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s said age means.” He ha one woman quest i had HIGH HONOR COMES TO GEORGE C. MARSHALLHetines Resumed:i.2%:% ‘ss s | WASHINGTON —Ser. McCar- *8@ at Ft. Monmouth By ALTON C. FAY will receive the Nobel Peace Prize|calied after he thougt he had re-jlied forces im Europe, Marshall ad-jcroquet, which he plays occasion-/at Pinehurst a Sd-year-old men’s thy (R-Wis) resumes public hear- w INGTON 4 j for the U.S. foreign aid program/|tired from public life as a five-‘dressed him as “Eisenhower.” ally. He fishes some and goes golfing organization, The Tin Whis-|-_ , Sekt d ASHING' #—The peaceful rn 30'N as a ings today in an avowed effort to years and high honors have come which bore his name star general with more than Now he calls him “Mr. President. canoeing when on vacation in the tles, elected him an honorary} Marshall was Secretary of State|years army service. | When Marshall called a man im Adirondacks of New York member. He follows matches in/#how there has been espionage on for George C. Marshall, American when te performed the service soldier and statesman He came back first to under-jand started out just calling him) When at his Leesburg home, his Jeep station wagon, hops out at\radar secrets at the Army Signal a th that won the award. It was one take a special mission to Chiang'“Jones,” Jones knew things were Marshall visits nearby Washington | greens to see how the putting g0e8, Corps laboratories at Ft ’ Tomorrow, in Oslo, Norway, he'of three jobs to which he was re- Kai-shek for President Truman. |running at an even keel. But if he two or three times a month on perches on a camp stool to train! mouth, N. J. pr smn A Million Dollar Deal secretly STICKUP FAILS CLEVELAND ?—A man shoved h the. wicket at the ater yesterday where ¢ Thomas, 40, was a Later he served as the nation’sjopened up with “Mr. Jones” or business trips. He is chairman of binoculars on approaching players.| Secretary of the Army Robert \third Secretary of Defense. “Col. Jones” the general was an-\the American Battle Monuments Occasionally he joins in a quail T. Stevens told a news conference | Many of those who worked for/°Ved and trouble was brewing. Commission, which has jurisdiction | shoot. ‘Nov. 13 an Army inquiry had | him in the Pentagon and State) Marshall retires along about mid- over cemeteries overseas where) Marshall was only two days outiturned up no evidence of success- Department call him kindly andjevening and rises- early in the U-S. military dead rest of a sickbed when he boarded a ful spying at Ft. Monmouth in re- \eenabdlesote, but always reserved./morning. He never was an enthus-/ When winter descends on Vir- liner in New York to sail forjcent years. He said he thought Snowball Melts Away Three decade. as an army officer|iastic follower of the cocktail cir- ginia, the general and Mrs. Mar-/Europe last week. He had been'there had been some several years SMOWDAa ells Away shape habit and traits. The older,/cuit. He hasn't smoked since 1935. shall go to their other home at ill with a virus infection. jago. RENO, N easier-going Marshall walks and) The general likes football, a Pinehurst, N.C. and live there! “I really had a hard time with} McCarthy has said the Ft. Mon- ser looks like a general, even in a sports interest that dates back to until spring. that,” the general told reporters/mouth hearings by the Senate in- cy, tweed jacket, his student days at the Virginia) Liscombe Lodge, their Pinehurst who saw him off. jhe heads will show “what espion-\and just melte The military have a practice of/Military Institute at Lexington, home, is a modest, clapboard) Newsmen tried to ask his views | using the last name, without rank, |Va. |bungalow set in a smallish garden,'on current world affairs—on Rus-| when speaking to individuals of} He has long been a booster of'so well screened by trees it barely sia, on the general European situ-/ equal or lesser rank. There prob-|West Point's gridiron teams and is visible from the road only 25/ation. But he made it plain he no ably are no more than a dozenconsiders himself something of an yards away. There is a covered/longer was an official; that when persons larshall has ever calledjelder statesman-coach for “the veranda. A living room with bigihe left the last of his four big by their first names. Point” at the yearly Army-Navy fireplace faces on a terrace Ser-|jobs, Secretary of Defense, he be- When he was Army chief ofjclassic in Philadelphia. vants are a maid and the gener-|came just a citizen. staff and Dwight D. Eisenhower| He likes golf but no longer plays\al’s orderly, Sgt. William Heffner.