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Pege2? THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Tuesday, December 22, 1953) Subscribe To The Citizen men, it will not lack earnestness, . jbope for more Sod and more con- East Germany exposed the vast Be conscience and honesty. 'To Give Program |sumer goods of better quality. [underlying discontent which exists This A Very Merry Christmas | ; Se The Islander |perience, with considerable activi-@Te" of the Kindergarten and Jonsp— the workers within the |af Western Europe the Soviet lines Sy BELL TELEPHONE CO. | The bulk of the saving—about Pan,” two traditions have been'the state on military duties. My gram will consist of a pageant of course, would be a welcome| five pillion dollars — would come considered. In his all-cartoon pro- undergraduate studies were at Flo- showing the birth of the Savior. — Coliege, and Ise 99 Tf) NEBLETT ANNOUNCES Younger Pupils | DULLES SAYS NATO _sPoach tthe practices observed — ~ a = Peter Pan’ FO,» ccosunes trom race ose & | (Goatnuea From Page Une) lin the free world ’Pho Gi Is Will H ‘| Mak j | appear to lack political acu- Of Grace Lutheran seek te encourage their people to, “The revolt of last June within " P Shown At “My principal qualification is in- “That clearly shows a popular pee the — — tegrity. ckground of Tonight demand insistent that it can- satellite areas. indicates th \gal cathe ang Se priced ee? Soe On he cantek: Tt suggests that if there were an armed invasion tration is co Se . ity im civic and welfare matters. 1/&Tades one and two of Grace Lu- Soviet Union may be allowed to of communication might not be \dollar eut in federal spending dur-| ‘Throughout the theatrical history 9, '¢ poe a resident ot Florida theran Church-School will present work less for military purposes altogether secure.” |img the fiseal year ahead. of Sir James M. Barrie's “Peter! since 1922, except for absence fromja Christmas program. The pro- and more for their own good. That, | from the national security pro- duction of the Barrie classic, Walt\rida Southern I gra-The children will sing a number, \grams, usually reliable sources Disney bas kept one and broken|duated from the School of Law,'of choral selections presenting the | said yesterday. The rest would be the other. \University of Miami, with an LL.'meaning of this happy season. Mat. 2 & 4:06 Night 6:12 & 8:18 AIR CONDITIONED trimmed from nondefense items in| For the first time Peter Pan is\B. degree. | The program will be held at the budget. icharacterized as a boy A woman! biography includes'Grace Lutheran Church on Flagler -| Key West and vicinity: Cloudy Such a spending slash still would has always played Pan on the was born in Ma-|Avenue at Tenth Street “*'ss Caro- a0 with occasional light scattered put the government in the red by stage. However, in this, the, grea’ 1906, my parents lyn Pomerenke and ~ ‘verdell “Ishowers today and tonight and 1% to 3% billion dollars in the est achievement of his 5rilliant ca/being Rev. S. A. Lillian Neblett'Hines are in charge. fiseal year that starts next July 1. reer, Walt Disney has retained the|of Tennessee. Military service in- The parents of the a of a dry|¢learing by Wednesday night. Con- Nothing that concerns peo-| particularly at this) le friends, this is most! people, your people right West area, tinued mild but cooler Wednesday afternoon and night. Low tonight about 68 degrees; high Wednesday about 78 degrees. Gentle to mod- PARIS #—A strike and a light fog drifting over Paris’ two com- mercial airports stopped all air traffic in and out of the French lerate easterly winds inereasing to|¢Pital today as Christmas holiday you do on Christ-| oder. theast djtravel neared what should have Christmas Day? | south os aie uh ouxte mod.(been its peak period. we friends in, throw a party,! lift a cup, call some distant friend! or relative? Do you do these | erately strong northwest Wednes- day afternoon or night. Florida: Mostly cloudy thru Wed- things? We're sure you do, and in nesday with oceasional local show-| ers. Colder north portion tonight “land in north and central portions) ; |Wednesday and extreme south por- Who does all this work for Y0U\tion Wednesday night. at the height of the holiday — San! Jacksonville through the Florida) ta Claus? Well, the spirit is right’siraits: Moderate to fresh south-| but you've got the BUM: east to south winds shifting to nor-| mas Day. Some 2,000 control tower and \radar operators struck for pay in- |ereases two days ago. HONG KONG (®—Three persons were injured today, one seriously, |when a U.S. Navy Neptune patrol plane from the Philippines crashed | while landing here. BLOOMFIELD HILLS, Mich. A last-minute Christmas gift sug- ber.” itherly over north portion Wednes-| In this case, Santa is 