The Key West Citizen Newspaper, May 9, 1947, Page 11

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© Fateh, Mamie Be ecennccnn ic Babol, Mertic Lay ef A) pererenetonn ‘Axelson, Mary McDougal Davis, Leonard Wo, CRATE Bee neers immelman, Jack, et al .... kins, Joel W., Trustee . Archibald, Mes. Rmma G. “73 bins for trifles of valine. 3] He‘collected cigar an@* Norfleet, Helen, et al. ma orate, axes Lager ey « Wieser ee h 3 Baptist church in Fite, Scotland, Greene, Mary J: | and the remainder of his stealth | Sullivan, J. J. 4.30 | to brothers and sisters in McIntosh, a former linot; “a eet alae ** | erator and one-time activeitrade “esas. 1 unionist, became miserly’. affe -Sultivan, J. J, 1.07 | retirement, iNordyke ieal } Construction co. jevtotenseseeed Bn) RBH BR BRB RRR B The busy lawyer. looked up 30 Hadges, Nissimine ............-.. 2.08 | from his desk as his new, Client, | MOWARD E. WELSON a little girl, came in. “And, what; ‘Tax Collector, Monroe County, Fia.! is your problem, my. dear?” SPADE AN ars PG a BE. cea a ” a NOTICE OF TAX SALE FOR DELINQUENT 16 i we, Ewan abe ses ant i, BYERGLADES DRAINAGE DISTRICT TAXES | to divorce my pape ae } NOTICE 18 HERERY GIVEN 01 : : 2 uy nadmene Of EN ERGLADRS ULAIN AG SNE de Pate = aah : tc as ‘may he necessary to pay the amount di *| When Mark Twain was Youn, eats SAN cues Roulette fis | and struggling. in San Preece ‘ol i doo in ‘ i jn the Cy. of Key Went. Blorida, and continuing unl sald sale is. co | friend saw him one day with A complete list of ‘wach. delta Jands is avallable for ub! a cigar-box under his: arm. +‘‘'al- ways see you with a cigarbox,” guring the to ¢ of the Tax Collector for t mrve tn ihe Court House at Key inquiries as to U in said delinquent list, by mail or by telephone, or in pers she said, “I am‘ afraid you Srhoke too much.” “It isn’t, that,’> said husiness hours, will be fully auswered by the office of the said Tax Ce HOWARD L i § Tax ( fy Monroe County. Fie Mark, “I’m moving again.’ | & Or. EB. WILSON *lERE’S THE WAY IT MAY BE ON MARS, wo seas YOUR CARRIER BOY! His Future. . . in the xu sikap same soins in his. band. And even’ if he's never » millionaitn, he will he ¢ hatter business man; _ snare valuable member of ‘his community, when he’s srown ... for the experi- ence be’s sainins naw. a es s By HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE ————— ae AP Science Editor Nw YORK.—Flying a space ship to Mars might be like swim- ming in a river a million miles wide, flowing 20 miles an hour, out to a small rock one mile from shore. KIDNAPED CHILD FOYND. CHICAGO, Ill. — Maty Ann: Kubon was kidnaped two ‘years! ago but the little five-year-old; fi The swimming is complicated by the fact that the fast mov-| |= ‘ seas i ing water does not flow in smooth, straight lines, but has eddies, ' ae pears 4 policeyjoman.| Selly unkag rp. G0 pupriog: foster fee « FRinmer. | FBI agents discovered her- living ; “wapeeet ars lies isfy | with William G. Fuller, 41, an space. The motion is gravitation’s, | s ce Rearick hin: bealbaen: nae pull. The eddies are perturbation: suited to live on earth than man} vith the kidnapi oe in gravitation ,due to earth, moon, /is on Mars. Men who colonized} ¥? ie ping. iant t Jupiter, and even!Mars long enough to becom _ > Seated sit osdran of asteroids, ‘adapted, a matter of thousands or| Truth is the oldest of all the} which are very small planets. {more likely millions of years res: virtues. * ‘When the space travelers reach idence, could not return to. earth! Mars, the air there will do them {Without bringing their own air no good. It contains, by the best | These are just a few of th yj s astronomical estimates yet made, handicaps facing space ships. The — - one percent as much oxygen ‘hide of this ship probably will be ‘ag earth’s air. Some estimates are Metal, since nearly half an inc lonly one-thousandth as much. (is needed to prevent specks of | ‘Also it is doubtful whether the dust, which are small meteors, ; ships will find enough water on from boring holes into the ship. fars. Mars’ oe sem@ete ef Key West Citizen 25c"A Week by Carrier eavkeGis i b ebREEGaEEaas BEthEEw TTY Titty 7 2% + = = ees ‘The amount of ‘water in| The specks travel 40 to 60 miles a * air is estimated at about|Second. There may not be many, three percent of that on earth. jdangerous meteors. No one knows. ‘This first ship will have to carry |However, billions of the little ones . its own oxygen and water to last :fall into the earth's atmosphere ¢ several years. joaily- ‘ 3 Probably also all its own food.; The sun’s rays will make the @ Mars’ temperate and tropical re-;sunny side of the space ship near- : e e e e e e ssaee gee BES gions turn green in summer. But 'ly as hot as boiling water. The there’s a catch. The green comes other side will be way below zero. down from the white pole, which , This is easy to correct—in theory. is supposed to be ice, but could; Just keep the ship rolling slowly be something else. On earth the over and over. Pick the right spring green advances from the ‘roll, and it may not be necessary south up toward either pole. There ‘to have any other heat than the is no good explanation for Mars’ |sun. ° spring reversal. It may be due to! The roll would present quite a the fact that the water has to flow | problem to the crew. Up and down from the poles, as they melt, down would change according to using the long lines that look! the area of space. Near earth vaguely like geometrically-drawn down would be toward the earth canals. near the moon it would be to, Mars’ axis is inclined 24 de-| ward the moon. } @rees, so that it has alternate | Man’s weight would be only mers, north and south, much one-third on Mars But it would like the earth. But even in the,be much less during most of the ‘warmest belts, where tempera-jtravel. What that would do to tures seem to go to 60 to 80 de- {digestion and all other body func. grees in daytime, there is astr ions, all of which depend in par nomical evidence that it falls far on the forces of gravitation, is al- below zero at night, perhaps to/most entirely unknown. The log- the coldness of dry ice tical expectation would be ex- Mars clouds nave been seen|tremely sick travelers. 15 to 20 miles high. That is three ae to five times higher than earthly |\ CMO MMM LP clonds There are two explana-/| tiens: one is that they are water or vapor clouds, riding higher be- HE ARTMAN PRESS cause grayitation’s pull on Mars; PRINTING is three times less than on earth, // ‘The other is dust. There is good: C lastronomical evidence to support the dust explanation. One conclusion is safe on the’ basis of present evidence, namely, ‘ that Martians would be no better| OOOO OD ODD OM. 4 & Engraving Rubber Stamps Photo-Engraving iH eizzuesr Business Stationery The ARTMAN PRESS {ti Hitt + Rbeeranaeié CALL 31 Our Répresentative Wii Call Promptly i stit ate ili 1 if : eeccceseesece ececcccece " u

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