Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
' naar ete PAGE TWO ee een aaa oo marearss.2” * een —— eis ecccel ase eater or Ny 7 ATED PRES! wil be 10 eents od tor atthe meme st of diso abit issues Subjects of loci reat, but it wit not publish symous communications. EDITORIAL. TATION IMPROVEMENTS FOR KEY WEST ADVOCATED SUPREME MOMENT not has noted that, whenev-) er reference is made to Pres. ident Truman’s fishing, he is reported to have used a handline. Home-bred Key, Wes anglers would like ‘to ie the President’s hand and assure him he. knows the how, why and wherefore of} fishing. To us, using a rod and reel, is very much like eating soup with a fork. You don’t get the feel of a fish when: you set back on your rod and hook him; you don’t. get the tingle in your hands when you reel in vw iish, * Weare aware that de- votees of rod and reel de- clare that catching fish for sport with a handline is} something like pulling in a) boat's painter or hawser. | For 16 years the aforesaid | piscatorial seer and prophet | pulled ’em in with rod and! reel in the waters in the vi- cinity of New York City. He followed the sport in that} way because, had he used a handline, he would have been set apart from the The Citizen’s piscatorial | secr and prophet and what-| { | By FRED BRADY AP Newsfeatures ESTON, Mass.—Ocean born hurricanes may never again) make surprise attacks on a world across which they have) blasted death and ruin since winds Wherever in the world the tinels against them. LITTLE QUAKES ES” TRAC THE KEY WHEN THE EARTH TREMBLES these machines tell the stomy.) locate the tremors. At right. Father Linehan examines great storms gather—if it's over| | water—alarms will flash to instruments and men who are sea~ The alarms will be long-unexplained marks on seismograph ording device he helped invent. ” herd. It was a_ case of “When in Rome do as the} Romans do.” BY THE CITIZEN papers which reflect the vibrations of the earth, and one of the first men to recognize these marks as hurricane warnings was the Rev. Daniel Linehan, S.J., seismologist at the Weston Obser- WEST CITIZEN “fascinate.” me, a. senténee which includes the word} ard Robert (after deep spoushoty aid wanted ly father. si a “e At left are instruments which i ALMA JANET LE ro: Rima dane! ara Liberty aaee Linhenwuent. In x. You are hereby *reaitrea bl a ar to the Bill of vs a livorce in the above use on Or before the 24th, Loa ty Mar A.D. herwise -t! t “ity = oo oe pordinnny tive est Citizen, a news- ed in the City of Key eet Grdered this 2ist™ aay AD. ieee in he, BBs IN SHE CCUIT ELEVEN’ 1. More Hotels and Apart- ments, * 2. Beach and Bathing Pavilion. 2 p and Sea. 4 ‘ion of County ‘and ; ott Al als MONOGRAPHS To Our Readers: In Caesar's time the Ides of March made it hot for him; iffmbdern times, the Ides of March make it hot for the taxpayers. “i ORACLE. RED CROSS CARRYING ON. GI's are human beings. In| uniform jor mufti, mankind produceg a few who magnify | the littl {hipgs—tforget the importa One GI who Cross didn’t. Sheinstance is the ea m4 Hrs “s ye s id Sana! cigarettes aring fhe revered: insignia, into thB wBuyopean; market. fH Soles es d dismissed fr0m_ pertly juse: Hissown momen: In hostteye “pity eng} tum-to swing him into a workers ‘freqteéntly shépped for bed patients. Sometimes; they made purchases of cig- arettes outside for them When the other patients saw the money change| hands, they, apparently thought the Red Cross wér were selling Red Cros: cigarettes. These long-gone situations | worth mentioning, main-| because the person who ngs them up and repeats them —both loud and Jong. Wh; Ww ll, some hamanity is frail from its ‘enemies, collected certainly the wounded. The packages sent to prison- of war in Germany were er certainly. not sold to the who other- ’ on Nai fare. “Doughnuts and _ coffee Red Cross, barber and pressing as well as lodging was charged for — because| Army required it. Ten i -s for 12 coupons got three cups of coffee and six were sold by the and doughnuts for the bearer of! coffee cost In Italy, three cookies 5 cents. the ETO. was tree; 5 lira, about Redj'Cross werkers brought never-for- gotten «cheer to the men when they rested behind the lines. Up front, in the mud and blded were the nurses in the field hospitals, Now, in the hespitajs, such as our own Naval Hos pital, the Key West Chap- ter of American Red Cross carries on with recreation and reHabilitation. Last year, when the hur- rieane .warning resounded, shelters were. . established and stocked with food, wa- ter, and other necessities. That job was but one ex- Sap ees Ith give as ross em than a.50-50. chance jof get-}7 Zing-g- black, you” ee as COUXt-MAT-\ ote t f boat Your, catth. Ex- with the odds against you. is Apt to keep griping| He gave away his rod andj reel when he returned to Key West. Had he attempt- ed to use it here the home- town folks would have totéd a,superior sneer when he went to commune with his} finny brethren. But that was /not his reason for eschewing} |rod and reel. He thrilled at} | the thought of feeling a jstrike in his fingertips; |thrilled at the thought of ithe line’s whizzng through his hands while he played a | doughty fighter. He who thinks there is | not sport in catching a tar- | pon, an amberjack or a sail- j fish on ‘a handline, let him | try it only once, and, if he |is not an expert, his hands will be burned as though by | fire. The expert handline | angler does notynnt, stalls on. his, fingers. to}, k ei p; them }, | from.-being: Gitte i + | fers. ta, use sbare hi and-Y gomparatavely “6 all cotton fines, ‘Satthat he will fish he chodks morg ting away, £2 Hold him if id. don't’ we a cockpit. .Do.that, and you'll) ithri]l to the supreme mo- ment of landing a fighter The man with no axe to} AB vatory of Boston College. the dread ocean winds. The alarms for hurricanes, Father Linehan explains, are the “small shakings” of the earth. “Great shakings” are earthquakes, and these have been known and charted on seismographs throughout the world since the turn of the cen- tury. The “small shakings”—seismol- ogists calls thém microseisms— have been noted too during all that time but were simply—and incorrectly—explained by the first Italian observers as ‘quakes too distant to register a strong seis- mograph recording. Now to watch for these small shakings, Father Linehan ports, the U. S. Coast and Geo- detic Survey have started a chain of seismograph stations in Flor- ida, the West Indies and ofher spots of the hurricane belt. They @inst such rioting winds as ‘claimed 6,000 lives in Galveston, Texas, in: 1900,:.more than- 2,000 fives in Florida in 1928 and 588 lives in New later. ‘Microseism warnings, the Je- -Suit scholar says, start when the hurricane starts and gener- of alarms from the standard weather instruments in use for 30 years, the barocyclometer. Father Linehan accounts for the linking of microseisms and ocean- bern hurricanes in this w: When atmospheric p. ure changes in the forming of a hur- ricane, the change is a jerky de- re-j are the new watchers! ally will be 10 to 20 hours ahead | During the war when almost all other weather guards were | lost his work guarded American shipping in the Atlantic from | de seént from high to low which velops “a pumping effect” from the atmesphere. jof pressure ove -the water, mak- ling the ocean bob up and down jand causing vibrations which #a- diate from the ocean bottom, magnified by the weight of ocean water. Further magnification of such vibrations—from 400,000 to 1,000,000 times—is then ac- complished by the receiver, the seismograph which after nearly 50 years of improve- ment employs electrons | measuring the vibrations of the earth, Storms forming over. shallow. water or over land will not reg- ister on these instruments. Father Linehan says his micro- seism observations began:in 1938, the’ year of the New, England hurricane, and that during the war from his countryside labora- England 10 years tory 16-miles from Bostoh he ‘was, sejsmoeraphs able to keep Washington ' formed of hurricanes. .hui over the Atlantic. He insists that credit. for the discov must be shared .with the earlier work of two. other, Jesuits. At