60 fine young women, the entire operating 4s thru Wednesday with scatter-| force, working around the clock to} provide that Christmas call inj somebody's stocking. | It isn’t easy to meet the Yule-| tider’s request in every instance. Toll lines are like highways, The big roads and cutoffs to the small- er places get jammed. and there are a lot of horns blowing at once. Rember too that honking never| cleared a jam; likewise, repeated) inquiries on calls already placed) only add to the avalanche of calls|Highest yesterday and tend to hinder rther than help. Our telephone girls are having) their Christmas, too. A small tree) in the office, a little party between) Total last 24 hours ... tours of duty and basket after bas- ket of food and wonderful presents made up for needy children in many communities, . So remember the Christmas Spir- it, folks, as we do at Southern Bell. And, don’t forget the “belles” on our big package — theyre doing a job for you this Christmas, as al- ways. Temperatures At 7:30 A.M., EST Atlanta. Augusta . Birmingham Jacksonville Kansas City Meridian Miamt ... Minneapolis Memphis . New Orleans New York Norfolk Oklahoma City Omaha ES-S8SSh28 43 3 64 47 15 ENTRIES MADE (Continued From Page One) Nonnenmacher, 526 Margaret St., Edmund H. Sawyer, 518 Francis Street, and John J. Romero, Ill, 1422 Leon Street. : Noble’s Art Center is competing in the commercial division. MARATHON MAN IS (Continued From Page One) day. Weather partly cloudy to ov ed showers. Western Caribbean: Moderate east winds and partly cloudy wea- ther thru Wednesday with scatter- ed showers. Key West, Fla., Dec. 22, 1953 Observations Taken At City Office at 8 A.M., EST TEMPERATURES . 80) 69) 75 72 Lowest last night Mean ease Norma! PRECIPITATION » & ins. 40 ins. 86 ins. Total this month ..... Deficiency this month Total this year Relative Humidity, 7 A.M. 97% Barometer (Sea Level), 7:00 A.M. 30.05 ins.—1017.6 mbs. Tomorrow's Almanac ‘Sunrise reset Sunset - ‘Moonrise Moonset TOMORROW'S CIDES (Naval Base) | High Tide Low Tide ; 12:17 a.m. 5:50 a.m. | 11:49 p.m. 5:04 p.m. Boca Chica Sandy Pt) Channel north end) 9:01 p.m, . 9:37 a.m. —ob 40m +2h 10m +14 f added. ADDITIONAL fIDE DATA | Reference Station: Key West | Time of Height of Station-- Tide high water Bahia Honde (bridge) ——oh 10m = 8.8 ft No Name Key feast end) —+2h 20m LAST-MINUTE (Continued From Page One) to the prisoners “to listen or not to listen.” } And Lt. Gen. K. S. Thimayya, probably will ‘“‘all join together and go to the other end of the | compound.”* Hope for interviews with the Americans all but vanished when the repatriation commission ruled i {for Allied talks. The other teams’ jwill be busy watching Communist explanation sessions. views unless five sites were avail- able, but observers pointed out that if the “Americans should offer 7:09 a.m.| 45 p.m.) estion came from the Cranbrook [Institute of Sciences advising it was placing on sale “mounted rattle- |snake heads at only $1.50." TEHRAN, Iran (®—A solitary cell today awaited weepy, talkative old Mohammed Mossadegh following his conviction on treason charges. It was not known yet whether he would appeal the sentence given him by a military court. The five-man tribunal convicted the former Iranian dictator yester- day on 13 counts of trying to unseat Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi last summer and sentenced him to three years in solitary confinement. ‘Dean Urges | 'US. Patience In Peace Plans By WARREN ROGERS JR. WASHINGTON (#—Arthur H. Dean, who tried vainly for seven weeks to arrange a Korean peace jeonference with the Reds, urged the nation to match Com- munist stalling with patience and hope. “] munists are determined to keep North Korea politically and eco- nomically integrated into their own economy,” ‘hé “told a° nation- wide television ‘and radio audience jlast night. “The outlook is discouraging but by no means hopeless. ere is jno easy, pat solution. It will take all the brains, energy, resolution and patience at our, command.” The special ambassador spoke in a report to the people on the Panmunjom talks, from which he walked out 11 days ago after the Reds accused the” United States of “perfidy.” | He said the Communist negotia- tors aimed for a long-drawn-out session in the hope Americans would lose patience and, through public opinion, force a settlement on Red terms. “The meat of the coconut” hold- jing up the talks; he said, was ;Communist insistence on imclud- jing five nations, including India jand Russia, as neutrals at the 24/Indian chairman of the commis-|proposed Korean peace confer- 45| sion, predicted that the prisoners fence. | He said the Reds sought to drive |a wedge between the United States. and India by creating an impression that the United States |“does not like