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Oi meen . Cnty Dally Newspaper in Key West aud County Metered at Key West, Florida Ss woond Clase matter or ver al PRESS The Assoc te us twety gatitied to republica- © of ai news tehen ited ” net ey a bape end piso local news twhed bere. SU MRORIPTION RATES > a : by e notices, cards of the Pa of rempect, rt: at) OM ee, poema, ete, will be bereed tor at the rate of 10 cents * Uitheee tor ent tainment by herches from whic be da revenue is i or general publish A pein ste AIL OI THE SERPENT’S HEAD If you entertain a de-| lusion, any day now, that you see a sea serpent, or at! least its head, ou may be! sure that its name is Infla- tion. Go into a store with a| tive-dollar bill and, after you have spent it, look into the bag or basket at what! you got in exchange for the bill, and you not only will see the serpent’s head but) also hear the ominous snorts comjng out of the distended | nostrus. It is an easy matter tofind the men who are spawning the serpent Inflation, All you have to do is to go to Washington and point in any direction, and you may} be sure that somewhere in that direction is a man or men who are helping to cre- ate the serpent. OPA itself is helping in} the production, lt has per-| mitted advances in prices on} 52 commodities m the last jthe bottomless pit and a great {pent, which is: the. Devil, and Sa- {his mark upon their foreheads, FIRST RESURRECTION AND SECOND DEATH And I saw an angel come down from heaven, having the key of chain in his hand. And he laid hold on the dragop, that old ser- tan, and bound him a thousand tomless. pit, and shut him up, and set a seal upon him, that he should deceive’ the nations no more, till the thousand years should be ful- filled: and after that he must be looséd a, little season. And I saw thrones, and they sat upon them, and judgment was, given unto them: and I saw the souls of them that were beheaded for the witness of Jesus, and for the word of God, and which had not worshipped the beast, neither his image, neither had received or in their hands; and: they lived and reigned with Christ a thou- sand years, But the rest of the dead lived years, and cast him into the bet- iur Horosco ; JUNE 18, 1946 i jomacy. e nature is a Jittlé” too sympat and blows andsheérs will hurt exceedingly, thi not much’ show. will be made of it. If there should come a sevér¢. shock to, the. affections, it iscliable to develop a morbid iteridéncy, which should be stren- \uously fought, Todav’s. Auniversaries (Know tional. clergyman, first president of the Univ. of California, which bern at Acton, Mass. Died Jam. . 22,1875. | '1841—Lester F. Ward, soldier, Government geologist, pjoneer- leader in American modern and evolutionary sociology, born at ‘Joliet, I. Died in Washington, D.C., April 18, 1913, ot ed Philadelphia publisher of the Ladies” Home Journal and Satur- day Evening Post, the latter bought in 1897, for one thousand , dollars and with a circulation of | 1802—Henry Durant, ‘Congrega- 3 opéned in 1860 with a class of 9 } 1850—Cyrus H. Kk. Curtis, fam-}parcél and has and the jurers e: regret that they: candidacies. City council, at a meeting last night, authorized the tax collec- tor. to make a statement, when- ever requested, of a single piece bof realty in the case of a tax- payer who owns more than one, all his realty | York, Zionist leader, born in Phil- listed in one statement. That ac- , adelphia, 50 years ago, tion was taken so that he may.| pay on one or alt of his proper- | ties. West As Taken Key j qm | James Montgomery Flagg, the atm famed artist-illustrator, born at} DaysGone errizent | Pelham Manor, N. Y., 69 years an ! r ago. - JUME 18, 1936 John M. Franklin, president of peda: ».) The. grand jury, which had been making an investigation of the 524 absentee ballots cast in the first primary, made its. pre- sentment today. in cireuit court, sed their | not have the power to “throw. out” the ab- }sentee vote and recommended that the. eandidates who profited from that vote withdraw their i TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS, U.S. Lines, war major-general, | rade? assistant chief of transportation,}. 3 What born Cockeyesville, Md., 51 years | France: | ago. ‘ itl Dr. Herman,A. Spoehr of the 4. Why | Carnegie Institution, Stamford | House of is “ |Gniversity, famed plat bidtogist, |“ wtuten sahok |born in Chicago, 61 years ago. win her indege: , Kay Kyser, band leader, Aah "<a ~ at Rocky Mount, N. C., 41 years jthas President unan ago. 4 | Jeannette MacDonald, ’ actress,'}'* a ne jborn in Philadelphia, 39’ years | he f? 7 Prentiss M. Brown, former OPA |sjonable as applied te price administrator, ' dnetime | ergy? 10. What two nations wnership of the Michigan U.S. senator, born at St. iIgnace, Mich., 57 years ago. Philip Barry, playwright, born at Rochester, N. Y., 50° years ‘ago. Rabbi Israel Goldstein of New ———— ee Subscribe to The Citizen To speed up refrigerator de-+ | frosting, turn it to “off” position. f | Empty ice trays, rill with hot } 2,000," born in Portland, Maine. Lockwood Sawyer, 67, died| water, put back in evaporator Died June 7, 1933. not again until the thousand years this morning at 4 o'clock in his | and close refrigerator door. It were finished. THIS IS THE two weeks, probably in an DOES HISTORY REPEAT ITSELF? Seeretary of the Treasury | Fred M. Vinson, in a com-} meneement address, points} out that “history repeats it-| self to the extent that it, does enly because man, | with his limitations, acts; end thks in such a man-| ner that he repeats his mis-| takes.” The observation is ex- tremely timely and should| verve to correct erroneous thinking on the part of peo-! ple who are inclined to ac-| cept half-truths as inevitable truth Mr. Vinson points out that we can control our course ond that if we do not repeat there is no chance whatever of history repeat- ing, or seeming to repeat, itself. This is very much to the point in connection with the attitude that has devel-| oped in this country in con-! nection with problems aris- ing from World War II. There is no doubt, in our opinion,’ that the greatest; menac® to the peace, .pros- perity and welfare of the) United States in the future is the @pparent trend of! public: opinion along lines: that were pursued after; World War L. In that course | lies the inevitable seed of future conflicts, the begin-! ning of a tremendous infla- tion and the certainty of an} inflationary explosion which will produce a depression, unequalled in the past. STATE MEDICINE COSTS MONEY i It is no accident that very | little is said by the propon-| ents of state medicine as to | the eos. of their proposals. Their arguments are confin- ed to humanitarianism be- cause the problem of cost is toe unpleasant to discuss. But! the people have to face the cost of social se- curity and socialized medi- cine, for they must pay the taxes to support them. They should not be sold a bill of goods until they know what it will cost. One competent authority writes, “During the next ten ov fifteen years, the total annual cost of social insur- ance will be somewhere be- sixth of the payroll, or $10 tween one-seventh and one- to $12 billion. It is almost certain that before the costs | are stabilized, they will] equal or exceed those of the British system which are es- timated at 24 per cent of | the wage bill.” The same authority estimated the cost of state medicine alone, such @s proposed in the Wagner-Murray bill, at $7 biltion by 1960. This is something for all Americans to think about. One must be very con- scientious indeed to tell whether he’s tired or just lazy The chemisal compounds of a watermelon are worth no more than 5 cents, yet the fruit sells for $2.50. If that isn’t inflation, what is i | mands for higher wages attempt to smooth the fur of the OPA opposition in congress, As a rule, the senate is the conservative part eration of the OPA exten sion bill the senate has fa- vored the establishment or extension of price ceilings on many commodities. House members, who believe that the OPA is our chief factor in fighting Inflation, have declared tnat, if the senate’s amendments to the exten- sion bill is favored by the house and senate conferees, | it will mean the virtual death of that government} agency. One news commentator Sunday night named the conferees and then asserted that the nation would know whom to blame if free rein were given to Inflation. Your wages or salaries are high, but of what conse- quence will be high wages and salaries if the serpent Inilation snorts and cavorts| throughout the land? It will mean more strikes, more ee anc salaries to meet the higher eost of living. The demands will be granied, and up: go the prices again! Inflation is on the march, and it won't be long before it will be galloping wildly, with more demands for higher wages and salaries and further advances in the cost of : will never be on a par with the cost, and, in triyng to get on a par, Inflation will in- crease its dimensions until the economy of the nation is ruined. Yes, that serpent’s head you see in your basket of purchases with that dollar bill is Inflation. The balanced, rational life includes a portion of play and pleasure. It takes less energy and less brains to, step. on the gas than to use the brakes. There are any number of national weeks but the fa- vorite week, seldom over- looked, is vacation week. 20. CENTS Here’s how inflation of congress, but in the consid- living. The wages! five-| |FIRST RESURRECTION. Blessed | jand holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection: on such the second death hath no power, but lthey shall be priests of God and jof Christ, and shall reign with| him a thousand years. And when the thousand years are expired, Satan shall be loosed ! out of his prison, and shall go out! to deceive the nations which are 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 the | jcamp of the saints about, and the | | beloved city: and fire came down | from God out of heaven and, de-| |voured them. And the devil that deceived} {them was cast into the lake of \fire and brimstone, where the !beast and the false prophet are, | { i} jand shall be tormented day and night for ever and ever. | And I saw a great white throne, and him that gat on it, from {whose face the earth and the heaven fled away; and there was | found no place for them, And I w the dead, small and great, stand before God; and the books were opened: and another book was opened, which is the book ‘of life: and the dead were judged out of those things which were | written in the books, according to their works. | And the sea gave up the dead ‘which were in it; and death and| ‘hell delivered up the dead which jwere in them: and they were |judged every man according to| their works. And death and hell} lwere cast into the lake of fire. i THIS IS THE SECOND DEATH. {And whosoever was not found! ,,, |written in the book of life was | cast into the lake of fire—Twen- | tieth Chapter of the Book of ‘Revelation. | | ! Scripture Quotation: “The world| passeth away, and the lust there- | of: but he that doeth the will of; {God abideth for ever.”—I John} } 2:17 | TODAY IN HISTORY (Know America) 1798—First of the historic Alien ‘and Sedition laws, a naturaliza- tion act, enacted by Congress. econd war with England | san B, Anthony, who} sted at Rochester, | N. Y., for illegal .voting to test woman suffrage, fined $100 for so} doing—a fine she never paid. ; 1873— had been a 1916—-Pres. Wilson calls out ‘the militia for service on the ‘Mexican border. | 1926—The International Eu- \charistic Congress opens in Chi-}! PY decease |cago. ¢ punty, to the 26. ~ rc onroe Count 1936—U. S. “Supreme Court} F Re ne a finds against the Guffey Coalj f said County at Ke within eight calend: Control Act. 1941—Great project water from almost 400 miles away bringing | pore \to Los Angel mpleted. Aap eee eee “lion. |to Los Angeles completed. Pein ee psec | 1942—Rommel takes Tobruk | . 2 and some 25,000 British. | the war would have been! j943-The War Labor Board is worth $200,000,000, in circulation with a purchas- leing power of twenty cents. The news dispatch s: that the government is pre- paring a one hundred bil- lion-pengo note. This, pre- sumably, will be worth about $2.00, but the chances are that by the time it is) printed and in circulation, it will have a much smaller purchasing power. The people of the United States, who have saved bil- lions of dollars during the war years and have other billions in permanent invest- ments, will be interested in keeping the dollar on sound basis. However the job is accomplished, it will require some method of price control to retain the) purchasing power of money in cireulation, ay ers’ raise plea. 1944—In Normandy, Americans | jcut off Cherbourg. U.S. and Jap; fleets meet in battle in the Pa-} cific. | ; 1945—Lieut. Gen. Simon B,} Buckner, Jr., 58, killed by Jap | jfire on Okinawa. | Well-Planned | | Smith, on the way to the city, |found a slip. of paper just outside} the gate of his house. It was a}. detailed plan of his private of-} fice. The exact position of the} stairs was shown. Notes showed which doors swung in and which | swung out. Even the windows | were set down. Smith, alarmed, | rushed back into the house. t “Someone must be going to raid | my office,” he told his family. “Oh, it isn’t that!” cried his! daughter, glancing at the sketch. | “Those notes are in John’s hand- writing. He’s coming to your of- fice today to ask you to let him marry me.” \To Whom It May Concern: }o’clock in the forenoon, or as soon jdicial Circuit of Florida, in and | SoHicitor for Plaintiff. turns down United Mine Work-| © | LINTON ‘J. FI { 1857-—-Henry Clay Folger, Stan- dard Oil head, donor of the great )Shakespearian Library, Washing- ton, born in New Yerk. Diedf June 14, 1930. 