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~ BMEERSSLASSES PASAT AMT eB Al Ae Te Be 8 ee R“SELSER BS SCRSSPSSPETSPCAL BF SESSVSASCLALSRSCSREAPSSSASASPSSTEE SF SABER SLE GE TWO the Key West Citizen Published Daily, Except Sanday, 3 by i. B. ARTMAN, Owner and iisher JOE ALLEN, Business enaser From The Citizen Building Corner Greene and Ann Streets Culy Daily rere. in Key West and Monroe County stered at Key West, Florida, as second elass matter | eee MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Assceiated Press is exclusively entitled to ee for republication of all news dispatches credited it or not otherwise credited in this paper and <iwe the local news published here. bi da SUBSCRIPTION te Vear ... “x Months ree Months Month . uly ADVERTISING RATES Made known on application. IAL NOTICE cutices, cards of thanks, resolutions Situary notices, poems, etc, will 7 t the rate of 10 cents a line. | for entertainment by churches from } sich & revenue is to be derived are & cents a line. The Citizen is an open forum and invites dis- tuenion of public issues and subjects of local or general interest but it will not publish anonymous Emunications, —$—$—$—$—$—_—$—$$$—$—_———— | SS @IPROVEMENTS FOR KEY WEST ADVOCATED BY THE CITIZEN More Hotels and Apartments. Beach and Bathing Pavilion. Airports—Land and Sea. Consolidation of County and City Governments, } ie bub | edpial gains —and?ate!lABfe fn ‘ite teeord | fgains, the ghost of special privileges will cease to be a} nipnace to a free economy and a free peo- wR The only answer to the problem is | Igpislation. A few years ago the public s not much coucerned—the feeling be- in that labor strife and malpractices pre- e@it@d issues to be solved by management bie. - » Now, however, it is becoming appar- | Smee practices re- | duction, and dinate | pnsumers and Bhe detriment s all workers ’ ingress a; . pon equality and abor would See ee a delegates to a Pre Cynference the management mt’s Labor - Management re efacted into legislation. In the long run, labor’s leaders them- th would recognize this gain. And @gress would gain, too— nothing it ld do would be better calculated to tore the prestige and eminence it has lg@et before the onrush of bureaucracy in tBeent years. = BANKS AND SERVICE. MEN . . = The Philadelphia Agency for Business | ams to Servicemen, Incorporated, is re- | iving some attention as experts seek in- bes lianat trade on a free basi mation about its unusual and et m of granting business loans to ; men and rpige » | Ps AR gy | support. ) ik It seems that thirty-two banks in the | Hadelphia area banded together and | aranteed a reserve fund of $10,000,000 ! finance “every eligible veteran who mts to start his own business.” = Each member bank was apportioned Cehare of the fund according to its size. ‘Brie insures adequate funds for all, pre- wets one bank from carrying the burden the community and eliminates the tecessity of a serviceman visiting any par- pular bank in order to procure a loan. + Up to February Ist, 151 loans had en approved, although some of them ied nat been fully disbursed. The loans @eraged around $4,000.00 to start a new siness, but veterans also buy into estab- hed businesses with average loans of ‘ound $3,000.00. While the number of loans is small, bankers say that it is only the begin- and that many more loans will be when veterans get back from re- sher courses or special courses to !earn iw trades. The agency finances the busi- Hs venture and makes a point to keep in ‘uch wtih the new business men, checking ny a de the progress made and offering continued | aid - ————. | = Your life can be judged only by what | fu do, not by what you say you intend | te do > — ——— = The “experts” are often wrong but | ey never lose their standing as “e ex. | oe ja trip to S } flects the truth. | pointed THAT WELL-KNOWN TEAM Morris V. Werner, head of the com- pliance division of the Civilian Production Administration, declares that “housewives are the worst hoarders in the country.” | He was discussing nylon stockings at the time he made that assertion. He explained that 30,000,000 pairs of, nylon stockings are. ') monthly in this country phos _ the ‘last But; millions of women are without a pair each, while some women, he said he | had been told, have as many