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Local Vote On Amendments To Constitution AMENDMENT 1 AMENDMENT 2 AMENDMENT 3 AMENDMENT 4 AMENDMENT 5 AMENDMENT § AMENDMENT 7 SERVICE DISTRICTS For Against For Against For For For Against For Against For Against For 10 As 10 12 u 15 18 12 17 4 6 6 11 5 10 21 10 17 23 8 as. ae 33 39 41 32 33 i 12 18 25 “4 28 48 25 29 17 4 i yal 1 19 29 19 14 10 3 9 13 13 17 vv 16 18 16 13 23 22 26 3 27 20 23 14 7 31 21 31 35 17 15 Do Your Christmas Shopping Now at Firestone A Small Deposit Holds Any Gift i i Precinct Precinct Precinct Precinct Precinct Precinct Percinct Precinct Bwoananrne CHaoravruene ~ Precinct Precinct 11 24 17 Precinct 12 6 Precinct 16 12 Totals— 263 5 4 3 5 Precinct 10 13 24 11 24 20 6 18 25 Precinet 13 29 ’ 20 41 57 Precinct 14 27 16 33 41 Precinct 15 23 7 19 39 36 4 19 19 Precinct 17 17 1 ‘3. at 179 22 32 Sewauane Su Soa i 29 37 24 48 57 41 42 37 26 17 17 26 31 413 147459 12 5 7 36 26 19 53 31 37 22 18 56 55 “4 41 15 40 41 31 3481 76 15 4 «16 15 32 ieee 23° 549 227 406 440 NSM Seowasaame 134 148 Election Results By States |One Bright WASHINGTON, (#—Here are the election results state by state. All states had House elections. Many Miso elected governors and sena- torss ALABAMA Democfats took it all, as usual, putting James E. Folsom in the governor’s chair, returning John J. Sparkman to the Senate and electing Democrats to all nine House seats. ARIZONA Howard Pyle, incumbent gover- nor, lost to Democrat Ernest Ww. McFarland. Democrats took one of two House seats with other in doubt. Old lineup (Republicans listed first): 1-1. ARKANSAS Orvall Faubus, a Democrat, was elected governor. Sen. John L. Me- Clellan, a Democrat, and six in- cumbent Democrats in the House all re-elected. CALIFORNIA Goodwin K. Knight elected gov- ernor and Thomas H. Kuchel el ected senator. Both are Republi- can incumbents. In the House Re- publicans won 4 seats, Democrats 5, other 21 undecided. Old lineup 19-11. COLORADO Democratic Sen. Edwin C. John- son elected governor and Repub- lican Gordon Allott, Republican, won Johnson’s Senate seat. House lineup stayed 2-2. CONNECTICUT Democrat Abraham Ribicoff de- feated incumbent Republican John D. Lodge in the governor race. Republicans took 4 House seats, Democrats one, one undecided. Old lineup: 5-1. DELAWARE Democrat J, Allen Frear re- elected senator. Single House seat, formerly GOP, won by Democrats. FLORIDA Democrats elected LeRoy Col- lins governor to fill out two years of the unexpired term of the lage Gov. Dan McCarty. Collins had no Republican opposition. One Re- publican and seven Democratic candidates for House elected. Old lineup: 8 Democrats. GEORGIA Marvin Griffin, a Democrat, el- ected governor without opposition and Democratic Sen. Richard B. Russell won his fourth six - year term in the Senate. All nine House seats stayed Democratic. IDAHO Republican Robert E. Smylie goes to the governor's mansion and Republican Henry C. Dwor- shak returns to Senate. Two House seats remain split. ILLINOIS . Democrat Paul H. Douglas re- elected senator, Eleven Republi- cans and 12 Democrats elected to House. Remaining 2 seats still in doubt. Old lineup: 16-9. INDIANA No race for governor er senator. Democrats captured 2 House seats, Republicans 9. Old lineup: 10-1, 1OwaA Republicans cleaned up, elect- ing Leo A. Hoegh governor, Thom- as E. Martin senator over incum- bent Democrat Guy M. Gillette, and retaining all eight House seats. KANSAS Fred Hall, a Republican, elected governor and Republican Andrew F. Schoeppel re - elected senator. Five of 6 House seats Republican, other still in doubt. Old lineup: 5-1. KENTUCKY Alben W. Barkley, the Demo- cratic former vice president, beat incumbent Republican Sen. John Sherman Cooper. Republicans took 1 House seat, Democrats 5 with 2 other in doubt. Old lineup: 2-4. NORTH CAROLINA W. Kerr Scott, a former Demo- cratic governor, easily beat his Republican opponent in one of the Senate races. In the other, Sen. Samuel J. Ervin, a Democrat, was elected without opposition to fill out two years of unexpired term of the late Sen. Clyde Hoey. Re publicans kept their one House seat, Democrats their 11. NORTH DAKOTA Norman Brunsdale, Republican, elected governor. Republicans took one of two House seats, other still undecided. Old lineup: 2-0. OHIO Democratic Gov. ing of the term of the late Sen. Robert A. Taft. Republicans took 17 House