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the Florida governorship campaign today. ae EB ki i : a a? 8 i Ee : i i ? i ; i HEH ltl a eis! Beg FEs i iy Ht 7 4 TO DONATION OF BLOOD BY LATTER. Tete is = 5 & e Promoted Richard M. Justinger, USN, now serving on board the USS Petrel in Key West, Fla.’ has been promoted to Yeoman Ist class, as a result of Service-Wide Competitive Examinations, Justinger is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Justinger of Crit- tenden Road, Alden, N. Y. He entered the Naval service on September 30, 1948 and re- ceived his recruit tpaining at the U. S. N. T. C. in Great Lakes, Tl. In 1949 he was aboard the USS Howard W. Gilmore for du- ty and later in 1950 transferred to the USS Petrel. Before entering the Navy, Justinger was graduated from the Alexander Central High School of Alden. CAP Cadets Study ‘Under Shepherd | Civil Air Patrol Cadets renew- huge profits of the | ed their studies of Civil Air Regu- ick operators.” | lations last Thursday night under who spent all day Mon-| the direction of Lt. Shepherd. talking to farmers and citrus Any boy or girl interested in house employes in his | aviation and desiring to join the St. Lucie, is cam-| group is urged to attend the in Dunnellon, Wil-| meetings at the Key West High Bronson, Archer, Newberry,| School on Thursday night at High Springs, Alachua, Lake But- | 7:30 p. m. ler, Raiford and Ocala. | Last Sunday at the airport, the Alto Adams, the other major | radio scripts committee gave their candidate, campaigned Monday| report. A model meet was held Palm Beach County! afterwards in Poinciana. He continued his attacks on Mc-| Membership in the organiza- tion is limited to youths between NOTES By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD ™ — Are Fey 2 bere Se you a letter, advises Louis Cal- don’t just write your Aunt mother-in-law, queen of ‘It’s sort of a hobby of mine,” the actor explained. “I got started that the Pensa- has now) the lower bracket ie regular tax rate dog track taxes from the first, have pledged to work for a ‘aduated tax on all tracks in- tax on the big tracks state and counties wil! four million dollars oREse the speakeasy cash in our life get in on the deal. J I hadn't seen him since. “The company wrote back that it would keep an eye out for any blue-eyed Indian named Glassy Tongue.” For the past few years, Calhern has been penning such letters to ,; and a half years old. reorganization as the means of eliminating what he Draft Call Is ealls bureaucratic waste. He will | . Expensive spend today and Wednesday so-/| Uciting votes in Dade County. | Odham will speak at Fort | " iPr. Walton and Wewahitchka this aft- | oe ae See theta aeons $700 * |} to answer his draft call. letter to Calhern’s boss, Dore ities A Poems City ae | _ Miller was a storekeeper in the|Schary. Calhern wrote the MGM Y tonight. | Persian Gulf port of Kuwait) head about building up his part in | when he received his “Greetings | “tr. Congressman,” and suggest LeValley Is | from the President of the United ed the picture could be retitled, - | States Ps using the name of Calhern's char- Promoted | He traveled half way around/ acter. the world yoo br Py Fort, Five hours later, a reply came a i b = ee | Meyer, Va lay e's jotting from Schary. Among other things. BO ogy heme SBS the trajectories of guided mi the producer said, “Our makeup Kar Wen b west ~ ‘/ at this Southern New Me: men can do wonders with Calbern. witht eben gh bragged foe | They even made him look as to Personnel-Man 2nd Class as a . result of Service-Wide Competi. tive Examinations ao | young as 92 im ‘The magnificent be « Dead’ Voter LeValley is the son of Mrs | Yankee.” Ruth LeValley of RFD. No 2 Active Again describing to them the qua’ “At present. I am writing the ; chairman of the Democratic and Shickshinny, Pennsy)vania He entered the service on Feb- . SANTA FE, N. M.—().—-Noti-j which the nation will demand in fi t his name was being re-\e presidential candidate. In each the Republican National Commit- ruary 7, 1849. and received his m i from voting lists because / case, the inevitable choice lead te recruit training at the U.S.N.T.C. im Great Lakes, Til. He was sta-/ moved tioned on board the USS. he was dead, Jose Ramon Garcia | Cathern.” ard W. Gilmore (AS-16) and the! restored his voting status by ask-j He also has written USS. Tringa (ASR-16, before/ ing | postmaster general with the news reporting aboard the U.S.S. Petre! “If I'm dead, why is for duty. ) paying me for working™” [than purple ones. He urged the Before entering the Navy imitted they had/ printing of more pink stamps. Valley was greduated f + man of the same name in| Calhern deplored the current Huntington h | decline in the art of letter writing School at | “People are too busy watching tei. nd licensed | evision and doing other things to which only 40,000 are write letters any more,” he re marked, shaking his bead. “They The fastest results came from a E. D. WHALEN, HOSPITALMAN, USN, SHOWN TAKING BLOOD PRESSURE OF 5. B. bored, listless, ill at ease? Then! the Point Four Program as tech- {nical cooperation adminiatrator. touring with} Democrat at Little Rock since 1948. MEWHIRTER, SEAMAN, PRIOR Justinger Has HOLLYWOOD) Truman Appoints | Soviets Admit Andrews To Post | American’s Talent! |« WASHINGTON (@— President; MOSCOW (7)—It was a Rus- Truman today nominated Stanley, sian who really discovered Walt | Andrews, Arkansas editor, to head | Whitman, so says Mikhail Mele- | sov, critic for News, the Soviet English-language magazine. “Whitman,” he said, “was still a humble clerk in Washington, a writer whose literary efforts had not yet attracted wide attention when his ‘Leaves of Grass’ fell int ‘the hands 6f Ivan Turgenev. Turgenev was, of course, one of eseia's great men of letters. ‘The Russian writer,” said Melesov, “was so impressed with the ‘poetry ‘of the ‘astonishing | American poet’ that he under- took the translation of several of the into Russian.” TB Clinie To Open Andrews was named to succeed Dr. Harry Bennett, who was killed die East last year. The. 56Vear-old Andrews, a mer assistant to Bennett, has been associate editor of the Arkansas He was born near High Point, Mo. He began his long newspaper career’as editor of the Sedalia (Mo.) ‘capital in 1921. He joined the Point Four Pro- gram last Jan. 2. By FRANK CAREY Associated Press Science Reporter WASHINGTON — A controver- sial new law affecting every pill and drop of medicine moving to the American people in interstate. ee goes into effect Satur- y- Compounded principally by two congressmen who also are drug- by profession. — Rep. Dur- ham (D.-N. C.) and Sen. Hum- phrey (D.-Minn) — it is unofficial- ‘prescription The U.S. Food and Drug Ad- ministration (FDA) says the law ase i g fi 2 i 4 g Fs th s now there has been no federal | law plainly prohibiting the sale of such drugs without a prescription. 2. Eliminating “the practice if they want to sell it out- right to the public and another way if they want to impress doc- tors.” 3. Ending lack of uniformity among drug manufacturers in la- belling products. FDA says this results sometimes in a person be- ing able to purchase drugs for self- medication which he can't safely use—and sometimes in being pre- vented from directly buying drugs he could safely use. Some of this has resulted from complicated regulations, says FDA but some of it represents abuse of Tuesday, April 22, 1952 THE Eugene Rasp Is Transferred ~ The communications depart- ment of the Naval Station trans ferred Eugene H. Rasp, radioman third class, to Boca Chica Naval Air Station today. Rasp reported aboard the naval station Novem- ber 1, 1951. He previously served aboard the U.S.S. Glennon, destroyer 840, in 1945 and 46, with the na- val reserve. He was recalled to active duty in October, 1951. His home town is Nutley, New Jer- sey, where his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rasp, now live, at 2 Kentzel Avenue. Rasp graduated from the Uni- versity of Miami in September, 1950, with a bachelor of business administration degree. A prominent player on the Naval Station baseball team, Rasp will continue to play as a center- fielder. It has been previously be- lieved that he would transfer to one of the Air Station's teams. famous Rou KEY WEST CITIZEN \NAS Gains Radioman Today The Naval Air Station, Key West, gained a radiéman = third class*today, Clarence J. Teseniar. He had previously been ‘attach- | ed to the communications depart- ment of the Naval Station. Teseniar began his naval ca- reer on July 11, 1946, and has served aboard the submarines USS. Caiman, SS 323; USS. Greenfish, SS 351; an@ USS. Ronqguill, SS 396. He qualified for submarines in October, 1948. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Adam L. Teseniar, now live in Newberry, South Carolina. Form- erly they resided in Caroleen, North Carolina, where Teseniar was born, in 1928. Teseniar is married to the former Dellet Ruth Ross of Red- ding, California. Mrs. Teseniar has one child by a previous mar- riage, Ronald Lane yckoff. Their local address is 126-F Poin- ciana. Page 3 nd Bobbin rebuilt Portable Electric Free Darner, Buttonholer, and ZIG ZAG attachment With Each Machine As Long As Supply Lasts OUR KEY WEST 136 the | my boss | that more people liked pink stamps | deprive themselves of a great deal of pleasure, and history will lack an intimate commentary on our times.” The actor said he has never writ- ten that other noted letter writer, had President Truman. But he did have lunch with the President during the stage run of f SINGAPORE.—(?).—The finest anti-Tuberculosis clinic in the Far East with a daily treatment capacity of 5,000 patients will be in operation here in July. Operated by the Singapore Anti-Tuberculosis Association, the | clinic will have seven X-ray ma-| chines, said Dr. G. H. Garlick, the director. Actress Pleads With Former Husba ®) Wirephoto | SCREEN ACTRESS JOAN FONTAINE follows her former hus- band, Fe television producer William Dozier, wridor in Santa Monica, Calif. had previously obtained « restraining order to ime from taking their three-year-old daugh down the court- and pleads with him. Dozier event Miss Dedorah. with het on a motion picture-taking trip to Spain. Miss Fontaine Was attempting to have the order set aside, Phone mm ALLIED regulations by “some manufactur- ers or distributors.” _4. Permitting a druggist to re- fill any prescription for a “simple home remedy” without securing the doctor’s approval and legaliz- ing telephoned prescriptions for all non-narcotic drugs, even “danger. ous” ones, provided the druggi: immediately puts the doctor's tel- ephoned prescription into writing. Streams starting on Triple Divide Peak, 8,000-foot mountain in Montana, flow into three oceans, the Arctic, Pacific and Atlantic. BE A REAL ESTATE BROKER OR SALESMAN Real estate offers 2 profitable lifetime career—$20,00° in commissions collected in 1951 by one of our graduates. REAL ESTATE LICENSE COURSE (Prepares You for State Exem.) To be given in Key West at St. Paul’s Parish Hall ON MON. AY NIGHTS, 7 te 10:45 &. M. (5 WEEKS) TO BEGIN MONDAY NIGHT, APRIL 28, at 7 P.M. Over 2808 Graduetes . . . ali of whom passed State exam except four! Money Refunded To Any Graduate Of Our School Who Fails To Pass State Examination ‘This is the only rea! estate course we will offer this seesen in Key West. Te enrell at tend first cless Monday night, 7 P. M., April 28, at the St. Paul's Parish Hell, BISCAYNE SCHOOL OF REAL ESTATE