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INEFFECTIVE SENTINELS THE KEY WEST CITIZEN TSE a STEN AA NSS TTS ILI Subscription (by carrier) 5c per week, year $12: By Mail $15.60 ADVERTISED RATES MADB ON APPLICATION PS cl 2 NRO AR Ri US ROMO ‘The Citizen is an open forum and invites discussion of public issue ahd subjects of local or gengtel interest, but it will dot publicn anonymous eommunications. ES: TLON FLORI ASS U. S. BUYS BEEF The Department of Agriculture announced during the last week in March it was beginning to buy beef in an effort to help strengthen prices, Only two weeks before sciififafirans mccter'arsce"™ (Completed By ‘The two announcements may not directly conflict, al- : bd though the latter announcement would indicate the De- Naval Officer partment of Agriculture is still not satisfied with the trend Ensign Kocher in meat prices, It is understood that the government-pur- uo Wh tas le chased beef will be given to the school lunch programs, or | Fleet All Weather Training Unit, to institutions, The Department has also begun distribu- tion of beef menus and other materials in cooperation with the livestock industry in an effort to promote more con- sumption of beef at this time. _ In watehing the trouble the beet industry is now en-| "5 countering, ong cannot help but wonder if the extrtgmely in January i high prices which the consumer hea been forced to” pay “sso ell ed a-naval for beet in recent years are not the cause of the present| aviator at Pensacola, Fla. situation. Even though as much or more beef is being con- 5 ES sumed, it is reasonable to conclude that many lower-in-| walter G Kemic,, ia hort come families, who would have ordinarily enjoyed beef | Chicago. regularly in their menus, have learned to subsist without most beef cuts. In other words, many families have no doubt formed esting habits which almost exclude the more expensive cuts of beef. e novi “ars? Most compliments are untruths, and that makes th vven more enjoyable. , : People’s Forum. = We have never seen anyone disastrously affected by going to church regularly, U. &, aircraft operating near Communist territory should be our latest and fastest, and armed. ‘The current Hollywood rages are a sad commentary on the average intelligence of the movie goer. FL i ‘We do not care to go back to the good old horse and buggy days, nor does anyone else, on second thought. i Fil He Godliness and goodness can be supported through loyalty to your church, even though the church isn't per. fect. qin ut GIFT TO two-and-a-half for transshipment g rEELRGE beret AEE Es : i i BE i 4 rn iif ; : i Es : eet Zz : 4 z i Eire : lay Vit ith Re it SUITCASE-SIZED RUNABOUT.. new French moter seooter with 2 top speed of 42 weirs $4 Ibs. is 19 inebes beng. 15 inches high amd 16 ra tp RHils tt allt H [etal Petite nih fe i ete jie 127,400 more persons S. motor vehicle ac- ar than in 1951. Crossword Puzzle across: ..Mourntul « “a —S ot @®. Meteorolog- ical in- grument $3. By birth BH loving 55. Siikworm 56. Thrice: pres 81. Mature 58. Vermilion 58. Waseh secretly .| thoughtful puff on her cigar. So I! blind since’ 1945, works in the ammunition depot at St. Julien’s Creek, near Norfolk, Va. Because of ‘the administration’s econ- omy program, Neamond faces the loss of the only job he can perform. He has written President Eisenhower asking for “a little special consideration.” He wrote, “Jobs are few that a blind man can do.”"—(#} Wirephoto. HAL BOYLE SAYS NEW YORK w—‘I love your | skyscrapers—they are like stretch-| ing tentacles, pleading for the sky,” | said the world’s highest paid ac-| tress. | Then Anna Magnani of italy leaned back in bed and took a leaned back, too—in a chair by the | she had given me. { It actually is called a cigarillo— a slender plastic-tipped cigar no | larger than a king-size ciguret-and | popular with both men-and women | in parts of Europe. Anna likes} them, but smokes only two or three ! a. week, “They are sent to me by my favorite admirer—my son, Luta,”} she explained. Luca, who is 11, is in school in Switzerland. : Anna, who recently completed an | Italian film called “Bellissima,” | Paris. Rome lets was so wornout by her first five days in America that when 1 called at her hotel sulte she decided to be interviewed in Ged, ft | She wore yellow ‘pajamas, j trimmed in blue, She has a long} : midnight mane, framing @ face of; Roman gold, and as she leaned i back against the pillow she looked like a tawny, well-fed lioness—vio- Jence in repose. |. “First, I interview you,” said Anna. “You like Italian women?” “Do you like me?” a" That ended her interview. So 1} \ took up the questioning, “Do you like American men?” “I would like to marry one and find out.” if she does, he'll be a bucky fel- | low. Anna is reported to. get $125,- | 900 a picture, plus $1,000 a day overtime, and the Italian intome tex is hardiy even the nuisance! that a sales tax is in this Deeg One American spaghetti mamufac- turer is said to have phoned her Pritts Me [LA 1 eIRTATS) HEM ds} LiEINIE] Solution of Saturday's Puszie 3. Retuted 11. Plant of the 4. Corded com veces &. Greek market familly piace 17. Statew’ with 6. £dible tuber ore SS. Nate mets TT; Erte rf ft af Lin See anton and asked what she would want to endorse his product. “Oh, $50,000,” said Anna, and the star- tled manufacturer murmured, “Wrong number,” and hung up. Anna is willing to make a film here, even at a financial sacrifice. “It depends on the bed—and took a puff on the cigar | “wi A gleam came into her which look like two Spots of black caviar sunk in amber pools. She is as temperamental as Tallulah Bankhead. “I like your New York,” said. “It has mote personality : ift i : like a woman. But fascinating, because 50 wWolent like >... like . . men. “But it is so on the lif é ; in Anna, born in titter- lives in a fiveroom op ass id Dries. ik Bees she has fl id 8 fs fire is H it ii F i i . be ER iH e E ; i? : ij iis H E i i e