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mere ae ct A a ot Bee Keet, Plorida, a» second class matter & THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tee Neeeteted Prem in one tet tepubtiontion of all hews di ‘ fet ther ine credit gee Bab liehed the beret ic % ey rr Da vieive BATES Het beeen on anplication, —notincententeet ePRerat wetter 20 ohtine Hetiees, cards of thanks, resolutions @ termes will be bituary mete he # yous flower of Holland's manhood, the tens and hundreds of laborers, have The arted off by thousands to toil as slave come home, broken, not in spirit, but shat- tered in body after their years of sub-sub- sistence servitude in Germany. For the Chermans gave them only enough food so that their stolen slaves could keep on work- ing without dropping dead. re than a million acres of the most fertile soil in the world were inundated by the Nazis. Most of this land now lies under walt water. This soil will not be able to produce for as long, in some cases, as ten years. Holland must have food, medicine and clothing. These are not set down, nec- emarily, in order of importance. But of tep importance is the ne in Holland for assimilated foods and of these 1 item is protein hydrolysato, a These hydrolysates are administered to persons in advanced stages of starvation, people who have lost their the easily the No predigested food. ‘ability te assimilate ordinary food even if © they are able to partake of Hydrolysates are scientifically com- pounded of a variety of ingredients includ- beef and wheat glunten. is dispensed in the form of ne. white powder, Usually it is_adminis- ing milk, yeast, The produc i by mixing with water, fruit juices imilk. In extreme cases the more high- ned hydrolysates are injected intra- venously By the thousands of ‘pounds these very b are being rushed to the Ne'herlar gift of American Relief Holland. But as t as American lab- tow an make them American Relief Helland buys them up and speeds them Teeas, first bringing back a na- ‘ hat was captured but never con- . red . Pr Y remory, it seems cer- those ber t the wity ha d will not be apt nation and the people restored them.to life. WK wants to make progress d t and unselfish local t Vaca would be enjoyable if it the pre-vacation stress and . t rain The Unit tes has more ships than | a, let us hope, no intention of giving then after the war. a hb may be legal for congressmen to themselves an increase of $2,500 in Such a de- from @ condition which has exist- ‘ ~~ many years and one which digs Geop ime the pockets of the taxpayers, should have t submitted to them, just rperations always submit to the stock- ry bat it isn't businesslike. heviede templated increases in remun- er to the officers, for approval or re- t Since the congressmen have voted their increase in salaries, it is not likely they w vote down the $25 weekly for 26 weeks annually asked by President Tru- man for the unemployed after the war. Whither are we drifting? POTENTIAL MIAMI BEACHES No indication of what may be done in the change of the ownership of the capi- tal stock of the Perky interests on the Flor- ida Keys is given in the documents that have been recorded in the county clerk’s office in Key West, but if the new owner intends to develop only a small part of the acreage transferred, it will mean much to the development of Monroe county. f The Citizen believes that the day is not far distant when there will be sizable communities on the upper keys, sttch as | Marathon in the lower chain, and Taver- nier on Key Largo, fs Stephen C. Singleton, who attended the “housewarming” of the Marathon Chamber of Commerce, said that the’ peo- ple at that place are up-and-doing ‘and ever ready to seize any opportunity that will promote the interests of that com- munity. Practically every male adult at Marathon is a member of its Chamber of Commerce. At scores of places on the chain of keys are sites for prospective villages ‘or small cities, and, in the postwar world, a | good many developments are likely to be made. Probably the first of them will be made primarily for the accommodation of. tourists, due to the unexcelled climate and fishing groynds, but industries eventually will b&\established to meet the growing éeonomic