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PAIGE FOUR SOCIETY SCOUTS’ RALLY HELD FRIDAY BIG SUCCESS A rally of the Boy Scouts, Cubs, ‘and Scout Leaders in Key West was held Friday night at the Parish Hall and was called an outstanding success. The attend- ance was 70 Scouts and Cubs and four leaders. Attending were Troops 52 and} 59, Boy Scouts, and the Cub Pack. For Troop 52 there were 75 Scouts present, under the leader- ship of Assistant Scoutmasters Archie Potter and Ernest Avila. Troop 59 had 20 Scouts present under the leadership of Scout-j master Ernest Cohen. The Cub Pack with 20 members present! were under the leadership of Den} Chiefs Adam Stanczak, Oscar Avila, and Fred Bassett. Wilbert Moehrke, chairman of the Examining Court was the spe- cial guest of the evening. The purpose of the meeting was | of | to demonstrate to the people Key West that Scouting was still alive here. interesting reports about standings of their troops. master Cohen of Troop 59 that his troop was going just fine, although n insignia, badges and mping ‘was still lacking. The report of Troop 52 given by Assistant Scoutmaster Archie Potter said that the troop had more boys to take care of than sufficient leader- | ship. Refreshments served under the direction of Ernest Avila, scout- master, was enjoyed by all. The singing of “The Star Spangled} Banner” and other songs and acts taken from the Boy Scout Circus ‘Was very much enjoyed. SCHOOL PATROL ENJOYS PARTY The Girls and Boys Patrol of the Division Street School held a! beach party yes lay afternoon at South Beach, with a wiener roast, with different forms of en- tertainment indulged in by the! many members in attendance. Mrs. Myrtland Cates, who is director of the Girls organization, | conducted the affa Mr. Cates} is supervisor of the Boys unit, while Stuart B. Wright is the state officer. A very enjoyable was spent by those the party. P.-T. ASSN. COUNCIL | MEETING TOMORROW | afternoon making up! The leaders gave very i the! Scout-! stated | equipment ; ENJOYABLE DANCE AT JACKSON SQUARE USO (Contributed) Nearly a hundred GSO girls at- tended the formal dance held last night at the club on the square. Mrs. Gloriana Bayly and |Mrs. Murray Wiener assisted as senior hostesses. Mrs. Albert Ca- rey served in the check room. During the dance the iocal fire trucks sirened past the club. A smart marine is said to have yell- ed, “Alert at Fort Taylor!” The| soldiers hurriedly left their part- fees and rushed out of the build- je When they returned a few jmoments later the marine jd@ancing with a soldier's girl, triumphant smile on his face. | Moving pictures will be shown jtonight at 8:30 p. m. Return of a | movie. USO FIRST AID CLASS ASSEMBLES | The new First Aid Aid Red Cross Class, sponsored by the USO Club, 1021 Duval street, met yesterday at the Catholic Daughters head- quarters on Windsor Lane, where | a very successful session was con- ducted. The days set apart for the class meetings are Monday, Wednes- day and Friday, beginnihg at 9:30 a.m. Anyone wishing: to join the class should call at the hall on Wednesday morning. Margaret Hauser, i a sufficient number become terected in starting an evening or afternoon class, that arrangements | will be made at once to conduct these additional activities. Any information desired rel- ative to these classes can be ob- tained by ‘phoning Miss Hauser, whose number is 692. SCOUTS READY TO PUT ON CIRCUS The Boy Scouts are ready for the circus performance Friday night at the High School Audi- torium. All the acts have been secured and the peogram has been arranged. The musical pro- gram is now being prepared and j will be announced in a few days. The show will begin at 8:15 p. m. Doors of the auditorium will be opened at 7:45 p.m. The program will take up about 90 minutes. One of the outstand- Plans for the new