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Published: February 21, 1895 Copyright The New York Times

LIONS C L U B ERECTS BANDSHELLMembers of the local Lions club are shown above as they put the finishing touches to the bandBy MARY NELSON shell they have constructed The hunting season might be on.i creation ball. This large sized j and will present to the Nationbut along the waterways fishing "community family" will partake, a I Guard this coming Wednescontinues to make news, and of the traditional turkey and all! day night at the local armory. I The shell, costing an estimatchnmp fishing is in the spotlight that goes with it. ed $500, and consuming some this week with one of the biggest Newcomers at the M & A ', 120 man hours of labor to erihnmp hauls (bat has ever been taken from these waters. Two Trailer Park this week vare Mr.' ect, will be formally presentshnmp boat owners and their, and Mrs. GavJord Belts, Cam-j ed to the Guard at a Thanksfamilies are staying at the Coral, bndge, Iowa, Mr. and Mrs Wai-' giving Eve dance at the armApartments on Seaway Drive' ter Bagge, Chicago, 111. Mr. and, ory. Gale de Cordre was general chairman for the project. while the boats take part in this; Mrs. John Vaday, Hasbngs-onoperation and they are Mr. and Hudson, N Y ; Mr. and Mrs John] In tbe photo, left to right, are: Mrs. Leon Canova of Mayport of Vanscoy, Tavares, Fla.; and Mr j James Randel, John Weithe shrimper "Molly and Me U' and Mrs. B. K. Schatto, Green-j haven, de Cordre, Bronce Gallant, Ken TnmbJe, Edward and Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Floyd and wich, Conn. Traab, Jr.. Harold Lewis, son, Tampa, owners of the "WynIvam Shaffer, David Wilibur, Mr. and Mrs Victor Nockin, erua." Henry Walmsley, mine host at 1 beach residents for the past three 1 Charles Gnswold, Earl Benethe Coral Apartments, was invit-| vears, who reside at George Kuen-j fiel, and Charlie Pharr. Those taking part in the project, but ed out on the "Molly and Me" on, aeth's Coconut Cove apartments not present when the photo Thursday and had the thrill of took out a S12.00C building permit was made are: Henry Lawatching one of these big shnmp' this week and will build a twocatches being taken. j bedroom home in the McCarty, Chance, Joseph Corso, John I Holt and John Glynn. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rhodey of| sub-division. (News-Tribune photo by Len McCicero, HI, are other guests reThe attractive Shamrock Village I Nulty) gistered at tbe Coral Apartments lounge was the scene of a card| this week. party and tea on Saturday after- > be at the Wilson Apartments until From shrimp we jump to the 20- noon when members of the D A R.! they can occupy their lovely new pound snook Bill Vincent of the and friends met for bndge, can-. inlet home, which is now nearing i completion. Kiwi Apartments caught in the asta and samba. Inlet last Saturday. This called Another inlet-frontage apartMr. and Mrs. Sidney Nunuelly for a fish fry and that evening been sold guests at the Kiwi apartments,; bad as their guests this week, Mr ment property has the change and announcement of and Bill's brother Roger Vincent' and Mrs L H. Theobold of Mem- ownership will of shortly be made. of Louisville. Ky , who was visit phis, Tenn. ing for the week-end, gathered to Mr and Mrs. Jerome Wurz and I Another open party for fishereat broiled snook. be opMr. and Mrs. C W. Ferris, of! Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wurz of! men willout added to the fleet this erating St. Louis, Mo , who spent some Cleveland, Ohio are at the Davis j winter It is of Fortft Pierce boat the 5 head time at the Kiwi Apartments this apartments on Sean ay Drive for "Horizon" which Bill Thomas has summer are back on a return two months The Wurz brothers j brought over here from Fort are building a duplex at St. Lucie: visit which the two families will occupy Myers, and it will dock at the Pe1 lican Yacht Basin. AnseQ Snow has gone to Mid upon its completion. Pines, N.C , where he will take Mr Jack Flynt of Sanford. Fla . j LET'S GET ACQUAINTED-part in tbe Julius Boros Open golf Our neighbors this week tournament. Mid Pines is the w ell-know-n tomato dealer is at the' and Mrs. Forrest Vincent,are Mr. owners home club of Boros who has been Dolphin Apartments on the ocean,; of the Kiwi Apartments on the this year's outstanding golf per and will remain through the cur- inletLibby and Bill to their insonality, and a field of one hund- rent tomato sales. Mrs. Flynt timates When we approached red will take part in this S5.000 who has been hospitalized will Libby Vincent for information for purse invitation tourney. join him here later this item she told us ''We are just In December Ansell will go to plain ordinary people who have Miami for the Miami Open champ Mr and Mrs. Carter Dalton o f . never done anything in our lives ion ship, and later will take up Pungo Bay Farms, Belhaven.j that would make a news item " one of two offers be has received N.C . arrive on Tuesday and will' Well the world is made up of to teach golf at Miami clubs.

Fort Pierce Beach News

triaa. He vas a plain ordinary people, and figNEWS-TRIBUNE, Ft ff. acter; only MM of him becune a N*v. O. H ured tome l the other* would Pa* fatality, oaiy 1TS.CN of Ma was like to know abort IMMT a injured. Do you personally know bon front Hf m Indianapolis, one at Mm? And do yon know to an attractive tounst court j that the aider and wiser he cot Fort Pierce, Florida, is made. the ofiener b* coffered? Seems the Vincents were consider- j The 9,00* fatalities in M51 when ing buying mto a business at the separated into age brackets betime they took a vacation trip to come the following: 3,300 0 or Florida in October 1949, and you older, 2,000 45 to 64, UOO 25 to 44, guessed it, got sand in their Shakespeare is known to have, 1.200 5 to 14, 800 under 5,600, 15 shoes. wnttea. "Foolery, sir, does walks to 24. Upon their return home pre-i AN EAST COAST BASE, Korea NEW YORK ifr-Gea. James A. j about the orb like tbe sun; it, viously made plans were aban-!<*South Korean President Syng- Van Fieet says "we can produce | gh'"*** everywhere." He could j Last Saturday our Boy Scoots doned and they set in motion in- man PK said today he expectsj many more" fighting Sooth Korean j well have been pondering, like a gave generously of their time at quirses which eventually led to' Dwight Eisenhower "to bring peace. divisions in additioa to the 10 di- i Merlin m his crystal, upon today's the request of the St Luei* County visions which already are manning their purchase of the Kiwi Apart-i and unity to Korea." j pedestrian. For it is very drf- Safety Council, to pass to pedes"Eisenhower was a professional the bulk of the Korean front meets. ificult to understand tbe attitude, trians who were observed jayBill Vincent is now employed; soldier so he understands all about Declaring that he favors "ia- ! of the careless pedestrian Com-< walking a little card with a messwith the Bass Motor Co., as shop war," Rhee told thousands of creased use of native troops to 1 moa se&se tn< him that in any age. If you were one of those foreman, white Libby carries on! South Korean soldiers during cere- < defeat their own lands aad to re- contest with a motor vehicle he's careless folk, you will remember momes formally activating two! place the American soldier wherethe message. the active managership of the' Qf the new Republic of Korea dmssoos. j ever possible," the Eighth Army bound to kwe, "yet he continually Tnis week as proclaimed by the j^g new apartments. They find one of overestimates the motorist's abi<He was most rewarding aspects of their S ' ***> * *I*w>* ** there-1 commander in Korea writes in tbe lity to see his reaction time, his National Safety Council and by new life is the many wonderful:* understands the problem of.Nbv. 23 issue of "This Week" control over the vehicle, and his our own city fathers, is Pedesfriendships they have formed with] diplomacy and statesmanship. magazine: courtesy and patience. While trian Safety Week. We of your people from all over the U.S., wboj "I expect General Eisenhower to! f *B* type of defensive war- many walkers get away with suchj local Council urge you to thougfat1 come to vacation, and then return i bring peace to Korea. We are de- {f* * J> which we are engaged conduct, the cemeteries and hos- fuUy adopt practices while walkagain, and again. Truly did the'pending on President-elect Eisea- j stabe posmocs with httie^ move- pitals have more than their share ing that will increase your caution "ment in mountainous *= Vincents, with their sons. Jerry "bower." ~ ~* terrainthe of those ho are not so lucky. and further your future. Rememand Terry Lynn, find their "place Gen. James A. Van Fleet, an- ; ROK's are as good, man for man, Let us look at last year's pedes- ber, walk carefully, the life you as U. S. troops. in the sun." other speaker, said the ROK army) save will be your own. holds the major part of the battle-j "*ROK " **fa> -*** Md perior to Americans m personal *"L for M I line in KoreaVnd takes the biggest W ** P* * "^ .camouflage, digging in, mountain The first U.S. building specially j losses among Allied troops. l^"63":" . 3 , bufit for astronomical observations lubject lsso fa 'climbing, night patro'liag, infiltra"While the U. N. command andj * b** = * the ^l?^1 "mfaign when tion, ambuscades and taking pris- was constructed near Philadelphia . my country especially exercise the!"* presidential campaign wh^ j\ oners." m 1789. Gea Dwi : major share of command in Korea ! S" - Eisenhower urged replacement of more American ' and logistical support, it is Teiy' >i *<*"* 5* ? American '' evident that the ROK army shares-f^P* * ** *?** J?2 ' SAN FRANCISCO ifA rolling the major part of the fighting and 'later made public a letter from earthquake collapsed a bouse at Van Fleet expressing a similar . Oceano and rocked the California tbe casualties," Van Fleet said. view. Ceremonies today formally actiYour Church is calling you to attend one service each week coastal mountains for 500 miles In his magazine article, Van either the morning or evening service or Wednesday prayer from San Francisco to Los Angles vated the 12th and 15th, ROK Divi- 'Fleet writes that already 60 per isions which, along with six indemeeting. ; before and after midnight today. pendent regiments, were actually cent of tbe 155-mile battlefront is No deaths or injuries were reSunday $chl 9:45 A. M. Memin* Worship 11.Si A. M. being manned by ROK (Republic j ported although the San Andreas activated Nov. 8 Youth Fellowship 6:30 P. M. of Korea) troops, another 15 per earth fault, on which nearly all of |quake for more Qian 554 of an cent by other United Nations Prayer Meeting, Wednesday. 7:3t P. M. Cahforma-s disastrous quakes have Hemek declared damage "un- troops, leaving Americans responoccurred, was convulsed for more doubtedly would have been disas- sible for only 25 per cent of the Evening Worship 7:30 P. M. than three quarters of aa hour, j^us ^a t^, epicenter been in line. HaH Hour Gospel Singing Youth Choir PUne and Orga* Charles Herick. on the University , populated country." ROK soldiers, he says, "are uTimely Gospel Preaching of California seismological staff j said tbe quake started at 11:47:14 i PPS last night (2:47-14 EST to- j FOR day). He said it undoubtedly was' severe at its epicenter near Park- j field in desolate mountains of : AT FLOYD W. COOPER, Pattw southeastern Monterey County, 120 ' Healed er Coaled by Air-ConditJorfcit) miles south of here The seimo- j Arcade Building graph continued recording the i

