The Key West Citizen Newspaper, May 6, 1954, Page 10

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< ADMINISTRATION BLAMED FOR GENEVA INDOCHINA ‘REVERSAL’ By D. HAROLD OLIVER WASHINGTON (#—Sen. Guy Gil- lette (D-lowa) told a national Democratic conference today the United States suffered “an astounding and unprecedented re- versal” at Geneva on. the question of Indochina. He blamed it on what he called a “split” Republican ad- ministration lacking a foreign oe the 1952 election put one group of Republicans in charge of the executive branch and another group in Congress. The “fiasco” at Geneva, he said, is only the most glaring example of what price America is paying in the struggle against Communist im- Secretary of State Dulles said yesterday the Geneva talks are going about as anticipated and that he knows of nothing that has hap- pened to justify an interpretation that the United States had suffered he has unqualified faith in Dulles. He said no one loses a battle while the battle is still going on. Gillette said selection of a Dem- ocratic Congress. in November scoop eb pert ota Republican party, which may w. be incurable, but it will heal the breach in our government ‘and al- low the President to lead America in the leadership of the free world.” Gillette, a Foreign Ralations Committee member, said the coun- try will live to regret the adminis- tration’s decision not to use the United Nations machinery to halt the Indochina war. “We could have hauled the Red béfore the bar of world ,” he said, “but we pre- ferred to revert to outworn jmeth- Gillette’s remarks were pre- panel on “American the second day’s ses- é Jefferson-Jack- al h former Presi- an be an informal B. Johnson and m Rayburn, Texas leaders “minority party in Senate , are billed per es” to pep up the drive of Democratic majorities: Congress in November. Adlai E. Stevenson, the party’s 1952 presidential aaa originally listed for a a fe come on advice of his . He is recovering from pEebes E "ah a ae ‘i ware of “‘political indictments” he said may be instigated by Atty. Gen. Brownell, and of “smear and fear” tactics of Sen. McCarthy (R- Wis) in the coming campaign. Mitchell urged his fellow Démo- _ erats not to be overconfident, even though he said their party bolds a “most genuine advantage” over the Republicans ‘‘in the basic con- fidence of the voters and on the major issues of the day.” Mitchell said he has been in- formed that ‘‘the junior senator from Wisconsin (McCarthy) is|] booked for three months of speech- es—but without Eisenhower's ap- préval, we are told.” The executive committee of the watching, the administration marched straight up the hill to Geneva, then turned around and marched right down again.” The explanation, he said, is to be found ‘‘in the fact that there was no policy for Indochina and no firm basis for a policy if one had been found on which the Re- publicans could agree.” Gillette said it is now “painfully evident that the Republican party has proved inadequate to conduct U. S. foreign policy”—not because it lacks capable men but “because it is split from top to bottom” on America’s role in how to oppose Communist aggression. He said he did not blame any individual for the “diplomatic dis- aster” at Geneva. He said Secra- tary Dulles found his diplomatic hands “‘tied behind his back, his voice muffled and his a bidden even to look the peel the face and obliged to abandon the field before he had set foot on it.” oe Schizophrenies Are Given New Hope For Cure Guerillas Hold Out In Remote Korean Island By BOB PROSSER CHEJU ISLAND, Korea # — A half - dozen die-hard Communist guerrillas are preventing resettle- ment of this isolated island just off the southern tip of the Korean a. The guerrillas — two women and four men — are known by name in the settlements which they terrorize. They now act more like simple bandits than political warriors. Others who once roamed the rugged volcanic hills with them have returned to their fields as peaceful farmers or artisans. They have been forgiven and accepted into the communities. But because of the bitter hold- outs, villagers must withdraw each night behind ‘the lava stone walls ringing their towns. They lock and bar the gates and mount guards throughout the night. Raids continue at irregular intervals. The slopes of 6,000-foot Mt. Halla are designed by nature and man to harbor the hunted. At the end of the war in the Pacific, Japan planned a last stand from this rugged mountain island. She garrisoned it with more than 200,000 troops and covered the slopes of the mountain. The lapanese and Korean troops have g0ne but the fortifications and hide- Outs. remain. éd with abandoned Japanese and machine guns, the six apparently con- é their .activity simply because &n easy way to live well on an knowing few luxuries. World’s Largest Piece Of Glass On Display ~- CORNING N. Y. —The Corn- ing Glass Works has on display at its museum what it says is the largest single piece