The Key West Citizen Newspaper, January 31, 1952, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

“oy kz 7 ae Break I . a T CiTIZE2 Thursday, January NH, 1922 age 18 THE KEY WA J eee \t er Wol Spreading Fast In €ffices And Factories Report Shows Mutual Life Insurance Com; 800 Of Its 2.000 Office Worker A “Coffee’” Sneak Each Day Of Year By SAM DAWSON »* NEW YORK —Coffee, tea and ‘hers I rw Pound Took ¢ ee | B SEA | soft drink men are always busy Annual CORK thinking up ways 1o bring more hioments of cheer end more es, into your life their indus Aw ards Given NSA RY The Coffee Bu-| +., Sales for nation’s ssented its e Pan-American au is as happy as anything today vk awards io over what it considers evidence j;, Rachel L. Carsor tuat “the coffee break” custom is g-a 1 Moore s 1g fast in factories and of- snes. Bi. wan (he fiction-adere fi is first novel. “From Here fhe Tea Bureau, Ine., with an 2pnity.”’ Miss Carson received eve on the nation’s alarm at the trowing traffic accident toll, is Sey busy ading the doctrine, ed Poemy ‘ Drink tea and see.”’ It aiso holds, poetry award hat forlorn hope that Gold presented the } busin three Tuesday at an affair sponsor vill copy the Britons and take an ed jointly by the American Book # fternoo; ak for tea hers Council Inc., the Ameri And th t nen, as wel! wxsexers Association Inc se peddiing tea and coffee,; and the Book Manufacturers’ In y puiting as many vending ma Tn¢ es into business places as 1 on-fiction award for her “The Miss Moore's earned her the ound us € some viedals were stitute can break is distinct from the coffee sneak, which has | loag been popular. The sneak is | i.e more or less winked-at custom | oi runping over to the soda soun tain across the street. ‘The break | is the forma! time-out at the desk cr within ear-skot of the phone Whea tie Mutual Life Insurai Co. counted noses of its New Y City emp. Ss leaving tie office for a daily cup of coffee or tea, | 4, or a glass of coke or juize, it 4, fousd that about 80) of its 2.000 » o'fice workers took a coffee sneak each dey. At 15 minutes each this added up to 12.000 working min utes daily, or a labor cost of $130,000 a year, the company says. it wheels eight carts into the octiees wad serves the) “second Lveabfast” heii at aaa t+ Celebrates Her The Pan-American Coffee Bu 105th Birthday reau, announcing a coffee-break TRENTON. Ont.. (?) — Mes. | survey of 1,160 companies, of all| sizes, in 45 states, says that about | £0 per ceat of the firms it sampled! Jane Mitchell quietly celebrated started regular time-out sessions, her 105th birthday recently at during the last 10 years. More than, the home of her son. Still men- a third of these started the formal | tz alert, she loves to relate breaks’ since the end of World War | tales of the pioneering days. She iM has three sons, 14 grandchildren ‘The bureau claims fine results—! and several great-grandchildren | for the companies as well as«dor oa firms the bu- reau represents. The bureau says the survey shows these findings, es reported by the companies re. sponding to its queries Productivity ineré ed in 62 per cent of the firms establishing ‘a formal time-out for refreshment. | Wis Sites India Imports etals NEW DELHI Unit ed Kingdom (®)—The Belgium ' r ouantity of t India bought 1 to August India and published here 86,000 came in imnorted ch 30,090 tons rom the United Kingdom and 25.009 tor from Belgium India aiso obtained 9,000 tons. from the United, States, 7,000" tons from France and 6,000 tons from West Germany. breaks as strictly policy. Most of the companies make the: refreshments available through the company caieteria, portable or sta- tionary canieens, or vending mu chines. But 32 per cent report their lemployes bring the refreshmerits Morale improvement was report: | from home or elsewhere outside 73 per cent of the companies, the plant Employe tatigue is down, accord-' The bureau jubilantly. reports ing to 82 per cent of the feperting| comments from managements wio companies, The accident rate is|have adopted the break, Cown, say 32 per cent of the firtns “A real morale factor and pro. Pwenty-one per cent note draps inj ubly directly makes for inereased Jabor turnover; 15 per cent see a} production,’ says an- automotive reduction in waste; and 42 per cent equipment manutacturer. lowered absentee rate Production definitely goes up Union contracts calling for re-| immediately after a break,’ says freshment breaks are reported by! a glass products maker. per cent of the firms, while! Anybody tired? Want té join us 4 per cent say they adopted the in a cup? a managemeat | hey i est’s First W Siaaaibas W alitios ar PRINCIPLES IN THE “CEREMONIES” - Flower Girl, Elmifa Pearlizér Kee *» len C. Roberts}; the Groom *. Curry) and. the Person, Dr Q. Fatfee | there fssumes Command Gi U.S. A NEW COMMANDING OFFICER tor the U.S. V. Juliin on January 16, Cdr ean. Cer. ing up residence there. Maureen O'Hara Believes Sider Have More Temperament Than Actress By BOS THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (#%—Who has the nost temperament, actors or ac ? The actors, says M4ureen Miss O'Hara is obviously an a tress. She is also red-haired and Irish, so one would expect her to toss a tantrum on the movie sets. But no, she remarked, it’s the male members of the casts who get temperamental. What @o they do? “Many things,” she replied. “They come*in late to the studio } in the morning. They fret about their makeup. They have a fizzy because they don’t have enough jialog. They spend minutes in frent of a mirror so they can get one lock of hair to dangle correctly on their foreheads. ‘They are late setting into their costumes after unch.”* She added that the men are un- co-operative about their off-stage dialog. When the actress has a closeup and the actor is hot in the camera's range, he will usually yo to bis dressing room and play cards, she said. The dialog direc tor or seript clerk then reads his ling jot me,”’ she declared. “I stay and read the off-stage lines the Ley ‘Memorial Methodist Church were, froni Db a the father.of the Bride, Memoria! Sticher Dekichtteedh (Mits } (Roscoe BtcKibbens the Bride. Rose i : (Stuart Whiting). at a formal change Ccr. Farrell, prior to assuming command, : Farreil is a graduate of the Naval Academy, during World War H, he was awarded the Silver Star with two Gold stars, He is married to the former Mis: Mrs. Farrell are residing at Quarters Julihn is reporting to Commander ; myself.’ ) Vanity,” | star, Na cal School ddveuced Underseas W eapots Naval School Advanced Under of command ceremony was the Operations Officer of -he USS Coiumbu. Class of '35 and was qualified to ¢ Commendation Ribbon Eleanor King Loughlin of Wilmington, N. C ‘O” at Fort Taylor. Submarine ca Weapons, Commander Richard M. Farrel mimand in subr , June of 1940. with <a. "Vi," Jo-Ann, 12 arine They have two children, J Squadron Six at Norfolk ss Operations Officer. His family has moved cluded that economy was essential, $10,000 or $12,000 if the business was to survive. longer atford | “Supposing we got into a hassle they're caused by an with an actress who didn't like a dress that had been made for her.” the director cited. “We might go around and around on the subject for a whole afternoon. Meanwhile, crates, the father of medicine. 110 members of the crew would = - e be sitting around without getting, Years ago, when tirst any film shot. An afternoon’s delay much of Wagner's music would mean the loss of at least ‘very unmusical to many people Studios can no when actress’ such losses wai The island of Kos in the Aegean Sea was the birthprace o: Hippo In Hollywood ritten, She indicated it aided the periormer to have the lines come from the person who is really in the. scene. | “Ob, yes, ii is the’ men who have the temperament and the she vowed, “not the wom- en.’ However, she hastily made an exception of her present co- Errol Flynn, who is “ tremely nice."’ (Probably the first | time he has been called that.) George Sherman, who is direct- | ing the pair in ‘Against All Flags,”'! remarked that temperament is | a negligible factor in movie-mak ing nowadays. The veteran direc tor said that star tantrums have virtually disappeared from the | Hollywood scene in the last two years. “The only one who gets away with it any more is Shelley W fers and she's crazy e said. “1! directed her in her first picture ; atter she made her hit in ‘A Double | Life.’ She said to me, ‘George, | you understand me. You know P'm crazy, and all these other people have ta find it out the hard way Sherman said that the industry could no longer afford time-wast ing temperament. That has been a development of tLe lust two years, when movie ma NOTE FROM YOUR BUICK DEALER: ne’ n nt Presented here is the story of © grea! naa development, as told by the men who did hel e We reprint the story here in its entirety — | couldn't beat it if we tried. : SAS EE LABS LRT SS Ng. we didn’t have to build a new engine. We took Buick’s valve-in-head Fireball Engine—which makes the most of high com- pression. We drew on 12 patient years of Buick carburetion research. And we came up with more might, more miles, from gas—right out of thin air, in more ways than one. ], ” When you talk about “miles per gallon” you think of fuel, because that’s what you buy. But air’s line, a busy engine c gallons of air. free—and for every gallon of gaso- an gulp more than 8,000 j ‘The problem is to deliver air in the right proportions, throughout the tull range of speeds at which you drive. .\ carburetor—big enough to supply the air needed at full throttle—can be wasteful in } stop-and-go driving. A carburetor sized for { thrift in city traffic literally smothers your ! engine when you really give it the gun. So Buick engincers developed the Airpower carburetor —a four-barrel automatic — and here’s how it works Loafing along, two barrels are working, two stay closed. And you get a low-speed Citizeti Staff Phot the leh. . Corner Caroline St. & Telegraph Lane bud Dellicatessen (Tomms, relieved Commander attached to the Sixth Fleet in the Mediter For services in submarines and the Presidential Unit Citation. and Richard, 5. MULBERG CHEVROLET CO. —_——————————__—— 7 : tative atgwrers r Administra - ons ofifiterest os A ar ovo, Pinter - ningty re- {ren to milita rvice. Beepus > fim I n't abito b T he nermitt to eiftin ar ee if om. Withe re - fl r pickineit up ulatiang you cowed 10 resuThe your raining within & paso what this period” is for eac's O Terr n the WA ges short for the ond eke r Dee ares * Lerpec to Va t ie ae VA} t maternity p= \ tir ve. ‘ 28 ot nati mace wt »oonitabigatio-: Ql : ey \ srenetian | for Om ect =. AitaRTE- is Thive.a hearttondt Official U.S. Navy Phot. | tion, non-seryggron h mekesme w nT cligible forthe * pecial GT insterance for disabled, ‘eterans in spite of my heart} condition? A. No. You would bez tarred rom this special insurktike fot lisabled veterans becauige” of ‘our non-service-connected*disa- vilitv. which makes you; tnin- surable, But you might be eligible for enother twne of special nidieon- vertible Gl term incurante‘avail- able to veterans with the neces- T elephone Census ; serv service after Korea. You MONTREAL «-P) must apply, and pay leased here show Canada is third ! ium, within 120 d: in the world telephone census | l¢r7e from active dut; with a total of 2,911,900 instr (Veterans living in ments. The United St. who ish further with 43,003,000 telephon bout their benefits the United Kingdom has t the VA Regio 600. | Room 218, Post Office Lawrence neueeble Commander and to Norfolk and are +tak- Statistics re- thrift and smoothness that’s out of this world. As you pick up speed, the “stand-bys” come into play—feeding not just more gas, but more air too—so you keep getting maxi- mum power trom each drop of fuel. You have 170 effortless horsepowey when you need it—a tremendous reserve ready to go into instant action at the nudge of your toe. You have the satisfaction of knowing that you _ get this power with a frugal use of gas. At 40 you use less gas sea you formerly used at 30, That's the stor y ot Adidiasin carburetion in facts and figures straight from the factory. ¢ But statistics can’t tell you the breath-taking 4 joy of heading tor new horizons in a great« powered new ROADMASTER. bi wl When can you do that? Better come insoon, |” ~~ lots of other folks are flocking into our , showroom these days to see the greatest ‘ array of new Buicks we've had in years, 1 Equipment, accessories, trim anc modele ar ~ibjec to ~hange with ¢ When better automobil are built Sure is fue , fm BUIC will build them . was rose rine alld: tus: reet ling ina, $100

Other pages from this issue: