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By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER | WASHINGTON «#—U. 8. diplo- mats in Moscow are reported to have been subjected to a series of “personal indignities” by Soviet police prior to the latest incident involving two American Embassy wives. ‘This is understood to be the rea- son U.S. Ambassador Charles E. - Bohlen has moved to seek the per- sonal intervention of Foreign Min- ister Molotov. Essentially, Bohlen i erned to obtain greater re- spect for the rights of his embassy staff and greater regard for their the embassy, and Stiff, wife of the as- attache, carried a near the U.S. Washington and Moscow , ac- counts differ as to what happened. ‘The Washington version: The asked permission to graph some Russian women. permission was refused, a man suggested that they should go to a nearby workers club where there was they would be interested in. At the club two Soviet secret police agents forcibly prevented them leaving although both pre- diplomatic identification. . Sommeriatte and Mrs. Stiff fight to get away. After hour they were rescued 5 tHe ; a sought to take a pic- some Russian children @ background where re- under way ‘and there able rubble. The fath- ¢ of the children protested ughter’s picture tak- a background. He ited the women nearby, and the il! BRERs BF s E what foreigners may do there. The Malenkov government’s re- laxation of «many restrictions has encouraged Americans to travel about and make pictures in un- on stealing Soviet secrets. In the American view this appears to have ‘stirred up considerable mis- placed zeal on the part of minor police authorities and many ordi- nary citizens. British Actress Hasn’t The Time For Royal Show LONDON #—British movie star Susan Stephen stunned the theatri- cal world today by announcing that she has withdrawn from the annu- al royal variety show. Too busy making a movie, she explained. The yearly extravaganza staged especially for Queen Elizabeth II is to be held next Monday at th Palladium Theater. Bids to take part are treasured by the grease- paint set. Comedian Bob Hope, for instance, has flown here all the way from Hollywood. “It is not really correct to say that I refused to appear,” the 22- year-old Miss Stephen told news- men. “I just felt I could not do ties To U.S. Diplomats In Moscow Revealed Prior To Incident Involving American Embassy Wives Tammany Hall Leader May Emerge As Force In Nat'l Politics If Democrats Win In N.Y. . Poignant Film |Siamese Twins Drama Stars Shirley Booth A ‘magnificent blending of provo- cative, adult drama with a rare casting combination sparks Hal Wallis’ brand new, deeply moving Paramount film, ‘About Mrs. Les- Are Happy On 3rd Birthday By RICARD J. BROWN DAYTON, Ohio @ — Nature winked at the little Galyon boys and they came back smiling. For them, life is a cumbersome shift of taking turns walking back- ward because Donnie and Ronnie ce | #7 Siamese twins, joined at the co-starring Robert Ryan, the ab- sorbing tale concerns an unusual friendship between a night club singer and a nationally known in- dustrialist, The romantic alliance is a uni- it absorbing emotional conflicts are bec gre material | i version: The two|i house that Miss Booth opens when her relationship with Ryan meets an ill-fated end. How Shirley Booth influences the lives of these two through “her own past experiences lends a tender and illuminating side to the intensely moving story. Carradine’s Wife ries Him From Courtroom LOS ANGELES (» — Actress Sonia Sorel, celebrating their de- cision to reconcile, picked up actor John Carradine yesterday and car- ried him out of a courthouse build- The display of exuberance oc- curred as the couple left a half- hour session. with Superior Judge Elmer D. Doyle of the Domestic Relations Court. Carradine and his wife an- nounced they would resume their marriage on a 90-days-or-longer basis. Carradine agreed to drop his charges of misconduct, but his divorce complaint alleging eruelty will not be withdrawn until the The gaunt Shakespearean actor’s exit line as he left the courtroom in the arms of his lithe and strong- armed wife was, of course, “All’s well that ends well.” British Gov't Calls Meeting For Strike Talks LONDON (# — The government called waterfront employes and dock union leaders together today in a fresh attempt to end the stub- born dock strike which has para- lyzed England’s major sesports. As the walkout, now involving 43,000 stevedores, went into its 25th day there were warnings that its effect on Britain’s export trade is becoming calamitous. “Goods for the Christmas trade overseas have been held up so