The Key West Citizen Newspaper, September 24, 1954, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Iraq Feels Its Reds Should Go Tc Russia By WILTON WYNN BAGHDAD, Iraq #—Iraq figures that Communists should have “an opportunity to visit the country to which they pay their first alle- sisance.” Tuat was the view expressed by Prime Minister Nuri Said in pro- claiming an ordinance threatening Communists with ioss of citizen- @bip and deportation. The ordinance was issued as an amendment to an older law out- lawing communism, under which convicted Communists received prison sentences up to 12 year. In extreme cases, the deatt. jcn- alty was given, and some convicted Communists have heen hanged. The job of implementing the new law falls to Iraq’s Kurdish min- ister of the interior, Said Qazzaz, | a coldly efficient administrator al-| ready noted for smashing commuv- | nism in Iraqi labor unions. “We don’t intend to wait till the Communists are strong enough to take over this country. We are | taking preventive measures now,” | Qazzaz said. “Our position is dif- ferent from that’ of the United States, or Portugal, or Australia. Only a thin strip of Iranian terri- tory separates us from the Soviet Union. Communist movements here can easily be built up into revolutions with Russian help.” The minister of interior said that most of Iraq’s Communists are misguided siudents. Communists have been overtly active in such organizations as the Partisans of Peace and National Democratic Party, which won three seats in June Parliamentary elections. The latter party has been suppressed, while Partisans of Peace will be considered Communist under the new law. Iraq’s law hits at Communists under any name. “We are not going to let Com- munists change their name and operate openly,” Qazzaz declared. “Today they are Commhkists, to- morrow Partisans of Peace, the next day World Youth Movement. “Our law will apply to any or- Banization whose members pay Primary allegiance to a foreign state. The law thus hits Zionists as well as Communists, under any name.” Whether the Soviet Union would accept any deported Communists is a question yet to be Put to the test. —___. Ulysses S. Grant was regimental Quartermaster for the 4th Infan- try at Ft. Vancouver, Wash., from 1852 to 1854, ———— Rehabilitation Work Begins | In Mo. Prison JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. :> Missovri prison officials ¢ centratea on rehe!,,, lems growit) cai of th _ouvict riot is: virtually -vipea out. the ciate penitenia:y industries. They aigo. sought ringleaders in the 15-hour rebellion. When the revolt finally ended early vesterday, four convicts were dead, 30 others and three guards were injured. Damage to the pen- itentiary was estimated at three to five million dollars. Three of the injured prisoners remained remained in critical con- dition. Thomas E. Whitecotton, director of corrections, said he planned to make a thorough investigation be- fore taking any disciplinary ac- tion. He said he felt the ringleaders comprised a small group in the maximum security section where the rioting started. Some prisoners claimed it result- ed from pent-up resentment over food. Other prisoners and officials said they believed the riot was without . prupose — instigated by unstable convicts and carried out by men who were victims of mass hysteria. Whitecotton said the immediate concern of penal authorities was: 1. To get the penitentiary back to a near normal operating basis. 2. To attempt to solve the prob- lem of carrying on until the next state legislative session can do something about reconstructing the wrecked buildings. Prison authorities are expected to ask the governor to advance emergency funds to aid in reha- bilitation. State troopers and National Guardsmen remained on duty al- > con- though the prisoners, back in.their | cells, were quiet. FREAK CHICKEN PAYSON, Ariz. (®—Lewis Bow- man, operator of a local chicken ranch, hopes a chicken hatched recently is the forebearer of a strain, The pullet has three thighs, legs, four feet and 15 toes. “Yd specialize in chicken thighs,” Bowman said. four | Gov't Employmer: Openings Told The Fifth U. S. Sivil Service Re- gion has ics. an evamination an- nounees.