The Key West Citizen Newspaper, June 4, 1954, Page 7

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Plundered by ancient grave robbers who stripped them of their and jewels. “It was only by lucky chance it this tomb escaped being loot- ed,” Goneim said. The archeolo- gist has been digging at Sakkara since 1951. He unearthed the ruins He said the sarcophagus is about six feet long and slightly over two feet wide. The top is of solid ala- baster and the mummy was placed inside through an aperture in the end. This opening was closed by a sliding alabaster panel. “We can expect to find’ inside the alabaster sarcophagus a coffin of solid gold, or possibly of wood cov- rae with thick sheets of gold,” he PA. OLDSTERS DIE READING, Pa (®—Two of the oldest men in Pennsylvania, both 102, died within 24 hours of each Lewis A. Stein died in Reading Hospital yesterday. William Thom- as Aldridge of Harvisburg died Wednesday. Taree noters iw IPAM] 2: rorunar prices Remon Faas Located In the Heart of the City REASONABLE ROOMS WRITE or WIRE RATES for RESERVATIONS with BATH and TELEPHONE Ritz Pershing Miller. , HOTEL HOTEL . HOTEL 132 B. Flagler St. 925 N.E. Ist Ave. 229 NE. Ist Ave. 102 Rooms Elevator 100 Reoms oO Solarium ; Hested $3BLOCKS FROM UNION BUS Elevator Rooms Elevator STATION SPECIALS Interior - Exterior | WHITE OIL PAINT . . . gal. $ 2.98 STEEL SINKS . . . . $6.95 to $10.95 White (Complete w/ Fittings) i ie CIORET’. |; . . 5. 98995 17 x 19 (Complete w/ Fittings) C.1. LAVATORY ...... KEYS ... PIPE... FITTINGS PLUMBING SUPPLIES PAINT . . . HARDWARE .. . GLASS Rental Equipment Sanders - Waxers. - Floor Sanders - $35.95 Paint Sprayers Ete. Paint Hardware, Plumbing Supplies KEY WEST SUPPLY POWER TOOL RENTALS Phone 3123 219 Simonton St. Overseas Transportation Company, Ine. Fast, Dependable Freight and Express Service between MIAMI and KEY WEST Alse Serving ALL POINTS ON FLORIDA KEYS Between Miami and Key West Express Schedule (Ne Stops En Reute) LEAVES KEY WEST DAILY (EXCEPT SUNDAYS) at 6:00 P.M. Arrives at Miami at 12:00 e’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 KEY WEST DAILY (EXCEPT SUNDAYS) at 8:00 o'clock A.M. (Stops at All Intermediate Points) and arrives at Miami at 4:00 o'clock P.M. -ygyss MIAMI DAILY (EXCEPT INDAYS) at 9:00 o'clock A.M., and + ieteedg cra aad 5:00 o'clock MM. Free Pick-Up and Delivery Service Show Up For Meet Thurs. WASHINGTON W—A late-after- noon meeting of the Senate Investi- Security Council Delays By WILLIAM N. OATIS UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. @— The U. N. Security Council seemed likely today to’ take its time with Thailand’s request for a “peace gators subcommittee was canceled | i yesterday after none of the three Democratie members showed up. The meeting had been called by Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis), The New York Times said in a dispatch from Washington that the absence of the three minority members was a “Democratic boy- cott,” byt the senior Democrat on |? the subcommittee, Sen. McClellan (D-Ark), said this wasn’t so. He said some confusion had arisen over where the meeting was to have been held. McCarthy is regular chairman of the investigations group, but he has stepped aside during its inquiry into charges he and high Army of- ficials have aimed at each other. Sen. Mundt (R-SD) is temporary chairman. ; However, McCarthy yesterday summoned the subcommittee to a meeting after it had completed its regular hearing. He did not an- nounce the purpose of the meeting, but it reportedly was to consider hearings on alleged Red infiltration of defense plants during times when the televised hearings on the Army-McCarthy dispute are in re- cess. McCarthy had asked the Army’s lawyer, Joseph N. Welch, and the subcommittee’s special counsel, Ray H. Jenkins, to attend. However, the meeting was called off for lack of a quorum, and Roy M. Cohn, McCarthy’s chief coun- sel and a principal in the Army- McCarthy row, said the three Dem- ocrats failed to appear. Sen. Jackson (D-Wash) said he was on his way to the meeting when he met Mundt, who, Jackson said, told him it had been called