The Key West Citizen Newspaper, December 28, 1953, Page 2

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THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Mondey, December 28, 1953 The Foreigners Are Barred From urther Efforts ‘o Eliminate Waste Urged MIAMI MAYOR (Continued From Page One) The_ heart gets full. No matter where Weatherman =, 2: tec: sawn teas - Says! Judge Ted Seimple: “Had 1 known 1 was going to be called on Key West and vicinity: Partly to speak, 1 would not have come JULIO CABANAS BIG THREE MAY (Continued From Page One) (Continued from Page One) riel Garcia. The new slate of of-/zone and gives the Communists \ficers will be installed January 7./undue influence. MRS. CONSUELO D. GARCIA All were members of the “Offic. Bab nrg saa! Araieryap caso Mrs. Consuelo D. Garcia, 67 jal Party” which defeated a slate treaty which would create a unified died Sunday afternoon at 1:20 p.m of “Popular Party” candidates by West European army, faces the at Galey Memorial Hospital after a wide majority. jtouchy problem of organizing @ a short illness. ‘DEATH | e.¢ . British Meeting ._|cloudy thru Tuesday with occas- here. Irving Cobb the great lec-. A record number of voters par- LONDON W — The government) WASHINGTON @—A magazine ionaly clear skies and passing ov- turer once said that to make a good) ticipated in the election which today barred all foreigners from publisher called on the Post Office /ercast at times. Continued warm extemperaneous speech takes about! Was held between 10 a.m. and entering Britain to attend a|Department today to go “‘a lot far-|and humid. Chance for brief seat-\48 hours of ‘intense tion.’ 4 p. m. in their Duval Street “Teachers Bor Ponte” conference|**=” in its efforts to eliminate tered showers. Low temperature | am proud to be here to welcome headquarters. All Cubans and de- egenints here tomskzey Semen gue dang — = 70 degrees; high Mayor Abe Aronovitz. I have talk- seendants of Cuban families in A. W. Motley of New York, ‘Of the 987 votes cast, the Official | postal k Key West eligible te vote. A Home Office spokesman ssig:| 5 ee pee 4 bate leave to land.” The spokesman gave no reason Berlin “but my sympathies are with the Zast, and that is obvious- ly why I was not wanted here.” A spokesman for the conference said “it is not Communist sponsored. It contains people of many different religions and views and they wish this to be made clear.” “An important contribution has} been sent to us by the New York Teachers’ Union and also by the Chinese Teachers’ Union. This in- dicates the welcome by other teachers to this effort of ours to show that agreement can be reached by free and friendly dis- cussion,” the statement added. Royal Families Are United By Simple Wedding BOURG-EN-BRESSE, France —The royal families of Austria- Hungary and Italy were linked to- day by the marriage of Archduke Roberc of Hapsburg to statuesque Princess Marguerite of Savoy- Aosta at a simple ceremony in this drab little market town's city hail. | Hundreds of Austrians and Ital- jans still loyal to the now defunct crowns of their nations swelled the crowds of curious who stood in a cold mist outside the grim 18th. century hall to watch the royal couple come and go. Archduke Robert, 38 and 6 feet 2, is second in line for the Hapsburg throne, which toppled at the end of World War I. Princess Mar- guerita, 23, and a stately 6 feet herself, is somewhat farther down the line of inheritance for the crown of Italy, which was a- bolished after World War II. Her! uncle, ex-King Umberto if Italy, mong the titled guests at- ig the ceremony. Robert's older brother, Archduke Otto, whom Austrian royalists call Em- peror of Austria-Hungary, also was there. Hershey Tells Value Of UMT BOSTON — Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey said today Americans must “quit be-| moaning” the prospect of military) service. “Two or three years is not a lifetime,” he said, “‘nor is it a big) enough part of a lifetime