-ut for *’© positions of {ecvias science analyst and legal -, assistant, paying $3,410 a year. | Appiicants will be required to ‘tation prot-|take a written test. In addition, | | applicants will be rated on their education and experience. Applica- |tions will be accepted until the needs of the service have been et. Applicati:n< forms or informa- tion as to wuere such forms are available may be secured at any post office (except the Atlanta, Georgia Post Office) or from the Fifth U. S. Civil Service Region, 5 Forsyth Street, N. W., Atlanta 3, Georgia. Damages Asked | In Tot’s Death SANTA MONICA, Calif. (7 — Actor Mel Ferrer and his wife have been sued for $60,000 dam- ages because of the drowning of a— |child in their swimming pool. John Lake Jr., 2, drowned in the {pool at the Ferrers’ home last | Nov. 9. The boy’s parents, Mr. and |Mrs. John Lake, allege that the } Ferrers were negligent in not hav- jing the pool fenced. | The Lakes said in their suit, filed in Superior Court yesterday, that ~/, had only recently moved into tue neighborhood and did not know |there was a swimming pool on the | Ferrer property. Driver Follows Wrong Leader LOUISVILLE, Ky. (®—Motorist | Ralph Montgomery told police he simply followed the guidance of 2 man with a flashlight last night. That, he said, explained how he | the Ohio River. | As his car submerged, he climbed onto the roof of the ma- | chine. The Coast Guard picked him | up. | Montgomery was charged with , drunkenness. |Read Citizen Daily BUY HERE ——______ pay HERE SERVICE HERE PAY HERE Buy Here! Pay Here! Save Here! Be Satisfied!! 30 BRAND NEW FORDS, LINCOLNS and MERCURYS ete. saeEt Service Herel!” SERVICE HERE quqaH ANG QuaH AVd Our List Prices Are Lower'!! Our Trade Allowances Are Higher! See Us For Your Best Deal ! EXTRA SPECIAL! HOIAMS aug New FORDS. . . . . . from $1695.00 New MERCURYS. . . . from $2595.00 BE SATISFIED 1952 NASH RAMBLER, new paint, low mileage. A Beauty! .. . $ 995.00 1947 Transportation Special — CHEVROLET, 4-Door. . . . $ 195.00 — SAVE HERE UY - 1117 White Street TEL. 2.5631 HERE ———— pay HERE Monroe Motors, Inc. — 2 LOCATIONS — and Cor. Greene & Simonton TEL. 2-5881 ad GaLIsLLVs SERVICE HERE and his automobile wound up in| Friday, September 24, 1° | cor Hopes Are Pinned On Demo Support By IRWINI J. MILLER INDIANAPOLIS (® — Vice Pres- ident Richard M. Nixon last night | pinned Republican hopes of retain- | | | | ing control of Congress this fall! on President Eisenhower's popula-| |rity among Democrats and inde- Pendents. | In the final speech of a cam- | paign swing through the crucial | | Midwest, Nixon called upon Dem- jocrats and independents who |helped elect Eisenhower in 1952 to |vote for Republican congressional | candidates. “It’s just as simple as that,” he said. “If you’re for President | Eisenhower and his Program, you vote Republican; if you’re against him you vote Democratic.” Asked at a news conference on, jhis arrival here about GOP, chances for keeping control, Nixon replied in effect that the needed support from outside the party would be forthcoming and would |keep Congress in Republi- |can hands. The vice president made no spe- jcifie reference to the farm price and unemployment problems, on | which Democrats count heavily in | their campaign to take over con- trol of the House and possibly the Senate as well.: He said the main issues in the | Nov. 2 election could be summar- jized in four words — Korea, con- | trols, communism and corruption. Nixon credited the administra- |tion with ending the Korean fight- ing and declared that “the Tru- man-Acheson policy got us into a war — the Eisenhower Policy got us out of war.” He charged the Truman admin- istration with creating a “runaway inflation” despite controls on the nation’s economy. He said the ad- | ministration has cut government |spending 12 billion dollars in two | years, given the people a tax cut jof 7% billions, and restored the jdollar to full value. The vice president said the “Reds are on the run” in America |because the administration has strengthened laws against subver- sion and driven Communists from government jobs. Nixon called the Truman admin- jistration “‘scandal-ridden with its mink coats and deep freezers” but {declared that Sen. Capehart (R- Ind) now is uncovering “the real scandals” in his probe of the Fed- eral Housing Administration. “We clean up, we don’t cover up,” he said. Viet Nam Premier Quits Gov't Post By OLEN CLEMENTS SAIGON, Indochina (#—Vice Premier Nguyen Van Xuan quit the | |South Viet Nam Government tu-| |day and called on Chief of State |Bao Dai to remove Premier Ngo | Dinh Diem in favor of a new| | leader. | _ Xuan’s resignation after only six | | days in the Cabinet came as Diem | Prepared to appoint leaders of the | | Powerful Cao Dai and Hoa Hao! | sects to his tottering government. In addition to Xuan, who also | Was defense minister, nine Cabinet members have resigned and a 10th | |has disappeared. The Premier | hoped the backing of the Caodaists | and the Hoa Haos, who control | | Sections of South Viet Nam terri. | tory and have their own armies, | ; Would strengthen his hand in his | | Struggle for