off. Sen. Symington (D-Mo) said he “just didn’t go.” McClellan said he was detained on the Senate floor. McClellan did, say, however, he felt that under the original resolu- tion through which the Army-Mc- Carthy hearings were started, the investigations subcommittee could not handle other matters until its special inquiry was finished. CONGRESS HICHLIGHTS WASHINGTON (# — The Eisen- hower administration chalks up q legislative victory as the Senate approves its housing program and writes in a public housing provi- sion. Passed by the Senate yesterday on a voice vote, the bill now heads for a Senate-House conference for a compromise of differences. In approving its version of the bill, the House included no mention of public housing. But the Senate voted yesterday to give Eisenhow- er the authority he asked to build 35,000 new public housing units a year for the next four years. It did so by a 66-16 roll call tally. In general, the housing bill which won Senate approval yesterday sured credit for home buyers, fur- nish a stepped-up slum clearance program and erect safeguards against any more abuses in the government’s housing operations. MCCARTHY-ARMY — The Sen- ate investigation of the McCarthy- Army row enters its 27th day with the main issues obscured for the’ moment by the question of what to do with what Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis) says is a list of 133 sus- pected Reds doing sensitive de- fense work. McCarthy has said he is willing FULL CARGO INSURANCE MAIN OFFICE and WAREHOUSE: Cor. Eaton and Francis Sts, TELEPHONE 2-706) to turn over the list to the Defense names be kept secret. The depart- ment said yesterday it wants the names—but that it can’t agree to the secrecy ban. Thus, disposition of the list re- mains up in the air as Roy M. Cohn, McCarthy’s top aide, re- turns for, more cross-examination before the Senate Investigations subcommittee. FOREIGN AID — Secretary of State Dulles steps up to bat again for the Eisenhower administra- tion’s request for a 3%-billion-dol- lar foreign aid authorization. This time, he goes before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Junior-Senior Mixup ENID, Okla. «® — There's a junior who’s a senior and a senior who's a junior in the White family. John M. White Sr., 58, a retired Army captain, is a junior at Phillips University here. John Jr. is a graduating senior at the University of Oklahoma. Foreign Aid Plea To Senate By EDWIN B. HAAKINSON WASHINGTON (® — Secretary of State Dulles opens the administra- tion plea in the Senate for a 3%4- billion-dollar foreign aid authoriza- tion today, with questioning likely to focus on Communist-menaced Indochina. Chairman Wiley (R-Wis) asked Dulles to appear before a public session of the Senate Foreign Re- lations Committee. The secretary has appeared previously before the House Foreign Affairs Committee, which has reached no decisions. These policy committees are con- sidering only an authorization. Ac- tual funds must be voted later in a separate appropriation bill Members of the Senate Foreign Relations. and Armed Services committees got a secret briefing on the situation in the Far East yesterday from James A. Van Fleet, retired Army general. Van Fleet is just back from a mission to Japan, Korea and Formosa for President Eisenhower. Wiley quoted Van Fleet as saying that no formal decisions had been reached on what the administra- tion would do about the expanding Indochina Communist crisis. The President made a similar state- ment at his news conference Wednesday. Sen. Kefauver (D-Tenn) told the Senate yesterday he understands a policy has been determined, but that administration leaders ap- parently feared to tell Congress and the public what it is for fear of losing control of Congress in the coming elections. “Anything as serious as war has no business in politics,” Kefauver said. “The decisions before this country are far too grave for them to wait on elections.” He demanded that Congress and the public be told just what is planned about intervention in In- dochina. “Top military leaders of five powers — the United States, Great Britain, France, Australia