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Saudi Arabia Changes From US. Friend To Sharp Critic By WILTON WYNN fer of military aid, and have signed the famous “Onas- sis deal” discriminating against American tankers. And in Arab League circles, the Saudis have when, the late King Ton Saud built his country’s foreign policy on the basis of American friendship and was willing to give America bases on any strip of his desert sands. Ever singe the old king's death last fall, a rift has been widening 1, American indifference during the Saudi dispute with Britain over the Buraimi Oasis: This territorial dispute looked like a little thing to They expected American diplomat- fe support and were embittered when they failed to get it. 2. American military aid for Traq. The Hashemite royal family of Iraq and the house of Saud have drove the Hashemites out of the Hejaz in Arabia. The Saudis con- sider aid to Iraq as aid to their enemy. 3. America’s attitude toward Pa- Iety aang Imgcesson Sa Frtce jar on ce Feigal, brother of King Saud and delegations tions during the crucial days of 194@ and 1947, when the United States backed the General Assem- bly decision to create the state of Israel, It was the Arabs’ most crushing diplomatic defeat. 4, 4 group of anti-Western ad- visers around King Saud. This group includes such Arab nation- alists as Rashid Ali Gailani, an Traqi exile who led a i terday took one last look at the battleship Missouri — on whose decks he signed the Japanese sur- render nine years ago, She leaves ape § for mothballs at Bremerton, ash, Te- | inla Brother’s Advice Didn’t Prevent Fatal Accident OMAHA ®—A letter containing a brotherly sermon on safe driving was found in the wreckage follow- ing a headon collision near Depi- sen, Towa, yesterday. Six persons @ied in the erash. The letter was addyessed to ‘Wayne Alleman, 17, of Omaha, one of the victims, and owner of one| of the automobiles involved in the erash. Tt was written last March 28 by | his brother, Gary D. Alleman, then | an Army private at Ft. Leonard Wood, Me. Wayne at the time was! living in Des Moines. The letter read in part; “Dear Wayne: “How do you like your car by now? Vil bet it really is a rod the way you describe it. Could you send me a picture of it? “I hope you are driving your car slow and carefully, because if you should happen to have an ac- cident, you would not only be hurt- ing yourself but the whole family... “You have a lot of responsibility in your hands, Wayne, so be care- ful and think what you do before you do it. F've got to go now so Vit see you later, Wayne. “Your brother, “GARY.” Typhoon June Cuts Wide Path Across Japan TOKYO (Violent Typhoon | dune cut a 300-mile wide path of death and destruction across the southern Japanese mainland today. At least nine persons were dead, eight missing and 5,366 homeless, Kyodo News Service reperted. The storm slammed into teem- ing Kyushu Island with winds up te 110 m.p.h. Winds slackened to 9% eg as the typhoon roared Three southern Kyushu cities, lashed by an P-y wind, tidal waves and: ¢ “pains, were evacuated. They -are © Miyazaki, with 120,000 residents; Miyakonojo, 75,000; und Nobeoka 88,000: The newspaper Yomiuri said a flash flood may haye virtually wiped out Miyakonojo, The storm paralysed communications in the area. The U.S. Air Force said the | storm center, lumbering northeast- ward at 17 m.ph,, would move across western Honshu and into the Sea of Japan tomorrow, Its. present course. would carry the storm through Hiroshima, but | it would miss the populous centers of Osaka and Tokho. Women drivers were involved in about 2,200,000 auto accidents in 1953 says the National Safety Coun- eil. It's Prize Night! Every Night in RAUL’S SEAFARER'S LOUNGE Now Open 7 Join the Party Every Nighi with TINY and NELSON at the Bar JOSE TORANO at the Piano THE KEY WEST CITIZEN M r 13, ° ony, Sevenber ‘(Jazz Musie To Played At Cafe Man’s Rites SALT LAKE CITY ® — There will not be the usyal sad organ and piano music when a Colorado cafe operator is buried Tuesda: Instead, in accordance with wishes of the deceased, a jazz bi will give with a hep beat. The widow won't wear mourning, -either. She'll .wear, she — said, *elothing he liked to see me in.” The fugeral wil] be that of Lodel Vandavere Jay, 44, who was killed fin an automobile accident near Rangely, Colo. He was proprietor of the Headquarters Cafe at Rangely at the time of his death, and had been @ chef in several Salt Lake City ¢afes. His widow, Mrs, Dorothy Pappas Moore: Jay, said today. her hus- band had been an avid jazz music fan, and his funeral will feature jauz_ versions ef ‘Don’t Worry Tee Me,” and ‘The Nearness of ‘ou.”