The Key West Citizen Newspaper, October 21, 1953, Page 8

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RESULTS OF LONDON TALKS TOLD NEW YORK # — Secretary of State Dulles says the recent for- “sought unifying principles which’ might relax:tension” in the world but “avoided platitudes without) relevancy. Dulles adds that what the meet- ing did not do is as important as what it did so, asserting: “We did not undermine the mor- al. strength of the free world_by. resort to measures cf short-range The secretary of state, in a speech last night at the 22nd an- nual New York Herald Tribune! Forum, gave-a panoramic view of the talks he had at London British Foreign Secretary Eden and French Foreign Minister Bid- ault, Dulles returned Monday from et of the chief results of the London sessions was the sending “ in relation to that is what we now We hope that the answer affirmative. In any event be revealing.” a meeting on the for- ministers level was proposed our view that few be more dangerous é gF = z q & & = fy i f i i a E with its NATO neigh- Western ministers believe decision to relinquish the ad- ministration of Zone A of Trieste to Italy” wil pave the way to a final peaceful solution.” Korea—“The division of Korea is wrong and, unhappily, there are similar wrongs elsewhere, as in Germany, but new war is not the Indochina—The ministers ‘‘wel- comed” devdopments seeking to meet the aspirations for freedom of the people of Indochina while Protecting them “from being taken over by the.enemies of freedom.” Israel—“‘It is the United Nations which played an essential part in creating the state of Israel . . . So we agreed to join in asking the- United Nations Security Coun- cil to take jurisdiction of this mat- ter (of recent Israeli-Arab ten- sions).”” Reward Money Grab-Bag Feud Hilton Called To Testify In Wayne Divorce By JAMES BACON LOS ANGELES (®~Nicky Hil-| ton, former husband of Elizabeth Taylor, today was subpoenaed to -|explain his week-long stay last’ year at the John Wayne home as the “guest of Mrs. Wayne- while the rugged movie star was in Honolulu. «Wayne charged yesterday.during couple’s stormy divorce trial Russell. Hilton, son of hotel magnate Con- rad Hilton, said he would save ‘comment until “‘I testify in court.” Atty. Jerome Rosenthal, counsel’ for Mrs. Wayne, said actress Betsy von Furstenberg would testify that she asked Mrs. Wayne to house d|Hilton while he recuperated from accident injuries, Hilton ead Miss Von Furstenbeeg were ‘swee hearts at the time. On the stand yesterday, Mrs, ‘Wayne testified her brawny hus- band hit-her with everything from the back of his hand to upholstered pillows during six years of Holly- wood married life..But they, always kissed and made up, she added. " One reconciliation scene, she Said, took place in.a Burbank hos-| pital. She quoted the husky actor: “I know. I -have been ,@ horrible .|jerk with you, I need you very much. Please give me one more jchance.”” Just as she was about to give in, she added, Wayne’s press agent arrived and asked: “Shall I call the’ reporters?” Mrs. Wayne said she snapped; a publicity stunt?” She said Wayne agreéd that the scene mii and ordered the publicist out of the roum by yelling that he “had spoiled everything \by coming in’ too soon.” Another time Wayne embar- rassed her, she testified, was when he left her stranded at a party while be took off with the boys. “They all Went soniéplace where there, were stripteasers, call girls, prostitutes or whatever you want to call them:,He came home the a beeg, black bite on his neck.” | Asked to explain what kind of a bite, Mrs. Wayne’s large Latin eyes grew big an® she empha- sized: hae was. a human being jite.”” i She said Wayne told her that one of the. stripteasers bit him without his consent. Sweet Potato Chips May Soon Be Marketed By SAUL FELDMAN STILLWATER, Okla. uw) — The lowly yam finally may get in thei chips—sweet potato chips, that is: After studying the surplus yam situation for years, scientists at Oklahoma A&M think they've fi- nally hit on a solution. If you can make potato chips from regular potatoes, why not! chip up sweet potatoes? Frank Cross, head of the horti- culture department, says experi- ments show the new chips: may} soon be the nibbling sensation. ‘They're big, golden yellow and erisp with the sweet - potato ®avor brought out. Some of the first experimental ehips have been served this month at field days around Oklahoma end a survey of those m bent delicacy show they’re enthusi- ic. “Besides being colorful and tasty, the chips made from sweet Potatoes are healthier,” Cross Pointed out. “They have all the Bourishment of regular chips plus vitamins.” Only a small part of the sweet Potatoes harvest can be sent to the} Srocers because the majority. is jumbo size and too big and pithy for the table. However, these big ones are per-) fect for making sweet potato chips.! The sweet potatces are pro-| Sprinkler Bogs Down ALBUQUERQUE, N. M, W—A/ elty water truck crew stuck to its schedule and drove out yesterday to sprinkle dirt streets in north-| west Albuquerque, But it didn’t get the job done. The truck got! stuck in mud from the heaviest rain the city bas had in six) months. i potato, {British ‘Laborite and humanist. She said her husband slapped her around and banged on doors with wooden tables and threw rub- bing alcohol in her face. ‘Wayne sat expressionless through most of the testimony, oc- casionally .shaking his head. He “t figured at that moment,” ex- plained Wayne, *‘that I would have! to’ earn $20,000 to-pay that $2,000. Riot At Bullring GUATEMALA, Guatemala w — Gate crashers’ fought with ‘ticket! holders for seats yesterday at the bullfight here -which was part of \the opening program for Guatema. la’s annual October national fair, Eight persons were injured and the was considerably da: radio said the gate crashers’ were “reactionaries to Sabotage the . state-sponsored ex-! position.” i. About 2,500 persons bullring gates and the scramble for seats led to the riot with ticket! holders. An undisclosed number of, arrests were made. Two Are Considered OSLO, Norway (®—Sources close to the Norwegian Nobel Committee which chooses the winner of the annual Nobel i tian humanist and medical mis-) sionary, and Philip Noel . Baker, The prize, estimated at around! 