neces- sarily to make an everlasting dif- ference, however it might be Rew government after Jan. 17. when its new President takes of- fice. Any hope that talks with Rus-! sia might reduce international ten- sion presumably would encourage French hesitation on EDC, which the Soviets strongly oppose. j Against this background, the) Funeral services will be held this afternoon at S p.m. in the chapel of the Lopez Funeral Home The Rev. John Capelle, S. J officiate at the services. will be in the family plot at City Cemetery. will Burial °@ jlications, sai -jhas been made during the past year in cutting out waste and in-|' jacksonville thru the Florida| efficiency and in improving th morale of postal employes.” But he added that much remains to be done to eliminate “deep- seated conditions of many years’ Noting that Postmaster General Summerfield is planning to ask Congress for further increases in postal rates, Motley said: “Businessmen simply can’t see how the postmaster general can hope to establish fair and sound postal rate schedules without first of all putting the postal system on a sound, modernized basis.” A rate increase at this time, he said, could have adverse effects on business generally, AID APPLICATION (Continued From Page One) reached by the court. If the additional tax is upheld, applications can be accepted in a payments can be made to disabled persons until the Legislature ap-- Ppropriates money. Andrews said the next reguiar meeting of the board will be held in Tallahassee Jan. 20 so that Act- ~< Gov. Charley Johns can at- tend. NIXON RELAXES IN ‘Continued from Page One) could win,” he said with political diplomacy. Nixon shied away from other political discussions. “I've done nothing but serious talking for the past year,” he stated. “I'd like to get away from that for awhile. His father, Frank A. Nixon, is in a hospital at Phoenix, Ariz., recovering from a gastric hemor- rhage. He was stricken Tuesday while on a flight from Birming- ham, Ala., to Whittier, Calif. He expects to complete the interrupt- ed journey this week if he con- tinues to improve, 43 PERSONS ARE (Continued From Page One) also be assumed to be unhurt, a Coast Guard spokesman said. The 43 survivors, including one stewardess, were the entire crew of the Oklahoma and the only per- sons aboard her. The Coast Guard said all are believed to be Europeans. A message from the Bluejacket quoted the Oklahoma's skipper, Robert Kutschbach, as saying-the vessel broke in two about midships, Efforts to find the ship later were unsuccessful. Kutschbach messaged the ship’s general freight agents, Furness-Withy & Co., of New York, that it had probably sunk. However, a Coast Guard spokesman said the search would spent.” Speaking at a conference on; manpower at the 120th meeting of} the Assn. for the Advancement of! Science, Hershey said “inaccurate) ideas” many young men have) about military service are ‘“dis-| couraging these young men into in-) difference and indecision, frighten-| ing them into ill-considered, has-| ty decisions about college, the| choice of a profession or anything continue today. Kutschbach gave the position of the Oklahoma when she split as about 400 miles off Newfoundland, The 5,900-ton vessel was headed from Sweden to Baltimore with a miscellaneous cargo. The last survivors were taken from the fourth life boat around 3:45 a.m, Sunday, nearly 12 hours after the Oklahoma radioed it had split, operation until a decision is relatively short time, but if the tax is declared unconstitutional, no portion late Tuesday. |Straits and East Gulf. Moderate \southeast winds increasing to oc- | casionally fresh southeast to souti: |this afternoon. Tuesday fresh south \and southwest winds shifting to ‘west and northwest over extreme) inorth by late Tuesday. Partly ‘cloudy to cloudy with scattered |showers elsewhere. Western Caribbean: Moderate jeast and southeat winds thru Tues- day. Clear to partly cloudy wea- ther. Widely scattered showers. Key West, Fila., Dec. 28, 1953 Observations at 8 AM., EST TEMPERATURES Highest yesterday Lowest last night Mean Normal PRECIPITATION Total last 24 hours ____ 69 70 1 Deficiency this month — 1.06 ins. Total this year 46.39 ins. Excess this year _____ 7.06 ins. Relative Humidity, 7 A.M. fo Baromoter (Sea Level), 7:00 A.M. 30.04 ins.