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Tiny School {Te_ Sends Big Band Weatherman To Nat'l Meet South Dakota Sends Kids To RED SLOWDOWN (Continued From Page One} TOD AY’S of 1,000 shares up @. Araerican of them remaining narrowly mixed. i Tobscco started on 2,200 shares up Among higher stocks were Texas i r r and Liggett & Myers opened up Co. American Woolen, Schenley STOCK MARKET on 1,500 shares. Industries, snd Republic Steel, NEW YORK w—The stock Be here was little clear cut move-'Lower were Standard OW (NJ), . ORS \p— The stock MST ment among major divisions, most| Anaconda Copper, Allied Chemical, i SPECIALS Face Soap . . . . 3 bars 10c Canister Seis... . . . 3% R.of Coating. . . . . . 0c Water Paint. . . . gal. $2.50 Page 9/ i} ait | ‘Cop Gets Smeared may return for consultations. The diplomats made no progress/ Friday toward removing the big, roadblock to a peace conference— ‘Communite insistence that Russia; attend as a non-voting — jrather than as a full participant. | | Key West and vicinity: Partly) ee agreed to meet again Sat-/ lay. jeloudy today thru Saturday with The snarl in the Allied explana-, jisolated showers. Little change in tion program definitely has de-) temperature. Low tonight about 72 layed the start of interviews with) Town Of 218 ldegrees; high Saturday about s4/the 22 Americans and one British| Ban inic degrees. Moderate, occasionally’ prisoner. 2 4 Cie \fresh easterly winds. Possibility of, Allied officials said the Red slow- By LAWRENCE N. ELORED northwest and north winds by Sun-|down appears to be aimed at tying IGAGO (# — A big band from day forenoon. jup the explanation program before the smallest school ever represent-| Florida: Increasing cloudiness \the non-Koreans are called. ed is taking the most attention with widely scattered showers this! Plans Delayed | at the Midwest National Band afternoon. Mostly cloudy with se: The U. N. Command had planned} Clinic this week. \tered showers tonight and Satur.\t0 complete interviews with 328 It is the 52-piece high school\qgy Warmer north and centra]/South Koreans early next week, band from Cresbard, S. D., a town of 218 population. The school has} an average enrollment of 70 stu-| dents. | director, William E, Klitz, told how the tiny town, 40 miles southwest of Aberdeen, built up the band. “It was the community spirit which made it possible,” he said. “When we started our music program eight years ago, all we had was a bass drum with a! broken head. Today we have an inventory of $18,000 in music, equipment and instruments. “This is our first out-of-state i} trip. We were invited to the Rose | With scattered showers tonight and the interviews with Americans will Bowl two years ago but couldn't $15,000 it would have cost. | §0 because we couldn't raise the “Then last year we were invited to appear at this clinic. We figured|°*%t '0 southeast Saturday. Partly|turned down the request of a ft would cost us about $6,000 to} make the trip, That looked pos-| sibxle then. We are in the spring} wheat area odt there and the crop) looked wonderful. “But a week before harvest the rains came. We had rain for three weeks. Everything was flooded. | portions, continued warm south then ask for the others. portion. Jacksonville thru the Florida} Straits: Fresh winds, northeast to| east this afternoon becoming east) to southeast tonight and southerly! Saturday. Increasing cloudiness with scattered showers Saturday and widely scattered showers this afternoon and tonight. East Gulf: Fresh easterly winds this afternoon becoming southeast- erly tonight. Fresh to moderately jStrong southerly winds Saturday! “They felt they need sufficient shifting to northerly over extreme north portion, Increasing cloudiness Saturday and widely showers this afternoon. Western Caribbean: Moderate northeast to east winds becoming Scattered cloudy weather with widely scat- tered, mostly light, showers. Key West, Fla., Dec. 11, 1953 Observations Taken At City Office PRECIPITATION Highest yesterday _. All 255 Koreans interviewed) chose to stay with the Reds. The first five prisoners inter- viewed Friday made the same de- cision, But the other 25 refused to jhear the explanations unless they were allowed to explain back. | Thimayya said leaders of the American prisoners have told him) |they feel they are entitled to} lengthy explanations and a chance) \to ask all the questions they want) \because . . . | itime to clear their own minds.” | The U. N. Command has said jbe “brief, dignified and to the |point.”” | In Tokyo, Gen. John E. Hull, \U. S. Far East commander, |Minnesota mother who flew to Japan to plead for a chance to} talk to her son, one of the un- repatriated Americans. Mrs. Portia Howe had hoped to, change the mind of her son, Pfc.) Richard F, Tenneson. Hull said{ he has no authority to allow her To Reopen Air Transport TOKYO @ — c radio at Pyo re SS eieeee @ so a a ll cla GAINESVILLE, Fla—This unidentified policeman |! quell a riot of some 500 University of Florida. stuc nesday night was the target for a bucket of paint. shown walking awdy from the center of the melee \ started as a prank to paint the SAE lion. Tear gas grenades and mob dispersion shells were used to restore order.