cqnditions, : * J. W. Ricketts, one of the vice presi- dents of the Coral Gables Corporation, at the time the late George Merrick was de- veloping that community, said that the Florida Keys are bound to grow, and he pointed out that many of them afford far better terrain for improvement than was the case at Miami Beach when it was a in a virgin state. The time will come when the keys will have a good many “Miami Beaches’ on a smaller scale than the present city of that name. If you take her for a walk, be silent, don’t talk! Military Intelligence: The rocket is probably the cheapest method of delivering explosives upon the enemy. In Newark, O., the city’s councilmen have voted to reduce their salaries from $150 to $1 a year. Their motive was to “get people in the council who were more interested in the welfare of the city than in getting the $150 a year,” a spokesman said. That’s a severe indictment, and probably true. What kind of a city council would Key West have if the yearly stipend to its members were only one dollar? The best, of course! NEW AIR FIELDS ON GUAM Celebrating the recent completion of the second field on Guam, designed exclu- sively for the use of B-29 bombers, which happens to be the fifth of its kind in the Marianas, Lieut. Gen. Barney K. C. Giles, in charge of the Army Air Forces in the | Pacific Ocean area, pays a tribute to the work of five battalions of aviation engin- eers and five battalions of Seabees, who hacked out the base in wildest jungle ter- ritory in three months. Referring to the huge bomb tonnage that is being dropped on Japanese ports and, Japanese plants and cities, the Gen- eral told the construction workers: “These missions were possible only because you wree willing to work long hours in creating the engineering marvels that were beyond the ildest dreams of Jap technicians, These ; strikes would never have been possible | without you and your splendid achieve- ments.” : The field put into operation is known as Northwest field, is built of asphalt, with | an 8,500-foot strip, 160 feet wide. It has parking places for 200 planes. Phe big bombers that leave the Mar- ianas for their mission to Japan are now | | accompanied by Mustang fighters, using } | four runways on Iwo Jima. Everybody re- | | members the hard fight that took place on the island, but its value is apparent. Not | only do Mustang fighters operate from Iwo | to Japan and back, but a number of B-29s have been saved from destruction by the existence of a temporary refuge. 3rigadier General Ernest Moore, head | of operations on Iwo, says that the Mus- tang run to Japan is the longest fighter jrun, about 1,700 miles round trip. Each | plane has to be hand-flown, without rest |or relief for the pilot. Despite this grind, | the Mustangs have rolled up a seore of 422 | | Japanese planes destroyed against about {35 American planes and 27 pilots lost. u Ol) ———_————<e«_«»_«»n«<\nsss | J. Lancelot Lester, son of of Mrs. Hazel Caussman, 1108 E. ee Ae De ae i Josiah Harlan, noted} Mr. and Mrs, J. Lancelot Lester eee ne le ‘dventurer in the Far East) "turned yesterday from Gaines. band of Mrs. Ada M. Hendley,!in the 1820's and 1830’, born ( vi Sere 8 soc On te 42062 Suwanee Ave., Tampa Co., Pa. Died in October 1871.! University of Florida, to spend Uobeson aches rd Lt! 1306 ann AG Rock en-| is summer vacation in Key West. son oes L, Johnson, Box yineer-bridge builder, for “ee| Today The Citizen says in an 353, nh Sprin ‘an A he | editoriz rapraph: Johnson, Roy C., Pvt, son of; field, in, Germany. Died] "ny Wettn Wes pane and ad! T Mis, Anna B. Johnson, 397 Bulla) juiy'22, 1869. | dress on an egg, a Missouri giri oo Large Ward Ave, Lake Wales, | 1g44—Janarius A. Mac 9,| got herself a husband. A varia- and ; fader, Fa i ond A 2 tos" famed war correspondent his day | tion of the old shell gam N of Mrs. Bertha M. Kader, 2559)¢00 cn. s were said an- ERVICE Small ane BNC RANOre Lt, gon |Mudlly in every Bulgarian church} William 'T. Gardiner, soldier, oS Too r fe Ai sb R Renttiley ’ 500 in grateful memory, born Per Y,j;onetime governor of Maine, born e pe Bias Alea oe ee 7 OY So, Ohio. Died June 9, 187%. Newton, Mass., 53 years ago. of Mirs. Lucy A. Kirby, 2756 Oak|t#na senator, who died just be-} St. dackeanilie fore becoming R velt’s at- Sison Et! HL, Pvt, son of\torney-general, born Two River Earl H. Mason, 516 5th Ave., Pal-; Wis. Died March 2, 19 REET i H i i i i ti AG “the hi sth ene Aden ra any aries et ve “any, announced that she would move| He a sort of smile. “So to a. gar ge Agase. She_ob-|Yn: ‘other prone! But Geni tng jected to the furtive manner in|question of forgiveness, Cynthia. insigr whieh had gotten mar-|Nothing has changed so far as|the beeen ashes dite against ried. The next day, when Cynthia] you and I are concerned. It could|she didn’t count ff Fi aael went to the office she was 2 pani never change.” If he expected her ‘Ailegations ‘of Bald at the bills the children had run| face to light at that he was ee up during the summer, especially | disappointed. She merely looked era, = ; troubled. Then he glanced around bytes the room as if he expected to see|her absence. ‘Chapter 9- Macon, Georgia. You are’ hereby re ee, Bil of uired to ap ‘omplasnt ii 2 | g fu i ‘| ? allt 4 ¢ (Cireul jut, someone behind the window| “Where on earth have you © © ‘Clerk of the ‘chi , i z re is—I’t fraid I he demanded after a swift | : jon} i childten had always Been [BINS | Mo get’ the name w ne eae “The office? But i By oa. Florence idn’ i 4 hen allowed to have what they|didn’t quite get’ the name w Pt ea th i can Be guided aright . a Maud told me. I was rather} yéu didn’t have to go dowh there ; 2, IR. wanted but their wants hed been |) owied over, you know.” in all this heat. You could have | JULIUS = woe in a steady line of simple enough, She hadn't time) Cynthia told him with her chin| telephoned.” jun5-12-19-26,1945 | thought. to shop for them, but now the/up. ‘They wouldn’t get far, ignor-| Cynthia opened her mouth and bills were staggering. Then her| ing Carey like this. Belittling him.|closed it again. It wearied her mood softeried, Perhaps Vera was|At the same time she realized/even to remember the thousand just growing up. She thought of|that she hadn’t thought of him]and one details she had looked birthdays, a little hazy for.a mo-}for an hour; as she came into her|after in her swift transit with | IN ANB FOS ment, Vera would be cighteen—| office she had slipped him off with |Miss Lee. ‘is cara seine no, nineteen on her next, in Jan-| her coat and hat. But now she ex-| “Well?” ‘de gave her a lit WILLA G. uary. Nineteen. It was a chilling| plained proudly that her husband | <paye Riointith thought. After nineteen comes| was at the plant in Burbank. “He|™ (, |: en te 2 ve. twenty and a girl is a woman. __ fis an cee she said and gave a ee ae eae ae ©. R. PAYLER, i She wrote checks for every one/the word all she had. Ewart = the wae Nateved her to NOTICE TO "xeeal AR of the extravagant demands. The} «g, you didn’t marry a small] pe “Darling, its wonderful to see R. PAYLER, C. house bills alone were doubled, | pusiness man,” Ned ‘said not te een Sots nats khve thbte as if everyone had gone on almeaning to ‘be sarcastic but jong. seperations.” spending taka ce hares se read sounding like it, “An engineer!|""\Avo won't,” He was unexpect- , sation lie ferioaiaced discreetly. ope ES must seem tame in}egiy emphatic. “You'll beve fe divorce filed against you In the Wwe A® MARY ay Aten “she wanted to say “Don’t be et Ne eS comets oad Re eee ae by age Bh Van bat euch of Fa ea i eae We Ne this,” a it wouldn’t have in all sorts of places when you s of said bill Willi notified and required ar f _| beer wise. With a strong sense of] ought to be here.” Se ne ee look of @ Per-lioss_she knew irrevocably that|’ “She pushed him off with the | 9! stairs and is gazing back at the|"0thing could be as it had been|flat of her hands, looking into his | (Circuit Court chieck Set tyenped bin for her and Ned. Tae old rela-| face to see if she had heard aright. Seal) Cynthin'calied bis name putting | onship was gone and could never) “You're joking, Carey .. .” How ee eae Geni wae weey twie|be revived. ‘There wouldn't bel queer that they had never talked Gort That he was saffering time for it, nor would she have} of this. before. Then she remem- whether from frustrated love or] Wanted it otherwise. The picture|bered that there had been such the natural humiliation of the} °f, herself with Ned and the one| talk but it must have been over a loser. She was ashamed all over| With Carey were too divergent! misunderstanding, seeing it from again for her hard-to-explain si-|2"4 it was with Carey that she) different angles, each thinking fence : belonged and wanted to be, that the other wouldn’t interfere. f Ned brought it up again as he| Now she knew with sure insight : se thi ; res Soria er cais benvie chem was leaving, clumsily saying the| that he had taken her abdication Ald. Pie CLAIMS OF te Sampson, N, YX You are hereby required to ap- Pear to the Bill of Complaint for ni f M A. D. 2 day of May, A. This the 29th day yi ther of yew, s known as Mary Ross C Sawyer known as Clerk of the Circuit Court. | late of Mon By (sa) Kathleen Nottage, D. ©. f JULIUS F. Bi, Faas aintift. fe Soe eay may29;junb-22-19, 1945 Aesth ha oom, ‘FLORIDA. ontain the place of Estate of ‘JONATHAN CATES, Deceased. post office 4 and shall b “"< NoTICE OF PROBATE NE Be cori, STATE. ae demands shall be ant, h i ' rain! Florida, to All Persons told mi wrong thing. “If you ever need] for granted. He hadn't the faint- The Bate of a rice. Weiate of said na The silence was awkward while|me, Cynthia, I'll be there, just] est notion of what it meant. | Decedent: i in the Cynthia imagined Maud as com-|/i : I a ee et ican MAE Sd a agg tina ad cagpiong 7 mentator. There it w: again.| “You're an old dear,” she said | Carey,” she said gravely. “It’s part (Agr saters fursent obeneesin, et ak dina titi ti ae a She should have called Ned at] vaguely. of me. I saved it. Built it up. It’s once—last night—but she hadn’t| She wanted Ned to go so that|my ck ildren’s anheri ae even thought of him. she could telephone to Carey. It}real wealth but something that’ “It was very sudden,” she said|became necessary all at once that|see them through pon ares can meekly. “There wasn’t much time|she should hear his voice to reas-|stand on their own feet. a to think about—other people. I|sure herself that this was reality.|an income and we cop suae ty a ‘ thope you'll forgive me, Ned.” But she hadn't the remotest idea] We do use nearly all of it, 2 tt was what she had said to|of how to locate him in the mael-|couldn’t stop—if I wanted to. Maud only now it was more ba-!strom of an enormous airplane To be continued KEY WEST IN | DAYS GONE BY’. said decedent has been admitted 19 to probate in said Court. You are hereby commanded with- fn six calendar months h date of the first publication of thix ~— notice to appear {n said Court and ft un a show ‘cause, if any you ean, why " the action of said Court in admit. > ting said Will to probate should not stand unrevoked. (Seal) RAYMOND R. LORY, County Jud (sd) JACINTO SOT.ARRR (ad) MYRTLE Se Ae JULIUS F. STONE, IR , Florida.| Attorney for Admir ju cmecur counyT oF THR " IN THE ~ « AND FOR WONt CHANG RATE. Nae Nteaee FLORIDA Sgt. husband of Mrs. Margi ONATHAN CATES, Deceane. ROBERT W. RAUCH Bass, Ennis R., Sgt., son of Mrs.} Pietruszewski, 190 N. Church S To All Creditors and lersons ve pioneer Ruts V. Bass, Tallahassee. | Bartow | FROM FILES OF THE CITIZEN) {2uink Sila'rstae: ™“""* [MARGARET BQO Baynard, Lawrence W., ,Jr.|. Pilcher, Zenas H.,, Jr., Ist Lt.,| OF JUNE 12, 1935 You, and each of you, are he NOTICE TO APPH AH = —— TF s notified and required to’ present claims and demands which you, have against nd of Mrs. Jean E. Pilc! 12th Terrace SE, Ft le: . MARGARET veham & Pfe., son of Lawrence W. Bayn-! ard, Sr., 770 4th Ave, N., St. Pet-/ 6 ersburg. j de Lau either of you, ma: M | nur Edwina Hodges, public will give a series of in- to the sw Champigny, Lloyd, Pvt.,hus-| | Pollard, Raymond V., S-Sét.. structiens to midwives in Mon-| nis Sftice in | against ahve 4 » band of Mrs. Boza C. Champigny,| husband of Mys. Elizabeth C. Pol-| 156 county, it was announced to-| County at K cause, on oF before the ia 2277 NW. 5th Ave., Miami, jJard, 3009 Bay Villa Ave., Tampa.| (2 ‘by FERA. in eth 4 : Coker, Joseph R., FI.O., son of} Poole, Louis E., T-Sgt., son of} notice, Each claim or demand shall .s Harmon L. Coker, Gardner. | Mrs, Stella Poole, 2826 ean Monroe county commissioners| Place of wentlenea inglt State, the ‘ot May, A Corrales, Paul R., Pfe,, son of; *Ve» Fort Myers. | will hold a meeting tonight, and,| address of the claimant, and shall . Mrs. Rose R. Corrales, 1614 12th| Powell, James A., S-Sgt., hus-|as Chairman Carl Bervaldi is on Hears Bech. eel ony wens Clerk of t " Ave. Tampa. |band of Mrs. Margaret K. Powell, an official visit in Tallahassee, claim’ or demand not’ so filed shalt muoutt Monroe . Cowan, William F., S-Sgt., hus-/ 328 Trinity Pl, West Palm Beach.| Norberg Thompson, chairman pro-|e Void. SAreons 5. a band of Ruth M. Cowan, 710 S ie H., F1.O., hus-| tem, will preside. executor of the Last Will i may? ‘ 29th Ave., Miami. Sampson,! of Jonathan LS : o teachers in the public) juny9- A. Pfc. son of, Schools in Monroe county have : : ,,| been given scholarship awards at| IN THE CIRCUYE COURT 0} |the summer school at the A. and) ELEVENTH JUDICIAL © I ILES? 1 this OF THE STATE OF FLO! “ 1M. They} IN AND FOR MONROE COUNTY. SPEE IN CHANCERY. Cox, James / 5, son of Mr Nora E. Cox, Crawfordville, F Cruz, Leo J., Pfe., husband of} yp Mrs. Doris Idell Cruz, 409 E. Oak | Qeaia Ave., Tampa. | , Larg realy, A Dora B. Shealy, Route College in ~Tallahassee. Cunningham, Henry G., S-Sgt.! hand of Mrs : , are Annabelle Hill and Grace Pal- NOE ee ass vans ee cliien teielin. on GE son of Err L. Cunningham, 36) w. 20th Sa jacios, colored. JOHN CUL PHLerer, | Beet Same as Nosed by devers ndjune 9 7 re re Petersburg MP ral 4 vel it imor Cli 3526 17th Ave , St. Petersburg Enead, Albert J., son 0 ( ie ; fees ee alliage dad coin aes a Darville, Leroy L., T-Sgt., son! yars) Ruth Snead, Ingra-! Jose Lucez, generally known as . PoE, H bs users are surprised. Feips mar Jof Edward R. Darville, Riviera| jay . | Bilongo, found dead this! gpee om Foy ot ey eo Beach. I liam M., T-Sgt., son! morning in his room at Eaton! To: Lov Gintment—er Thornton & Min Delgado, Gonzalo L., Pfe., hus-! of an Thomas, 1220/and Whitehead streets. Coroner 15520 17th Street, clone wep hand tes Sonenng with a band of Mrs. Alicia Delgado, 2041! gw. 93rd Cot Se {Frank O. Roberts has summoned] yoy are hereby required to ap- |. Rule the low cost refunded on reqiumele NW. 7th Ave., Miami eae se Pfe., son of/a jury to hold an inquest. heat to the Bill of Guired to sp-| At all good drug stores everyuiere, Dellaccio, Joseph J., Pvt., hus-! ys, Mercedes M, Vann, 21 W.| —— Shove ets eeroaene ——— band of Ms. Vera C. Dellacio, 113) nuval Si. Jacksonville. | Mrs, Arlene Sheppard, 416} or June, A.D. 15 son, Olivia street, received a telegram| * Your Grocer SELLS That GOOD 3 Oakj this morning informing her that STAR *. BRAND v {twins had been born to her son S. Alcaniz St., Pensacola, NEekl) Brea D. dareaandl tt Downing, Buster, Pvt., son of! of Mrs. Rosalie Veal, Ermond W. Downing, Route 2,'¢,_ acksor t Court Lula. (Wells, Benjamin F., 2nd Lt.,,and daughter-in-law, Mr. ad Mrs. Seal) Ross © Sawye! Duke, Janes T., Sgt, son of] pucband af Mrs. Cecelia M. Wells,| Frank Sheppard, in Savannah,] "Clerk of the creut court.| AMERICAN COFFEE Mrs. Idella W. Duke, Box 254/104 San Marco St., St. Aug c.| Ga. rents B's! ——n and CUBAN Venice, Wilds, Harvey J., S- Try A Pound Today! Edel, Ralph R., 2nd Lt., er of Lt. Anne Ede) De: NR., 137 Valencia Ave., bles. Farmer, Paul J., Sgt. son of 1.) Mrs. Pau) D. Farmer, Box 783 Port St. Joe Miss Dorothy Key, who had Ernest E., Pfc., son of Mrs. agers US . | been in Miami visiting her sister i 9 , tte.M. Gill, Route 1, Mun TODAY’S Mrs. Orlean Bennafield, returned Mrs. Thomas L, Kelly, 613 Fran- , was informed over long ance telephone this morning that her mother, Mrs. C. C. Hef- d died in Baltimore, sand of Mrs. Josephine all, Morris, Sgt., husband Dorothy L, Woodall, Gen , Cross yo lin, b Henderson, Curt M., Pyt., s 1 Muns, George W., Pvt. hu Mich. Died WITHOUT POISON \ | { band of Mis. Myrtis Muns, 833,Aug. 13, 1927. | | New, non-palsonous DIL-KU, der kills ' i The Citizen Building PHONE 51 James Olive t, born Owo: 38 novell NW. 75th St., Miami. { Patterson, Fred H., 2nd Lt., bro-| Rt. Re : 7 foaches, ants and other household \ . Malcolm E. Peabody,t 44 harmless to children and peta, uce wale ther of Miss Samantha I. Patter-!Protestant Bpiscopal bishop of roe pe ey son, Box $71, Panama City. u acuse, N. Y., born Danvers,] results, Don’t use old-fashioned dangerous Doisona, Ask for DIL-KIL at drug, bade. Ware, Brovery sLures~30¢ —O0gel Pietruszewski, Joseph G., S- M , 57 years ago,