school vear| will be made at the meeting of the | Monroe County Council of Parent- Teacher Associations to be held} tomorrow afternoon, beginning at} 3 o'clock, at the Harris School. Mrs. Milton Sawyer, council president, requ the members of the three different schools to be in attendance. COSTLY SLAP ALBUQUERQUE, N. M ing a traffic argument with a California motorist, Mrs. Bessie | Pevantlos slapped at the driver of} the other car. The force of the | | —Dur-i ing acts will be the Parade of |the Clowns. lentire program will be published | in The Citizen in a few days. | |FERN CHAPTER TO RESUME MEETINGS | tablished to govern citizens of|ers can’t bank on getting trans-|which they raised 65 ducklings. Fern Chapter No. 21, Order of Eastern Star, will resume _its| meetings for the season on Fri- |day evening, October 9, begin- ning at 8 o’clock. All members are requested to| be present, while visiting mem jbers are invited to attend. STILL ‘THIS MAN'S ARMY’ was | The Pimpernell is the title of the} new women’s | director at the club, states that if | in-} Birthe Se KNIGHTS HAVE TWINS Announcement has been made !a girl, to Mr. and Mrs. Knight at a local hospital. Knights reside on North Beach. Mother and babies are report- ed to be getting along nicely. Peter | | THIS LAD Woup s |TEACHER * | (By Ansotigted Press) SALINA, Kas., Oct. Richard Morgenstern of Salina was surprised when her five- |year-old son, Dickey, | back into the house a short time | after she had taken him to school | |for his second day of kindergar- | ten. She asked an explanation. | “well”, said Dickey, “it was just jthe same today as it was yester- |day and I didn’t see any use in | staying”. ONE A SWING SHIFT? HAGERSTOWN, Md.—Susie, a Hie sow owned by Herbert E. hey, had such a large family Pe didn’t know how to feed |them. Realizing all nineteen of the piglets couldn't eat at one |time. Farmer Athey divided them |into two shifts. Everybody’s jhappy now, apparently. | A FRUITY ORDER MEMPHIS, Tenn.— Tenn. neate the| |surprise of Milo Gartrell, working on railroad waybills, to read that |a carload of peaches was to go to Pearland, Texas, addressed to W. | A. Fig and Company. AGE | | i} | GENEROUS BEES ' ELLSWORTH, Ill—Three tubs | painters between the walls of the | church, ceds used to pay for the paint. Masculine Cake-Maker HATFIELD, Pr.—Five prizes gomery County Fair were won by —of all people—a man, | Hileman. ESTABLISH RECORD WALLA WALLA, Wash.—Mr. and Mrs. Robert Carey believe |their family has set some sort of missioned in the armed services within a week. One became a major in the army engineers, an- jother a captain in the air for In the entire show | and the third an ensign in t there will be fifteen events. The| naval air service. STATE OF FRANKLIN NEW YORK.—From 1784 to | 1788, a state of Franklin was es-| |what is now the state of Ten- | nessee. |to to the United States by North | Carolina, and residents feared the | {national government would not |mal ke provisions for their govern- | ment. | To relieve of the birth of twins, a boy and} LVE. 6.—Mrs. | trudged | of wild honey, found by church} were sold and the pro-| for the best cakes at the Mont-| Donald | a record. Three sons were com-| THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Foundation Lawrence Dennis Celebrated Author and Former Member U.S. Diplomatic Corps. | MR. DENNIS’ STATEMENT: Post- war planning may be domestic or global. Either should be out for the duration. In the American scheme of things and in the American dream, war and peace are not the same. Peace, we hope, will bring America a petter social order. But, if it is to be peace and not per- petual revolution, ie., war, the post- war structure must be planned as well as built in the climate of peace. It must not be planned while war passions are high, war necessities, paramount and war