seats, Democrats 6. Old lineup: 16-5, with one independest and one vacancy, OKLAHOMA Democrats elected Raymond Gary governor, sent Robert S. Kerr back to the Senate and re- tained their five House seats, Old lineup: 1-5, OREGON Paul L. Patterson, Republican, elected governor and Guy Cordon, incumbent Republican senator, leading Democrat Richard L. Neu- | berger in Senate race. Republicans | won 2 House seats with remaining 2 in doubt. Old lineup: 40. PENNSYLVANIA Democrats elected George M. Leader governor and gained a net of three seats in House with 14 wins in 30 contests. Old lineup: 19-11. RHODE ISLAND A Democratic sweep. Dennis J. Roberts, incumbent governor, and Theodore Green, senator, both re. elected and Democrats reta: both House seats. SOUTH CAROLINA Democrats took it all, as usual, electing George Bell Timmerman .Zovernor and sending write-in can- didate J. Strom Thurmond to the Senate, He beat Edgar A, Brown, candidate of the regular Demo- cratic organization. All six House seats retained by Democrats. SOUTH DAKOTA Joe Foss, Marine air ace, elect- ed governor and Carl E. Mundt, incumbent, re-elected senator. Both are Republicans. Two House seats stay in GOP column, TENNESSEE Frank G. Clement, Democrat, re-elected goverfor and Estes Ke- fauver, Democrat, re-elected sen- ator. Republicans retained two House seats, leaving division un- changed: 2-7. TEXAS Democrats elected Allan Shivers governor for his third complete term and returned Democratic Sen. Lyndon Johnson for a second term in the Senate. Republicans captured one House seat, Demo- crats the other 21. Old lineup 0-22. UTAH Republicans kept both House seats. No other major contests. VERMONT Joseph B. Johnson, Republican, elected governor and Republicans retained the state's single House seat. VIRGINIA A. Willis Robertson, Democrat, re-elected to the Senate. Demo- crats took 7 and Republicans 2 of 10 seats in the House, with one still in doubt. Old lineup: 3-7. WASHINGTON Only House contests here. Re- Publicans took 3, Democrats 1 of 7 House seats with balance in doubt. Old lineup: 6-1. WEST VIRGINIA Matthew M. Neely, Democrat, re-elected senator and Democrats copped 5 of 6 House seats with other in doubt. Old lineup: 5-1. WISCONSIN Republicans re-elected Walter J. Kohler governor and took 7 of 10 House seats, a net loss of one. Milward Simpson, Republican, barely leading Democrat William Black for governor. Republieans retained the state's only House seat, VOTERS OK (Continued from Page One) | Allow the Legislature to provide for one or more county judges in counties with over 125,000 popula- tion. Such acts of the legislature would not become effective until} | ratified by voters in the county | concerned. At present, the amend- | ment would affect only Dade, Du- val, Hillsborough and Pinellas coun- | ties Give the governor 20 instead af | 10 days after the Legislature ad- journs in which to act on bills. Allow the Legislature to author- ize assessment and collection of municipal taxes by county asses- | sors and collectors. Voters of the | counties concerned would have to approve the act. |. Provide and additional jydge for | the Escambia (Pensacola) court ef |record and allow the Legislature Lausche won unprecedented fifth | as required. Ip Senate contest, Repubii- San George H. Bender was lead- ing Democrat Thomas A. Burke, dpoumbent, for two years remain- than \ a | _ ‘There have been rare specimens jof tigers which are black rather! striped. . i Spot Reported In Chest Drive The only bright spot in the current Community Chest-Red Cross campaign is the 100 per cent contribu- tion of the “A Day’s Pay the United Way” chalked up for the second straight year by employes of the M. E. Ben- nett Construction Company. Campaign Chairman, Sam Col- lins,. gave facts and figures at a meeting of the colonels of the various Chest divisions at a re- port luncheon at the La Concha Hotel yesterday. The sad fact is that only a little more than $15,000 has been con- tributed by the citizens of Key West to the campaign — far short of the $55,000 goal. Division after division reported individual contributions of $1 and $2 to the united appeal — which breaks down to less than 10 cents per agency, $55,000 Really Needed The $55,000 goal was set by the Chest after carefully screening the budgets submitted by the Red Cross, co-sponsors of the drive, by Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, Key