as five dozen pairs each, and he heard about another woman who enthusiastically informed her friends that she had 33 pairs of nylons. Werner hastened to say that he did | not mean all housewives showed that atti- tude of “piggishnes that it applied only to a small percentage of American women, though the per- centage was large enough to deprive sev- | eral million women of a pair each of nylon \ stockings. But there should not be any reason for the women who have been unable to T obtain that type of hose to be uneasy. With 360,000,000. pairs, prodticed annually, ac- cording to Werner's, figures, it, will: not-be. long before the thoariers” wil have realized they had made a mistaké int buy: ing so many pairs, presumably obtained in the black market at exceedingly high | prices, as compared with the ceiling set for nylons by the OPA. Women, with five dozen pairs each, undoubtedly will squirm when they see similar types of stockings sold for one-fifth as much as had been paid for black market stockings. All of which shows that that well-known team, Demand and Supply, unbeatable. is Life today is extremely liberaletom- pared to what was permitted even a gen- | eration ago. FOR A PEACEFUL WORLD? Fiorella La Guardia, former Mayor of New York. who-has t returned from uth America, s. that the standards of | of other nations must loser to that of the United Silt ibd ‘GkbaR Galilee DEG served. This declaration, which we believe re- aces Warthing-alongside Americans that 7 standard of 'iving world. It highlights the admitted economic pressures in various countries tend to promote military enter- prises and, that people on a sub- standard scale of living have little to lose in the disorder, suffering and misery which accompany warfare. If the La Guardia declaration has a significance in connection with American foreign policy, it is that thi country must be willing to develop inte This would the proud boz country has in the f. that also, other countries, permit w on produce | S00ds that can be sold at a ae in the United Stat a i ee t meget ne | % - inewith the! tren ec Oh treaties end-other effortaty abolish cartels, quota ‘iftvigations,» trade restrictions and ; currency manipulations throughout the world. There is such a thing as sticking to- gether to avoid being stuck. FOOD WORTH MORE THAN MONEY The shortage of food occupied countries and in feated nations, empha: fundamental importance of agriculture. There was a time when foodstuffs were more valuable than gold and the time May come again. With the development of modern transportation methods, the threat | of famine disappeared for countries which have been able to import in France, in 2s again the | food from other lands. The disorganization of agriculture .in | Europe, caused by the war, has created-a grave shortage in’ foodstuffs, which has be- come serious because of disaster to grow-|ten in the books, according to | death twice, once natural and once ing crops in several areas. When a nation finds itself without fficient food to feed its people, the gov- rnment seems to recognize the importance | of food and to recognize the importance of food and the relative impotency of gold re- serves. Money, it is plain under the circum- stances, is worth little more than it can but and if war, or other contingencies, make it impossible to use gold for food, the possession of wealth will not keep a nation’s population alive. *, Indeed, he declared | ome of the de- | progressive | ena hie! Chapter 21 S" had come to this decision rapidly, but quite delibérate- +°Ne one ‘there would: do me aoa real harm,” thought. “They can’t afford to, ‘bécause they’re hoping to get. U: Ru- fus’s money through me. I've got 4 to go back, and find out, whats = States would eens ve least one pair. happened to ‘Mr. Fennel.” She was perfectly sure that something had happened to Fen- nel, and that Miles was respon- sible for it; she was profoundly alarmed and troubled, yet in her | hecrc there was still that un- sho::able confidence in Fennel. Her chief motive was loyalty. Fennel had come entirely. on her account: any misadventure that befallen him was due to his to help her. And now she ald help him: can 't very well go to, the po- ” she thought. “I haven’t any evidence that anything’s hap- pened. And Aunt Emma_ would