Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Page? THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Thursday, November 4, 1954 Democrats Are In Position To Run Senate As Well As House By JACK BELL WASHINGTON W#—Democrats |= moved ‘into position to command T, the new Senate today with the ap- parent election of Oregon's Rich- ard L, Neuberger as their 48th member and the promise of a vote on organization from independent Weatherman i ee agrebernon Says Se |A’s Go To K.C. PHILADELPHIA » — Arnold Johnsen, Chicago businessman, said teday he had bought the Cennie Mack dynasty and will transfer the club to Kansas City. Johnsen told « news confer- ence that he had paid $604,000 te Connie Mack, Sr., and “had entered inte a contract te pur- chase the stock” owned by Con- =e SS BURTON TELLS was voiced—first by veteran Dem-| Key West and Vicinity: Inereas ocratic Sen. Carl Hayden of Ari.|ing cloudiness with brief passing | zona—whether the party would | Showers tonight and Friday morn want to take over the reins in a | ing; clearing Friday afternoon and situation where a member's death | Dight. Warmer today, cooler Fri | might wipe out a single-vote mar-|day. Low toni; gin and force another shift. Already entrenched in 29-vote | 68 Frida command of the House, the Demv- erats all but obliterated Republi- can hopes of retaining Senate con- trol when Neuberger edged out Re- publican Sen. Guy Cordon in an al- most complete count from Oregon's vibrating senatorial balloting on/| Tuesday. | The tabulation, from 2,48 of | 2,499 precincts, gave Neuberger, | 4l-year-old Portland writer, 283164 votes, and Cordon, over 10 years @ senator 261,596. an upset in these re- sults by an official count schedul-d about Dec. 1, Republicans had no chance of retaining Senate control ight near 70 and high | Friday forenoon 78 falling to 66 “| y night. Moderate to fresh | easterly veering to southerly to- | night and shifting to fresh norther. j strong offshore. Florida: Increasing cloudiness | and warmer with showers begin- ning in Tallahassee area this after. n central portions tonight. Mostly | cloudy and few scattered showers | south and central portions, clearing and becoming cooler during Fri | day. Fair, colder Friday night. | Jacksonville thru the Florida Straits and East Gulf: Moderate east to southeast winds increasing to moderate to fresh and becom (Continued trom Page One) of its daily flights was a hasty action. He said that National will ji y West | - rooms in the Courthouse. The continue three flights into Key West | cross the street. A truck arrived |" ‘ gn si his leg. | sically unable with the directors’ | istrar’s seals, bearing his signa-| Key lime pie will be » featured "5, °* unless they are phy: ¥ oy e tyr apy z tae ture, were pasted over cracks | item of the sale, and other choice “Under questioning he admitted to do so. _ “National is here to stay,” he said. | Boca Chica Use On the question of use of Boca |ly Friday, occasionally moderately | Chica, it was stated that the Navy has not made any decision. | Burton read a letter stating po-| licy of a federal airport board in| |whieh it said that to use federal | This is ‘oon and spreading into north and |funds for the development of an/| be in airport which duplicates an already | existing military field is a luxury | that this country can not afford. | Burton sad that they have no assurances that the ‘op sabes will be expanded to 5,000 would be a minimum for DC6 op- erations. Presently, the county Philadelphia Athletics from the | nie’s two sons, Roy and Earle. | SUZY MISSES AGAIN (Continued From Page One) | would have said, “Oh, no you're mot.” | Not one of us could decide if the get-ups sported by the majority of the girls were part of the ward-} robe or if they were wearing black jturtleneck jersey blouses as a tri- bute to Miss Magnani who has fre-| quently been seen wearing black| | turtleneck blouses. : Much Ado Before we got around to check- | ing on this, the “company” arriv-| |ed and there was much ado a getting things ready for the “shoot- | ing | This involved moving cars and asking the spectators to move a-} and