long that major export sales are being lost.” declared John Burg- hart, an official of the National Union of Manufacturers. Elkan Simons, president of the British Jewelers Assn., said the stoppage is causing irreparable justice to the occasion by going on unrehearsed.” ACTRESS CLAIMS TRIGGER KICKED LOS ANGELES #—An actress who says Roy Rogers’ horse Trig- ger kicked her has sued the cow- boy actor for $186,000. Mrs. Mabel Smayne alleged she suffered head and chest injuries during the filming of a movie scene in 1951. As trial of the suit opened Tues- day, Rogers’ attorney denied ghe was badly burt and said the @geee backed into her. harm to Britain’s export trade in jewelry, gift wares and fancy Soods. The British post office said many Christmas packages for distant Points now cannot be delivered un- til after the holiday. TRAGIC AFTERMATH SANTA MONICA, Calif. w—Aft- @ attending the hearing at which Marilyn Monroe divorced Joe Di- Maggio yesterday, a 28-year-old Mother of two children leaped to her death from the 10th floor of another building, police reported. Officers said they learned that abdomen. Somebody has to sleep on the bottom when they get tucked in at night. But the boys were laughing to- day as they celebrated their third birthday with an ice cream and cake party for the family. Cowboy and cap guns brought grins a6 clean and bright as er, Mrs. Wesley Galyon, says. blond, blue-eyed brothers to walk last March and themselves to the television Mrs. Galyon said: Physioians said last year sur- gety would mean death for one of the: hoys because they share vital internal organs. Not enough vital organs for both have been detected yet to make separation advisable. But their father said, “We'll nev- er separate them. We don’t even tak about it any more.” This birthday Ronnie is the taller but it was Donnie who once was the big one. Donnie is the ‘‘wrig- gliest” too, Mrs. Galyon said, ‘‘so we have to put him on the bottom when they sleep at night. Other- wise he. squirms around and they fall out of bed.” Mrs. Galyon recalls: “Everything in their develop- ment happened at once. Donnie was first in everything, but it didn’t take Ronnie long to catch up. I fact. Ronnie can say sentences now. Donnie’s still at the single word stage.” And so the balance of nature swings back and forth between the bright-eyed brothers, first favoring one and then the other. “Kiss Me Kate” To Be Shown At The Monroe “Kiss Me Kate,” one of Broad- way’s greatest musical comedy hits, has been brought to the screen in Ansco Color in an opulent and tasteful film version by M-G-M and bids fair to become an_ all-time leader in the filed of film musi- cals. It opens Sunday at the Mon- roe Theatre. One of the few shows ever to achieve a run of more than two years on Brodway, this spectacu-. larly popular Cole Porter hit, with its play by Samuel and Bella Spe- wack, is as gay, lilting and saucy on the screen as in its stage pres- entation. Its hilariously rowdy story of a temperamental actress (Kath- ryn Grayson) given to hurling flower pots and her equally force- ful vis-a-vis (Howard Keel) who tames her first with a royal spank- ing and then with a bull whip, has the humor, color and lightning ac- tion which lends itself happily to camera treatment, particularly as presented here on the spectacular Wide Screen and with Stereophon- ie Sound. Highlighting the laughs, Shake- spearean drolleries of the story’s “Taming of the Shrew”’ play-with- in-a-play sequences, and the ro- mantic dilemmas is the musical score of some fourteen song, con- sidered to be the most varied and brilliant ever to come from the prolific Cole Porter pen. They im- clude the romantic “Wunderbar,” the haunting “So In Love,” the sly ‘Always True to You in My Fash- ion,” the spirited “I Hate Men,” the torrid “Too Darn Hot” (danc- ed by Ann Miller) and the rowdy “Brush Up Your Shakespeare,” as well as “Were Thine That Special Face,” “I’ve Come To Wive It Wealthily In Padua,” “We Open In Venice,” “Tom, Dick Or Har- ry,” “Why Can’t You Behave,” “Where Is the Life That Late I Led,” “From This Moment On” and “So Kiss Me Kate.” Most of them became instant hits the day after the play’s Broadway opening, and as sung and danced by the picture’s stars they provide some of the happiest moments of “Kiss Me Kate.” Mrs. Selma Leonore Silbert had made other attempts to end her life, By JAMES DEVLIN NEW YORK —A curly-haired, youthful-appearing man who isn’t running for office will emerge as a force on the national political seene if the Democrats win the governorship of New York Tues- y. He is Carmine G. DeSapio, 46, leader of the political machine known the nation