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Your Horoscope | TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 1946— ‘Today gives strong passions, so strong that much effort will be “needed to control them. If other aspects favor, there is indication of a very successful life, some {accumulation of wealth and con- jsiderable notoriety. - Fortunes will be better for women; but ‘men will do well to exercise ex- treme restraint in their dealings with women. Comeback The Romans considered salt a AP Newsfeatures sacred article of food, and never UGSBURG, Germany.—Hans_ Placed: any other dish on the Stuck, pre-Nazi Germany’s, table’ before it. number one speed demon, is tr }ing hard for a come-back by way ‘of an automobile repair shop. The once famous German auto-} racer, who participated in many | jinternational competitions includ- jing some in South America, says he had to give up his profession j under Nazi pressure in 1934. He says he lived in exile in Switzer- jland until 1940, then moved inj} hime of 1943 to Austria where he organ- | pliance ized a resistance movement in| {nd to re Saint Anton. H He has now chosen the Passion play village of Obermmergau in the Bavarian Alps as his tem-} porary home and opened an auto- | |mobile and motorcycle repair shop there. Stuck, who is 40,! }hopes for a comeback, but pros-! for an early reappearanc of German race-cars in the int national competitions are meager Ancient monuments show that early Egyptians ate bread shaped like muffins. LEGALS EB OUNDER FICTITIOUS AME STATUTE | s HEREBY GIV desirin: h ier, F said s fictitious name with the Clerk of the Circuit } Court of ¥ Dated County, 1946, Flori rry) B RORMO; MARY FORM¢ jun COURT OF DIC RCUIT .|undertaken some time next year. THE | *|waves used for radio communiea-! | Around World By Way By WILLIAM GLOVER, AP Newsfeatures Writer YORK, June 22. a. message via the moon to Paris, Rio or any other faroff point may sound like doing things the hard way, but at leqst one. research laboratory is logking forward to such experiments as a major advance in long distance radio transmis.&—- “If we were not limited by the fact the moon is visible only 12 hours at a time, such a system would be better probably than any other for continuous opera- tion,” says Henri Busignies, direc- tor of Federal Telegraph and Ra- dio Corporation research. “Emer- gency messages would have to be sent by a different method when the moon isn’t in the sky, but \there’s a huge bulk of messages that could be sent via the mogn.” The laboratory has a theoreti- cal project underway and Busig- nies indicates that completion of other work probably will enable experimental transmissions to be Sun Never Sets On British Publicity WARSA W. —(AP)— Youthful Patrick Howarth, press attache for the British embassy here, isn’t running competition with Polish po- litical parties, but his work is getting the “play.” He has placed big bill- boards with pictures of Brit- ish news events and life in the windows of tourist bu- reaus in principal cities. In Crascow. for instance, there’s offen a crowd of peo- ple eight to 10 deep gazing at British photographs. Across the street, usually only two or three interest themselves in e display by the Com- Would Detour Fading The expected advantages stem! jfrom the fact that radio waves aren’t all alike: For example, | tion and broadcasting today are! affected greatly by atmospheri¢ He has contacted an English rac-! cLayros RU disturbances and variations in| mynist-backed Polish Work- ing club in London to try to ar-]} . jthe ionosphere, an electrical er Party of anti-British and range his participation in_ this jblanket which surrounds the} anti-capitalistic cartoons. year’s “Majola Race” at Saint} earth. {| Moritz, Switzerland. His wife, Paula von Recznicek: Stuck, former German women’ tennis champion and author, still jlives at Saint Anton. She has re sumed writing novels and short stories for German newspaper: and magazines from which she was banned by the Nazis in 1933. hereby required to ap- to the Bill of Complaint for above pear divor styled cause 1946. ions therein taken a essed This order is to be published week for four ¢ in The Key West H ne ane AL)’ ‘THE LOW DOWN I of (SE { Clerk of the Cire | Monroe County By: Florence from——___—— I (sd) Allan B, Cl ' Solicitor for FE HICKORY GROVE. What this country needs “less! of” versus “more of”, is a subject | for research. Up to now we been {going in for “more of’—and we been getting more and more promises—and less margarine | That sorta sums it up. Any pro- gram chairman at the book re- view and lunch club, if she is up against the problem of a subject, having run out of psychologists or | es geniuses with a flare for making simple things complicated, they are free use my suggestion, and delve into the “less of” ver- ‘more of” subject More of” lots of things is good. | (pas IN TH | JUD of PINDER, Deceased. da Persons Hav- Demands Against To All Creditors ing cl u and each of you ar ified and required to'p' demands w to a, | months publicati s Take leisure—that is good—but t a orn you get it down to where you; to by the claimant, his ‘agent, or | his : a h clat work only 35 hours a week, there | it dame nr ec cullea an ars is 133 hours left over—56 hours} void. ) HILBURN E for sleep and 77 hours for devil-| ‘ ment. And if you choose to skimp] of Wallace a bit on sleep, you can cut it) atime’ down to six hours a day and can} fe 1946 | But on the other side of th argument on what we have “1 6 Kt > ” ore AND FOR MONRO) of and could use more,” look at) qy CHANCERY. mama's girdle—and no rubber in; N 7G The Govt. can take over | VINTON J. Vv a coal mine, or and get by with it,; jbut when it fumbles with mama’s | _ jregalia, it is on thin ice Well, | 7: 8 jsays Henry, both sides of “less of | jversus more of” can agree on one | |thing—we got plenty of confu- | sion 5 Yours with the low down, JO SERRA. same a railroad, or \power house M46: otherw s therein will be taken as con- In Elizabethan England, slan- | dering persons were often pil- }loried and had their ears nailed | ,, back | SE | y published nev Key West Florida uper in d.this 10th day County Florence E. y Deputy Clerk Diamond mining first became | !an industry in India sometime between 800 and 600 B.C. Jul2,1946 NO WONDER it's good .... it's EHRET’S BEER FAMOUS FOR FINE FLAVOR SINCE 1866 ENJOY A BOTTLE OF EHRET’S BEER TODAY! DISTRIBUTOR ROBERT KNOBEL—Wholesale Beer & Wine 2049 N. Miami Ave., Miami, Fla. Telephone 2-5824 | \ , {shorter they are affected much , only for a distance of about 50} “jreflected back to earth by th 4 - {ment is facing the moon—an add- | * ed advantage for some types of} t, distribution is desired. h}would also make it possible to| *Jabout 12 hours a day, with San} LIM M SS ST IM SWORDS INTO—? SYDNEY (AP).—Surplus war Such things as fading and noisy reception are the result, + and Busignies points out, trang«* oceanic communications are _ sometimes interrupted for sev- eral days at a time. But as radio waves become uses in Australia. A man who bought a captured Japanese tank planned to exhibit it and then tand. A said to be Jess by such factors. Instead aj tse it to tow his p jnew handica crops up — the! Be hand ied craps, pe 5 he , breakfast food firm noise-free waves can be received } miles (the horizon). puffing wheat. They con- + tinue out into space and are no! t e ionosphere. They can be reflect-| the ed, however, by a solid object an in space, as radar transmission moon” transmission. Talking via the moon in two- way conversation is unlikely, -|to the moon by the Signal Corps] however. .|demonstrated. In this way the} There would be an awkward distance limitation of such noise- | five-second delay in talking, caus- , free waves on,the earth’s surface | can be overcome. Would Ease Traffic Jam The reflected signal can be picked up anywhere on the earth’s hemisphere which at any mo- the moon and back, from the time ; York until the reply came back from overseas. “BROADWAY CIGAR STORE communication where widespread} The new system, says Busignies. | ;jease the traffic jam in the pres-! ently used wavebands that are | 610 Duval St. crowded by communication needs. | COMPLETE Busignies points out that trans- | mission between New York and| South America would be possible; BASEBALL SCORES Received Daily by Leased Wire |Francisco eight hours, with Paris jseven hours. No Added Power Needed The research director declares that the amount of power re-| quired for such transmission |would be about the same as that/| now used for long distance radio | work, and believes that types of] radar and television tubes already i Popular Brands of Cigars and Cold Soft Drinks To Sending * j | | } { material is being put to unusual ! using obsolete ack-ack guns for ; |developed ean be adapted to “via | ed by signals traveling twice to , a person stopped talking in New | = Of The Moon Texas U. Goes All-Out For AP. Newsteatures AUSTIN, Texas. — Big. Bi Gilstrap, line coach of the Uni- versity of Texas, says: “We gotta graduate the Little year. “We gotta give him something fine to remember his senior year. We’re gonna have a fine team this year, we’re gonna have a fine schedule, and by Joe, we gotta win every dadgum game | for the Little Man.” Gilstrap was referring affec- tionately to Dana X. Bible, Uni versity of Texas head coach for nine years who, Jan. 1, 1947, re- j tires as mentor of football after more than 30 years of tutoring major college teams. Bible will retain his position as athletic di- rector but Blair Cherry becomes the Texas coach. Bible announced his “course” for the athletic semester. It was the University of Texas football schedule. It bore out what Gil- strap said. It’s tough Missouri, | Colorado, Oklahoma A. and M. Oklahoma, Arkansas, i ADD’ PERSONALITY TO YOUR SUMME We you ever BRACELETS See Our Store “Little Man” | Man this! defies comparison. And POLLOCK’S «: May Tour _ BUENOS AIRES (AP). ; ish football ‘fans may get the “chance to see Argentine playérs, in action before long. — ii Dr. Rudolph ‘k, vice- \president of the Swedish Sports jAcademy, on his departure for | Stockholm after talks with sports authorities in this country, said it iwWas possible an Argentine foot- bel team would tour Sweden ip { : M He said plans also were being ully ‘made to bring ten outstanding | Swedish next yea! athletes. to Argentina ir. The country’s dairy. herds to- tal 26,000,000 cows. ; —_———— Southern Methodist, Baylor, Tex- | as Christian and Texas A, and.M, From the number of. foi Texas stars who will be back at ; the university next. fall, it ap- | pears Bible also will have the ; fine team” Gilstrap was talk- | ing about. Some critics already } are predicting it will be Bible’s | greatest eleven of all time. | Of the ten opponents on the 1946 schedule all expet Baylor and Arkansas have been bowl teams. Oklahoma A,.and M, for | two seasons has been undefeated and untied in ‘college competi- | tion and has won two howl con- | tests. Missouri played in the ; Cotton Bowl this year. It appears Bible’s"” “senior is going to bea rugged one AND SMARTNESS. R OUTFITS WITH NECKLACE | AND BRACELET SETS have an array that can be assured of finest quality for what- price you pay. QUALITY IEWELERS $14 DUVAL STREET Adjoining Palace Theater The hig new Ford has an important feature you'll find in two of Ameri highest-priced cars . has a powerful V-8 engine! Like these highest-priced cars it also has dual carbu- retion—with Ford-develop- ed “downdraft” to save gas. Like highest- priced cars it has oversized brakes. These self-centering hydraulics re- quire only a tiptoe touch. j ‘ihe ieee |S as res ‘~ ‘a And Ford shares the classic beauty of large cars, too. It has soft, deep seats and multi-leaf springs that you expect to find in the most luxurious cars. Study it closely and you'll find the new Ford has many features found in no other low-priced car. Order yours today. ~ There’s a = “Your For. 1201 White Street r. in Your Future! PHONE 725 d Dealer” Compare the 6/G New “IOO-HORSE' FORD V8 with cars which cost $1000 mo TREVOR & MORRIS Key West, Florida