The Key West Citizen Newspaper, November 16, 1946, Page 2

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PAGE TWO —— Key West Citizen hee 2 Dally Exeopt i. P. ARTMAN: Owner and — D. ARTMAN, Business Ma Monsees, From The Citizen iiding Corner Greene and Ann Streets Only Datly Newspaper in Key West and Monroe County “Bntered at Key West, mers second clas: atte: THE ASSOCIATED The Associated fvely entitled to use so for republica- tion of all news dispatches credited to ft or not otherwise credited in os paper and also the local news ihed here. PRESS is _exclus- 00 Six Months Three Months eo 2.75 One Month ——————n— 1.00 Weekly -...... - 8 ADVERTISING RATES Made known on application SPECIAL NOTICE All reading notices, ca! thanks, resolutions of respect, obit- wary notices, poems, ete, will be charged for at the rate of 10 cents ® line Notices for entertainment by churches from which a revenue i8 to_be derived are 5 cents a line. The Citizen is an open forum and fnvites discussion of public issues and subjects of local or general interest, but it will not publieh ymous communications, NATI EDITORIAL. IATION (MPROVEMENTS FOR KEY WEST ADVOCATED BY THE CITIZEN 1. More Hotels and Apart- vocnts. 2. Beach and Bathing Pavilion. 3. Airparts—Land and Sea. 4. Consolidation of County and City Governments. §. Community Auditorium. MONOGRAPHS To President Truman, { The White House: j “Strike while the iron is hot,” is an old saving, but strike, too, when a strikes. If you you'll have to re- our hook and try sailfish don't, Very truly yours, THE ORACLE. CONTROLS IN BRITAIN The British government continues food rationing: and controls and gives no} indication whatever of abandoning them until the amount of food available in; the country is thirty to forty per cent above the pre- -war | level. The Labor government's Food Minister John Strac h- ey, say that the present tem is fairer than “ration- | ing by poverty” and asserts! that the population, as ai whole, getting 93 per; cent-of the calories which: they received before thej war, . Hl Rtseems, from newspaper | reports, that millions of or-| dinary people in England} have more money than ever| before: Sonsequently, there aioe is am-amcreased demand for! food? The nation has been} on an equal-basis-for-all for | long that observers be-| lieve it would be dangerous to decontrol before an am- ple supply of food made it possible for the richer class to get all they want while the poorer class unable to buy. WHAT ABOUT THE FISH? is 80 is Maybe you are one of the many American citizens who have wondered what happened to the fish in sikini Lagoon when the! atom bomb exploded. We can't give vou an answer to the question just | now, but the School of Fish- eries of the University of} Washington is studying be-! tween 5,000 and 6,000 fish | to find out what effect, if! any, the bombs had on the! Bikini denizens. When the study is com-} pleted, the information will | be passed around, we sup-j| pose. Meanwhile, the word! that there is plenty of! diation in the fish car-} casses stored in the labora- tory. Russia is like the little] boy who always broke up! the ball game by taking his | bat and ball and going} home. Except that the Rus-j{ sians have neither bat mee ball. SE a Siig er Ree IPRS Ee THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Coca-Cola Sued Red Cross Officials Arrive For $75,000 For | OUT IN FRONT Go to any city, not nec- essarily a winter or a sum- mer resort, and if you find its people to be civic-mind- ed, you may be sure it has an active and_ efficient; Monday For Two Busy | Days Loss Of An Bye! Officials and tha of the™ A $75,000 damage suit was! Junior Red Cross will hear two Chamber of Commerce. | was filed this morning in Circuit important executives from the Conversely, if a.city has|Court against the Key West i no chamber, or one that Coca Cola company. The plain: | Southeastern Red Cross functions in’ a half-hearted tiff is Fred Henning, Twelfth | headquarters in a serles of meet manner, it is safe to con-| street and: Staples avenue. He j ings Monday and Tuesday, it backward in} suing in the name of his four-| was announced today by Allan} T HERE area \as so many the commissioners, so to t speak, until a resolution to; call a bond election was, passed. j ! working with 000 to construct a beach IN} the Hi School Band in Junior Red Cross throughout th ‘OSs ee are e > Key West. As a represénta- ‘rent drive for funds. =" ieetee {sonal ene Lopatichayieh te tare tive of the