The Key West Citizen Newspaper, July 30, 1949, Page 2

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PAGE TWO the Key Citizen aD EE epee - | W | Your Horoscope owner ama Pebitenee When you speak or write, say some- Key est iy _| SATURDAY, u =" thing, That is not as easy as it appears to | Ppa te ee onty Gaity Newspaper io ey West and be. Too many of us think we have to be ys * ned axpects a henmeanmesstind verbose to aay something or expansive to aS TAKEN FROM aes & Metered at Key Went, Florida, as second clase matter | write soomething, but just the reverse ix THE CITizen quites very true. ¥ 2 ieee “te comtrovert Soo, Semartanne Voom | at Frequently, The Citizen receives “tus PA Aaa atone p loom om news items from outside sources or from semis announced, today thet SUNDAY. residents that are full of cemeralities that |! Curry Moreno has Pesigned @8| day endows. mean nothing. in Key Wes. The piring Westbrook Peg ae goes into effect toe tive rather away at Drew Pearson and others, who —- ** lean trait have been attacking Geners! Vaughan, | .,"°i% “artmonell was held up! push and robbed at 2 o'clock this Mor®- | eechery. President Treman's military aide, quoted | ine « tepped from. his pos near hs home on Fleming street. paragraph after paragraph or sentence Saemoven, ho sell al aa after seftence denouncing Vaughan, and | oniy $3. a ne bad left has roll of | in all the abuse, as Pegler pointed out, not , hi! © hs home a single charge was made against The Cuban Nav Band. whicn |<. Vaughan. had been attending the Liens’ | The Citizen is not concerned in this sence, in oh the editeria! about the status of Vaughan in | ee Ae ty Sonar much publicized charges against the “Five- | will make the trip to favana an Pereenters,”” who have been operating in | * Cvher munboat Washington The question here isthe | jonn Photan, captali of the jut 9-16-29- 30,1949) point in being able to say or write some- | ferry H M Flagler. arrived here - thing without smothering it in meaning- from Fort Lauderdale two les generalities. / A The art in writing is to say something , Charles MH Smuth left today for in the fewest words. A master of that art ae 2 ensign hehe oe a : } | om that thet tmtend to was Charles A. Dana, who for 14 years |Charies A. Smith, and fom ; came was managing editor of the New York |! proceed to New Yon to at ie Tribune, when it was edited by the great |"? * World’ Far TORN AND 625,26, 4949 Horace Greeley. In 1876, Dana purchased Mr. and Mre Alvin Smith of the New York Sun & made it a greater —— — —— Be Mu . paper than the Tribune —_ em vhs Dana learned to sty much in few “4 _ . t Joe MeMahon, Jr. amd Manuel | ‘ — hen he was with the Tribune, but natetguee tae dan: EP” Peon es a e exceeded Greeley for terseness when he | to vest relatives and friends ROMERT £Te Re edited the Sun. i ate Defendtan | eneEe oF FURLE sTrOs Harry Sutphin, who wrote editorial ag BH ead Manel oe paragraphs for the Sun in the 1890s up te | short yout m Miame ——— ~ | Dana’s death in 1897, told the writer that he, Suéphin, tried repeatedty, in testing | y lw" Peacock, tewmer Key You ate berehy required te ap pear te the Bill for fy ! t you im th mor hefure the MONOGRAPH Dana, to boil down his paraghaphs to the |Gabies, is in Key West visiting |seuations ‘ontain Dear Readers: bone, but always Dana was abie to cut out | tes and frends Sane Sak oneED wo, tep Won A Mey West housewife inquired }| 4 useless word or two in them, “and make | tuday The Cuan says in ane eit the price of an appliance, and || *trenger,” Sutphin said. editorial paragraph “ante apaMa, | was told it was $299.95. She was stump- . , - i a pociagrcainsh J gp Mg RS ed because a nickle more was not charg- 7 it man springs from the ape, some men | corn 1” jENMgre Ragres tm Probably the sellers wished to keep ven't sprung very far. eee - pare ‘ot, of the $200 bracket P ; THE ORACLE UNIFICATION CAN PROVE EXPENSIVE TOD AY'S | a The creation of a national defense os- HOW TO REGULATE BIG BUSINESS? | blishment, with « single military te-|| BIRTHDAY ure at the head of the three services, ix a ‘The economic concentration, resulting | line with the effort to “unify” the ser- by from a wartime economy, is hardly ap- | Vice* and to “economize” on the cost of na preciated by the public which will prob- | tional preparedness. ALFRED HARRIS NICOLL, born! ably be rised by the statement of At Herbert Heover, former President, re- | J!" 30. 