The Key West Citizen Newspaper, July 26, 1940, Page 2

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PAGE TWO The wry West Citizen | i Residents of this city -have become | THE CITIZEN PUBLISHING CO. ENC. Published Daily Except Sunday By L. P. ARTMAN, President and Publisher JOE ALLEN, Business Manager From The Citizen Building Corner Greene and Ann Streets Only Daily Newspaper in Key West and Monroe County entered at K Member of the Associated Press Associated Press is exclu t or not otherwise the local news published here. SUBSCRIPTION RATES n+ Year 3ix Months r Months h ADVERTISING RATES Made known on application. SPECIAL NOTICE All reading notices, cards of thanks, resolutions of -espect, obituary notices, ete., will be charged for at the rate of 10 cents a line. otices for entertainment by churches from which nue is to be derived are 5 cents a line. ys forum and invites discus- ues and subjects of local or general will not publish anonymous communi- THE KEY WEST CITIZEN WILL always seek the truth and print it without fear and without favor; never be afraid to attack wrong or to applaud right; always fight tor progress; never be the or- gan or the mouthpiece of any person, clique, faction or class; always do its utmost for the public welfare; never tolerate corruption or injustice; denounce vice and ‘praise virtue, commend good done by individual or organ- ization; tolerant of‘others’ rights, views and opinions; print on:, news that will elevate and not contaminate the reader; never com- promise witn principle. IMPROVEMENTS FOR KEY WEST ADVOCATED BY THE CITIZEN Water and Sewerage. More Hotels and Apartments. Beach and Bathing Pavilion. Airports—Land and Sea. Consolidation of County and City Gov- ernments. A Modern City Hospit Italy was always spoiling for a fight —now she is getting the spoils, One thing Hitler fails to realize is that some day restitution must be made for his atrocities, Slavery originates from war. In Europe today there are thousands of slaves, working for nations that conquered their land. We have stepped into the whirlpool and are in the war up to our knees, soon we will be in it up to necks, and then 2 2:38 The courage of the Chinese, in their war-against a strorger adversary, is to be admired. Out-manned, out-gunned but not out-managed Chiang Kai-shek leads his people in a prolonged struggle. our Germany is powerful because every German is taught to wofk for the common goal; the United Statesiqust have the loyal support of every citizen to remain power- ful.. Such loyalty and sacrifice made easier and more comfortable in a benign demecracy than under a brutal dictator- ship. The decision is yours. is Millions of Americans who have no time for foreign “isms” hold with Hoover that it was Communist money and a “world domination” program, through the in- strumentality of former Premier Leon Blum, which undermined the French peo- ple.- For ene thing he softened the hardy French working man by the introduction of the 40-hour week. Governor Herbert H. Lehman, of New York, addressing student officers at Platts- burg, N. Y., declared his belief that the United States would be : attacked!’ imme+ diately if Great Britain is defeated, but in a magazine article just published, Major Fielding Elliot says that it would take al- | most two years for Germany to commence any kind of action against the United States should she be victorious against England and invasion of any part of the Western Hemisphere be her intention. We believe: Major Eliioi’s opinion has the West, Florida, as second class matter ly entitled to use republication of all news dispatches credited to redited in this paper and also | THE ARMY TO EXPAND HERE | quite accustomed to the idea that the navy will expand its facilities here. Perform- ance so far since last winter has proven the e. During the expansion program, | however, no particular amount of thought has been given to the army post in Key West. Sert of a forgotten branch of things military insofar as we’ve been concerned. But that’s aH changed, | Army and Navy Journal carried what ap- peared to be official news of the estab- lishment of a Coast Artillery Battery at Key West Army Barracks. So—we change, for the moment, from contempla- | tion of the navy to a consideration of what this army expansion may mean to us. First—naturally, the addition of some 99 men to the permanent resident status of the city, means, in proportion, just what greater additions meant with the navy; more economic wealth for the city, more buying power and, what is quite im- portant, more demand for better, all around facilities. In that light, the expansion