—(P) Wirephoto. GOUZENKO TO TALK (Continued From Page One) Democrat on the international se- curity subcommittee, said he thinks there still are spy rings in the government which Gouzenko can help track down. Canadian authorities have said that all information already pro- DEATH GREYBURN D. PINDER Greyburn D, Pinder, 62, passed “White Oil Paint . . gal. $2.95 RENTAL EQUIPMENT SANDERS - DRILLS - ETC. Thread and Cut Pipe Key West Supply Co. 219 SIMONTON STREET DIAL 23123 Overseas Transportation Company; Inc. Fast, Dependable Freight and Express Service between MIAMI and KEY WEST Also Serving ALL POINTS ON FLORIDA KEYS Between Miami and Key West Express Schedule (No Stops En Route) LEAVES KEY WEST DAILY (EXCEPT SUNDAYS) at 6:00 P.M. Arrives at Miami at 12:00 o’clock Midnight. LEAVES MIAMI DAILY (EXCEPT SUNDAYS) at 12:00 o'clock Midnight and arrives at Key West at 6:00 o'clock AM. Local Schedule LEAVES MIAMI DAILY (EXCEPT SUNDAYS) at 8:00 o'clock A.M. (Stops at All Intermediate Points) and attives at Miami at 4:00 o’clock P.M. LEAVES KEY WEST DAILY (EXGEPT SUNDAYS) at 9:00 o'clock A.M.,and arrives at Key West at 5:00 oktlock ito enter Korea. vided by Gouzenko has been made *¥Y pee cay morning at his re. Dean hurried from the prelim-' available to U. S. officials. |Sidence, 1523 Flagler Ave., after a iuary peace talks to Seoul for fur-) In an interview, McCarran said: long illness. ther eter a am “I regard Gouzenko as highly| Funeral services will be held “And yet by Oct. 1 our school 7, rea’s President Syngman ee. important to the internal security Sunday afternoon at 4 p. m. at the program for the new term was ee et oo "|The ROK government is opposed ' of the United States and Canada.” |Fleming Street Methodist Church set up and we decided to try. to\Deficiency this month. ito any plan which would permit) Gouzenko was questioned in late where the body will be placed at raise that $6,000, That is where Total this year i ineutrals at a peace conference. i949 by representatives of a Senate 2 p. m. The Rev. James E. Sta- the community came to our rescue.|Excess this year . SEL RSIS immigration subcommittee headed tham, assisted by the Rev. Ralph “No tax money was used. But! poistiyg Humidity, CANADIANS STOP by McCarran. It was investigating |Rogers, will officiate at the ser- the Faulk Flying Club sponsored 96% . (Continued From Page One) |Communist activity among aliens vices. Lopez Funeral Home is in a benefit, the parents chipped in} =, - when they found that their mast [and recent immigrants. jeharge of arrangements. Burial despite the crop failure and there|S@rometer (Sea Level), 7:00 A.M. was too tall te allow them te | The record of the interview ney-|Will be in the family plot at City were even a few donations from! = 2ins—1086.6 mbs. pass under the Hudson River ef has been published. McCarran Cemetery. ‘omorrow’s Almanac Sunrise. outside the eommunity to make) 1 un. [Said there were deletions he re-| Survivors include his wife, Mrs K W v up the $6,000.” ye 7:03 am pgp. weet —— a block \gards as “material” made by the Ingurtha Pinder; two brothers, T ey est ney Sunset _.___m___ 5:39 p.m.| and tackle, unstep the mast. |State Department then, jLuther Pinder and Eugene C, Pin ) 5681 Father Gall nd |Moonrise | ‘Their engine carried them down| 0. J.'DeKom, one of the immi-|der, Miami; one sister, Mrs Jen = J a iMoonset “to New York City where the-mast|@ration subcommittee staff mem-|nie Larkin, Miami; one son, White BOALGaithardl Sh . iwas replaced. It was a wet voy-\bers who questioned Gouzenko,/more Pinder, Miami, and two outnar . Is New Catholic age, they declared today, with rainsaid in a recent interview that standchildren. fe falling throughout their ten day/he considered deletions in the trip. % Chaplain Here a. Te |transcript unimportant. terway with little incident except| MAN NABBED BY BS a enroR severe times! (Continued trom Page One) near Daytona Beach. They left Key West on Nov- buena rounds—were for a .357 ember 24 for Havana and that's |» 2snum. After the rain ended black stem|Lowest last night rust broke out. The crop was a|Normal failure, We were ready to kiss\Mean —_ our trip goodby. that we shopped for cash with a loan from City Loan Co.” Lieutenant Commander Benoit R. Galland, USNR, of Fall River, Mass., recently reported to the Key West Naval Station as Catholic Chaplain. He relieved Lieutenant ata touch of your finger! GET FABULOUS Garcia, according to the sheriff’s Joseph L, Remias, USN, who sev- aral months ago reported for duty| afloat uader Commander Military) ea Transportation Service, North Pacific Sub-Area at Seattle, Wash. | Father Remias had served as Zatholic Chaplain at the Naval| station since July 1952. | Before reporting to the Key West Naval Station, Father Galland ser- sed as Chaplain for one year in he destroyer tender USS Bryce Canyon (AD 36). Democratic Party | Meets In Philly — PHILADELPHIA “®—Some 1,500 top-drawer Democratic party lead- ers arrive today for a round of dinners and conferences designed to step up party enthusiasm for the 1954 congressional elections and to bite another chunk off the party’s financial deficit. Party leaders hope to raise at feast $100,000 to apply: to the debt | fucurred during the 1952 president- fal campaign. The conference will end Satur- @ay night with a major address Kansas City at a $100-a-plate dinner by Adlai|kKEY WEST Stevenson, party presidential cand- Wate, over a nationwide radio and television hookup. Stevenson is scheduled to arrive late today and to hold a press conference soon afterwards, The conference is composed ‘imarily of party leaders from je 11 Eastern Seaboard states and the District of Columbia, with | gees in these states expected get a thorough airing behind closed doors, Too Inquisitive | DETROIT (#—William Jones, 34, came back to town to see how Bis wife was doing on a charge ef taking $685 frum her employer's tM@ ana attempting to make it ook like « burglary. He found out Polly wasn’t doing too well and landed in jail him- |No Name Key when the fun began. When they hit the Gulf Stream, they were | engulfed in 15 foot waves as a | result of a 25 mile per hour | wind, The 90 miles trip took 34 be hours, the: y said. ADDITIONAL TIDE DATA “It was too rough to light the ni ‘ — brs ee stove for cooking,” Hackett said. high \“We li it and k- Station. Tide Height ibutiaie: on cold meat and crac! Bahia Honda bridge " Their 25 horse power engine de- { ' tm 88 f cided to conk out when they were 30 miles off the coast of Cuba and they had to thread their way through the narrow entrance of Havana's harbor at 3 a. m. through/ the blackest night they saw on} their trip. The Gulf Stream was 37 moving along at three knots at ~ 33 that point and heavy seas were 21 \throwing 25 foot high towers of surf 4liover the Malecon Boulevard. They 28 made it by a proverbial hair and 37 then settled back to rest. That 32 didn’t last long, they said. Ch: They were caught up in some- Pa oe ak : 34 thing of a social whirl that saw Stas risti 9 them feted royally by yachtsmen. Sect. as They also toured the interior of the El Piso ~ > island, but most of their adven- Ft Yorth 5 tures, they reported “can't be Galveston printed in the newspaper. Jacksonville __ (east end) —+2h 20m Temperatures At 7:30 4.M., EST Atlanta Augusta Billings Birmingham Bismark _ Boston Buffalo Charleston 410 contrast to their stormy first) - 33 crossing, they made it back to Key’ West with a beam wind, in just 15 hours. They will leave shortly 72 for Miami where they will spend 55 the Christmas holidays and then Louisville _ 31 will cruise the Bahamas for a cou- Meridian 43 ple of months. They expect to be Miami 68 back in Quebec City about May 1. Minneapolis 29° One of the high points of their Memphis 42 voyage was a meeting with Ann New Orleans ——. 51 Davidson in the harbor at Beau- New Yerk __ 39 fort, South Carolina. She’s the Eng- Norfolk ——. 35 lish woman who made a much Oklahoma City - 53 publicized solo Atlantic crossing! Omaha } vs 34 recently. She was feted at a dinner Pensacola _ 53 aboard the Coaster and after their Pittsburgh — 29 experiences in the Gulf Stream,| Boeke is 26 both Huard and Hackett aver that| St. Louis — 33 they have planty of respect for San Antonio — 49 i San Francisco —..__. 41 sis ponent Seattle ~39) 6 Tallahassee 47, FAMINE THREATENS | Tampa 61, YELLOWKNIFE, N.W.T. w—| 32)|Maurauding wolves and failure of| Key West Airport Los Angeles Washington —__ _ |the fall caribou hunt reportedly | VA Reports On Trainees threaten famine for Eskimos in the area around Canada’s arctic {department, came to the attention! self. Detective John McGruddy Administration reported today that sald Jones admitted he schemed nearly 600,000 veterans were en- the thing for his wife so they could rolled in colleges and schools under}, @rive home te Newport, Tenn., for its training programs this fall. Caristmas i, a used car they Included were a record 217,000 planned to uy. veterans taking training under the MecGruddy said Mrs. Jones Korean GI Bill, 346,000 World War Pleaded guilty to embezzlement II veterans under the original GI after arrest Saturday. Jones, he bill and 26,000 disabled veterans. sald, fled town then. The husband The nrevions reeond for Korean was madbed as he inquired of his GI trainees was 131,000 veterans » wite in a court lobby, lin Aprn .053. coast settlement of Coppermine. The tale of disaster was told y a young Eskimo who trekked into Coppermine, on the shores of Coronation Bay, north of the Arctic Circle. He said his people were heading toward the settle- ment, seeking food to see them through the winter. _ Egypt and Engiand have ruled \jointly in the Sudan since 1899. of police last July 29, when he was| charged with assault and battery.| He was released the following day.| PIERCE BROS. Cor. Fleming and Elizabeth Sts. 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