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ot Citinen . by ed} day from now? an deowbs Fomine £5 tehewn fee . fone i, Will be te af 18 conts ei net an icatbons Pabliod ae ye ‘The ratiroad unions have been given credit for ability in set- : wage controver- =e without destructive =ttien. They have not been with the more radi- elements in labor con- it comes, there - treversies =. whock to see Pres- immed- ry eee by the gov make “ i" with em- road mm rejected ’ of the Broth- erheed of Railroad Train- - of ownership of the ecoun- Prement, as the only way to sultatie adjustments Rerhoods of Rail- and Loeo- i of the Labs ex 4 wai board which wage weetal lack of intelligence by rejecting the recommen- work. Asking for government ownership b @® atmission of inability ehip there would be no place } aehene—when you work you Pow strike —that becomes Seretetion and the Army aver. At the present @hen « anion strikes epee & private company, ermpathy & more apt to be Si then”, you may look for-! NOSES TO GRINDSTONE How far are you looking forward to what you intend! to do when that time comes? | Let us say you are looking | forward only a year. Don’t you think you are presum- ing too much to talk about what you are going to do a! year, a month, a week, or a} Of course, if you add a provisional clause to your: anticipation, such as, “God | willing”, or “If I’m living ward to whatever period you wish about it. You have known of many @ man and many a woman who said what they were going to do in such and such a time, and were bas-} ing their doing on the money y were saving. And they strived and stinted, but long) before the time came they were called to enter on the Great Adventure. These thoughts came to mind when we _ recalled what a fellow workman told us he was planning to do on such and such a date. He would get a job that did! not pay a salary but paid on! @ basis of peicework, and) with the earnings he obtain- | ed in that way and his! monthly stipend under the} Social Security act he would! be able to live comfortably; “though nothing fancy, you understand.” aes His was a worthy feeling; | such a feeling is sensed by | Eenetically every man when | realizes he is going down | the hill of life. Despite that general at-| titude, few realize what) they look forward to, and; almost all of them ‘die in} harness”. That seems to be! the way of life: spurred on) by hope and ambition or a! tendency to work “a little| longer” to be better fixed) for the time of retirement, | and the time of retirement, with few exceptions, turns out to be the grave. The pace of life is too fast in the United States, and the time for retirement to be afforded opportunities to do those things we wish to do is deferred to too late a date in life. Of course, Dr. Osler’s statement that man had done his best work by the time he was 40 years of age was absurd. History shows that the great major- ity of men did their best work after 40, and some of them after 60, but, regard- less of any particular time for retiring, which every man should determine for himself, it is true nonethe-| less that. Americans, as a} rule, keep their “noses to the grindstone” to too late al period in life. Our odd language: Ladies, | Tieccinaates as tet te oo GP OE T is business with our brother Brian de Bois Guilbert?” demanded Beauma- noir. e Isaac sped with terror ani muchiaene: To tell his tale might be interpreted into scandalising the ler; yet, unless he told it, what hope could he have of achieving his daughter's deliver- ance? Beaumanoir saw his mortal apprehension, and condescended to give him some assurance, “Fear nothing,” he said, “for thy wretched person, Jew, so thou dealest uprightly in this matter.” “I am bearer of a letter,” stam- mered out the Jew, “so please your reverend valour, to that good knight, from Prior Aymer of the Abbey of Jorvaulx.” “Said I not these were e times, Cénrade?” said the Master. “A Cistertian Prior sends a letter to a soldier of the Temple, and can find no more fitting messen-/ ger than an unbelieving Jew. Give me the letter.” re He then perused the letter in haste, with an expression of sur- prise and horror; read it over again more slowly; then holdin; it out to Conrade with one hand, and ‘slightly striking it with. the other, exclaimed—“Here