The Key West Citizen Newspaper, June 18, 1946, Page 4

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on f£AGE FOUK Martha Machin And Peter Perez ‘Married In Double-Ring Ceremony Miss Martha Machin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Luis Machin, Bahama street, and Peter P, Perez, son of Mrs. Tula Perez, Whitehead street, exchanged; nuptial vows at the First Meth- odist church. The Rev. C. T. Howes, pastor of the church, officiated at the double-ring ceremony. The Rev. G. Perez, Spanish minister, of- fered his services in a Spanish; prayer. : The bride was given in mar- riage by her elder brother, Ar- mando. The bride was attired in a gown of eyelet chiffon with a! long train which was held by; the bridegroom's niece, Celia Acevedo. Flower girls were Miriam Ma- chin and Anelan Ybarmea. -The ring bearer was the bridegroom’s nephew, Arquivedes Perez. Miss Margaret Cabot was maid of honor. Charles Machin, brother of the bridegroom, was best man. Ushers were Michael Ramirez, Andy Alonzo, George Henriquez. Thomas Howes, son of the pastor, was the organist. Lieut. Rogerson of the Navy base here was the’ soloist. He sang “Be- cause” and “At Dawning.” A reception followed at the Red Men’s Hall, Caroline and Elizabeth streets. Out of town guests were from Tampa, Miami and Pennsylvania. The newlyweds are at home to their friends at 531 William street. 4 Essay Contest Winner Named | MISS CABRERA Miss Zetta Frances Cabrera, 17, | @ pupil in the twelfth grade at | the Convent of Mary Immacu- late, has been adjudged the win- ner of the 18th annual essay con- test sponsored by the Florida state council, Knights of Colum- bus. Miss Cabrera, a daughter of | Mr. and Mrs. Sebastian Cabrera, Key West, won first place with her ay on “A History of My Parish.” The subject was chosen through the assistance of the Rt. Rev. Thomas J. McDonough, St. Augustine, diocese chancellor. Judge of the contest was the Rev. Fr. Thomas T. McAvoy, CSC, head of the department of history, Nc Dame University, Ind % ner’s school were presented with a suitably engraved trophy at the commencement exercises -at the convent by C. Clyde Atkins, chairman of the essay contest. winner and the win-} JACKSON SQUARE U.S.O. PROGRA WEDNESDAY é 8 p.m.—Shell craft. Make a pair of ear rings for your best girl. 9 p.m.—Photo study group. 10 p.m.—Stag smoker. Blow by blow description of. the Louis-Conn fight. Cof- fee and doughnuts on house. Bicycles Available at the Club (All USO Girls meet at USO at 7:15 for Gilmore Party) THURSDAY : 9 p.m.—Something new: Movie quiz. Win a telephone call home or a carton of cigarettes. | 10 p.m.—Singo bingo. Book Review By BOB PRICE THE UNTERRIFIED, by Con- stance Robertson (Holt; $3). OU TAKE a beautiful South- ern belle who is passionately loyal to Dixie. You throw her in with a handsome Yankee who is devoted to the Union. You weave a plot involving spies and treach- ery and a mysterious stranger. There you have the basic ingre- dients of a standard Civil war novel. “The Unterrified” has all of those ingredients. But it emphat- ically is not a standard Civil War novel. For one thing, the hero isn’t a soldier. There is only one swift whiff,.of battle smoke in all the 483 -pages, Instead, of the war- front,, Constance Robertson _ is concerned with:the homefront, in New. York state; and the fraction- {al conflicts and hatreds that boil- {ed over in the. draft riots of 1863. The North.had no unanimity of mind about the war, especially in the early years while the issue was in doubt. Particularly was the Daytona. Beach Girl Weds Raoul Perez Patsy Alvina Beville of Daytona Beach, became the bride of Raoul J. Perez of Key West last the home of the bridegroom's te and brother-in-law, Mr. und Mrs. John Cobo, of Reynolds treet Thomas S. Caro perf i the ceremony. | M Perez is a daughter of| Mrs. Carey Copallio, of St. Aug-| uskine. | PENT ON LEAVE | Robert H. Pent of the U. S.| Army, son of Mr. and Mrs. How- | ard Pent, 1108 Olivia street, is! home on leave after completing | his basic training at Camp Rab- | tmson. He will return to his new fst at Tacoma, Wash., where ‘he | will be placed in the engineer- | ing department. Miss Judge night at 9 o'clock at! Democratic party split between jits advocates of | peace-at-any- price and those who thought the war should be fought through to |victory, even if Republicans were at the nation’s helm. The opposition to the war fo- cussed in opposition to the draft. If we can stop the draft, it was argued, Washington will have to stop the war because the armies can’t get needed manpower. There was no consideration of the point that opposition to Washington was, inversely, aid to Richmond. Such a situation was made to order for a smart agent like John Andrews (a character plucked in- | tact from history, the author says). Under the guise of organ- izing opposition