The Key West Citizen Newspaper, May 4, 1945, Page 2

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iS ee sen BaUsias. Senter im Newspaper In Key West and Monroe County YR ET IREE Sw anh Piensa. SRE nlered at Key. West, Florida, as second class matter aneeie or = apeecth eR PRESS © Assuctated clusively ely entities ro 5 Teroucntion of arnt news patches cr ited so f% or not otherwise credited in this paper and sae abe ¢ local nae published here. 8! L NOTICE l reading nott cards~of enki resolutions ¥. = soagest. obituary ees ser | po ag oo will) be for at the rate o! @) jotices for entertainment by churches from “hich a revenue is to be derived are 6 eents a line Citizen, is onan, ers and invites bi of public aud subjects of local al interest but it seit hot publish anonymous IAL. Soon = NATI > Airports—Land. and Sea. — : THE SPIRIT QF THE: ‘LETTER. : > “Not long ago my infantryman son was hospitalized, somewhere in France,” Faith Baldwin tells us. “For six weeks his ‘ mail did not catch up with him. When he , returned to his outfit December 22nd, he wrote that it had taken him a full day to read his mail, and he was so happy to have it that nothing else mattered. * “I write to service men and women all over the world, at least once a week, in. hospitals in India and New Caledonia, on battleships and LSTs. I write to my son every day, if possible, for I have learned that frequency of letters contributes most to the morale. A long, newsy letter once a ~ whogth is notgas satisfactory as the. letter whith aifivés-every mail call:” = Nat ally, writing daily, one soon ex- hawgis, the news, but there are always things to say. A fighting man cannot be too piteh assured that those he loves, love him, 1 “of and pray for him. He is in- tereshétl, im, the. most. trivial thing which med at.home ..... the play you saw, the*birds at the feeding boxes, the friend you*meét on the street, the school marks of his younger brother, his sister’s new beau. He # interested in clippings from his local paper.. He wants to know that you are well and dding your share, that your spirits are | high and your hope un-dimmed. *Spare him the saddening, the worry- ing#things. There is nothing he can do about them, at that distance,’ Letters filled | with woe and foreboding only serve to: heighten his tension and anxiety. He wor- ries enough about you without your adding te i Worry does not make a good soldier. | © ny on as often as you can, if only a Once a day is better than once a twice a day is all. right too. You hawt ‘he time. It doesn’t take very Jong to ay. 41 love you, | am thinking of ‘you. Keg your letters cheerful, and upder- ing: Make each a little link binding is imigtyongly, closely, with home, It’s so little to.do. For it is the boys » hé go from mai} call empty-handed and te aby hearted who are those most likely to cragk up under their deadly strain. Don’t addJjo‘that train; lighten it if you can. “rise, often; write cheerfully; and i at your heart in youy letters. “Memory is the product of andjwork telligenge. medicine applied to the politic, and most of us know how medicine tastes. #Times will be normal again when au- | tomgbilists begin bragging about how many thiles they. made in so many minutes. | SYiesident Truman has proven himself 2 S@isible man and his wife is of the same timbre, for she decided not to hold. any | pr conferences at all during her stay in the W hite House. Wales they are absolutely stupid, the Japanese must know that they have lost the sear and that continuing it, means loss of fen andysubstance, If they quit now: it w rout}: result in immense benefit. and a crea: to their wisdom, but they reese all than lose face, | will do in cleansing Germany and Japan of { time before the peace ofthe world i is again i | would | THE WARLORD SPIRIT Sometimes we may think that millions of lives have been lost and billions in prop- erty destroyed all because of one man— Hitler, but that is not so. + Hitler merely typified the Nazi sys- tem, but behind him was the ruthless power of Prussian junkerdom, which included, at the beginning of this war, many of the junkers that precipitated the First World, War. Hi A man ‘by any ‘other name could have been at the head.of the system, and it would « Bs have been just as ruthless. It is for thas | reason that the Allies are determined, in their efforts to secure the peace of the world, to root out of Germany every ves- tige of Naziism, which was sowed by the junkers and egged on by them to try to at- | tain their goal of world domination without , the least regard for the loss of human lives. | In other words, Naziism is only another | word for the Prussian spirit of conquest. That spirit must be stamped out, or it will rise again under some. other name. It must be stamped out also in Japan, regard- | less of the name. or names.under, which it | parades, for. it is the. system, not the name, | ‘that is of consequence. And if the Allies do. | only one-half of. what they. say now they t | { ' | | their militaristi¢ spirit, it’ will be. a long, )tormto~pieces. 