The Key West Citizen Newspaper, March 30, 1945, Page 4

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ee AGE FOUR taal aint aarti etatnniall ANNOUNCEMENT MADE HEREWITH OF ARMY-NAVY WAR CASUALTIES The Navy Department ao- Reunces for the United States as @ whole 333 casualties for March 90, 1945, of the U. S. Naval Forces lavy, Marine Corps and Coast! ee Guard) not heretofore reledsed on wy Department total casualty » consisting of 93 dead, 176 Wounded, and 64 missing. These casualties bring the total report- e@ to next of kin and released for December” 7,|! evcocceose SOUTH BEACH | NEWS NOTES Yesterday one of our leading. citizens and an architect of note was “sunning himself. with a friend. He had his own blanket fand seemed to,enjoy his stay. Richard B. Thompson, .A. M. M. (F) 3c, says that he likes the beach, but right now. he wants a Publication since 1941, to March 30, 1945, to 93 392. This list includes only those from Florida FLORIDA Navy Dead Stanley, Ist Lt, USM reported wound- f naval casualties 1944). Mother, Mrs. Molly Gordon, 1746 SW. 10th St., Miarr Low ncis W., 2d Lt., US MCR. Mother Mrs. Letitia D. Lowry, 323 E. Park Ave., Talla- Hamme Navy Wounded ] Ashton, Lester Jerome, Pfc., USMCR. Father, Mr. Vincent N. Ashton, 512 N. Orange St., New Smyrna Beach. Booker, James H., Parents, Mr Booker 230 ter Garden. Burnett, John Benjamin, Sea- man te, USN. Aunt, Christine Duke Windon, Mulberry. Prior, Robert Lee Jr, 2d Lt, USMCR a. ti and Mrs. Robert L. Prior, , 905 35th St., West Paim el Navy Missing Bassett, Milton Eaford, Avia- tion machinisit mate 2c, USN. Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Walton Bassett, 529 Woodbine St, Jacksonville. | Dead—Pacific Regions Jones, Mell C. Pfc. son of Mell L. Jones, Badge 17819, c/o Wainwright Ship Yard, Panama City Russell, Elmer L., T5_ son of Benjamin H. Russell, 214 Lemon Ave., Sarasota Cpl., USM 7) and Mrs. Stepp A. Florida Ave., Win-} i Army Wounded—Eucopeon Area Abbott, James W., Pvt. hus- band of Mrs. Florence Abbott, 36 N. Hiliside St., Orlando. Austin, Robert C., Pvt. hus- band of Mrs. Gladys C. Austin, Gen. Del, Blountstown. Bell, ¢ \ Jr. Pfe. son of Clive 1, RFD; Campbeliton. Baxter, Marvin D., Sgt. band of Mrs. Nora R. Baxter, 52: Hogan St., Jacksonville. Beaty, Thomas C., Pfc.’ son of Mrs. Addie Dinkins,*912) E. Adams St., Jacksonville. Brown, Grover C., T4, brothet of Herbert D. Brown, Bee Ridge. Brown, Robert E., Pfc., son of Mrs. Mildred E. Thomas, 3659 Waish St., Jacksonville. Brown, Roberts N., Pfc., son of D. Newton Brown, 705 Bay Ave., Clearwater. Bullard James M., Pfc.. hus- band of Mrs. Savell B. Bullard, 820 Osceola Ave., Lake Wales. Cason, Coleman R., Pfc., hus- band of Mrs. Arthie O. Cason, 43 E. 6th St. Jacksonville. Eatmon, George C., Sr., Pfc., husband of Mrs. Neomia L. Eat- mon, corner of Maple and 9th Sts. Ocala. Fernandez, Anibal M., Sgt., son of Mrs. Dolores Fernandez, 3027 Wainut, Tampa Godwin, Julian W., Pfc., son of Mrs. Bertie L. Godwin, Route 1, Box 103, McDavid. Gould, Bruce M.Sgt., husband of Mrs, Billy M. Gould, 1113 Ver- mont St, Lakeland Harris, Lioyd, Pfc., son of Mrs. Wardie Harris, Ocoee Hatcher, Rufus E., Pvt. hus- bend of Mrs. Freddie C. Hatcher, Route 1, Pine St., Marianna. Holland, Thomas F., Pvt., hus- band of Mrs. Theda L. Holland, Route |, Lithia. | Infinger, H. C., Pvt., son of ‘Mrs. Sally M. Infinger, Route 1, Bruce. Kersey, Eugene T., Sgt., son of Mrs. Jennie J. Wooten, Route 1, Box 60, Limona Lovett, Harry S., T-Sgt., hus- band of Mrs. Edna Lovett, Route 1, Box 53, Bushnell. Martin, Olivious C., Jr., Lt. Col., husband of Mrs. Lessie W. Martin, c/o 4. E. Williams, Bonifay Monroe, Ulysses, Cpl., son of Mrs. Srilla Monroe, Route 2, Box 65, Williston Morris, Junior B., Pfc. son of car more than anything else,-and second he wants to bea wolf, but he needs, that car even if it is a | 1935. model. Jim Biando, A. M. M. 2c, has a Ford V-8 and sure has his trou- bles with it; every day he has that hood up, and the other day he wanted to run it on water, but the darn thing would not run and he had to overhaul it, from tank to radiator; but it was worth it, for it kept him in practice, Timmy Carsline, A. M. M. 3q went out the other night looking for fun, and had a good time. He is from Cincinnati, Ohio. tenncth Kennel, A.’M. M.’ 3c, Porter piece and likes a i is i h and. gee his folks, fame chal fe may hi Vat home. eft a Frankie Brunette, S. 2c, is at the beach often, and likes the girls,.and some girls like him, but it seems as if only one has won his attention and is the one who has him in high waters. Miss May Hilliard of the U. S: WAVES, is out often and sure likes to take a dip in the blue waters of the Atlantic, and with her is a constant Romeo. May does not mind; she is in the serv- ice and knows how to handle the boys. She is from up Buffalo way, and is going to Niagara Falls on her honeymoon. Subscribe to ‘The Citizen—25¢ weekly. Mrs. Florence E. Morris, Route 2, Manatee. Nettles, Ernie W., Pfc., ‘husband of Mrs. Lucille B. Nettles, 1405 Hubbard St., Jacksonville. Nobles, Buie, Pfc., brother ‘of hus-| Miss Nell Nobles, Box 1018, Win- ter Haven. Snyder, Wiley Kenneth, Pvt., son of Lester D. Snyder, c/o J. H. Lawson, 312 N. Russell'St:, Tampa. Army Prisoners of War, Germany Lins, Thomas W., Pfc., son of Mrs. Mary Lins, 9551 Harding) Ave., Miami Beach. McCawley, Herbert L., Pvt., son of Frank J. Wedekempet, 1650 Le Jeune Rd., Coral Gables. Shuck, James D., Pfc., nephew of Dan E. Shuck, Drummonds Park, Panama City. Swilley, William B., Pfc., hus- band of Mrs. Arnette Swilley, Route 2, Box 158, Alachua. Se BOOKS 10 AM. to 9 PM. ea ure IF YOU'RE Looking For, See Paut SmitH 334 Simontons?. THIN WITH WATER! COVERS IN ONE COAT! gar, 90Cor. PASTE FORM 1 gal. + 4 gal. water makes 14 gals. paint PIERCE BROS. Fleming and Elizabeth Streets—Phone 270 ndj until . equipment,,and manpower. ceivers _ THE KEY WEST CITIZEN TENTATIVE ALLOCATIONS ON POST WAR MATTERS BY F. C. C. By C. E. SU Six other channels are pro- ‘By Asso Fredo) NEW YORK, March 30. n| Vided ‘in the space from 180 to the face of the Federal eee 216 megacycles. This, it was ex- jications Commission’s report on!plained, gives television the air allocations, those advocates of | same six channels it has had be postwar television .based on, pres-} ‘low 225 megacycles, but does re- vent standards | father than “8: Gc0 the grand total from 18 to switch 6’ higher ‘ frequencies es Sonth jos at faa in the 12 within that range. Each chan-} ynel is six megacycles wide. learly stages. * On the other hands frequency, 7° ultra high frequency as- Modulation didn’t: ‘fare so well. signments, the commision assign- It is to be moyed to higher fre-|€4 480 to 960 megacycles, to be quencies. aa }used solely on an experimental basis, oe i Said it did got believe ‘the pres- war is to be Sven chance ” ent television system, argument- do a peacetime job, railroad radio ed by improvements*-over the mets spe A ne ae pre-war, should be “abandoned service. So does the rural radio A isi ay . and commercial television held ee for isolated aa abeyance until a wide-channel} x ‘ jsystem in the ultra ‘high fre- Tentative Allocations jquencies can be developed and! These, it would seem, are the proven,” with the time required basic high spots in the prelim- for that job “indefinite.” inary report of the FCC just an-| FM Change Drastic nounced as tentatively allocating More drastically affected by radio services in the spectrum the allocations is FM..Transfer| from 25,000 to 30,000,000 kilo- of this service from ‘its present | cycles, or 25 to 3,000 megacycles. 