Rhee Experts Vai Fleet Says Here S. Koreans Ike to Bring Peace to Korea Can be Utilized

Quake Rocks Mountain Area

NOVEMBER IS LOYALTY MONTH

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Dr. and Mrs J. G. Kepasse and daughter have returned from! Richlands, Va., and are occupy-j ing their St. Lnae Court home. j Adrian Van Ravesteyn returned to his Sea Shore apartments on Thursday from Cranbury, N J , where he has been for the past several weeks on business. ! Adrian Van Ravesteyn, Jr., leaves next Friday, the 28th, Nov , for Lackland Air Base, Tesas, for Air Force training. A student at the U. of Miami last year, Adrian enlisted at the end of this summer. Another young man to go into service this week was Jack Col 1ms. a resident of the M & A Trader Park who left Fort Pierce on Wednesday to enter the Nav-y On Tuesday evening a group of his yoang {needs at the trailer park met in a farewell party for turn Mr and Mrs Hiram \rmen trojt will amve from H:eh Point. N C , on Wednesday to be guests over the Thark^iving hoi'aav of Mr ard Mrs Rodr.ev S-.cm of Sezwsy Dnve On Fr7<i?y the foursone vill csr\e in Miarn sothe Miami North Carohra fooioaii Vr a-d Mr-. \%a-re- K Gx>>r of Silver Spnr; ^In are at thc.r Sea*ay Dive -~~ e a - Vl ;, rc i~a_ c.er the T^^-A-;..r.; v%ec->. end R^nderts of the Caux.-vay Tra "er Co-Jrt w ^ z- f.cr tocefcr on Th'_rx3ay at o-e c c cck for Tra-k-pv.'-s; d.--er <^!- ~w, w j i be served buffet st-.e in the re

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P A G E TWO

PANAMA

CITY

HERALD

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1935


ing or depleting t h e fresh water 000,000. T h e Florida Gulf-Atlantic supply In p a r t s of Central Florida Ship Canal is t h e greatest e n t e r h a s h a d preferred attention a n d prise in t h e point of cost t h a t t h e one of t h e Nation's most eminent Federal government h a s u n d e r t a k geologists h a s been engaged to en since t h e Boulder D a m which Is carefully check t h a t phase of t h e to cost when completed in 1937, n o t situation. Both President Roosevelt to exceed $165,000,000, also the and Chief Engineer Col. Somervell G r a n d Couler D a m on t h e Colum have assured t h e Florida public bia river in Oregon, now u n d e r t h a t t h e most careful consideration construction, which is to cost $340,will be given t h e m a t t e r a n d such 000,000. precautions t a k e n a s m a y be neces A vast a m o u n t of dredging will sary t o prevent anything of t h e be necessary in t h e St. J o h n s River kind. Naturally some sections will from Jacksonville to Palatka, a perhaps benefit more t h a n others. distance of more t h a n fifty miles I t is expected to aid in t h e devel where t h e channel a t present is opment of port business in J a c k only thirteen feet deep a n d of c o m sonville a n d along this line it paratively narrow width. should also be of considerable bene Preliminary plans call for t h e fit to commercial cities like Palatka construction of t e n bridges over a n d Ocala. Many a r e of t h e opin t h e Canal a n d five ferry crossings. ion t h a t i t will be highly valuable It m a y surprise t h e reader to know to t h e P o r t of T a m p a which d i t h a t this Canal will provide n a v i vides honors with Jacksonville, gable water from t h e interior of Pensacola a n d Miami a s t h e State's Florida to many far distant points leading ports. Shipping from New such as Sioux Falls, N. D.; O m a h a , Orleans a n d Texas a n d Mexican Nebr.; Kansas City a n d St. Louis, ports c a n economically touch T a m Mb.; Minneapolis a n d St. Paul, pa enroute to t h e Atlantic seaboard Minn.; Eastern Iowa a n d Western or Europe, whereas with t h e C a n - Illinois, Chicago a n d Lake Mlchlg a n

THAT FLORIDA GULF - ATLANTIC SHIP CANAL


The following interesting: his tory of the F l o r i d M f U l f A t l a n tic ship canal was published in the September issue of the "Florida Public Works," official (journal of the Florida State Road Department. It contains much valuable information h e r e tofore unpublished. The article in the road depart ment journal is a speech deliver ed before the Florida Engineer
ing Society at its a n n u a l con

The Florida Gulf-Atlantic Ship Canal


The Florida Gulf-Atlantic ship canal will cross Florida from t h e m o u t h of t h e St. Johns river n e a r Mayport to P o r t Inglls on t h e Oulf of Mexico. Estimate cost of Canal, $148,000,000. First allocation of funds by President Roosevelt on September 3, 1935, $5,000,000. First work begun in charge of Lt. Col. Brehon Somervell, chief e n gineer of Canal on September 5, 1935. Minimum depth of Canal, 30 feet. Total length of waterway including dredging deep channel 27 miles in Oulf of Mexico, 202 miles. Length of Canal proper, 175 miles. Width of Canal, 250 to 400 feet. Formal beginning of excavation of Canal a t a point n e a r Ocala occurred Thursday. September 19, 1935, when a t one o'clock p . m. President Roosevelt pushed an electric button a t his Hyde Park home In New York, setting off a heavy charge of dynamite. Number of men employed SeptemberlOth, over 2,000. Number to be employed by November 1st, 8,000. Estimated maximum number of men to be employed a t one time during course of construction, 25,000. EsMmated length of time required" to complete canal, five years. Present plans contemplate a sea-level canal, making locks a n d their o p e n t i o n unnecessary.

vention in 1932, b y Col. Gilbert A. Youngberg, United States army engineer, retired, of J a c k sonville, w h o gave t h e interest i n g facts relative to t h e t h e n
proposed c a n a l a c r o s s t h e s t a t e .

