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a5 ? f | | a z I 5 fF H ry ? iy zF i i Pres ly ask, wouldst Thou have me do?” i i H a3 i | i H ited Presbyterian ' ¥ ge z i ; : i il i i i BER i ef ThE Lin “e 4 i f P ! ; i 8 i i i f i H ge? fe : i RB f i TT z | i it H li " ; oe ? é ef i ; i 1 FE real i z : i si i 3 e | H : | | : i F i H : i ; ' i ( i rE i g B i. 5 a i 4 1 Fe Eve ag : H iF 3 3 Ey at rs és : f iF Hl Ee oi it : Fi Tore ra tures worers in MPA] 2: porucar prices speaker, i # 250 missidnaries in E o¥e i k . f i = a8 E s s a : i by Is fll i a 3 & & ¥? i & . Price, Moderator iy ae Hh i i g byterians. However ‘they were broad leral to such an extent tha’ SEF fas jan Episcopalian, one a z aE : i ‘Lions Plan For Minstrel Show To Be Held In Feb. ‘The reguler meeting of the Key| ; ‘ |West Lions’ Club was held Thurs-\(R-Minn) contended today that, far from supporting the seating of he w | Mao Tse-Ting’s Communist Chinees |cape government in the United Nations, Four new members were induct-the United States should concen- ed by President Paul Albury. Thejtrate on making him fail in China. \day night at the Lion's Den on Sem- i # new members are: Ray Malone, Joe Bucks, Eugene Martinez and William Herman. ‘ Lion Charles Smith, a former) i Key West Lions’ ‘camp and send them to “neutral” ‘Czechoslovakia have changed their minds and been returned to the north camp compound, an Indian spokesman said today. The spokesman said two other|sale, for Objections former South Korean soldiers who|Saisee. also requested repatriation to a “neutral” . country in eastern Mao Tse-Tunig’s Bid For U.N. Seat Is Scored. bean fail — and the first aim of our foreign policy in Asia should be} directed toward that end,” Judd declared in a copyrighted article written for the magazine U. S. | News & World Report. SALT LAKE CITY Former! .-esented . J, Dell Kingston was a para- found Geena: in World War Il, and be is log a. See also hit the silk over Korea. “Skiing,” he commented, Several years ago he fell into'dangerous.” a mathine and! Seems the 27-year-old manufacturers of the device said was carried from a as the only man ever to es-'Brighton, Utah, 3 week being crushed to death in the'a double fracture of the During airborne maneuve: . nse TS near Oita, Kyushu, Japan, on Feb. 28,| Playing cards originated in Asia, he dived into a river and|many students believe. WASHINGTON — Rep. Judd if i “Mao conceivably might pull | 1953, Kremlin, if through | following its guidance he began to} Monday, January Ui, 1954 «= THE KEY WEST CITIZEN = Page S DRA -ay UR tne a Ape ne poe ate fan cat ER ese J DONT FORGET Judd struck out against what he | called “the myth” that “if we will just be nice enough to the Chinese | Communists, we can detach from | .jthem the Russian Communists . . . ‘or we can make a Tito out of Mao could. He is as loyal a satellite as the Kremlin has ever had.” | MEDICINE LAKE, Mont. w—| stroyed this tiny town’s fire hall and only fire truck yesterday. | Tallahassee, Fi: December 30, tT aad NOTICE is hereby given that the the Internal Im; Pursuant to Law, will ty in Talla- |As ‘Strong Man’ In Ecuador sass" itatint Editor’s Note—Even his worst/has set up a strong man regime in’ ject a Pro-communist war pris- enemies admit President Jose Vel-|this little aon Ae uae. J asco Ibarra of Ecuador is an out-| His opponen' arge he has a a standingly honest man, But, they|junked the constitution by arbi-|Thais Will Resist say, i) is gt inosve and vio- Stary seu and iy aac ie in| NEW YORK William J. Don- 1 . Here ie story of the way fo! concentrat 4 % jhe runs Ecuador, a county where|his own hands cut short his two hake the ge eae ae who wins the support of|previous presidencies, in the| any Vietminh invasion. wins the support of the — og and again im the} He adds the Thais are “good, — Both times the army applied the tere l a Wae.are it a: pe By PAUL SANDERS boot and sent the 6-foot, bespec- UITO, ‘Three tacled chief executive into exile. 