* The. Weatherman Says . Seemeneed Key West and Vicinit Partly cloudy with seattered showers or thundershowers through Tuesday; not much change in temperature. Low tonight 75/76"; high Tuesday 88/90°. Gentle to moderate variable mostly easterly winds, fresh in and near shawer areas. Florida: Partly cloudy to oeca- sionally eloudy wil scattered showers and thundershowers most- ly in afternoons through Tuesday except for some night and morning showers near southeast epast. Little temperature change. Jacksonville through the Florida Straits: Moderate to fresh north- east to east winds over extreme north portion through Tuesday, Moderate east to southeast winds elsewhere, Seattered showers, East Gulf: Gentle to moderate east to southeast winds through Tuesday. Partly eloudy weather, Widely scattered showers. Western Caribbean: Moderate to fresh east to southeast winds thru Tuesday, except winds light to moderate variable over south por- tion. Partly cloudy to cloudy with seattered showers, especially over north portion. Weather Summary for the Tropi eal Atlantic, Caribbean Sea and East Gulf of Mexito: An area of cloudiness and showers extends | from ‘south of Cuba northward across southern Florida. Otherwise conditions in the area are relative- ly stable. There are no signs of any new storm developing. Qhservation Taken at Post Office Building, 7:00 A.M. EST, Key West, Pi t. 18, 1954 Temperatur Highest yesterday - Lowest last night - Total last 24 hours —. Total this month Deficieney this month . Total this year i Excess this year — 4,22 ins. Relative Humidity, 7 A.M. 80% Barometer (Sea Level), 7 A.M. 29.95 ins.—1014.2 mbs. | Tomorrow's Almanac |Sunrise — | Sunset |Moonrise — |Moonset - Days a Week Time ef Height of Tide high water Low Tides | Station— High Tides 10:48 a.m, 4:15 a.m, | 10:39 p.m. 4:23 p.m. | ADPITIONAL TIDE DATA Reference’ Station: Key West Bahia Honda | (bridge) ....... ah 18m | (east end) ....+-2h 20m | Gece Chice | Sandy Pt, oh 4m No Name Key | Caldes Channel (nerth end) 9.0 tt. +th lém +14 ft MEL CAVALIER at the Hammond Organ and Win a ith of Champagne, One of Tiny’s famous etchings, plus Other Prizes! ALSO Tues., Fishing Trip on the Greyhound Weds,, Airplane ride with George Faraldo Thurs., Roast prime rihs of beef $1.75 Our chef carves right before your eyes in the lounge! Continuous Music Every Night (—)—Minus sign; Corrections to be subtracted, (+)—Plus sign: Corrections to be a TODAY'S STOCK MARKET] NEW YORK #—The stock mar- ket was slightly higher today in (early dealings, and buyers showed | fil] a highly selective attitude. | Changes in either direction were jsmall with a few issues pushing their gains vigorously to between |1 and 2 points. Among gainers were Nationa] Steel, Republic Steel, Scott Paper, _| his headquarters in defiance of| .| Premier Ngo Dinh Diem, _| tired him, m, | Warters in ease Diem should send '|Police to arrest him. Chrysler, United Aircraft, Consol- idated Natural Gas, Allied Chem- ical, Union Pacific, and Pan Amer- jean World Airways. | Yaehtsmen on Grand Lake, |Colo., say theirs is the nation’s \highest anchorage — 8,369 feet | above sea level. “Edna” Toll Mounts To 19 Today PORTLAND, MAine (#—Washed- highw railroad tracks and jagged wound to- across territory raked by dealing hurricane Edna from Massachusetts to Nova Sgotia. The cost in lives mounted to 19— 13 of them in New England and eight in Maine alone, where autos were trapped .in road and. bridge washouts by streams that went wild under a record eight inches rain. Maine Gov. Burton M. Cross aft- er an air survey set loss there at more than seyen million