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j Braves Say They Il Split |Trustees * Pitching Staff For Trade ; | Friday, December 11, 1953, By CHRIS EOMONDS MILWAUKEE ~The Milwau-| Page 6 kee Braves are willing to split! THE KEY WEST CITIZEN in at a tas “at * 2 Minnesota, Tulane Clamor For ational Basketball Attention strengthen themselves. “We're still in the market for) By BEN PHLEGAR the major league meeting in New York, “but we went give up *y\Harris Elected NEW YORK W—Minnesota and| will agree, was pretty good last |ketball attention today with three- summer, We'll listen to reason on To Head Key West game winning streaks and victor-| trades.” s The Gophers from Minneapolis with New York Giant executives, The Key West Golf Club at its edged Oklahoma A&M, No. 4, 57- presumably concerning the pros-regular monthly meeting elected 56 last night for the Aggies’ first “About all they'd talk about was! served as President of the Club|D@imc last seagon’s NCAA runner- rren Spahn,” Quinn said. “And betore World War Il when the elub|“P» 69-65. that's out of the question. Spahn was only a social organization. Ths belt 1 led both jopening game of the winter for) ven cer list vice-president in charge of|Phog Allen's Jayhawks. leagues in earned run average 1a8t rournament, Russell Hyman: 2nd! The University of Louisville was) games and lost seven. | i 4 ing ‘, ipresident in charge of Entertain-|at Albany, N. Y., 78-71, its first aged inden rp che peal (AO Al Borreson, Sr: 4th vice-|defeat of the season. M.nager John Quinn, back from) pitchers nothing. ‘Tulane, better known as football — oes think ranyees| ers, clamored for national bas- ies over the fourth and fifth-rank- Quinn said he and other wo Golf Club Thurs, 2s teams in the count. Braves brass conferred three times) pects of obtaining Bobby Thomson, Mr. W. Curry Harris as President|defeat, and Tulane tripped Kan- hard-hitting outfielder. Ifor 1954. Mr. Harris had previously |$#% Voted No. 5 on the strength of age nal best ne eee losers were Leanne patty rip pitcher and! ‘Aiso elected to serve with Mr./away home and it was the bet Yo keep him.” ‘Harris for the ensuing year were: summer, posting a 2.10 figure, low- view président tu char | 2 ge of Greens, charged with 42 fouls and lost a in seven years. He won 23 Cc. mn ats) apis: 3rd vice-|rough-and-tumble contest to Siena! tain by trade. He side - stepped questions on whether Thomson was a key figure and whether Frank A®thony Demeritt: Directors at points at the half. Buzz Bennett} Thomas and Danny O'Connell of Pittsburgh were likely fea gin The Braves are in obvious need of an outfielder who can hit, preferably a right-handed batter to follow Eddie Mathews in the clean- up spot. Sid Gordon, the veteran outfielder who slumped so badly he was benched in the final month ne season, apparently is out of picture. “Don’, forget Jim Pendleton,” he replied when reminded of the outfield need. “He hit only about -875 the final month, you may re- member,” Quinn added. Pendleton, obtained through a trade with Brooklyn last winter, NEW YORK (—After three| Dick Boushka, St. Louis Univer- wound up with a .209 average. He replaced Gordon in left field in|! the closing stages after a brief stint at shortstop because of an injury to Johnny Logan. He drove in only 27 runs, though, in 251 trips to the piate. Although Quinn didn’t say so, the Braves reportedly are willing to part with such second - line pitchers as Don Liddle, Max Sur- kont, Vern Bickford or Jim Wilson. Even Johnny Antonelli, the young lefthander to whom the Braves paid a $65,000 bonus fiv ago, might be offered as bait, So. Cal Mentor Mourned After Accident Death EL CENTRO, Calif. & — Mes- sages Of coudolence by the hun- dreds reached this little Imperial Valley town today as funeral ar- rangements were awaited for New- ell (Jeff) Cravath, former football coach at the University of Southern California. They came from officials of USC, the