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PAGE TWO She 2 Key West Citizen “PUBLISHING CO, INC. ned Daily Except Sunday By AIUTMAN, President and Publisher AL Business Manager tizen Building Corner Greene and Ann Streets Oz=ly Daily Newspaper in Key West and Monroe County Key West, Florida, as second class matter Member of the ‘Ansociated Pre: - 1 Press is exclusively entitled to. use on of all news dispatches credited to rwise credited in this paper and also lished b. Assoc FLORIDA PRESS ASSOCIATION 5 NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION 1941 SUBSCRIPTION RATES ADVERTISING RATES wn on application. of thanks, resolutions of ., Will be charged for at ment by churches from waich are 5 cents a line. open forum and s to be deriv n is a ites discus- » issues and subjects of 1 or general t will not publish anonymous communi- THE KEY WEST CITIZEN WILL always seek the truth and print it ithout fear and without favor; never be afraid to attack wrong or to applaud right; ays fight for progress; never be the or- gan or the mouthpiece of any person, clique, faction or class; always do its utmost for the elfare; public never tolerate corruption or injustice; denounce vice and praise virtue, commend good done by individual or organ- tolerant of others’ rights, views and print only news that will elevate { contaminate the reader; never com- promise with principle. ization; opinions; and n IMPROVEMENTS FOR KEY WEST ADVOCATED BY THE CITIZEN Water and Sewerage. More Hotels and Apartments. Beach and Bathing Pavilion. Airports—Land and Sea. Consolidation .f County and City Gov- ernments. A Modern City Hospital. question often heard and never an- swered: “Why does the United States go on selling oil to Japan?” Trade in Key West and help develop business in your own area so that prosper- ity Will remain here for a longer time. ,» The way to reform the world is by set- ting a good example in good works; this is more important than making small contri- butions to worthy causes for effect, The European situation is getting more complex every day. . Now Finland, which we aided, is going to fight for Germany, our engmy, and against Russia, now our “sgbundrel” friend. We-can see better now that we should stay out of this European mé@ss wih the one exception to continue our aid to England to the fullest as a matter of self-protection. It has been often stated that was blinded by gas during the World War, buts New York physician recently stated that he est medical men in the Reich that in 1982 he himself investigate " PE Feiad | @ had himself investigated Hitler's official | mien: ed of one | It con Diagnosis: “Hysterical *, which means blindness due If fortunes of war go against him, Hitler will se quiekly. He is not an up-hill fight- and will give up as soon as the score is not fy his favor, medical war record, hospital admission: ambloyopia’ to a hysterical fear-reaction. 1s colly er, * Far-vreaching changes have been pro- posed for Britain's diplomatic service which willredound to her credit and _ political strength, Hitherto social standing and pr and merit now Anthony Eden, for- ecretary, promises that the entry into ign service will be revised so as to make it “more representative and more open to men without means”. mild improve its diplomatic service if it ceased appointing men, who have con- triBbted liberally to the treasuries ntHig pe too, rties as their chief qualification. Hitler | was told in 1935 by one of the great- | ever the | ante wealth have been preferred before | The United States, | of win-' Predicting the greatest Fourth of July | traffic jam in history—with the biggest | | holiday traffic toll of dead and injured— the National Safety Council has prepared a | bulletin urging the nation’s drivers to make | | this holiday a safe one. | More money in the workers’ payrolls, | more automobiles, and more incentive to | take a Fourth of July holiday this year will | i contribute to a highway jam of 30,000,000 | vehicles, the coungil. predicts. i “Take it easy on the Fourth”, the bul- letin advises, “be alive on the Fifth”. Here is what last July cost: | j Killed—9,800. Injured—900,000. Cost—$300,000,000. | That was July, 1940! At the devastating pace | of 13 people killed every hour, July swept through | the United States like a hurricane. | soe 9 | Every year accidents mount to a staggering | total in July. Over the past five year, July’s acci- | dent losses have been 24 per cent higher than that | of the average month. Every 12 days of the average July as many | Americans are killed by accidents as lost their | | Approximately one of every 150 persons is in- jured by accident in July. Two of the important reasons for July’s heavy | slaughter are the Independence day and HEAT. celebration | The cost of America’s traffic during the month of July last year—including holiday and everyday driving—was 2,790 lives. Publie