| “When 1 retired I was supreme commander of Al-lit. He has a putter’s touch for! When the Marshalls came to live straight out,” he said. Mrs. Thomas sna out of her He di eee a Tuesday, December 8, 1953 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN versie lad taeleeisienceice Page 5 LOANS For Christmas Cash Don’t let lack of money spoil your family’s Christmas, walked “BILL” SARNER Manager Ameunt of Loan Monthly ravens 2nd Lien Auto Loans We don’t care how much you owe — we will advance the money you need — you don’t have to pay off your present balance. $ 50 $100 $200 $250 $300 Interest Included $ 3.00 $7.59 $15.17 $18.96 $22.75 Tired of fighting trafic? Went to refux as you see a9 you save? Leave your cores and car at home and go Greyhound! Lowest of Fares! Sioux Falls, S. D. $42.00 Milwaukee, Wis. _ $31.85 Pittsburgh. Pa. 31.55 New York City __ 28.90 Macon, Ga. ___. 14.85 Elmira, N .Y. 30.70 WALTER J. MATHERLY., dean of the College of Business Ad- ministration at the University of Florida (seated, left), is worke ing on a million dollar business To Consolidate Bills Just call us te pay your bills out of business in Florida. M March of Dimes Campaign in paign plans with J. F. Nee, nat deal—a deal to help put polio latherly, chairman of the 1954 the state, talks over his cam- ional March of Dimes director, and Mrs. Beatrice Wright, who heads March of Dimes women’s activities nationally. is over $1,000,000. Dealt A Death Blow In College STILLWATER, Okla. (#—Chiv- alry, dead for years, has been; pushed about six fect deeper into} the ground by four Okiahoma A&M} College undergraduates who de-/ cided to trade the Air Lancelot idea for a fast dollar. They are selling good looks and Goal of the 1954 campaign in Florida Reds May Still Hold American | Boys In Russia By C. YATES MCDANIEL WASHINGTON (#—Some Penta- gon officials think it is quite pos- sible that some Americans cap- tured in Korea are alive and being forced to work for the Commu- nists behind the Iron Curtain, Periodically during the Korean War American intelligence agen- cies heard such reports and made ‘ jevery effort to track them down. piss Have gel gaat ane Deus bi oop nearer 4, |8ay they cannot declare flatly that Pe ham gaol Rept) 4 Chinese and Korean Reds business venture will nl the [tiled to return or account for all swer to a des Leake a’ |Americans they captured, because a ce Wane ape ba ble St the (tHe Communists never made com- bee rete ar coke dates, |Plete Senses 00: DEsouary AML: Te- dances, bridge, coffee or tea drink- ing, or any other social gathering. | The boys—-Gaylord Ortman, Hen- Messey, Okla., sophomore, Joe! Perry, El Reno, Okla., senior, Dave Bergdahl, junior from Skandia, Mich.; and Jerry Herrin, Meno, Okla., freshman, also from Skandia—guarantee the young lad- ies a date they will be proud of, well-mannered, well-dressed, well- *|fused to permit independent inves- tigations But one official, after reading the statement of a returned Jap- anese prisoner of World War II} that he had seen Americans in a prison near Moscow, put it this way today “It is quite possible that some American boys are digging urani- um in Siberian mines—if we could only prove it.” GREYHOUND BUS DEPOT iio } PRESENTING Add U.S. Tax to above Return-Trip 20% LESS. . .on Round-Trip Tickets! $11 SOUTHARD STREET Ga: to GREYHOUND 4:42/ PHONE 2-5211 and have only one monthly payment. SOUTHERN FINANCE CO. 7052 DUVAL STREET PHONE 2.3574 the new 1954 Lincoln Now—come in and see the latest, most dramatic edition of the car that has changed American motorists’ ideas about modern design~the new Lincoln for 1954, You'll see completely new styling—inside and out— from stunning new grille to distinctive new taillights. You'll see exterior colors far ahead of their time— from pastels to vibrant primary shades; interiors of rich TODAY- SEE THE NEWEST, MOST EXCITING nylons, gabardines, whipcords, broadcloths, and leathers. Frankly, you will not see bulging lines and glitter for glitter’s sake. Lincoln has the pure beauty of functional design found wherever the living is modern. Finally, we invite you to drive the new Lincoln. Only on the road—in traffic, on the highway or back road— can you feel the incredible combination of smoothness LOOK ON THE ROAD and surge. 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About The baee announced their ar-|™St of these men, the Pentagon rival on the Oklahoma A&M social |S°9S frankly that it has no infor-| , % mai whatsoever. Bi acene with an ad that read: “Girls, maton, *hatsoe tak ene don’t panic. An escort is as close as your telephone.” lieved to have been captured, Here’s the way their system > mS works: Fire Sweeps Prairie Customers get the use of one of} BROWNING, Mont (—Fanned four cars—their choice. The first|by a 50-mile-an-hour wind, fire 20 miles are free and a nominal |swept 15,000 acres of prairie near| charge of 3 cénts a mile is added jhere before volunteers brought it} thereafter. Cigarettes, the custo- under control Sunday. mer’s brand, are free, Rates start ~ at 70 cents an hour for single |quests from prankish men students| dates with lower rates for double, than customers. 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