is quite welcome. AS more and more service men appear on the local scene, the tendency to | raise the standard of living here increases. But a wider interpretation of the new move nay be considered than that of com- \ mercial possibilities. The establishment | cf definite defense units with the Coast Artillery Battery points all the more strongly to the fact that the United States governing powers in control of home de- fense are considering Key West, more and | more, necessary link in the whole plar. > There is every indication that both | the army and navy will continue to ex- | pand here and take up still more land, bringing in still more service units of one kind and another. That is what Key West should get used to ard scale its future op- eration’ and aims on that premise. cas asa | | | SO-CALLED MONROE DOCTRINES Germany wants a “Monroe Doctrine | for Central Europe” and Japan wants a “Monroe Doctrine for Asia.” At least, this is what Berlin and Tokyo assert. Americans who are familiar with the | operation of the Monroe Doctrine in this | part of the world may be misled unless they become familiar with the methods of totalitarian nations. In the Western Hemisphere the Mon- roe Doctrine demands and obtains respect for the rights of all nations, the small ones as well as the large ones, including the right to decide their future for them- selves. Germany and Japan, while calling for a “Monroe Doctrine,” stake out an area fcr themselves, in which to plunder and rule as they please, without respect for the rights of small nations and without regard to the rights of other nations to equality | of commercial opportunity. If Germany was, in reality, interested in a Monrce Doctrine for Central Europe, she would have joined Great Britain and France in protecting the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Czechoslovakia, Poland, and the other nations that have ulost their liberties im recent months. E Japan, if interested in a doctrine for Asia, * would permit China to decide her own future. Both would be interested only in preventing other larger nations from com- mitting aggression against the areas they guard. The truth of the matter is that both Berlin ard Tokyo- understand that there is no similarity between their doctrines, as- serted for their own aggrandizement, and the doctrine promulgated in this couptry, many years ago, which has preserved the small Latin-American nations from en- croachment from Europe. Berlin and Tokyo are smart enough to know that they can confuse some _be- fuddled Americans into believing that the doctrines they assert are what they call them, regardless of the actual facts in their respective areas. They know that there are Americans looking for every excuse to éxonlérate the United States from any re- sponsibility in the world. today. LABOR PLEDGES COOPERATION Labor, speaking through sixteen lead- ers of the American Federation of Labor, the Congress of Industrial THE KEY WEST CITIZEN now. The} OBBIN, the dancing horse of the -hilarious Ford “horse opera”, ' asked this question when he trotted into the “Around-the-World” party of the Circumnavigators Club: in the Ford Exposition at the New , York World's Fair. Some of the members were prop- erly taken aback. Circummavigators Club is an exclusive international organization of cosmopolites im- portant in the industrial, exploring, dramatic and writing fields. To be- long, one must have gone around the world by an unconventional route, but mone of them had done it on horseback. And judging from the expression on the face of Major J. Allan Dunn, explorer and master of ceremonies of the evening, (left), none of them thought it a very sound idea. Pictured are the two dancers en- cased in Dobbin’s papier mache and gray flannel hide as they delivered the invitation to mount Dobbin for oday’s Birthdays Ella A. Boole of Brooklyn, N. Y. W.CT.U., world head, born at Van Wert, O., 82 years ‘ago. Col. Francis R. Stoddard of New York, lawyer, governor-gen- ,eral of the Society of Mayflower *|Descendants, born in Boston, 63 years ago. Paul W. Litchfield, president of Goodyear Rubber and Tire, born in Boston, 65 years ago. Ex-Senator Dixie Bibb Graves of Alabama, born there, 58 years ago. Walter S. Tower, secretary of the American Iron and Steel In- istitute, New York, born at West | Bridgewater, Mass., 59 years ago. | Dr. Franklin B. Snyder, presi- the next globe-girdling expedition. }dent of Northwestern University, The horse was quite a hit of this _born at Middletown, Conn. 56 party—the final one of the year years ago. staged by the parent, New York, . .. chapter of Circnmnavigators. The Sergei Koussevitsky, conductor Ford pavilion had been transformed Of the Boston Symphony Orches- for this meeting into a tropical jun- tra, born in Russia, 66 years ago. gle with thatched huts, palms, mat-| Dr Reuben L. Kahn of the ting walls, macaws, monkeys, cocka- | 15, chi toos, beautiful sarong maidens, and |UNiv. of Michigan, noted bac- yes! even a baby elephant from teriologist, born in Lithuania, 53 Frank Buck's exciting Jungleland years ago. show at the Fair. . George Bernard Shaw, famed Conferring with Dobbin, (left to ‘British born ears right) are Major Dunn; . Dobbin eee sai — himself, star of the Ford Exposi- " . tion's “A Thousand Times Neigh” | Texas livestock and livestock show; Frank Buck, in person, maes- ‘products in 1939 yielded a cash tro of more jungle creatures than income of $218,713,000, or $4,802,- any man alive; Arthur M. Tode, 999 less than aggregate income honorary national president of the i Propeller Club of America; and from agricultural crops. LEGALS Harrison Forman, explorer, lecturer and camera man, who brought out of Poland the first pictures of the | STATE OF FLORIDA, MONROE COUNT: IN CHRCUIT COURT, STATE OF FLORIDA, ELEVENTH JUDI- siege of Warsaw. CIAL CIRCUIT, MONROE COUN- A REVIEW of the current ex- hibition at the Art Center by F.} Townsend Morgan, director, fol- lows: H The Key West Art Center is! displaying until August the 2nd, a group of paintings by notable artists of the American school of the present day, “Country Cross- Section”. It represents a cross-; secnon of the easel painting wnicn is being done throughout the United States on the W.P.A. program. While the exhibition as a whole is distinctly conservative, it also is representative of certain re- gional differences. A number of the artists are well known in the museum world; others have won their first recognition through the opportunities offered them by the National Arts Program. The exhibition has been sent out from the Exhibition Section in Washington, D. C., by Holger Ca- hill, national director, and cir- cuited through Florida by the Florida Art Project, W.P.A., Eve Alsman Fuller, state supervisor. This collection gives the public an opportunity to study and ap- praise the new horizons in Amer- ican Art that are appearing un- der government sponsorship. |Landscape is the main theme. The native flavor of Massachu- |setts is evidenced in the two pic- tures by Yvonne Twining and the FOOD FACTS IN A TY. IN CHANCERY. RALPH LEOPOLD MOLLER, Plaintiff, ¥s. DIVORCE. == BETTY JANE MOLLER, Defendant. CAB! It appearing by the sworn bill SoS filed in the above-stated cause that Although warmed over cabbage ; Betty Jane Moller, the defendant | therein named, is a non-resident of | does not make a very palatable the state of Florida, and that her - residence is unknown to the plain- dish, ‘any cabbage left’ from a but whose last known resi- first serving can be used to ad- dence was 930 American Avenue. ze -. Long Beach, California; that said vantage as a wrapper in which defendant is over the age of twenty- = one years; that there is no person | to fry or bake small portions of in'ine State of Florida the service inely chopped meat of any kind. of a summons in chancery upon incly ae im . whom would bind said defendant ———— It is therefore ordered that said defendant be and she is hereby re- PROTEIN IN BUTTERMILK hired to appear to the bill of « im jurprisi see! . | plaint filed in said cause on or be- Surprising as it may scem but-| ON "wonday, the 2nd day of Sep- termilk has a food value compar- tember, A. D. 1940, otherwike the at. Almost half the allegations of said bill will be sal f food value in but-| ‘2*e" 25 confessed by said de-} as ap o Mead in ae fendant. CEES. termilk is protein and a pint o! It is further ordered tha’ i ; “s tai Secs order be published once each week | bites uy taser Daas aioe be for four consecutive weeks in The as much nourishment as two and Key a Citi, 2 < ublished in said county and s' e a half ounces of beer. P“Done and Ordered this 25th day of July, A. D. 1949. (SEAL) Rors C Sawyer DATES IN VARIETY Dates grow in surprising va-— Tiety, there being about 125 dif- ferent kinds. The three most im- portant are the Hallowi, which is a brown date, and the Siyir and Frad, which are black dates. for Plaintiff. jly26; aug: IN. CIRCUIT COURT, STATE OF FLORIDA, ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, MONROE COUNTY. IN CHANCERY. CLYDE THOMPSON BURCH, Plaintiff, DISTANCES ELIMINATED So efficient is the modern sys-! tem of mass merchandising de-| BARB. veloped by the chain stores that ORDER OF PUBLICATION foodstuffs can be transported: it appearing by the _— . is ‘led ve-stated cause great distances without adding {led im ths abore mat Gcrendant appreciably to their cost. For! therein named, is a non-resident of instance, the average haul on the State of ogg and pend s i xo. 1346 Front) Street, She fruits and vegetables is 1,500 ! Tire, San Diewo, California; that miles, yet items in this category said defendant over the age of il ty-one years; that there is no formerly only available to the Strson in the State of Florida the ve. ARA JUNE BURCH, Defendant bill woman in the upper income brackets now are available at prices within reach of modest budgets. AMERICANS PIE EATERS Americans are the world’s big-j allegations of said’ bill gest pie eaters, consuming 450,- 000,000 a year. Apple pie is the service of a summons in chancery upon whom would bind said de- fendant. It is therefore ordered that said defendant be and she is hereby re- quired to appear to the bill of cor plaint filed in said cause on or be- fore Monday, the 2nd day of Sep- tember, A. D. 1940, otherwise the de- will taken as confessed said fendant. “{t is further ordered that by this first choice, coconut custard and | order be published once each week two: pictures by ©. Mary ; Hoover. | Work of one of the best known American Painters is. typically ‘represented in “Spring in Cen-| tral. Park” and “Still Life” by | Emil Ganso of New York. A still {lemon meringue are tiied for sec- fe ? Editors of non-metropolitan newspapers from all sections of life of great charm is the canvas ithe United States, members of the JOHN | by Eugene Trentham of Colorado, | while possibly the most unique jand original still life is the decorative gouache, “Red Still Life”, by Elizabeth Terrell of ‘taken on a statewide tour which New York City. An unusual wij) cover such points of interest mountain subject is “Sunlight on as Marineland, Bok Tower, Cy- the Rio Grande”, by Charles press Gardens, Silver Springs, Barrows of New Mexico. “Re- McKee Jungle Gardens, the Su- ligious Fiesta”, a rich rendéring He t ‘ ¥ in oil of an East Side festival in! S*", oust at Clewiston, and oth |New York, is very representative of the well-known painter Jerome — |Myers of New York. The strik-; ing scene, “Hein Place” by Mar- shall Smith, of Illinois, is most compelling. Altogether, ten states, are represented: Massachusetts, New York, Ohio, Iowa, Minne- sota, Pennsylvania, Illinois, New Mexico, Colorado, Californi. VISITORS to tis “exhibition are asked to cast a veté for the |work they. like best. | Subscribe to The Citizen—20 weekly. {National Editorial Association, will visit Florida next spring ‘when the Annual Convention is held in this state. They will be and the railroad brotherhoods, has advised | ond place and cherry is a close: lished in said county and state. fourth. i ound Out Your KEY W “HAVANA for four consecutive weeks in The Key West Citizen, a newspaper pub- Done and ordered this 25th Gey c* July, A. D. 1949. (SEAL) Ross C Sawyer Clerk Circuit Court. | By (Sd.) Florence E. Sawyer, : Deputy Clerk. Selic to Please Your Palate ORDER YOUR POUND Tonar| | joer coi v To PORT TAMPA et 5:09 p.m. The Ove: Egheas. c= necumg Key Wes ext oe Fir waa memané fe owe see Today’s Horoscope —— ae = ae ability = <r Clute Pepe Sede speech writing and grest en- _. s = = - _ thusiasm. The mind is elastic = and somewhat given to wander. == “Umar “a ing. The sense may be rather ©! Se sequres ona undeveloped, and needs to be trxiges and pet Se ceed & peep carefully trained im the lews of ct stepe Gr cep wees life and morality. Neglect of this use The federal gewetemeest =o may lead to a compulsory retire- be asked & = Ge = oar ment from the world for a while [= Sa IeIse sees a is. COMPLAINT SERVICE. . . : If you do not Receive Your Copy ef The CITIZEN By 6¢P. = PHONE— WESTERN UNION Between 6 and 7 P.M and a Western Union Messenge- Boy ~ deliver your copy of The Citimen ALi zitztztzttszzzrznsZd = cxpense IIALALALLALLLAA its tdssdadasdddédia Office: 813 Caroline Street WAREHOUSE—Cor. Eaton and Frencis Sta For the next few days you can get 2 te=- only 95c down and $1.00 per month Total trie now presents the new Emerson Junior Fans. . Look at these features: Streamlined breeze capacity; 90 or 45 degree escilictme year guarantee. Phone Today Te Have One Or More (Of These Fans Delivered Te Your Home The Key West Electric Co. the nation that it is ready to give “effec- | tive and expeditieus” cooperation in the | execution of the national defense pro- | greater value and: that there is no imme- diate-danger of aggression, though an eventual possibility. Phone 414

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