Key West Rotary | It may not be Byron, Shelley or! They appear before the'a number of new proposals into Club, where the movement | Keats, but it should help to get! P. her Association and | the local program of Junior Red to get a beach was initiated, | those uniforms the min- | Cross activities. Price organized a civic com-} S » Key West High} Besides Mrs. Camus, chair- mittee to appear before the | Plea z at 8 p.m./man, the committee includes: | county commissioners to} 1 band : {Willard Albury, superintendent urge them to provide a n our} Dr Jenkins joined the Junior} of public instruction, honor Cross staff in 1944 after and assistant chairman iund to build a beach. He did not attend just one meeting and “call it a day s member, uished j For ca nin L. Culloh, . staff Edwin Trevc assist proud, the time. o they of us are wont) to do in matters of that kind but he clung to the flanks of! But his fight for a beach} was not ended then, and has; not ended yet. He cam- paigned, day in and day,out, among voters to have them,” approve at the polls t thel proposal fdr a speech. And]: now, as'the head of the civ committee. he actively { the commis- | Hel pm sion in retaining engineers} best o ta-make a survey to deter. ‘ mine the best place along / As you the south shore for a beach. | And you may be sure he) | You ‘ean will keep on “hitting” < the beach is a reality. i As head of the Chamber of Commerce, Ke f is of Job good band the | ‘obe. he patience stand n them go b: actually see a ‘tear in appy ‘and neat nu feel will find} may be sure they Clem Price always out in} 14 front striving to better eco-| nomic conditions in t his; community | — 1 Mazbe it ix about time| 0 735 Stet ce 5 CHANCERY. Cane No. for the majority of the peo- | ple of the nation to organize | their own political par and take over the govern ment for their own benefit. } STILL NEED FOOD TO 864 | + PA The impoverished na of Europe must spend their slender cash resources for| « food or economic. ré¢overy } and, acerding to the United Nations Relief amd -Rehabi- | litation Administration, ithe} : prospect is that man per-} sons in Europe wil] go hun-| gry next year. While bumper crops have H been produced in several countries and the food will; be available on world mar- | ‘ kets, the situation will be | : critical in a number of | countries assisted byj UNRRA. Italy is described as be- ing in a particularly pre-} earious plight, with less; than one-third of the grain}: necessary for an adequate} diet. Austria wil] likewi be dependent on foreign a sistance next year and Greece, Poland, Yugoslavia, | Albania and China will} need some aid if their} Mon populations are to have any thing like enough food. When UNRRA ceases to | distribute food, the na+|wewwvwwevvewwwvrre tions named will be com-' sTRONG ARM BRAND COFFEE pelled to divert funds being | »ppyypH T long last you slip behind the wheel of your very own Buick. You look around a minute — straighten your tie — grin a little at the handsome picture you know you must be making. You turn the key. Step on the starter-treadle. Feel those eight big Fireball cylinders take silken hold. Easy as a breeze. you slip away in two agile tons of steady-going levelness — and right then and there a lot that was dark is clear. You see why this car is the most wanted automobile in America today. You see why this doubles the problem posed by indus- try-wide slowness of parts and material flow. You see why Buick production men are gladly putting every waking hour into ceaseless battle against such log-jams, so that they can supply these sweethearts to the greatest possible number. You see how quickly a Tune in HENRY J. TAYLOR on the air twice weekly used to reconstruct industry | “#0 MET for the purpose of b ng! COFFEE food. This will delay their] MILL economic recovery, but no; at anh oemnpal meee eC 1s | Mal Grocers | Cudne and New Streets PHON equipped to furnish relief. iwyvyy vvvvvvvvvvvewy his makes up for a lot! ou SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16 —— ee | ms | ARMY ADJUTANT HERE MADE 44j0R The promotion to meler of Captain Burton W Stewert 40 . jutant of the Army Berber De Son Born To Trevors fenses Detachment bere sy ny and Mrs. James Trevor, | nounced “4 ao oe the a ee tis @ regular Army veteres j years’ serview, both as embete man and officer DR. GUITO HERE Dr. Franciso Ho Guite » visiting Ab paren \ Mr. | 1929 Harris street, announce the | birth of a son at 12:20 a, m., to! day at the Municipal Hospital. Fords Have Daughter } A daughter was born to Mr. | | and Mrs. Boyd Ford, 1217 Pearl clude that it is civic affairs. The residents Ye@-old son, Ted Richard Hen-}L. Hampton, chairman, Key | | street, at 1:10 a. m., today at the Fog ?. 