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PAGE FOUR -- SOCIETY -- FINE MUSICAL PROGRAM ARRANGED FOR SATURDAY NIGHT AT ST. PAUL’S An entirely different type mu- sical program but one which will appeal to the average listener, will be presented Saturday eve- ning, 8 o'clock, in St. Paul's Episcopal Church by Stanley Plummer, Sp(W)3c, USNR. Most of the selections sched- uled on this program for tran- scriptions and arrangements of well known melodies. Only the opening and closing numbers were written especially for the organ. The Gothic Suite was written for the dedication of the organ in the Cathedral at Notre Dame and gives a musical version of three parts of a sacred service, namely the choral, the prayer, and the elevation, Westminster Chimes is Vierne’s impression of the carillon in tire number is built around the eight tones of the chiming clock. Six variations on this theme are given in this composition: which: is considered by orgahists ab’ one of. the finest ex: i | picture’ set to music. i The program follows: Gothic Suite (Choral, “P¥aver and Tocatta)—Boellman. Schubert's Serenade—Schubert. Choral Prelude—Bach. Lost Chord—Arranged. Erotic—Grieg-Plummer. Meditation from Thais—Mas- senet. Hymn, “O God, Our Help -in Ages Past”—Arranged. Westminster Chimes—Vierne. ARMY AND NAVY. COLLEGE TRAINING EXAMINATIONS WILL BE HELD APRIL 2 Application blanks for the qualifying tests on Friday, April 2 ing Program and the Navy Col- lege Training Program are now available at the principal's office and the library of the Key West High © School, Prof. Horace O’Bryant announced today. Properly filled out, these appli- cations will admit qualified high|- school seniors or recent graduates to the tests. Each applicant may indicate on his blank whether he prefers the Army, or the Navy which includes the Marine Corps and Coast Guard. From those who successfully complete the tests candidates for the Army Specialized Training Program and the Navy College Training Program will be selected to attend colleges under contract to the respective services. Stu- dents selected for the Army Pro- gram must undergo further screening during thirteen weeks of basic military training before they are finally qualified for col- lege attendance. Students chosen for the Navy program, after sel- ecticn by the Office of Naval Of- ficer Procurement, will be detail- ed directly to colleges. Students who attend college under either of the programs will be under mili- tary discipline on active duty in uniform with pay. All expenses, including tuition, food, housing, books and uniforms will be paid for by the Army and Navy. Announcement Of Engagement Mr. nounce daughter, and Mrs. Tony Leto an- the engagement of their Miss Byrdena Leto, ‘\ton, Patsy Bethel, YELVERTONS HAVE SON Announcement has been made of the birth of a son, weighing 10 1-4 pounds, to Lieut. and Mrs. John A. Yelverton on March 21 at a local hospital. The new arrival has been given the name of John Terrence. was formerly Armayor. SPECIAL PROGRAM AT LEY MEMORIAL A service of song and music will be held Sunday evening in the Ley Memorial Church, of which the Rev. Willian E. Bryant is pastor. The Navy Choir has arranged an interesting program which will be given under the direction of Stanley Plummer. ALUMNAE TO MEET Next Tuesday evening the Alumnae of the Convent of Mary Immaculate will hold a meeting in the home of Mrs. Grace Lowe, Elizabeth and Southard streets, | to make arrangements for an alumnae reunion on. Easter Mon- day e' ing, April 26. The reunion will be held in the convent WHY THE JAPS (Continued trom Page One) Japan could throw a modernly- equipped army and navy intp the Pacific that could overrun so much territc in so short a time. Russia did what Germany had done earlier — operated in such secrecy that few ever got out of the country with even a hint of what was going on. But apparent- ly Japan left han*writing all over the walls and the only mystery now is why so few persons were aware of it when dark days came FINE PROGRAM for the Army Specialized Train-/* AT LIONS CLUB “SON AND DAUGHTER” NIGHT) OBSERVED LAST EVENING AT REGULAR MEETING “Son and Daughter” night was observed last evening in the Lions Den at the regular meeting of the Key West Lions Club. Lion Presi- dent Earl