—1017.3 mbs. Tomorrow's Almanac Sunrise —___._ 7:11 a.m. Sunset 5:47 p.m. Moonrise 1:21 am. Moonrise 12:49 p.m. TOMORROW'S TIDES | York. He married a Key West girl] The institute, formed in 1871, by Taken At City Office’ 71\be :T ins.'conceal our weaknesses, We ‘Total this month __ .53 ins.| ki State Department commented Sat-| Survivors are a son and daugh | who will ee that the Soviets me nag tehitlaw Mr. and Mrs. Fernando i ef serve for another one-year term, Bag ps iGarcia; daughter and son-in-law some Ce oh gat that the institute “will Ce se ae anaten —— for aPPTO-/Mr. and Mrs. Villiers Esquinaldo, |his job he will have accomplished tinue to work as in the past for the ft ae Salas inches Sita sister, Mrs. Manuela Rivero, much as any other mayor in|best interests of closer relations coviet Uni Miami's history. \between Key West and the Repub-),. heen me te yin fo 8 meeting /cia, Jr., Andrew Garcia, Edward “My dad was raised in New lie of Cuba.” outstanding since J The Soviet note referred importance of assuring “‘ " a land lived here for 35 years. He|@ group of local cigar maker$ and | conditions for peiticinatian in this MTS: Claudina Norris; ran for office many times, and he|Patriots to aid the Cuban cause in/conference for all the govern |S*¢#t srandchildren. always accumulated the greatest|their fight for freedom, operates ments.” number of ‘no’ votes I ever saw./am elementary school at their Du- The State Department remarked, The first solid gold service ever|Val Street clubhouse, |“the Soviet Union presu: made in the United States The building, which also houses solicitude for other participating made for a Key Wester (Wm.|the San Carlos theater, is owned| governments and assumes that it \Curry). My dad used to play cards directly by the Cuban government. |is better qualified than the gov- during the lunch hour at Peter| Plans have been submitted to Cu-jernments of France, the United | Williams’ store. Dan Navarro’s/ban president Fulgencio Batista,|Kingdom and the United States to | dad, one of the Gatos, and also a/Cabanas said, for the renovation decide what best suits their own jfuture Chief Justice of the Su- and enlargement of their school! interests.” \preme Court of Florida also play-| facilities. | Diplomats read in this wordin; led there, If Batista approves the plans, @ message to Frenchmen: You While they were playing one more than $30,000 will be spent on know better than Russia what your day, one of the card players look-|improvements, he added. own interests are. led up and said ‘Pete, there’s a| Members of the Popular party, Another section of the Soviet customer in the store.’ Answer-|who were defeated in yesterday’s S0te was interpreted as a possibl ed Pete: P election, included boaoe genie SSP ics kot seep eho —— eae « 2 didates: for president, Andres Rod- ed the former Allied | Bagg Quiet’, He'll go away in *\ gues, vice president, Dr. Artaro| Control Authority building in the | Bob Givens, former city com-|Castillo, recording secretary, Joa-| |) = — of Berlin as a meeting missioner of Miami, and who will|in Oliveros, corresponding sec.|Place. The Russians said it would | andidate for a circuit judge-|Tetary. Manuel I. Rodriguez, and), 2>Pear expedient” to let the four |ship: “Many people have express. |tfeasurer, Joseph A. Boza. iuisare aeacting’ have a pre. led surprise in Aronovitz's victory.| Unsuccessful candidates for the 12. y meeting to choose the} \Key West ancestry gives us an cg og —— nea ey ; ivi e. Bec: eormnles, Gi al- leet lated and one mile square we can't|¢ez. Armando Acevedo, Juan Bor |"™* Citizen: A Family Newspaper got Ses, Jose Mira, Dr. Delio Cobo, | i jhere a peculiar kind of training.