5 > _, Fimally, the collapse of; Germany. is jMecr at hand. With the ‘surrender of. al- | most 1,000,000 % Sat one, time, news.| leomes out of Germany, that. other. Nazi, mies are, arranging to, lay down, their arms. And when that oceuys, the. Allies wil} | turn their full power.on Japan. The outlook for. Japan is even more sinister than the actuality is in Germany, if) we are to believe announcements that are coming out of Tokyo about fighting to the, “bitter,end.” Should the. Japs stick, to, that threat, little will be left to the Japan- ese homeland; all.of. her once-proud cities ‘will be reduced to rubble, and millions of Jap lives will be lost. However, hints too have come out of Japan; hints that thé Japs will cry for peace long before their homeland is laid waste. However that may be, the spirit of the warlord there too will be eradicated. Had the United States not been eter- nally vigilant it might have developed into a country overborded by fascism under the guise of Americanism. We have had. pe- | tiods of mob sadism, lynchings, vigilantism, terror and suppression of civil liberties. We | have had our hooded gangs, black legions, | silver shirts and racial and religious bigots, and we will have organizations of that ilk again, but it is not likely that we will ever have leaders like Mussolini or Hitler. i LEAN MEAT AND FAT | For many years, since the days of Jack | Spratt and his wife, human beings have di- vided themselves into those who prefer lean meat and those who prefer fat. Consequently, an amazing amount of energy has been required to separate the two ty pes.of meat. This will be avoided in the futureswe understand, by an applica- tion of electronics, Tt Seems that an inventor has patented’ a:method to separate ean meat irom |} bye knife which is guided by a photo- | rie cell and automatically follows the | division in color between the mez Hl Now, if some statistician z g 4 : ae » indiv be po: boon to man- | uvera wn, it appraise thi late the time iost ' in eliminatin, ble for us to, kind. ! | | | Zonite, a disinfectant, | which sold, on the Big Board 2 few years ago at 25c a} hary, is now quoted at § a share. Aside | | 6m an inte resting stock market disclos- {4 jer interest in this product is | he Zonite was formulated here n Key West during World War. I. | UNUSUAL STORY It is an re story that comes front Washington, where the death of a woman ; author, at the age of 77, led to the discov- lery of the body of her mother, who had been dead tor 33 yeays, in a mahogany cof- fin, in a back bedroom. { It is diffieult for people of ordinary in- telligence to understand the mental quirks {that move the behavior of ohter human be- ings. Apparently, the daughter was anxi- ous to prevent the seperation of herself and | her mother. So far as we can judge, her ecc2n- i d no other person and if it it ought to suit the rest of us. ' green lawn. "wood were in their autumn glory with ‘the red-and yellow.o sweet-gum, | , the scarlet of dogwood, the navy ' Blue of the ash. There. was-an aisle. that. ran. down the moun- tainside to the blue water of the} pool below. Lambert.’ her father's his voi loss of Bi 2 ary a into gig car back upon the seat. Pr ” DAYS. GONE BY! FROM FILES OF THE OF MAY 4 1935 Joseph Richardson, scribe of the Robert J. Perry Chapter of LeMolay of Key West, said today} mation calling for the suppression| gusta, Ga. Died Jan. 2, 1892. saw Rex Warner col y Fd her. She thought: The cises, his must have wore that look as with ‘Tommy. and She to appreciate Dr. Warner's im- Patience wil interfer- ence of a polio pati It took many Tong hours of per~ ‘suasion to co. wince, him that. th down. at the patients’: po But the Mime came when her efforts. were rewarded. When. she ‘ large Jow sue. bus stop} front ofthe infirmary on hat to the pool, Tommy was the to roll chair up the ramp and| ner "| take. take se Piece He even began to because, she, was not in- Reed in his da: “Tf you get 4 i ac generous offered, “wv make room for you. to. go, too,” te “Thenks, . dai‘in. Bret you'lh ROMMY’ tiad-t = among the ge ion. that e ae Kay was a topic of con-| 3) versation, according to Tommy's F pthe) hey think you are pretty,” peer to. her. “Ange ee you wear swell-lool “Oh, thank you. They’re.kind,} 7 aren't they?” Kay Taghed: Yes, Tommy was much stronger. His ‘food | planned| ship. by. the expert dictiti massage tr supervised sw =|"Faoar w msToRy | MAY & 1945 1765— Country's first medical] school, the Medical School of the University of Rentisylvenia, es- tablished. 