know how to make things look all right. She called in that de- tective herself. ... I wish Pd kept that other letter—the one with the money in it. It was a forgery, “of course. Who did it? Miles? Is that what he’s so wretched about?” “If anyone had ever cared for him,” she thought, “had ever takentany trouble over him, he might have been—a decent man.” And that, in.a wa) her re- quiem) for. Miles. S 2 ad Pitled i had done, what oe couk ual now she had finishe wh erent drive to the Eas Hazlewood Station,” she told the chauffeur. “someone there can tell you how to reach a house called ‘The Chalet.’” “Paying for this taxi is going to make an awful hole in my ten dollars,” she thought. “But Mrs. Frick’s turned so amiable.” Dees were going up the hill now, along the woodland road. The sun was gone, the sky was drained of color; here among the trees there was a somber twilight. ‘The Chalet was a house easy to Pget into, but not so easy to leave. “Pll see to that!” she thought, and leaning forward, spoke to the driver. “Please wait. for me she’ said. “And if I don’t come out im half hard hour. please goto the door’ and ask for me.” "He turned round’ to look “at her, | m, and in the gathering dusk: his swarthy face had, she thought, a strange, secret look. “No!” she said to herself “That's ridiculous. . . aloud: “Please — dog’t go ere, without me,” she said. “No mat- ter what anyone Says: . . . Even if someone comes out and pays you and says I'm not.coming. I—I am coming. .. .” She stopped, ashamed and half-frightened by the tremor in her voice, the un- mistakable note of apepal. “You see,” she said “I’'ve—left my bag there. . .. I—they—they’d like me to stay longer--but I can’t... So if you'll please wait. ms “Why don’t yez leave me go and ask for yer bag?” he asked. The kindness in his voice near- ly unnerved her. “Thanks ever so much, but I've —got to—go in.” me wait,” ‘he said. “And if mie won't leave yez come out, ri TI tell some friends of yours?” | tl “Yes!” she cried. “I'll give you an, address.—if yqu have a pensil , He. stopped the cab, halfwa: ‘the hill and not yet in sight of a3 house.’ and on a bit of paper she wrote Mrs. Frick’s address, * “Tf you’ll please let her know. ...” Putting the paper in his packet, he turned away again. “Well . * he. said. “Maybe they got a right to keep your bag, but they got no right to keep you, That’s again the law.” “Oh—” she began, and stopped, Evidently he thought this was an affair of unpaid board; better let him go on thinking that. “Tl wait, aw’ right,” he added. y! As they d she saw late, and turned the the house Spiritual Pood FIRST RESURRECTION AND | ' SECOND DEATH } And I'saw:an dangle:come down! from heaven, Having’ the key of} the bottomless pit and a great! chain: in his hand. And he laid} hold on the dragon; That’ old ser-} pent, which is the Devil, and Sa- H tan, = bound him a rea tomless iia and shut hir up. Py set a seal upon him, that he should deceive the nations n¢ more,-—till - the---thousand- years should be fulfilled: and after that} he must be loosed a little sea son. And I saw thrones, and the |sat upon them, and judgment v {given unto them :and I saw th |souls of them that were beheadex |for the witness of Jesus, and for | |the word of God, and which had, not worshipped the beast, neither his image, neither had received in their hands; and they lived and} reigned with Christ a thousaad | years. But the rest of the dead} od not aagin until the thousand | rs were finished. | THIS IS THE FIRST RESSUZ- } RECTION. Blessed and holy ly | { he that hath part in the first r surrection: on such the second no_power, but they 1 b@ ipriests. of AGod and of rist, and shall reign with him# a thousand years. And when the are expired, Satan shall be loos out of his prison, and shall go ov to deceive the nations which arc in the four quarters of the earth! Gog and Magog, to gather them together to battle: the number of whom is as the sand of the sea. And they went up on the breadth of the earth, and compassed tic camp of the saints about, and t beloved city: and fire came do’ from God out of heaven, and voured them And the devil that had deceived them was cast into the lake of |fire and brimstone, where the beast and the false prophet are, and shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever. | And