about 40.000 patients crowcing the lim- ted medical facilities of South Everyone Welcome! Korea, i 7:30 P.M. -- NIGHTLY Starting Sunday Night, Oct. 18, 1953 DYNAMIC, SOUL-STIRRING MESSAGES OF “GOD” FROM YOUTH EVANGELIST P. L. PARKER OF CHATTANOOGA, TENN. “BRINGING THE TRUTH TO THE YOUTH” Singing and Music PLEASE COME % Everyone Welcome! It is with pardonable pride that we present our new Fall selection of Florsheim Shoes. For better looks, finer fit and money-saving longer wear, each is a foremost value in fine shoe quality; Be For The Brands You Know “BG |] $26 DUVAL STREET DIAL 2.3931