is good- ly stuff for one Christian man to write to another, and both me: bers, of religious professions!” Mont-Fitchet took the letter from‘his superior, and was about hi not f who haye not feared to detain our an and put oe ee where! ave also rf escaped ite tet that thou ast fair Jewish sorcerc 3, whose black | then, eyes have bewitched thee. We are heartily rejoiced of t! patchy: nevertheless, we pray to on thy guard in the matter of this second Witch of Endor; for we are privately assured’ that your Great Master comes from Normandy to diminish your with ie amen your mis- loings. refore we pray you heartily to beware, and to be found “ watching even at the Holy Text hath it, Invenientur vigilantes. And the wealthy Jew her father, Isaac of York, having raved of me letters in his be- alf, I gave him-these, earnestly advising, and in a sort entreating, that you do hold the damsel to ransom, seeing he will pay you from his bags as much as may find fifty damsels upon’ safer terms, whereof I trust to have my part when we make merry together, as true brothers, not forgetting the wine-cup. “Till which merry meeting, we wish you farewell. Given from this den of thieves, about the hour of matins, “AyMER Pr. S. M. JoRVOLCIENCIS.” “WAS sayest thou to_ this, Conrade?” said the Grand Master. “Den of thieves! and a fit residence is a den of thieves for such 4 prior. And what mean- eth he, I trow, by this second to peruse it. “Read it aloud, Con- rade” said the Granda Master, “and do thou” (to Isaac) “attend to the purport of it, for we wil! question thee concerning it.” _ Conrade read the letter, which “Aymer, by divine grace, Prior of the Cister- tian house of Saint Mary’s of Jorvaulx, to Sir Brian de Bois- Guilbert, wisheth health, with the bounties of King Bacchus and of my Lady Venus. Touching our present condition, dear Brother, we are a captive in the hands of certain lawless ard godless men, Witch of Endor?” said he to his confidant, something apart. | Conrade was better acquainted (perkaps by practice) with the jargon of gallantry, than was his superior; and he expounded the passage which embarrassed the Grand Master to be a sort of language used by worldly men towards those whom they’ loved par amours. “There is more in it than thou dost guess, Conrade; thy sim- plicity is no match for this deep abyss of wickedness. This Rebec- ca of York was a pupil of that ——— a : en! Key West In rom” ‘iles = Days Gone By g.25, MAY 23, 1936 ae J. Mark Wilcox, candidate for} the Democratic renomination for | representative from this congres-| sional district, and William C.| Hodges (Homestead Bill), candi-| date for governor, are scheduled | to speak here next week. | Funeral services for Mrs. Lor-| raine Schmucker, who died in| Tallahassee, will be held Monday | afternoon in St, Paul’s Episcopal Church, with the Rev. A. B, Dim- mick officiating. Norma Louise Garcia, student in the Key West High School, re-' ceived honorable mention in a nationwide contest in writing an essay on “How My Home Eco- nomics Education Helps at Home.” 4 State Plant Board units will resume Monday the spraying of fruit trees in Key West. Arrangements are being made to build a rifle range in Key West for small caliber rifles. If per- mission can be obtained, the butts and gold. Louis XIV had 413 beds. Some were decorated of pearls, silver ANNOUNCED BY STATION 1 Subject to Change i | Where to Listen— 1600 On Your Dial Mutual Broadcasting System | (*Designates Network Program) . ursday, May 23rd P $3 P. M. to Midnight i News. - | 1600 Club ‘ | Weather Report \ Parade of Sports j 1600 Club Fulton Lewis, Jr.* Diana Shore Arthur Hale, News* Carrington Playhouse* Rogue’s Gallery* Gabriel Heatter* Real Life Stories* Hour of Song* You Make the News* Talk by Ralph Robey* Blue Baron’s Orch.* All the News Jimmy Dorsey’s Orch.