1888. in San Frametace. | IP"... ty surp \ President of the Graybar Shec-| Biter: in torney-General Tom E. Clark that, during | Ce"tly told the House Armed Services | ic « e started his business |“? the war period, “ninety-five per cent of Committee that the provision for a single | career by working in neighbor js the manufacturing firms lost twenty-three | Military head is “not dnly unworkable, ir ry per cent of their workers, whereas five but might be dangerous to the country.” enti OMA f ter | he She per cent of the manufacturing firms gain- We do not have the full statement of several sales) Pam ed twenty-two per cent | Mr. Hoover available fer sthdy, but, ap jobs he juined im 19M the Western Elec tc Ca; prede cessor of Gray ber, which i Mr. Clark was testifying before a | parently, he has in mind the possibility Sub-Commit of the House Judiciary [that the mistake of a single military | Committee which ix considered the task of | ader could have disastrous consequen spverhauling our so-called anti-monopoly | for the nation in case of war. We h “laws. These laws, as almost everybody | Tepeatedly expressed the same idea ix ww the world’s knows, have been en the books for a con- | Connection with discussions over unifica- | nage 2 arm siderable time, but little progress is made | tion of the armed services | evi pth By —_ if anti-trust cases We are not willing to risk the future n to sales manager and in The present statute limits fi ) $5, | Security and safety of this country in the | <>, - or — = 008, which is, in itself, no deterrent to | effort te save money on our prepared. | te to New York a as-|.. VM illegal practices by big busine enter. | Ness activities. It is quite possible that t t president in 1939 . prises. Mr. Clark suggests that the fines | if the future defense of this country de- |", oe — oe cperitent he doubled and points out that the courts | pends upon a single plan for war the | As ep i are so loath to assess jail sentences for | pation might find itself in the pesition of | k he was hast to the | of , 4 convictions of this type that only two] France after depending upon the Mag —- et By the Homnrakic ” Aquitine tapes.) such penalties have ben ziven in anti-trust | not Line | antrie ert of the bes i ases While it may not be cheaper, it will} | far Mommie Coumey — : The Attorney-General says that mo- | be safer to let the Army, the Air Force | TODAY IN HISTORY (SO)... on i tae | renee, & Base of een nopoly power seldom shows up in the | and the Navy plan the tactic at- | (Kaow America)! cc cat Geaer on “ + | mead boom in Ginaeen, tenes form of a single industry dominating an | e#y of their respective fields of e.| louse of “Burgesses : Ay 8 : | ba years ago entire industry. In most cases, it is found | Thus, the three services will not nece sa oe 2 4 wl » BA Hy Po TTT _ it Industries controlled by a few large | sarily develop identical plar procedures } =, py 7. companies which {: w policies and prac- | and programs but, in the event of war s 4 © St John's Lodge, | 449 ' ‘ | Political tices to eliminate real competition among | one of the three will have something pe Tap th themselves, and at the same time maintain | capable of defending the nation sent Gears “_ | f s , nstame of the] int Jou ; AAAs abaabbbbbbhbhbhd ge wary 0 Mahoney, of Wy- Cowandice makes mast of the impor iss i inna & we | For City Commission oming. who has spunsered 2 bill to net up ibilities we fear. { ‘ ane accepted ad ALBERT G. ROBERTS federal charters for all corporations en ONE THING OVERLOOKED pes pg frer tests ot | : gaged in interstate commerce. thinks that | ne benny m enpian nand| & 4 eo. . - opera- Editor - Ex-Mayor - Colonel - Dea: | 1982 — The Ctympie gine y pany, or group of Com | Banker Charles Harris bas been robbed. |?" Los Angeles pantes. He does not denounce big busi- A bold, bed burgler entered th 4 ve ge Ape velt asks ness because it is big. pointing out that it | Harris home in Cantos by punchir he 943—Rocsevelt warns newtr = 4 rene =. vernauereia ” | in a window screen and pilfered the ectit a no a Ing carried on ’ many iddus but « . 2 * amy ive thinbe that the pi lisa nt should at pasta Soap tate _ _ “sk on Haw, haw, haw! 47 —In Boston, Dougia down the rule of procedure for the era it uller convicted for broad . Serves him right : Ss aa which we live ; Any editor who carries $215 in real | wer = = Berlin - ome ante} CAUTIOL is " money on his person deserves to be robbed a “4 . he ye qumesenbeans The fact that be can get together that Ph Peay Having read somewhere that salt | much cash all at one time proves him + n program is not adapted water is injurious to garden plant a | a malefector of great wealth, if not a pre * tater om eet neighber of ours, deeply solicition r the | datory pletocrat ‘ee ¢ . 7 plants, always quits working among them | The robber should also hav« srried veer } - before he begins to sweat.<Jackson | away Charlie's pants Jackson ( Miss.) Lote Aguiter, Carts Lone tore through the exit. TT 4OUT appearing to glance faven wg Gow, aliwugh Ubex nlawed SUNSHINE CONSTRUCTION CO. jor @ Ever-Plastic Elaterite @ Gulfspray Shower-Enclosures @ Ventilated Awning-Shutters @ Perma Stone GLASS and ALUMINUM JALOUSIES SKYLIGHT JALOUSIES ... the best ever made! TILE Domestic, Cuban and Roofing Barret Tile TERRAZZO FLOOR €.B.$. CONSTRUCTION SUNSHINE CONSTRUCTION CO. LICENSED CONTRACTORS 2313 Patterson Avenue TELEPHONE ‘as ( Mig.) Daily News Daily News. beend ase Spee hg ; | Seucs t | "Tom “Tie Read the Classified Ads in The Citizen Exclusive Dealer for Monroe County |

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