The Key West Citizen Newspaper, September 16, 1954, Page 5

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INAVARRO, INC. | NAVARRO, INC. v i= fe} g > < Zz NAVARRO, INC. NAVARRO, INC. NAVARRO, INC. 1952 No, we're not talking about your age, but the fact that we have over 40 fine Used Cars for you to choose from ... all makes and models, and in A-]1 shape... all priced to sell quick. Here are some of our buys: 1949 1951 1953 1947 1949 1950 1950 1952 1952 bees 1951 1948 1950 1949 1951 1953 1951 1951 1953 1951 995.00 398.00 1947 1950 1950 1951 1951 1951 1950 1950 1950 1950 1950 1952 1949 1949 1952 1949 1949 1946 CHRYSLER, 4-D Stock No. 1291 __ Stock No, 1282 645.00 Steck no ta NT LT. 905.00 Stock No. 1304 0 1595.00 CHRYSLER, 4-D Stock No, 1308 Stock No. 1308 495.00 Sen Re ime te 58500 Stock No. 1310 ie 1895.00 FORD TRUCK Stock No, 1311 Stock Nor ise 1045.00 sea ou «1250.00 Stock No. 1917 _ 289.00 PLYMOUTH, 4-D Stock No. 1921 en Stock No. 1325 Tareas ey 395.00 fone «ST Stock No. 1119 __ Pema See OS De Luxe—Stock No. 1199 ____ 1195.00 DODGE, \%-Ton Truck Stock No. 1267 tock No. 1214 _ DODGE, 4-D Stock No. 1231 Giovk We tat Sock Rea 897.00 Stock No. 1286 Stock Nov izes) upurban 995.00 Stock No. 1264 1297.00 oe ee 1597.00 Stock No. 1274 _ _ pr a lata 745.00 Stock No 1279 845.00 CHEVROLET, 4D 697.00 Stock No. 1262 Sear we tay? OP Cre. 697,00 Stock No, 1288 1697.00 pty tah Dot 445.00 Stock, 2e;1388 Sock Moines Ce 1395.00 Stock No. 48 595.00 cn oy fies 495.00 Navarro, Inc. NOT DREAMBOATS Just Old Goats! “48 BUICK, 2-Door ‘47 BUICK, 4-Door STOCK NO. 1312 ‘48 CHEVROLET, 4-Door 93 PLYMOUTH, Bus. Gpe. 0 TOE SS ‘388 CHEVROLET, 4Door NAVARRO, Ine. 197.00 LINCOLN, Sedan DODGE, 4-D — 445.00 BUICK, 4D CADILLAC, 4-D _ 195.00 PLYMOUTH, 4-D FORD. 2-D 15.0 STUDEBAKER, 2-D PLYMOUTH, 4-D 1397.00 CHRYSLER, Site PLYMOUTH, Cranbrook PLYMOUTH, 4-D OLDSMOBILE 88, 2-D $97.00 CHRYSLER, 4-D FORD V-8, Suburban 997.00 DODGE, 4-D CHEVROLET, Conv. 497.00 Leiba Oe OLDSMOBILE, 4-D PLYMOUTH, 2-D 475, 00 BUICK, 2-D Navarro, Inc. * STOCK STOCK-NO. $1 LOT NO. 1 424 SOUTHARD STAg, PHONE 29-2242 995.00 | ‘Yhoreday, September 16,1954 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Page 3 Army Moves To Against Deadly By BELTON C. FAY WASHINGTON —The Army is bmg 9 steps to warn citi- zens. jadly gas, radiological or germ warfare materials during shipment. Warn Public Gas Danger “Atomic City Opens Tonigh ” At Islander A spokesinan seid loday the man sai y Teg- ulation was issued u- Army specialists shipmént of CBR matérial from P69 i pg installations are ‘to “request the asist- aneé of newspaper, radio ststions, local poliee, ete.” if an accident makes rative the prompt warnlag sof persons living in the area. ‘The regulation says that “if the i¢al eseort personnel . . . are or sefiously injured and can- not issue” a warning announce- ingtéliation or a similar agen- cy, should sound the als volved might pot be disclosed. The regulation says the release say only that -an accident certain ig on the circum- stances, that guards had been post- ed to prevent into the dan- ger area; or that “evacuation of area was necéssary te the welfare of the epmmunity” because ot wind and weather conditions; and that a announcement ear be made when the area was fe. Présumably, the most lethal the CBR materials which might be by such an accident is the “G" or nerve gas. Expogure to nerve gas causes strangulation and death within thinutes. Like other war gases, a6 es close to the 5 g with light wind. Detection treatment must come swiftly. Radiological material — the by- Product ef avelear fission which Produiges poisonous coritamination —acts much slower, requiring hours, days or weeks for effect. hus, there is more tine for pre- ventive measures. ‘The aceidental release of germ warfare materiel probably would be the easiest with which to cope, since the onset of disease takes a comparatively long time. . TODAY'S STOCK MARKET NEW YORK, ) — The stock market quietly slipped lower to- day in early dealings. The losses never were great— into the major fractions — while many stocks posted modest gains. Montgomery Ward was down % at 71, American Cyanamid gained % &t 30% and Capital Airlines was up % at 14. J. P. Stevens was lower on a reduced earnings rt, and also dawn were U.S. | Studebaker, Genera] Dyanics, Boeing, Philco, American Telephone, American Smelting, Du Pont, Southern Rail- way, and Standard Oil (NJ). were General Motors, who escort each | o¢ an |Goes Berserk Paramount’s “The Atomic City” which opens tonight at.the Island- er Theatre, is a neat and nerve- tingling thriller that rates with the best suspenge films ever made. Dealing realistically with the story atomic scievtist’s son who is kidnapped by enemy agents, this Joseph Sistrom production aims solely for excitement and délivers plenty of the same. Directed by Jerry Hooper from Sydney Boehm’s high - voltage script, the absorbing melodrama gains additional intensity from the location shooting in and around the huge atomic energy plant at Los Alamos, New Mexico. From the mores that the boy is discover- missing during a visit to a San- ta Fe fiesta, the story builds to almoét unbearable tension, for the Tansom prite is a top-sectet ato- mic formula. F. B. I. agents brought into the gase spar for time by mailing the kidnappers false data which will take several days to decipher. The urgent search for the boy leads | to a sedty Log Angeles hotel and then te a baseball park, where one of the spies’ underlings is killed Just as agents are about to take him in tow. Filmed with all the authenticity of a documentary, thé picture switches to somé Indian cliff dwel- lings when a sightseer stumbles on an important clue. Now conyineed that ‘the boy is imprisoned in one of the many caves, federal agents and state police close in. The ulti- mate round-up of the kidnapper- spies and rescue of the youth is as fine a piece of suspense drama as you'll ever see. Old Coupe PHILADELPHIA (#—Mrs. Clem- éntine Fenn is 82 years old. She drives a four-eylinder coupe, vin- tage 1932. And normally she drives it with the skill and decorum be- fitting her age. But yesterday, just at the rush hour, things got out of hand. She started slowly out of a ser- vice station into a busy suburban intersection when suddenly the ja- lopy came alive. With a jolt and a bump the car dashed rear-end first into the dual highway deseribed a 340-foot arc and finally came to rest against the smashe windows of a rival service station across the street. Score: A grazed sign standard, a side- swiped parked auto, a seore of badly frightened shoppers, an for Mrs. Fenh a fracture nose and minor chest injuries. Comment from the lady: “Gas pedal must have stuck.” Two Face Prison MIAMI (#—Fréd Hewlett and William Donald Voorhies, both 22, face 19 yéars ih prison for: the armed robbery of 4 motel hére in April. Hewlett, already serving 10 years for a previous motel holdup, pleaded guilty and waived jury trial. Voorhies was tried and con- [vieted in Criminal Court Tuesday. Se PR ie a cas Goodrich, Distillers Corp., South- érn Pacific, Air Reduction, Allied Chemical, and Union Carbide. areas now be made to the ne Welcome News For Property Owners The Plumbing Inspector has announced that connections can w sewer system in certain Key West MIKE’S PLUMBING Will Be Pleased to Give You An Estimate Without Obligation to Make Your Connection Financing can be arranged on a no down-payment. 96 months to pay basis for this connection or your other plumbing needs. See.or Phone Us Soon For Full Details . | Beach in Alabama to Florida Point Escaped Mental|STRANGULATION HEARING NOW UNDER WAY ‘< JAI INVILLE ] Patient Gets ig et Gai tea rn Wish To Di ish To Die LITTLE ROCK, Ark. = ing “come and get me, I want to die,” a crazed carpenter pushed a woman hostage at gun point onto her front porch then stepped through the door to his death in a hail of bullets from an off-duty policeman’s gun. H. B. Long, 42, an escapee from the Arkansas State Mental Hos- pital yesterday held Mrs. A. D. Lynn captive in her home while he deliberated his next move and repeatedly shouted to police: “You'll have to come get me, I want to die. I don’t want to go back. to that lie-place.” Mrs. Lynn said, “I felt sorry for him and tried to talk him into giving