1869—Carolyn Wells, popular} novelist-author, born at Rahway, | N. J. Died March 26, 1942, Passing Conversation He: “Why is it that a girl can never catch a ball like a man?” She: “The man’s so much easier to catch. LEGALS NOTICE OF INTENTION TO APPLY FOR A FREE DEALER LICENSE b You and each of you will please take notice that I will on the 19th day of June, A.D. 1946, at 10 thereafter as the matter can be heard, apply to the Hon. Aquilino Lopez, one of the Jutges of the Circuit Court of the Eleventh Ju- for Monroe County, in chambers, for licensé to manage and take charge, of, and control my prop- erty, and to become free dealer in every ‘respect. Dated at Key West, Florida, this 4th day. of June, A.D, 1946, MANUELA A. PLOWMAN. jun4-1]-18,1946 EB CIRCULE COVRE rae SVENTH JUDICIAL. Cae THR STAR OF FLOR IN AND FOR MONROE COUNEY, 0~" N IN CHANCERY, Case No. 10-764 EDITH MAE PARENT JOYCE, Plaintiff, vee DIVORCE CLAYBON RUSSELL JOYCE, Defendant. ORDER OF PUBLICATION Clayton Russell Joyce, pper Church Street, Springtield, asetts. re: hereby required to ap- the Bill of Complaint for ree in the above styled cause on or before the 12th day of July, D. 1946, otherwise the allega-}, therein will be taken as con- his order is to be published once a week for four consecutive A. D, 1946, 5 Ross flerk of the Cire Monroe County. By: Florence une, AL aw Deputy Clerk. (sd) Allan B, Cleare, Jr., junll-1 jul2,1946 NOTICE TO CREDITORS (1933 Probate Act, Sees. 119, 120) IN THE COURT OF 1 SOUNTY JUDGE, MONROE COUNTY, FLA. IN PROBATH, ‘ in re: Estate of LACEY PINDER, |! e Deceased. To All Creditors and Persons Hav-; ng Claims or Remands Against{ astate: You and each of you are hereby notifted and required sent any you, ot inst the months from the time of the of publicat this notice. hall be i > the place of re! nd pe office add of the claimant, and shall be sworn to by the claimant, his his attorney, and demand not s "LOREDA LN COUNTY. ELWOOD H. DUD z h Avenue, F Pennsylvania. You a by juired to ap- Dear V of Complaint for | divorce in the above style on or before the 1946: otherwis therein will be cause of July, allega- aken as con- is to be published Done nd Ordered this 10th day of June, D. 1946. (SEAL) Ross C sawyer ch of the Circuit Court, Monroe County, 3 By J. ¥. PORTER, Sollcitér for Plaintitt. junil-19-25, jul2,1946 Fiori: Florence E. Sawy. Deputy Clerk. © Ke %: 7 ay ie: 8: 9: 9: 9: 9:55 AUIS R PR RWW WN NYE EE home at morrow afternoon in the Flem- | ing Street Methodist church. —_—— 4 t Miss Edna H. Smith, teacher in the Key West High School, | has gone to Atlantic City for the summer. Mrs. Josephine visiting relatives in Tampa, re- turned this morning on the steamship Fiorida. J..B. Symonnette, local in- surance.man, and family, will leave tomorrow for Miami for a fortnight’s vacation. Mrs. Ralph B. Spalding and gon, Ralph, Jr., are visiting Mrs. Spalding’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Brown, 801 Waddell ave- nue. Today The Citizen says in an editorial paragraph: “The chief. troublg with golf is that those who do not know the game have to listen to those who play it.” RADIO. PROGRAM <n aee, B 2. KWF Where to Listen— 3600 On Your Dial Mutual Broadcasting System 1600 Club Fulton Lewis, Jr.* Parade of Sports Arthur Hale, News* Inside. of Sports* Nick Carter* Adventures of Falcon* Gabriel Heatter* Real Life Stories: American Forum* Upton Close, News* Moonlight Serenade All the News* Wednesday. June 19th 7 A. M. to Neom Sunrise Serenade News Sunrise Serenade Norman Cloutier Weather Forecast Sunrise Serenade News Sunrise Serenade Frazier Hunt, News* Down Homers Shady: Valley Folks Civic Calendar Meditation Southland Singing Author Meets, Critic* Cecil Brown* Elsa Maxwell* Take It Easy Time* Victor Lindlahr* wrobrusupid Sassassssas Neon to 6 P. M. Lyle Van, News* Morton Downey, Songs* Weather Forecast News Siesta Serenade Master Singers Lopez Music* Baseball Anniversary* John J. Anthony* Cedric Foster, News* Smiletime* Queen For A Day* Novatime Benny Geqdman Lady Be Beautiful* Erskine Jehnson* The Johnson Family* Jumping Jacks Melody. Hour* Social Record Superman* Captain Midnight* Tom Mix* Ser seesssrsesessnssess otic Ranainideiaans aa abiR Rtn, Your Grocer SELLS That GOOD STAR * BRAND Zeek COFFEE AF Today! 1107. Fleming street. 5 : Funeral services will be held to-| defrost to the point where ice "Vinson and daughter Gloria, who, had been} | should take only 15 minutes to { can be sealed off. if ——————— ENLIST IN A GRADE WITH your 'ARMY MOS 3 t JOB FOR YOU A GOOD U. S. Army CHOOSE THIS NE PROFESSION | F U.S. Army. Recruiting Station 212 POSTOFFICE BLDG. KEY WEST | Open Daily 8:30 to 11:30 am H 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. | Closed Saturday Afternoon NA AX VA “s = ” EVETAZY VV Ek NOW | Made of Port Orford Coder Slats, finished with nom chalking synthetic enamel PROMPT DELIVERY A Deg wen DEPARTURES BUSES BAILY F@ MIAM! AND NORT | Leave Every Two Hours | On The Even Hour SAVE YOUR CAR --- TRAVEL BY BUS | Miami . oe ee « $9000 06Mew York we | Jacksonville... . . $860 Washington ee West Palm Beach - $445 Chicago wae Q@rlando . . . s+ - $7.10 Cincinnatus eee \Fampa . . 2 « 6 - $ 7.60 Louisville nae | Tallahassee oc $10.90 Detroit ea All Prices Subject to Federal Regulation FLORIDA GREYHOUN LINES