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seeidiitinin 1. ne le areca tall MEXICO CITY — &% — Occu- "84 Germany and this ancient! Axtee capital are in a tug-of-Wwar | ver fresh meat. Mexico doesn't fhovee year round supply of fat! <#ttle for both herself and for- “tqners. Allied authorities bought teh meat hereto be added to #e ration of Germany coal min- ers, and thus persuade them to on being miners. City has long relied on the rich Muasteca plain for its beef. The Huasteca doesn't have @nough to go round. Mexico City Butchers said the cattle were be- ing sold in Tampico. The govern- oe banned export of 4 cattle This brought a protest from the Allied cecupotion authorities in Germany. They said the interrup- tiem in meat shipments endanper- @ their program in Germany. ‘The situation is furt compli eated by Mexico's need for dol-! tare. Meat shipments are paid for | in dollars Grist Mill Since 1914 the United States! hee gradually accepted the fact; that this world has become too emall for us to live isolated and indifferent from the rest of our earthly neighbors. The late Pres- ident Franklin Roosevelt recog- feed and preached that our na- tional security was dependent on conditions and events in far- @wey lands and on distant seas. The velidity of that belief was preven by the scope of the last tow wars. In the light of our pres. emt concept of international re- tations, it @ well to examine the events now transpiring in the Cimeses civil war When the Chinese civil war be- gan im earnest in October of 1945, the Nationalist Government's omic, onder Generalissimo Chiang Ke rk, were still in- tect. They were armed with American equipment given them te fight the J we, and with that equipment they began mop- pire up the Communist forces. They were successfully driving “ backward when ed a of the mation of a eomtrtion everament between the Nationslist and the Com- quniets The United States then “epped sending arms to the Chinese government for more than ten month ten precious etithe in which the government ferees became disorganized and d@emerettzed while the Commun- vets wed forward, taking ad- waniane tag fom Communist offensive swe pt momentum went forwas cd Bethe et and its strength as it Some and it is still sweeping for- wore There are these who would have us believe that there is no @vidence of Russian aid or inter- vention in Chine. But it was the Bueriens who armed the Chinese Com nists while we disarmed the government armies. We are ate athed to believe that Mao | Teeh-tung Communist leader, is; Chinese, with no allegiance to Moscow The facts indicate other- wie The miral committee of the Chinese Communist Party, which Mao-Teeh-Tung heads, is smd in glove with Soviet For the past 25 years the have conducted a train-| ol, military and political, for Chinese Commur in Mos- « Mao Teeh Tung sent a mes sage to the Seventh Congress of the International Communist Party in which he said, “the militant Chinese Red Army sends | greetings to ali-union Commun- | ist Party of the US. S. R. and to the leader and teacher of the workers of the world, Comrade mt This Congress will facili tate the preparedness for the de- eisive berricade fight for Soviet power throughout the entire ~ Wf there could possibly be any doubt in anyone mind as to where the Chinese Communists tami, that doubt should have been dispelled by a statement} made by Mao Tseh-Tung only a} few days ago when he said,; China urse is to ally with the | Reviet | n ally with the; new democratic countries of Eu we. ond ally with the proletariat and the masses of the people in ether countries to form an in- fernationa i front One leans either to the side of jm- " m or to the side of social- sm Neutrality is a camoflage.” Reelizing how small and close ly knit the world has become, the eircurnst es existing in China are alarming and should give us atene meern and reason to carefully consider with utmost gravity our future policy in the Bar East j of shelf space it affords. | metal teeth that enable you to fit | gether or as’ far AIRLINER CRASHES AFTER MID-AIR COLLISION (®) Wirephoto SIXTEEN PERSONS WERE KILLED SATURDAY as a Memphis-bound airliner was chopped apart in the skies over Fort Dix, N. J. by what witnesses described as a stunting Navy fighter plane. The airliner’s left wing and tail weré shorn off. and the crippled Eastern Airlines DC-3 whirled into a farm pasture and burst into a wall of.flame. The Navy plane burrowed into the ground ‘two miles away. strewn throughout the wreckage of the airliner. in a field beside an antes parachute. 