|Dt. Jose Valdez, Bienvenido Per- |You had to get along with people. ¢%» Emilio Corral, Manuel Perez, ‘You had to have sportsmanship,|!smael Calleja, Antonio Martinez, and be trustworthy, The Key West Ramon Valdez and Ralph Betan- ‘of 20 years ago I'd like to come |oUrt. back to, Don’t make Key West too big a town.” RADIO AMATEURS Mitchell Wolfson, multi-million-/| (Continued From Page One) | aire television - theatre owner, ndjfor radio amateur operators and 1 former Mayor of Miami Beach: |is the publisher of the official or-| . | “None of us left Key West seeking gan, QST, of which Mr. Budlong|@ x4 No. 3 Fir Lumber] happiness. We went because either is editor. $115.00 M | bel ny to make a living or our, This is Mr. Budlong’s first visit bi mily took us away. I grew up|to Key West and we urge all ra-| with Abe as a boy, but since leav-'dio amateurs in Monroe County to! Strunk Lumber ing Key West I have read about be at the Key West Radio Ama- 120 SIMONTON, near City Hall Last Times Today MGNROE ai aa COOLED (Naval Base) High Tide Lew 1 4:52 a.m, 9:43 a.m. 4:25 p.m. 11:40 p.m. Boca Chica have been &ble to seebime Mayor Aronovitz, already given years job for the great city of Miami. He sought the job net for remuner ation but because he wanted an opportunity to do something for the people of South Florida. Dr. Jose Renedo, consul for Nic- aragua: “It’s little known that in 1886 at the San Carlos the consti- ‘uba’s independence.” Paul Marks, attorney and mem- ber of the Orange Bowl committee: “None of us who left Key West be- came preachers, but also none of us became criminals. We were be added. ADDITIONAL TIDE DATA Reference Station: Key West ‘Time of Height of} Station— Tide high water Bahia Honde (bridge) ————-oh 10m 9 8.8 R Wo Name Key {east end) —+3h 20m we enjoyed. a spirit of tolerance. In Key West there was no artifici- ality, we had the spirit of being born on an island. We had a sort of constitutional honesty and the guts to say what you think and courage to carry it vd Captain Murphy: “I’m a new jconch, not an old conch, I come 34/here in 1946, and I love Key West, 36)Key West means a great deal to Temperatures At 7:30 A.M., EST Atlanta Augusta Birmingham Boston Buffalo Charleston Chicago __ Corpus Christi Denver Detroit El Paso Ft. Worth Galveston Jacksonville ‘Kansas City KEY WEST ‘Key West Airport ‘Miami New York 39 41 34/have to do a great many 57\greeable’ things, But bear with us, 18/as the Navy loves Key West.” 32) Judge Seimple earlier told a 30) Story of old, old Key West that 38, May or may not be true but is still 5g interesting. It seems that a notor. 49)lous Stock Island bootlegger 27) finally caught and given a trial Key West. The prosecuting attor- ney had what he thought was |‘closed’ case, He presented wit- 72 44 bootlegger. ‘of loyal, public servie out of office. | II think he will do an outstanding kobe! of Cuba was signed before, middle of the roaders. In Key West! 44)me. Speaking for the Navy, we! 69/nesses and threw the book at this, The defense never | Streets to welcome Mr. Budiéng him more in the papers than I teur Club at Southard and White ———_—_—_—_——__ << | jto Key West. Be REAL VALUES -@g_ | A Wide Selection Foreign born people were about |13.4 per cent of the U S. popula- TABLE LAMPS __ $7.50 to $12.50) tion in 1900 but only 6.7 per cent FLOOR LAMPS __ $7.95 to $22.50; of the population in 1950, EISNER FURNITURE CO, rem — |Poinciana Center Tel. 2.6951 1 Your Grocer SELLS That Good STAR * BRAND AMERICAN COFFEE, and CUBAN —— TRY A POUND TODAY — | | = | SERVICE Francis at Truman DIAL 2-9193 Your PURE OIL Dealer |) ACCESSORIES | STRONG ARM BRAND COFFEE | Triumph | Coffee Mill at | ALL GROCERS RADIO and! T.V. 