to the draft, he stirred up armed revolt. His plans reached their climax—and frus- tration—in five bloody days of rioting in New York City. Against such a dramatic back- drop, Mrs. Robertson tells a pow- IIIA DADS? If You’re Sensitive It May Be Your Feéet’s Too Big AP Newsfeatures ; NEW YORK. — If you're @ moody fellow or don’t like the social life it may be partly the result of being un- derweight or having big hands, In a research investiga- tion conducted with 258 young men as specimens and reported in the Journal of the American Medical Asso- ciation, studies were made of the possible relationship be- tween body build and per- sonality. Men with bodily dispro- portions including unusual height for weight, shoulders broad for chest circumfer- ence, head large for size of chest and oversize hands “were found to have a great- er frequency of certain dom- inant personality traits, in- dicating lesser stability, lesser integration, greater sensitiv- ity and complexity of per- sonality and lesser capacity for making easy social ad- justments,” the report said. Conversely, it was found that men with traits indi- cating personality soundness or stability had fewer dispro- portions in physique than the average of the whole group. The experiment report car- ried a warning, however, that the theory requires verification and further study. PIII DL I ID Late Bulletins (By Associated Press) BILL RIDER OUT WASHINGTON, June 18— House leaders said today that the Case bill will not be attached as a rider to the President's em- ergency labor bill. Reason for that action, they explained, was because they could not muster a sufficient number of members to override the President's veto of such a measure. Honor Among Thieves: Thanks For Buggyride ST. LOUIS.—AP—Victor Fien- up would like to thank the per- son who stole his automobile. Three days after machine dis- appeared Fienup received a post- card telling him where he could find his car “with'a new genera- tor and battery,” Fienup retriev- ed his car and looked under the hood. There was the new equip- ment. HOURIHANS VISIT HERE Capt. and Mrs. John J. Houri- han, of Coral Gables, arrived last night for a short stay with Mrs. George Lange and mother, Mrs. H. B. Whitaker of 509 Grin- nel street. Capt. Hourihan is well acquainted in Key West, having been the skipper of the Convoy Control center in Key West dur- ing 1944. General Eichelberger says swift demobilization invites war. erful and stirring story. The one major flaw is in the character of Lacey King, the southern bride of a New York state senator. She is a misty figure, unexplained and never quite believable. book is convincing. Its authentic- ity is attested by a detailed and lengthy bibliography which would do credit to the most careful his- torian. _ *John L. Links Miners, Hard and Soft By CHARLES B. HOLSTEIN AP Newsteatures Writer | WASHINGTON.—Two separate | co: again this year | home the fact that the uing industry is a com- bination of two separate entities common except | Lewis. | (bituminous) | coal are part of the me | i Mine Wor of | ar occupation- struck for sub- | * contract bene- | are as different as the of fundamentally types of their strikes. When the quit, the omy of tt with Blast furnaces | and steel mills shut down. | Auto- | mobile factories and other indus- ! tries dependent upon steel suf-}that coke, oil, gas and even soft | John L. Lewis his loyalty when | Railroads ‘coal have steadily been cutting | contract time comes around. Like fered severe setbacks. not at this time of year. Even in anthracite’s big eastern seaboard now is mostly just something to read about in the newspapers. Only if it lasted into the fall {would the picture be likely to/ boiler in his change. That’s because anthracite has begome almost exclusively a do- furnaces in Philadelphia, York, Washington, and other east- lern cities are shut down for the summer. It wasn’t always that way. An- thracite, the first underground fuel to be discovered in this coun- now. It has been a growing sense of concern to the hard coal region began canceling runs to conserve into anthracite markets. fuel. Brownouts were ordered. | Nothing like that results from So intense is the feeling in the anthracite area against competing ,;an anthracite shut down—at least } fuels that residents have been os- | tracized and businessmen boy- | cotted for using oil. The story 'markets, a hard coal strike right} goes that a hard coal Congress- ! man was defeated for re-election | once when constituents discov- !ered he had installed a gas-fired Washington _resi- dence. | Anthracite is perhaps the most {concentrated fuel -in existence, d coal (anthra- | mestic home-heating fuel. Home | more so than gasoline. It is hard New rock, long-burning and smoke- [} s and clean in comparison to bituminous ,but it is also more expensive to mine. | An anthracite miner laverage goes hundreds on of the feet ne. Different, too, | try, was once important in steel, | deeper than a bituminous miner | |in"gas manufacturing, in railroad-}in reaching the coal face, has a bituminous miners | ing and other industries and was ; tougher time dislodging the coal e productive econ-|used in a lot more factories and|When he gets there. ‘on was threatened | home-heating plants than it is |clined to look down a little on the He is in- {soft coal miner as professionally \inferior. | But he gives soft-coal miner jhis soft-coal brothers in the i UMW, to the anthracite miner it’s “no contract, no But, in its essential fabric, the | Staunton \ the university. The first half of eral, but he will specialize in the THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Graduate that time the course will be gen- final two years. By JAMES C. MUNN AP Newsteatures Writer |sartorial correctness have to agree that the membership of the right in this respect. dressed body. The distinction is achieved without the presence of a single member who might cor- rectly be termed a “clothes horse”. Good taste in attire generally pre- vails. Only exception is that occa- sionally a mmeber will sport a tie that verges on flashiness. For ex- ample, Rep. Pittenger (R-Minn.), sometimes dazzles with a brilliant crimson four-in-hand that evokes sly digs from his colleagues. It's a toss-up as to who is the best-dressed representative. Eu- gene Keogh (D-N. Y.) has plen- ‘ty of gallery support for the title. So do Les Arends (R-Ill.), Joseph Clark Baldwin (R-N.Y.) and Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn.). Single-breasted suits are gen- erally more favored than double- breasted. |the latter |tin (R-Mi jleague, M Minority Leader Mar- ). His Bay State col- ajority Li er McCor- mick, habitually wears a single- breasted. Four-in-hand cravats are far more favored than bow ties. On Ja typical day recently, with most jof the membi present in the |House chamber, the margin was jeasily four-to-one in favor of the jfour-in-hands. New York’s James W. Wads- {worth (R.) is a consistent bow tie man. He also favors plaid sui fas does another New Yor Democrat John J. Delaney. Day in and day out, gray ap- pears to be the most favored suit color. Blue and brown fol- low in that order. Sports jackets of tweed or flan- nel, with contrasting trousers, are becoming increasingly popular. Edwin Arthur Hall (R-N. Y.) is seldom n dressed otherwi: Neither, for that matter, is anoth- G. Andrews. Not infrequently, Roy Wood- ruff (R-Mich.) appears on the floor in a sports jacket of a color best described as burnt orange. Woodruff, like Pittenger with his crimson tie, doesn’t mind a bit jwhen he’s “kidded” about the shade. Lowell Stockman (R-Ore.), | CHILLS & FEVER | DUE TO MALARIA | 666 ig) sessery Caution: Use only as directed @ No more bluing streaks | @ Add these blue flakes when you use your regular soap @ No extra bluing rinse If your dealer does not have WASHINGTON.—Sticklers for, House of Representatives does all | Fact is, the House is a well-| Leading proponent of | »|has *j/uranium atom when it was split. er New York Republican, Walter ; BLUES CLOTHES BN QAZZLING WHITES whose six feet, six inches make him the tallest. man in the | House, has the doubtful distinc- tion of being perhaps the only | member who can seldom—if ever—step into a store and buy a ready-made suit. Stockman has to rely on made- |to-order suits. His tailor does a jgood job, too. Impartial observers rank him one of the best-dressed. Seldom, if ever, does any man appear on the floor with his suit in need of a pressing. One mem- ber said: “The ladies—bless ’em!—see to it that we keep our clothes pressed.” NEWSPRINT STRIKE REPORTED SETTLED (By Associated. Press) OTTAWA, June .18.—The gov- ernment reported today that an : ement has been reached with striker's:in newsprint production plants in western Canada. A formal announcement of the {settlement of the strike, the re- {port said, will be made in 24 |hours. Newsprint workers in that jarea of Canada have been on | strike 28 days. The Answers | (QUESTIONS ON PAGE TWO) | 1. About 3,000. | 2. No; Russia, Poland and Yu- ,;goslavia declined to take part in the proc on. | 3. None; the Popular Republi- _ fear that continued high = MELVIN E. RUSSELL, JR., son of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin E. Russell, graduated from the Staunton Military Academy, in Staunton, Va., on June 4, and, on June 10, matriculated at the University of Florida. Melvin, who is 17 years of age, will take a four-year course in Clothes Make The Congressmen | And these pests, living and growing inside | Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back. can movement is the strongest party. | 4. Because the King of Italy been dethroned by e favoring a republic. 5 Spain. | 6. Eight up to June 12th. | 7. Character in Jules Verne’s j“Around the World in. Eighty | Days.” |e S27 | 9. In biology it denotes the splitting of cells in animal and ;plant life and was applied to the popular | 10. Argentina and Great Britain. 1B eeeenaeeas | Strand Theater | “Abbott and Costello | In Hollywood” |Coming: “Thrill of A Romance’ ‘7S BBB EBCUeeees | ARTO STILT ' Monroe Theater TIERRA DE PASIONES con JORGE NEGRETE and MARGARITA MORA Spanish Picture, Matinee & Night RR Se BLU WHITE YOU wash | BLU-WHITE yet, remember— i's new! Keep asking for it! jing countries in order to keep in- "Pin-Worms | Better learn the Truth, Mother! | Recent medical reports reveal that an Oe Dad ddAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAA Add dadaddadadedadntntn tnd tdetetndetnted ttl - HUNGER (Continued froin Page One) five to seven years to restore |~ its food production to pre-war | levels. They point out, however, that Europe’s pressing need for food imports may subside considerably within two or three years. Steps then will be necessary to increase the purchasing power of import- ternational trade in agricultural products at high levels. Surpluses Worry Us Surpluses were ‘the big buga- tion of such products as .wheat, sugar and cotion will again bring The FAO’ believes. that a pri-"; mary need‘ ‘will be development of the less advanced’ countries; such as China and India. # 4.2 The FAO program will ‘not’ at- tempt to reach the millennium, Very simple beginnings are now planned. A steel hoe, for instance, can make a lot of difference to a! man who has never had one. Many young people in the less fortunate countries will be sent abroad for training. Many mil- lion more acres of land could be irrigated in China, India, South America, Africa and the | Middle East. | Agricultural engineers say the! high cost could pay large divi-| dends in the opportunity for many people to make a better livelihood. Some countries may be able to build up their livestock or dairy production. Parts of southern China are said to be well adapted to a considerable livestock deyel- opment. . BOLD THIEF CHICAGO. — It was a bold thief who siphoned all of the gas out of Police Sergeant John , O’Connor’s automobile while the ; officer was in the Englewood police station questioning aj; criminal. } Cant Get MY Child!’ amazing number of children (and grown- ups too) may be victims of Pin-Worms— often without suspecting what is wrong! the human body, can cause real distress. So watch out for the warning signs that may mean Pin-Worms—especially the ag~ gravating rectal itch. If you suspect this ugly infection, get JAYNES P-W right away and follow the directio < P-W is the name of the Pin-Worm tab- lets developed by the laboratories of Dr. D. Jayne & Son, after years of patient re- search. The small, easy-to-take P-W tablets act in a special way to remove Pin-Worms. Ask your druggist: P-W for Pin-Worms! remember, of the bus. Your Bus Now Stops at the Far Corner KeyWest Transit Co., Inc. J. W. Sellers, Manager Phone 1057 RIDE THE BU WHENEVER POSSIBLE It’s Convenient, Practical and Economical When you do ride the bus neighbor will both get there faster if you have correct fare ready and move to the rear abolt® disastrous situation, _ which contrels only tempers now generally recogniz- ture and humidity, ed that those huge surpluses ps spammy were surplus only in relation to cipal ingredient is carbon buying power and not in fela- which has a long-known af- tion to the needs of human finity for absorbing guest beings. Although farm prod- aeheon (all smelis are gases) and otted for lack of markets, other air impurities, large numbers of families even in the surplue-peoducing -ceum- According to W, B. Commer tries lacked food they needed | Engineering Corp. 08 pe for health: cent of the several themand When the current famine crisis| BeW Passenger care ander is ended, a big problem of the! ¢omtract include corben ait FAO will be to encourage expand- | purification in thelr design. ing production without creating, When materials com be ot ruinous surpluses. FAO officials | tained in sufficient quemsities, say it will be necessary for na-' manufacture of cerben oi tions to act toga her, purifiers for home ead Seek Foreign Development t fice is promised. Twe tiny copsvies conten ALL VITAMING knowa to be essential to bumen autrition, plus liver aad wom. At last — 0 new heat pemdinr bentonite! Johnson's Preekiy Heat Powder quickly soothes and cools the itchy, burneng prickly rash. And the beatente — exclusive with Jobmaen's Promotes quick ing the skin dry. Try it today, you and your BUS FARES Poinciana and Naval Hospital 10e City Hospital. Stock Isiand and Boca Chica Loe SOOSSLOOSOHOSHSODOOSOSSESOOSEOESESESESE HETERO SS. lt Co POA AAA EEE ELE ERAD EE EEE BEADED eee ee ee ee rr

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