Col. Y o u n g b e r g said in p n r t * " t h e Idea of a ship audfor a barge canal across t h e State la n o t new. Neither did It originate In Jacksonville. I t is of record Minimum Depth t h a t t h e Spanish Governors sought Plans call for a minimum d e p t h a water route across t h e peninsula. al such routing would n o t be a t through t h e Chicago river, Chi of thirty feet which will accommo In 1825, only four years after tractive from a financial view cago Drainage Canal, Illinois river, date practically all vessels in t h e Florida passed to t h e United States point. a n d t h e Mississippi, a n d Pittsburgh, Gulf trade, not many of which a r e St. Augustine interested itself in T a m p a Closer Cincinnati a n d other points o n t h e ! over 500 feet long, with a maximum the project, a n d a n Act of Con The Canal will also place Tampa Ohio river also Chattanooga a n d beam of sixty feet, a n d a Minimum gress approved March 5, 182G, d i tinuo-H *'. '1 p t s t te.i years. T h e ! a n d civilian engineers several hundred miles closer to Nashville on t h e Tennessee a n d Wishing draft of t w e n t y - s e v e n feet. The rected " a n examination of the Rlvei x . . l I l a i b j ; Act oi 1027 p r o - i to be certain t h a t the projrrt is Gulf entrance t o the C a n . ! will be Atlantic seaboard ports a n d Eur Cumberland rivers. country south of t h e St. Mary's Riv vlded Longest Canal r a oi'ellinlnarv i>xamina- not onlv f*^.*lbl from every angle, juol about iOu m'uMA xrom Tampa ope. I t will be of similar value to er, a n d including the same, with a tlon of a "waterway from Cumber- j b u t t h a t It would fit in with t h e Pensacola, P a n a m a City a n d ApalaThe Florida Gulf-Atlantic Ship view t o ascertain t h e most eli land Sound, Georgia a n d Florida, j work relief administration plan, t h e by water. 150 miles from Apalachi- chlcola. From t h e tourist s t a n d Canal will be t h e longest ship canal cola, 200 miles from P a n a m a City gible route for a canal, admitting to t h e Mississippi River." The Act point it will provide easy access to in t h e world. I t will be used by construction of t h e Canal,from and 300 miles from Pensacola. the transit of boats, to connect t h e did not specify whether this was Tampa, St. Petersburg, Sarasota, t h e standpoint of t h e employment With reference to t h e saving in Fort Myers a n d other Gulf ports for ships of every nation on t h e globe Atlantic with t h e Oulf of Mexico, to be a barge or a ship canal, a n d t h a t h a s a m e r c h a n t marine. Noth it would provide.was referred to distance t h e Canal will effect a s and also with a view to ascertain the United States Engineers h a d pleasure craft t h a t now go down ing t h a t h a s ever happened In t h e authorities of t h e Federal Emer against passage around t h e Florida the practicability of a ship can not completed their report before the east coast only. State will rival t h e favorable p u b gency Relief Administration for a Keys, t h e New York Daily News al." For lack of funds a complete the River a n d Harbor Act of July 3, Undoubtedly t h e Canal, during licity resulting from this great careful check. I n t h e meantime, prints the following In a n editorial determination was not practicable, 1030 was passed, containing not less Its construction if not after com commercial waterway. During i t s President Roosevelt gathered a n d which speaks highly of t h e e n t e r but a tentative route was project than six Items for examinations pletion, will draw more visitors to construction it is n o t unlikely t h a t considered every possible type of prise from every angle with t h e ed across t h e extreme n o r t h e r n p a r t for waterways from one side of t h e the State a n d there is where hundreds of thousands of persons Information on t h e subject. He exception of Its depth, which t h e of the peninsula. (Doc. 102, 20th peninsula to the other. Amongst Miami will profit, if In no other from other States will be a t t r a c t e d h e a r d t h e a r g u m e n t s from Senator New York paper believes should be Cong., 2nd sess.) way, because most Florida visitors these Is one reading as follows, Fletcher a n d o t h e r members of t h e sufficient t o accommodate large from t h e North .especially during to Florida to witness this g r e a t e n Submits Report terprise in t h e making. I t will r e a d viz;"Waterway across northern Florida delegation In congress, for ocean liners a n d battleships. T h e "In 1870 Gen. Q. A. Olllmore sub Florida to connect t h e Atlantic I n - t h e Canal as well a s p r o m i n e n t ci News c o m m e n t t h a t follows, upon the winter season, hardly consider ily become a n o t h e r great Florida mitted a report on a barge canal tracoastal Waterway with t h e pro tizens In Florida. He received a n d t h e distance t h a t will be saved by their visit t o Florida complete now magnet for visitors along with St. adays without a call a t one of t h e Augustine, Daytona Beach, t h e I n from tho mouth of St. Mary's posed Oulf Intracoastal Waterway carefully considered all objections the Canal Is Interesting: nation's smartest a n d best known dian River, Palm Beach, Miami a n d Rlvor to t h e Gulf; a n d again in by the most practical route." I t from Florida a n d elsewhere. " 'From all points of view this is resort cities, Miami. Miami Beach, t h e Overseas Rail 1880, p u r s u a n t to a n Act of Con Is to be observed t h n t neither t h e Funds Alocated a real public improvement of n a I t is understood t h a t there will way, t h e Bok Tower, t h e Rlngling gress, h e submitted a report on a dimensions, t h e termini nor t h e "After various surveys, economi tional importance. I t will save Gulf ship canal. For t h e second time route a r e specified In this Item, cal a n d physical, by both army a n d to Atlantic seaboard ships t h e d a n be several points along t h e Canal Museum, Central Florida's lakes, a potential route was projected which, In fact, was Inserted in t h e civilian engineers, together with r e gerous passage a r o u n d t h e Florida of extra width, designated a s t u r n hills a n d orange groves, St. P e t e r s across t h e northern p a r t of tho Act a t t h e request of Jacksonville ports by geologists, considerable ef Keys; a passage whose perils a r e ing basins or harbors. I t is b e burg a n d a hundred peerless cities lieved t h a t provision will be made and towns a n d tourist a t t r a c t i o n s state. (8. Misc. Doc. 37, 53rd Cong., Interests. fort by most of Floridas" congres are being dramaticaly Illustrated a t "It Is common knowledge t h a t sional delegation, also some actl- this writing by t h e S. S. Dixie, a s it a t such points for ships passing of importance in North, Central, 3rd sess.) through t h e Canal to take on car "The purpose of any waterway when the United States Engineers < hangs on F r e n c h reef with high goes of citrus fruits, winter veget South a n d West Florida. And t h e Federal government a s across Florida must be to Improve undertake a preliminary examina workers of Jacksonville, Palatka, seas endangering rescue of its 384 ables, phosphate a n d t h e like a n d sumes t h e responsibility a n d pays transportation facilities. To a c tion they call upon local interests Ocala a n d other sections. President passengers a n d crew. Distance b e possibly r e t u r n cargoes of m a n u technical evidence Roosevelt, p e r h a p s better informed tween New York a n d New Orleans factured goods from Atlanta ports the bill, content to support t h e p r o complish such purpose t h e water to furnish way must shorten the d i s t a n c e - " t h a t t h e waterway when a n d If will be cut from 1,699 miles to about and nearby Gulf ports a t low ject because it is a time a n d money or more precisely,It must shorten improved wil serve as a real artery ,289; between New York a n d G a l rates. I t should be born in mind saver, a safety measure, will p r o September 3rd, tho time now required for the of commerce with resulting benefits 1D35, allocated $5,000,000 to begin veston from 1,893 to about 4,193."' t h a t the Canal will probably n o t be vide employment for m a n y t h o u "turn - around" between ports on and savings to commerce such as to t h e construction of t h e Florida between New Orleans a n d S o u t h complete before 1940 a n d m u c h c a n sand while under construction a n d tho Gulf a n d those on both sides warrant t h e expenditure of Federal Oulf-Atlantlc Ship Canal. a m p t o n from 4,603 to about 4,193." * h a p p e n within t h a t period t h a t will finally it Is expected t o m a i n t a i n of the North Atlantic Ocean. It funds." T h e Engineers Insist t h a t A s t a t e m e n t from Washington call for a better appreciation of its itself a n d return a reasonable r a t e T h e first allotment of funds is Is perfectly obvious t h a t to secure the proposition must have a dem classified as follows: clearing right says t h a t t h e Canal will effect a commercial value t h a n t h e public of Interest on t h e investment, a n d eventually liquidate its original the maximum benefit to water- onstrable investment value based of way, $500,000; excavation in saving of about two a n d a half is able t o visualize today. cost. borne commerce with a minimum on concrete facts a n d figures." To Cost $146,000,000 central area, $3,500,000; housing, days on t h e t r i p between Atlantic of cost t h e Trans-Florida Canal Must Organize According to t h e estimate by t h e shops, storehouses a n d minor struc- a n d Gulf ports by doing away 101 INDICTMENTS must cut t h e peninsula on t h a t line "It Is common experience t h a t tures, $5$00,000, a n d bridge foun- with t h e swing a r o u n d t h e Florida army a n d civilian engineering (By Tba AMOclaUd Pr*M) which a t one a n d t h e same time ocal interests must organize a n d datlons, $500,000. Keys a n d t h a t t h e shorter w a t e r board t h e c a n a l will cost $146,000,O R L A N D O , Oct. io.The feder shall be a s far to t h e northward finance investigations t h a t will Previous estimates based on s u r - way will result in a n a n n u a l s a v - 000. This compares favorably with al grand jury closed a three-day as poslsble a n d which shall be as >roduce such evidence. Canal, session here by returning 101 I n Jackson- veys made by both a r m y a n d clvt- ng to ocean going vessels of $?,- the cost of t h e P a n a m a short and a s straight as possible. vlllc thoroughly realized this fact, llan engineers have placed t h e a p - 500.000. which t h r o u g h J u n e 30, 1933, was dictments. Julian Blake, clerk of Such a waterway must be more at a n d in t h e absence of other fin- proximate cost of t h e Canal a t $339,200,059. T h e New WeUand the court, estimated that 90 per Significant Statement tractive t o commercial shipping anclal backers t h e City approprlat- $146,000,000. T h e waterway begins Canal a r o u n d Niagara Falls cost cent of the indictments involved Significant is t h e Associated t h a n the existing route via t h e ed $15,000 a n d commissioned t h e a t t h e m o u t h of t h e St. J o h n s river Press statement given o u t by S e n a $122,000,000, t h e Suez Canal $148,- liquor law violations. Florida Straits, rts width a n d firm of Hills a n d Youngberg to a n d thence p a s t Jacksonvlle, c o n - tor Fletcher following the a n depth must be adequate to permit make a n economic survey. T h e tinues on u p t h e river to P a l a t k a n o u n c e m e n t of the Canal allot fairly high speeds, a n d yet, from firm by stipulation was given a free where excavation will cover most ment by President Roosevelt, to the the' standpoint of economics, It hand to ascertain t h e factsall t h e of t h e distance t o t h e Oklawaha effect that such disasters a s that HARRISON must be capable of construction, facts, whatever they m i g h t prove river which lt follows t o a point of t h e steamer Dixie, grounded on operation a n d m a i n t e n a n c e a t a to beand n o t merely those favor- n e a r Sliver Springs. Excavation F r e n c h reef rounding the danger cost commensurate with t h e bene able t o t h e project or to Jackson- wil begin again here and c o n . ous Florida Keys from New Or fits. vile. It is t h e sole purpose of tlnue until Dunnellon is reached by leans to New York would be avoided Very Simple Jacksonville t o demonstrate t o t h e a deep c u t through highlands. by vessels using the Florida Canal Many metropolitan newspapers "Fundamentally, t h e economics United States Engineers t h a t t h e From Dunnellon, t h e Wthlachootpotentlal benefits to be derived chee river m a y be utilised with e x - t h r o u g h o u t the United States have of the problem are very simple. They are exactly analogous to those way across t h e s t a t e a r e suffl- cavation a n d dredging to Port I n - emphasized the safety feature r e cently in editorials favoring the Which confront a railroad com from t h e construction of a w a t e r - glls a n d t h e Oulf of Mexico, clent to justify t h e cost of a c o m - T h e approximate length of t h e Canal's construction, commending pany when It undertakes to eli minate and replace heavy winding plete survey a t t h e expense of t h e Oanal is given a s 202 miles, but this the project aa a substantial enter grades over a mountain pass by United Statessuch a survey as includes dredging a thirty-foot prise that will be a benefit to thou means of a short direct tunnel a t will determine t h e economic f e a - c h a n n e l from 500 to 1000 feet wide sands of unemployed. I n this I n a low level. Four interpendent slbUlty of a cross-state canal a n d a d twenty-seven miles long In the stance attention is invited to t h e questions call for specific answer; the determination of a route a n d OvM of Mexico. This leaves t h e fact that extra employment will not namely, first, what is t h e volume the preparation of plans for c o n - Canal proper 175 miles in length, only be provided In the actual building of the canal, bat that a of commerce or cargo tonnage that structtng a n d financing a suitable Utilizing t h e St. John* river waterway. Irrespective of t h e d e - passes directly In front of the City vast a m o u n t of construction m a might avail Itself of a ship canal across t h e peninsula? Second, how sires, hopes or aspirations of t h e * Palatka, Just below which point terial, equipment and supplies will and at w h a t cost does t h a t com City of Jacksonville, s h e could n o t excavation will begin a n d continue be required, much of which will be t h e Oklawaha river which val obtained from factories and mills merce now movo? Third< how and a n d did n o t undertake to lay down any conditions to govern t h e U n - toy *t will follow t o a point a few In various p a r t s of the United a t what cost will It move if the Tills In * south of t h e City of Ocala States. This means additional e m canal be provided? Fourth, w h a t lted States Engineers. their own discretion will select t h e where t h e project headquarters are ployment In all such places to say win It cost to construct t h e canal nothing of t h e big item of railroad, and to m a i n t a i n a n d operate It? route in t h e best Interests of the being maintained, commerce of t h e United States as Assistant Named steamship and motor truck trans "The difference between t h e portation which will provide still , The Canal is t o be constructed In further employment that would not answers to t h e second a n d third a whole." Questions will be t h e measure of Surreys Made Its entirety under t h e direction of be available under other circum gross benefit, but this m u s t be "If t h e reader h a s followed t h e t h e United States W a r Department stances. placed over against t h e sinking Canal surveys a n d Investigations represented by Lt.-Col. Brehon On almost every hand outside fund and Interest charges on capl for the p a s t three years, h e knows Somervell, chief engineer In charge, tal construction cost a n d against w h a t has resulted from Hills a n d with Lt-Col. Clarence E. Boesch as of Florida, the Canal is looked upon the annual costs of maintaining Youngberg's survey. Army engl- h e a d engineer of t h e project. Capt. as a needed commercial facility and operating the waterway. These neers made a survey as to the route James B. Newman, Jr.. has been that will pay i t s maintenance from latter figures, which will be answer a n d cost at the direction of the named a s assistant to Ool. Somer- the time lt opens, promising even to t h e fourth question, can be de Presldent. T h e n a group of clvl- veil. Capt Richard Lee has been tually to return t h e original invest termined only by a complete physl- Uan engineers were engaged by the assigned to handle t h e details of ment to t h e Federal government tal survey which will determine t h e Federal government to repeat t h e employment It Is said t h a t about with a fair rate of Interest Some OfpeeAtten most feasible route a n d which will performance. Intense studies were 100 civil engineers, draftsmen, surresult in the preparation of plans made by experts in Washington, veyors, geologists and experts In Doubtless due to a misunder cod estimates of cost for t h e con* followed by t h e naming of a board hydrographie work will be requrkd standing largely of what t h e Can fttexfttton of Congress. by President Roosevelt to go Into to carry o n t h e big undertaking In al will really mean to Florida aa a l o a f Sought the engineering report* exhaustive- addition to the many thousands whole, there h a s been some opposi tion to it In certain parts of t h e "The agitation for a waterway ly and reports its findings. The of skilled and unskilled workers, across Florida has been nearly con- board was made up of both army T h e first job tackled was t h e State. The question of damag
v l t y o n t h e p a r t o f p r o m l n e n t c l v l c u p o n t f t e w h o l e s u b j e c t t h a n a n y o t h e r i n d l v l d u a l ( o n

construction of headquarters in eluding the Canal administrative office buildings a n d housings for the personnel. This includes five administration buildings a n d 100 dwellings of three t o seven rooms each* plus six} warehouses. All are of frame construction a n d they are erected in short order by a big force of building tradesmen. Present plans contemplate a s e a level canal, obviating t h e necessity of expensive lock construction a n d operations, a s well a s saving time to ships passing through The Canal will range from 400 feet wide from the Atlantic Ocean to a point near Ocala where it will be c u t through highlands a t a width of 250 feet, later widening to a 500foot channel In t h e Oulf for sev eral miles a n d finally to 1,000 feet for eleven miles to thirty-foot w a t er in t h e Oulf of Mexico.

. . . 1 . 1 .

1~

PANAMA CITY

WED., O C T .

23

to

m l l e

Published: January 22, 1939 Copyright The New York Times

Ptw 4 NIIM-TtltUNI, M Pfcrw, ., TN*4*y, &rt*Wf 14, IW IB th Hurt of tte Famoui Indian River SwUM

"HK! A MOUSE!"

Hal
When the cbss filbert* let the Jd cliu <* VH << Mwlboro; College, Mariboro, Vt, held its reunion in th Uck b*ta rf a annual reunion this **k wd filed Sixth Avenue bar and rose mistythe most negative report io the eyed to sing tiw oU school song. "How Are Things at Casserole anal* of alumni annotation. Not since the Electoral College College?" not a man was missing. ave up football has any college Yes, not a man was missing, even raduating class had a less dis- though only one man was there. And that one man was meor inguished history. After 10 years in the cold cruel I, if the English Department had world, far from the protective Ivy done its duty. of old alma mater, so the class Not many people can say that talisticlan told the class secre- they were the only member oJ ry, who In turn told the class their college graduating class. Not president, the class has chalked many people would ore to say it, ip no births, no deaths, no mar- but that is entirely beside the riages, no divorces, no million- point. ires, no bowery bums, no famous How does one get to be in a class rtists, musicians or athletes, no by himself? Well, Marlboro Colaptains of Industry, no clergy- lege, located on a lovely Vermont nen, HO government officials, not hillside, first opened its doors in ven one conspicuous success in 1947 with a full freshman class, women's ready-to-wear or door- a couple of dozen sophomores and juniors, and no seniors until I aro-door vacuum cleaner sales. The entire class has gained 35 rived all eager and busting for pounds since graduation, drives a baccalaureate. 953 model car, works in a Before the war I had attended cramped, cluttered office, lives In a two-year college, picked up a five-room walk-up apartment in another year at a university operwhat sociologists term a cultural- ated by the army at Biarritz, y deprived neighborhood, files a France, and persuaded the Marlsimplified tax return, votes a split boro faculty to put the intellectual icket, has one cat, no dogs and roof on their noble edifice by achas never been arrested or dated cepting me as a senior. Kim Novak or been caught crib- Even in its first year, Mariboro developed many heart-tugging traling in an isolation booth. The Marlboro man 10 years later ditions, most of them built around has less brown hair, more gray the casserole dishes that seemed lair, less total hair, bleary blue to be a fixture at nightly meals eyes, rakishly fallen arches, and inspired the old school song. smokes a pack of nonfilter cigar- Since that time, the college has ettes a day, is always on the turned out many brilliant and disthreshold of an awesomely austere tinguished graduates, but only the diet, and exhibits the same un- class of '48 could boast of a man tainly lack of coordination at who not only finished first in his wwling and table tennis as he class, but was voted class athlete, did at skiing and ice skating in class poet, class valedictorian, most likely to succeed, best ii more virile campus days. He may not be handsome; he's mixer, best lover, most popular, and at once the tallest, shortsomething less than dynamic, but one thing you can say about the est, fattest, slimest, smartest, Harlboro man, vintage '48, he's dullest, most Ingratiating of his peers. oyal.

FORT PDERCENEWS-TRIBUNE
EfUbUilMd DwevbM U. 1W3
SIDNEY L. GRACE KttlOMl Adrwtllint KprMnUtlv*. G*Mral Advertising Strvlo* Inc., 01 Gorgl gavlnjt But Blda.. Atlintt. Ga. Entered M Second Clue Butter AuiuM 30. 1926. at the pot ofllce In Port Pierce. Fla.. under,the Act of March 8. 1ST*. CiroUntlon Muucw Published Sunday mornlni and every week day a/trna *cept Saturday. SUBSCRIPTION IUTCI By mall: 1 month-il SO montlutg.OQ I roontba-(<.60 1 yearJ18.0C By carrier36o per week. BEMBBR Or THB ASSOCIATED PRESS Th* AMoeiited Freu 1* entitled excluevrely to the uee for republlcttlon ct all the local newt printed In thli newepaper, u well u all AP Neva dwpatchei.

Thi Fort Plerct News-Tribune telephone: All Departments HOward 1-2050 OrculaUoo Department ifter 5:30 p.m. Can HO 4-1O7
1 dlsapprevt tl what you y, bv I will defend to th death your rljhf to say H." Vtltdre

BIBLE THOUGHT F.OR TODAY


. -.

We having the same spirit of faith, according as it is written, I believed, and therefore have I spoken; we also believe, and therefore speak.II Cor. 4:13. Not prayer without faith, nor faith without prayer, but prayer tn.faith, ,is the cost of spiritual gifts arid gracea.H. Clay Trumbull.

Is Our Federal Government Using The Income Tax As Means To Punish Critics?
While our federal government poses as a benevolent and kindly master-parent, looking out for pur needs and caring for our ailments, we must, of course, bow humbly before .its commands if we are to continue to receive its blessings. When \YV are NOT properly humble, the claws of power politics are apt to appear. To many this would seem to be the situation when the federal government tried to smear Gov. Orval Faubus of Arkansas with an alleged income tax evasion, running into five figures. The government showed its claws clearly . . . perhaps too clearly.- The charged, more than likely, will prove a boomerang. No matter what one's personal opinion of Governor Faubusand there are those who think he has gone too far, or has used the wrong tacticsthe government's action in this income tax -case has l.elped Mr. F-aubus-get off of any public opinion hook from which he might have been dangling. The Governor charges that the government is using the Internal Revenue Service to punish him for his stand against integration. , This may, or may not, be true. Yet some of the items upon which the government said Governor Faubus was liable for income taxsuch as rent on the governor's mansion and use of a state car are so ridiculous as to enable the Governor to build up a good case. To have a representative of the Internal Revenue Service admit to a mistake and say that "somebody goofed" is hardly an acceptable explanation of the situation. The government, by its action, has created a lot of sympathy for Governor Faubus. The American people dislike the income tax intensely ... and they dislike even more its being used as a means of punishment; or of forcing (blackmailing might be another term) an individual to do what the federal government wants him to. Maybe the government didn't have this in mind ... but try to get anybody to believe it! The .government used the same kind of pressure tactics in trying to gag the private utility companies of the nation. These private utilities, like millions of other Americans, feel that the government is unfair in using tax dollars of ALL citizens to create, and build up, huge socialistic government monopoliessuch, as the Tennessee Valley Authorityto compete with private power companies. These private utility concerns spent money in advertising to tell THEIR side of the story to the people. This advertising must have been effective ... in any event, the government had the Internal Revenue Service rule that the private utilities could NOT charge off such advertising expenditures as a legitimate business expense. In other words, Big Government is going to GET BIGGER . . . and you better lay off criticizing, if you don't want to get hurt! The American people, generally, respect the nation's laws. But they have little respect for the income tax law. They feel it has been crammed down their throatsas have many other things and they don't like it. The people have to do all the work, and pay the tax, too. The people don't understand the complex income tax law . . . for that matter, who does! And the average American approaches the income tax law with the same lack of respect he had for the old prohibition law. The average citizen who runs afoul of the income tax laws may find a considerate agent of the IRS who tries to help him outit does happenbut more often it is a form letter, slapping on a penalty . . . and that's that! In view of such actions, these same average Americans find it difficult to understand how, on the other hand, a lowdown hoodlum like Mickey Cohen can continue to roam the streets of Los Angeles, living on a $20,000 a year scale, with a delinquent income tax claim of around a MILLION dollars hanging over him! And there have been other cases of settlements of huge income tax claims which make, people wonder as to how equitably the income tax laws are applied 1 It may not be possible to make the federal income tax any more unpopular than it is ... but, with the Faubus case, the private utilities case, the Cohen case, and others, the government seems to be making a brave attempt to do just that.

WASHINGTON REPORT
Y FULTON LEWIS JR.

BUSINESS MIRROR
By SAM DAWSON

WASHINGTON - Among the most impressive attributes of his late Holiness, Pope Pius XII was the reverence and sincere affection that he commanded on the part of non-Catholics and even non-Christians, the world over. Ex-President Harry Truman, a Protestant, called him the greatest statesman the Vatican h a s known in 200 years. There are mil' lions who would agree or would go even further. And among my close friends who had private audiences with this great man during visits to Rome are Jews, Moslems, Buddhists, Presbyterians, and virtually every other denomination of religion. I, raised an Episcopalian, regret the fact that I nSver had the opportunity of such an audience, because I had t deep admiration and affection for the man. He was mountain of unswerving strength against Communism and all forms of tyranny hot only when it became popular to be so, but when other men who purported to be leaders wert preaching otherwise. But along with this great strength there was a simple human warmth that e x u d e d through his personality on the one occasion I was able to attend one of his public audiences.

It was a July day in 1951 when Mra. Lewis, our two children and I motored up the winding road from Rome, through the typical walled towns of the volcanic-erater-lake region to the summer residence, Castel Gandolfo, where life ebbed out of his frail shell early last Wednesday. It too Is a walled town, perched atop its own little mountain, and from the main highway, it is necessary to. walk up panting steps on cobblestone, to a picturesque village plaza, shaded by p l a n e trees, similar to our American sycamores, and edged with awninged peddlar stands. They did a thriving business L. religious medals and objects of every kind, and lace head-coverings for ladies who had failed to bring hats. At the end'of the Plaza is the castle itself, with its massive wooden gates inside of which was a huge courtyard, nearly filled with pilgrims from all over the world. There were monks and nuns of endless orders, but mostly the crowd was of people like ourselves. I remember thinking at the time that many of them, undoubtedly, were also non-Catholics. His Holiness appeared on a platform at one end, and was presented with a new white skullcap, which he put on in place of

the one he was wearing, and de livered several minutes of thanks to the black-robed sisters who had brought it to himin their own German language. To a Spanish group, he spoke Spanish. To a French group, French. And U his USE of those languages was as perfect as his use of English, he was indeed an able linguist. All told, in the course of about 40 minutes that afternoon, he spoke in s e v e n languages, ever smiling, ever gentie, ever gracious. His mannerisms were of Italy; instead of waving to the l i t t l e groups who acclaimed him from below, he lifted his hands, palms to him, and moved his fingers in a sort of beckoning manner, like a radio or television director inviting applause from the studio audience. The crowd loved it, and there was a certain benign sedation about the whole experience that imparted a feeling of tranquil satisfaction, almost as though he had hypnotic powers. Perhaps he had. Perhaps that Is why the Communist leaders who tried to replace his God with themselves were so afraid of him, even in death, that they jammed the radio waves to prevent the people from learning of his pass' ing. They only proved the power of his faith.

NEW YORK (AF)The bubbling stock market delights the bulls and especially the brokers. The bulls see chances for financial ain. The brokers pocket a presjnt gainthe commissions on the shares they buy and sell for traders. Talk of fat bonus payments to jrokerage house employes at Christmas time grows. But for all the excitement in Wall Street, most stockholders seem to be just leaving their shares in a strong box. They may check the newspapers each day o see if they have a paper profit or a paper loss. For the most part, lowever, they are just sitting tight. The public may be in there, buying and selling right along with professional traders, but if so it's only a small part of the public. One reason given is that if they sold stocks which have increased in market value this year as the popular indexes climbed to new lighs, they would have a capital gain on which to pay taxes. Another is that they would have cash to be invested elsewhere and if they buy other stock they will have to pay its new record price, too.
Friday 4,610,000 shares changed hands on the New York Stock Exchange. This was the biggest day's volume since December 31 when 5,070,000 were bought and sold. But for ah1 that; the 4,610,000 is only a smidgeon of the number hat could have been sold. The exchange lists 4,855,096,764 shares available for trading. The exchange's magazine points out today that in the first eight months of this year the turnover ratiothe volume actually sold as against the total that could have jeenis 13 per cent, only slighty more than in much quieter 1957. And it is practically nothing at all compared with sprightly L900 when the turnover was 172

THE WORLD TODAY


By JAMES MARLOW

per cent of shares then avtBable and they numbered a more modest 59,579,694. In nine of the years sine* World War II the turnover ratio has been higher than this year. Average daily trading volume was higher only in 1955. More shares available for trading have been added each year. The exchange notes that since 1950 the total listed has advanced by 115 per cent. But in 1950 the turnover was 23 per cent. Since 1950 the gross national producttotal output of goods and services has increased 28 per cent, even after adjustment for price changes. If stock trading had grown by the same percentage, the average volume this year would have been more than 5,000,000 shares a day, instead of the eight month average of 2,542,697. ' One result of this slowing down percentagewise in stock trading, brokers say, has been to make a thin market. When demand for some stock spurted, there weren't too many shares available for trading. Some of the big swings in prices have been due to this. In other words, that multitude of stock stached away in strong boxes has acted as a sort of corner in stocks. If more were available for trading, an occasional rush of buying wouldn't send prices swinging so far. SHEFFIELD, England (AP) People stopped and blinked on the sidewalks here when they saw a car apparently being driven by a dog. The car traveled 50 yards, brushed against a bus and ran into a wall. An Alsatian sat behind the wheel. The owner, Robert Griffin, 46, told Magistrates' Court Friday he parked the car and left the dog inside. He added: "he must have seen another dog in the street and jumped, knocking off the brake."

WASHINGTON NEWS NOTEBOOK


By PETER EDSON

]| President William A. McDonnell, WASHINGTON (NBA) New year. drives to get more businessmen 1o The bill to aid depressed areas one of the chief advocates of take a greater interest in politics by government loans, which busi- greater businessman participation probably came too late this year ness groups opposed, was killed in politics, emphasizes the fact that 32 "conservative" members to change November election re- by veto. sults. Business representatives also of the last Congress did not run There's hardly time to cure the o p p o s e d the two-billion-dollar for re-election this year. "There is no doubt that their Republican "apathy" about which community facilities bill for pubPresident Eisenhower speaks so lic works construction, passed by departure constitutes a real loss to business interests," said Mcthe Senate, killed in the House. feelingly. But the consensus is that it will R a i l r o a d s got some help Donnell in a recent Ssr. Francisco take something more than GOP through provision for government speech. "It is up to us the pep conferences at the White loans and a reduction of trans- business people of this countryHouse and stepped-up speaking portation taxes. But they want to replace them if we can." A new group, Americans for tours by Eisenhower and Nixon even further concessions next Constitutional Action, is now beto change the trends at this late year. ing organized under retired Adm. The one definitely pro-business date. This explains, perhaps, why the measure which passed was the Ben Moreell to encourage proU.S. Chamber of Commerce has small business legislation every- business candidates to enter politics. announced that it will launch a one favored. Executives of Gulf Oil, Ford, long-range program to stimulate Business groups consider they the participation of businessmen failed in not stopping an increase General Electric, General Dynamin politics beginning next Jan- in social security benefits and ics, U.S. Steel, Boeing, Aerojetwhat they consider the beginnings General and other big companies uary. If the business community is to of all-out federal aid to education. have indicated greater interest in make any impression on 1960 What hurt the business commu- political activity for businessmen. They admit that success of unelection results, it .vill have to get nity most of all, however, was the busy now and work hard for two reversal of congressional policy ion labor's political action groups has stirred them to greater inyears. In no other way can it re- on government spending. In 1957, under heavy business terest. But nearly all confess they store the influence it had in government from 1952 to 1056. lobby pressure, Congress cut the are getting organized much too Business leaders' present feel- Kisenhower administration's bud- late to have any telling effect this ings that they must take a more gel by some five billion dollars. year. active part in politics does not In 1958 Congress increased approMOVING WEATHER come from this year's gloomy po- priations so much that the govBenjamin Franklin was the first ernment's deficit this fiscal year litical outlook alone. There is also a realization that is expected to reach 12 billion to observe tiiat weather moves, when he noted that a storm one day in business took something of a beat- dollars. . Ing In the last session of Congress. The implications of this switch Philadelphia occurred the next day Lobbyists for business groups are more inflation and higher in Boston, according to the Encyclodid throw their influence nround taxes next year. Business doesn't pedia Britannica. effectively in helping In defeat the [like the prospect and thinks someLargest exposed granite rock In mild Kcnncdy-Ives la hor reform thins ought io V>c done to rhange the world Is Stone Mountain, near bill. But !hcy want stronger ' i t .

WASHINGTON (AP) If there were a pari-mutuel window at the State Department, the odds would be 50-50 that some agreement will be reached to halt nuclear tests. This is pretty good, considering there is no certainty that the meeting will even be held. The Soviet Union lately has been grumbling about not shooting off as many nuclear test bombs as the United States and Britain. The Soviets started some catch-up shots a couple of weeks ago. Nevertheless, all concerned expect the Soviet Union to show up Oct. 31. The real target of the grumbling, knowledgeable officials are convinced, is a string attached by the United States to its offer to stop tests for at least year. This string is the proviso that some progress must be made during the year in cutting back troop strength and reducing the quantity of guns, tanks, ships and planes. If no progress is made, testing could be resumed. The Soviet Union from the start has been eager to "ban the bomb" on an everybody-trust-everybody basis. But it never has been anxious even to discuss reducing military manpower or limiting conventional weapons. The reason is simple. The Soviet Union lags behind the United States in atomic and hydrogen weaponry. It has far more men under arms and far more nonatomic weapons power. Ban the bomb and, instead of an EastWest military standoff, you have Soviet superiority. Soviet statements, like that of Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko at the United Nations five days ago, seem to be laying the groundwork for a propaganda drive against the conventional cutback proviso. Kremlin propagandists have had field day with the democracies on the test issue. A big puzzler in Washington is: Why did the United States reverse its nuclear test policy? Clever Communist propaganda, playing on sincere desires for an end to the cold war, is a likely answer.

lowever, had long set his jaw against halting atomic tests unless there was an iron-clad agreement to make sure nobody tested on the sly. He offered an impeccably logical formula for controlled stopping of tests, but

Florida Park News


The propeller, shaft, ribs, and the rudder frame of the wreck of an old steamship sunk to block a channel off old Fort Clinch are on display in the State Park at Fernandina. At the Historic Memorial on Fort George Island the old structures are built of coquina, "tabby", brick and lumber. It is on A1A near the north end of the Mayport Ferry. At the old mill site in Gold Head Branch State Park, near Keystone Heights, grain was ground, cotton was ginned, and logs were sawed by water power. The sills of the mill which once ground meal for the town of O'Leno may still be seen in the bed of the river in this charming State Park near High Springs. "Tabby", a mixture of oyster thelis and lime made from shells and sand, was used in the construe lion of portions of Fort Pickens at Pensacola, Fort Clinch at Fernandina and portions o the historic buildings at Fort George Historic Memorial at Fort George, near Mayport. Both Rock Bluff and Neals or Battery Bluff are in Torreya State Park near Bristol. Neals Bluff is over twice as high as Rock Bluff. Florida's state tree, the sabal palmetto, and the live-oak arc globular in shape when they grow in the open in the State Parks and elsewhere. A quarter century of care and protection of widlife in Highlands Hammock State Park near Scbring has made the animals and birds plentiful and unafraid.
I

it was complicated. The Soviet Union pounded away on its simple theme, "Ban the bomb!" The simple idea caught on, as simple ideas have a way of doing. Neutralists like India, allies like Britain, Republicans like then disarmament adviser Harold E. Stassen, Democrats like Adlai E. Stevensonall began pressuring Dulles for* a trial halt in U.S. tests without strings and even without international agreement. The reversal came Aug. 22. Eisenhower noted experts from both sides of the Iron Curtain had decided at a Geneva meeting thai a controlled, supervised test ban was technically feasible. He announced a U.S. willingness to sus pend tests starting with the Oct 31 diplomatic talks, which take up where the technical experts left off. Top Western diplomats expect the Soviet Union will meet Eisen bower's two conditionsattend the meeting and refrain from touch ing off an atomic blast during the one-year moratorium. They are not so sure what kind of agreement, if any, can be ex pected.

ACROSS 1. Mausoleum 6. Of him 8. Word of disgust 12. Charles Lamb 13. Cunning 14. Particle 15. Anarchists 16. Land along the ocean 18. Jury list

36. Furrow 38. Jap. chip 39. Dissuade . Public vehicle


43. Catch

20. Slight taste


21. Church seat 22. Mental image 24. Mat 26.Insect 28. Tapering candle 30. Medieval stringed instrument 34. Gray

New Kind of Financing Besides Money?


SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) The advent of missiles, rockets and space travel may require an entirely new means of financing besides money, the head of a Call fornia missile company said to day. Dan A. Kimball, president o: Aerojet-General Corp., told the 38th annual conference of the Cal ifornia-Nevada-Hawaii District 01 Kiwanis International: "1 a whole new world is being bornand tha is just what is happening it's going (o cost a lot of money. "U may be that some entirely new system besides money may have to be created to sustain anc push ahead all (hose develop mentsjust as money had to be invented when barter wasn't ade quate for the ("rowing exchange of goods and services many years ago."

44. Total 46. Precious metal 48. Pronoun 51. Unfamiliar 63. Brag 56. Wire 69. To a podlion on 60. Branch of the service 61. Cretan rat 62. Insignificant person: colloq. 63. Got up 64. Twice five 65. Organs ol hearing

Solution of Yesterday'! Puzzlt DOWN 1. Archaeologist's delight 2. Olive genus 3. 12 o'clock at night 4. Founded 5. Owns 6. Provokej to anger 7. Step 8. Cheering word
<o if

antiracketeenng bill passed next' U.S. Chamber of Commerce Atlanta, Ga.

Secretary of State Dulles, with support from President Risen-

8. On the summit 10. Ran fast ll.Sawbllled duck 17. Goad 19. Influenced 23. Manner 29. Muffin 26. Spoiled 21. Utility 29. Tavern: British 31. Large handkerchief 32. Period of time 33. Junior boj; scout 35. Affirmative 37. Harbor boat 40. Part of* ladder 42. Weep bitterly 45. Deserve 47. Unfastened 48. Headline 49. Brave nun 50. Trees 62. Walk In water 54. Mix 55. Toys 87. Hole in a needle 58. Grown boy

FAR IIMi M MIN.

PAJVAMA CITY HEKAJLD, Panama City, FI*., Tuesday Afternoon, Aug. 1, 1*67

HjOO Daily Devotion 11:05 News Sc Sign Off

8.00 CBS News Special 10:00 Combat

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) A shrimp trawler caught fire Two men, one wanted by the in Tampa Bay early today and FBI and the other by Dade Herald Bureau burned out of control for hours, TODAY County law officials, were but tne three crewmen jumped picked up here Monday and jail- 7:30 p.m.Bay County Medical Society WEWAHTTCHKA-Gulf Count- overboard and escaped serious ed by Bay Sheriffs Department 7:30 p.m.Beach Business Men's Association ry commissioner, sitting as a injury, the U.S. Coast Guard reofficials, Sheriff M. J. (Doc) 7:30 p.m.Panama Art Association, City Auditorium board of tax equalization, ac- ported. Daffin revealed. 7:30 p.m.St. Andrew Men's Club, Truesdale Park Mem- cepted without change Monday The trawler Mark E. Singlethe new tax roll presented by George Dana Hackett, 40, of orial Hall Tax Assessor Sammy Patrick. ton reportedly was carrying 12,WASHINGTON (AP) Ob- But there are some from Xe- tforth Maple, Minn., was arrest7:30 p.m.Zeta Zeta, First Federal Building Taxable valuation of the 1967 500 gallons of diesel fuel which viously disturbed and. concerned groes. ed for passing about 5400 in WEDNESDAY tax roD is set at $38,668,663, an fed the flames furiously. by urban rioting and looting, Mail from the South generally worthless checks in the county, citizens by the thousands are is heavy with criticism of Presi- Daffin said. The Minnesota man 7:00 a.m. Optimist Club of Panama City Beaeh, Holi- increase of 668,663 over 1966. i The cre _, _ . . . . wmen who_abandoned expressing their views to sena- dent Johnson and with some- also is wanted by tbe FBI for The total tax rolls stands at] day Inn No. 3 e tors and representatives. around $51 million, with home-] * ** * id*a?i?wL ** thing of an '1 told you so" and bond jumping in New Jersey, 12.IS p.m.Khvanis Club of Panama City, Dixie Sherman y> G Most congressional offices "You brought it on yourself"! he added. .^^ H 1^110 of stead exemption accounting for vlUe MarkV^Pack* J^ksonreport their riot mail as moder- point of view. Mayport, $9 million and $3.2 mulion in | | Brid e Club Garden ate to heavy in volume. government property wholly ex- *** Lawrence Jones of Odessa. > Numerous letter w r i t e r s There isn't a great deal in the empted. A Miami man, James Merritt, The trio reported for way of proposed solutions or called suchsomething to be done 40, wanted on warrants from 7:30 p.m.National Secretaries Association, 4 Winds Ter- Tbe breakdown on the taxable radio at 12:23 a.m. the fire by and abanabout militantly outspoken constructive suggestions, con- Negro leaders as Stokely Car- Columbia and Dade Counties, race Room valuation: Personal property, doned the trawler in the Egmont gressional offices say. Most peo- michael, and H. Rap Brown, also was arrested and probably $19,593,010; real e s t a t e , and Ship Channel at 12 :30. A harbor U> iii,33^,600; railroad ana tele- 1 pilot shuttle boat picked the suggested thai thoughts and for the Vietnam County Sheriffs' officials today. I phone utilities, $1,082,803. three up nine minutes after they Strong emotion. war might better be spent in the ZMerritt is charged with breakjumped overboard. To sum it up, several ing and entering to eommitt bers of Congress said, "The folks United States. The 73-foot boat later ground Most members of Congress grand larcency and for car theft are against riots." decline to permit their corre- in Dade, DafBn said. itself 1.5 miles north of Egmont, Slost of the letters appear to spondents to be quoted by and about three miles west of be from whites, particularly but do permit quotations name (Continued from page 1 from the Sunshine Skyway bridge Nail-biting, smoking, drinkmgthose with Southern postmarks, j letters so long as the writer is Airport May Be everyone has habits he'd like to the 77 other bodies and 33 of the massive racial violence. Rioting al to help our area in any way over Tampa Bay. break. What about habits you not identified. injured. lolled 40 persons in Detroit last possible. On that basis, The Associated On City Agenda should make? Read a psycholTUESDAY Small fires still plagued thi week and 27 died in Newark two In conclusion, w h o e v e r is ROACH Press obtained many of the not ogist's suggestions in Making elected the people should stand Forrestal's crew through the weeks ago. RADIO & TV LOG letters. Here are samples of Habits Work For You. One of Herald Bureau solidly behind the city commis- A N T l T E R M I T E f night A smouldering mattress what Mr. and Mrs. America are PORT ST. JOE The was discovered on the twistec As Detroit rebuilt Monday, a sion in these trying times, their 40 articles and features in the CONTROL "" v_. PANAMA CITY writing their senators and rep- possibility of Port St. OP obtain- flight deck and another smal major political controversy decisions are frequently diffcult August Digest. Get it today. broke into FLAIG N A V A L CHEMICAL AM WDLP FM resentatives about the matter: i ing a municipal airport may be blaze was found in the charrec Michigan Gov.the open when *o make. I ask the help of all From Tennessee"I am not brought up again at tonight's ruins of the ship's post office. A George Romney of the people and welcome con.READER'S DIGEST MO KC -5 MC racist. Neither are the peopli 7 8 5 - 6 3 5 1 or 785-5445 accused President Johnson of 1,000 WATTS 39,000 WATTS for whom I speak, Negro as wei commission meeting, according third small fire triggered an delaying the deployment of structive criticism. alarm. TOCB MOST 3ITSIU STATIONS as white. We are outraged and to Mayor Frank Pate. The commission meeting is set Navy authorities said none o: federal troops in the city in frightened parents who believi for 8pm. (EST) at Qty Hall and the fires was serious. order to "play politics in a WPCF the tune has come for firm outside the airport matter only Navy officials said 57 planes period of tragedy and riot." LISTEN TO PAUL HARVEY startling and immediate action were destroyed or damaged Romney said he had to wait 22 is jtm t p.m. by the government. A stop has routine business is on the The cost of reparing damage to hours for federal troops. agenda, Pate said. 5,000 WATTS to be put to rioting and pillag the ship and replacing the Other major developments: ing, flagrant disrespect of our planes was put at 5135 million, Providence, BJ.Bands of Pneumonia Caused WSCM country, our flag, our rights Negroes spilled into streets Modern Country Top 40 Tones our lives." Woman's Death throwing stones and bottles in Seattle"These rioters ac 1290 35-block area; force of 350 like mad dogs. If people act like POET ST. JOEPneumonia heavily armed police restored that, the police should be al< caused the death of Mrs. Mary WMA1-FM least two lowed to use machine guns on Dixon, local Negro, according each and ordered an arraign- calm; at stabbed. persons shot 107.9 MO 89.3 KW them." to an autopsy report released ment for 1:30 p.m. Wednesday. and four 7 A.M. 11 PJJL After a 2 a.m. briefing in the Erie, Pa.Negroes hurled Mississippi"Send them all today. For The Discerning Listener back to Africa and give them She was found dying at her armory by National Guard of- rocks and bottles at firemen 160 acres and a tractor." home July 23 and an autopsy ficers and Palm Beaeh County answering call at a set fire, but Sheriff the was ordered by County Judge governorWilliam Heidtman, who police using dogs restored WGNE praised the men order. Sam P. Husband. 1480 had put down the rioting. GENIE RADIO "This was a routine attempt West Palm Beach, Ma. at some vandalism," Kirk said. samll fires set in what police WCTV-TV "We don't allow that in Florida. rmed "minor" incidents. KIDDIE SHOWS 25 c CHANNEL, f We have law in Florida." WashingtonPresident Johnff g_T | Kirk said the tear gas barrage son told imprompu news conferBOX OFFICE OPtN 12:45 TAIXAHASSEE-THOMASVIZLE and firm tactics which met 400 ence that the racial troubles :00 Tail Man - F ^ ^ ONE SHOW ONLY 1:00 7:30 Daktaxl Negroes as they tossed stones, will not hamper the Vietnam 8:30 ftpotllKht CBO Wednesday bottles and insults was used on war effort. "Meeting our 9:30 Petticoat Junction his orders. problems at home is no 10:00 CBS Reports TUESDAY AUG. 1 11:00 Ptilia Final "Nothing goes on in these indication that we are going to 11:30 Joey Bishop Show High 6:tta.m. things without my orders," Kirk gnore or surrender our comLow 5:34 p.m. said. mitments abroad," he said. WEDNESDAY AUG, Z WKRG-TV As the Republican chief execuligh 6:59a.m. tive walked among the guardsCHANNEL 5 Low 6.28p.m. men, his news secretary, Jim MOBILE. ALABAMA 5:30 First EdiHor. THURSDAY AUG. 3 Wolf, said the governor had 5:45 CBS Bvenlnn Nws High 7.41a.m. abandoned plans announced in 8:15 Home Edition :30 Daktari Low 7:16 p.m. Tallahassee to visit the riot area 'stand in the door of the court ouse or schoolhouse" and must 7:30 Spotlight FRIDAY AUG. 4 because he was too tired. 8:30 Hollywood Premiere 8:29a.m.: Kirk introduced himself to the reduce a constitution which 10:30 Pive Star Final Ultisslmo wide track tread is up omplies 10-35 Naked City Low 8:04 p.m. guardsmen who were mobilized ished by with precepts estabfederal courts. 13:00 Final Edition to */z inch wider than other tires of com from as far away as Fort Pierce The next constitution, he said, SATURDAY AUG. 5 High 9.23a.m. and who bunked for the night in will be "a framework to guide parable size. You get more positive traction and WTVY-TV Low 8:58 p.m. blankets spread on the armory's he destinies of this state for the CHANNEL precision control. On straightaways. Curves. cement floor SUNDAY AUG. 6 ;ext 100 years. DOTHAN, ALABAMA High 1 : 1 a.m. 01 4:00 Casper Cartoons From street speeds to turnpike speeds. While Smith said Florida must 430 Have Gun Win TTaTel Low 9:40 p.m. Thurtdoy seek to "recapture" govern9:00 Batman n , MONDAY AUG. 7 mental strengths lost through 5:30 CBS Evening News HEU IS FOR HEROES" 11:05 a.m. the inertia of- states, another Reportf Steve McQueen Low 9-59 p.m. speaker said the powers already 7:30 Spotlight Bobby Darin TUESDAY AUG. 8 have been lost for good. MRS. CLAUDINE BOYER ... . 8:30 Petticoat Junction

Wanted Men Letters Pour In. Arrested Here To Capitol Hill Concerning Riots

Board Accepts Crew Escapes Blazing Trawlci


New Tax Roll

v^uir County Gulf v-ounry

IN TAMPA BAY

HABITS: THEY CAN MAKE OR BREAK YOU

From Page One


Carrier Racial

Daley

Kirk

TRACK

TIDE TIMES

Legislature

DEATHS

High Low

n.59 a.m. 10:20 p.m.

CHANNEL 7 PANAMA CITY. FLA. 6:35 Tyndafl News in Review 8:30 Brooking Daybutters 7:30 Newt Florida Today 7:35 Today 8:25 Morntnf Meditation 8:30 Today 9:00 Snap Judgement 9:25 NBC New* 9:30 Concentration 10-00 The Pat Boon Show 10:30 The Hollywood S)utr*f 11X0 Jeopardy 11:3O Eye Guess 11:55 NBC Newi 12:00 Televiat 1230 Let's Make A Deal 12:55 NBO News 1.00 Day* Of our LJvei 1:30 Tbe Doctors 2:00 Another World 9:30 You Don't Say 3:00 Tbe Match Game 3:25 NBC News 3:30 The Fugitive 4:30 Cartoonerama 5:00 Ranro 5:30 Spotlight - News Weather Sports 8:00 Huntly-Brinlcley 6:30 Girl From U.N.C L E. 7:30 Occasional "Wife 8:00 Tues Night Movie "That certain feeling" 10 0 The Pugltuve 11:00 News-Weather-Sports 11:15 Tonight CHANNEL 3 PENSACOLA, FLA. Marshal DtUoa Meet the Braves Lead off Man Braves vs. Cincinnati Tenth Inmng Peyton Place II Jack Kenney News Weather Sports Joey Bishop Show Kews Weather ft Sign Off CHANNEL 10 MOBILE. ALA. The Earlv Show McHale's Naw Huntley Brtnkley Newsbeat Bob Morse Sports Jim Koblas Weather Ken Holiday Occasional Wife Tuesday Night at the Movies "That certain feeling" S7th Prsciact News Beat News News Beat Future News Beat Sport* Weather Tonight Show News-Wemther-Sport Sign Off

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Mrs. Claudme Boyer, 37, a resident of Port St. Joe since 1957, died in a Panama Clfy hospital Sunday. Mrs Boyer moved to Port St. Joe from Beebe, Ark She was a member of the Methodist Church. She is survived by two daughters. Miss Mary Gertrude Boyer and Mrs. Ruth C. Ramsey, both of Port St. Joe, three sons, Clarence Edwin Boyer of Wewahitchka, William Paul Boyer of Fayefteville, Ark., and Louis Dick Boyer of Atlanla, Go ; eight grandchildren and six great-grand children. The body will be sent to Westbrcok Funeral Home in Beeos, Ark., for funeral services end Interment. The family Iras asked In lieu of flowers contributions be made to the Methodist Women's Society of Christian Service Blue Lake Fund In Andalusia. Ala. PREVATT FUNERAL HOME Port St. Joe 237-2401.

Vietnam
major offensive force smashed by Marines in heavy fighting in May. In North Vietnam, small U.S. jets Monday bombed a large storage area 25 miles rorthnorthwest of Hanoi, spokesmen said. The jets also hit targets through the North Vietnamese industrial complex in the Red River delta near Hanoi and Haiphong.
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President Cleveland is io luck agaii hU being ia Washington initead o d>wn again in the summer and gather They are trying in G^rmnn? to find a Mexico with his rheumatism, prevents shells, but would not lire there f < r a substitute for I idu rubber. No one his ailment from being called the ji SOME EXTRACTS FROM A LETTER. kingdom. The folks here were glad to who has used Dr. Big*low's Positive Cure j*ms. see mii and sd they had missed me ever deaires a substitute, s it is eminently successful in coughs, colda and li throat so much. od luog diseases. For sale at McCorXenirt Ltdj'8 TluikggivlBff It ia stated that $20,000,000 has beta This afterooou a young lady called mick'B. Which Was flpeit in the suok in newspaper enterprise! in New for me to go with her to see the CheroSonth." HBAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. kee, the new boat. I thought when I York Oitv during the past twentj.fiv* Hannah A. Sedy to Margaret A. siw it yeaterday it was very homely, yeara, Still Henry George is not deterred Hemmg; lot from going into the business. but oh it ia grand inside. Everything s reetp, $7,500.on Church and Detroit The followiag interesting letter from Ml Ctlia Fleming, who U upending the about it is beautiful. Wa went all Tobias Dreee to William L. Blair, all The Presidents message in full will he winter in Florida, we have been permit- through it and I felt that I would not of bt No. 4 in Kyle'a addition to Cedarfound on our outside pages. It is a tod to read and tbo been allowed to take be afraid of the ocean in that The cap ville, $925. Tolominouj document of a characteristic one tracta fronname. It was writ- tain told us there were 60 ladies on board The I'irst Keen Twinge. nature. He is for a tariff for revenue ton to her sister. and not one of them missed a meal. On ou'nt111? fT5^13 advanc.makes Itself kuown es by wulch rbeumaiism the pains ami achonly and other things of equal demc MAYPOET, FLA., No?. 25, 1886. the return voyage it took thousands of arei experienced after every exposure, it fi cratic stupidity with the main chance o Oh, how I wi*h y6u could hare been bles of cotton. I bad a very pleasant ^ifl*1?'611 Jhat HoodVSaraaparma i i o f r rt If being nominated in 1888 always in view with me this morning. It ia only nalf- walk but did not know I was so far away H^Sl can ? euinati6m-we doubtthe there is, or be, sach a remedy. Bat thouand benefited by others HooU'sSar^parma, warRetd it, if yon care to. put eight, but I hi?e been on the At- and on coming home I lost my way a l n urglng * who suffer from before tb ftrat keen lantic Ocean already thia morning. Laat little so tbat I was very tired and had a The little hoom which some papers ar TMeday OM of my pa pit* CUM to DM severe headache when I got home, but tryiof to get up for Shermin and Hawley and Mked me if I would not go home found your letter awaiting me and that The mother of five new born uhepherd a the Bephblican nominees.for Preaideni with her and spend Thanksgiving. I made me feel ever so much better. puppies, near Houston, ww -mournia 1888 will go higher than Gilroy'a kite though tibe lived in Jackson Yille, but I want to tell you of a ride I had a ing the death of four of her babies that when the time rolls aronnd. That Elaine he amid her home WM at Mayport, about few days sgo. Mr. McClure hired a had been taken from h*r, 'when a rery young pig, whose mother had lost it ought to be the nominee for the he*d oi twenty fire or thirty miles nearer the carriage and driver and took us all out came squealing around the dog house. the ticket is beyond question as a matter mouth of the rirer. I had been wanting to the country, along the river. How I The shepherd dog at once adop-.ed the of justice, and that he will be, as an ex a trip on the river too badly to refu did enjoy it At one point we drove al- little porker, and it now suckles along presaion of the people's will, ia aa sure a luch an invitation. 89 last evening at most to the water's edgf; was juat oppo- with the pup,aud follows its ioeter mother about tquealiog vigorously, whenever it deatinv. We venture the prediction 430 we left J. ou tha "Kate Spencer," site to where the river bends and cou!d feels hungry. The collie seems to love that Elaine and Foraker will be the and had a delightful ride, only when it see away up the river, twelve miles I the pig quite aa much as she dosa her nominees, that would be a ticket with became too dark to see I did not enjoy was told. While standing there the dri- own pup. the right kind of metal at both enda. it so well. I recaived a very pleasant ver got me a bunch of moss, which I set t . "BTJCHTJ-PAIBA." Ohio will only throw her chance away to and cardial welcome from Mrs. Burrows, you, and hope you hare recaivecl it be- Quick, complete cure of Catarrh of the do something for her*If by sticking to the little girl's mamma. fore this time. That da; I aaw tree, Bladder, all annoying Kidaey, Bladder and 1 Sherman in the next convention as she Thii is a big day on the St John river. tha branches of which were merely COT Urinary Diseases. | . At druggists. "HOUGH ON PELLS has in the past. He is not a probability The largest steamer that has ever entered ered with it and loobni beautifully lut Little but good. Small granules, small and hardly a possibility. Nowhere ex the river came in this morning and goes not ao much so ss where the trees were dose, big results, pleasant in operation, cepl in Ohio and a small corner of New M far up as Jacksonville. It is direct treen and moss hanging from them. I clont disturb the stomach. lOc. and25c. "HOUGH ON J>IRT.w York has he any strength, besides the from New York and will make regukr had thought there were no ortngea on Ask for "Rough on Dirt;" Aperfectwashcommon people of the pirly in Ohio who Iripi between the two places. This \a its this tide of the river but that day we mg powder found at last! A harmless extra are for Elaine by a large majority are first trip and several steamers went out passed two groves where the trees were nue A1 article, pure and clean, sweetens, freshens, bleaches and whitens without Ured of being: voted like sheep again* to meet it and I had the pleasure of being full and were turning yellow (the orang slightest injury to finest fabric. Unequalltheir choice. This is a nation and not i on one of them. We got op at five and es were.) Coming home we rode under ed for fine linens and laces, general houseState. All Ohioiana love to honor Sher- started about daylight. About the time a plum tree in bloom and in several hold, kitchen and laundry use. Softens water, saves labor and soap. Added to man. They have done BO and are doing we crossed the bsr'the pun made his ap- yards we saw some beautiful roses. rtarc1'Amcreascs loes' prevents yellowing, so now, but they want Jas. G. Elaine for pearance and so I got to see the sun tiee ac., 10c., 25c. ai Grocers or Druggists. President and they will.see that he get* ontheOaean. It was grand. We went Uncle Sam Will tiet The Chickens. When vary young children are deprived of hta proper portion of Ohio's vote this out about two miles. It w&a the fiiet their natural nourishment, it is difficult to A country Sheriff having a writ of Procore a proper substitute therefor: hence time or know the reason why. time the boat I was on had ever been at execution against the property of a ?e fc'arinlnz mortality among Infanta 011 * which Is recoramencltd by sea and I have heard since we came back debtor levied, among other thing*, upon *, i? 1 ^Pmedical aothoritieH, lias been the hlghpst prepared LO meet this very want. SAVEDBI AHELVLKsS INVALID that the captain was quite uneasy when a coop full of chickens. He locked it Advice to .tiotbers. it began rocking from side to side. Am up over night and returned the next 1 ^^800113111* ^^P. ^ Child1 Paralyzed Woman Prevent* herNnjie glad I did not know this while on board. morning to take an invtntory of the ' 16 nur8 Prescription of one of the ,ls tbe and fowla. He found the coop jnst as he from Boning to Death. " ** Pbyslcians in the The roughest place was in crowing the had left it, but the chickena were gone ' and ba8 be11 "^ to forty bar. It was impossible to walk or even The experience of the United States nK sncofss by milloni cnildren. During the AKBON, 0., Dec. 6.-Bertha Cook, stand without holding to something. Government with the Pacific Rdlrosd , it8 valae 1110111 &i incftlcurable. aged nineteen, while attending at the The boats saluted each other then we people promtaet to be very much like ' ri fDP n, cures dysenB P B n the bowels, rick-bed ot Mrs, Theo. Bobii son yeater- turned and came back. Much as I en- that of the Sheriff. It holds a second . - ? 8iving health t o t h e mortgage on the property of the comp*. tt rest* the motner. Prtce 25 cto. a botday, accident!!* brushed her dr?ss sgainsi ioyed it I felt quite relieved when I ny, but from present appearances by the itove. In a moment the fi imea shot knew we really had turned and the only time it gets redf to call in the indebtover her head, envelopiDg ]^r. Mn. way I did know wis by seeing the sun edness there will be nothing but the rails EjbinsoD, who has long been helpless on the oppositejide from where I first and sleepers left. from paralysis, apranar out of bed, ran twit. While we. were so disturbed by Subscribe for the GAZETTE. A COMPLETE STOCK OF across the room and wrapped a blanket the waves the new steamer plodded along about Miai Cook, and waa returned to o steadily that they seemed to have no A. STABTLnro FACT. Ded in a better condition than when the effect on it It apparently defied the It U not commonly known that a large accident happened. TIM shr.ck to Miss the mighty waters. So I have been proportion of the rheumatism and neuCook was so great that her mind was en- 'Kocked on the cradle of the Deep." ralgia extant is traceable directly to the tirely dethroned, and she has been crazy Now 1 am sitting by a window facing diseased condition or imperfect action of We have just perfected arraogemenlB with one cf the leading booaas of everaince. It is thonght she will-not Jie river and think I am not more than the kidneys and liver; therefore a remedy which cures the resulting disease must recover. Cincinnati, for the purchase of .BdEv., ret edFrui, 8 , Mfin e.. c . Bl)9lj . dMJWllere . Fre,h New YMk8,,te twenty-five Yds from the water. The have found and smitten the first cause wind fe blowing and the rive;- looks very Many persons using Athlophoros for CUTE LITTLE rheumatism and neuralgia have been rough, much rougher than when we surprised to find that chronic disorderTof in Africa* Traveler Baas Across a Race were out I wish I wa* eloquent and tlit hver and kidneys have also been Removal Get Your of Wooly.Haired Dwarfs, ltd a good.commaud of language so that Kreatly relieved and they have written Fjrmera and others tare notice that i OF Oil at your door of R. I. Williamam'i PHEPARE FOR WINTER I could describe to you more minutely for an explanation. The fact is, that the hHje removed my blacksmith hop ;t. me^- acts directly on these organs, New T*ok Line. x ' *"er 6.-A B.ussels vhat I see and enj >y here in Florida. I cleansing them from all irritating sub* ifrr B stand, and am prepared to do J djapatch itatea that the explorer, Ludwfg ll kinrta of work io my line. Bookstore of Wolf, just rau-ned from th* Oorgoi r? eel that the trip this morning has paid stances and regulating their action. Taken WANTED, U*c 4. 3,iA3wfc. V.P. SMITH m connection with Athlophoros Pills thw e for coming. JOHN. N. WRIGHT, W , without exception, the most valuable i A white man who thoroughly undertribes of dwarfo, generallv Thfa village is a desolate looking place. kidney and hver remedy in the world, and atandithfl care of hor**, cow? etc Holiday Present*. 5a*ringlea.th.n four feet.SarSei r. Barrow* keeps a hotel, but just new will cure a large proportion of those who We will KUirQtee thie candy to be pure and is willing to make himself useful' and wiA short wooly hair. ThlrC ben are no visitors here and everythicf nave these diseases. and unadulterated. We ofler Cbmtonaa Books and Card*, ,_ Apply either at this cffice or Lock Box Miciiigan Apples. fc *!S811 *** tre 'TOftderfully atilt Booke, Religinaa Books, Birthdav ^.'"J. Dec 3 31 JU(strec good tempered. Many thouindiof dull The soil M white rand art is *o living at 22 Bibles etc. Xnow Cards tollable for 8 ^ "d lor n %^<>' this wild ^on >le*k and deaolau, I have not si en a * " , 0 , ?! don't ., 75c per 100. Xman Cards beveled tdtf think there many medicine like Athlonho >? nier the name oflu. pew of anything green yet txcept two git edm 5c. XMM Froated Ribbon They mix very little with the o? three trees and a thistle. Beyond the ros for rheumatism. Previous to my using Book 25c. A general aMortmeni and thu medicine I used abo.it every kind of S for the Superintendents of Sunday fine variety. Teachers, P*r*nn, Ohil"MJirown population. rim I can see as far M tbeeye can reach rheumatic medicine 1 ever heard of, both "ftiV'sayi Wolfl/oofifirmsthe aadant Scho-iln etc., and we kindly aek jou * aren and all othf n are cordially invited eoaieetarts of HerodotM and Aristotle 0ly whew the view is intercepted by what regular and irregular without avail. At Jersey Sweetf at ED. to call and examine our goods. to look at oar csndy aud learn CONWELL A BARB have a few mrr- of . the time I commenced with Athlophoroa w oce Harriet Bmcher Slowe's home I was suffering very much. In a very. CARRA H. CLOSE. those elegant HorM Blanketsthey ar Nol-dtf our prices before j Africa* Lilipntiaoa re- Tint now it is all aglow with eunahioe, remarkably },ort time, in fact I had only 37 W*t M*in treet, Xeaia, 0. closing them out at cost. 8 Bat'ifajKj- hotpiubly." iog eleewhtre. Dec. 2-aAw-3w. f W doM X Oilg and Gasoline Da the way down here we pasted whe i 5-i* ?. , *' I*"enced very decided relief. It is now over two yeaw do>r to French was miatacred by the 8ptn since I med it and I have had no Rheum the New bin tbe early part of our country's Zoma Residence For Sale. Eveiytbin? in the hardware line k Athl .^ Phorosdidiu likorj. cheaper l Ooowell <k B*\,h thin any A rre opportunity to secure a pleaswill do the same for others. of S where in town. ' Nuv.29dA^2w, ant home in Xenia at a bargain. Cheap Lunches. Jacksonville. Aw here tg.in and an> Centrally located and in a tplDdM The Leading Cheap Cash Grace ra. _ to get herr. It i, like coafeg bone. neighborhood. Enquire of Bjpw A . r L8 I left Mftyport thn zoning at 6:30 and any one who may amicted with rheuman; __ 8ep22-dAw-lf. aale. fi>.dhrefttiiije. The river WM ao Ilto?., I. ft U M Wanted. P top wi JtUf but the wind waa u o cold for n* 1> and Athlophoro. Pill, but where theyocan- SS7 " i'0UWf ohad locDoteot ttji If by not be bought of the drug^t U,c Athlo Choppers Wanted! A good wwirg rmchine collector nd Mleiain with hor* aod harnew, WU the wiodowi. YaHerday if. phoros Co., 112 WallSt^ew York will B. , .* either, (cam- paid) " Will p?.y expense* OD tbe road. Xenia, Ohio it wa 10 cold and the wind blew Alto' WMted, Uo good M(e*atD for aM Qretnt county, A Afents*Wanud.

