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FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1983. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Political Gossip In Nation’s Capital QUTLOOK FOR — 'STARTPLANSTO COMICS BARRED [BROAD POWERS SENIOR HIGH | "zanat'simvnnnvs’ Sehitc'rsat's,'"> " Svaie rene ECONOMIC MEET | COVER EVENTSIN | FROM PRINT IN | FORSECRETARY | SCHOOL REPORT|"'smscya mcs x 2% rie oi, eve ug in ym ~ LOOKS BRIGHT) COMING ELECTION CAPITAL CITY| HENRY WALLACE, coop ~ School, recently ap-| at Di UL, 54 Ss ago. ;sit in Britain's Parliament, born pointed U. S. Member of hs Pie gives Ci Se a fat Danville, Va., 54 years ago. | | FAVORABLE ATMOSPHERE| REPUBLICANS SIFT ROOSE-| HERETOFORE CONGRESSION- : PROVISIONS OF FARM BILL! all ad jio, Canada, 62-years ago. | bors im New York; 54 years ago. CREATED IN LONDON CON-! VELT POWERS FOR ELEC-} AL RECORD NOT PERMIT-| PLACES. HIM IN LIMELIGHT FERENCE BY WHITE nouse| TION ISSUE; MUCH ACTIVI-| TED TO PUBLISH OTHER] IN CONGRESSIONAL acti.| CONVERSATIONS {| FY BEGINS IN WASHINGTON| THAN REAL HAPPENINGS VITIES ON ISSUE Saturday Evening Post staff writ- HONOR ROLL GIVING AVER- AGES OF RATINGS ATTAINED | John W. Garrett, of Baltimore,; Walter Russell, of New York,} | Miss Mary Norman Hopkins, of former Ambassador to Italy, born noted artist, born in Boston, 62 Gadsden, Ala.. will be social see there, 61 years ago. years ago. : i vetary te Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen, | Hfirst American woman diplomat, Dr. John J. Abel, Noted Johns’ Samuel G. Blythe, journalist,! who is minister to Denmark, t Elizabeth Ayala, Sylvia Guito, and Kathleen Watkins lead Senior High School with highest possible honor. point averages rating per- feet grades for the period ending May 5. Elizabeth Ayala and Sylvia Guito are students from the grad. uating class of 1933, while Kath- leen Watkins is a student of the Junior Class. Twenty-one seniors By HERBERT PLUMMER (wy Ansvcinted Press} WASHINGTON, May 19,—By-; By ALEXANDER R. GEORGE Ay associated Prenn) | (Hy Ansociated trennd — WASHINGTON, M 19.—Th rer) eleetion year is almost 12 iin ao sue h red ge actigieat latcest Galowiay te roe” eral feeling in Wash- ad tha: presidential election) ings are a bit happier in the / spotligh s rd that ‘a strikingly favor- anny et 4 fee head. put | house for John J. Boylan, of New’ farm bill’s course through able atinosphere for the London ihe prectgal oer at aes pain | York. | gress has cast into bolder outline eeononiie conference has been .o¢ ches tor both of these events} Boylan has been crusading for} the 44-year-old secretary of agri- erated een. President Roose- can, perhaps, be set down at this} a long time in behalf of the Con-! culture, to whom it delegates pow- rate honor point averages this velt and the ‘foreign statesmen joment. gressional Record—the daily story | &fs almost dictatorial. !period, a marked increase over who have been visiting him. | Unless all signs fail political) f what ¢ in the le jalative | “Young Henry” Wallace, as he jast period. probably due to the This opinion prevales not onl¥’ stump speeches of the future are | W2at Bes on 2! ° is called by the Iowa farmers who fact that final examinations are = Aingthe state department but many destined to be constructed on and| Chambers of the capital. 4oxeign. officials in the diplomatic: ground one big issue—Have the! ‘ write him at Washington, is a curi- near at hand. He believes that The Record ous combination of a “scientific?! Those with an honor point aver- coxps. A widespread belief is gemocrats and President Roosevelt ; apparent that the United States shelved the. congress and the con- ‘By BYRON PRICE . By HERBERT PLUMMER ¥ Ld (Chief of Bureau, The Associated Lhd dd CLA hd hd di de de dehodediutiubeukedeadend LOW PRICES NOW. What will the same articles cost one month hence ??? con- CL he had should be made more readable. He, dirt farmer and the intellectual age of 3.00 are: Elizabeth Ayala, has made 9 strong bid to regain stitution? would make of. it a publicati yn €¢onomist, possessing the manners Sylvia Guito, Kathleen Watkins; the, world leadership it exercised during the world. war, and lost after the peace negotiations began in Versailles. | It. would be hard to overstate the degree of optimism of some of those closest to the president. “They express privately a conyie- tion that he will be able to get his international program through the conference with the same, ility which has. marked enact’ ment of his domestic program by eongress. That, of course, remains to be seen, ional diplemacy is full of, pitfalls, and the’ London conference in particular is beset pavers sechee vi just now is the. which has been built place merican capital. ; * Comment in Private ‘ On the basis of what the visitors from abroad have said privately to their * House. | in Washington is that in an in- 08 at London to without too much debate or’ that nited re may: veins some of; changing Ameri. order, and from their first- hand contact may have carried, * “home with them a conviction that the day has arrived for equally} important changes in the world, order. As For Going Abroad— hether Mr. Roosevelt himself dent, were made with an entirely different purpose in mind. It can be said also, however, that Mr, ‘Roosevelt is a man a custdmedy to figuring out course. goes along. He likes to base next move on the other fe! 's last move. ‘It is not at all inconceivable that he might decide to go, sheuld Negotiations become deadlocked. Whether he actually crosses) the Atlantic or not, the precident may be counted on to rank as the chief‘American negotiator at London. He means to keep the ® threads of the conference very closely in his own hands, and’ make every major decision him- Republicans likely will attempt to make much of this, They are murmuring about it even now. Of course, at the » present, with “emergency conditions” still ex- isting, they ave not doing much more than murmur, But it will be different when the republicans attempt to make heir first stab at q ¢ome-back in the congressional elections of next year. And the democrats know it. Those Washington political ob- servers who long ago formed a healthy admiration of Mr. Roose- velt as a politician are pointing te ® paragraph in his “second ‘re- port” to the country recently as an illustration of what he expects, Thunder Brewing : °“'fhe only thing that has béen happening,” said the — president, “has been (for congress) to desig- nate the president as the agency to carry out certain of the pur- poses of congress. This was con- stitutional and in keeping with the past American tradition,” Tt is only necessary to glance the record of the evens the repub! their campaign on by congress is pressive. And before the special} short time later he asked that he! session is over these powers will increased. section of the country. He’d put in comics and cartoons. He would have it illustrated by drawings and pictures, The rules of the héuse are very strict in this. respect. enera! speaking, illustrations of all sor are barred, One member did ceed at one time in getting a pic- ture of a prize cow in, but it was more or less of an accident. Always A Barrier Boylan’s luck in getting in little human interest stories and poems up until the present congress has been a bit preearious. And it was because of Representative Under- hill of Massachusetts, Underhill was the unofficial guardian of The Record on the tloor.’ Since insertions of material must be by unanimous consent, editorials and the like. It was highly amusing at times to wateh Boylan trying to elude the ever-watching Underhill. At jene time he was very eager to get four poems in The Record—one on Mary, the mother of Washington, and the other three about George Washington, .. Undevhitl- objected, | ‘much to the disgust of Boylan. A be permitted to address the house for five minutes, showing from day to day a cross- Underhill’s “I object” spelled doom} Underhill again! of a shy country youth. Withal, he has.a keen relish for his j6b along with a distaste for , the trappings of office. | “The “Mr. Secretary” deference. ' Knowles; 2.50, Curtis Stanton, ‘the blandishments of favor-seek-* jers, among them some who for ; merly railed at his “radicalism”, ‘and the swank of the crest on his governmental limousine. are |sourées of embarrassment to him. } ‘He walks the four: miles from jhis apartment to his office every 'day, leaving home at 7:15. He works late at night unless com- pelied to accept a dinner or speak- ing engagement. ;the sartorial needs of | Henry’s” father. alysis. birdie. He is rated one of the least “political” members of the Roose- velt official family; yet his friends say he has a keen understanding of the farm mass psychology de- veloped through years of close contact with the farmer and of in- tensive study of his problems. He appears equally at home at a round-table conference with | scientists and professional econom- | I There's the emerengey banking | objected, pointing out that Boy-) ists or at a barnyard chat with a act, for example, congress clearly assigned authority to the presi: deat in this bill that it usually for itself. The farm relief bill containing as it does the Thomas amendments =) Shggaet of the currency is an- A Lengthening List Then there is the economy act, carrying with it presidential au- thority to make vast reductions in payments to veterans, government Jcmployes us well as abolition and reorganization of different federal The bill creating the so-called “conservation corps” and the arms embargo are others. Also, there is the bill to regulate the railroads of the country, the bill to stimulate, mobilize and act. ed sueh as presidential power to adjust tariffs, make trade agree- eXxG 4 Puffy and Fluffy, the cute little samp, - Hate’ stopped for the night and proceed to make “It’s raining!” cries Fluffy, “My fur will ge wet!" ; “Just cuddle up clese,” says the Troop 5, Boy Scouts. under of Scoutmaster J. A. Bossa, will attend divine services in the First Methodist Al members of the troop .are to be at the corner of Flem-' Eagles and ladies of the order. will | Simonton streets not lat-} observe their memorial day, Sun-| m 7:30, They will assemble formation and march to evening at the First Congregation-— the church. | Puff, “avd don’t fret. otter ORDER OF EAGLES TO ATTEND CHURCH The Knights of the Golden day, by attending services in the al church. Jan’s purpose was to read the poems, This was too much for Boylan. He demanded a parliamentary in- quiry, When asked to state its ‘nature, he said he wanted to know if Underhill was psychic or just ®@ good mind reader. A Watchman Gone Underhill is no Jonger in the house, having retired last session. And so far no one has sapere his zeal in guarding The Record. Cooperating with another mem- ber, the other day there appeared in The Record an account of how the late Will Wood of Indiana, for- mer chairman of the appropriatio: committee, daily for more than 20 years fed a flock of pigeons out- side his office. The story of how the pigeons knew Wood so well they would “sass” him back m pigeon lan- guage, and of how daily they look up in the faces of passersby hoping to recoginze him, It’s a good story, but one can al- most hear the snort Charlie Under- hill would have given had he been in the house when request . was made to print it in The Record. OBJECTS TO FLIGHTS CHICAGO.—Objecting to her husband’s airplane flights, Mrs Emory Westlake, of this city, told the judge that a married man’s place is on earth, not in the air. MD a | CO hakakad, CAL kA hh hh dd, For ; farmer. WEDDING CHIMES MARK GOLD BOOM (Ry Asneciated Preas) | PERTH, May 19.—After a cou- }ple of years in which marriages | were at lowest ebb, there is a mat- rimonial boom in Western Aus- tralia. Jewelers report splendid busi- | wedding rings. | Increase in weddings is believed }due.to several factors, one being | the revival of gold mining in Kal- {goorlie and Boulder City which [has caused wide economic improve. | ment, | Many single men get married to save taxation. . Also it pays unemployed couples {to get married because the dole psd married couples is higher than for single persons, And if there are children the dole is increased very ' liberally. Ore Australian State, New South Wales, provides a dollar per child per week in addition to the | dole. Pennsylvania has a new wo- man meteorologist, Mrs. Hiram ; E. Bull of Towanda, who has been ‘appointed to succeed her late hus- j band. } SOSOSSO ROSCOE ESECOEDOOLEsEERSECCECOCSS Sale Cosecesesooseccecesscece 5 Bundles for 25 in bundle 5c | hatdihhadahidedidididdddddéed I He submits rather sheepishly te Armida Sanchez, Armando Navar- the ministrations of Edward, the ro, 2.20; 1.80, Edith Russell, Isa- veteran negro valet attached to the bel Armayor, Marguerite seeretary’s office who cared for xuela; “Young Fae Lowe; 1.66, Aida Coto, Mar- i Wallace revels in statistical an-| Phillis Rogers, Mary Taylor; 1.50, 4 He gets as much kick out Howard. Pinder, for countless speeches, poems andj of , production chart as a golf en-, Mary Curry, Sophia Loss, Kath- thusiast does out of shooting a'leen ness in diamond engagement and | 2.80. Harold Felton; 2.75, Edith Williams; 2.60, Laudelina Con- treros, Margaret Faleon, Dorothy Look Over The Following List And See If There Is Anything You Need? $1.00 : 25’ length with - Dixie Galvanized Shingles, for cash only, g 55 Cold Water Paint, Sherwin. Wil-” jams, i . colors: cream, Extra Heavy Cement Buckets, 14 hams, special lot. Solar Y Ate qt., regular 80c, 5 pound special each Rubbish Burners, $1.00 to 36” Galvanized Screen, OP VAR cst 30e 36” Bronze Screen, 60e .. $39.00 Cheap Paint, per gallon Black Roof Paint, gallons Roofing Paper, as low as. per roll Garden Hose, couplings, length ........ Barbara Taylor, © Violet Maudie. Johnson; 2.40, Napolis; 2.25, Mimnie Knowles, Merville. Rosam, Flora Lopez, Lorie Lowe, Mary Romero, Beulah Lee Williams, Sylvia Sawyer, Har- ry Weintraub. Marjotie Roberts, Leona Bethel, Jesus Carmona, Woodrow Wilson, Ruth Ingle, Selma NeSmith, Joe Fernandez, Mary Guzman, Fannie Hansen, Deborah Knowles, Kath- ryn Lightbourne, Maynard Lowe, Filer, Aleida straw, russet, pink, package, at per package $15.00: $18.00. Special lot Garden Hoes, while they last, 1x4 No, 3 Flooring, Valen- 1.75, Cleo Kemp, Jennie 4 1x6 No. 3 Flooring, garet Perez; 1.60, Helen Cates, Helen Russell Wall Board, per M. ..... Ackerman, Edna Bearup, Juanita Mayg, John McMahon. NEAR 200 MILES IN ONE YEAR’S DANCING {Ry Axnocinted Prens) LEXINGTON, Ky., "May 19.— A popular coed at the University of Kentucky can very near equal the marathon dancers, an enter- prising statician on the Kentucky Kernel, campus publication, has figured. He estimates a coed at- tending all the student dances in a@ year would dance 199 miles, or 15,840 steps at each dance. in bulk, 5 Black Roof Paint, 5 gallon cans .... 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