India.” | He said he is sure that, even if that only one neutral observer/no peace conference is arranged, |conclusions reached by team will be available tomorrow/there will be no shooting again in| Korea. | The Reds do not want. it be- cause they “took a terrifi¢ be: A UN. spokesman said it would ing,” he said, and both the United|today in the American Journal of | be impossible to conduct inter-/Nations allies and South Korea,|Sociology in an issue devoted en-| jwhich had threatened to’ go it jalone, are determined to abide by jthe armistice agreement. has! ‘do believe the Chinese Com-| \old tradition that the same man portray Father Darling that plays) |Captain Hook. The sparkling fea-| jture in Technicolor will be shown at the Islander Drive-In Theatre ‘from Wednesday through Saturda: Hans Conried, well known radio and motion picture actor, is the ivoice for both Papa Darling and) Hook. The Disney artists and ani- mators also used him as a for their drawings of the if peppery, Mr. Darling, and ‘evil pirate captain: How many of us, as children, have thought of our practical, hard- working fathers as narrow-minded or even villainous? The father forbids going to a movie, to increase an allowance, or de- mands the lawn be mowed or all the well-laid plans of younger years seems the blackest of vil- lians to an adolescent. What more natural thing, then, to associate the Papa Darling with the notorious Catain Hook, pirate deluxe and villain extraorainary. | By selecting Conried for both parts, Walt Disney has a man who ean generate with only his voice hate and fear as a pirate or warm- th and understanding as the ha- rassed head of the Darling’s Vic- torian household. Walt Disney has broken one tra- dition and kept another, and the result makes for the biggest and most lovable presentation of “Pe- ter Pan” since Barrie first put it on paper. Damage Suits Are Settled In Court Of Judge Lopez J. Y. Porter IV, city attorney, and a, Miami law firm won a pair of cases in Circlfit Cburt. In one case the jury hung. In) the other, the jury found for Port- er’s client. As a result of dynamiting opera- tions, four persons sued Floyd W. \Davis and the W. T. Price Dredg- ing Corp. for a total of $18,100 damages. The four suits were con- ‘solidated in the trial before Judge 'Aquilino Lopez, Jr. | The suits were brought by Aus- |tin DeStolfe, George W. Goodson, |Samuel R, Magill and Louis F. Fenton, Magill asked $10,000; Fen- ‘ton, $3,000; Goodson, $2,500; and Stolfe, $2,600. | M. Ignatius Lester and J. Lan- leelot Lester represented the de- \fendants, The jury hung in the \Price case and found for Davis, who was represented by Porter. | ‘Substitute For Works Is Needed \After Retirement |. CHICAGO W—If you would be| jhappier after you retire from your job you had better try to find a substitute for work. Watching TV | La following an isolating hobby | jwill not do the trick. | This is one of the preliminary the University of Chicago who jhave a three-year study under |way in six Florida communities. | | First reports on the study appear | jtirely to the subject of growing | jolder. L. C, Michelon, assistant profes- to attend this decision could be| Dean’s publie report came after|sor of industrial relations, says Leon Peacon, J. R. Herring John! modified. : jhe met at the White House yes-|there is a difference between the j R. Kerr, .Sr., Richard Cabanas,; Thimayya said one possibility terday with President Eisenhower/leisure of the job holder merely Charles M. Gomez, Charles Parra,,; would. be explanations to groups and after he talked with the am-|pausing between work activities Cecil T. Curry, Stephen M, Young |of prisoners—the 22 Americans in|bassadors of the 16 other nations|and the full-time activity of ‘re- Jr, Robert M. Saunders, Jack Currie, Clarence T. Kellar, Leo Cruz,, Roger Brooks, Fred Saund- * ers, Neil C, Shea and Antonio J. Esperdy. CITY COMMISSION (Continued From ace «ine: police chief's post was filled by appointment by the city manager.) They presumably discussed the dimer have been separated since! ‘the 77 South Koreans in a third | group, | No one, however, would predict that the interviews would be held. Gen. ‘John E. Hull, Allied su- preme commander in the Far/nounced that she will soon seek] retirement, the East, conferred for 2 hours 45 min- utes with Thimayya in the neu- ‘tral zone. L.,one group, the 1 Briton alone and!which fought in Korea, |\DIVORCE FOR SKATER HOLLYWOOD (#—Sonja Henie, |the skater and actress, has an- ja divorce from Winthrop Gardiner, |New York aviation executive. The skater said she and Ga: Dut under the terms of a legisla-jfuture of unrepatriated prisoners ast May 1. They were married tive act passed this year, the city/ who are scheduled for release Jan. in New York in 1949 commission was given