4 SS NAVY PLANE f WRECKAGE BURIED IN ae | ary for 10 months of the The charred bodies of twelve passengers and three crew members were The pilot.of the Navy plane was found dead 120 TEACHERS ! 1 | (Continued From Page One) !days of the year. The public schools of the county would not receive state funds if the teach ers were not employed to teach jfor 180 days. Under an amended state law, |the teachers are paid on the basis of one-tenth of their annual sal- year. There was some trouble about a year ago when the state law read that they were to be paid for 12 months work. : Some of the school boards throughout the state took the position taht they would be call- ed upon to pay the teachers for more than their contracts called (®) Wirephoto THE WRECKAGE OF THE NAVY FIGHTER PLANE that col- lided in the air with a commercial airliner near Fort Dix, N. J., Saturday, is buried in a field some two miles from the area where the airliner crashed and burned. The body of the Navy pilot was found 800 feet from his wrecked plane. Féfteen pas- sengers and crew members died in the airliner. A witness said the Navy plane “buzzed” the airliner just before the collision in which the tail and left wing of the airliner were ripped off. About Your Heine By FRANCES DELL VASHINGTON. — Something can be done about your kitchen, even if the family budget can’t stand a big remodeling project. All you really need is a good screwdriver bow grease. If your pantry is enough, and whose install a set of not large why not | revolving Lazy You can order a made, and it’s very in- expensive considering the amount Or, if the idea of a merry-go- round in your kitchen is a bit too giddy—perhaps you'd prefer a set of the very new and practical | metal Strip s! s. The metal! strips are screwed into the sides of your cubboard. There are small in wooden shelves as_ close to- oo apart as you! about painting your kitchen with’) paieg a good washable paint in a bright, | There is an excellent disap-| cheerful color? Hang curtains pearing towel rack on the mar- | made of oil plastic material at ket that works like an extension sit back and} curtain rod. You could put one under your sink or in 3 try. When your push it out of sight. The rack will hold three towels. There is a utility cabinet being | made which holds cleaner and all its The cabinet also has a place for your long - handled mops; and a wealth of el-| for the small things that always seem to get lost. If you don’t have the itchen for this wonderful inet (24” wide x 24%” high),’ perhaps you in your hall or porch. Rotating shelves are just what you need for very deep clos and cabinets. a whirl and is in view. Why not hang most frequently pans on large steel the range? You will find this will} save you many unnec For the finishing - touc! the windows—then ur pan- towels are dry, the vacuum attachments. icks required space in your cab- deep x 84” could put it on your back ts Just give the shelf everything within some of used «pots and hooks over how- THREE HOTELS IN MI AMI at POPULAR PRICES __ Located in the Hear! of the City RATES REASONABLE ROOMS WRITE or WIRE for RESERVATIONS with BATH and TELEPHONE . ° Ford Pershing Miller < Hotel Hotel Hotel N.E. 3rd St. 226 N.E. Ist Ave. Be Hocus 100 Rooms 229 NE. Ist Ave. Elevator Elevator 80 Rooms Solarium Heated Elevator 3 BLOCKS FROM UNION BUS STATION On na ae eee a your | steps. | for. So the state laws were chang- ed to read that they should be paid for ten months. Monroe County’s teachers will | draw their fi one-tenth of their annual salaries on Septem- ber 14, or one month after they have been at work. ROOSEVELT (Continued Froin Page One) promissory notes each for $2,700 to cover the final cost of the prop- erty. By getting the warranty deed the city avoids payment of county taxes for the property. County taxes now amount to about $800 annually. An peunence amending a pre- THE KEY WEST CIVIZEN U. S. Government | Conducts Effective Lobbying Tactics — \ By EDWARD R. SIMS ~ The Citizen’s Washington + __ Correspondent ue WASHINGTON—A lot of talk has been heard recently of the { terrible lobbits in Washington. and even President Truman” is appalled over’ some of the lobbies here. Some of them are tle-talked-of dther side of the sue is also, Very questionable: In other’ swords the govern. ment is also in the lobbying bus & ness and some of /the are ‘engaged in such. outright lobbying, finaneed the tax- payer’s money, that it’ should be made known. Some government agencies here in Washington are in close cooperation with priv- ately - financed lobbies. Often these agencies will refer people to the lobbies. Government agencies and de- partments lobby for - various things. There