E. Hamilton presided. A splendid musical program was presented by program Chairman Allan Hampton, highlighted by several selections.on the accordion by John Mallin, Sea2c, USCG. Other numbers on the program were: Vocal solos by Frank O’Neil and Billy Strieby . “Welcome, Sweet Springtime.” “Daisy Bell.” “Beautiful Dreamer.” Clarinet . ‘solo, “Whispering Hope,” by Oscar Rego. “I Don’t Want To Set The World On Fire.” “Melancholy Baby.” “Florida.” Piano selection, “Bluebeard,” Betty Louise Roberts. Guests of the club at last nght’s meeting were: W. E. Hamilton, Jr., Everett R. Rivas, Jr., Robert Mil- ler, Mary Katherin@ Bryant, Wil- fred Robarts, Oscar Rego, Jr., Billy Strieby, Frank O'Neil, Dr. R. B. Wilson, Mary Margaret Wilson, Betty Adams, Constance Adams, Zolo Marie Camus, Edyth Hamp- Betty Louise Roberts, Patsy Hampton, Mary Ann Matchett, Frank Malin. Lenten Organ Program At St. Paul’s Church On Monday Evening The Young People’s Service League of Saint Paul's Episcopal Church announces that the third in a series of Monday evening organ recitals during Lent will be rendered by Charles Roberts, church organist, at St. Paul’s Church, on Monday _ evening, March 29th, beginning at 8 o’clock. The organ program has been ar- ranged to include many of. the|> favorite, inspired devotional themes of the great.music mas- ters. A’ cordial invitation to a tend is extended to the general) public, CARD OF THANKS We use this means to thank Rev. Samuel Reinke for his con- soling words, friends who were kind during the illness and death of our loved one, James Cormack; appreciation of the flowers and cards sent and the Pritchard Funeral Home for its handling of all the details following the death of Mr. Cormack. We as- sure you it was indeed comfort- \ing to have been the recipients of such thoughtfulness, MRS. JAMES CORMACK and FAMILY. mar26-1tx STRAND THEATER JAMES ELISON it’!*! ARMY SURGEON Coming: “NOW. VOYAGER” MONROE THEATER ROSE HOBART in “GALLANT LADY” and “MOKEY” at Pearl Harbor, Midway, Hong- kong, Bataan and Singapore. Coming: “BALL OF FIRE” |Campen of the ee a a CLASSIFY THE KEY WEST CITIZEN TOO LATE TO By RUSSELL KAY Westminster Abbey and the en-; About a year ago when first restrictions were being placed on} travel and it became evident | that Florida's ““tourist business” | was uf fbr ‘thé bration, I ad- | Gee suggestion in this| columa that Florida had just as| Ment. People were the last thing| maych foxsell as ever in the wa) Ofiexsunshine;* health, pleasure andwecreation, but she'd have to| revamp her’ appéal and go after an entirely‘new type ‘of cus- tomer. About the same time J. T. Van Florida Eas’ Coast Railway coined a nee phrase to fit the situation, which was sO appropriate I called atten- tion to it and urged its statewide adoption in the place of the time- worn talk of a “Florida vacation” | é —That two-word masterpiece was | “ “Civilian Furlough,” I Pointed out that men, like ma- chines, wear out and that the all-! out war effort meant millions of | men and women working at top| speed, in three shifts, Sundays! and holidays included.—They | could stand it® just’ se“iong and | ‘hen they would ie va seek rest and ar 6 pK | | change pice to! Fecuperate ee lest energy and énable them. to,carry.anw ~~ In the mad scramble for mili- tary developments,, Army and Navy bases, camps and posts, most communities failed to recognize! the even greater opportunity} represented by Florida’s ability to} serve as the Nation’s Civilian | Furlough Land. } 2 My thought at the time was that} if Florida would advertise itself in a new light, with a new appeal,| that thousands of factory work-| ers with money in their jeans,! would jump at the idea of a bit of! rest and recreation in the “Land! of Sunshine.” The-idea that any employer | would go so far as to send his} employees here and would estab-; jlish a resort just for that purpose | was too fantastic to imagine. Ij was simply going on the assump- tion that Butch Magillacuddy,) master riveter, and Mamie Wa-| licki, stock-room girl, were people | just like Reginald Mortimer Van-; bilt or the Countess Olga Oggle! de Oister, and that a trip to Flor- ida would appeal to them just as it did to the “carriage trade.” The only thing that had kept them away in the past had been their inability