Zi-ka-wei, near Shanghai in, China, Father Gherzi discovered 15 years ago a _ connection be- tween microseisms and mon- soons, and then in 1938, when in- Father Linehan’s own work, was; grind has no axe. It is amazing how exc ited | ome people can get over lit-| tle things. | egeeneneenneiones | The theory of education| is not always practiced by the educated. The church suffers much | and pos-| sibly more from its friends. | The best w to bring| about greater safety on the | highways is to have all traf-| fie regulations vigorously enforced — against every-| body. ample of the efficient or- ganiation. In the background, stood, the Nationa] Red Cross pre- pared to fly in nurses and supplies of many kinds, should the disaster strike. Also ready was the National Red Cross fund to aid in the rehabilitation of sufferers, should that be necessary. Sixty-one Red Cross work- duty in World War I. Six hundred and _ ninety-eight were partially disabled for life, 101 were completely disabled. Danger is no deter- rant.to the Red Cross. The volunteer who con- Libutes time and work to the Key* West Chapter is responding to one of the highest calls of humanity.) So, likewise, is the one who gives money to finance this) great organiation, Key West needs to keep its chapter strong, not only a matter, of community pride, but of| community wisdom. ‘ ‘Key West In Days Gone By AS TAKEN FROM FILES OF THE CITIZEN OF MARCH 15, 1937 Mayor Harry C. Gayly and ers of the city counciy an- nounced tod; that they will jleave for H na on March 22 to invite President Bru and members of his official family to | come to Key West on April 10 to ing the v to Jose} Marti. monument A frogfish was put in a tank at the Key West Tropical Aqua- rium today. It is among the rarest fish in local waters, and| ‘the first to be put on exhibition | in Key West. A meeting to consider the zon- ing of Key West was held last night in the home of Wallace Bryant Kirke, Arthur Sawyer Post of the ‘American Legion and the Ladies recreation| ers were killed in line of Auxiliary will celebrate tonight the annive ry of the organiza- tion of the American Legion. The \affair will be held in Legion Hall on Whitehead street. Five bids were opened last night by the Overseas Highway Bridge Commission for work on the proposed bridges. Two bids were for the decking of the Bahia Honda railroad bridge and mak- ing s to it for use as a highway bridge Attorney Henry H. Taylor of Miami is in Key West on official business. He arrived by plane this morning. A musical entertainment will attend the ceremonies in un- | (Consinned trom Page One) sonnel offigial at the Submarine Base for a number of years, and who recently submitted his resig- nation, said he could not di- tion about the reported impend- jing seizure of Poinciana by the | Navy. | Commissioner Louis Qarbonell said this morning that he “had spoken to Capt. Henry M. Cooper, |commandant of the Naval Base, jon the matter and Cooper ‘said! he knew of no change in the! situation since a few months’ | ago. Capt. Cooper admitted the Navy wanted the project but |that any definite action was “still in the bight,” Carbonell | said. The commissioner has wired | |Rep. Geo. Smathers . (Dem.) in| | Washington, to contact the Hous- ‘ing Authority on the question. Proof “You seem very quiet tonight, Ronald,” said the pretty girl. “Are you sure you love me?” at the gate last night your dog bit a piece out of my leg, and I didn’t even notice it till I got home!” | be given tonight by pupils in the grammar grade at the Con- vent of Mary Immaculate. been visiting her brother and sister-in-law, Lieutenant and} Mrs. E. V. McCarthy, left this | Today The Ci editorial paragrap! “If you think you are up on current history, tell us Givckly who is the president of Caba"or France?” ___ ae This creates thousands of tonsj in ! CITY ACTS TO HALT |! vulge the source of his informa-. “Love you?” exclaimed Ron- | ald. “Good heavens, Rhoda, when we were saying good-bye Miss Mary McCarthy, who had | morning for her home in Boston. | en says in an! No. 10-1074 SEYMOUR. “TA ACK, Plaintife, ae 5 GRANT, CATION ‘Grant, sty! he alles: i be Nake as confe: published once ” pivoreH Long Island City? 4, } pear to the TIMING—Linehan checks by |‘ radio te coordinate machines. Hr ante 8 Father Ramirez of ' Bogota, Colombia, made the most } comprehensive report up to that time on intensity increases in miscroseisms, i Father Linehan watches the ; earth under ruby lights in a long low! cellar, dim as a Photographic darkroom, where the six recorders of his new- est seismograph stand ii a line. Darkness is necessary for the . recorders because a photo- graphic process is used, Himself a co-jnvehtor / Linehan-Afringdale~ ‘small ‘ unit seismograph, Father Linehan is yproudest of the instrument which tops the $200/000’ worth ‘oP équip?) ment in his cellars, the Benioff 1 Anvéntéd fy /a stidmitoa As dis ‘L. Palme Saad oF alin tthe _Caljfornia, J oa sof ‘Technology, the Benio’ operates] only there and at the’ Harvard ‘observatory and for Father Line- han, He says the earth takes a lot of watching. “After the experience of a thousand readings,” Father. Line- han says, “a seismologist is about ready to interpret what the j seismograph tells him.” paper West, Florida, tra (sd) ANan BR Solieitor aid URNS: aale or Devisees, deceased: vars, unknown: any Florida, Part Lot one (61) eularly reference as: German Fishermen a * Getting New ae thence in a SV of the F. E, tance of 90 fee angles in | | SYLT, Germany.—(AP).—For-| mer German army barracks on {this North Sea island are being rebuilt to house the German fish- ermen and their families who used to live on Helgoland and now have been evacuated to | Sehleswig-Holstein. | ‘Sylt offers them virtually the |same conditions they were used to on Helgoland and they can |again pursue their fishing indus- try from the “New-Helgoland.” The new colony is expected to be ready for occupancy by sum- {mer. The Royal Navy intends to jblow up the extensive military installations on Helgoland soon, making it impossible for fisher- men to live there in the future although two of its harbors will remain to sheHer fishermen from storms. rij a ‘ht angles in beginning, quired March 25, A.D. it Court 1 Cireuit cery, Curry, is in @ ed against you. to the situate, lving County, Florida, Part Lot Section One one (81) 3 nine (9) Book F- eularly 4 reference Commencing due West feet; for ‘a distance point Candid Comment point of beg At a wedding breakfast little Eric was given a seat near his | adoring aunt. Hl “Well,” said the lady, “what | kind of a wedding will you have, | Eric?” “T’m never going to get mar- ried.” ea “But why don’t you ever get) ,/f married?” | Eric was silent for a few min- utes as he gazed across the table at his admiring Lapeer Then he answered very posi | tively: “Because I've lived with married people too long already.” general sa) 5 | ata to The Citizen—2e} oo reer Legatees or , said Clara A. ‘ause now ws You are hereby * Sampla Fa 4 ° Bill ef Com) orce, ip the alove iatyled efore the 24th TMT; ‘otherwise the t ee in will be taken as aitceatite ‘his order is to be published once a week for four consecutive w in The Key West Citizen, @ Sewer ublished in the City of Key ate ret ligne and ordered, this 21st day Pei AD, Bos CRATER. Clerk of the Cireult gure. Montes County, Florida. vy: Alice H. Salgado, re, LMER iff. mar 1-8-15, 1947 ‘pal nd CT, Bustat his wifé, ELMA’ MAN, formerly ELMA AYARS)( a feme sole, et al, Defendant: Sarge Tr) ye A. iN THE : CIRCUIT COURT OF 1 i JUDICIAL, att f OF THE Nineteen Section One (1), Township Sixty South, Range Thirty “in the Northeast M F FLORIDA not known ‘to be}! A. Palmer, ara his wife, not known to re eae alive; The. vahnomp i e aneee or Grp ees mer, i sag 20 of . the Grant aie, ‘t she” ma Chapman, formerly Bima}... a feme’ sole, residence A, B..Chapman, her hushand,, residence unknown; AN Persons having ‘or claiming interest in the folléwing described land, and being in Monroe County,’ to-wit: situate, lying 3) of ‘Sixty. perio a and parti- said deed thence due Commencin, at re. a tale Ri ite corner of above Lot 19: ; due West for a distance of 30 Former Army Barracks| tect: thence 90 degrees South for a distance of 30 feet as int ef beginning. From said int of beginning Ae ire parallel with the right. of was Cc. Railway a dis- t; thence at right i} a NW’ distance of 128 f stance of 33 feet more thence due Rast for a distance of 126 feet more or less to point of according Pi recorded in Plat Book 1, Page You are hereby ordered and re- to file your appearance. on 19 of of Wherein | T. Plaintiff and the above named parties are Detsaanet ult of such a Decree Pro Confesso Said cause stituted as aforesaid for the pur- pose of quieting the Plaintiff's title following described — land, direction a thence at Sly direction less; to at 8. in the. above pending in the the Eleventh the State of in and for Monroe County, Jenkins being in Monroe to-wit: ineteen (1) Township Sixty- h, at of 'L RDI mer b-g-h5, 1947 (19) of ‘Thirty the > corner of above Lot for a distance of 30 thence 99 degreen due South of beginning. From nning traverse due t feet the F. of SO fects thance at Fight angles direction a distance thence at right angles direction feet_more or 1 due East for a dista feet more or less to point of be- ginning, accerding to Plat record- in Plat Book 1, is Further Ordered that this distance thence of 136 Page 68. der be published once @ week for four (4) consecutive weeks in The Key West Citizen, circulation Monr. rs Copy ¥ a newspaper of published in ‘lori Pia Practi Call 563-M or 1148. marl0-6tx | including stock and equipment. ;* Come in or call 1183-W. |__| Atomic Lunch’ Restaurant, $650.00 | 3 marl2-6tx | Furnished homes, hotels, apart- ment houses, filling station and building lots. Paul Boysen, 626 Fleming Street, Phone 153. mar]2-4tx Ae ssp Nets MONROE COUNTY, x Nice home or apartment house, res € having -7 rooms and bath on first floor and 4 rooms’ gnd bath 5h yaliebeedt Street (upstairs), 1! of s:mar]3-3tx ee Fiat-paint, white and colors. Lead and zinc white house paint, ironing < beans, oherty,: ole, good _ condition. 927, cae t mparl5;3tx Ladies “Bieycle, rust -resistant Phone 1043-J. Man’s fine English bicycle, three- speed gearshift, handle-bar brakes, headlight and, tail- light; tool kit and pump. Few months old. Call 1043-M, 66 Rest Beach. mar}5-3tx paint, $20.00. 65 Rest Beach. mar15-1tx , Restaurant, beer and wine license. Landon Poultry, Trenten 7, N. J. Chieks, bloodtested, N.H. Reds, R. 1 $2.95 per 100. Leghorn Cock- erels, $1.95 per 100. Ship C.O.D. Box 1644, mar}5- nh B. Rocks, Reds, W. Rocks, Jersey Giants, Wyan- ‘National Hatcheries Outlet, 1728 S. 8th St, Phila, 48, Pa. marl-it waa Otis: St, So. Gate, Calif. } mar6-15-22-3tx pee ogee ye a Telephone 255. - Best location, doing business. Must sell. Will exchange for Will sell or exchange for car. mart-6tx very good Sickness, lots. Write P.O. Box 103. mart -8tx ——————————————————s One good iron bed with springs Bathtub, toilet, lavatory fixtures and mattress. Enquire 513 Whitehead Street, Court House. marl§-1tx Four-piece ‘living :reom set and desk. Must sell, cheap. Pathe 2404 Staples Avenue. maris- 3tx radio, Weather-Eye heater, e: cellent throughout. ida St. * fnar]5-2tx 1937 Ford tudor, 85 h.p. good condition. 714 White St. Apt. No. 3. mar15-2tx ’46 Royal Enfield motorbike. S. Phillips, N.A.S., Unit 30, marl5-3tx 1 1941 Oldsmobile Town Sedan, excellent condition. Call be- _ tween 5 and 9 p.m., Ft. Taylor Navy Housing, C3. marl5-3tx Government surplus work clothes. Save money! Used Herringbone Twill pants, 95c; work jackets, ‘T5e; field jackets (wool-lined), $1.95. Rebuilt service shoes, $2.45, combat boots, $3.45. Bar+ gains entire family. “Free cata- logue”. Send $1 deposit, Small- est. order accepted $2. Money: back guarantee: Dixie Mail Order House,»158 Monrgé St., New York 2, N.Y. marl5-1tx. “lNew shipment of sheets, pillow eases, chenille spreads, bath sets, curtains, dresses, slips, ete. Cash or time payment. Call 1949 Nash: Anibassador 6, 4-door, f $31-R, R. R. Russell, 508 Wil- ‘. liam St. 5 wanted. All or any Citizen. single item opposite} desired. Write Box G-1l, efo marl5-5t bfpencven cal Pre soca ward. 701 Flor-}' ae