over as Tam- many Hall. DeSapio spearheaded the nomin- ation of Averell Harriman as the Democratic candidate. Should Harriman win—and news- paper polls show him’ leading— DeSapio will be in this position: His organization will have the Prestige of breaking the 12-year Republican grip on the nation’s most populous state. It will control the ‘huge and in- fluential New York delegation to the presidential nominatimn con- vention in 1956. That would mean it might well push Harriman for the presidency. * Finally, it will be in charge of the state.political machinery when New York’s 45 electoral votes are at stake in the national election two years hence. First, what is Tammany Hall? | Page 12 FARM 1910 | 92 Million Total Population SOURCE INSTITUTE OF LIFE INSURANCE THE KEY WEST CITIZEN URBAN FARM 160 Million Total Population An AP Newsteatures Pictograph { Ike Will Test His Ability To Stir Voters In Friday Trip WASHINGTON (#\—President Ei- In Cleveland, Eisenhower will be A “sinister force,” says Sen. Ir-| Senhower puts to the acid test to-|trying to aid Republican Rep. ving M. Ives, the Republican nom- inee for governor. A symbol of ‘enlightened demo- cracy,” says DeSapio, In any case, it is the Democratic party organization of Manhattan, one of the five boroughs, or coun- ties, in New ‘York City, and it is the dominant one. Republicans have made “Tam- many” one of their chief campaign issues. Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, retiring this year, and Ives have hammered at it. as the symbol of corruption despite DeSapio’s efforts to give it a new label of respectability. As recently as four years ago, Tammany appeared to be dead af- ter a long, checkered history. But the Republican outcries against Tammany testify that once again it is flexing its muscles. Friend and foe alike attribute this largely to DeSapio, virtually un- known outside New York two years ago. F As a boy of Italian descent, De- Sapio grew up in the Grand Street area of the city’s lower East Side, He got into early on the ward and district level, fought his way up through party ranks and became Tammany. leader in 1949 when the organization was in the doldrums. He is now Democratic national committeeman from New York, He scarcely looks the part of the traditional political ‘‘boss.” With his wavy black hair combed back, he dresses with a neat. flare —dark blue suit, white shirt and a white necktie decorated with small hand-painted modernistic figures. He invariably wears dark-tinted glasses—his virtual trademark. The glasses are intended to soothe an eye tenderness that gives him an aversion to bright lights and smoke-filled rooms. He holds a $12,000-a-year post as a commissioner on the Board of Elections. He has an insurance business, but gives it little atten- tion because he politicks day and night. Sabu Denies Arson Charge LOS ANGELES (#—The movies’ former elephant boy Sabu denied in court Tuesday that he set his suburban Northridge home afire in 1950. Two insurance companies are suing him for $29,081 they paid as damage claims. Sabu told a Superior Court jury, “I was in Malibu at the time of the fire.” The 29-year-old India- born actor also denied ever talking to an ex-convict about an arson plot. Andro Perez, 23, who served two years in San Quentin for arson, has admitted setting the fire and steal- | ing jewelry and gold dinner plate | from Sabu’s home. Concert Given Without Maestro NEW YORK ®—Arturo Tosca- nini’s orchestra, the former NBC Symphony, gave a concert here last night without the Maestro— in fact, with the conductor’s stand conspicuously empty. | After Toscanini announced his retirement and returned to his na- tive Italy, NBC disbanded the| group. But last night they assembled at | Carnegie Hall and won long and | loud applause from a large crowd. Concert master Daniel Guilet| gave the men their cues. | Toscanini had been invited to) return and conduct the concert, but his son Walter cabled from Italy that the Maestro was “firm in his resolution to remain in re- morrow his ability to stir up the voters and to win support for Re- publican candidates. The White House announced last night that Eisenhower will take off tomorrow on a one-day flying cam- paign trip to Cleveland, Detroit, Louisville, Ky., and Wilmington, Del., in that order. This will follow close on the heels of his radio-television talk here to- night at a campaign rally staged by the Citizens for Eisenhower con- gressional organization: Mrs. Ei- senhower will accompany him to the rally. The speech will be car- ried by NBC television and radio and by ABC radio. It is scheduled for 9:30 p.m., EST. Tonight’s speech has been