are agencies, or bureaus, here which should’ be abolished. Some are merely, du- plicating others. They were set} up in the ,war emergency, but| many still thrive because a gov- ernment. lobby. has kept them alive. On questions such as public housing, medical health billg:and labor laws, the government’s lob- bies are very active. They spend much-money ptiiping out propa- ganda to the people. They ‘say they are informing the public, Often they are misinforming the public, This: is not to take a stand opposite that of the Tru- man administration in these fields nor is it to ‘support the administration position. It is to say this govetnment is conduct- ing unethical lobbying opera- tions. In some cases, government de- partments supply research and information and all aid possible to congressmen who are with them. They have said this work was out of their field whén op- ponents asked fog information. Some departments have even been influential in getting secre- taries placed in certain congres- sional offices. There these secre- taries pump out the propaganda. And,so while lobbying is going on, it is being used by both gov- qnment and private business, jand the government lobbying | seems to be more effective. Few people have heard much about if, though ther’re footing the bill. vious ordinance requiring that lights on an automobile shall *be visible for at least 200 feet and that it shall have two lights in éront and one in the rear. A resolution settling the claim of James Del Pino, formerly an | employee of the city, for $875. Del {Pino fell of a scaveneger truck and injured his shoulder. ZA Extend ing jobs -- Addition UNDERWOOD Addis tng Fig yuring MACHINE IMMEDIATE DWNT | ‘ ' $i8 DUVAL STREET You Can de i or verity invoices, Calculate Discou Figure payrolls. ups...or any ond Multi .. hen THE WORLD FAMOUS Phone for a demonstratian) al yon ype hday ALLEN’S aT 2E R ints "Marke other figu’- . that involve “Subtraction Pp lication. MWe SUNDSTRAND per (2) PHONE 73 tainly questionable, ‘but’ the =) DIE IN CRASH S| Postal Business it’s out of the “postoffice” busi ness. of tourists asking for » arrow sign, intended to pet ; the postoffice around 2 thad been moved by t until it pointed dire bank. GENERAL MARSHALL (Continued F) ERP or the M the North Atl: He went into a strate the timeliness ‘arming act. With the Western Furope pronerly armed no aggressor nation would chanee a war with the pact nations, b cause the aggressors w , that they ahayrule eve » Page One) that the President has Europe & ngthenin essential to men Choose Your GIFTS from us Something for Every Member of the ‘Family TROPICAL TRADER ‘718 Duval Street Phone 1000 GP) Wirephoto! CAPTAIN LEROY ROLAND MATTHEWS (top). of Jackson Heights, N. Y., pilot, and Peter Gobleck (bottom), also of Jack- son Heights, flight attendant, were killed in the crash of an Eastern Airlines DC-3 passen- | ger plane at Fort Dix, N. J. Saturday. Another crew mem- ber and 12 passengers of the airliner also were killed. The airliner crashed after colliding with a Navy plane. CONGRESS MAY. NOT (Continued From Page One) | to bureau salaries, which have been getting along on stop-gap! funds. TO HAVANA Leave Arrive Chairman Clarence Cannon of Flight Key West Havana the House Appropirations Com-|| 952 10:15A.M. 11:00 A.M. mittee stated that final action 954 1:45 P.M, soon will be taken on many of the} 956 4:00 P.M. bills. ties in Japan are the Democratic | Liberal, the Democratic Party and | the Socialist. __.. [Bank Glad To Lose! GUNNISON, Colo.-—-iA”)>—There is no profit in re-selling stamps so the First National Bank is glad | Tellers were puzzled by a flood | mailing schedules and such’ until one visitor finally noticed hat an to at the Plan and a iq ———$ ' . 7 The three major political par-| ROGELIO GOMEZ. Agent stripes, worvee or paenned Dow an Choove sow while the -elecnion is good Femmes freely given Telephone today Awnings =~ Vewrtian — 123 DUVAL STREET 12:30 P.M. 300 P.M. eee erm ry wie BROADWAY == LOW EVERY DAY PRICES! “Priced Low” Features EFFECTIVE AT BROADWAY Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday 34c 29 ALL BRANDS MILK 3 DELRICH E-Z PAK OLEO LB. PKG. MISSION CALIFORNIA TOMATO Catsup 20 «. 25¢ TALL CANS TENDER SWIFT'S MILK Poevccerseccvcveccec0c00000000 Armour Star CORNED BEEF Armour Star ROAST BEEF Armour Star Corned Beef Hash 16-02. Can 33¢ Vienna Sausage 33c : POCO DOSS EDEL LOSDELOOR9ECRR00D0009 12-0z. Can 39¢ iw 45¢ U. S. NO. 1 WHITE Potatoes 10): 37¢ LARGE - RIPE - CUBAN AVOCADOS :: 29¢ CALIFORNIA GREEN-TOP Carrots 2 wis 19¢ PEACHES Blue Ribbon Meats! 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