* Feeling Is Mutual* Randy Brook’s Orch,* News* Moonlight Serenade 00 capi | Friday. May 24th 7 A.M. to Noon Miriam f whom thou has heard. a shale teat the Jew own it even now.” Then turning to Isaac, | he said aloud, “Th is prisoner wii Bois-Guilbert?” “Ay, reverend valorous. sir,” stammered poor Isaac, “and what- ever ransom a poor man may pay for her deliverance”— “Peace!” said the Grand Master. “This thy daughter hath prac- Hage the art of healing, hath she not?” oa gracious sir,” answered the Jew, with more confidence. “Thy daughter worketh the cures, I doubt not,” thus he went on to address the Jew, “by words and sigils, and periapts, and other cabalistical mysteries.” “Nay, reverend and brave knight,” answered Isaac, “but in chief measure by a balsam of marvellous virtue.” “Where .had she that secret?” said Beaumanoir. “Tt. was delivered to her,” an- swered Isaac, reluctantly, “by Miriam, a sage matron of our tribe.” “Ah, false Jew!” said the Grand laughter, Brian de been heard of throughout every Christian land?” exclaimed the Grand Master, crossing himself, “Her body was burnt at a stake, and her ashes were scattered to the four winds; and so be it with me and mine order, if I do not as much to her pupil, and more also! I will teach her to throw spell and incantation over the soldiers of the blessed Temple. | There, Damian, spurn this from the gate—shoot him dead if he ongose or turn again. With his daughter we will deal as the Christian law and our own high office warrant.” Poor Isaac who had hitherto feared for Rebecca’s honour, was now to tremble for her life. Mean- while, the Grand Master ordered to his presence the Preceptor of Templestowe. (Te be continued) TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS (Know America) Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., chairman of General Motors, born in New Havén, Conn., 71 years ago. Edward H. Foley, Jr., new as- sistant secretary of the treasury, born in Syracuse, N. Y., 41 years ago. Prof. Allison Gaw of the Uni- versity of Southern California, noted teacher of English,’ born in Philadelphia, 69 years ago. Mabel W. Willebrandt of Los Angeles, noted lawyer, onetime assistant U.S., attorney-general born at Woodsdale, Kansas, 574 years ago. John Stuart, board chairman of Quaker Oats, Chicago, born at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 69 years ago, Chester Beach of New York, noted sculptor, born in San Fran- cisco, 65 years ago. Herbert Marshall, famed actor, born in England, 56 years ago. Unlucky Number To Two" MALVERN, Kan.—The _loco- motive on the Santa Fe Express train which was recently derail- ed here, killing the engineer and fireman, bore the number 1313. Usually So JASPER, Mo.—Two local resi- dents, Roy R. Boucher and CJar- ence E. Brown, sadly returned LEGALS “ten abaie corer om ° ae fF MLORIDA, 2x feline Ri UNTY. IN| through ac |Jocal dep: Plaintiff, | t e OF FL ANS MONROE CO! i Vane No, 10-738 JESSE HARLEY, me vs. DIVORCE | RUBY SMITH HARLEY, N S Defendant, BOF PUBLICATION Smith Harley, > 8th Avenue, Apartment N, New York, N. ¥. You ‘are ‘hereby required to ap- ORDE! To: Ruby * 2058 pear to the Bill for Divorce filed) in the above styled! against you cause on or before the 17th day of June, A. D, 1946; otherwise, the allegations contained therein will be taken as confessed, Done and Ordered at Key West, pone this 15th day of May, A. Ross C Sawyer 1946, | (Cireuit Court Seal) Clerk of Cireuit Court. : (sd) Florence B. Sawyer Deputy Clerk: WM. V. ALBURY, d j Attorney: for Plaintiff. mav16-23-30:i2n6,1946 IN THE COUREY JUDGE'S COURT ‘Db FOR DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, IN PROBATE No. 12319 Imre: a GEORGE VICTOR MALONEY, Jr., a minor, Guardianship | 2 NOTICE You are hereby notified that on he 5th day of June, A. D. 1946, at x A.M, WILMA ill present & legal guardian of »] ICTOR MALONEY, Jr. a minor, seeking authorization ‘to’ execute a@ ratification of a certain lease, dated J 7, 1943, covering the follow- ing’ described property: Government of Section 35, in, Township 66 South, Range 29 Kast, containing sixty-one (61) ‘acres, more or less, _to- gether with ail riparian rights, thereunto belonging or appear- taining. ERIE ITG “may23,1946 t {io M. WILMA M. NOTICE OF REDEMPTION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by the Board of Public Instruc- tion of Monroe County, Florida, that in aecordance with the is- suing Resolution, the herein- after described Refunding Bonds, which were drawn by lot from all the Refunding Bonds of the respective series outstanding, are called for redemption on July 1, 1946.. The Refunding Bonds so called for redemption are de- scribed by date, series, number and maturity as follows: + SERIES A Dated