billed as an effort to arouse in the battle for control of Congress, to be de- cided at the polls next Tuesday, some of the ‘“‘crusade”’ spirit of the 1952 Presidential campaign. White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty announced that on tomorrow’s trip the President will speak to airport crowds at each stop, with Republican can- didates from the surrounding states on_hand. Hagerty, asked by a reporter whether the four states were chosen because GOP Senatorial candidates were “in trouble,” replied, “I do not admit your premise.” He said ‘they were selected because of cen- tral location and because, except for Kentucky, the President had not visited them during the cam- paign. Eisenhower told his news con- ference yesterday. his chief objec- tive will be to dramatize his desire to see everybody vote in next Tues- day’s election. But the selection of the sites by the Republican National Commit- tee and its financial sponsorship of the tour indicated party officals except him to come close to the kind of barnstorming in which the President said last April 29 he would not engage. 3 Eisenhower told reporters yester- day he was puzzled by reports of apathy among the voters who might not share his belief about the importance of Tuesday’s elec- tion. The GOP national Committee’s choice of the four cities was re- garded here as indicating mixed hopes and fears of party officials apout next» Tuesday’s balloting re- sults. PIN-BALL CRAZE LEADS TO DIVORCE TOKYO — Japan’s pin-ball craze—it’s called “pachinko” here —has ‘hit the divorce courts. The game has been named “‘co- respondent” in eight divorce cases this year by Japanese husbands and, wives who complained their mates spent too much time—and money—at it. George H. Bender, who is opposing Democratic Sen. Thomas A. Burke in a state that Eisenhower carried by a half million votes in 1952. Republicans have been pinning large hopes on Bender’s regaining the Ohio seat that Burke was ap- pointed to fill after the death of Republican Sen. Robert A. Taft. A Republican spokesman. said Eisenhower’s Wilmington appear- ance was arranged in the hope of tipping the scales in favor of Re- lican Rep. Herbert R. Warburton in what is reported as an extremely close race with Delaware’s Demo- cratic Sen. J. Allen Frear Jr. In Detroit and Louisville, the President's objective will be to help save the seats of two Repub- lican Senators now depicted as being given strong battles by Dem- ocratic opponents. They are Sen. Homer Ferguson, opposed by Democrat Patrick J. McNamara iff Michigan, and Sen, John Sherman Cooper, opposed by Democratic former Vice President Alben W. Barkley in Kentucky, LEGAL NOTICES IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR MONROE COUNTY. IN CHANCERY. Case No, rr HAZEL BERETA DALEY, Plaintiff, vs. DIVORCE NOEL SAMUEL DALEY, Defendant. NOTICE BY PUBLICATION TO: NOEL SAMUEL DALEY, P. O. Box 474, Cristobal, Canal Zone, Panama. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that suit for divorce has been filed against you herein and you are re- quired to serve a Ry of your answer on ENRIQUE ESQUINALDO, JR., 8 Whitehead Street, Key West, Florida, Attorney for Plain- tiff and file the original thereof with the Clerk of this Court on or before the 8th day of November, A. D. 1954, otherwise a Decree Pro Confesso will be entered against you. bag Beis Monroe County, Flor- ida, ‘tober 6, 1954. (SEAL) EARL R. ADAMS, Clerk of the Circuit Court By: (sd)- HERM. CEREZO, * Deputy Clerk oct. 7-14-21-28, 1954, IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR MONROE COUNTY. IN CHANCERY. Case No. 14-115 MARY MADELINE RODMAN LIES, Plaintiff, vs. DIVORCE NORMAN FRANCIS LIES, Defendant, NOTICE BY PUBLICATION TO: NORMAN FRANCIS LIES 113- 08 - 103 Avenue Richmond Hill Long Island, New York YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that suit for divorce has been filed against you herein and you are required to serve a copy_of your Answer on ALLAN B. CLEARE, JR. 604 Whitehead Street, Key West, Florida, Attorney for Plain- tiff, ‘and file the original thereof with the Clerk of this Court on or before the 22nd day of November, A. D. 1954, otherwise a Decree Pro Confesso will be entered against you DATED at Key West, Monroe County, Florida, October 19, A. D. 1954. EARL R. ADAMS, Clerk of the Circuit Court By (sd) HERMAN CEREZO. Deputy Clerk. oct. 21-28; nov. 4-11, 1954 FLORIDA POULTRY, ' EGG & FISH CO. 819 SIMONTON STREET = Week-End Specials PHONE 2-6385 “we Fla. SMALL EGGS . 3 doz. $1.00 FRYERS. . . . . 2 for $1.89 FLORIDA GRADE A—Dressed and Drawn STEWING HENS . . . 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