everyone was so interested in watching for Miss Magnani’s chair that they didn’t see her arrive in a car and go to the bright blue! trailer she uses for a dressing It was after 3 :00 p. m. by this time father drive up in our car. where I lost my chance to, the movie — he was told to| park it on Virginia Street and drive | it around the corner when the ac-| tion started. ‘Round He Goes He did this about a dozen times and the car was sprayed with dust to make it look even worse and all [Oregon Ballots |Food Sale Slated iTo Replace Fund ‘Taken By Thief |Chiang’s Pastor Closely Guarded Tells Of Try On i * . ° PORTLAND, Ore. —Extraor- ; stein. |L@ader s Life din: «precautions have beentaken| The women of the First } | es throughout Oregon to protect the dist (Old Stone) Church have ral- , cen AN : ballots in Oregon's dramatie ele--|lied to replace their “Week of she! poe tion until the official count is com-| Prayer” offering, which was sto-| he ¢ a E r pleted Dec. 1. ten from the church annex this | the ones mo in a Formosan When it became apparent that | week. : Seay a gla ) the race between Sen. Guy Cordon, | This was a sacrificial offering} aa a te Ms hen Republican, and Richard L. Neu-| given to carry on the work, of God | ® et os minister and pastor of berger, his Democratic opponent,|in various needy places of the|# chapel on Chiang Kai-shek’s would be» extremely close, Gov.|earth, and the women do not want | Conference yesterday Paul Patterson ordered county of-| the work to suffer because of the) “One Sunday we noted a strang- ficers to protect the ballots. evil of the thief. ~ jer joining the congregation. Some- In Multnomah County, the sate’s have slated a food sale to/9ne engaged him in conversation most populous, the registrar of| be held in front of the church on | and — rand wan = Chris. leeti locked the b i from 4 to} ® intervened and found veenes — on Friday |that he had a dagger strapped to the edges of doors and | windows. Keyholes also were cov- | ered with seals signed by the reg istrar so that any break would de- stroy the signature. Then a uni- formed deputy sheriff and armed registrar's guards were placed on round-the-clock duty until the ean- vass is completed, These precautions spread to the | . In No. 18, in a commu- nity church, the counting board gave up in exhaustion late last night. Until it could get back to work, the ballot box was sealed, then each member of the board signed the seal. | foods will be offered. STRAND All help given will be appreciated, and it is the hope of the women of the church that an even larger |sum for their offering will be col- lected Friday than the amount for- merly raised. | A nautical mile is 6,076.10 feet | | compared with 5,280 for a land | mile. | CLINTON | HAYES | Thurs. - Fri. - Sat., Sun. and Mon. SPENCER TRACY WAGNER a 100 Box Office Opens at 1:45 P.M, CONTINUOUS SHOWS FROM THERE ON The Finest and Largest Theatre in Key West ——— LEE \Pinder Announces New Office Hours Sam B. Pinder, supervisor of registration, teday announced new hours for his office in the county court house, From Nov. 8 until Dec. 1, the office will be open only from % a. m. until noon daily, except Saturday and Soinday when it is closed all day. he was a Communist agent, sent from the mainland to do away with the generalissimo.” Dr. Chen came here from For- mosa for a two-month tour of the United States with a traveling evangelist. % Air Conditioned Tues. and Wed, the time I was undecided whether | —=—===$=>>=—$—<—<_=<—<——— even if they finally win a skin-| ing southeast to south tonight shift- tight contest in New Jersey—unless the Democrats handed it to them | as a gift. | Hairline decisions in several Sen. | ing to northwest and north during Friday. Inereasing cloudiness with showers north portion tonight. Mostly cloudy Friday, few show- |plams to only make it 4,500 feet | which would be only be minimum facilities for Convairs. On the question of minimum op- erations, the representative stated that it meant the airliners using or not to protest that I was sup- | posed to drive the car. | How About It? WANT A FREE| “MR, UNFORGETTABLE” 3-DAY TOUR