January 1, 1937 Maturing January 1, 1967 Bonds Numbers 2, 11, 17, 18, 23, 26, 27, 29, 33, 37, 40, 50, 52, 55, 56, 57, 63, 69, 71, 74 and 75. SERIES AA Dated January 1, 1937 Maturing January 1, 1967 Bonds Numbers 2, 6, 7, 8 and i | SERIES B é Dated January 1, 1937 Maturing January 1, 1967 Bonds Numbers 80, 83, 84, 89, 90, 93, 95, 98, 100, 101, 105, 115, 116, 118, 127, 134, 143, 145, 153, 154, 157, 158, 164, 167, 169, 178, 182, 183, 205, 206, 212, 214, 216, 21% 220, 228, 229, 236, 242, 243, 247, 249, 252, 257 and 259. SERIES BB Dated January 1, 1937 Maturing January 1, 1967 } Bonds Numbers 20, 24, 29 and| 32, { The Refunding Bonds which have been called for redemption shall cease to bear interest as of | July 1, 1946, and shall be pay- able at Guaranty Trust Company | of New York, N. Y. BOARD OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION OF MONROE COUNTY, FLORIDA By: J. CARLYLE ROBERTS, | es eb ba store, fears a cat had been walled up a recent. remodelling grew. vestigation ceased, howeve! when a maintenance man- pened along and oiled the ‘ hinges. The “meows” immediately. Orientals still regard the use of salt at a meal as symbolical of friendship and hospitality. Veto—Colgate’s cream deodorant—is differs ent from any deodorant you've ever used before! Because it contains Daratex, an em clusive new safety ingredient —~ Vew dees wat rot clothes! Veto is safe for any normal skin! Te spreads and rubs in easily, is easter to ase! tt Stays moist in jar. So use Veto regularly, to stopodor, check perspiration—safely! \Ogand larger sizes. Drug and co: Colgate’s VETO Stays Moist In The Jar! Never Gritty or Grainy! ALWAYS THE BEST BUY IN FURNITURE ax MAXWELL’ 3-Pe. Living Room Suites Just A Few Left for Only @eh the workers than with 4 rill be erected { gee oo 7:00 Sunrise Serenad ihe Gmplovers. Gut when| babies and rabies. Mach} 2. tress ermayy yard. ui Newa drom Usting tip to: Grane Lake ics owns an enter-| Word has three vowels and) Benjamin Ketchum, who has 7:20 Sunrise Serenade RHE, See Pu ay oe te eARD M. ALBURY, S. & strike becomes an| thfee consonants, yet ladies /peen spending his vacation with’ 7:30 Norman Cloutier jing netted them one tiny fish wi : , Sitack om all the peopie, for} and babies are pronounced |his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles, 7:45 Weather Report pegeh Rea or Mee, ERE ee The ate then the cwners| With two syllables, while H. Ketchum, will leave tomorrow 750 Sunrise Serenafle || |Seott, showed them two large | oad employers rabies with three. How do for Jacksonville to resume his ats News gc piesa pi rege fishing” aes . ‘ |duties i internal revenue! 8: unrise Serenade | s eee Ht the brotherhoods figure 7 you account for that? I wuteau a i a pe NS 9:00 Roser Hunt, News* ‘small creek on Boucher’s proper- that wader government own- ——__—____— | 3 9:15 Riding the Range jty, not 100 feet from his house. T RMIT 3 Luxurious Pieees evmhip they could atrike DENIES WASTE | Attorney Henry H. Taylor ar- 9:30 Shady Valley Folks* Spring-Filled SEATS and wah Gepunity and refuse {rived yesterday from Miami on a’ 9:55 Civic Calendar Maple-Finished FRAME | rm i> abelle by awards that do} The public has Meditation “Men, Women! Old at heard | short visit to attend to legal mat- | 10:00 10 I DOUBBLE-DOUBBLE Feeamme wded in- | H | eet meet thelr demands.) Many charges that millions ters here. :15 Southland Singers | IS ESPECIALLY I ; thee fever anarchy. Certain-| Of dollars worth of surplus) — 10:30 Married for Life* AO 50 60! Get Pe RECOMMENDED j S-PIECE SOLID Woon 5 . i iy en ae intelligent as the] Property were not properly | Paes The Civsen says in an te Ce Sere \ ? ? . p FOR THE KILL ij 4 LEATMERETTS @Bars i " A es editorial paragraph: 215 sa Maxwe’ P: i 7. 