power with the army | chief of staff, Gen. Nguyen Van! Hinh. | With the national army solidly | behind him, Hinh refused Diem’s | jorder two weeks ago to leave his | Post and go to France. He told an| | interviewer today he would oppose | | the Teorganized government but that the army would not do any- | thing for a few days. | “Then we will judge whether 1 must do something for the good of | | the country,” he said. | A Caodaist leader said Diem | | would announce his new govern- ment later today. Reportedly it in- |cludes two members from each of | the sects, Despite the continuing crisis, | there was still no decisive word | from the ex-Emperor Bao Dai, | | whose vacation on the French | Riviera is now in its sixth month. Fake Payroll ‘Checks Forged INDIANAPOLIS (® — A scheme | to Print fraudulent payroll checks | }in the print shop at the Indiana | state prison has been broken up, and a skilled printer has a new | assignment. | Hugh P. O’Brien, chairman of | | the state correction board, said the | printer is Grant Dean, 55, serving | a sentence for forgery. He didn’t | |say what Dean’s new assignment would be. O’Brien said he believed Dean | Sz | National KEY WEST CITIZEN Page 9) Memorial Service For Momm Saturday Morning Menvorial services will be held at 10 o’clock Saturday morning at the Naval Station Chapel for Mrs. Christine Momm, 48, wife of Cap- tain A, 0. Momm, USN, Com- mander of Surface Anti - Subma- rine Development Detachment here who died unexpectedly Wednesday | evening of a heart attack. Father E. R. Galland, CHC, USN, Naval Station Chaplain, will offi- | ciate as Celebrant at the Requiem | LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS ME STATUTE NAME § NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage in business under the _fictitiou name of “THE DELICATE 2& Simonton Street, K Ky fictitious «.*me with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Monroe Cc Florida. JOHN D. BERNREU' unty, sept. 24; oct. 1° IN TE): CIVIL COURT OF RECORD IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA W._D. HORN a Florida cor Plaintiff —vs— WILLIAM ENGLE Defendant Notice is Hereby Given that under | and by virtue of a writ of exec tion issued in the cause, I, John M. S) iff of Monroe nty ida, Solemn High Mass, with his assist. ants, Father A. Gibbons, CHC. USN, and Father Cappelle, S. J., from St. Mary’s Star of the Sea Church. The Truman Avenue gate will be opened at 9:45 a. m. for the| occasion. Internment will be at Arlington Cemetery, Washington, D.C. Fleming’s Home Town Moves To Aid In Appeal RACINE, Wis. (®—A movement is under way here in Lt. Col. Harry Fleming’s home town to support appeal of the Army of- ficer’s conviction of collaborating with his Communist captors in Ko- rea, Fleming, convicted Wednesday at Ft. Sheridan, Ill., has been or- dered dismissed from the Army and must forfeit all pay and allow- ances. The Reserve Officers Assn., of which Fleming is a member, met last night to organize a fund cam- paigs. Kenneth Greenquist, a past Wisconsin state commander of the American Legion pledged full sup- Port of Legion Post 310. Fleming will be greeted by a delegation of supporters upon his return here this afternoon. OLDSTER DIES OF CRASH INJURIES ASHEVILLE, N. C. (#—Louis 0. Gravely, 73, of Tallahassee, Fla., died in the Veterans Administra- tion Hospital yesterday of injuries suffered in a car-truck collision at Old Fort Sunday. Gravely, a retired attorney, served in the Florida State Legis- lature during the 1929 session. have levied upon and will offer for | sale and sell to the highest bidde |for cash, between the | eleven ofcl | two o’cloc First day n | Bayles Boat Yard, Marathon, Flor- ida, the following described proper- | ty,’as the property owned by the | said defendant, to satisfy the said | execution : A thirty (30) Foot CRIS CRAFT BOAT bearing the name PAM, the property of William Engle, located at Rayles Boat Yard, Marathon, Florida Dated this 18th day of Septem- ber, 1954. JOHN M. SPOTTSWOOD, Sheriff of Monroe County, Florida ARCIA. By DARIO Q Deputy Sheriff. SYLV! ER P. ADAIR, ney at Law, 29 South Krome Homestead, Florida. sept. 24; oct. 1-8-15, | ORDINANCE NO. 463, COMMISSION SERIES |AN ORDINANCE AMENDING |SECTION 34.2 OF THE CODE jOF THE CITY OF KEY WEST, FLORIDA, 1952, TO PERMIT A |VARIANCE THEREIN, NAME- LY, THE OPERATION OF UM- BLE CANVAS SHOP, IN A POR- TION OF THE PREMISES KNOWN AS NO. 108-110 DUVAL STREET, IN THE CITY OF KEY ALL ORDINANCES OR PARTS OF ORDINANCES IN CON- FLICT THEREWITH, AND PRO- VIDING WHEN ORDINANCE GOES INTO EFFECT. BE IT ENACTED by the City Commission of the City of Key West, Florida: Section 1. That Section 34.2 of the Code of the City of