school where he starred as a er and whose teams he guided as a coach for nine years; from his coaching rival at Notre Dame, Frank Leahy; from Michigan's Fritz Crisler, who handed Jeff the ‘Trojens’ worst defeat in the Rose Bowl, and from many others famed in college sports. Cravath, who spent most of his life against a background of ex- citement and the roar of big time football crowds, met death at a lonely highway intersection in this \president in charge of Member-| ‘ship, Sam Silberman: treasurer,| Large, Dr, Ed, Gonzalez and Har-| ty Knight. Mr. Roy Duke, immed-| jate past-president,-will also be on the Board of Directors. The Key West Golf Club has as) its main function the operation and maintenance of the Key West Mu-| nicipal Golf Course under a lease) — with the City of Key) est. Players, Owners Near Agreement days of bitter accusations major gue baseball players and owners seemed close to agreement today ‘on the pension stion. President (Walter O'Malley of \the Brooklyn Dodgers, who spon- |sored' & resolution to consider the| advis ly of ending the pension |plan, denied he was trying to kill the idea. | Instead, he said, the purpose| of his resolution was to improve the benefits to the players. He admitted the wording of the ars|resolution was “perhaps mislead-| University of Detroit. The Univer-| ing and certainly unfortunate,” but! explained that it would be neces-| Sary to terminate the old plan if a new and better one was to be) put into effect. O'Malley said the players had every right to seek an increase in benefits, but he added that this could not be done under the terms of the present contract, He said) increases in benefits could be at-| tained after the current contract! expired and a new one was nego- tiated. “But we cannot commit our- selves now for what we believe will take place in the future,” O'Malley explained. O'Malley still insisted that Ralph! |Kiner and Allie Reynolds, the! player representatives, agreed to jhis resolution last Sept. 29 at the meeting of baseball’s Executive ‘Council, “The only one opposed to my resolution was Commissioner Ford Frick,” O'Malley continued. “He thought it would endanger the pen- |sion plan and he did not want to agree to anything that might |jeopardize the players’ benefits. Kiner, Reynolds and Lewis (J. Norman Lewis, their attorney)! were in full agreement, however,| and signified thus in a voice vote.” Eyes Discharge Minnesota caught up with the) Oklahomans after trailing by six) moved from his usual guard spot) into the pivot in the second half! to spark the Gophers’ comeback.| He scored 20 points. At New Orleans Bobby Delpit,’ a 5-9 midget among the Giants, and! Hal Cervini ignited a fourth-quar-) ter rally.that carried Tulane to) victory. Both Minnesota and Tulane are unbeaten in three games. North Carolina State scored the first collegiate victory in four) years over the Phillips 66 Oilers in a 67-65 double overtime thriller! , at Raleigh, N. C. Vie Molodet scored 15 for the college boys. sity’s brightest star since the days of Ed Macauley, broke his own school scoring record with 38 Points| as the Billikens whipped Alabama 82-68. De Paul of Chicago ran its win- ning streak to five by swamping Manchester College of Indiana 82- 59. Boston College won its fourth in a row, 62-47, over Stonehill. Temple, beaten only by Ken- tucky, outclassed Lehigh 60-48. Notre Dame used its full 13-man squad in a 72-45 romp over the ity of Oregon waltzed over Port-| land 92-73. Sandy Saddler NEW YORK (#—Pfc. Sandy Sad- dier, the world featherweight! champion, who hasn’t had a match) in more than two years, said today he felt as good as ever, was in excellent shape and figured he could resume fighting six or eight weeks after he is discharged. He will be eligible next April. Saddler arrived here yesterday from Wurzburg, Germany, where ke is a boxing instructor, Boxing Results THURSDAY'S FIGHTS By The Associated Press FALL RIVER, Mass. — Harold Gomes, 124, Providence, knocked out Stoney Godet, 128, Hartford, Conn., 1, DETROIT — Ken Hammer 190, Detroit, stopped Noel “Bull” Reid, 230, London, 5. NEWARK, N.J. — Danny Rubino, flat desert country. |, O'Malley also denied the con-'158, Hoboken, stopped Joe Serafini, Critically injured in a traffic/tention by Lewis and former Com-'156, Newark 4, { crash two days ago, he died in a missioner A, B. (Happy) Chandler; PORTLAND, Maine Billy! hospital at the border town of that all the television and radio O’Boyne, 145%2, Old Orchard Beach Calexico yesterday shortly before/ money from the World Series and outpointed Terry Ryan, 146%, Port- noon. {All-Star Game belongs to the land, 10, t “ey mr reece = aie MChandler and Lewis know th Ai ridge, Colo., but reared in Santa! ind Lewis know tha Gi . iraffe Dies Of Broken Heart | Ana, Calif.. came to the valley is not so and the players should almost two years ago to engage know it too,” he said. SAN FRANCISCO (—Muggins,’ the unloved giraffe of the San in the cattle and produce business, | Dodgers Dicker Francisco Zov, died yesterday at Leahy, from South Bend, Ind., For New Stadium | the age of 16—victim of a broken! described Jeff as a “tough com- Petitor” and a wonderful sports- man. Crisler said he was “the most honest man that ever lived,” and Kenneth L. bat gms ae Ten ; BROOKLYN (#—Within the next heart, commissioner, cal m “a five years, Brooklyn baseball fans! ent Square shooter . . . who was a may have a new place to cheer Sees peated credit to his profession,” their idols, the Dodgers. late Sikes William Sako h! President Walter O'Malley of the'tiearst. He crew tena tren brooks announced yesterday that i@ feet and 00 wousds os the club is negotiating for a new) Bit he never found love. Wi stadium since enlarging the capac- he See tes lass passione teats | | Cravath coached the Trojans to four conference championships and ity of 32,000-seat Ebbets Field would be impossible. into the Rose Bowl four times. In the latter games, he. won from Washington and Tennessee and lost to Alabama and Crisler's Michigan team, He said the proposed new sta- him off. Cravath’s record at USC was 54 dium would seat about 52,000 per- victories, 28 defeats and eight ties, /sons and would cost some $7,200, Silent walks around his enclosure, His overall college coaching record, |000, Three sites have been picked Three years ago, Raffe died.| including terms at Denver Univer-'for consideration. |Muggins perked up. But the widow] sity and San Francisco University,| ‘We hope to make enough prog-\"0t only scorned him, she chased was 76-43-9, Tess within the next six months him off. Cravath made no secret of his|to know on way or another wheth-| Yesterday, he was found dead. | bitterness of leaving USC, forcedjer the Dodgers will have a new AQ autopsy confirmed the broken out after the 1950 season by “win park,” O'Malley said. jheart d.agnosis. or else” alumni groups. | Muggins’ heart had been pierced . = Louis W. Shaw cf Bayonne, N. by a piece of wire he apparently! Menil Mavraides, Notre Dame J., is the 1953 winner of the annual swallowed, guard, kicked 14 consecutive points John T. MeGovern Award as the after touchdown in 1953 to set a “umpire who has done the mest modern school record He then for the eamse of tennis offielatin tuissed his next three in a row. iduring the year.” The weight for the middleweight 8 boxing class was set at its present limit, 160 pounds, in 1915, iF. Muggins seemed to brood on‘ LEGAL NOTICES Tallahassee, Florida November @th, 1353 aeTice a hereby give that the { the Internal improve- of the State ef Florida NOTICE 1 ‘ de ONROE Y Florida to- wit A parcel of bay bottom land In the Bay of Fiorida, sovthwest- and adjacent to a part , Section 34, Town- wing COUNT Monroe County, and being more particu- larly described by meters and bounds as follows: Commencing at the intersection of the east- erly abutment of the abandoned F. E. Cc Rwy. Trestle on Stock island and the centerline of the andoned FEC Rwy. bear Rortheasterly along the eenter- line of the abandoned FEC Rwy. for &@ Gistance of 330.08 feet to & point where said centerline intersects the centerline of the Country Clup Road: thence at right angles and northwesterly along the centerline of the Country Clud Road for a dis- of 100 feet to the north- ly right of way line of oned FEC Rwy: thence * the =) line of the al doned FEC Rwy, for a dis! of 35 feet, more or less. to f the Bay of Florida; meander the shoreline of y of Florida in a north- wei ‘ly direction for a distance of 110 feet more tor less, to a point Which 200 feet, m Fiortda. shoreline then known as the point of begin- ning of the parcel of bay bot- tom land hereinafter described; from said point of beginnin bear southwesterly along a) for a distance of 120 feet to a point; thence at right angies and northeasterly for a distance of 200 feet, more or less, back to the shoreline: thence mean- der the Shoreline in a south- easterly direction for a distance of 140 feet, more or less, back to the POB. Containing 0.6 of an acre. The land Is to be used for public purposes only. The purchaser ts required to pay the advertising cost and documen-| tary stamps. Th af phate, 4 metal 50% of the petroleum thereon br thereunder. The Truste: ment Fund re ject the sale. BY ORDER of the Trustees of the’ Internal Improvement Fund of the State of Florida. CHARLEY FE. JOHNS, Acting Governor f Internal Improve- rve the right to re- ttest: F. C. ELLIOT, Secretary Trustees of I. I. Fund Dec. 4-11, hassee, Florida ember 5th, 1953 E 1953 NO’ J NOTICE ts hereby given that the Trustees of the Internal Improve- ment Fund of the State of Florida, Pursuant to Law, will offer for sal for objections only, in Tallahas |Florida, at 11:00 o'clock A. M. De. cember 15th, 1953, the following de- scribed land in MONROE COUNTY, | Florida to-wit: ‘A parcel of submerged land tn Florida Bay lying westerly of and adjacent to Government Lot . Section 2, Township 66 South, Range 32 East, Key Vaca, Mon- roe County, Florida. Correct legal description to be furnished with deed. The purchaser ts required to the advertising cost and docum: tary stamps. The Sale, if and when made. shall be subject to the Trustees reserv- ing unto themselves 75% of the hosphate, minerals and metals and 0% of the petroleum thereon or thereunder. i ‘The Trustees of Internal Tmpro ment Fund reserve the right to re ject the sale. BY ORDER of the Trusteesiof the Internal egal Fund of the t Florida. Piateet CHARLEY F. JOHNS, Acting Governor Attest: F. C. ELLIOT, Secretary f YX. Fund ; Dec. 4-11, 1953 Tallahassee, Florida November 4th, 1953 NOTICE NOTICE Is hereby given that the Trustees of the Internal Improve- ment Fund of the State of Florida will offer for sale, for compe' bids and objections, in Tallah Florida, at 11:00 o'clock A. M. cember 15th, 1953, the following de- scribed land in MONROE COUNTY, Florida to-wit: A group of five Islands called Tarpon Belly Keys in unsur- veyed Section 6, Township 66 South, Range 23 East, Monroe County, Florida, lying just northerly of the marked chan- nel of the Intracoastal Water- way, Miami to Key West at Latitude 24 degrees 43.8 min. North, Longitude 81 degrees 32.2 min. Wes: ‘The purchaser is required to pay the advertising cost and documen- tary stamps. The Sale, if and when made, shall be subject to the Trustees reserv- ing unto themselves 75% of the phosphate, minerals and metals and 50% of the petroleum thereon or thereunder. ‘The Trustees of Internal Improve- jment Fund reserve the right to re: ject the sale. RY ORDER of the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund of the State of Florida CHARLEY F. JOHNS. Acting Governor Attest: Cc. ELLIOT, Secretary Trustees of I. Tt. Fund nov. 1 » 4-21, 1953 lahassee, Florida November Sth, 1953 NOTICE NOTICE is hereby given that the Trustees of the Internal Improve- ment Fund of the State of Florida, Pursuant to Law, will offer for sale, for objections only, in Tallahas: Florida, at 11:00 o'clock A. M, De cember 15th, 1953, the following a. seribed land in MONROE COUNTY, Florida to-wit: A parcel of submerged land in the Straits of Florida lying Northerly of Section 14 and Gov't. Lot 2 of Section 15, Town- 6 Sou Range 32 Fast ng 3.2 acres, more or ship Correct legal description to be rnished with deed fred to pay d documen- Zoobelle, her mate Raffe chased © thereunder The Trustees of Internal Improve- ent Fund reserve the right to re- ct_the sale. z BY ORDER of the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund of the State of Florida CHARLEY F. JOHNS, Acting Governor m Jee Attests F. C. ELLIOT, Trustees nov. 1 Secretary r Fi 1982 To Buy, Trade, Rent, Sell, or Exchange—Use the Classified Ads Smith Favored White Sox Engineer 4-Player Trade WithReds | By CHARLES CHAMBERLAIN Lane of the Chicago Wh | CHICAGO w—Rebuffed in his has tapped the Nationa! League swinger from the Cincinnati Red- own American League trading for veteran outfielder V rd Mar. legs, Lane yielded three players marts, General Manager Frank shall —Saul Rogovin, a 30-year-old right- College Grid Crowds Equal ze ite Sox! To get the Styearcld southpaw Over Zulueta In The Garden | By MURAY ROSE NEW YORK —Wallace (Bud)’ {Smith of Cincinnati is a 2-1 favor- ite to beat Cuba’s Orlando Zulueta Rocco Krsnich and Connie Ryan. All four players had to be waived on in their own league before the trade. Marshall, a teammate of Sox tonight in an important battle be- tween the two top lightweight con- tenders. 1952 According To AP Survey Manager Paul Richards at Atlanta in 1840 and 1941, has led a fairly successful nomadic life in the ma- NEW YORK &—Major college jors Tes week A te Molo football attendance for 1953 was’ He was bought by the New York entering Square Garden 1i0-rounder may earn a shot at Jimmy Carter's lightweight title. Starting time is 10 p.m., EST, for the coast to coast broadcast (ABC) and telecast (NBC). Although they’re even for three previous meetings—a draw and a Miami Open win apiece—Smith has been esta- Golf Tourney blished as the big favorite because) 4 of a current string of five knock-'. outs and a change in the weight contracts for the fight. The two first agreed to meet at the class limit of 135 pounds but Smith’s manager had the con- unchanged from a year ago—but Giants in 1942 before the only because the big powers drew service for three years, He re large crowds—an Associated Press turned to the Giants in 187 and survey showed today. jreached his slugging peak by | The figures covered the home slamming 36 homers, driving in 107 jgames of all major conference runs and batting .891 that season. teams and large independents. The He was traded to the Bostoa over-all attendance was up, but Braves in 1980 and in 1952 wes the increase was so small that it cold to Cincinnati. Last seasoa ia was negligible. |122 games he hit 17 homers, 14 The significant aspect of the sur- doubles and 6 triples while batting vey was that teams like Notre m266 and driving in 62 runs. Dame, Southern California, Mary-| Lane has been on the prowl for land and Minnesota kept the at- a front-line =p nomen without : tendance at major games on an avail. Marshall may add enough tract changed to 140 pounds, give Ney rales Tiecting their leven keel outfield strength to permit the or take a pound. The 24-year-old paign. Southern California's total shifting of Minnie Minoso from Smitty fights better and hits hard- Wall, slender, 30-year-old pro out jumped from 242p466 in 1952 to left field to third, im case Cass er at around 138 pounds. Zulueta, &f Pocono Manor, Pa., who hit 412772 this year. In five home Michaels proves inadequate, slender and wiry, is a natura] ‘¢ tournament trail for the first games, Notre Dame drew 286,406 Michaels, 27, a utility infielder, lightweight. time last year, fashioned a 5-under- and Minnesota played before an was purchased earlier this week They first clashed 2% years ago Par 65 with a red-hot putter yes- average crowd of 59,540, one of from the Philadelphia Athletics, and wound up‘in a draw after'tetday to grab the first-round lead the highest in the country Rogovin's departure leaves Rich- eight rounds. Zully won the next/°Ver'a field of 60. The newly formed Atlantic Coast ards with one less problem, After one at 10 rounds last March but) He finished his initial round over Conference, led by Maryland and compiling 12-8 in 1951—leading the Smith evened the score May 5. the Miami Springs municipal Duke, pulled in 648,749 spectators league in earned run average with In his last five fights, Smith, |course a stroke ahead of Al Brosch, at 31 games. The Southern Con- 2,78@—and posting 14-9 in 1933, a power puncher with either hand, the veteran redhead from Garden dropped 14 per cent. This would Rogovin collapsed. Last seagon he put away Johnny Williams, Carl/City, N. Y., and two strokes better lead to the conclusion that the for- dropped to 7-12 and his ERA shot Coates, Charley Spicer, Arthurjthan -another time-tested cam- mation of the AAC brought fresh'to 5.22. King and Billy Hazel. His record paigner, Ed Furgol of St. Louis, interest to the area. | Krsnich, 25, was always weak is 26-8-5 with 15 kayos. | If Wall’s luck should hold out. The over-all increase figured out at the plate but compensated with Zulueta, 25, has a 5-1-1 record through the 72-hole grind, he would '©,0.004 per cent his glove. His defensive for the year and 46-189 overall. collect his second big prize since The total attendance at 514 slumped along with his batting is This year he lost to Smith, drew/he entered the tournament ranks. 8@™es came to about 12% million. | 1953. He batted .203 in 64 games, with Joey Brown and defeated! He won the Fort Wayne Open last At an estimated $2.50 per ticket,) Ryan, a veteran of 33, Luther Rawlings, Art Persley,| august in agplayoff with Cary this brought in more than 30 mil-/bought last Al from the Paddy De'marco and Bobby | widalecoff. |lion dollars without even consider-| Phillies as an He English. Eleven players, including Lew|‘®&,the small college games. hit .222 in 17 games with the Sox. |Worsham, Oakmont, Pa., and Doug) TH¢ Big Ten averaged 50,284 per \Ford, Yonkers, N. Y.—the No, 1/8#me. although it showed a drop land No. 2 money winners of the of 1.17 per cent. The Pacific Coast, year—were jammed up in a fourth. |»'8 Seven, Ivy League and Skyline place tie with 68s conferences were up while the : “ Southwest, Missouri Valley, South- Twenty-four players broke par. ts d Bord Notable among those who didn’t sea ern end Border -conterehoss was Sam Snead, who has won the| owed slight declines. Miami Open five times. He had a par 10, Weather Bureau Needs More Money WASHINGTON (®—A special ad- jvisory committee says penny- pinching has the U. S, Weather Bureau operating on standards 20 to 40 years behind the times. Wall Leads By BEN FUNK MIAMI, Fla. w—Art Wall Jr. led the pack today as the touring golf professionals tee doff for the second round of the $10,000 Miami Navy Personnel Changes Here Are Announced Three ensigns and a junior grade} lieutenant have reported for Naval \duty here while another junior) Oe eis liapecieans 'UN To Act In nounced today, Lieut. (jg) George Beinert, US- NR, was released after serving nine} a months in this area as Officer-: “J d Dis Charge of the Naval Control Ship-| ordan pute Ping Office. He has been in the) reserve since July, 1965. UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. wW—| The special eight-man commit- Lieut. (jg) George L. Stansbury, | The Western Big Three were re- tee, appointed last July, reported USNR, has reported to the Naval) Ported readying a call for the U.N. yesterday to Secretary of Com- Station as assistant security offic-/Security Council today to ask merce Weeks that, not counting! er, Before reporting here, he serv.) israel to hold off work on her military facilities, the United) ad in the attack transport uss disputed Jordan River project States spends 18 cents per person Bayfield (APA-33) as Second Divi.