Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
jet 3 an quire the use of stern discipline. Heaith dune is an unfavorable in which to race locomotives to eresings, Remember that, after Key West in your car. Mew that the Duke of Windsor, who while King broadcast that he “needed the help aed support of the woman I love”, wet hope he will make something z to it Short Talks the Times-Union ef the Smithsonian Institute at That's a new institution; took &t up during the next visit at the ——e Those engaged in sedentary. work be required to add an extra technique ‘This column last week made Patrick he preferred death to ’ Pat wasn't that kind of a What he did say, in effect, is what knows that he preferred death y. s g z of the Florida Realty | et once contain the name of Key West or that of any Key West realtor. | 1 appears tha: the local real estate men are dead on their feet, lanquid and listless, Waiting for manana to bring them bosi-| tem: end can that be the reason why Key: West, «o well favored by nature, is lagging behind in real estate transactions? A few | targe turn-overs have been made in the) pect few weeks, but apparently they were | comummated without benefit of realtor— | direct from seller te buyer. One Wews agency said that a Nazi! Heademan in a silk hat chopped off the! ead of Helmuth Hirsch for allegedly plot- | ee to kil « high German official, while | apother stated that it was Germany's new}; rf ewilietine which decapitated the American i youth, and which had been substituted for} and begin owing us at once. the ancient headsman’s axe, formerly of-| tela) weapon of capital punishment. With’ it» tight censorship, it is difficult for the! the debt and pay us another year in ad- is correspondents to get at the truth of hap-| penings in Germany. Only a 10-line notice} and will not do so, is requested to move C. in the evening newspapers announced the (to North Dakota and make room for one |@ B jpoint would make maintenance of execution, with no further details. i doubt but have no idea that war is near at hand, and no notion of the nation that might engage | us, the ri nce at the aul densa | turtle was sent to New-York this! STERN OST OONNG TREN strates the wisdom of possessing the ability to protect oneself. Again, while we have not the faintest inkling that there will be internal difficulty of a serious nature in the United States for many years to come, the history of the past suggests the possibility of such an gecur- rence and if we are to profit from the. ex- perience of other. nations. we should take this factor into account when wé. consider the military, naval aiid aerial jieéds of the United States. ede sieasn:> Of course, it is easy forthe war ex perts to show us the need of an immense army, backed by an industrial organiza- tion of great detail, to point out the neces- sity for a vast navy that will stand-off every possible combination, to stress the building of second-line coast defenses | everywhere and to elaborate upon the im- possibility of possessing enough airplanes to bomb others and prevent them from bombing us. What the people of the coun- try are interested in, however, is a sane program of national defense that will not attempt to attain strategic perfection in every detail of subordinate national life to the war state. FAILINGS OF THE GREAT It has become quite common of late } for authors and critics to dig into the pri- vate lives of great men, with a view to ex- posing their human frailties.. There can be no particular objection to this, so long as it is not attempted to belittle the serv- ice these men have rendered to mankind. Every man and woman has certain defects of character, and this has always} been so. It is a further fact that some of those who have contributed most to civil- ization have been guilty of moral offenses which would be sternly condemned to- day. As a matter of history, many of the world’s greatest leaders have led repre- hensible private lives, as measured by com- monly accepted standards. It even may be asserted that in the case of the very high- est types of genius this has been the rule rather than the exception. But in estimating the permanent placg which should be accorded those men in th esteem of the world, only the sevice end they rendered to humanity should be con- sidered. A recent writer»well expressés this idea, thus: fos “Every leader must be tested not by | his private conduct, but by his public be- havior. Did he serve well his day and generation? given and. forgotten.” A REASONABLE EDITOR After all is said and done, it must be | p: admitted that the average small town editor is reasonable. He will agree to al- most any proposition which seems fair. He will even suggest several propositions and let the other fellow take his choice. This obliging attitude is well illus- trated by a recent item in a Kansas news-} paper, which says: “Amyone owing this paper is request- ed to call and pay at once. Anyone owing is requested to call and subscribe Anyone we; are owing is requested to subscribe for this! paper in advance for the full amount of vance, cash. Anyone who is not owing us | who will.” t militaristic fervor, and, in its preparations, cognizance should be taken of possible in- ternal difficulties that might, some day, re- To these conclusions there may arise | answers are to be found in ‘her husband and a , child. The’ : the history of other peoples, While we |fmily had been in Key West If he did, all else will be for- !* went home for dinner at 6 n was there, waiting for! Often a ci : - s ago he had the} 2 a Cigarette wins popularity nee. He lost anoth- in a small part of the country... fer charm, advertised for it, andj = ihad it returned on the same after- a few cigarettes become known all noon the ad appeared. | over the country. i | fill for the Overseas Highway be- wherever cigarettes are sold in the tween Lower Matecumbe and Up-! not |x the i Their sii to candle-light romance. Mrs, James Fred Sinnott, of; - i ‘Of coralillo a coral i* 1 |€xvectedly this morning after a shawl, ‘And winds harp melodies of those vanished days Gone with the speeding years beyond recall. . . . severe heart attack. She was 27 years old and a native of Shegoy-' gan, Wise. She is survived by | _ Peeecccveccocscccssecccos (Today's Horoscope about five years. An unusually large shipment of’ Movement To Guard j Against Accidents, morning via Mallory Line. There} Today’s nature is emotional (By Axnociated Press) 1 were 102 turtles in the shipment, a"d today’s native likes the good | LONDON, June 7.—Parents. inj They weighed from 80 to 315, things -of life. There-is a fair;several parts of Britain are on, pounds each. ; Hirelrmctngh bain mean iemeoeneyemRnee vbly some inheritance. The ins! test the “slaughter” of school chil- Two hundred and. seventy-one,tel'ectual powers may not be par-i 5.) 5. specdi re { pupils of the sehools of Key West! ticularly brilliant, and in thas: F Jae of chi { whose parents are unable to pay} #8 much labor will be needed to} fathers mothers cbiliapny for the work were given dental’ 8¢complish good results. Be sure| who have to cross. Westway—aj treatment by the dentists of Key| ‘0 cvltivate energy of action and dangero»s arterial thoroaghfane’ West at a free clinic whieh;closed! Comserve Your resources to°th®!i, the western suburbs of London | with therend of the school term, | Utmost. meee | -pdemonsizated brought Sgeee to their demand for a Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin F.|Ppeal to the - railroad’ Lowe, bride and groom of Satur-| Permission for its removal: »! {1 4” procession. of 250 strong! day;are making their home at aoe ae eae sei ro : 2 ' 1001 Eaton street. The wedding! Editorial comment: Sonic Ke¥ pouring rain, holding up the eal tock place at the home of the: West restaurants are ‘serving fic on a busy Saturday afternoon. bride when Miss Francis E. Sweet-|*Pring (2) chicken. The only Motorists were confronted with! ing, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Asa| trouble is that it is probably the banners bearing slogans “Make! ; Sweeting was united in marriage: SPring of 1914, certainly nothing Westway Safe” and “It May: Be| to Benjamin F. Lowe, son of Mr.| later than 1920, “Your Child Next Time.” and Mrs. Roger Lowe. Rev. W. SUPE RIE ER aE PRIUS ae ea K. E. James, of the First Baptist Church officiated. Miss Eva Sweeting, sister of the bride, act-! fod as bridesmaid: and: Mie: Thebes Montecino was maid of honor. Asaj{ Sweeting was best man. It rained here last. night. Ht poy not a downpour by any man- ner of means. Whether it was an | answer to the prayers offered dur-| ‘” jing Sunday or an answer to city | council is an open question, but it rained. The weather man says it! | did rain .02 inches. Just a good shower as it were. This, however, is that much more than the city has seen in the past five weeks. Word has been received that a | daughter has been born to Mr. ‘and Mrs. Austin Taylor, former Key; |Westers. Mrs. Taylor was for-| imerly Miss Juliette Knowles of this city. i | Mr. and Mrs. Peter Nicholas an-| inounce the birth of a son at their| yhome on Packer street. _Bothj |mother and child are reported a2| tdoing nicely. | The body of Mrs Mary Vir-| jginia Heckler, who died February | 1 and was buried here, was today disinterred and will be forwarded |to Dayton, Ohio, this evening.| | Mrs. Jeanette Adams, daughter of | | the deceased, will accompany the/ | remains. | | A fire at 2:15 this afternoon at; | the corner of Thomas and ~ Olivia} j Streets did but little damage to a; ; home occupied by a negro woman.' j Bre flames were caused by aj jove pipe pad the damage was less} an $32 | n Mears and Miss Rose Pita! * married last evening at the} } sae of the bride 1107 White! t#freet. The ceremony was per-/ med by County Tax Assessor; gene Albury, notary public. | SS AEE i MORE PLEASURE ... Chesterfields are satis- fying millions of smokers, men and women, in all the four corners of the earth. Cit'zen want ads bring resa cee 0 C. Sam B. Curr: [the criminal court, who has just] been trying ’em out. Mr. Curry, Host a Elks charm. It was one he} zed very highly. He inserted id in the lost and found un. The paper came off the! o'clock. When Mr.! t 4 United States and on board all the great ships of the world . . . under Matecumbe which it was esti- ted would cost the county more than $50,000 been arranged at Seumnatiesiil: 29 flags and wherever they touch... , who are building and for good reasons. the hway in which the stretch ‘ It move the fill for the joned sum. The fill erected by Jenner Broth-! 250 feet from the F. E. ght-of-way. Later that the current at th ers Chesterfields will give you more pleasure. . They Satisfy Coprright 1937, Licazrs Sees Fouscco Con jope the fill exceedingly expensive. An!