TO HAVANA? Inquire at | EL PASAJE Appearing Nitely By the time I gave up the idea, | at the | everything was ready and the fa-| ther drove around the corner with | | ate contests left the possibility «f official recounts which conceivably could shift the picture. Western Caribbean: Moderate In New Jersey, Republican Clif. northeast to southeast winds be- ford P. Case wound up 825 yotes| coming moderate to fresh north- ahead of Democratic Rep. Charles | east over extreme northwest por- R. Howell with all voting districts tion Friday afternoon. Partly. clou reported but with absentee bal-|/dy weather with widely scattered lots unaccounted for. showers. Case's vote was 858,437 and How. Weather Summary for the Tropi- ells 857,612 and both parties said cal Atlantic, Caribbean Sea Area they certainly will ask for re-| and the East Gulf of Mexico: Wea- counts. Rechecking was still in| ther conditions are normal in the Progress. ' | hurricane belt with no signs of a Even a victory by Case would | tropical storm. give the Republicans only 47 votes, ° BS comer ON one short of the mark where Vice President Ni t Building. 7:00 A.M. EST, Bence bere a.tie |. ren Pia. aoe ee in their favor—unless Some Demo. crats chose to vote with them or Tempera absented themselves or unless par. Highest yesterda name ty leaders decided to let the GOP |) (eter inet saute have control on a voice vote. M. ial ean ; Normal |ers south and central portions fol- lowed by clearing Friday. | ‘There were several factors which might influeuce the Democrais against any such decision as Hay- den suggested. For one thing, they | picked up eight governorships in| Tuesday's election, and a Senate seat normally changes political complexion only when a senator of one party dies in a state with a governor of’ the other. Then, too. | the Democrats had won control of the House; GOP organization of the Senate miight lead to friction on that score. And some Demo- cratic veterans in line for chair manships might be reluctant lois, relinquish them voluntarily. any Hayden, 77-year-old Democrat rome who ranks second in Senate service | 4o0nTs* to Sen. Walter George (D-Ga), told | Moonset the Phoenix (Ariz) Press Club that | TOMORROW'S Democrats would be “reluctant” fIDES to organize the Senate if they had a majority of only one. He did (Naval Base) not specify whether this applied if Time of Height of Morse supplied the 49th vote Tide bigh weter As the key figure in a dramatic Low Tides development that might give him 4:30 a.m. 41:15 a.m. the deciding vote now, Sen. Morse} 5:42 p.m. 11:33 p.m ADDITIONAL TIDE DATA (Ind-Ore) left no doubt where his Reference Station: Key West sympathies lie He said in a statement that the | genie Hende (bridge) ....—oh 10m election results had “demonstrated very clearly that the reactionary record of the Eisenhower adminis- “hbsegy abide tration was repudiated by a ma- Sandy Pt —ch 4m jority of the voters of the country.’ No Name Key One of the first to urge Eisen- Caldes Channel (merth end) 414M. hower to become a candidate for the GOP presidential nomination, | (—)—Minus sign: Corrections to be subtracted. Morse left the party in the 1952 (+)—Plus sign: Corrections te be campaign to oppose Eisenhower's election because of policy differ. TODAY'S STOCK MARKET ences. He campaigned actively for Democratic candidates in the mid- term election but has not indicated whether he will run for re-election as a Democrat in 1956. Asserting that he is “convinced that by 1956 by see say admin istration will turned out of of fice, as it should be in the national} NEW YORK, w — The stock interest,” Morse urged “forward. | Market today extended its strong looking” members of Congress to | post-election gains in a modest “try as hard as they can in check. | manner in early dealings. ing the sellout of the Eisenhower | General movement of the market administration to big business .n.