42 to 50 megacycle space to 84 In ‘pointing out that the report to¥ f02° megityéles~ is not. final, with @ finther heaf-'t4oHtve OP iehannels instead off ing set for Feb. 14 for; orak avga+'35," With" 20° fot “eduditidriél uses! |ments or objections the, comm means, pPresents, equipment must | ‘gion stresses that’most. of the pro- be chatlged. The. commission says} posed allocations:eannot»be mad¢ the * éist* on 500,000 existing re} “will not. be consider4/ are available for the necessary able.” ADO (e mechanical shifts. ‘Thus it labels On the other handschanges in| them a “preview of America’s the nine television transmitters| Post-war, radio spectrum.” ‘and 7,000 sets to fit the new fre- It was the television situation quencies, would be minor. that had created the most atten-' In giving a hand to the walkie- tion primarily due to the posi-'talkie, the commission fixed it tion taken by the Columbia at 460 to 470 megacycles. The re-| Broadcasting System which last port lookeg ahead to the day spring | started advocating high when portable two-way sets definition and full color pictures might be used by physicians, on| on higher frequencies, where the trucks and ‘tractors, harbor and required wider bands would be craft and for numerous available before. full public in- ervices. It's possibilities in troduction. The other side, which gjyjlian life are almost limitless, | jincluded the National Broadcast- provided the user would not havé | ing Company, insisted television ,to have a full technical license jwas “ready to go.” to operate one. \'s Compromise Reached The commission did not nam" |~ In settling this question , at any special assignments for the | Tepstefak.cno Ws. theygonamissionadide-reral. telephone, but thought sit make some changes, yet gave could be sabdwiched into the: certain recognition to the’ CBS tejeyision bands. Neither did the | position. It assigned six televi-! commission make any theater | sion channels, between 44 to 84 television assignments, which it; megacycles, moving the lower ,said was still largely in the ex- | side of the band back to its, for-' perimental stages. ; {mer position.and cutting off the; pat upper end. Present assignments, Subscribe to The Citizen—25c range from’ 50, to 108 megacycles. | ‘weekly. river re eee Cantata: ‘The Exalted Christ FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH White and Washington Streets EASTER SUNDAY AT 8:00 P. M. | YOUR NEWSBOY - . - buys his copies of The Citizen at whole- sale, sells them at retail, . - + pays cash for his papers. . » « loses if @ customer fi to pay. . + + goes the limit for his trade, is on the job | rain or shine, serves his customers well. - is embarrassed if a customer is slow pay. - . » asks customers to cooperate by paying him promptly and regularly. THE CITIZEN Circulation Department Plan Your Sunday Dinner and Shop at ARCHER’S Here You Will Be Certain of Getting the ‘BEST the Market Affords Make up your shopping list now—bring it to Archer's, Our really wide selection of food products will surprise you. Plan to tock. your pantry ‘shelves completely. Customers are not obligated to obtain tickets or buy groceries in order to get Our Meats Archer’s Grocery “The Store That Serves You Best” 814 FLEMING ST. PHONES 67 and 47 SEED L's PACK THE BATHING HEACH PROJIRCT | Wwhete it is)e ALLIED FORCES (Continued from Page One) great Frankfurt- Berlin super- highway, sweeping 12 fnilestnoetii| of the river to within three miles of Bad Rauheim. On.their way, the Sixth’s tanks} passed through advancing col- umns of 90th Infantry Division doughboys who had crossed the} Main Wednesday, night in the, wake of the Fourth Armored PE Vision. - Mannheim, second largest port, on the Rhine, capitulated when the mayor told an American commander that the city was! empty of German fighters, the British radio said. : However, front dispatches said; the 44th infantry division was jmopping up the northern part of Mannheim against heavy artil- lery and small arms fire from Friesenheimer Island to the north. The