up his gun. I told him that was better than death, but he wouldn’t listen.” Long was on his way from his ‘ward to the barber shop when he bolted the line and escaped. During his shortlived freedom he terror- ized persons in West Little Rock by brandishing a .22 caliber rifle. Entering the home of Mrs. Effie Callihan, he said: “I won't hurt you, I just can’t go back to that lie-place.” He left after Mrs. Callihan gave him a bottle of water. Long found Mrs. Lynn in her backyard and ordered her into the house. He asked if she knew any- one who owned a car. “I need a/ car to get away,” he said. Mrs. Lynn said she began dialing the telephone but Long suddenly jerked the receiver from her hand. “Y’ve changed my mind,” he told A neighbor, A. Lewis, had heard the commotion in the yard and calléd police. A dozen officers surrounded the house and called to the man to surrender. When Long rvfused a policeman agked if he would free Mrs. Lynn. Long then jan marching Mrs. Lynn through the house and onto | the front porch. Mrs. Lynn walked | calmly — “as if she were on her way shopping,” one officer said — although Long was behind her with a gun at her back. Mrs. Lynn said as she walked into the yard, “not daring to think,” she sensed a swift move- ment behind her and fell to the ground. She fell only a few feet in fromt of Long as Gene Smith, an off-duty policeman, opened fire. Long fell under a fusilade of six shots—only one missed the target. As he rolled to the ground, he groaned: | “Thanks fellows...That’s good enough, it’s just what I wanted.” A moment later he was dead. Hurdle Cleared PENSACOLA ()—One of the hurdles in the way of building a Perdido Bay highway from Gulf has been cleared. The Navy Department granted a a of way easement through the inactive naval gunnery range to the State Highway Department Tuesday, Rep. Sikes informed the Pensacola News Journal from Washington. Freed Of Charge ATLANTIC BEACH #—Justice of the Peace J. L. Gavagan has! ordered Edmund James Powell, 20, released from a manslaughter charge in the traffic death Sunday of a woman sunbather. Powell's car ran over Philomena Slane, 33, while she was lying on the beach in front of his machine. Witnesses testified at a hearing Powell didnot operate his auto- mobile in a reckless manner. - MIKE’S PLUMBING 1103 Whitehead Street er testimony from seven state wit- nesses consumed 3% hours yester- day. ° on Aug. 30—the day Miss Eidson was last seen alive—he saw a girl answering her description get into an old model coupe with Walter = w we Lee McDaniel, 21-year-old fing station attendant charged with her | murder. —_$_ Your Grocer SELLS That Good STAR * BRAND adcusan COFFEE —— TRY A POUND TODAY .— SVRONG ARM BRAND COFFEE (®—A hearing-}Hallowes if he was positive the|the Peace George A. Harris she driver was McDaniel, Butler said: | was walking down the street with “I’m positive unless he’s got a| Miss Eidson when the car pulled twin brother.” up but she could not swear Me+ Miss Eidson was found dead in| Daniel was the man in the car. a palmetto thicket six days after “I didn’t get a good look at him getting into the car. A woman’s|at all,” she said. belt was found tightiy around her! Deputy Sheriff Mel Drane testi- neck. fied that McDaniel after his arrest Lavelle Tyner, 19, told Justice of denied picking up anybody. e worker, continued today aft- Lonnie F. Butler testified that RIOS BROTHERS 517 DUVAL STREET FREE FIRST LAUNDERING! With Purchase of New MANHATTAN SPAN SHIRTS COUPON MUST BE PRESENTED TO A MEMBER LAUNDRY OF THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF LAUNDERING Asked by State Atty. William A, Triumph Coffee Mill Visit Us At Our New Location and See Our Complete Line of Men’s Clothing and F urnishings at ALL GROCERS Madison Square SHOES For MEN “KMOCK OUTS =. FOR VALUE! ‘The’ nationanicde” mee performance- proved when feet need a friend. The shoe you switch to, then stick #0. For men “who know the ropes” it's always a 38 as Sais : Sure-Footed, Long-Wearing CORK-SOLD WJORK AMERICA’S GREATEST WORK SHOE VALUE! Choose from Oxfords or Hi-~Shoes

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