| was higher, although losses were terests" and to carry the fight to Scattered somewhat generous.y the voters two years from now, | throughout major divisions, and many leading issues held un changed. Gains extended out to between 1 and 2 points at the best. Losses went to major fractions Buoyancy was found in the mo tors, rubbers, mail order issues, metals, rails, oils and airlines. were mixed along with Radio Danger $, aircrafts, and electri BOSTON # — Motorists with cal equipments. The utilities heid two-way radios were warned today steady Precipitation Total last. 24 hours Tota! this month | Deficiency this month | Total this year Deficiency this year 0.00 ins 0.00 ins 0.30 ins. 35.06 ins. Relative Humidity, 7 AM. 85% Barometer (Sea Level), 7 A.M. 30.07 ins.—1018.3 mbs. Tomo:row's. Almanac Station— High Tides +th Vom | the impulses from such sets can set off dynamite charges prema turely at highway construction projects. Public Works Commissioner John Volpe advised those motorists to turn off their sets in sections where blasting is underway. The warning does not apply to standard broadcast radios member Florida Game and Fresh HE’S DURABLE Water Fish Commission had a full BILLINGS, Mont. uw — John| membership today fer the first Crider, 32, was run over by a city | time im two months. garbage truck two weeks ago while} Acting Gov, Johns filled the lone sleeping under a pile of papers in remaining vacancy yesterday when a downtown alley. He suffered oaly |he named D. C. Brown of Immo- minor hurts | Kalee to replace Henry M. Jerni And yesterday he was bit by a | gan of Por Pierce. car while walking on a street. Hos Brown resigned as a member pital attendants said his condition of the Collier County Commission Was Dot serious. t© accept the position, STATE GAME COMM. |HAS FULL ROSTER TALLAHASSEE W—The five. | has recently turned down a request 0.90 ins. | | with both having a tower but he : | said the control towers are not par- |ticularly cheap to operate and! -| maintain. 9.0 tt) he field could not safely use the airport with a full fuel load and therefore would only be able to make short distance flights from Meacham. . Future Plans The representatives of National stated that they hoped to run DC6 air coaches from Key West but could not do so with the present planned facilities. When questioned about when they believed it could | be done, they answered in a year | or three. They agreed that it was & guess. A: question was asked from the audience as to whether National had ever applied to the CAA for a price increase to cover the fifty cent head tax. . Diamond answered that the CAA by other airlines to raise fares up |to even dollar prices. He explained that for this rea- son and because of the fact that National wants to lower price: stead of raising them, it did not apply for an increase. Tex In Cuba | Diamond agreed that NAL pays a head tax for its flight to Cuba} but he said they expected it in a) foreign country but not in the Unit- ed States. Chief Pilot C. H. Ruby of Na- tional told the members that it is possible to operate two airports | Joe Pinder said that as he un- derstood it from Paul Sawyer, the county's attorney, if the commer- | cial airlines abandon Meacham, the | former owners of the land can take | over the property. Sawyer said that the word com- mercial is not in the contract, but! he added that he did not believe {the tax payers of Monroe County | would want to support an airport |for small planes. | | Accusation Made | One spectator accused the air- | line of using the long runway argu-| ment as a reason for excuses to| keep from paying the 50 cent fee) jon the basis that National has a-| greed previously to pay $600 a mon- |th when the construction is com- pleted. | | A member of the JayCee asked | | what difference the 50 cent head| tax would mean in case the air-| |line moved to Beca Chica. He pointed out that additional limou sine fare to the Navy field would cancel out the dffference of the head tax. H Burton answered that he was not |familiar with local taxi prices. Mel Levitt, president of the mo- |tel association, inquired if it was safe for jets to take off behind air- | liners. He expressed fear that the jets might overtake the airliners. The representative explained that |it was a reason for the necessity | for controlled air departures. | On the question of safety, Ruby “A PENNY A POUND” j (Up to 12 Yrs. of Age) DON RAY PORTRAIT STUDIO 70S Duval Street A Specialist & Baby Shetegreghy Has Been Brought 'e Key West 12 NOON - 9 P.M. i the cameras grining, In the meantime, Truman Schdol let out and hordes of interested youngsters were standing around, | causing Hal Wallis to ask if they | had been given a half-holiday. | Miss Magnani gave several of | the kids her autograph between | shots and asked,~“What do they do with these names I write?” { Someone explained to her about autographs and scrapbooks and she | seemed greatly amused about the whole thing. | Crowd Watches It looked like about half of Key West was watching the movie mak- | ing — and certainly every one who | lives within walking distance of Bayview Park — was there. Even young Gary Renna — very smartly attired in short pants and a bright yellow cap — was on hand to watch mama Mickey go about her duties as assistant casting di- rector. Harold Laubscher was there and was probably feeling very smug about our climate—since most of the Californians were dressed in Shorts, sport shirts and bright billed caps. One of them said it was the first time in weeks he had needed glasses. It was fun, even if I didn’t get in the movie, and father now has a new nickname—‘Barrymore.” BURT LANCASTER (Continued from Page One) when the camera started grinding, minor mistakes spoiled the takes. | She tried it a third time and | as she left the store, she stubbed | her toe on the sidewalk and nearly fell. Instead of calling a halt, she played it straight and continued | as though nothing had happened. Spectators Applaud The result was probably one of the most natural scenes ever put on film. It brought applause from the scores of spectators, As the cameras stopped whirring, Miss Magnani rushed up to direc tor Mann, “Did I ruin the scene again?’ she asked in consternation, “Ruin it,” replied Mang, “You made it great — it couldn't have been more realistic if you'd plan ned on tumbling.” The realism of the scete also brought enthusiastic comment from playwrite Williams who wés look- ing on yesterda BREAK-IN REPORTED Burglars broke into the Key West Outboard Sales and Service Co., Truman and Francs, last night and took two new 7%- horsepower outboard moters, the sheriff's office reported today. explained that the pilots of the planes are the ones most concern- ed because of the seating arrange- ment in aircraft. “The pilot and jerew arrive at the accident first,” he said. By Popular Demand We Repeat SPECIAL CHRISTMAS OFFER “A Penny A Pound* Thurs., Fri., Sat. Beautiful Platinunr Tone (Limit: 1 te « Family) for This Work NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY Spanish Restaurant 1005 Truman Ave. Ph. 2-6136 EISNER Furniture Co. Poinciana Center Tel. 2-6951 42 Shopping Days ‘Til Christmas USE OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN Tires - Batteries - Accessories DARLOW’S PURE OIL STATION STOCK ISLAND TEL. 2-3167 Open 7 A.M. ‘til 10 P.M, AUTOMOTIVE REPAIRS WHEEL BALANCING FRONT END ALIGNMENT Repairs Can Be Financed POOR OLD CRAI SERVICE STATION Francis at DIAL 2-9193 Your PURE OIL Dealer TRADEWINDS LOUNGE 303 DUVAL STREET | Factory Methods Used— All Work Cuaranteed Marine Radios & Asst. Equipment FOR PROMPT AND RELIABLE SERVICE—SEE DAVID CIFELLI 928 Truman Avenue TELEPHONE 2-6008 Thurs. - Fri. - Sat. lithe ANY ANY if make MODEL FOR YOUR TELEVISION OR RADIO Cae 2.8511 Pniice TV Sales and Service KEY WEST RADIO & TV SERVICE 826 DUVAL STREET Trade-in Allowances That Tantalizing Aroma Is H LUIGI'S CHARCOAL BROILER! || Luigi Invented It . . . You'll Love It! DELICIOUS CHARCOAL BROILED, HICKORY SMOKED Chicken - Ribs - Steaks Try Them at LUIGI'S RESTAURANT Free Home Delivery On All Food—lIt'll Be Delivered HOT! 227 Duval St. Fox News Box Office Open: 145 - &00 P.M. @aily 3:45 - 9 P.M. WEDNESDAYS CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE @up~ TELEPHONE 2-3419 FOR TIME SCHEDULE -qygy San Carlos Theatre Airtonditioned 3:30 — 6:30 — 8:30 100% AIR CONDITIONED Sun. and Mon. ONE MINUTE TO ZERO ROBERT MITCHUM Eskimo Nite Sunday Night 2 Pieces of Furs will be Awarded Each Sunday Night