2 co rrerepini mee Both times he was sent north into twice kicked by = Colombia, across the nearest fron: | out army revolts, |\’ ig a a Jose Maria Velasco Ibarra again|tier, then went to live out his exile Florida adjacent ibdivision, a S/D in t 1, tion 11, South, Range 32 East, according to plat thereof recorded in Plat Book 3, Page 15, Public Records of Monroe County, Florida, containing 8 acres, more or less, Correet legal description to be furnished with dee The Purchaser ts required to pa: avertising eost and documen-) «ihe Bal a if and when made, shall eS foe ot the petroleum Located in the Heart of the City REASONABLE ROOMS "ewe RATES for RESERVATIONS - with BATH and TELEPHONE Ritz i Miller HOTEL HOTEL 182 G. Flagler St. 226. N.E. Ist Ave. 229 N.E. Ist Ave. HOTEL 102 Rooms 100 Reoms Ld Elevator Elevator Rooms Solarium Heated Elevator 3 BLOCKS FROM UNION BUS STATION Space Contributed by for Bangkok after three weeks of consultations with the State De-/**ste" We Are Offering OUR COMPLETE OPENING STOCKS DRESS SHOES : to You for ‘O% : Loads of New Spring Styles and Colors to Choose From WD vo: 04a & Ends The actual number of shoes in our window was 768... Miss Donna Stewart, of 1321 Angela Street, was the winner with an estimated figure of 770. in Argentina. Two days after his inauguration in 1952, Velasco Ibarra dismissed some 60 high-ranking army officers and replaced them with men more sympathetic to him. Increase in pay and other benefits followed for: the officers, El Comercio, one of the country’s foremost independent papers, has supported Velasco Ibarra in some’ matters, but has been mostly critical. Its closure in November was or- dered by the government after Jorge Mantilla, director of the pa- per, organized a solid front of the nation’s press in refusal to print a government statement denying a report of a cabinet crisis and lam- basting the Ecuadorean press in vitriolic terms. The paper was re-| opened at the end of December. The government statement origi- nally was given out.as paid matter earmarked only for several news- papers, El Comercio was not on the original list. But general | refusal of the newspapers to carry jthe statement, under Man i brought | backed government demand that | El Comercio print it or else. Freedom and reputation of the | press were involved, Mantilla ar- gued. He refused to print the statement. Police then took over | El Comercio, its afternoon affilia and its radio station. Employ were ordered out and the plant Padlocked. The government charged “rebellion.” Elections next June will replace jthe congress, which adjourned early in November, ; who won in 1952 by a big plur: of the country’s 350,000 votes, had a largé majority in the old congress. Besides his own followers, he had the backing of the old-line Conservative party. }He also has the support of the ARNE (Ecuadorean Nationalist Revolutionary Action, a Fascist- ES group patterned on the Spanish Velasco Iba: a rough fight in June. A new Demo- jcratic Front of opposition electors and independents is shaping up. Municipal elections in November }didn’t turn out well for the Velasco Ibarra followers. The Con- Wonderful Help The government is likely to get | servatives kept their hold on Quito, ‘their principal stronghold, but lost elsewhere throughout the country. Regardless of how Velasco Tharra makes out in the new con- gress, there’s no doubt-of his ap- peal to a great doreans, most whom live in jpoverty and long for better things. Velasco Ibarra promises them roads, schools, hospitals and a better standard of living. And he || does have a busy little welfare} [program under way. i Thin and balding, the 57-year-old ‘Velasco Ibarra is one of South America’s best orators. His voice is deep, with a wide range; his | diction is superb, and he is an excelleat phrase-maker. “Give me a balcony in every town in the country, and I will] win,” he said at the start of his last presidential campaign, Even his bitterest foes admit Velasco Ibarra is an outstandingly honest man, and will tolerate not the slightest evidence of graft. They admit he is able, and one of the hardest workers the country has known. But, they contend, he is impul- sive, violent, and has an obsession “| feel like I’m walking on air since |! paid up all my bills with a lean frem CITY LOAN CO.” é eles LOAN Thompson Enterprises, Ine. (Ice Division) — the sale. or ORDER of the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund of Btate ef _ CHARLEY E. JOHNS, ‘Asting Governor. Attest: B.C. DIAL 26831 18-25 ;feb1,1954 be cf 3a ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF The New Used Car Lot on SIMONTON STREET Opposite the Navy Commissary TEL. 2-7886 LISTED ARE 5 OF THE MANY VALUES OF LATE MODEL CARS AVAILABLE ‘62 Plymouth, Heafer, Radio, New Paint $1297 “8 Nash Ambassador ..........$ 495 49 Chevrolet, Two-Tone, Good Tires... $ 797 All Cars Guaranteed Ys Down 24 Months To Pay