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sire tty yer in onan tence seme ar a ah Y.AULY 23, 1946 Ae Play Features Pazo, E. Griffin, uez. Triple play, te Ingrahem to Roberts. Perez to Pazo. cleared they had om 14 hits. Each safely at least once Sweeting, Alonzo, Albury, Hernandez twice Geod for 27 bases for the} elude @ homer by J.! Hotere. @ triple by Osterhoudt | tye doubles, two by Sweet- | Alonzo and Al- Dewitt Roberts Rey Auto Parts to two > tm the field, Arnold, Roberts wat Wernender starred for the wittiers and C. Valdez and Kerr those bombs and R. H. E. Pheer does 120 151 0—10 14 3 Sey A. P 030 0000-3 2 3 © Roberts, Sweeting and Mal- eet. C Veldez and, J. Fleitus. Homer, Roberts; triple, Oster- ‘elt, doubles, Sweeting 2, Al- ‘ery, Mermandez, Alonzo; stolen tor, Neveree, E. Sweeting;|D. C., bank president, former} Pered in holding meetings, byt! j wording of the Selective Serv- @*, _Boberty 7, Valdez 1; undersecretary of | the' treasury,’ the imposition of the so-called wm 2, ‘Roberts 4;| born at Kinderhook, Ill, 55 years|“statute of political parties” ; y' Ne te Valdez‘ to Meador. | ago. i makes them subject to consider- Tee | Nee, Weepives, Goss and}. Gluyas Williams of Boston, car-| able control by the administra- Meher. Sevrer, Aguilar. tooriist, born in San Francisco, 58 | tion: } 3 -> er years ago. i ‘| Likewise, the new government _ Mone Whatever Masetine Cres Scum dean,}has nationalized ‘the’ Central “leuk tere, waiter, is this bridge Masa sc aalaggig Ba tere Bank, the bank of eee of the he ie 8S ee s att s, sy free and controls financial Cae os y : : markets, insurance companies, eden > wu tell trom ‘the Phi ed “ Chpmier, chiet pt thes ‘manufacturers’ associations and "No, 1 can't” F born it Annona Ma 69 and Stok exchanges by “inter- ods : ish vention. "Well, then. what difference} years ago. P on - ‘ersons -who had hoped that Multher heels are good for all weds oof shoes because they| with both hands. Then discard teeeem the jer received in walk-|the socks when they become i soiled. me The game of golf, on which ee . Americans spend » @ year, has ved netines ‘stormy teetery. It has had to fight its way ap @ spite of prejudice, legal ob- claeies, wars, and an occasional te of bails. and ploce of its orign ~ eown, but it is a mat- ad feeeed, according to the Americana, that in. t. nd, Parliament or- ‘ aif should not be} giawed by the people, because it was distracting their attention from practice of archery, essen- tel te the defense of the realm. ‘On the same principle, American qetters curbed the game during Weed Wer I and 11, when all 4pm and amateur events, as well © the four big international oormaments were called off.) Seether this early Scottish edict eer lteter similar ones stopped the sprend of the game. It caught Se iterest of commoner and eobde elie, and in 1682 it provid- oa the background for a pretty F riches story .* Duke of York, later King tee 1 was im residence at| Paterson who was a ; | THURSDAY— Ups And Downs But Survives 500 Years _ He was'the investment in their golf prop- overlooking | ing improved equipment for the he ‘mong his titled! game .The American Coburn Has-| therein’ adi perinet 6 Suny wr ages the type of ball in A This ‘order to be published once "For Tonight ' At 7:30 p.m. the Miami Herald ip Delmonico will play a Junior of F. War This is a ame it is pitted against Arias. Both clubs expect to-have their new uni- forms for this game. Over News 7:30—Miami_ Herald vs. Del- monico. 9:00—Machinists vs. V.F.W. Preaches '7:30—Flying Eagles vs. usr | ra ef Sq : > Deal Market : De paar ay A Bd i gion vs. moer, acy potli J. F. McEVOY © RECREA’ gee en mayne a AP Newsfeatnres BUENOS AIRES. — The mili- tary touch still prevajls in Ar- gentina’s new government but the atmosphere of dictatorship which existed for the past three years has disappeared. As far as the eye can see, Ar- gentina is as complete a democ- racy as exists anywhere in the world. A congress is functioning for the first time since 1942, and President Juan D. Peron has ball and Handball Courts, Dia- mondball, Kiddy Playground, Comfort Stations. wd South Beach and Rest Beach— Swimming. Gulf Dock and ‘Rest Beach— Deepsea Fishing, Small Boats. | League Standing CLASS A LEAGUE Maitre be a been emphatic in his declarations A. Legion | ta aa that democracy is the only form Machinists 0 0 of government and it will be A. Dairy “0 0 000 practiced within the framework V. F. Wars 00 “000 of the constitution. : Roy Auto Parts 0 1 .000 Censorship of the press which disappeared in the last year of the Farrell government has not CLASS B LEAGUE been resumed and hoth foreign Q Club W. L. Ave. P Griffin Conch Garden 1 0 .000 correspondents and domestic Delmonico 0-0 ,000| ReWsPapermen have been free to Flying Eagles - 0 0 .000}handle news critical of the ad- Square Deal Market _ 0 0 .000| ministration. Radio stations, how- Miami Herald -. 0.0 000} ever, are still subject to rigid Miami Herald . _ __$Fet | control and when the govern- M. Daily News - 0 1. .000}ment.deems fit they must tie in station and political | with the official broadcast important speeches and events. . The street fights between Na- tionalists, one of the groups backing Peron in the February election, and student groups who opposed him are things of the past. Although lifting of the state of siege which lasted nearly three missioner of ‘The Public ‘Roads | ¥e@rs theoretically restored all Administration, Washington, born constitutional rights, political at Leadville, Colo., 65 yeats ago. parties have not regained com- Daniel W. Bell of Washington, plete liberty. They are not ham- Today’s Birthdays Ben Hibbs, editor of the Satur- day Evening Post, Philadelphia, born at Fortana, Kans., 45 years ago. Simon Strunsky of New York, journalist-author, born in Russia. 67 years ago. Thomas H. MacDonald, com- when Peron quit the army to be- come a civilian candidate for the presidency they were seeing the last of military rule have been disappointed. Peron, himself, was reincorporated into active army | service and promoted to the rank of brigadier general a few days before taking the oath of office. Although he has many civilian assistants, the president is usually surrounded by military and naval aides. TN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE BLEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCP 4 Slip an old cotton sock on each hand when you dust and dust organization is the Honorable Company of Edinburgh Golfers, whose home is the Muirfield Links, with minutes of a meeting dating back to 1744. Links were i i OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA, called links because in Scotland SD ron MOSBOE Peek, the game was played over! IN CHANCER stretches of land that linked the ie WILLIE water line of the seashore with Plaintiff ance tillable lands further inland. ei. paeralli cROW i The game took hold slowly in MATEO a y : i Defendant. the American , colonies, . where OF PUBLICATION . A. f ORDER work and fighting necessarily! ro: Mary Loulse Harcrow Turner, took precedence over sport. In] | APPDRHSS UNKNOWN A és You are hereby required to ap- prerevolutionary times, the En-} pear to the Bill for Divorce tiled Ameri against you in the above Style cyclopedia ericana relates, | Seainst you in tne yh day. of| residents of the district which is] August, A.D. 1946, oipermiae is allegations contained therein w now Albany, N. Y., then under) fo'tiken as confessed. Dutch control, were fined for] Done and Ordered at Key West, playing golf in the streets. netmapr nn at | still must be clarified? Johnson “THR ERY WAST ortiz still must be settled in despite the Supreme €o) ' cision on the so-called super- Senjority quest : Sedtty L. insok: the Justice Department's "Vet- erans Affairs Section, says the decision “does not determine all of the reemployment rights of veterans because all of the rights were not inyolved in the case.” | storms The Justice Department repre- | nopns— sents veterans free’ of charge. in reemployment cases. m In the superseniority decision the Seen Court . held ‘that World War Ui jterans have ‘no preferential seniority standing for one year’ oyer non-veterans when there are contrary seniority provisions in a ynion contract. The court did hold that vet- erans accumulated seniority dur- ig their period of service which must be added to senior- ity they held on entering the service, Some Problems Remain’ What are the problems which lists six examples: “1. To whom does the Selective; Service statute, guaranteeing vet- | erans’ reemployment rights, ap- ply? 2. What is a “temporary” | po- sition and what are the legal rights of a “seasqnal” or “part- time” employee? 3. What is to be done when the veteran’s old job has been abol- ished or changed? 4. What would be proper dam- ages for a court to assess when a veteran is denied reemploy- ment? 5. How must the veteran prove ; his qualification for his. old} duties? 6. If the employer has trans-]|. ferred or sold his business, what are the veteran’s legal rights to his old job? Some of these questions al- ready are headed for the Supreme Court. F Johnson says Attorney Gen- eral Tom Clark “takes the po- sition as the. veterans’ lawyer that all reasonable doubts should be resolved in favor of veterans’, rights. In this he follows the ice statute. “Likewise, the Supreme Court in the Fishgold (superseniority) case said the statute had to be liberally construed in favor ofj the veteran.” Case in Point Johnson cited a court case to illustrate problem No. 1 for me. A: doctor had been employed by an industrial firm before he entered service. “Although a doctor is general- i ‘full reemployment fou ; Wednesday. Weather partly u east. Scattered _ thunder- eo: Gent east wir rate to sh tonight an cloudy ith widely thundershowers. Jacksonville to Apalachicola: No small craft or storm warnings have been issued. : scattered Report Key West, Fla., July 23, 1946 (Qbservation taken at 8:30 a.m, Eastern Daylight Saving Time. City office.) Normal PRECIPITATION Rainfall, 24 hours ending 8:30 a.m., inches - RELATIVE HUMIDITY 16% TOMORROW'S ALMANAC aylight Sayings Time) Sunrise - 6:51 a.m. Sunset 8:15 a.m. Moonrise 2:52 a.m. Moonset 4:41 p.m. TOMORROW'S TIDES Nayal Base High Tide Low Tide 6:25 a.m. 1:48 p.m. 8:32 p.m. . Expert Says Rationing Made Swedes Healthier STOCKHOLM. — (AP) — Does moderate food rationing have a favorable effect on public health? It seems to have done so in Sweden, where Prof. Gunnar Nystrom of Uppsala University claims the Swedish people never were healthier than during the ‘war. In the Swedish Medical Maga- zine ‘the professor disclosed that deaths sank from an average of *12 per 1,000 population in the Thirties ‘to, 9.9 in 1942, when ra- tions were lowest: “Maladies like hemorrhage and arteriosclerosis caused ‘by alterations in the blood vessels showed an. abrupt decline. Nystrom stated fis opinion that the sharpened rationing which started 1942 led to a diet well ad- justed for people with, blood-ves- ly regarded as having an inde- sel diseases. pendent contractor relationship,” Johnson explained, “this one had regular hours as the company doctor. When he sued for his old job, the court ruled that he was an employee and entitled to re- employment.” What is a “temporary” posi- tion and what are the legal rights of a “seasonal” or “part- time employee?” “Many companies,” says John- son, “are trying to get around re- hiring yeterans .by . contending theit ‘pre+war jjobs-avere tempor- arye 8G y “All employment contracts are indefinite. The average employ- er in hiring a man _ just says something like ‘you’re on.’ We contend that the employer had to make clear to the employee the job would end within a specific time limit for the job to be considered temporary.” Johnson says the department feels that seasonal work is not temporary work “if there is a | | regular recurrent relationship between the employer and em- ployee.” “In a recent case,” he told me, PSpriie. this 8th day of July, A.D. Not until about 50 years ago} (Circuit Court Seal) es wyER did the game get firmly establish- OSs C. ’ '. Clerk of Cireuit Court. ed here. In 1888, John Reid of By: Gloria M. Acevedo. Yonkers, N. Y., founded the old-} Winiam vy. ann Clerk. est golf club in the United States. Riomey for Plaintiff. After numerous changes of ad- jul 9-16-23-30, 1946 dress, it is still in existence today] ,. HE at Mt. Hope, N. Y. peal 3 CIRCUIT COURT OF THE wi he United S KIND For MONHOE COUNTY hat is now the United States ‘D FOR MONKOE COUNTY, Golf Association was organized FOF FLORIDA. TN CHAD RY. 1 s C and incorporated in February,}. 7. Case 10-Si5 1895. The handful of clubs which | "UCHEP SCPRET atie Ly 5 i ime hi i vs. DIVORCE ACTION existed at that t as SINCE) LI CHARD H. SC grown to more than 5,000, and ERCY, Defendant. a ORDER OF PUBLICATION TO: RICHARD H. SCERCY, Residence Unknown. You are hereby required to ap- pear to the: Bill of Complaint, for divorce, in the above styled cause, on the 22nd day of August A.D. 1946, otherwise the allegations rein will be taken as confessed. erties totals around $720,000,000. The Encyclopedia Americana credits Americans with develop- “g tobacco company refused to rehire’ an auctioneer who had worked once a year at an auction for $10,000 before entering the service. The court held that he was not a seasonal worker and had to be reemployed.” When a veteran’s job has been abolished, the Justice Depart- ment holds that “if a comparable position exists he must have itt Johnson says. “The act holds that he must receive his old job or one of like seniority and pay.” About Damages Proper damages? Johnson says the department contends that: “When a veteran applies for week fore sine eee per published in : ae 2 vest Citizen, a news- It was an American dentist,| pa Key West, Flor- a. Done and Ordered this 22nd day and eh om the links. The cobbler Dr. William K. Lowell of New Duke _. fhe stakes | Jersey, who introduced the wood-| of July. A.D. 1946. i EAE Whe cobbler, wholen-peg type of tee. And an] SPAY cory of the Cieeult Court end 5 Se to build a house ' American firm, the Horton Manu- = Afonzoe County. lorida. - . Edinburgh, ever facturing Company, brought into - BERET EE. Deputy Crerk- ge “golfer's land.” ‘use the present type of tubular) eer eilgy cor the. Paine as | eldest authenticated golf steel shafts for golf clubs. bie jul 23-30; aug 6-13, 1948] his old job and doesn’t get it, he must be paid until the time he starts work—and then re- tained for a full year. A Ken- tucky court recently upheld this contention, forcing a company to pay damages to a veteran up to the time they put him on and then give him a year’s job.” What test must the veteran meet? “We hald that he must be given a fair opportunity to re- ‘ acquire his old skill, even if a 4 mare skillfuf man is on’the job.” What if the employer has transferred or sold his business? “We hold,” Johnson says, “that ... the job continues to exist if the business continues. In a re- cent case in Ohio, a parent com- pany took over a subsidiary com- pany and refused to rehire a veteran. The court held that the business was being continued so the job was still there.” This case has been appealed to the Supreme Court, BY——606 BROADWAY CIGAR STORE COMPLETE BASEBALL SCORES Received Daily by Leased Wire Popular Brands of Cigars and Cold Soft Drinks and showers in the after- emphasize how to be with me about it. careful you have ents and sur of service Some 300,0003000 will be mailed during each of these early post- war years. ‘Thefts occur principally at apartment houses and homes when occupants are away. Agents eaught one woman, with a baby in her arms and a screwdriver in] ; 4° her pocketbook ... and 11 vet- erans’ checks she had pried out of mailboxes. They tell of gangs of teen-age kids forging and cashing old-age pension checks. |. (The Secret ‘Service is primarily interested in forgeries of such |). checks, postal inspectors with mail thefts.) “Know Your Endorser” Wilson is campaigning for chants and-other stolen check tims to “know your endorser.” He says a favorite trick of these thieves is to present.a stolen 7s STS Anniversaries 1816—Charlotte Cushman, fam- ed actress, genius, dominating stage figure, and one of the great women of her generation, born a 3oston. Died there, Feb. 17, 1876. 1834—James Gibbons, Balti- more Roman Catholic archbishop- Cardinal, promotor of tolerance, among the foremost citizens of the country of his day born in Baltimore. Died March 24, 1921. - 1846—(100 years ago) Walter Cook, notable New York City architect, enhancer of the dignity ;.a “nuisance _leyel” of of his profession, born at Buffalo, | $30,000. ] N. Y. Died March 25, 1916, 1871 — Jacob H. Hollander, Johns Hopkins political econom- ist, economic adviser to presi- dents, born in Baltimore. Died } July 9, 1940. ; . 1877—Montague M. Glass, crea- tor of the widely-known. charac- ters “Potash and Perlmutter” of } his day, which did not at first ap- 5 peal to editors, born in England. i, Died at Westport, Conn., Feb. 3, 1934. Big Business The phone rang in the tiny and meagerly furnished office. The occupant heard a voice ask: “Is this the president of ‘Reap Your Share ‘of ‘Big Business Profits Corporation’?” “That’s right,” briskly replied the individual answering the/| phone. “This is. your landlord,” con- tinued the voice, “Do you think you can pay me a few months’ back rent?” the | dignit Congress first authorized the service in 1860.to suppress the counterfeiting of money. It ig the en cee ost | ap federal gove: a tough fight ; i Counterfeiti in the ‘30's fy ‘k hie 900 a year, It is red y now to Novelist Rupert Hughes was nicknamed “History” at school. Preve iL if -LENAMIN Winy cops: ALL know: "Varied and “beautiful. All besser quality. For gi 7 : en Bay . mit Pollock’s 4 t p sontain VITAMINS n to be essential to human #7 buttition, plus liver and iron. * 22's $2.59 = $7.95 NER'S PHARMACY NO WONDER] it's good .... it’s EWRET’S BEER FAMOUS FOR FINE FLAVOR SINCE 1866 ENJOY A BOTTLE OF EHRET'S BEER TODAY! DISTRIBUTOR ROBERT KNOBEL—Wholesale Beer & Wine 2049 N. Miamé Ave. Miami, Fila. Telephone 2-5824