procedures, ram- pant. Global planning should be out for the excellent reason that Amer- icans cannot reasonably expect tc impose on all mankind their world plan. The post-war world should rest | on consent, not dictation, adminis- | tration and policing everywhere by the Anglo-American victors. The un- derlying arrangements must be ne- gotiated, not imposed by world planners and world policemen. To "talk either domestic or global planning during the war, is to im- peril unity. The basis of unity among the several United Nations and within each of them, especially in the United States, is not: what they are for but what they are against. | Let's confine planning to the jarea | of common agreement, namely, the fight against Germany, Italy: and 3 Japan. - MR. CHERNE’S CHALLENGE: The “climate of peace” will be so stormy that unless we plan ahead we run serious risk of drowning in its problems. Do we wait for storms | at sea before arranging for lifeboats? Some peace problems we cannot, agreedly, tackle now. That's no rea- son not to plan for domestic recon- | version of industry, full employ- | x ent, avoidance of depression; for reoccupation and rehabilitation of Axis-occupied lands. The basis of United Nations unity | is what they are for. The Atlantic Charter,‘for instance, proclaims we are not only fighting against fascism but for democracy. Fighting for and planning for a democratic peace are one and the same thing. MR. DENNIS’ SUMMARY: Just us war planning is necessary now to win the war, domestic planning may be necessary after the war to win the peace. But we can’t plan for a future unpredictable situation. Plan- ning now (which is largely guess- | work) must not stir up internal dis- sension. Any planning which faintly suggests that the war emergency is being used to set up a collectivism to be perpetuated in the post-war | period would be social dynamite right now. Americans must not be given reason to fear that the free- dom they believe they are defend- ing at the front door is being spirited away through the back door. IS THAT ANY WAY (By Associated Press) LONDON, Oct. 6.—Lawbreak- portation to police stations when The area had been ceded they are picked up in future as! eggs. | Scotland Yard has ordered “strict economy” in the use of cars. ‘Wane Up, America! Is Post-War Planning | fescue Handicapping the War Effort? American Economic The| | As debated by Leo M. Cherne Executive Roscorenifoutets et ibaa MR. CHERNE’S STATEMENT: We are fighting for a world worth the tragedy and sacrifice of this war. Will we have won this war, what- ever the terms of armistice, if our 13 million returning soldiers cannot find jobs? Will we have won this war if the 75% of all American in~ dustry which will be working full- time for victory, cannot convert to Peace, or find markets for civilian production? Will we have won this war if for lack of study, planning, guts or vision America sinks into economic chaos and depression after hositilities have ceased? Germany completed her plans for the full integration of Czechoslovakia in the “New Order” before the first Nazi heel stepped on Czech soil. We must be equally prepared to restore not only Czech communications and industry but Czech freedom as well. Would you first subject the United Nations troops reoccupying Java to the bubonic plague which perma- nently afflicts that island before you discover the methods of fighting the Javanese ‘tats Which spread the dis- ease? If we allow the problems of the peate toj;surprige pus as did the bombers of the. Japs at Pearl Har- borjour blood, sweat, and tears will have, been sacrificed in vain. MR. DENNIS’ CHALLENGE: Mr. Cherne wants a solution for post- war unemployment for the entire world. So does everyone. The issue is this: Must America solve now on paper the entire world’s post-war un- employment problem, in some inter- nationalist totalitarian way or shall each nation solve its own in its own way, which, incidentally, would be the democratic way? Communist Russia has a solution. It has not been ours, up to now. If we are to plan an unemployment solution for the world, whose doctrines are to gov- ern, Josef Stalin's or Thomas La- mont’s or are they the same? Amer- ica’s planning task is the present war, not a post-war Utopia for the entire world. MR. CHERNE’S SUMMARY: Amer- ica must plan America’s future. Cer- tainly, military victory is today’s problem. But we can win this war in a way that will guarantee an- other war; or we can win in a way that can prevent another war. Choice between these alternatives involves planning now. Rob men of an ideal to fight for— and you destroy the soul of combat. We must plan for the peace or the fascists will. The enemy is not run- ning away from tomorrow. Mr. Dennis asks, “With the victory ours whose plan will govern the armistice, Stalin’s or Lamonts?” How about Thomas Jefferson's, Mr. Dennis? NICE WORK < FOR DUCKS Py!) TREAT A A GUEST?) xincrisuer, {ER, Okla—Mr. and| |Mrs. Wayne Hubbard decided Hast year to raise Pekin ducks and jstarted with two hens from This year the 67 ducks laid 2,500 Of these 885 were set by | the Hubbards. Now their pens jcontain 630 ducks. SUTIN TEL LEAMINGTON COLDS 1° N. E. Ist Street at Biscayne Boulevard M. BONAWAY GIVEN | HEARING IN COURT At 11 o'clock this morning | Michael A. Bonaway was ar- raigned before Justice of the! Peace Enrique Esquinaldo on aj charge of operating a freight- carrying truck without first ob-; taining a permit from the State Railroad Commission. The charge, specifically, is that | Bonaway ran a truck from Miam: to Key, West in bringing product } into this-city. He was held inj} $100 bail, for the Monroe eae Hse 3 Court of Record. MAURICE SHOP OPENS TOMORROW MORNING: The Mauriceonnel Shop will open its j doors to the Key West public to- } morrow, their opening announce- i ment is in today’s Ciitzen and: ‘they are offering an exclusive ] |line of ladies’ wearables, dresses, ! coats, millinery, lingerie and ac; | cessories. her many friends and former! — customers to attend the opening, if only to view the many pretty new things being shown. PIII IIIA IIASA AI SSSASISSAIAISAC STRAND THEATER BARBARA STANWYCK in “BALL OF FIRE” —Cdmifig— “Mexican Spitfire Sees A Ghost” FOIA REE EO \e ig ° e PIII AAAI AA ISA SAIS IASI IA. MONROE THEATER BRENDA JOYCE in ‘RIGHT To The HEART’ and ‘SEALED LIPS’ Coming: “Sullivan's Travels” PEUUCCT tT ttesete te tet eT AALDDADAAAADAABABA KEY WEST BEDDING CO. 515 Front Street Phone 669 The Southernmost Mattress Factory in the United States @ MATTRESSES RENOVATED @ FURNITURE UPHOLSTERED VIVVVV VI V VVC The Favorite In Key West STAR * CUBAN COFFEE on SALE at ALL GROCERS 02£4444444444444444 a TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1942 Get Your Copy of “The War of Confusion” by LESLIE BALOGH BAIN Fill in the coupon below, bring or mail it to The Key West Citizen. Thg Key West Citizen. West. Fla. Please enter my order for copies of Mr. Bain’s THE WAR OF CONFUSION at Two Dollars a copy- © Amount enclosed $— O Please send C.O.D.* Address *There will be a small additional charge for C.O.D. p Mrs. Maurice Weintraub invites | —— REAL ICE ASSURES USERS OF REFRIGERATION CERTAINTY When you place your re- frigeration reliance upon the regularity of OUR ICE DELIVERY service you know that not only is your ice chest to be properly and regularly filled. but you will get guaranteed satisfaction. REAL ICE Is More ECONOMICAL. . .It’s Healthy and Safe. . .It’s Pure WE DELIVER DAILY EVERYWHERE A ‘Phone Call Will Bring Our Representative Thompson Enterprises (ICE DIVISION) INC. Phone No. 8 Key West, Fla. White and Color WASHABLE Opening 95< Special | MRS. MAURICE WEINTRAUB, Manager 614 Duval Street Opening Specials | x. {IPIIOTTATOOOEL TIES fi eee ee. 7 dad os 50 COTTON DRESSES All Styles Opening $175 Special GOWNS & MILLINERY Key West, Fla. FOR WEDNESDAY We Launch A Bright New Season slap detached her diamond-stud-| | Misery of ded wrist w: | to his car. drove off, was taking the with him. WEATHER REPORT The unknown driver not knowing that he! watch westward | h and hurled it in-| eS | LYONS, Kas.—A Lyons man} who has returned from an Army} camp where a WAAC company | is stationed says the first thing |the women were taught was the \art of making beds and how to cook. And the teacher was a} man. Observation taken at 8:30 a. m., E.W.T. (City Office) Temperatures Highest last 24 hours - Lowest last night 85 741 - 80| Z --80 Precipitation Rainfall, 24 hours ending 8:30 a. m., inches Total rainfall since Oct. inches Deficiency inches S Total rainfall since Jan. 1, inches Deficiency inches ee Relative Humidity 74% Tomorrow's Almanac Sunrise 7:22 a. m. Sunset 7:08 p. m. Moonrise 4:42 a. m. Moonset 5:45 p. m. Tomorrow’s Tides (Naval Base) High Tide Low Tide 8:53 a.m. 2:16 a.m. 9:24 p.m 2:57 p.m, FORECAST Key West and Vicinity: Little change in temperature tonight. Florida: Little change in tem- perature, except slightly cooler in extreme north portion tonight. Hatteras, N. C., to Apalachicola, | Fla.: No small craft or storm warnings have been issued, 0.03 1, 0.09 Oct. 1, since since Jan. 1, 3.73 1.031 LEGALS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL | CIRCUIT IN AND FOR MON- ROE COUNTY. STATE OF FLORIDA. !N CHANCERY. Case No. 8-371 | JEAN AUDREY WIGHT, Plaintiff, vs. | | SYDNEY WELLS WIGHT, | Defendant. | ORDER OF PUBLICATION |TO: Sydney Wells Wight, Air 20 Overland Street, Boston, | |, ie : You are hereby required to ap- |divorce, in the above styled cause jon the 10th day of November, A.} D. 1942, otherwise the allegations; \therein will be taken as confessed. This order to be published once | a week for four consecutive weeks| in The Key West Citizen, a new: s-| paper published in Key West, Florida. Done and Ordered this 6th day} of October, A. D. 1942. (SEAL) Ross C Sawyer Clerk of the Circuit Court, Mon- roe County, Florida. By: (Sd.) Kathleen Nottage, Deputy Clerk. THOMAS S. CARO, Solicitor for Plaintiff. oct6-13-20- 27,1942 Corps Training Detachment, |. Try “Rub-My-Tism”—a Wonderful) Liniment |Tommie’s SKATING RINK SUMMER SESSIONS Afternoons: Tues. - Thurs. and Sat., 2:30 - 4:30 Every Evening: 8:00 - 10:30 p.m.| Ladies Invited SKATE for HEALTH’S SAKE Lessons Phone 9116 | STRONG ARM BRAND COFFEE | TRIUMPH COFFEE MILLS AT ALL GROCERS: pear to the Bill of Complaint for} ;: IT MAY BE DEADLY Overlooking Bayfront Park and Biscayne Bay ini a Bus Station: MIAMI, FLOREDA One Block trom Shopping Diisttet’ind Aniuibcionts FREE PARKING LOT ADJOINING HOTEL Alfred Simons. Manager | AANA RN Too WHEN IT’S JOB PRINTING REMEMBER There is no JOB and No SERVICE Too Small THE ARTMAN PRESS The Citizen Building PHONE 51 Large CASUAL Boys’ Styles. Single and Double Breasted, Tweeds, Plaids, All New Shades Sizes up to 44 FFP P FP PPP PPP IPP IIIT TTI TTT IOI II III IIL, the past. \ IOP Oe LL PLL LL LL hhh ddeddedaddadede In Flattering ‘FALL DRESSES $B -95 Smooth, Soft and Pretty Casuals in Crepe and Wool Mixtures. Sizes 9 to 15 Fashion Headliners In New .. . \ FALL MILLINERY CLASSIC UNTRIMMED COATS 14 Maurice’s are well known for their exclusive clothes and accessories. The MAURICE LABEL always means the Finest Quality, Fastidious Work- manship and Right Prices. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN! Complete Line of BEACH WEAR, PLAYSUITS, SHORTS and SLACKS 4A DREAM LINGERIE Dainty VAL LACE Trim- OPENING mings and Teiteneteteens- “=e superb blending of Beauty and Wearability in Tea Rose and White I shall continue to treat you now as I did in MRS. MAURICE WEINTRAUB.