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 rENITH e Brighten the life of » hard-of- hearing friend or loved one. Visit or phone today for com- plete i tion. It’s so easy ++-80 thoughtful! AMY OPTICAL DISPENSARY 423 Simonton St. Phone 2-7522 || SOUTH. FLOR) BOWEN FAVORS (Conunued from Page Une) mission on the initial steps takes to establish a Federal Credit Unieg among city employees, He and sev- ea other-city officials ana workers met with a representative of the Federal organization at which time a charter was signed forming the credit union. Bowen's report also stated that the city’s cash balance has drop- ped $162,766.30 from its 1952 level, The report shows that the city’s nee now stands at $1,462,923.- including more than eight bua- dred thousand dollars in sewer funds and treasury Donds on de- posit at the First National Bank in Miami. Total receipts coming into the city during November included |Tampa; grandsons, Fernando Gar- $38,820.66 in the general revenue fund; $1,588.60 in the sewer rev- uly. |Garcia, Henry Esquinaldo and enue fund; $3,459 in the interest and hed the | Biny Esquinaldo; a granddaughter, sinking fund; $11,302.06 in the cig- and five arette tax fund and $1,819.12 in the hospital fund. Mat. 2 & 4:06 Night 6:12 & 8:18 AIR CONDITIONED Isle Of The Dead with BORIS KARLOFF and ELLEN DREW Night 6:30 & 8:38 Tues. and Wed. PA ‘DAS else in their future.” | A spokesman for Furness-Withy Hershey said he is an “unshak-|said the Oklahoma was owned by en” advocate of the belief that/the Transatlantic Steam Ship Co “the question as to military serv-|Ltd. of Goteborg. Although no ice is not whether the young man/details had been received yet, he is to perform, but when he is to/said, the ship’s crack-up was pre- Norfolk Los Angeles Oklahoma City (Omaha 40)questioned a statement, offered no 49\rebuttals, presented no witnesses, 27jand the defence attorney spent, 16|most of the trial on the outside Pensacola 60 Smoking cigarettes. Jury's verdict Roanoke TODAY and TUESDAY perform it.” Although incestuous unions are! not censured in early Germanic) Jegal codes, the children of unions between people of different social| tank were classed as bastards. | sumably due to the stormy weather, Tt is estima’ 40 billion g: consumed in 1952. that more than’ RAUL’S NOW SEVEN OPEN DAYS A WEEK 35\0f “Not Guilty” incensed the St. Louis 30\Proscuting attorney and he ques- San Antonio 4g\tioned a juryman about the de- San Francisco 45\Cision. Said the foreman: “We 47|don't know who you are and how 45\40 we know you're telling the, g1(truth.” | Those present were: Mayor C. B. Harvey. City Com- missioner Jack Delaney, City Com- missioner Louis Carbonell, City .|Manager Victor Lang, City Attor- *\|ney J. Y. Porter, City Judge En- 1-|tiaue Esquinaldo, Sheriff John an|SPottswood, Dan L. Navarro, H. Earl Duncan, Isadoire Aronovitz, Mon- — sthygytran = Pearlman, tana 201; Nebraska 303; Nevada|M@ Carey, Admiral George C. 10 0; New Hampshire 2 0 1; New|7°W2er, Lt. L. B. Price, Dr. Her- Jersey 21 4 4; New Mexico 5 0 0;|™22 K. Moore, Fred J. Dion, Abe New York 342 5; North Carolina) ee ne ie 33: Chis tae |Plummer, Robert Givens, Mitchell } Oklahoma 8 1 1; Oregon 4 1 1; Wolfson, Benjamin Carey, John | Pennsylvania 19 3 7; Rhode Island|We, Tilde Carrera, Guthrie Bab- Louisiana 3 1 2; Maine 11 4 9; Maryland 9 5 3 : © 1 0; South Carolina 4 2 1; South|¢ock, Ernes* E. Roberts, Norman] Dakota 2 0 0; Tennessee 16 4 2;/Blakley, Paul Marks, Edward L. Pritt eeeeeerccceseecseee ee Fox News Cartoon Box Office Open: 1:45 - 9:00 P.M. Daily 4:00 - 9:00 P.M., Wednesdays CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE Plus A Sneak Preview and Shorts Sunday and Monday — THREE NIGHTS — Tuesday, Wednesday and Bee «TELEPHONE 2-3419 FOR TIME SCHEDULE Be Thursday Serving Incomparable Foor | Texas 21 8 7; Utah 1 0 0; Vermont }4 @ 0; Virginia 4 0 0; Washington /5 0 0; West Virginia 17 1 2; Wis- }consin 12 1 1; District of Columbia 010. ) Semple, Norman Giller, Al Gold- jan, Cavtain W. H. Truesdell, \Captain E. L. Murphy. E. L. New- |tor. Dr. Henry Renedo, Dr. Jose sea San Carlos Theatre Air - Canditioned 3s oy, 5° JAMAICA RON ESicmov vier mp

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