accidents, other than motor vehicles, reach the year’s peak in July. For 1940, this meant 2,500 deaths and about 300,000 injuries. The Jyly | totals were more than twice as great as those of | any winter month. trips In the latest year for which complete figures are available, July topped every other month of the year for lives lost by drowning, electric shock, lightning and food poisoning. bowed only to January in the matter of deaths from falls. excessive heat, } It } When the thermometer skyrockets as it did in | 1936 and 1934, from 2,000 to 3,000 more people die | of the heat during the month of July than in the average July. oe One-fifth of all drownings occur in July. Most | of these happen at beaches where is no supervision. | In July an average of 75 people are killed | every day of the month by falls—in the home, at | work and in the street. eoee Another factor which contributes to July's | high accident rate is fireworks. Despite widespread | legislation, many small children continue to stage | private fireworks displays, with disastrous results. July’s usually clear weather is no safety pana- cea to motorists. Four out of five accidents occur when the weather is clear and the pavement dry. Will July, 1941, leave an equally bloody trail behind? The answer depends on whether or not we, | the individual citizens, are willing to take the simple precautions which will stop this national disaster. | IMPROVED PRODUCTS Improved processing of American- H growing crops will play an important part | in providing substitutes for certain pro- | ducts heretofore imported, but which are now difficult to obtain because of the war, according to a recent writer in the Farm Journal. Among such developments noted is a new process for “cracking” soybean oil, to make it better adaptable to industrial Many prodicts in the industrial field are now manufactured in whole or in part from soybeans and the list is being rapidly expended. However, the enormous increase in the American soybean crop which has | been witnessed during recent years is due | principally te the growing use of soybean | oil meal in feeds for all Kinds of livestock and poultry. In fai aboot Tints of this meal goes into feeds, while probably 85 per cent of the oil extracted from the beans finds its way into various edible products. Predic- tions of recent years that the soybean is destined to rise to great heights as a cash crop of the American farmer are being ful- fitted, thereby adding to the resources of the nation. Agricultural authorities point out that | the use of soybean oi] meal as a protein in- | gtedient of feeds for meat animals has proved to be an important factor in enabling / | stock raisers to improve the quality of meat. | DEATH IN JULY |= |Mean . |Sea level, 30,00 (1015.9 millibars) | | Sunrise lives in the Revolutionary war. | | cloudy scattered thundershowers | winds, !south portion, and partly cloudy /@nd Mrs. William G. Camero of | trained, there is the making of |In this latter case, it leads to do- |fully against any desire to break THE KEY WEST CITIZEN a= = | BE E we LS THE WEATHER Today’sbirtidays ROM HICKORY GROVE" Prof. Louise Pound of the Uni- | eee versity of Nebraska, teacher of _ Time kinda tempers things. | Wivaurn assunra an NAUGHTON, English, born in Lincoln, Nebr.,,Maybe you were a Democrat 50) » raainttt, 69 years ago and didn’t think that | hws “ AS he See Gannon co AAR bi Maa Cal Coolidge, as Governor of) TPN Y'BLass Mena\ Betenennt, TT rege Mass., was so much. But today, | es Mrs. Florence S. Kerr, assist-/ Democrat or Republican, you} a ant Works Progress Commission- yd are to see some old- Sear | jer, Washington, born in, Harri- 10% ndze epeaon sare ane ae 0.05|man, Tenn., 51 years ago. back-bone come. bark into ope) ae i jeration. Like when he tell ’em/ Henry Bliss eevee \ame of 21 years and thatither there in Boston who was who and: person in the State of Flori oa dew ahd URT OF THE | CIAL CER: tee FOR IN 1DA — CERY, — Observation taken at 7:30 a. m.,' 75th Mer. Time (city office) Temperatures | Highest last 24 hours Lowest last night _... Normal ____. Precipitation Rainfall, 24 hours ending 7:30 a. m., inches Total rainfall since inches “ | Deficiency since “June a, inches | Total rainfall since . Jan. 1, inches from the affidayit of | Tt povees ita McNaughton, elyn Saale ee 1.82| Walter Hampden, actor, 4 !in New York, 62 years ago. | proposing’ a_."policernan’s 2.42 out. They didn’t walk out. You take these pwould bind the said deferdan| walk- ‘that the said defendant Sarees | | McNaughton isa Rrra a orl pee country. er than the | wild-cat strikes. We been tying lorida ah € ae pacticall s eat said defendant particularly as is” Excess Mt. Vernon, Ia., president, the 4, cure them by social science | known to the plaintiff is 1092 Circle inches _ -- 11.87 Woman's Foreign Missionary | and psychology versus a hay-| Drive, Whitefish Bay. Milwaukee, Wind Direction and Velocity sat oie | Wisconsin, it is, therefore NE-7 miles, per hour ; Soe: the Methodist Church, | maker. |gORDR SED anat oS seid Henry | Relative Humidity born ‘in Jackson, Minn., 68 years; Mr. Freud had some grand |Hliss McNaughton, dsendaat in the 87% ideas on velvety handling of your before the Cireuit Court of .the Barometer at 7:30 a. m., today Mrs. Evelyn R. Nicholson of} 25.63 | since January’ . ot 3 Bleventh Judicial Cireult of Florida, | off. spring without an oo door | in and for Monroe County, in Chan- | to the woodshed. It was a fiz-|very at Key West, Florida, on the | | zle. You have maybe seen some | 7th day of July, A. D., 1941, and ap- ‘of the youngsters brought up via} pear to the plaintiff's bill ef com-/ Prof. Harold J. Laski of the |the Freud doctrine. We |plaint, in default of which decree been pro confesso will be entered against m./ Univ. of London, famed English | ¥¥iné the same an our sit-down- een scientist, born 48 years Glenda Farrell, actress, born Tomorrow's Almanac ‘in Enid, Okla., 37 years ago. 0 a, m.! Sunset 1 p.m. | Moonrise :05 a. m. Tomorrow's Tides (Naval Base) AM. an ree 2:27 FORECAST (Till 7:30 p. m., Tuesday) Key West and Vicinity: Pavily tonight and ‘Tuesday; | Tues- | | Said defendant, Plaintiff seeks a decree of divorce } ‘and other relief. It is further. ORDERED that this jorder.be published once a week for | four consecutive weeks in The Key sche ele chorus bek-ectalbaoadh | West Citizen, a newspaper published jin Key West, Monroe County, Flor- Magnesium is about one- oaks ida. as heavy as aluminum. LEGALS Yours with the low lown, ° JO SERRA. High Low y of May, A. D., SAL) Ross C Sawyer County, Florida. By (Sd.) Anita M. SuEate. Depnty Clerk. June2-9-16-; 2a. 20, 94d Subscribe to The Citizen—20¢ SON TO BARODIS Announcement has been made day afternoon. cf the birth of a son on Sunday ¥ Florida: Partly cloudy tonight t4 Mr. and Mrs. Edward Barodi!,,. os jand Tuesday with afternoon}at Miami. The new arrival has E thundershowers. jbeen given the name of William Jacksonville to Florida Straits | Pdward. jand East Gulf: Moderate variable _ Mrs. Barodi was formerly Miss | \"To mostly southeast over | Rose Camero, daughter of Mr. vs RICHARD 1. Unknown, r Rasp falas a and Tuesday | this city. scattered | [Se RECREATION More than one hundred theatres jare now under construction and |165 additional theatres will be [his puder built to provide entertainment for week for four soldiers. Service clubs are being ane built at reservations with large oes troop concentrations and gymna- | Pated day of June} siums and athletics fields and | (4 simuat G. ourt Seal) | other sports facilities will be pro- vided for all corps areas. weather |with a showers. tonight few widely — nfesso will | ‘Today’s Horoscope uae tee! once hed In Monroe PAY Fy thie If today’s nature is carefully this 2Ist a worthy person, if the disposi- tion is not given over to license. 10" ss C Sawyer, ure in and | a@R AS Florida, | S j yi @ i | AGREED path in life, for such impulses are) FLORENCE FE. SAWYER j is “i ee, easily intensified. ju Clerk of the . for Mon mestic unhappiness. Guard care- away from a perfectly aeant WORLD CHAMPION MISS MARGARET HAMMA, operating an IBM Electromatic Typewriter, established a new professional world’s record of 149 words per minute for one hour. The first half-hour of this performance won for her the amateur championship. x} ‘These records were made in competition with 8 other professional contestants and 44 other amateur contestants from various parts of the United States and Canada. 4 The competition was held under the auspices of the Ninth Annual International Commercial Schools Contest in Chicago, on June 19 and 20, 1941. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS BAGHINES CORPORATION DONE AND ORDERED this 31st} 1941. Cleri of the Cireuit Court, Monroe | MONDAY, JUNE 30,1941 § , the | born | what was what, when they were |service of subpoena upoh whom} | | | i } | Attorney at Law | orD RING DEFENDANT saa 23 Rye ie pin Ban | 217 Duval St. [INTHE NAME OF THE STATE or} LORIDA? .8S ILLINGWORTH MUSIC STUDIO | plaintite eran. that th meeoceet | a ee | Mr. and Mrs, ‘EUROPEAN RAINING Piano. eee ot 615 Elizabeth St. TWO TIRES AND 16 in A-1 condition. Rea Apply 809 Ashe Street. jun28-s HOUSE TRAILER, $100. 728 United Street. jun27-3tx FOR SALE—Baby Carriage, 514 Margaret street. jun23-tf ELECTRIC FANS, $1 up; blow- ers, drinking fountains and Coca-Cola boxes. Gray's Fish- ery, Ojus. Open Sunday, wk FOR SALE—8-cylirder’ Terra- plane engine, ideal for boat or pump. Gray’s Fishery; Ojus. *|TRAILERS. Apply Skating Palace. Fully equipped. “$100. James H. Pinder. 1217 Petronia Street. FOURTEEN FT. OUTROARD MOTOR BOAT. Fully and one Johnson tor, 4 hp. $150. James, Pinder, 1217 Petronia S' FOR RENT LARGE COMFORTABLE TWO- BEDROOM APARTMENT. No children. 727 Eaton ae