and New Zealand — opened secret talks here yesterday on measures which may be taken to combat communism in Southeast Asia. No results were announced. Foreign Aid Director Harold E. Stassen told a news conference yesterday the‘ President should have authority to use $1,133,000,000 requested for Indochina in the new foreign aid budget in other adjoin- ing areas if the Communists should overrun Indochina. Protest Succeeds TOKYO (#—The presidert of a Tokyo women’s university said to- day photographs of 48 freshmen students nude from the waist up would be destroyed. Dr. Masamichi Royama said the university would formally ap- ologize to the young girls. The girls and their parents had protested. Dr. Royama said he had not known that two faculty members had arranged for the semi-nude Photographs. They were studying the female physique. Your Grocer SELLS That Good STAR * BRAND and CUBAN — TRY A POUND TODAY — STRONG ARM BRAND COFFEE Triumph Coffee Mill at ALL GROCERS CHRIST Tomorrow Night, 8:00 HEAR... Lt. Henry Russell Of the Salvation Army and Harry Gregory SOLOIST 729 FLEMING STREET yon K. Tsarapkin opposed immedi- ate debate formally, contending Thailand Move (Arsonists Are Wadaworth, acts for Lodge in Easy To Find ‘The Arah member of the council,| HODGENVILLE, Ky w#—A cou- a reporter, “I don’t think we should meet again until Geneva busts up - | Charles A. Malik of Lebanon, told ple of persistent “fire bugs” were caught yesterday—in their jail now would endanger | or comes to a conclusion.” He add- | Cell. chances of a cease-fire agreement |ed he favors giving the talks inj Jailer Levi Carter said Stanley Switzerland two more weeks to|Keith, 17, and Lewis Hall, 22, tried 5g eign ut actions and expressions by other delegates indicated the de- bate would not start speedily. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. of the United States, the council president for June, left by plane last night to attend D-Day anniversary ceremo- mes in France this weekend. He said he did not know when he would be back. His deputy, James Tax Deed Buyer Wants His $85 HUNTINGTON, W. Va. @—L. J. Meisel, attorney and City Council member, says the Cabell County School Board can have its property back if someone will pay him his He had bid that amount at tax sale on a lot, sight unseen. He discovered later that the choice lot had a $50,000. public school building on it, the most modern in the county. The lot, in some manner, had Temained on the tax books after the schcol was built, and had been listed as tax-delinquent. Who Stole The Ding Dong? PITTSBURGH (™~Firemen asked police to investigate the dis- appearance of a 25-pound bell from a firetruck left temporarily un- guarded during a downtown blaze. Printing... Embossing Engraving ... Rubber Stamps The Ariman Press Greene Street Phone 2-566] “And | guess we owe some thanks to the manager of CITY LOAN CO.” rity Key West 2-568] 524 Southard St. BIG RUNS... . smal runs Whatever Your Requirement --- We Do Our Best.... Do you use Office, Store, Warehouse, Factory show results. three times to set fire to the jail. Two other Western delegates @-{ They ignited paper twice and, vored a similar waiting period. | after all paper was removed from attempting to burn property ef British circles, without setting a|the cell, they ignited their mat-| another person. time limit, took a like view and said a big council debate might en- danger the Geneva talks. WHATEVER YOUR NEEDS IN THE LINE OF Children’s TOYS Come to The TROPICAL TRADER 718 DUVAL ST. DIAL 2-6262 SHERWIN- Wiuams SwP HOUSE PAINT @ WEATHERATED for extra prov tection against— (GAL. IN 5's SHERWIN- WILLIAMS 708 Duval Street Tel. 2-8611 THOMPSON HARDWARE Caroline and Grinnell Streets For Home or Commercial Use... We Are Prepared To Furnish You With Clean, Pure Cube » Crushed ICE Thompson Enierprises, Inc. (Ice Division) 11504 61 to 130 more miles per tankful with a Studebaker! Thats what the 54 Champion got in the Mobilgas Economy Run against competing low-priced cars! Come in and look at the official AAA score sheet of the Mobil- gas Run. 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