West Youth Center, Salvation Ar- my, Bookmobile, Juvenile Coun- cil, Children’s Home Soeiety, NC- CS, YMCA-USO (UDF), Blood Bank, Heart Society and the Ser- | vicemen’s Center on Whitehead Street. It was pointed out that the | agencies had been asked to help | put the campaign over the top and most of them were submitting news stories about their work in an effort to acquaint the public with the work being done by the various groups. The Citizen has been publishing these releases as a public service. Suggestion Made It was suggested that perhaps the solicitors had fallen down by not selling the idea of the Com- munity Chest to their contacts, and that the division colonels had | not been ‘‘on their toes.” Several reported resistance to the “Day’s Pay” slogan, but it was brought out that in the long run, by having a united drive, campaign expenses were held to a minimum and the individual agency budgets were less than if each agency raising effort. For the average contributor, a “Day’s Pay” is actually less than | if the person made a contribu- tion to each agency — and very few refuse to give something to a worthy cause even if they have a personal predjudice against the agency, Te Publish Donors Collins asked that a concentra- ted effort be made to “‘step up the campaign so that we won't have to extend the drive.” The executive board authorized the publication of the names of contributors: to the Chest at a short meeting held after the lunch- eon. The break down of the progress report with the amount contribut- | ed last year and up to yesterday follows: U. S. Navy, last year, $18,200: to date, $8,080. Business, last year, $3,165.07: to date, $1,174.46. Government, last year, $1,319.15; to date, $581.75. Transient accomodations, year, $766; to date, $337 Commerce and industry, last year, $5,908.51; to date $3,560.50. Professional, last year, $1,120: to date, $497. Clubs and organizations, last year, $706.88; to date, $1,034.75. Special gifts, last year, $561; to date, $282.40. Colored citizens have contributed 2. BREEDERS ELECT LEXINGTON, Ky. @—The Na- tional Assn. of Thoroughbred last Frank J. to provide other additional judges | Breeders re-elected President Carl) G. Rose of Ocala, Fla., yesterday its next meeting of direc- Hialeah Park on the day Florida Breeders’ Stakes raced ia February. a had its own fund | Page 8 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Wednesday, November 3, 1954 TROOPER CHARGED FOR ALLOWING FIGHT DE FUNIAK SPRINGS WJ A state trooper has been charged with aiding a fight by not stopping it. A warrant issued by Justice of the Peace George Dandelakis fol- lewing a Saturday night fight charged E. W. Reeder with “‘aid- ing, abetting and assisting” an as- sault and battery. He was issuing a traffic ticket nearby at the time. DEATH FRANK WOLKOSKY Frank Wolkosky, 62, a “former Sports Wardrobe | | | Key Wester, died at 6 p. m. yes- |terday in Miami. The funeral will ;be at 2 p. m. tomorrow from the | Gordon Funeral Home, 710 SW 12th | Avenue, Miami. Wolkosky, who was retired, for- | merly operated the Broadway Shop which was located where Lewin- sky’s Men’s Shop now is at 526 Duval Street. He is survived by twc brothers, Joe and Ike, both of Miami. ASSAULT CHARGE (Continued From Page One) “| was afraid he was going te kill Ignatius,” Lester said. Lester was attempting to get Dri- ver off his son when Cleare, who had been in conference with Lester, appeared. In the scuffle that followed, Cleare was kicked severely about | | the legs. J. Lancelot Lester’s hands} Jmagine! A complete week-end were skinned, and Ignatius receiv-| wardrobe ALL in one pattern! ed_a bruise on the forehead, Make a skirt, with long or short Someone called the sheriff's de-| sleeves, shorts, pedal-pushers and partment and deputies took Driver | slacks in gay plaids, checks, or jto the county jail. solid colors, It's so shrifty! Mix He stayed in a cell there until|'n’ match ’em! | late this morning when Lynn sign-| Pattern 9015: Misses’ Sizes 12, ed the bond. Driver is attached to| 14, 16, 18, 20; 40. Size 16 shirt jthe Fleet Sonar Schoo’. takes 2 yards 39-inch; slacks 2 isi ce gccumibec aerated 3/8 yards 35-inch nap fabric. GRADY THE GOAT This easy-to-use pattern gives (Continued from Page One) perfect fit. Complete, illustrated | first scenes in front of a weather-| Sew Chart shows you every step. | beaten frame house. Send Thirty-five cents