Key West, Florida, 1952, be and the same is hereby amended to permit a va- riance therein, namely, the op- eration of Umble Canvas Shop in a portion of the premises known as No. 108-110 Duval Street, in the City of Key West, Florida. Section 2. All ordinances or intends to register the said | jing at a regular meeting held WEST, FLORIDA; REPEALING | s LEGAL NOTICES (CONTINT ED) parts of ordinances of said City in conflic. with the provisions |herei are hereby repealed to the xtent of such conflict. Section 3. This Ordinance shall |go into effect immediately upon |thentication by the signature of ;fe presiding officer and the | publication thereof one time in a |mewspaper of general circulation |published in the City of Key West, Florida. Read and passed on first read- jing at a regular meeting held |September 7th, A.D. 1954. | Read and passed on final read- | September 20th, A.D. 1954. (s) C. B. HARVEY, Mayor. | Attest: | VICTOR LOWE, |City Clerk | ORDINANCE NO. 464, | COMMISSION SERIES |AN ORDINANCE AMENDING | SECTION 3.19 OF THE CODE OF |THE CITY OF KEY WEST, FLORIDA, 1952, TO PERMIT A VARIANCE THEREIN, NAME- LY, THE ESTABLISHMENT OF |THE 116 BAR AT NO. 513% |FLEMING STREET, IN THE | CITY OF KEY WEST, FLORIDA, LESS THAN ONE HUNDRED FIFTY FEET FROM AN ESTAB- LISHED LICENSEE WHERE SALE OF INTOXICATING BEV- jERAGES; REPEALING ALL |ORDINANCES OR PARTS OF ORDINANCES IN CONFLICT THEREWITH, AND PROVIDING WHEN ORDINANCE GOES IN- TO EFFECT. BE IT ENACTED by the City Commission of the City of Key West, Florida: Section 1. That Section 3.19 |of the Code of the City of Key West, 1952, be and the same is hereby amended to permit a va- riance therein, namely, the es- tablishment of the 116 Bar at No. 513% Fleming Street, in the City | one hundred fifty (150) feet from an established licensee where there is consumption or sale of intoxicating beverages. Gection 2. All ordinances or parts of ordinances of said City in conflict with the provisions hereof are hereby repealed to the extent of such conflict. Section 3. This ordinance shall go into effect immediately upon | its passage and adoption and au- | | | | its passage and adoption and au-| Clerk of the Commission, andj THERE IS CONSUMPTION OR| of Key West, Florida, less than|the presiding officer LEGAL NOTICES the presiding officer and the Clerk of the Commission, and publication thereof one time in & newspaper of general circulas tion published in the City of Key West, Florida. Read and passed on first read- ing at a regular meeting held |September 7th, A. D. 1954, Read and passed on final read- jing at a regular meeting held September 20th, A. D. 1954, | (s) C. B. HARVEY, Attest: Mayor, VICTOR LOWE, City Clerk. | ORDINANCE NO. 462, COMMISSION SERIES AN ORDINANCE AMENDING | SECTION 34.8 OF THE CODE OF |THE CITY OF KEY WEST, FLORIDA, 1952, TO PERMIT A VARIANCE THEREIN, NAME- LY, THE CONSTRUCTION UP TO THE WESTERLY PROPER- TY LINE OF THE PREMISES |LOCATED ON PART OF LOT |SEVEN, SQUARE FIVE OF TRACT SIXTEEN, BEING KNOWN AS LOGUN’S SOUTH |BEACH RESTAURANT; RE- |PEALING ALL ORDINANCES |OR PARTS OF ORDINANCES IN CONFLICT THEREWITH, AND PROVIDING WHEN ORDI- NANCE GOES INTO EFFECT. BE IT ENACTED by the City Commission of the City of Key West, Florida: Section 1. That Section 34.8 of the Code of the City of Key West, | Florida, 1952, be and the same ig hereby amended to permit a va- riance therein, namely, the con- struction up to the Westerly Property line of the premises lo- cated on Part of Lot Seven (7), Square Five (5) of Tract Sixteen (16), being known as Logun’s South Beach Restaurant. Section 2. All ordinances or parts of ordinances of said City in conflict with the provisions hereof are hereby repealed to the extent of such conflict. Section 3. This ordinance shall go into effect immediately upon its passage and adoption and au- thentication by the signature of and the Clerk of the Commission, and publication thereof one time in a newspaper of general circulation published in the City of Key West, Florida. Read and passed on first read- ing at a regular meeting held September 7th, A.D. 1954. Read and passed on final read- ing at a regular meeting held September 20th, A.D. 1954. (s) C. B. HARVEY, Mayor, Attest: VICTOR LOWE, |thentication by the signature of City Clerk. Universal Cleaners 510 ELIZABE TH STREET LADY'S TELEPHONE 2-505] ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL! EVERY DAY STARTING MONDAY SEPTEMBER 27 THRU OCTOBER 2 WE WILL GIVE AWAY FREE TO A LUCKY CUSTOMER Man's PALM BEACH SUIT or OUTFIT FOR THE FINEST IN DRY CLEANING BRING IT TO UNIVERSAL OWNED AND OPERATED BY JOE SOLDANO intended to smuggle fake Payroil | checks out to accomplices.

Other pages from this issue: