The Key West Citizen Newspaper, September 5, 1946, Page 6

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- , is presu ned by local Ictadeés that Committee has been given the; “go-ahead” signal \for the erec-Wagnor's parents in Burlington. tion of the proposed Boy Scout! Camp on West Sumbierland Key, | it was announced toviay by local: Scout officials. This was good news for the leaders! in’ Scouting | for it has been their goal for! many years to-see that the Mon. ‘Their stay will be for about two: weeks. Mrs. Wagnor was, cher i of Mr. and R. Curry, of 81: street. Z é Mr. Wagnor was discharged from the service on June 2, and_ ree district Scouts | have their, ; own youth camp, A. group of. leaders of the 4 Scouting | movement plan on motoring up to West Summerland Key Sunday» afternoon’ to make an. inspection of the camp site. ‘ ; ; ~ Several buildings still remain on * West Summerlane; Key ‘that! can be put into use for the camp. These buildings are a part of: the former C..C. C. camp that was located on this site quite a! few years ago. After the inspec-) tion of jJand ‘more definite ‘plans ean ‘be made. Jt is the de~ sire of local officials “hat the ¢amp be put into operating or- der as,soon as possibile. j Although a name for the rew| camp ‘has. not-been definitely /de- cided wpon.at the present time it the camp will be jmamed in memory of Star Scout Jackson | ! Lée Sawyer. Sawyer |was the only formes Scout fromi this dis- trict that lost his life while serv- ing with \the arm 3d _ forces! abr during this wat. While the; camp widl not be limited ‘to Boy Scout juse alone, it will be\umder the control and | supervisiom, ‘of the Jocal Boy} Scout Comrnittee at all times. Other youth » organizations will} be invited to make use of the camp. ae J CAVE-IN KILLS 3 ‘CHILDREN » NORWALK, Calif. — Three thildren, grandchildren of Mr. and Mrs. Walter) ‘Shelby, lost théir lives when # sand , ledge; ¢aved' in at a dump operated by their grand-father.| Firemen} worked for an hour to resuscitate } Joy. Carlton, 11, Dorothy Shelby, 5, and Garry Shelly, 10, but; t Bloomers, introduced in Amer- ica in 1849, were named after Mrs. Amelia Jenks Bloomer. LEGALS Bs NTR. Ww 23 tht COURT OF ELEVEN SLDICIAL bal IN AND COUN STATE OF RIDA. IN CHAN- BARRON G. ALBURY, ‘ Plaintiff, - ce vn. DIVORCE ACTION YHELMA P. ALBURY, Defendant. ORDER (OF PUBICATION To: Thelma P.. Albury 288 Logan Street, Auanta, Georgia You are hereby required to ap- pear to the Bill of Complaint, for divorce, in the above styled ¢a on the 23rd day of September 1 otherwise the allegations the! will be taken as confessed. This order to published once a weck for four consecutive weeks iy The ‘Key West Citizen a news- erpublished in Key West, Flor- one and Ordered this 2ist day of August, A. D. 1946. (SEAL) Ross C Sawyer Clerk of the Circuit Court Monroe County, Florida. Kathleen Nottage, D.C. THOMAS HE STATE OF .ORED A, IN AND FOR MONROE COUNTY, IN CHANCERY. Case No. 10-836 ARTHUR BD. HURLEY, Plaintiff, vie DIVORCE EUNICE PATCHETT HURL ORDER OF PUBL) ‘To: Bunice Patehett Hurley, No. 21 Tate Street, West Leederville, West Aust lia. You are hereby required to ap- pear to the Bill of Complaint for Divorce in the above entitled cause before the $th day of Qcto- . D. 1948, otherwise the alle- gations therein will be taken as confessed, This Order to be published once a Week for four consecutive weeks }in The Key West Citizen, a news- paper published In Key West, Flor- ida. Pursuant to a promise publish- will deal with the number June 30, 1945, the state had on/ lature should increase the pay of | its payroll a total of 19,180 per-| sons. Not all of them were ful. | time employes. Many were sea-! sonal workers, such as citrus fruit. imspectors, attaches of the legis-| fature, etc. Of this number, 983 | $2,000 per year. I don't see how they made ends meet on such in- | Today’s Anniversaries ae {Know America) _ . 1835—John G. Carlisle, itucky’s noted governer, i tredsury, Kenton Co, Ky: j Died July 31, 1910. : wages. Now that the! state employes to a living wage. The state road department had | the largest number cf employes with 3;476, who were paid $2,- 444,945.82 during the year. The state department of edu- Killed at St. Joseph, Mo., April 3, 1882. ‘ | 1856—Thomas E. Watson, Geor- | WeAly Sd) F 1935—Official end of the NRA.” 1936—American Federation” of, gia congressman, senator,. polit. ical leader, writer, famed South- were employed in the military cation came next in number of |°'™ aSfarian rebel of his -day,} 7 sho; ts one-third mem-{ | department. Only 21 of these re- employes, with 1,649, who oe , born at Thomson, Ga. Died Sept. Yorship for clo pera j ceived salaries for the year in pexcess of $1,000. The overwhelm- ing majority received less. than $100 during the year, thus indi-| cating that they were not em- ployes in the real sense of the ‘+| word; payroliees more accurately ; defines their tenuous connec-! from the top of $9,000.00 paid the governor (the 1945 legisla-| ture upped the chief executive's annual wage to $12,000), to need paid to Naomi Blackwelder, an employe of the Florida State Hospital, at Chattahoochee. The, eived $991,905.94 for their serv- ices during the year. The state board of health ran a close third with 1,620 em- ployes, who drew $1,534,092.46 in salaries. . The State Hospital (Chatta-| tion with the state. jhoechee) finished fourth with | increased nearly sevenfold dur-| Their annual salaries ranged» 1,399 employes, who were paid $719,496.79 for a year’s work. The board of forestry and parks | was fifth with 1,999 employes, who were paid $513,733.09. The University of Florida was sixth with 1,034 employes, who! received $1,071,356.39. - 126, 1922. | | tionally-known leader in educa: tion for home-making her gen-! ; eration, born in Chafleston, S. C.! | Died Feb. 3, 1931. - ft Britain’s. overseas - liabilities | to $13,500,000,000. i { | employes. {the pay of people who are em-j} overwhelming majority of state| No other department of state ployed in other departments of’ employes were paid less than government had as many as 1,000 state government. US. employes. Only f ther di a S. ly four other de- Charleroi. Earth tre: shi partments had ‘more than 500/U.S. eastern ae — | 1945—U.S. combat reconnais- Next week, Pll tell you about | sance troops enter Tokyo 1989—Nazi ‘ sta 1683—Anna E. Richardson, na: | mascace ray Hiei: ee 1942—U.S. planes bomb French’ coast. ; 1943—Allied invasion armies in i | Italy occupy the coast line. Mac- | Arthur reports success from new eeeenes in New Guinea. 53 : 1944 — ¥ jing the war—from. $2,000,000,000 | masts stout stomoneene Remy i First Army, pushing east- across Belgium, enters ;{_ In 1856 Pasteur experiments in milk started. ~ Life Incomes were not successful. |. $44. ee beef 2 children, Donald jot Ausust,: Ay Sa Shelby, 2, and John Hamling, 4, (SEAL) were pulled\ from the, sand by| Donald’s. mother, Mrs. Dorothy) Shelby and the grandfather, and 4 Mhey recovered quickly. | i Just Arrived! A Large, New . Shipment of Furniture MAXWELL‘S: J. Y. Porter, IV Solicitor for Plaintiff. aug22 on imilar to Mlustration) 3-Piece Modern BEDROOM SUITE This Bedroom Suite consists of full- size BED, VANITY with large ROUND TRROR, and CHEST $ with four Spacious Drawers - a ‘ss Platform ROGKERS. ...... Various Colors $44 50 Living Room DESKS. . . ,. . . . Wheat Finish $76 59 Drop-Leat See Whest Finhh 694.50 Fleor ~ LAMPS. 5.1 e . Aleta $15.50 ' Simmons’ STUDIO COUCHES. . . Various Colors $79 59 Metal WCE BOX. . . . . 4 . SPECIAL $39 50 = 3 : 3 El the MAXWELL CO. tne. Furniture and Furnishings : PHONE 682 909 Fleming Street. Corner Margaret St. Key West. Fla. VENETIAN BLINDS [> at Retirement for , General Electric Employe Over 100,000 men and women already enrolled under new hundred-million-dollar General Electric Pension Program. On July 10, 1946 General Electric announced ay expanded pension program to give every employee at retirement the steady income everyone dreams of—but few ever manage to secure. For the average employee this will mean a retirement income several times as large as the annuity he could ordinarily buy, Income at retirement, when added to Social Security payments, will amount to about 50% of average pay for the employee who has spent his working years with General Electric. $100,000,000 to Start Plan This plan provides a-pension for the years already worked, at no cost to employees. For this, the company pays the entire cost, estimated at more than $100,000,000. Thus every employee with over a year’s service has a good start on his pension at retirement — at no cost to him. The longer he has worked, the bigger the sum. To inerease this retirement income as the years go on, employees and the company will jointly contribute to the fund.-On the average, about two-thirds of future costs willbe paid by the company. Every Employee Eligible Pensions are not new at General Electric. Retirement plans were begun as early as GENERAL About 90% of eligible G-E men and women have already signed | up for Retirement Income “ Within eight weeks of the new pension program’s announcement, some of General Electric’s nearly one hundred plants in about seventy-five communi- _ ties report the following enrollment: Bridgeport, Conn: 90.8% Ontario, Cal. ...... 92.5% Erie, Pa 96.8% 97.0% Schenectady, N. ¥.. sen 95.0% Pittsfield, Mass. .. ~ 94.0% Philadelphia, Pa :... ~ 95.6% New Kensington, Pa 97.8% Lowell, Mass wee 96.4% Cleveland, Ohio...........0065 91.1% PSR EE Ee Le SE TE 1912. Over 40,000 employees now on the payroll are already covered. The new plan brings pensions within reach of 100,000 more. Every employee is eligible the day he completes one full year of service. ‘e © General Electric's Objectives: Three objectives of General Eleciric ane worth repeating : ° ss For the public, new and better ‘products at the fairest price that General Blectrie research and engineering ¢an achieve. % For General Electric men and women, a better place to work—fair wages, steadiest possible employment, and ‘‘job dividends”, for work well done. ’ fa ater of a snlllion cmerne ‘air return on the millions in savings have invested. of “Job Dividends” General Electric's “job dividends” thane’ extras that G-E employees get in addition te wages—now include among other things, pensions at retirement, insurance, vaeationa with pay, awards for achievement, etc. Qp such ‘‘job dividends” General Electric apent more than $35,000,000 for the year 1945. This new pension program, from Genaréd Elestric’s point of view, is another way & encourage the capable and efficient men and women who aid in the company’s auccess: With their help, even greater benefits car be produced for all. For additional details of the plan, those interested may write for the booklet, “General Eleetrie Pension Plan.” Address @3 ELECTRIC

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