thai author-'22 under terms of the armistice. The possibility that a competitive examination may be held for the post has also been advanced, Kemp will go on his terminal years when he has been on leave, he has been replaced by Captain Raymond Cabrera, who along with “There is no question in my mind,” Hull told newsmen, that the approximately 22,500 CITY BALKS AT (Continued from Page One) anti-/500 to one hundred thousand watts! tirement. q | “Leisure of the individual busy at work is weleome,” said Micb- | jelon, “because there is the knowl- jedge that there will be a return |to the vital business of work. With| individual must “Looking at television, taking a ride in the country and engaging in hobbies are called leisure for | the person engaged in work, but | actually they are only a ‘pausi between activities.” ] He added that hobbies a man| ‘Communist prisoners will be freed.|shortly. They will also add a one|undertakes in isolation are satis- He said, “The prisoners will be|thousand foot ‘ower to their trans-|fying during his working life be-| leave January 1. For the past three processed as rapidly as possible.”| mitting station Hull returned to his Tokyo head- quarters today. “We believe that you should not |proceed until after the strength of jeause it is good to escape the hus- tle and bustle of daily living. |. In retirement, however, isolating Guard, Marine and I retired in of Command- a Methodist. I married is Lones, of Key 1930, and have two grandchil- My daughter, ViAnn is mar- , Robert C. an active officer) Board. Home is 415 Francis Street, and aims will announced later, but of special all counties in this dis- terest is the stimulation of . Our counties need not be! strangers to one another. We can “T call upon all persons interest. ed in good government and repre- of all the people to sup- ind to work actively in STRONG ARM BRAND COFFEE! Triumph Coffee Mill at ALL GROCERS —_...__—_ Your Grocer SELLS That Good! STAR * BRAND atcun COFFEE —— TRY A POUND TODAY —| Sale Service Factory Methods Used— All Work Guaranteed Marine Radios & Asst. Equipment FOR PROMPT AND RELIABLE SERVICE — SEE... DAVID CIFELLI 920 Truman Ave. (Rear) TELEPHONE 2-7637 Grace School, the meu.vers of the Navy,'Grace Church, and friends and vi- sitors are invtied to attend this children’s program. | ‘TODAY'S STOCK MARKET NEW YORK w—Oils and steels held steady today against a gen-| erally lower trend in the stock Association and Community Chest/ market. The decline was fractional with rare exceptions, and there were a | few small plus signs scattered throughout the list. | Most steels and oils remained _junchanged or posted small plus | signs. Among the lower divisions were ‘railroads, copper, chemicals, ircrafts. Other sections were jar. | Lower prices were paid for South- | jern Railway, Southern Pacific, U.S. | | American Telephone, | {Anaconda Copper, American Cyan- amid, General Electric, American | Woolen, Chrysler, Douglas Aircraft, jand Zenith. About 60 per cent of the popula- | jtion of Russia is composed of | farmer: CHRISTMAS SUGGESTIONS Children’s Rockers, from ...... $ 3.50 Children’s Table and Chair Set EISNER FURNITURE Co. Poinciana Center Tel. 2.6951 STATION Francis at Truman DIA! Your PURE OIL Dealer Tires . . Tubes . . Batteries|}/ ACCESSORIES CUVE vos oir oF eS Le e HEARING AIDS —~Saee ; “ ag. Pest atcetece Visit or phone Sete, for com- plete information. It’s so easy ++ -80 thoughtful! AMY OPTICAL DISPENSARY 423 Simonton $t. WEDNESDAY ONLY All Spanish Ramon Armengod Emilia Guiu “Puerto De Tentacion” LAST TIMES TODAY Box Office Open: 1:45 - 9:00 P.M. Daily 4:00 - 9:00 P.M. Wednesdays CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE gap «= TELEPHONE 2-3419 FOR TIME SCHEDULE bc $a Children’s Platform Rockers $14.50/[] Phone 2-7522 WTV/J's new signal is determined” | hobbies are not so satisfying, he | patrolman Harry Lee Baker and) After the Revolutionary War, the he said. Both Spottswood and Tele-|said, since the new leisure should | Bienvenido Perez, have been men- first nation to recognize the new vision Relays propose to relay pro-|force a*person into activities with tioned for the post as police chief.'United States was Holland which grams from that station directly to others. Baker, has passed the examina- provide a three million guilder the homeowner, using direct cab- tion for Police Lieutenant. loa. les The Citizen: A Family Newspaper! San Carlos Theatre Air - Conditioned (entlemans | Agreerient AS & Night 6:30 & 6:30 MONROE“ AIR COOLED LAST TIMES Wed. - Thurs., wHEN WORLDS COLLIDE TECOOREDLGR | PH00uckd 81 conse Pal - OumeciED BY RNBOLPA Mane CALLAWAY WENT THATAWAY ___ 7:00 AND 10:38 WHEN WORLDS COLLIDE _.._. nioeeicaeenecaeeasiies’ ONE FOUR NIGHTS Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday