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j | i ' Page 2 sm WEST CITIZEN Saturday, March 29, 1952 y Che Key Best Citizen aap “ly Bind) 1 Artman, owner and pub- \isher, trem * itizen Building, corner of Greene Ald Ann Streets. “ “Ouly. Daily worsens sl may ‘West and Monroe County ba 9 *P2ARTMAM NGRMAN D. ARTMAN Entered at Key West, Flo: IF our Nominated Frealeny At the regular ‘weekly meeting 9 of the nominating. committee an For JayCee | |The Saciest And! The Mayor, er. Editor|the Key West Junior Chamber 0’ merce held on Wedresday it Kenneth. Knowles, chairman pounced to the membership the following names which will be sub- mitted on ballot Wednesday, April. y me, will te held. ~The following men were nomi- fuited for the office of president, 4 Esquinaldo, Jim Keer, ony Martinez, John Pearson. i | fy carrier) 25c per week, year $12.00, single copy sere 7 ADVERTISED | RATES: ‘MADE KNOWN ON. APPLICATION’ Si PCN cS AEE! ERROR OE , Chet Cold, Paul Es- ‘Jim Keen, EY . aT, om! this writing, however the floo club has a board cz n named and from them fiv. be elected: Hilary Albury, Joe jacks, Armando Canalejo, Charles lerman. Ray Green, Joe Ilac- ‘qua, Ed Irvin, Jeff Knight, Jim Looper, Manuel Lovez, Jcz Pinder. Charles Saunders, Mervin Thomp- son, Ned Turner and Robert You- tt i in Wedne ais une “til untamtiliae sw tna he has broadened he: day, as told in a Citizen f = ‘the tity. But ; and last Mon- | meal ’s turtle phoning Jim at 1323-W after 4 p.m. “Manuel Lojez announced to the d formed group jd pee e still a’ few more tickets for sale on the Dr. don any of his other Polgar show which will he held on ednesday night April 9th. things that no oth- , in that régard may | WILMINGTON, ete Pegg party is a ‘But ‘Sey have a pratletlarly fii ‘| excuse for opens a Fe-!| wide poke faite jonor muti foyer Js is Fey tel is 8 | m nce is Robert’ E. Lee i po ” said one old resident, up the feeling Tar igencn have for these bushes whit countryside. into a rainbow ot Right now old Wilmington, where Lurd Cornwallis once had his head- quarters, George | Washington @anced, and the father of Woodrow Wilson preached, is flooded with Shousands of visitors who have ome ic pay homage to a flower. Phere are a lot of other side eed during the unique 4-day val. They call out the Army, . Navy and the Marines to march Parades, they dance in the at night, they fly in a Hol- lywood Preside “came ‘and left ‘without , ashy any- thing definitely regarding his ruming or not renning for ‘¥e-election a question in Pg millions of his fellow Americans are interested. or not he runs, the fikelthood is he will return to Key \ shortly after Blection Day. But though he does not return, he may be aieulil “ actress and crown her qeen, they hold folk music con- parts and a $10,000 golf tourna- ment. * But the real show is one million or more azalea: plants just reach ing ieee ee ‘That i what 10,- ¢@ lovers really come to wees = it is a tremendous demon: | ra of the ' pride “Caroliniahs have in their land, a mystic kin- Ship with the soil built up through nearly 300 years. Bi a appreciates his home or trags about it ahead in life is to stop talking bch than a Tar Heel. io will permit a stranger to admire it, ing about it. he doesn’t care. It is enough im that he himself has it to spenjoy, as his grandpappy did be- fore him. The three great azalea meccas around ‘Wilmington iv parks, and ‘two pri- vately ee Airlie famous old Orton ¢ Sand: aleawnire throughout ) the > iSiawes heave bane: ‘cityund ity’ genial climaté, a id lyk amatl fraction of one j percent of thém need {see come here to give us 4 banner season. todoo Manis, Mr. President, for the boost you have given Key West. The best way to g about it and do some} “orchestras of now, studded with hundreds of ‘Varieties nae — the ground had el es of paint—rich -@!, “pink, \white, lavender and orange ‘Dominating the 155 acres of Air- lie Gardens is ‘2 39 - room mansion Century rice magnate and friend ‘in England. in 1947, but the gardens are open $25,000 a year tc keed them {lower- Rising from the midst of a car- nation. a tower- moss. e that looks like Father 2 5 ‘ af nis ‘ Pharles Saunders is the sole no- a a jee for the office ¢° Treasurer committee has iin. | inet to ee their cet dinner ting pam of this comm: art am Fequested those’ who to at- please Phone and make reservations so "that you can be assured of a good | ee can be made ty ‘wilt by Pembroke Jeaes, a 19th | the reply, home W. Albert Corbett, ‘an industrial. | milk is a little too strong for my, ist, bought the estate for a home baby.” to the ‘public. Tt costs more than | nakes you feel like you are ig a | pet of riotous azaleas is one of the | ut she isn’t jealcus of it at all. } live oak draped | 309 years, live for 300 years” ahd stand un-| 00 years, I'm: glad‘ of it because at which time the anrual elec ae be oven for nominations just |* @ricr. to election on Wednesday. Directors isting of five “active members | ‘the Jaycees’The following have e he shakes the hand of Ke sil ight, eye, shows. from behind, the President. baad i vacation, and ‘moved Tight’ into the White House. | THE FAMOUS FEDORA OF PRESIDENT HARRY TRUMAN is ail that is visible of the Chief as. , West's. Mayor CG. B. Harvey before boarding The Independence «on Thursday at 2:12 p. m. ‘City Commissioner Jack Delaney looks on and City Manager Daye Kings The President arrived in Washington, ending nit llth Citizen Staff Photo WITH RADIO By The Associated Press Brailey Odham gave his calle chords a rest today after broad- casting for 25% hours straight to the people of the Tampa-St.Peters® ‘burg area, but the young guberna=, terial candidate is planning a when the deadline came, he ex-} i tended his’ time an hour and a ‘half. tdi The’ Sanford, businessman faa mated that listeners pledged about ' $4,000 to aid his campaign, which more than paid for the radio show | carried in relays by seven $3.18. (| He said the. radic ti t $3, Odham's’ first dati broad- cast was in Miami last week. talked over the. lair)there for, hours, then went ‘to Bayfront Par' and, answered questions for an- other hour before going to bed. He estimated more than 5,000. questions about his background and how he stands on state issues came: to him during the Tampa-/ St. Petersburg broadcast. © Most questions were about sales taxes; schools and corrupticn-in govern- ment. While he answered them, Odham sipped soft drinks, sucked cough drops, smoked lots of cigarettes, ate regular meals and had him- self “shaved. | > Alto*Adaims, ‘another cabdidate | for” governor, ‘teld an audiencé’ in Perry the answer sto waste at misthariagemént in} state~ Povarin ment ‘lies in reorganizing the ex-/ ecutive department. He said ‘he would’ make ‘all appointive | &p- thént “heads” responsible ‘to’ the ' | Catinet aswell as the goverior; In’ addition, Adams said: every-| jstate agency should: be placed under strict budgetary control and its expenditures niade subject toa Yigid’ non-political audit. Adams ‘charged that Gov. War- ren “and Dan McCarty, another andidate for governor, are united ' |Toneliness in the city. It.is in this, (fiction. The author has managed 'to gather into hi MARATHON Key Books By A. de T. Gingras (SOLITAIRE. by Pierre Lartho- has; translation from the buch by Botty Askwith, fiction, published ‘aghton Mifflin Company. ‘Mass., 158 pages.) “is a psychological murder fost Thi story. A. bank cashier. prowling the might» streets of g French provin- cial city comes tpon ‘a wounded man. He takes the stranger to his lodgings and binds his cuts. In the out the man isa murderer. ‘The tale begins where the usual whodupit ends. The reader knows immediately who committed the crime: The book is thé explanation of how a reasonable ‘man may} come | his mistress, and how in the se of forty eight how as-his dear comrade. But the tare-skeleton plot is’ un- important. The book is a study of its importance lies asa piece of tale the loneli- room. of Sat- a city, of un- ness of the furni: urday night alcie married middle age. “The reader does wonder here | ‘and’ there “how, With, the “institu: | tionalized church bubbling with so- gials.and clubs at every corner, radios at all bedsides, and bowling | leagues in all the offices, such a} State of Solitariness’ on the part of the bank; cashier could be acccm- | plished. But French provincial ci ties do not feature extrovert acti wities jas they do. in the - United | States. And the author has the poe- tic license, to paint his characters }in whatever mood he’ chooses, pro- |0f Disney, but the cats prowling | viding they are perfectly imagined. And these are! + And from. Mr. Larthomas’ ‘book, against “him and that road con. tractors are‘ conforming to an-es-: tablished’ pattern ©. supporiasg men for governor who will help keep the same state road system. ‘McCarty, speaking in Sarasota, said he would take steps to help curb erosion of the Florida coast- line. He also: advevated relieving crowded conditions in ‘the State | ind the Farm Colony at { NEW PROBLEM FOR DAIRYMEN “Do you keep any calves?” the new city mother inquired anx- iously “Of the “‘mitkman: “Why, yes, ma’am, I co,” was! “Ah, good! the young of Banker J.P. Morgan. It con- {heaved @ sigh of relief. “Then! tains’ a Staircase from “Sir Walter | please bring me a pint of calf's milk every day. I'm afraid eow's cathedral,” A la husba one said. who lives here says her is in Tove with the old oak, Hl “They say Oaks like it grow for lie for 300 years.” she remarked. ‘The Airlie oak is.in the middie aes iW this reviewer has reached a con- course c! the bandaging he finds BRAILEY ODHAM. PRESSES ‘Charge Rejected CAMPAIGN FOR GOVENOR TAMPA (® — A Hillsborough |Ccunty grand jury has rejected a |charge by former Attorney Gener- |al Tom Watson that county voting | machines had been tampered with. Watson made the charges last aan, as attorney for a de- feated candidate in‘a city election. He has made several appearances {before the grand jury, but in a |report Thursday it said he had | Presented no evidence to Support Oe harges. clusion which has been simmering aroynd in her mind for a 8 imigination, from Gogol to 4 Rice, Have a distinct avers earaing a living as\a oe k ‘0 kind, particularly ‘as one’t ats |" down figures for a salary. “When- living or to symbolize the e1 of loneliness nothing else tut a j clerk will do for the featured cha- | | racter. | While a clerkship is not exactly ; a glamourous profession, there. are | prc ably a lot of happy cle liv- ing in the cities of the world. The fact that there are probably ‘more jof them: is good reason for their }being used as symbols of the ‘BOli- tary but it would be interesting to |acquaintarice,a lonely. man may ;S¢e an authcr of Mr. Larthomas’ jlearn'to love that same murderer | Powers of style and penetration, tackle the lonéliness of an ‘apart- ment house super, a garbage col- tector, a milkman, brieklayer, or other urban figure. A JUNIOR SELECTION (GYPSY, written and illustrated by Kate Seredy, ‘fiction for chi |4 to 7, published ty the Vi | Press, New York City, 63 mee The review cf a book for the Very | young child usually ‘becomes’ com- | ment on the illustrations. to a few sentences explaining ‘story told by oe illustrations. “A | girl cat. Gypsy, is born and ‘grows ‘up. ‘She disec-vers the ‘world about {her - thiggs indoors, things “out- doors, and human beings. Then she | meets a boy eat and ‘they fall in’ love - the result. kittens. This reviewer personally prefers inet illustrated animals with a shot j the pages of this book are some of. vthe finest realistic studies: of the feet Saute ever used: in~a child's ever any one of them wants to’ jthe unfortunate elements. of in| mi "The ‘text'of this book is limited | 1 Political Announcements DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY, MAY 6, 1952 ‘For State Representative BERNIE C. PAPY "Ree Re-Election” Fer Sheriff P= EMSAM B. CURRY For Clerk of Criminal Court HARRY DONGO For County “Commissioner: JOE ALLEN For County Commissioner J. M. FERNANDEZ, JB. i tutbinen Bong S. HIGGS WM. BILLY FREEMAN Second District | For Member School Board ) CABANAS, JR., Benny tee ‘Fourth District \ Por ‘School Board H. EARL DUNCAN Fourth District “Se ae Today's Business Nirrer By SAM DAWSON NEW YOR Ki# — The dream of nany an hourly worker—the ja security in the form of a guaran. eed annual wase—is one of the -ssues in the steel wage-price dig. wate. Tre steel union is asking the ompanies to agree to pay at least Lree-fourths of what a» worker vould make if he worked all year ong, whethe: ihere’s that much work for him at the mill or not in ifiy ohe year. But ‘the Wage Sta. dilization Board is not buying any of that squabble. It is tossing it yack for management and the union tc discuss <urther. Other issues will ahh mets decide, whether there’s an agreement or a sted] strike. But the drive for a guaranteed annual wage will doubl- 2888 cre) up again in other 5 lustriés. Interest in it, at low el ii periods o° full employmrmnt, fovives When men are teing laid 92 and reovle start fretting about be chaneés ¢* another depressiot. Demand as usual, will be strot est in industries having wide w and downs in jobs—whiere 7 workers are haunted most by the fear of unemployment. Ard _ hej management will be the hai to convince, arguing that it’s hi to foresee these cyclical swings, that they often are caused | nation-wide or world-wide tions beyond the combapy’s control and that to agree to such.a plap is to, sign a ‘blank ‘check. “No company, ho'vever B financially, can long afford: to for work that is not Beton the Guaranty Trust Co. York points out. To which labor leaders reply if financially obligated ‘to pay part cf the time a man is laid management might have centive fo plan steady em ment. Labor points to dustries, now produced ‘ata | are under: their oe it e I while. Lat or co better man prevented Another ale leat for ‘the anteed annual wage is its te to stabilize wage sear ge ing power, helping the omy. But the Guaranty its April survey, holds stabilizing effect. is’ “very tain arid probably very lit also. calls the result of p worker for not *working’ int ary. And the company, in the cost of guaranteeing with or without products re: would pass that cost on in prices, the bank says. Companies with guaranteed -w, plans .that have proved st have mostly been those employment is relatively naturally, or with seasonal Board | than cyclical variations. Seaso swings can be predicted and ‘The steel companies hae ati unemployment ‘in their cyclical, bed a okie Be: indus ich ‘the industry © os of this, of cou: Ape ha i ie stre his have the income Bheds . The answer, the bank thinks, unemployment Soapeat ition rath er than a wage guarantee, $3 NOTA “There's only one way to rid of your surplus fat. Ex and plenty of it.” * “Nonsense. How « do you a count for my wife’s double ¢hi