to get here. Now it turns out a couple of fast thinkin’ war plant officials in Cleveland named Bill Jack and! Ralph Heintz take my little train | of thought and run away with it,! while‘ I'm still playin” around ac a side-track. It seems that these two boys | have gone about the business of runnin’ a war production plant| the same way Olsen and Johnson | tackled the problem of creating a} | the show business, Jack & Heintz have done to industry. Instead of workin’ themselves into a froth about machinery, as- sembly lines, red tape, routines, regulations and efficiency ex- pediting, these two dumb clucks} put their heads together and con- centrated on the only real prob- lem in the whole production ques- | tion—people. Yes, sir, just plain, | oo AAA ssssAe Seas seee Archer's Grocery) “The Store That Serves You Best” You Get the BEST the Market Affords 4 8 POISE GOCE RC PEI SCOOT OC PU ODOC OSCE ETS : ef Dressed Poultry - Meats Fruits - Vegetables Dairy Products PHONES 67 and 47 , 814 Fleming Street show. What “Hellzapoppin” did to|» ordinary, every-day run-of-the-| mill Tom, Dick and Harry. They started in backwards, ac-! jcording to all the rules of indus-| try. For .yéars Gn given all th@ir jatt plant, the machinéry, the manage- | they thought about. But Jack & Heintz put a deuce |\ and a two together and figured out that all the plants in the world land all the machinery in ’em nev- | jer produced the first of any kind of product—they were much brick and mortar, steel, until you turned ’em over to people. When people liked their jobs there was no limit to what they could produce; when they’ didn’t, all the “efficiency experts” and ‘time clocks” in the world would not speed production. They figured jobs where they are respected and treated like human beings. They like jobs where conditions and re- lationships are on a human basis. They like jobs where their health and welfare isguarded and where | they a e seturity. The govern- all its fol-de-rol and iddidy- bag flam has yet to give fir: an, or,woman a single ie of thése things.’Organized la- or likewise hasn’t accomplished such énds; claims. . . . Jack & Heintz have! They don‘t “employ” people; they take ’em in as “associates.” The first thing they get is respect, then Santa Claus couldn’t give ’em more. They receive accident, health and life insurance protec- ‘tion, clothing, shoes, hot meals, vitamin pills, countless other ad- | vantages—alll topped off with a 2-weeks “Furlough” in Florida at} company expense. Honeymoon Isle, near Dunedin, was recently purchased and is now used ex-| clusively for vacations of Jack & | Heintz employees. There’s much} more'to the story but it can't be | told in a column or even a book. } It’s the answer to humanity’s prayer, but Orthodox Industrial- ists don’t like it, and Labor Agi- tators don’t like it; Political Dema- gogues don’t like it. Only people like it, but people are fighting for it, and God grant they win. LEE’S FOOD CENTER Duval and Angela Sts. Phone 94 We Close Thursdays at 1'p.m. | wv We Carry BIRDS EYE > FROSTED FOODS te te te te ntl POINT INFORMATION HEADQUARTERS {Bring Your .. . FOOD Ration Books To LEE’S |March 31 is the Deadline on A, B and C BLUE POINTS | You can now use your April Points to complete your (March Points You Can Save ... Food Points| And You Always Get FINEST QUALITY | GROCERIES, FRESH FRUIT and VEGETABLES, POULTRY and MEATS at LEE’S OEE TER. | just so} iron andj that people like| regardless of all its|. BIG PINE KEY NOTES By W. L. STEPHENS Mr. Goodbread, the State Road Department and an ardent fisherman, variety of fish last Saturday afternoon and Sunday. SRD, is going to leave the camp for good for his home in Lake |City, where he is to work for | | | ! | base there. } Lloyd Wright is jon the state: payroll. He | was ies 2 Home at Bay:,Pines, Fla. } MTT: | Rudolf Pabiag takes a load of} men! to Homestead and Miami every Saturday to , see their wives and sweethearts. | | --The writer is a night watch- man for the SRD and likes it. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Worth are to move their trailer up the line. the state for two years, | Mr. Kirkman, the main boss |of the SRD hereabouts, is kept busy from early morning until late in the afternoon checking | up on the work. The new road is coming along nicely. A large. percentage up to the pregent, is} complejed a: the, a) is m ae along nek: iy. ' SWALLOWS 4-INCH HATPIN | 4 oD ara ENS, TE, inch hatpin in her mouth, Ruth Iv- erson, 15, was laughing and talk- gia down her throat and she was taken to a hospital for observation and a special roughage diet. foreman for! caught a! Mr. Hodges, a checker fer the | the, government at the Navy air| a { mewcomer | formerly attendant at the Sol-} Mr. Worth has been working for | < OW CHICAGO. — Holding .a,four-},; ing with her two brothers. It slip-| | | | ' ts i | MWPB. |RADIO SERVICE STORE IN NEW QUARTERS | Al and Joe Radio Service removed to their jcorner of Elizabeth Answers to YOUR WAR QUESTIONS Send Home-Front Queries to Regional OEM Information Office In Care of This Paper have pied by Company. They specialize the Maxwell Furniture in radio repay work. Their announcement Q.—To whom should I apply for , pears in today’s Citizen. government work during school yacationy : A—Go to the Civik Service Commission and the U.S. assed j ment Service. { ap- Guard and eats one meal a day at home. Would he be allowed to use his coffee coupons? ni pes a, soldier eats fourteen a week in the military mess, Have food | he is required to give up his : shall I do| tion book. ‘Qo nr ‘ve been siek stamps left ‘ever. Wha | with them? A.—Tear them up, ma’am; keep them for! souvenirs. Q—Thave an invention that| | ANNOUNCEMENT. an may win the war. Whom can I} write about it? A.—Inventors Council, ment of Commerce, 14th-st.. Wash - ington, D. C. Q.—Will all men over 38 yea old be released from the Army A.—By no means, friend. A fe are needed for their experience | in essential occupations. NEW PHONE Hs Ee | Q.—Is there a iaw against build- E ing these days? A—Yes, mister. You can’t build | or temodel if your job costs mora: than °$200 Without a permit frony| } parse i Q—What becomes of Negroed! jin seryice? I never hear or read | of them. A—There has been so snc printed ‘about the good work} Negroes are doing both here and j abroad that we don’t see how you could miss it. in the Coast | LIVE TENNESSEE POULTR “The Shop of ‘Quanty”| fee BERMUDA MEAT MARKET JOHN COBO, Proprietor Attention !!! WE HAVE PLENTY of MEAT COME and GET YOU SHARE Veal Pork Lamb Also—BACON SMOKED TONGUE, BACON, SAUSAGES, FRANKFURTERS SALT PORK BACON, And Many Other Items to Select From ———OPEN LATE TONIGHT: Q.—My husband i: ' NO PAINT FIRE-PROOF 100 Square Feet . LIND Simonton and Division Streets Ib. 20c Killed, Cleaned, Cut-Up at NO EXTRA Charge! 528 Fleming pt | Is On Display | 1 | LEE PAIGE "$695. sae sie Popular Prices OUR NEW... Are On DISPLAY The new things for Spring You won't be asked to buy. FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES ARE NOT RATIONED BERMUDA MEAT MARKET Cor. White and Eliza Sts. - JOHN COBO. Prop. - Phone 52 ‘We Reserve the Right To Limit Quantities———— “If It's New and Women Wear It, Clara Has It” “Rose Marie Shave “THE NEW, FASHION CENTER” SR PHONE 232 Where a New Shipment of Dresses NATIONALLY ADVERTISED DRESSES IN HALF SIZES by Matrons 16% to 24% HANDKERCHIEF LINEN IMPORTED DIMITIES PASTEL SHADES $995 «+ Junior Sizes 9 to 15 SPRING and EASTER HATS ! word for them is lovely. Won't you come a | B | more they new location, | and Eaton ; Streets, the store formerly occu-| Creomulsion relieves promptly be- cause it goes right to the seat of the | trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, in=- flamed bronchial mucous mem- branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the un- derstanding you must like the way it quickly allays the ag or you are to have your money CREOMU LSIO N | for — Chest vom Bronchitis vow Al and Joe Radio Service HAVE MOVED! NEW LOCATION! conneR ELIZABETH and EATON STREETS NUMBER 1081 “The Fastest Radio Service In Town” Asbestos Siding NECESSARY $1200 A Square Covers a Sauare “Complete Line of BUILDING HARDWARE and PAINT” SLE Y LUMBER COMPANY PHONE 71 Dependable Nationally-Known Men’s Wear That Gives Key West, Fla. HART, FROM Complete Satisfaction —the Quality of which will be remembered Jong after the price has been forgotten. CLOTHES TAILORED BY SHAFFNER and MARX «83250 SHOES Made by FROM in and see them. “CLARA.” ® FROM LEWINSKY’S MEN’S SHOP FLORSHEIM SHIRTS Made by ARROW $950