|YMtil she settles the issue with her a year on weather services, ion, Gilises. ghd BaatsGetlaar. Arab neighbors. Russia, it said, spends 47 cents. "The three ensigns, allt the Na: The i1-nation council was to re-| The committee recommended val Reserve, and their duties here/SU™@ debate ioday on Syria's more fund, decentralization of op: charge that Israel is threatening ‘eration, more research, stepped up apres the Middle East by plans'repiacement of retiring officials shift some seven miles of the with younger trained personnel, Jordan River to a canal largely! ang stronger forecasting and cli- in Israeli territory which would’ mate research programs | Power an Israeli hydroelectric i | plant, A source close to the Western Powers said the reported resolution would give force to the request by the U. N. truce supervisor, Danish Maj. Gen. Vahn Bennike, that Israel stop work in the Project until both parties to the Israeli- Syrian armistice agreement reach some settlement, This source said Britain, France BATTERIES 12 Mos, 18 Mos, 24 Mos, 36 Mos. __ tteries Fit Most Cars Monroe Motors, Inc. 119 White St. Tel, 2-5631 1954 Westinghouse —— are: William T. Proctor, Jr., assist- ant personnel officer; Robert C. ,Stephens, assistant recreation of- ficer; and Kenneth E. Nicklas, as-; sistant supervisor of ships depart- ment. All three entered Naval service in July of this year and completed officer Candidate school, Newport, R. L., before reporting here. Test Case Fails ST. LOUIS «#—Robert Waln pleaded innocent to speeding on Lacrosse was originated by the Canadian Indians many centuries ago under the name of baggataway. y ey < Brey oats WHO BROUGHT BATTERY PRICES DOWN IN KEY WEST? Answer: LAUNDRO- MATS the radar-controlled express high- way “because I want to learn how a machine could pick out my car} and record its speed.” So a patrolman took the witness stand in City Court yesterday and explained how a radar beam re- corded on a graph the speed of Waln’s car and how the license} number was radioed to a waiting! officer ahead. “But,” said Waln, “there was and the United States had worked out a formula designed to bring the touchy issue to solution with as little friction as possible; He said it softened Arab demands that the Israeli project be frozen indefin- itely and at the same time sot more flexibility from Israel, which has agreed only to stop work while the council considers the Syrian complaint, LOU SMITH 1116 WHITE STREET With the Dependable HESTER Battery With Its Emergency Self Charging Are Here! WASHER DRYER e./Sixth of this port city Nov. 27. : AUTO ) FEATURE To Keep Prices Down Be Sure To Buy A HESTER! The biggest purse for a three- year old race horse was the $116,- 400 won_by Straight Face in the 1953 Flamingo at Hialeah, |a car right behind me which was going even faster and passed me.” | “That's all right,” the police-| ;man replied. “We got him too. aa | “I’m convinced,” Waln said.} “Judge, I change my plea to jguilty.” He was fined $15 and costs, = | | — DESIGNED FOR YOUR KITCHEN Regret Demonstrated | PUSAN, Korea (#—Son Yung Soo fesigned today as mayor of Pusan to demonstrate his “‘serious regret’ for a fire which destroyed one TOMORROW SAT. NITE KEY WEST HIGH SCHOOL vs. CORAL GABLES ; HIGH SCHOOL | At geet A Si Cicer \CARS AND TRUCKS] Game Times, 7:00 & 8:00 Mean Maximum Economy Adm. 50c and $1.00 FOR REPAIR APPOINTMENT AUTO DEMONSTRATION Come By 1130 DUVAL STREET or DIAL 2-2401 $$3S$$ SAVE $59555 —— i / The City Council will name a j mayor Wednesday, and Son was expected to get the job again, Expert Radio Repairs $$SSSS SAVE S$SS3S38 TWINS GARAGE Means QUALITY REPAIRS BODY WORK PAINTING AND USED CARS Lou's Radio and Appliance Lou Carbonell 522 DUVAL STREET DIAL 2-7951 |