dollars— on top of 10 million wrought 12 days before by hurricane Carol. Cross asked President Eisenhower to declare Maine a major disaster! area. Apple Crop Hurt Two-thirds of Nova Scotia’s four million dollar apple crop was counted lost. _ All of Maine’s dead were drown- ing vietims. Four persons perished in Massachusetts, one in i- eut, another in Nova Scotia. Six highway fatalities in New York State were attributed to the hur- rigane. Southern New England, braced for devastation reminiscent of the 1938 hurricane, was spared heavy property damage and even in the areas hardest hit water, not wind, was blamed for much of the destruction. Telephone lines went out of ser- vice-on a seale that once again saw roe erews head from south- ern New England into Maine, where their task was complicated by road washouts that caused a temporary ban on travel by all but emergency vehicles. Main Route Open Late last night state police said the main routes again were open. Hundreds of New Englanders left their coastal lowland homes, returning to find waters still in evidence, although subsiding, At Augusta, the Kennebec River rose 20.5 feet from normal — five feet higher than its peak during last spring's runoff. Two of Maine's hurricane vic- tims perished in a daring seven- hour effort to rescue a family of 10 from the top of an automobile engulfed by little Sandy Stream at Unity. Asst. Fire Chief Alton MeCor- mick, 47, and Ruth Brokeway, 6, one of the passengers, were swept downstream when floating debris broke a human chain to shore, | Meanwhile, hurricane Florence, sixth tropical storm of the year, broke up as it moved inland on the Mexican coast yesterday. Ousted Vietnam Leader Defiant PARIS (#)—Reports frem Sai- gon say that ousted Vietnamese Army Chief of Staff Nguyen Van Hinh has barricaded himself in| who The French News Agency said Diem repeated yesterday his dis- missal order, first issued last week and again directed Hinh to go to Franee. Hinh, however, refuse to obey as he had before. He set up a guard manning two tanks and a dozen fire hoses around his heac- Grand Coulee Dam is the world’s largest concrete structure with Shasta Dam second, says the Na- tional Geographic Soeiety. POLICE ARREST TWO (Continued from Page One) |terrogated both MeMiller and his Sex Deviation Is Given As Slaying Motive SAN.DIEGO, Calif. (®—Juvenile! authorities held a Marine ¢ ’s 16-year-old son today after he told’ police he shot and killed his bache- lor high school Latin teacher for making homosexual advances. Dead was Floyd Eugene Four-| nier, 34, who woul@ have sti r a new term teaching at San Diego as School today, etective Sgt. Paul G. Walk re- ported that Timothy Sapp, son of Col. John W. Sapp Jr., chief of | staff of the San Diego Marine | Corps Recruit Depot, said he shot Fournier early yesterday while Spending the night jn the teacher’s rented ropm at the home of an absent widow, The boy was quoted as saying he got out of bed after the al- leged homosexual acts, obtained a 22 caliber rifle from a closet and shot Fournier in the head. Police and Coroner 0. M. Ladd said physieg! evidence in the bedroom supported the boy’s | statement. } Fournier, whose mother lives in Seneca, Ill., had been a teacher wgier high school for a year and a half. Medical Aid Is Sent To C47 Crash Survivors WESTOVER AIR FORCE BASE Mags. (# — A plane today headed from this base to Thule Air Base, | Greefland, with medigal supplies for the five survivors of a plane whieh erashed yesterday with the loss of 10 lives. Air Force officials here identi- fied the plane which erashed and burned as an Air Foree, four en- gine C124 Globemaster. It erashed about a half mile from Thule base, 900 miles south of the North Pole, while making an emergency land- ing. Maj. Huly Bray of the Atlantic division Military Transport Ser- viee reported 10 of the 15 persons aboard were killed. Their names were withheld pending notification of next of kin. Bray said the plane had left Westover a few days ago and was on a regularly scheduled flight out of Thule when its commander de- clared a “state of emergency” 12 minutes after becoming airborne. Bray said