6 of the railroad protected or disposed of and a era some (Ila Take Tt Easy Timer | FeelVearsYounger,FullofVim | pints - Quarts - Gallons | Ty : wubeme cannot contemplate a) 7 y as e jmen are the days they get mar-|11:45 Victor Lindlahr* | Bhownd ammaea we what aitle pepping up wit. if at i fois @ Oe ' boy seh course guilty of waste. |ried and the days they get the — | Sith eeboaescelely Because tow foiron, Yoont | # ntote Resting to the govern-| The charges were not |divorces.” ‘ mo | Noon to @ P.M. Pubzedimpory sien only St Dey cettes uae ae || ALL STORES | pera ent. Uke & cry-baby to his} substantiated by investiga-| ol Lyle wat, News? . | A aeaecge mises, cveryenel me! MATTRESSES FULL Sime $4 a8 other @hee be wants ali; tions conducted by a con-| Cuts Wisdom Tooth At 81 z Mowan TEES: Songs* | Kev" West, at Gardner's Phar tn a: Fancy Ticking » ‘he other litle eave’ candy,| etessional committee. Now,! PORTLAND, Ore. — Hearing 12:35 Mess erneport Asemet ALL COLORS . ” General Dwight D. Eisen-|her 21-year-old great grandson 12:40 hower, who led our con-|°omplain about the pain from a} 1:99 uerin forces in Euro e, | Wisdom tooth he was cutting,| 1:15 q . P Mrs. Louisa Dingman, 81, who : he oat the American way of vioweg Uhings Siesta Serenade Listen to Leibert Lopez Music* From where I sit .. 4y Joe Marsh PLATFORM ROCKERS ©. 4* G@OD SENSE, BUT taney after an inspection tour of ean cull reed Gee wana | ve John J. Anthony* bases in the Pacific, reports (|. Se a 00 Cedric Foster, News* ‘ 5 a } All Metal - Au w We ote by the papers thet) that the work could not be aes, pened her matt anal £8 Sunuletime” es ' Thad Phipps:and (hte. Capacity ,* _ ; i7 + he Steen year-old bride of) done properly because of | dom tooth was just putting in an! 3:00 Novatime = i h den‘Part i be Tipeerold Missourian) the shortage of trained men. | appearance. | 3:15 Glen Miller the Gar en Party WHEAT FINISH - SOLID WOOD - ban tieappoored leaving ba Moreover, he adds, the, | 3:30 Lady Be Beautiful® a : Pee esc saaete D - - bed the guitar that the/ climate in the Pacific _is Pen Lost 6 Years Found | 4:00 Erskine Johnson* Thad Phipps’ wife finally got him ‘And then es Sa > i eroet™ gave her for a wed-| harder on men and material CHICAGO. — Someone in a} 4:13 The Johnson Family* to the Ladies’ Flower Club Lawn ladies there are feds ed =e as 6 ; ding present and deterioriation of stock-| bank notified H. W. Bornhott | 4:30 The Jumping Jacks | Festival and Garden Party. well as those who've c! osen marr . to why the news serv-) piles was hastened by damp- | 4:45 Mutual Melody Hour* ‘At first Thad was mighty un- de and cider, and he mutters: te devote tele he «we & . ness and heat. name had been found in the "15 Supernisip® ; 2 F exe 1 sit sauna vapltte me te the mm c. i bank. i rman making polite conversation wit! ‘rom where I sit, more and more a oe , ian statement of Sngral ise bad lost it~aix years before, "| 930 Captain Midnight* the ladies, nibbling on watercress people are realizing, ike Thad, that ff RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT AND surrt 7 eng 5 J 45 Tom Mix* viches. Until Milly Harztell beer doesn’t belong to any special ae ie @ matter that we fail to ——__ sandwiches. Until Milly Harzt ttn ns enderstand. In our opinion, the #&teen-fear-old bride } mae of 6 Se ei echthited good sense Sati minds find room for hig prefudices The deer ‘ ef eppertunity & marked “Push i hower because it is impori- ant for the people of this | country to have an official rebuttal of some of the eharges made by irrespon- sible columnists and com- mentators seeking a sensa- tion and anxious to say any- thing that might discredit a “brass hat”. that a fountain pen bearing his} A good way to clean an oven} jis to wait until it is Snaeoughiy | | cooled and then put one table-' | spoon of household ammonia ini ja saucer containing one cup of | | soapy water and place it in the} joven. Close the door and leave} | it there overnight. Next morn- | |ing the grease should wipe off ieasily. 5:00 Music of Manhattan ATHLETES FOOT ITCH | NOT HARD TO KILL. | IN ONE HOUR, | If not pleased, your 35c¢ back at} any drug store. TE-OL, a/ STRONG fungicide, contains 90% | alcohol. IT PENETRATES.| Reaches MORE germs to KILL} the itch. | GARDNER'S PHARMACY comfortable in his Sunday best, comes up with a tray of ice-cold | beer in frosty glasses, “I suppose,” says Milly slyly, “you'll think beer’s a sissy drink.” “Sissy drink!” says Thad emphati- cally. “Just because it’s mild and moderate doesn’t make it sissy! Beer’s a man’s drink!” reckon it’s a ladies’ drink, too.” group or occasion—it’s a whole- some American beverage that be- longs wherever folks enjoy good taste and modgration, oe Copyright, 1946, United States Brewers Foundation | STUDENT DESKS ‘ss: = *) @* COMPANY, Furniture 909 Fleming St,