8 Gua a of such a city are content) fears suit is a result of pose siete lnic aa wai | Municipal Hospigl | Duval street. The darter & pee to drift along with-the- routs | 2 of an eye last month, said | Dr. Frank C. Jenkins, area di- | | Batts Have Girl | sine aonttetry » S. Peniees rent, so long as be ai to have been caused by the ex-j rector, and Miss Jennie Ram- | | and came te Key Wen tam Se able to gain a ‘livelihoot Aree of a bottle allegedly; sey, area field representative of | Chief and Mrs. Frank A, Batts,‘ annual state meeting af dent In view of those facts, it’ bearing the Coca Cola trade|the Junior Red Cross, will confer | '205-C Poinciana, announce the, which wae esnsiades lam \ was heartening to readj mark in the boy's face. jat a planning meeting with chap- | birth of a daughter Thursday, 7| nesday in Palm Beech what President Clem C.j Attorneys H. H. Taylor. .| ter officials and appear before a.m, at the U. S. Naval Hos - Price had to say about the/and H. H. Taylor, Jr, are repre- | audiences in the Key West High | pital The new arrival has bee attitude of the reorganized j senting the plaintiff. {School and the Douglas School | | given the name of Chery! Dianne Chamber of Commerce | ees Fat aS jto describe Junior Red Cross ac- | Be: Batts, prior to her mar Key West. Price's words |Casa-Gonszalez {tivities in the United States and s, was Miss Melba Virginia | are not idlé words. Any-! {war-torn countries. | | Welte of Los Angeles, Calif The body who krtows him well, Troth Announced | They will discuss recommenda: | father is from Cary, Nome ce is aware that he is a go- Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Casa, 220 j Bone torte ay oe ae 4 CLA aber ed by U i me = Ne . @, =<" with the chapter's special com- | a ! | postal department of the U. S getter. \Ea Lane, announce the en-} j mittee for Junior Red Cross Ac-! DR. FRANK C. JENKINS {Sub Base. We recall on several sO; engseem=ne s their SG RUERIEry tivities in the chapter headqu: ———— eS | a easions when the Key W ee, Miss F Gan Mary Ca : x0 Cr ters at 3:30 p.m, Monday, Mr: | was execut of the} ‘The Congo river and its tribu- | golf course was in poor con- Vas .. Gon . Fernando Camus is chairman.| Commission on Secondary! taries are navigable for 14,000 dition and there wz much {Tine Bai { | They will speak to the students! Schools of the Southern Asso- yyjlos, i talk and no action in im-}™@Une ae oe _ ]and faculty of the colored junior} ciation and was formerly direc- we re one proving it. Price provided! a Sate and senior high schools at, tor of the Mississippi Curriculum feonard Curry, Leonard Curry, the action, inspired others |¢ SNCS GEC | 11:30 Tuesday morning | Program, | Mrs. Marcel Mazeau, Mrs. E. E with his vim and determi-!} P z } The: leaders will address the} Miss Ramsey's background for! Hood, Mrs. Elizabeth Singleton, nation, and the course was} HIG H SCHOOL BAND pounce oa hice council sone Sear Van, teachers and iene and Mrs. Reginald Roberts. a . ry posed of students, in the audi-| dents includes extens teaching Miss Jane B. Hopkins am oe sine ag to} agin —— HAND | torium of the Division Street} in the public schools of Ken-' Miss Betty Whidden are in py ‘him than any other Ke y uxt Schneider, a Petronia | School at 3:30 p.m, Tuesday. | tucky and at Montevallo, Ala., comes of production planning. | eee ie chtaining EO eet, has submitted the follow- | Their talks will explain the cur-{ College for Women. Their dis- J, R. Marcellus is program diree- t e a 4 i to The Citizen to help!rent accomplishments of the} jeussions with the Junior Red a and school sponsors are Mrs. | Louise Evans, Mrs. Myrtle Price, | Miss Kathryn Lowe, and Miss Ennie Mae Stewart j Dr re Ides ; La Va Your Grocer SELLS That GOOD || Office Hours: #12 and 8) em STAR * BRAND | xconcss.”” “Sime : ‘aides Bidg.. Otte * “and aa COFFEE ps. Duvei St ” Try A Pound eal Upstairs Resrtenc: ae | wait can be forgotten — when there s ‘ this at the end of the wait What matters is that this ts the best Bua h It’s available at OPA prices applying at del though we like to get trade-ins to trade. with Those things add up to the best dea! the» ' j anywhere. MULBERG CHEVROLET COMPANY E 377 Rey West, Flos

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