1802—Washington, D. C., incor- porated a city; President appoints mayor. . 1871—President Grant's procla- he had been informed that the} of the Ku Klux Klan. Columbia Broadcasting ‘System! will give a coast-to-coast broad-| p99, men, called to training camps. jman, postmaster. general, Wash- cast Sunday night about the Order of DeMolay. 1918+$Second contingent, 233,- 1923 — First. cross country air} flights -won by Lts. Kelly and} Macready of the U. S. Air Service; Mrs. J. G. Pigdela, president of] time under 27 hours. the Women’s Auxiliary of the} local’ Legionnaires, has called a meeting for next Monday after-|,, noon to arrange for the enter- tainment of the president of the | {Legion Auxiliary, who, with her | drews, hacer is due vise arrive. here on| and others killed in Iceland plane |May 8. Tbe annual May Day. festival, of the public school students in} Key West will be held Monday; |afternoon in Bayview Park. 'Yor Mrs. Mary D. Carey, 82, foxm- erly of Key West, died yestérday | ;Woman’s Hospital opens—world's!S. C. Died Dec. 1, 1891. afternoon in Miami. Her body! will be brought to Key West,for} burial George. Mills White, who play- ed the leading role in the “ “Pirates £ Penzange”, has returned. 4 Key “Westjaiid has started) te ganize* | coral Sorte ipa An Associated -Piess = from Tallahassee, eye gr i |Tke Citizen, s that the pros bill to legalize .diving for onge in the waters of Monroe y, was killed today in the lature. egi. The Patriotic Order, Sons of America, and its auxiliary, will hold memorial services tomorrow fternoon, beginning at 3:30 0’- clock, in the Golden Eagle Hall on Petronia street. Miss Dorothy Key, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Key of Coconut Grove, and Edward Cruz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Cruz of Key West, were married ; vesterday afternoon by the Rev.‘ Shuler Peele in the parsonage o! the Fleming Street. Methodist Church. Today The Citizer® says in an editorial paragraph: “Hope continues to go up andjmany experiments on the elec- loss of either wealth or reputa- come down about Prosperity that/ trical. properties of crystals un- tion from these causes. 1pposed to be just around the: Why not take a walk to! r in an effort to see if eves that point?” Prosperity i TOO LATE “I hear Sam is in the hospital. What happened to him tie: “Oh, he came down about 10 minutes after A moved somewhere else,”~ +14 1838—France acts’ for. self-de- fense, 1941 — Roosevelt urges defense plants work 7-day week. 1943—Lt, Gen. Frank M. An- Bishop Adna W. Leonard ‘accident. 1944— American planes bomb] enemy on borders of Siam. MAY 4, 1945 } 1836—The . Ancient Order of! | Hibernians organized in New| ee — The New York City: ‘first hospital run by and for; women exclusively. ‘orist, | 1865—Lt. Gen, Richard Taylor} surrenders the last Confederate army, west of the Mississippi. 1886—Haymarket Riot in Chi- ain full /flded. Ac into; midst ‘ ‘of 184}) lice men, followed ' by" ‘pitched ¢ between’ police’ and‘ anar- | 28 — First practical electri ic Mirclieys, overhead electric street | ear system, starts in Richmond,’ Va. 1917—A squadron of American, destroyers ‘begins’ patrol, duty in,| ' Europe. 1932 — New American, foreign policy announced: the non-recog- nition of new lands made by nations breaking the Kellogg Pact. j 1941—President Roosevelt ded- jicates Woodrow Wilsgn’s , birth- ‘place at Staunton, Va..a National Shrine. 1942—British attack and land on French Madagascar. Social Justice barred from the mails. 1943 Lenningrad heavily, shelled by German. artillery, 1944 — Japs gain ground and jforge abead ,in. China. MANY, EXPERIMENTS New York.