The Key West Citizen Newspaper, June 21, 1946, Page 2

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PAGE TWO The ~**@@B | THE ‘BIGGER’ THE MAN— a West Citizen a Commer Ann Streets Only Daly Newspaper in Key West a.@ Monroe County Metered at Key West, Florida @* Second class matter The Assoc! fvely entities om of ait news dispatel red: oF ot otherwise credited in Peper and also the local news shed here. SU MSCRIPTION RATES ADVERTISING RATES jade known pplication. SPRCIAL NOTICES reading notices, cards of teselations of respect, obit- ets w be Mine rate of 10 conts aul ak wary Aotices, hareed for att & line Notices for entertainment by from which a revenue is ed are 5 cents a line. em is am open forum and cussion of public issues ts of local or general it will not communications, EDITORIAL. SSOCIATION at publish “ WHEN BANS AFFECT U. S. RIGHTS A pews dispatch from Seoul, Korea, says that Ed- W. Pauley and a party American technicians, now inspecting Japan- ese industry, resources and equipment’ in northern! Korea. | This item does not seem} to be so remarkable until) we remember that it has} been many years since Am-| win of are eriean civilians have been| may have disliked the city |Wanted—Couple to operate busi-| permitied to go into north- | ern Korea. In fact, none of} them been there. since! 1938. This means that, under Japanese domination, the northern part of Korea was; closed to the outside world. | No citizen of this count was permitted to travel in- to the region while the Jap-} anese continued their depre-_ dations and the elimination | of all resistance. | It might be worth noting: that the Japanese, in prep-} aration for their aggressive war, likewise barred Amer-| iean shipping from certain} important islands in the Pa- cific. The has Japanese « took! this step in regard to some| s,m ‘the Pacific, et Hart}—— _——_————_} of the islands, given to them as a mandate by the League of Nations after the first World War. The United States did not insist upon the right of its citizens or of their vessels to go into territory con-{ trolled by the Japanese.) This, we believe, was a de- cided mistake in connection with our relations with Ja-) pan, Certainly, the suspicion | was general that the Japan- | ese were fortifying the islands and preparing them! to serve as bases for future warfare. In, yiew of the fact} that the Japanese govern-} ment ws violating its trea-| ty obligations and interna- tional law, the. United States would have been well- advised to insist upon the fall right of her citizens every where, A lesson for the future may be learned from these lessons of the past. When- ever any aggressive nation begins to bar all foreigners i from any region, no addi- tional proof should be nec- essary of the existence of designs against the peace of the world. Consequently, the facts might as well bej Key Westers generally re- gret the departure of Cap-| : tain Charles E. Reordan,! commandant at the Navy! Yard during the war. One thing outstanding in} his service here was in: demonstrating that one can be courteous and efficien at the same time. ‘ He brought to mind Cap-| tain Forsythe, who was com- mandant in Key West almost | half a century ago. He was) fair to Key West, as Cap- tain Reordan was during his stay here, but he was in-| sistent, too, in the perform-| ance of duties in keeping $25 A WEEK TO START with the high tradition of! (About $108 a Montth) the Navy, as Captain Reor- Over $30 a. Week (about $130 a dan was, i} | “ : Because a mananecta with ("* seerene success in an undertaking, | in any walk of life, that con-| dition is no reason for him). . . That’s for a 40-hour week, to be abrupt in his dealings |and there's opportunity to earn RESPONSIBLE POSITION That Pays TELEPHONE OPERATING A * | i ly more for overtime with his fellow men. Fact |considerabl; is, if he really is a “big” work at time-and-a-half man, he is considerate of; pyp pHATS, NOT ALL others and makes no at-) tempt to high-hat them. | Captain Reordan, during | his stay here, met messi cal Rotary Club, and, when-! Position ever he spoke, it was easy to see he had a kindly feel-| ing toward this city. On sev- eral oecasions he spoke of Scheduled Pay Increases Liberal Employe Benefits Vacation With Pay TODAY! Telephone Office | Mrs. McDermott, Chief Operator things he thought would — promote the interests’ of NCHAMERN BELL TELEPHONE the community; and his ex- and aera pressions wer sound. As The Citizen ‘has stated Caretaker, general . experience, on several occasions, it 1S maintenance buildings. Steady readily understandable how any man, away from home and in the armed services, | employment, good pay. Fred Dion, Phone 1035. junl0-10tx in which he was stationed.; ness on Florida Keys. Interest- If he keeps his dislike to himself, all is well, but the rule is to express the dislike at every opportunity, and, if an opportunity does no present , to resort to “knock- Box 572, Key West, Fla. junl5-6tx ity for right parties. Jefferson Coffee Shop, 116 Duval: St. ing” in any event. — e junt8-6tx | That happened in Key West, but, so far as The /Girl Wanted—Local girl must know how to type. Permanent position. Good, pleasant job. Apply in person. The Maxwell Co!, 909 Fleming St. Citizen learned, it was con-j fined to enlisted men. Another officer, stationed in Key West during .the war, who liked the city, was Captain Reordan’s aide the latter part of , his service’ here, Lieutenant Lestie Hart. jun21-tf MISCELLANEOUS — i . - z | Refrigeration saies, and service. He returned to» his home) “Repairs on all makes. All work town, Nashville,-te resume} guaranteed. Mumford’ &’ Ross, his work as.a newsman. Joe, 220 Duval st., phone 333, Allen, on hig»return home . juni8-tf in Nashville, and Allen said)Campbell’s, 928 Division, phone Hart declared, “I wish I! 18% Keys made, locks repair- was back in Key West.” | ed, ete, junl-Imo Finally, the “bigger” the, man the more considerate} he is for his fellow men. Picture framing, diplomas, cer- tificates, photos. Paul G. Di- Negro, 614 Francis St., phone 1197-M. jun6-lmox The net effect of what Mr. Justice Jackson says in public about Mr. Black will be the disst] tion of the idea that jurists are not human begings. Two ways to avoid argu-; ments: Be sure the words you use mean what you think they mean and that they mean the same thing to those who hear them. For guaranteed plumbing work and repairs, call John Curry. 512 Margaret Street, phone 781. Give us a try on your next job. Free estimates. junl0-1mxo When in need of a good painter and decorator, apply at 728 United St. junl9-3tx KEY WEST GARDEN and LAWN SUPPLY announces the opening of its store, located at 914 Fleming Street. We are able at this time to sup- feated political, military and | ee leaders ply the greatest majority of Sconorne 368) ers. iomeers| your needs. Open daily from At the trial of the Ger-; 4.99 to 6-00 p.m. Saturday | man leaders at Nuremberg, | a British attorney ques- tioned Colonel-General Al-{ fred Jodi, former German! Chief of Staff, about his} conscience “if Germany had not lost the war. from 9:00 am. to 6:00 p.m. Phone 748-W at anytime for in- formation. We deliver. Owned and operated Wardlow and Kermit Lewin. ’ The de-|"_ fendant admitted that noth-| ing would have been h rd RENT A CAR about it but added that “‘we/ You drive. Late model conver- would have heard of other bles and sedans. By day or atrocities in a similar trial.” | week. We do not imagine that PUTCAMP-ALEXANDER Duval and Division Sts. FOR RENT lammmnoneebeneeneeeeeee jmonth) after 6 months’ training ed parties write R. J. Bethel, ! t Two waitresses, Spod opportun-! by Charles H.} juni7-10t ; discovered immediately and} all soldiers of the Allied the situation faced at once.! armies, or that all individ- Nothing will be lost there-} uals in the army of the by Sait. i United States, were entirely! ai | innocent of wrong-doing in THE DIFFERENCE | the prosecution of the re- Wa . | cent struggle. In fact, we The end of thé war in Eu-| pave heard some stories rope and in Japan has pro-| which do not reflect credit juni-tf Two inde, pendent furnished hous- es. so an upstairs with priv- ate bath and kitchenette. Cheap. 728 United. juni9-3tx -bedroom apartments. APARTMENTS FOR RENT Unfurn- duced the unusual Spectacle | upon the honor of the, ished, with frigidaire, kerosene of the victor nations put-| United States. ee stove. Available to families ting on trial the leaders o Nevertheless, such inci- living in substandard housing. the defeated enemy peopl We have pointed out b fore that the example is} likely to be followed at the} end of any other war. Re-| gardless of what motives impel nations to fight in the! future. it can be assumed, we | are afraid, that the victors} will take advantage of their | success to punish the aes Income limit for admission, $2,- 010 per annum. Apply at Rental Office, Joseph Yates Porter Place, 7-G. jun13-16t dents have always reflected the misbehavior of individ- uals, which is to be expect- ed in any large group of men or women, and have never reflected a deliberate policy of brutality, cruelty ‘Furnished apartment for couple. Apply 801 Virginia Street. jun20-3tx ; ROOMS FOR RENT j 411 William Street. | Ocean front, ceolest in town, run- ning water. Semi private bath, use of porch, facing ocean, low rent. 701 Waddell. junl9-3tx WANTED | Subscribers National Voice. 1307 i Petronia Street. juni7-1mox i} FOR SALE i payable monthly. Johnson & Johnson, Phone 372. junl-tf Pepper’s Plumbing Supply Com- pany carries a full stock of ma- terials. We cut and thread pipe and take care of all serv- ice calls. Phone 118. junl-tf | i LUGGAGE TRAILERS i New, Factory Built i 1 1 H All Steel Body, New Tires PUTCAMP-ALEXANDER ‘Duval and Division Sts., H junl-tt Tilt-back couch, opens as double bed. Apply 410 Margaret St. jun20-2tx Grand.,, piano, : THE KEY WEST CITtZEN es Light. housekeeping rooms, $5 week, Summer rates. Apply junll-18tx | ed; | guaranteed, first-! Key JUNE 21, 1936 court, asking that the absentee be declared null and void. Tomorrow the second primary will be held, and today, on the and a_ headline that NOR.” Mrs. Sue Baker, formerly of Key, West, died Saturday in Mi- ami, according to ‘a’ telegram re> ceived by Mrs. Joseph Single- ton. The Citizen will post election returns tomorrow night in front of the office on Green at Ann | Street. Dan Navarro, local campaign ‘manager for Fred Cone, pre- dicted today, in a story in The Citizen, that Cone will be nomi- nated by a majority of 40,000. ! Attorney Paul Marks arrived today from Miami to visit his | Srandfather, J. Markovitz. yesterday and will make an ad- | dress tonight in Bayview Park in behalf ‘of the candidacy of | Fred Cone for the Democratic j nomination for governor. I ee | Mr.-and Mrs. George F. Arch- jer, Newton and Pearl streets, | left yesterday with their son and | daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Archer, for Tampa. Furniture for four-room house. Apply Box, JRH, c/o Citizen Office. jun21-3tx | 5 Canaries, two female and one } male. 1110 Grinnell Street. | jun21-3tx ‘ Good news, brand new motor- eycles. See them today. Full price, $249.00. |. ‘Pyteamp-Alexandes Motors | ,,, Division and. Duval Streets re jun5-tf Large pony, bridle and ‘saddle. 404 White Street. jun21-6tx Baby carriage, Stork line, almost new. Cost $50.00, will sell for $30.00.. Modern dining room set. Cost $260.00, will sell for $150.00. 1120 Division street. | } jun21-3tx | Friday. June 2lst | \ 6 P.M. to Midnight 'Pigeons, $1.00 a pair. 15 laying| 6:00 News | hens, $2.25 each. 912 Duval or| 6:15 1600 Club Millard Robérts, Islamorada,| 6:30 Weather Forecast Fla. jun21-3tx | 6:35 1600 Club — | 7:00 Fulton Lewis, Jr.* |14-ft. new boat. 896 United St. | 7:15 Parade of Sports | jun21-3tx| 7:30 Henry J. Taylor* |— | 7:45 Inside of Sports* | PHOTO SUPPLY | 8:00 Passport to Romance* | 8:30 A Voice in the Night* \Frames, an assortment of sizes,| 9:00 Gabriel Heatter* { 50c and up. Pilkington Studio;! 9:15 Real Life Stories* | 515 Fleming Street, Phone 99, | 9:30 Spotlight Band* | jun21-tf| 10:00 Tommy Dorsey’s Playshop* —— ) 10:30 Moonlight Serenade TODAY IN HISTORY [1° 4!) the News | (Know America) | Saturday. June 22nd | 1775—George Washington ac- | 7 A. M. to Noon j;cepts command of the Continental | 7:00 Musical Clock army, refuses a salary and sets; 7:15 News’ jout for Washington, D. C. 7:20 Musical Clock 1788—New Hampshire the 9th} 7:45 Weather Forecast }State to ratify the Constitution—| 7:50 Musical Clock | putting new Constitution into ef-| 8:15 News } fect, :20 Musical Clock ! 1834—25-year-old_ Cyrus Hall 0 Slim Bryant | McCormick patents his first reap-| 9: 0 Home Folks Frolics ler :55 Civic Calendar 1877—10 “Molly Maguires” are 0 This Week In Washing'on* hanged—ending the reign of ter- | ror in’ the Pennsylvania mining | jl region: ; 1919—German crews sink their jsurrendered ships at Scapa Flow jrather than hand them over to the British. 1922—Bloody rioting in strike-|12 bound Herrin, Il. 1940—French begin negotiating peace with the Germans in same jcar they had signed as winners| 2:08 Inside Radio Tokyo* jin World War I. | 2:15 Dance Orchestra* | 1941—Germany declares war! 2°80 Concert Orch.* lon Russia. ‘ “3:00 Guy Lombardo 1942—-A Jap sub shells Fort, 3:15 Ink Spots* Stevens, Oreg., just bef _| 3:30 Dance Music* * inight. Soe ore mid | 4:08 Dance Orchestra* | 1943—34 die i ae -aea| #:30 Record Shop | rioting. ee) Derrelt race 5:00 Sports Parade* { | 1944—American invafon forces 5:30 Xavier Cugat | . pound Cherbourg in Normandy. | 1945—Admiral Nimitz announc- | je’ ending wf the fight for Okin- awa, | 4 and inhumanity on the part of the Allied governments. We should not overlook the difference. electrically 905 equipped. South St., Tel. 720. jun21-3ix Apply | Two-bedroom garage apartment, | class condition. Howard up-| Today The Citizen says in an | right piano, guaranteed. 907/ editorial paragraph: Division, Moreno, piano tuner.| “Everyone favors a tax that Phone 825-J. jun20-3tx | somebody else pays.” For Sale—House and lot. 1017| Ancient Slav Relics Watson St. jun20-3tx} WARSAW. —(AP)— Two Po- | lish boys were bathing in the | Vistula river, found strange bronze vases in the sand. They carried them to the national ; museum in Warsaw. The museum sent a crew of {excavators to'the spot and un- | covered.a pre-historic Slav burial {ground dating from the eighth {century B.C. : Threat of meatless days seen unless livestock moves to market. . ‘CED BY STATION Subject to Change \ WKWF | Where to Listen— 1600 On Your Dial ! Mutual Broadcasting System | (*Designates Network Program) | | \ Andrew Sisters Rainbow House* Vincent Lopez Land of the Lost* | Noon to 6 P. M. It’s Up to Youth* Weather Forecast News Dance Music Opry House Matinee* | chcieaiaaleeaa ailerons, Your Grocer SELLS That GOOD! West In"ee"| Days Gone By 2,25, Attorney Thomas S. Caro;Reconversion director, born at filed a petition today in circuit \Jonesboro, Ark., 50 years ago. ballots cast in the first primary |author, born at Tarrytown, N. Y., front page of The Citizen, is,City, 56 years ago. published a 20-inch advertise- h ‘ ment, with a cut of Fred Cone , Union Theological Semniary, New Burr, confidante of reads, “FLORIDA’S NEXT GOVER- Ernest E. Roberts, formerly of | | Key West, now of Miami, arrived } pa rem care nena TODAY'S $ (Know America) «| { Air Force, a’ “hero of both wars, born in Pittsburgh, 56 years. ago. John W. Snyder of St. Louis, triot, Rockwell Kent, famed arti: Bi (ie Daniel 54 years ago. Ivor jurist, Frank S. Land of Kansas City ‘dent under Mi Mo., founder-president of the Or- at der of DeMolay, born in Kansas 11, 1825, 1783-—Theodosia Bu Prof. Reinhold Niebuhr of the daughter of the York, noted professor: of applied born in Albany, N. ¥. Christianity, born in Wright City, ‘sea, Jan:,; 1813, Mo., 54 years ago, 1850—Daniel Carter Dr. Arnold Gesell, famied Yale famed artist, author, School. of Medicine child special- leader, born in ist, born at Alma, Wis., 66 years June 11, 194i ago. ——_—— A A Shame, Ain't It? Arthur C. Dorrance, president? Mother! “Jot its of Campbell Soup Co., Camden, { N. J., born at Bristol, Pa., 53 pti shameful the way Junior ae just heard him say, I went, x Z |nowhere’.” Donald Culross Peattie of San-! Father: “I should say it ix ta Barbara, Cal. famed author- ‘shame! Why, he has traeaiad botanist, born in Chicago, 48 years twice as much as most boys hie ago. lage!” Only one in about 15,000 wo-| New combs made of nylon eam men drivers gets into a fatal ac-. be sterilized with boiling water, cident say statisticians of the will not burn when exposed te Pennsylvania Automobile Club.’ open flame nor melt at extreme For men the ratio is one in 1700. temperatures. “MAKE IT A MILLION!” RETIRE WITH A LIFE INCOME AFTER 20 YEARS! The new Regular Army has one of the best retirement plans on earth. You may retire at half pay for life after 20 years of service; three- quarters pay after 30 years of ser- vice. Over three-quarters of a million have joined up already. MAKE IT A MILLION! Get {full facts at your nearest Army Camp U.S. Army Recruiting Station 212 POSTOFFICE BLDG. KEY WEST or Post, or U. S. Army Recruiting Open Daily 8:30 to 11:30 eam 3:30 to 4:30 p.m, Closed Saturday Afternoon Station. | WEEKEND SPECIALS at MAXWELL’S WARDROBE wit Drawer Compariment 945} ‘METAL FLOOR LAMPS __. $1678 DROP LEAF TABLES $2450 $165 LIVING ROOM DESKS METAL SMOKE STANDS 7 RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT and SUPPLIES te MAXWELL CO. inc. Furniture and Furnishings PHONE 682 909 Fleming Street, Corner Margaret St.’ Key West. Fla. VENETIAN BLINDS Overseas Transportation Company, Ine. Fast, Dependable Freight and Express Servig® Between MIAMI and KEY WEST Also Serving ALL POINTS on Florida Keys Between Miami and Key West Express Schedule: (No Stops En Route) LEAVES KEY WEST DAILY (EX- CEPT SUNDAYS)! at 6:00 P. M. Ar rives at Miami at 12:00 o’clock Mid- night. LEAVES MIAMI DAILY (EXCEPT SUNDAYS) at 12:00 o'clock Mid- night and arrives at Key West at 6:00 o’clock A. M. Local Schedule: (Stops At All Intermediate Points) LEAVES KEY WEST DAILY (EX CEPT SUNDAYS) at 8:00 o'clock A. M. and arrives at Miami at 4:00 0 clock P.M. LEAVES MIAMI DAILY (EXCEPT SUNDAYS) at 9:00 o'clock A.M. and arrives at Key West at 5:00 o'clock P.M. FREE PICK-UP and DELIVERY SERVICE STAR * BRAND | | fEhere are 112,000 street and} AMERICAN | |tratfic lights in the New York) and CUBAN COFFEE | 'City“ boroughs of Manhattan, Try A Pound Today! } [Richmond and the Bronx. 5 FULL CARGO INSURANCE Office: 813 Caroline Street Phones: $2 and 68 WAREHOUSE: Corner Eaton and Francis Streets

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