in coins Lots of Activity for this pattern—add 5 cents for The scene présented a beehive |each pattern for Ast-class mail- |of activity as technicians moved | ing. Send to Marian Martin, care, | more than a ton of equipment into |of The Key West Citizen, No. 186, |the area. Powerful spotlights out-| Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., shone the sun and the huge Vista-|New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly Vision camera dominated the|NAME, ADDRESS with ZONE | scene. Dozens of assistant direc-| SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. tors and technicians necessary to the “production of the film raced LEGAL NOTICES ORDINANCE NO. 471 back and forth in the course of | their duties. ‘ Producer Hal Wallis and Direce-/ AN ORDINANCE AMENDING |tor Danny Mann supervised the ac-| SECTION 17.44 OF THE CODE tivities. OF THE CITY OF KEY WEST, Principals in today’s scene were} FLORIDA, 1952; REPEAL- Miss Grey, well-known for her gla-} ING ALL ORDINANCES OR PARTS OF ORDINANCES IN CONFLICT THEREWITH, mor parts, and Miss Pavan, a win- | som lady who happens to be a twin AND PROVIDING WHEN OR- DINANCE GOES INTO EF- | sister to Pier Angeli, one of Holly- FECT. wood’s ranking stars. BE IT ENACTED by the City | Miss Grey's Role | Miss Grey plays the part of Es- ‘telle, a woman of rather question- | able virtue (she works at the Mar- |di Gras Club), who is making a more or less successful play for the affections of the husband of Sera- fina (Anna Magnani). | Miss Pavan is cast as Rosa, the | adolescent but full-blown daughter lof Serafina. In today’s scene, Miss Grey | drove up to Serafina’s house (she's |a dressmaker) in a taxi. Reason \for her visit, is to deliver some | material for Serafina to make a |shirt which Estelle . apparently plans to present to her lover. | Rosa happens to be on the porch | and informs the visitor that her mother is not at home. How It Reads “Can I wait?” asks Estelle, “Sure,” says Rosa. “Where's your mother,” asks Es- telle. . “At the Ideal grocery store,” re- plies Rosa. And that's how they make a mo- vie. But the spectators found it all | very interesting. Miss Pavan play- ed her part without shoes -and it was agreed among the gallery that |she has cute feet. Miss Grey is supposed to have a rose tattoced on her chest and it was pretty well agreed that she has a cute — tattoo. Filming of the movie was sche dule to continue this afternoon at the Perez Grocery store, Virginia and Georgia Sts. Commission of the City of Key West, Florida: | Section 1. That Section 17.44 of the Code of the City of Key West, Florida, 1952, be and the same is hereby amended by adding there- to, after the last paragraph, a | sentence to read as follows: | “Provided further that motor | vehicles operated on Roosevelt | Boulevard from Palm Avenue northeastward shall be permit- | ted a speed of 35 miles per { hour up to the present 40-mile | tone. | Section 2. All ordinances or parts of ordinances of said City in con- flict 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 the presiding officer and the Clerk of the Commission, and publica- tion thereof one time in a news- paper of general circulation pub- lished in the City of Key West, | Florida. | Bead and passed on first read- jing at a regular meeting held October 18th, A. D. 1954. Read and passed on final read- ing at a regular meeting heid November Ist, A. D. 1954. (s) C. B. HARVEY { Mayor oa Attest: VICTOR LOWE } } j City Clerk, i on Firestone Lay-Away DOLL CARRIAGE $4.98 Handsome turquomse lated leather with white i Aluminum - finish frame. Brake, Reversible hood. Rubber tires. Real quality! 30-Inch Metal IRONING BOARD ene top aluminum finish legs. Folds easily. The Most Beautiful Hobby Horse Ever Built! DELUXE WONDER HORSE ‘ $29.95 Has the handsome rich coloring ° of « real Palomino, Body is skill- fully molded of high impact ples tic. Seurdy hardwood base. 36 inches long, 3344 inches high. She Walks! She Flirts! Her head turns as she walks. All-plastic, beautifully dressed cties, tao. She'll walk her way into your heart! Hours of Fum For Little Girls SAMPLER SEWING CARDS $1.98 Tnctades 24 sampler de- signs, 8 baile of yara ia needle, scissors an instructions. FOLDING TABLE AND CHAIR SET Baby Will Love to Bounce and Rock i This 5-inch ALL-LATEX DOLL $3.98 he ribbon on ail hair-d TEETERTOT SHOOFLY SPRINGER Firestone Home & Auto Supplies 1201 White St.