great battle in the north, where Montgomery’s —_ armies were grinding across the West- phalian Plain, was clouded by one of the tightest security black- outs on the Western Front, but correspondents ‘were permitted jto report an overnight advance “RATIONING ‘POODB: : Se a ‘Blue, X5-Z5, A2, B2 through’ March 31; C2-G2 through April 28; H2-M2 gh June 2; N2-S2 ' gh June 30. Red Q5- S5 through March 31; TS5- \$ XS through April 28; YS, © 5, A2-D2 through June 2: E2-J2 through June 30. White at Eliza Street ME BEST QUALITY, Do Your Shopping BACK THE ‘It's Easter Time KY ints Dress- -up Time It’s TIME MEN'S PALM BEACH SUITS BOYS’ PALM BEACH SUITS . SHIRTS BY ARRO For DRESS or SPORT LEWINSKY’ COCCOOCO OS ecoereeoseeeseO SOE TOOOOOOOSEOOe Ration Board Oe) Post Office Building Bermuda Market . JOHN COBO, Proprietor An Up-to-Date Sanitary Market—Complete New Refrigeration - We Have Very Little Meat On Hand But Expect to Receive a Shipment of in time to go on sale Saturday morning. At the BERMUDA MARKET you get the and you SAVE MORE! GROCERIES with your MEAT —_ SELF SERVICE Grocery - Fresh FRUITS and VEGETABLES BATH PALM BEACH $10% Colors: Tan. White, Blue STRAW HATS Sailors and Panamas MED SHOP ——_———————— WAY BACK IN 1633 OM HEATERS USED NEW YORK.—As early as 1633, lige were being cultivated’ oil heaters are placed at regular) close to what is now Afnnapolis| intervals throughout fruit at Royal, Nova Scotia. to diffuse heat when frost threat-! ens., Many crops are saved in this | way. | Persis D. Houston of Nashville, Tenn., noted banker, born Marsh- all County, Tenn., 71 years ago. Subscribe to The Citizen-—25e weekly. of 20 miles and a new surge dur-| .ing the day of@ “40 imiles. | These reports who Id place the ‘British 30 miles beyond their last |reported positions astride the \Borken-Dorsten railroad) and within possibly five miles” of the igreat rail center of Muenster. STRAND THEATER WALLACE BEERY in “Barbary Coast Gent” News - Sports - Serial MONROE THEATER JEAN ARTHUR in “A Lady Takes Chances” News - Shorts - Sports TIMETABLE, ~ SHO! Aimpan, Shop Ae. 3s: good indefinitely. jose 35. Book 4 through June 2. FUEL Old period, 4 and 5; new pe- riod, 1, through 5. GASOLINE 15A through June 21 sar 1 © eecccccccsensceceecce FOOD CENTER, THE ORIENT Upstairs, Duval and Angela Owned and Operate WING Phone 52 CANTON STYLE fi DINNERS nt | Seryed, Daily From g Py m., except Tuesday We Cater to Parties, A + Weddings and Banquets at Lower Prices, Here—You Can Get BUY AN EX BEACH PRO. Your Dres It Awai Gay Colors, \Hats and W STYLE Women’s Apparel and 52€ Duval St. PHONE 146 417 Duval Street TS BACK THE BATE BALTIMORE. — In California,| FRIDAY, MARCH 80, 1945 | i FOOD CENTER DUVAL and ANGELA STREETS We have just received a shipment of some items thet we have been out of. Just take time and look over our steck and see for yourself some of the reasons why so many thrifty folks are switching their food buying to WING LEES You will positively enjoy shopping at WING LEE’S We pride ourselves in being tojis! in courtesy, help- fulness and fine quality. tA WAR BON The Glong of Easter and Spring Fashions | Behold these opulent fashions of a new sem sparkling fash- bright in hue . prophetic in style ant in manner fashions that whisper of spring and sing owt the glories of a blessed beautitul and colorful ster fashions to give you your pla at the head of the Easter Parade to carry thrdurch dito quatmer son vou s for Easter Is Here ts Your Selection! Dresses TAILORED and FUSSY STYLES Pastels, Eyelets, Prints, Crepes, Sheers 9 ro $3Q% Bonnets for Easter @ Accessories @ Wide, Colorful Leather Costume Belts ®@ Blouses @ Beautiful Hand Bags @Lovely Flower Corsages for the Hair STARLING’S @Lingerie CENTER Accessories Exclusively “Opposite the La Cencha Hotel” Key West, Pleride Hane OH AOM PMReOsE — ome |

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