of glass in the The glass—a round experiment- al casting of a mirror to be used in the Mt. Palomar Calif. ob- servatory telescope—is 10 feet in diameter, more than a foot thick and weighs 20 tons. national group gave unanimous ap-| |} proval to Mitchell’s action in de-| fil nying national committee financial support for James Roosevelt and | jill Rep. Robert L. Condon, who are| fiji] Democratic nominations | jj] seeking for Congress in California. In another development, Mitchell refused, on advice of the commit-| [ill it, but Mitchell did. policy speech, Gil- “While the whole world was|fl) Tf you can the Philadelphia Water Department has THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Exclusively With Us DICKIES Work Pants $3. Khaki, Grey and Tan Also In JEANS $3. Brown, Charcoal and Faded Blue Completely Sanforized DICKIES Fit You, Fit Your Job By ALTON L. BLAKESLEE AP Science Reporter ST. LOUIS # — The sickest of all the mentally sick — schizo- phrenics—can be drawn back to reality over a bridge of words and action, a prominent psychiatrist has reported. A Dr. Frieda Fromm-Reichmann of Rockville, Md., told of new suc- cesses by psychiatric treatment that give more hope for saving hundreds of victims of this di- sease, once regarded, as hopeless. Insulin and electric shock treat- another and useful way to save them, said Dr. Fromm-Reichmann of the Chestnut Lodge Sanitarium. Schizophrenia, often called split personality, means escaping into an unreal world of the person’s own making. The same approach which heals other mental illnesses can be used to reach the schizophrenic, help him understand why he is sick, help him get well, Dr. Fromm- Reichmann told the American Psychiatric Assn. She believes no matter how sick the schizophrenic seems to be, he still has some core of health, some contact with the real world. The psychiatrist can create a bridge of understanding with the patient and eventually help him get well. The psychiatrist becomes a part of the real world for which the sick mind can grope. ‘ Dr. Fromm-Reichmamn _ said schizophrenics are victims of pent- up hostility which they can’t handle. They withdraw into them- selves, and actually are afraid usually of taking out their anger against themselves or against other persons. She believes they are not really withdrawn from contact with the world but rind have tried to cut off all communication with it. Even patients if an apparent state of stupor are frequently keenly ob- serving what is going on and can remember it. But they give ne signs of knowing. i What the psychiatrist says or does therefore can influence the patient and start building the bridge of communication. . The early bird does catch the worm, because. worms withdraw below the surface of the ground at midday. The population of the world is increasing at a rate of about 1.4 per cent a year says the U. N. Food and Agriculture Organization. Thursday, May 6, 1954 95 95 Treatment Fails To Cure Woman Of Rambling Urge LOS ANGELES (#—Twice Mrs. Sula Bell Stimson, 54, a grand- mother, has undergone psychiatric treatment seeking a cure for gam- bling. But she is back in custody again for writing worthless checks to finance her poker-playing pro- pensity. The Long Beach widow, who has seven grown children, was sen- tenced Tuesday to an indetermi- nate term in a state prison. She pleaded guilty last April 2 to pass- ing fictifious checks totaling $275. Police records show she was first arrested on check charges in 1948 and served 30 days in jail as a condition of a year’s probation. In 1949 she was arrested again under similar circumstances and charged with violating probation. Examination suggested a psy- chological disorder, and she was sent to Los Angeles County Gen- eral Hospital for treatment. Re- leased as 40 per cent cured, she was back in custody again two months later on fresh check charges and returned to the hos- pital for more psychiatric treat- ment. “The shots did me a world of good,” she said then, but after her latest arrest she said she had been gambling again at nearby Gar- dena, wheré poker games are legal. as well as summer. (em mnt came Cttahis coeet cmeed fetes cede come cms comes cm cee cas ASAD ce Ghia cen ee) en am come ee Ge So Go Se MS cS cD eS ee eS emi sees ieee) aes cite Gomes oot ELECTRICITY ZX-11 Personnel Show Interest In Education =“ The efforts of the personnel in the training office of Airship De- velopment Squadron: Eleven (ZX- 11) have shown good results since the beginning of 1954. During that time five enlisted men of the squadron have taken. and passed the high school GED examination. All five have since received their |}i¢. diplomas from their respective schools. Those receiving their diplomas are Benedict J. Amendolora, AN; Richard. E. Barnard, Jr.,. YN3; John Hommel, Jr., AN; Allen A. Peck, ADAN; and Howard M. Scruggs, AMAN. Richard E. Barnard has further- ed his education by su completing the first year college level examination offered by the United States Armed Forces In- stitute. Three other enlisted men who re- ceived their high school diplomas in the latter part of 1953 have also successfully passed the first year college level tests. . Those men are Curtis H. Bying- ton, AD3; Ferdinand Dupont, Jr., ADAN, and Robert L Newton, AD- AN. German Princess Is Dead At 67 BAD KISSINGEN, Germany. Former Crown Princess Cecilie of Prussia died here in her - sleep early today after along illness. She was 67. Her son, Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia, head’ of the former German royal house of Hohenzol- lern, and his wife Princess Kyra were at the bedside. Prince Louis Ferdinand, an- nounced yesterday that his mother was suffering from a circulatory ailment. Before her marriage to Crown. Prince Wilhelm, son of the last Kaiser, in 1905, Princess Cecilie was the Duchess of Mecklenbourg. Her husband’ died in 1951. The word ‘Paschal’ used in con- nection with ‘Easter derives frofh the Hebrew word meaning Pass- over. a switch to a room air conditioner is. a switch to summer comfort Why swelter, steam, and stew, when you can switch to cool summer comfort simply by install- ing a room air conditioner? Aroom air conditioner gives you a delightful haven from heat right in your own home. It cools the air and circulates it. Takes out dust and excess moisture. Gives you a place to relax —away from wilting heat. And you can make this cool place in your home for only a few pennies a day. See your electric dealer today about your room air condi- tioner—and switch to cool summer comfort. P.S. Look for the room air conditioner that switches to heating for snappy winter days. Some new models cool or heat—for winter use City Electric System TODAY'S Rough estimate of the room elr-conditioner you'll need: *he sure to hove adequate wiring Jury Considers Fate Of Two On Kidnap Charge SAN FRANCISCO Six men and six women today deliberate the case of two former private de- tectives charged with kidnaping a San Francisco real estate broker. If Harold Jackson, 52, and Joseph Lear, 43, are found guilty, they face possible sentences of death or imprisonment without possibil- ity of parole. The two former private investi- gators are charged with abducting Leonard Moskovitz last January. Moskovitz was rescued 61 hours later by alert police who spotted a man making a post-midnight ran- som call from a street-corner tele- Phone booth. No ransom was paid. First $500,000, then $300,000 had been demanded. The telephoner was Jackson, who led police to Moskovitz, who was guarded by Lear in a rented house. Jackson’s defense. was that there was ‘no kidnaping—that Moskovitz, 36, dreamed it-all up as a hoax to extort money from his father, Maurice Moskovitz. Lear testified he was hired by Jackson as a private investigator, and that-when he realized he was involved in a kidnaping he stayed with it in fear of his own life and those of his wife and stepson. The jury got the case yesterday ‘Jafternoon and deliberated until mearly midnight. ‘Under California’s Little Lind- bergh Law, the lightest possible sentence upon conviction is life im- prisonment without possibility of parole. Conviction of kidnaping with bodily harm could méan the death sentence. Suit Is Changed SANTA MONICA, Calif. (#—Jane Withers, 28, former child actress, has asked that her pending separ- ate maintenance suit against oil- man William Moss, 33, be changed to a divorce action. ‘Superior Judge Allen T. Lynch granted her request and set a pre- trial hearing for June 9. Miss Withers, who has 10 days in which to file the divorce suit, said it will charge mental cruelty. They were married in 1947 and have three children. I | | | | | | | | | | | | | ! | i | wl up to 350 square feet up to 450 square feet up to 550 square feet ARCHER S$ 814 FLEMING STREET Superette Market The Best Deal In Town! It’s Natural At Archer’s! SEVEN BIG REASONS Why You'll Always Get A Better Deal at ARCHER’S ‘tesy evi Yy Cleanliness and Friendliness Products Well Stocked Shelves eValues 47 June Dairy Grade A Large EGGS Fresh Georgia Grade A Whole or Cut Up Doz. Swift's Gr. A Western rib STEAKS b.4.3¢ Swift's Gr. A Western Rib ROAST bb. 35c ‘ Swift?s Premium---All Meat Weiners #. ».47¢ Swift's Premium Grade A Roasting HENS « 43¢ SEE THE MEAT YOU BUY! Our Butcher Will Give You the Cut You Desire Campbell’s PORK & Swift's Premium Can Beans 2 cans 25c | Corned Beef 39c Lykes Corned Beef Libby’s Rosedale—2'2' Size Hash . . can 25c | Peaches can 28c Sunshine Sweets---With $5.00 Order SUGAR 5 « 39¢ Quaker 2-Lb. Milk can 12%c| Grits . . pkg. 35c Fancy Early June Fla. Finest String Peas 2 cans 25c| Beans 2 cans 25c. Maxwell House---With $7.00 Order COFFEE lb. 93c E-Z Liquid Qt. Starch bil. 18 Armour’s Evap. Whiter Washes with Fab Ig. pkg. 28c .. b Be . . b 3e LETTUCE 2 heads 35¢€ FANCY YELLOW NO. 1 SQUASH 2 ibs. 25¢ PHONE 2-5132 FOR FREE DELIVERY oe) le Regular Grocery Orders

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