170,000 kroner ($23,760), either will) be awarded to one of these two, or the sum may be shared be-' tween them, the informants said. Last year no peace prize was awarded, because the five-member “what is this, a reconciliation or {4% next morning very drunk, with’ ; |been suspended as a result of the BY DULLES Pages THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Wednesday, October 21, 1953) WASHINGTON May Precipitate In New Mexico By JULIUS GOLDEN ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. #-If a man charged with the “Phantom| of, the Turnpike” slayings is con-' victed in Pennsylvania, a grab-bag style feud may ensue in the little town of Belen, N. M. There’s a matter of $11,000 fered by truck companies for arrest and conviction of the or persons responsible for the der of two truck drivres on Pennsylvania Turnpike. John Wesley Wable, 24, cha: with the slayings, was captured in Belen Oct. 11 after being spotted by two young women—Caroline it Midge Harmon of Belen. For a while, everything was and a “ A reigned, The Belen News-Bulletin, a bi- weekly newspaper, ran a banner “Eleven Thousand Dollar Re- ward Poses Big Problem After Capture of Murder Suspect in Be- len Sunday.’” The matter became a town prob- lem. Dist. Atty. Filo Sedillo said: “I feel everyone should claim the reward if Wable is convicted and if they had any connection at all with events leading up to his capture. This includes about a doz- en people in New Mexico.” A total of about 12 persons, in- cluding police offi of the net w about Wable . good his escape. and Miss Harmon were the ones who actually spotted the wanted ana. tnd whose tip led to, bis eap- “We've done nothing about the reward,” Miss Smith said. “All we know is what the newspapers) stated and what a Pittsburgh re-| porter told us over the telephone. “I feel like I’m on exhibition. Evtrybody looks at us all the time. everyone’s talking. No one| knows. what’s going on.” i \ Rumors that several Belen peace | officers saw lawyers to find out| their chances of getting in on the ‘money appeared groundless after | checking. A spokesman for one of the three | companies offering the reward] said in Pittsburgh his company | will pay money without a claim being filed upon conviction. He’ said the money would go to those designated by proper authorities. | ‘Spokesmen for the other two com- | panies could not be reached for comment. At any rate, Belen once was a quiet town. Now—well, it just goes to show what prospects of a little | money can do. McCarthy Seeks To Question Atomic Spy WASHINGTON uw—Sen. McCar-| thy (R-Wis) said today the Justice Department has agreed to let him | penitentiary at Lewisburg, Pa. Greenglass is the man whose testimony helped to send his sis- iter, Ethel Rosenberg, and her hus- band Julius to the electric chair | last summer as spies. He is serv- jing a 15-year sentence for espio- nage. McCarthy had asked permission | to question him in connection with ‘a new investigation of what he has called security leaks at the Army | ‘Signal Corps’ Ft. Monmouth, N. J., tadar laboratories. McCarthy contends he has evi- dence that a spy ring headed by was able some years ments are now in Communist East. | ern Germany. The Army said it knows of no unauthorized docu- ments in Red hands there. i McCarthy,’ after an inspection|| trip to Ft. Monmouth yesterday, | impressed by the very aggressive | — taken to improve security ere. | McCarthy said 12 persons had | security investigation but Secre- | tary of the Army Kobert T. Stev-| ens, who accompanied the senator, “That figure is too | CLEVELAND — What would anyone want with a “hot” Grey- hound bus. It’s simple. | “I just wanted to take a ride,” police quoted John Junior Watkins indicted yesterday on bus-stealing| charges. Police skid Watkins, 21, took a committee found none of the can- didates worthy. two-hour ride and was arrested |when he backed into a car. Unions Poll Of Members On New Strike By FRED HOFFMAN and other nonwage But a strike is eral months. The unions—which engineers, firemen, conductors—announced pre 3 EAE Bees g F E FF 3 E i | Fle Fak : as “stone age, lal Trouble Ahead | E LATEST THING in the way of garbage removal is to be put to work for Key Westers imme- diately. This huge monster of steel and rubber came into the city Monday afternoon ready for duty as a public servant. Evident pride in the machine is shown by Jack Delaney, left, while on the far right Mayor C. B. Harvey and driver Freddie Roberson discuss the ease of handling such modern equipment. In the center are shown Ivan Roberts, director of public works, and Ellis Watson, head of the Sanitation Department.—Citizen Staff Photo, Finch. bourbon” ideas which he said would “practically write off” seniority and other pro-! visions in present agreements. FOR less than the price of a Postage Stamp .. . MR. MERCHANT A Full Page Ad In The Citizen Costs Less Than .013c Per Subscribe For Easy Figuring We'll Base It On An Average of 3 Readers sees (National Average 3.4) Per Subscriber You Are Reaching Your Potential Customer at the Low Cost of Only 005c PER READER ? r ; PAID FOR—DEMANDED — AND READ THE KEY WEST CITIZEN.

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