I saw a great white throne jand him that sat on it, fre | whose face the earth and heaven fled awe found no place for them. ‘saw the dead, thousand years the ; and there was} And I small and great,} ‘stand before God; and the book: }were opened; and another boc | we s opened, which is the book of }$ | life: and the dead were judged out jof those things which were writ-} ; their works. And the sea gave up the dead| | which w in it; and death and | hell delivered up the dead wa: were in them; and they w | judged every man according | their works. And death and heli | cast into the lake of fire. THIS IS THE SECOND DEATH. And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the lake gf fire (Revelation 20:1-15) TWICE BORN, ONCE DEAD Those who have been bon his mark upon their foreheads, or {at Wauke *| the i tysbur i a - { bleak, such a fear swept over her that for a moment she was par- | alyzed. ‘There was nothing really to be pafraid: of; ae cab would be a pioaa gould the Geto acait tell cote ers tre whole thing,” she anh ee w. Miles. acted and about. : Fennel’s tet- ter. I'll tell her that if she doesn’t let me know at once what hap- pened to Mr. Fennel, she neeca’t ‘expect me to help her out with any money ever. I’ve got the up- per hand. I must remember that.” Light was shining from the windows. of the lounge. But all the other dark rooms. . “I have the upper hand!” she said to herself. “Perhaps Pm the only person who. can find out what happened to Mr. Feai:L Perhaps Wey’ ve done something —horrible. . It was very easy to believe that, when she stood again in the shadow of that house. “Uncle Rufus!” she thought, with a shock. “I promised, not to leave him!” She stopped outside the door, appalled. low was it possivle t she had forgotten that? For a moment, despair seized her. Leet she ee dp think nny | mp te sa him ert him. But tw iTtow ea Wve in\that housey Datusosdéti:n ind explain it. There must be some sort of hotel in the village. Yll stay there, and come to see him every day until he’s well enough to leave. I'll beg him to insist upon having a nurse for the nights. P’ll do it all quite openly She glanced back at the cab that stood square and solid in the driveway, its lights shining out clearly. Then she opened the door and entered the lounge. “Ah!” said a bland voice, and Mr. Purvis rose from his chair. “Miss Diana. . . . We've been waiting for you!” (To, be continued) TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS | (Know America) Maj. Gen. Harry C. Ingles, chiet | ignal officer, born Pleasant Hitt, | Nebr., 58 years ago. } Judge Anriette: A: ‘Adams - of | Sacramento; Cali) born Prattsville, | Cal., 69 years ago: H Stewart Edward White of Bur!-| ingame, Cal., noted author, born| lat Grand Rapids, Mich., 73 years | ago. | Harvey D. Gibson ‘of New York, | bank president, Red Cross work fer, born at Conway, N. H., 64; years ago. i Maj.-Gen. George-A. Lynch of rlando, Fle retired, -oneume { ychief of born at Blairs- | town, Iow. Ts ago. George W. Mason, president of! Nash-Kelvinator Co., Detroit, | born in Valley City, Dew! years ago. N. Dr. William Darrach of N2w York, noted surgeon, born Phil- | adelphia, 70 y ago. ' Daniel W. Hoan, ex-mayor of Milwaukee, president of the Great Lakes Harbor Asso., bori ha, Wis., 65 ago. Today’s Anniversaries (Know America) 1743—John G. E. Heckewelder, ! famed Moravian missionary +t) India of Ohio, recorder of Indian life, born in England. Died) at Bethlehem, Pa., Jan. 31, 1823.} 1831 — Clement Studebaker. whose blacksmith shop started in‘ 1852, with brother, Studebaker on a capital of $62.! as Hy & °C.) ayerew into one of world’s largest agon factories. born near Get-} Pa. Died Nov. 27, 1901 1835—Simon Newcomb, _ inter-/ nationally - famed astronomer, born in Nova Scotia. Died duly | Adolph S. Ochs, publisher of the N. Y. born in Cincinnati. Died / 1862—Jane A. Delano, famed! and nurse, Red Cross} Nursing head in the first world! war, born Townsend, N. Y.} Died April 15, 1919. 4 at 15, GENERALLY POOR CLEVELAND.—Pa: re generally poor be are too acid for the of pasture legume: ter pasture grasses. im-| provement requires liming. ‘ e ] wice, once natural and once; piritual, sk taste death only } once, the natural death. ; Those born only once shall tas. || spiritual Those born twice and are living } when Christ comes the on time — shall never experie. death. | Scripture Quotation: “God ser not His Son into the world to con. | Son of God.”