he does not know what aused the plane’s commander to declare a state of emergency. “Bray said it web the first fatal accident in more than 4,000 flights made by the Atlantic division Mats to Thule since the north ecoun- try airlift started in 1951. More than 35,000 passengers and 55 mil- | lion pounds of supplies have been transported. Hitler Aide Is Reported Dying HAMBURG, Germany (4 — For- mer Nazi Foreign Minister Kon- stantin von Neurath was reported near death today in West Berlin’s Spandau Prison. Now 81, he is suffering from heart trouble and| is nearly blind with cataracts. | Von Neurgth suffered a heart| attack in his cell last week. | Von Neurath, who was also! Hitler's “protector” of occupied | Czech provinces, was sentenced eight years ago at the Nuernberg war erimes trial to 15 years im- prisonment. Women drivers were involved in about 12 per cent of the U.S. auto! accidents ip 1953. < SOUTH FLO? { ULENN TURD ANN GL APPOINIMEN | imbtnduras eg | Oe De é " FINE S'7 Show Times: APPOINTMENT IN HONDURAS—7:15 & 10:46 $i $i FATHER WAS A FUL wife, one at a time, Both denied any connection, Howeyer, later on, | McMiller sent word to James he | wanted to talk. After his confession, McMiller led police officers J. Linehan and | James to Sugarigaf Key where | the cash box was located ‘n about three feet of water. | Justice of the Peace, Roy Ham-} lin stated that formal charges had | not been made pending statements of police officers. He said that as it stood now, Robinson would be charged with breaking and enter- | ing to commit grand larceny while | MeMiller and his wife would be charged as accessories after the faet. | All money was recovered | VAN FLEET RAPS (Continuea From Page One) able that thev will risk major war while they still lack the atom bomb} stockpile and those intercontinental bombers necessary to knock us “But if we still have time, I don’t say that time is on our side. . .| “We have been solely preoceu- | pied with preparing for that full-'] scale, global war which may never geome, and have heen blind to the tepid wars which the Kremlin is winning, and which now threaten | to outflank the free world. | “If this trend of the last eight | years continues, we would lose} World War III long before it begins.” | countries are | Connecticut Plants in foreign maintained by 27 firms. Eisner Furniture Co. Poinciana Center Tel. 2-695) Special Chrome Dinettes ... Wrought Iron Dinettes . Lime Oak Dinettes ... $49.50 WOMAN HELD SIGSBEE COUNCIL (Continued from Page One) | TQ MEET TONIGHT of the second cab, she gontinued,| The Sigsbee Community Council got into the cab driven by Oliver | will hold its regular monthly meet- Kemp. jing at the shelter tonight at 7:30 Admits Intimacy tonight. She reported that man gave} Captain C, L. Murphy will be Kemp $11, after which they drove | Suest of honor at the meeting and around town while she was inti-| @ representative from the legal 2 mate with the man. Later, she|pzrtment of the naval Base said, after the man got out, Kemp | speak. Goodreau called her out te his cab. | man was in the back seat when she was intimate with the man. Voces Rees ee ee The man gave Goodreau $10 of FOR PROMPT. AND up $250 required for bail. Mrs. Bar-} field is also out on $100 bond. She! "TELEPHONE 26008 The Finest and Largest Theatre in Key West Mon, and Tues. | Wednesday Only gave her $3, 4#@2 RADIO ond CIFELLI'S 3°22" she got in the cab, she added. | whieh he gave her $5. SERVICE—SEE is charged with being a vagarant. 100% Air Conditioned On September 8, she ‘continued | Factory Methods Used— While driving around town with | Trial will be held in eity court} DAVID CIFELLI STR/ LN Box Office Opens at 1:45 P.¥ she was in Phil’s Gate Bar when Goodreau driving, she said that AB Wank & Goodreau is in city jail. Kemp put| 928 Truman Avenue CONTINUOUS SHOWS FROM THERE ON ee POOR OLD CRAIG | SERVICE STATION Prancis at Trumap | DIAL 2-9183 Your PURE OIL Dealer | Tires . . Tubes , . Batteries | ACCESSORIES | Tires .. Batteries ., Accessories DARLOW’S PURE OIL STATION STOCK ISLAND TEL.’ 2-3167 Open 7 A.M, ‘til 10 P.M. 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