—Pierre Curie made ‘der different conditions, and found that certain crystals chang- ed slightly in size when subjected to certain electro-static strains. He also discovered that the crys- tals developed electric charges on their surface when mechanical | pressure was applied. Rev. ington, D. C., Episcopal bishop, j born New York, 53 years ago. sly tages vou. kao was true. 8, her abil free sing eg IN Seen Dr. Angus Dun of Wash-! arc ee ‘ Fa Francisca, € Fa - Rosg C By: (sd) sre of the Circuit ¢ Court, \ renee . Sawyer, Heitor fo ntift. H fo By. (ad) Florence aoe ge Pa felte Dials Fis apr ea { JULIUS F, Solicitor for faial’ $44 *SQREVENTI errata og ainew No. a - pty etait A J he tithe’ best In. Pe xa enlagle mB NEES pinntlty | To! squirmed in his chair. Eo sees =e sr; better will, ic an you do er ne » he. said, surprised, se ip oie Sl oa res ath, “capa a You's ar ne requi Loy to the Bill for t nobitiped filed remarrd you in, theabovge,enti hefore ‘the 19t! Gag. rae ead Sag 1945, otherwise the all ned therein. will be tal rig was busy with his. pa eae he Proauant $a Gayle ns with. De al an and of uit; Court, 4: pet Pedy Kathicon Nottage, fi tage, . Deputy Cle: 2 ESQUINALDO, JR, Q wives or nis, if married, citor for ee Pape imas maye4-141948 co given of Aatnn somal aa aes or sila Cake No. 10-220, OLEYI2-ROSS, Plaintite, IGN, Td. TOBLAS and, ki it who give le the rest of-us aeeeel he had! BL i; | answered, This new. life made Kay forget hone cal Warner nr toga \ elose friar : which was further ceme: by their common interest ‘ommy. other: , To be continued WILLIAM ROSS, EG Defendant. : ORDER OF PUBLICATION cane TO: WILLIAM ROSS, Residence Unknown, TODAY’S + it fs hereby ordered that you are required to appear on the 4th day ___ ANNIVERSARIES. of June, 1945, before the above en- | . dew titled court to the Bi of Complaint —guneres (iled against you in the aboveven- titled cause and. the Key West Citi- MAY.3,. 1945. zen is hereby designated as the newspaptr in.which, this order shall 18i2— Lot i. Merrill, noted je "puplixhed once a Week fof four ‘ Maine governor, senator, secre- coneasallig weetias 7 RC eae tary cf the treasury, born Bel. Serena ct tbe Lehane Den : 2 to as One of the Judges of. thi rade, Me, Dicd Jan. 10, 1883, ourt and the Seat uf 2 is = tn — “ity of ey West, jonroe Coun- Pe samen ate Saringeaee ord, this ard day of, May, quartermaster general, born, Au- (SEAL) Sept Pet ey tae i _ o erly Ross Clerk Circuit “Cour Monroe County, Fiorida, . By (sd) Kathleen posthnes 1843 — William Lyne Wilson, o ek | Deputy, Clerk | Confederate soldier and congress- Bin “9 os ph 3 to al ya8m been a of way sold to! or hh hie en , tx, whore mee! if tiving; aa mn: 7, obpare yoearance embraced in sais ington and Lee president, born in} nit tecans West Virginia. Died Oct. 17, 1900. 1849—Jacob, A. Riis, New "York! | IDA, > FOR MONROE, COUNT! A smear 6 pororHy® MERE journalist, crusader for the poor, eminent citizen, born in Denmark. Died May 26, 1914. 1853—Edgar Ww. (Sd) Howe, the! cE “sage of ‘Potato Hill,” noted’ At-| PON: ALD LOWELL Pendant eediig ie deetar chison, Kans, editor and author, No aie n° pia ate, miaintife, te Ga J oo land, and for injunction, AND ORDERED . *, ta lorida, this April 2 : Clreuit ro You are hereby required, to. a) Ross C Sawyer. A MAY 4, 1945 | pear to the Bill of Complaint for As Clerk of 1796—Horace Mann, famed re-} | Xonke: In the aboye. Sua oe Dewcribed former of schgols, born Franklin,| 4"). 1945, otherwise the auiew| os Rice pigemameg epee eee Mass.. Died, Yellow. Springs, Ohio, | therein wil] be taken ag cons, ft, McCASKILL, | Aug. 2, 1859. f ibileitor for Lime se he smay 5 1818—Edwin De Leon, editor, ‘ pal ithe Confederacy’s diplomatic 14 agent in Europe, born Columbia, | born Treaty, Ind. Died Oct. 3, 1937. New ‘York, ve Order is to be published once k for four consecutive weeks, y West Citizen, &@ newspa a . West, Florida, this 19th day of , at Key” West, Ross C Sawyer 1aow in the Ki 1862—Walt Mason, pogt-hum- y : Clerk Circuit Court, born Columbus, Canada. | Matinee Counts: Flgriaa. Died San Diego, Cal. June 23; By: (sd) Florence E. Saw: 1939. ‘| Deputy Clerk, 1864 — Richard »Hovey, noted }{Si), #LDAN'B. CLEARE, J2, poet, born Normal, tee Died Feb. 24, 1900. 1872—Har ‘old Bell Meee pop- ular novelist;his day, born Roi N. Y. Died La Jolla, Cal, May 1944. licitor for Plaintiff. a el TODAY’S HOROSCOPE ee eee MAY 3,, 1945 The persons born on this day will be anxious of recognition and desirous of affection from tho: to whom they are devoted. Sym- pathetic, anxious to please oth ers, desiring always peace, it is a happy, hopeful nature, rather than a strong. one, although the day carries assurance of more or less success. MAY 4, 1945 Today gives a capable business man_ of woman who will be well serve Sv. sabOrdinates. Is will be necessary te. keep a watchfu! eye, perhaps, ow yourself as well as your associates, te be -sure that nothing underhanded is done that may stir up strife or envy, for there is danger indicated of Subscribe to The Citizen. _ § rms STRONG ARM BRAND COFFEF ¢: TRIUMPH COFFLD MILL - WITHOUT, CORD SET -. Cily Elecérie System "epessnnsece0e0 ie ; contat Hie a eat eae a it: het cole mee ER ee ae ee. OT eR a lg om een Ob SE 2D £2 BRO MARS. Meee ee

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