—John 3:17-18, RADIO PROGRAM ANNOUNCED, ae ar. ALON Mutual Broadcasting ‘System *- (*Destgnates Network Program)! Tuesday, March: 2th 6 P.M, to Midnight News 1600 Club Weather Report AUN 1600 Club Fulton Lewis, Jr.* Louis Jordan \ Arthur Hale, News* Inside of Sports* Nick Carter* Adventures of Falcon* Gabriel Heatter* Real Life Stories* Forum of the Air* Upton Close* The Better Half* All the News* Dance Orchestra* Dance Orchestra Dance Orchestra News* Dance Orchestra! Wednesday, March 13th 7 A. M. to Noom Sunrise Serenade News Norman Cloutier Weather. Report Sunrise Serenade News Sunrise Serenade Civic Calendar Frazier Hunt, News*. Hometown Frolics | Meditation | Hawaiian Music Tic Toc Time* Fun With Music* Cecil Brown, News* Elsa Maxwell* Take It Easy Time* | Victor Lindlahr* | Noon to 6 P. M. Lyle Van, News* Morton Downey, Songs* Weather Report 10:15 10:30 11:00 11:15 me Fe A ” A fish casa der supper will be ate ‘y West wha ag 2 : Possible litigation | that may -re- sult from tae State Road. De- artment’s straig tening out the secess Pie between No Name Key and Key West was: of the county commission. Clem C. Price, who returned yesterday from Miaimi, said to- day that many yachtmen in that city told him that they would come to Key West the coming weekend, Their craft will be an- chored in, the yacht basin off the navy yard. The ferry Florida Keys was hauled up on Curry’s marine railway yesterday for general re- pairs, Gonzalo Bezanilla, manager of the Palace’ Theatre, been on a’ business visit in Mia- “rétyptied « yesterday. ye ¢ a’Short’ stay in Miami. for, Cdorie’ Leé, président a the’ second anniversary of its organ- ization at a banquet on the night; of March 20. Miss Mary Riley of New York, a sister of Bart Riley, formerly | of Key West, now of Miami, is} visiting Mrs. Arthur Pastorini. Today The Citizen says in an| editorial paragraph: | “An extensive vocabulary en-} ables us to explore our ignor- discussed last night at a meeting who had) Miller left” yester-| Young Men’s Social Crib, said’! today the club wil celebrate the’. plexities. | ation, 172 feet of the river. —_— _—_— ' For State | JAMES A. FRANKLIN For State Senator — “BOB” KING For State Senator | E.R. (Doc) LOWE For Representative, JOHN CARBONELL, JR. FRANK BENTLEY Fr County Commissioner i, (Fourth District) GERALD SAUNDERS SE RAE NNT H. E. CANFIELD, M. D, Eye, Ear. Mose and Throat Also Glasses Fitted ance more convincingly. “The medy of Errors,” by! Shakespeate,, Jwas.t one of his, first plays. iP | Office Hours, 7 t6 9 p.m., and by Appointment, Phone 19, at Dr. Galey’s Office, 4i? Eaton Street FAMOUS FO FINE FLAVO SINCE 186 ENJOY A BOTTLE OF TODAY! DISTRIBUTOR Telephone 2-5824 Siesta Serenade Red Cross Program Lopez, Music* Morton Downey, Songs John J. Anthony* Cedric Foster® Smiletime Queen for a Day* Names én the News Songs for Everyone Roth Orchestra Jazz Jamboree Erskine Johnson* Radio Key Outpost This Is Your Country* Pete Howe* Superman* Captain Midnight* Tom Mix" Who will be Festival Queen? ae eR ROS RE STRONG ARM BRAND COFFEE idemn the world; but that the world through him might be sav | TRIUMPH ed. He that believeth on Him is| COFFEE not condemned: but he that be |liveth not is condemned already, MILL because he hath not believed in AT ALL the name of the only begotten] GROCERS Novatime | IT SHOU It is not too from the Army Just as soon Resumption gers of the NO WONDER] ‘llit's good EHRET’S BEER EHRET’S BEER ROBERT KNOBEL—Wholesalt Beer & Wine 2049 N. Miami Ave,, Miami, Fie. Sorry that you had to wait, but trip to gay Havana and the enchanting sland of I and transport bs Florida” may renew acquainten ship's personnel, most of whom served on the ob it’s R R 6 LON'T BE LONG, BOW! soon to start planning thet long deleyed oo for our steamship “Florida has been recently selesed Transport Service 4s this fine steamsbip can be thoroughly overhauled, refitted and reconditioned to offer the finest in luxurious passenger travel, she will be vetwrned to service between Floride and Cubs of regular sailings will reestablish « wital en the United States n more than 45 years ago. Former passen