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MgeGA-PLAYGHOUND DAILY NEWS, Thursday Morning, May 1,1975

ekle Ends Career; Asked to Stay On


^TALLAHASSEE, Kla. (UP!) ;^Hal P. Dekle ended 18 years ,83 a judge Wednesday, but will lemain on the Florida Supreme ourt another month as a .'retired justice, called back to :Rjlp dispose of cases in which '.yt heard oral arguments. 'Chief Justice James C. dkins Jr. made the special ..assignment after clearing it ;fjth other justices. !* .\Vhen he leaves the court for Kiod in June, Dekle said, he ilans lo set up a private law ;fcactice in Tallahassee and ;ipecialize in appellate cases. ' -J pressed informally in an open 1 neck, long-sleeved cowboy shjrt, Dekle spent his final day isjan active justice working on foses and conferring with his Colleagues. * >'l am anxious to slart my law .JWdice," he said, apparently wjt anticipating any problems wjth the Florida Bar as a result jfjinvestigalions that prompted fcis early retirement, j He has been called as a wftness in the Bar disciplinary : frial Monday of Ed Mason, the ;vlorney whose improper legal Jicmo, prepared for Justice tfojseph Boyd and dropped off at fefkle's office too, led to a feommendation that Boyd and {Jfkle be removed. 4 Some sources say the Bar has .bejen asked to consider disciplining Dekle if it punishes Mason. The Bar cannot act Against a judge because jiibarmcnt would amount lo yejnoving him from office since a requirement for the bench is membership in the bar. A number of cases, including some in which Dekle wrote the opinion, are still circulating among the justices for a vote. Had Dekle not been persuaded to stay on through May, an outside judge who had not heard the lawyer's arguments would have had to be called in to vote. Dekle announced his retirement March 10, making it effective Wednesday. He said his health and finances were being exhausted by lengthy Judicial Qualifications Committee and a House impeachment committee inquiries. Dekle, 57, has served .continuously on the bench since his election in 1957 to the Dade County Civil Court of Record.

Bishop Defies Ecclesiastic Court: Fails to Show Up


WASHINGTON.(UPI) - The Presiding Bishop of the threemillion-member Episcopal Church Wednesday defied the order of an ecclesiastical court by failing to appear at the trial of a priest charged with allowing a woman to celebrate Holy Communion. Defense lawyers for the Rev.. William Wcndl, rector of Hie church of SI. Stephen and the Incarnation, sought to call (he lit. Rev. John M. Allin, head of the church, to testify on the question of the ordination of women. Allin, who previously said he . would not appear, failed to respond to his name when he was called by the defense during (he first day of the trial of Wendt. H is uncertain what action the court can .or will take in regard to Alibi's failure to appear. Under church law it Is possible that Ihe Presiding Bishop could be brought to trial /or violating canon or church law. Wendt is charged with disobeying nis bishop, the R[. Rev. William Creighlon, head of the diocese of Washington, and with violating his ordination vows, by allowing a woman who was ordained a priest in a controversial service last July to give communion. It called as witnesses the church's previous presiding bishop, the Rt. Rev. John Hincs who told Ihe court and some 300 speclalors that he believed the ordinations valid even though they did not comply with canon law what he called "in-house regulations." Wendt's lawyer, lay theologian Willfam Slringfellow, opened the afternoon session by saying the case was about "two events which are inter-related, intertwined and inexIricable." He listed them as the celebration of Holy Communion by the Hcv. Alison Cheek on Nov: 10 at St. Stephens and the Incarnation Church, and the unusual ordination service last July 29 in Philadelphia in which 11 women deacons, including Mrs. Cheek, were admitted lo the priesthood. ; VOTE NEIL A.

ECCLESIASTICAL TRIAL-Jusl before the start of the ecclesiastical trial of Rev. William Wcndt, left, got underway Wednesday, he chats with Kev. Alison Cheek, the woman he permitted to celebrate Holy Communion in defiance of a

bishop's order. In this first ecclesiastical trial of this century in the Episcopal Church, H'cndl Is being tried on charges of disobeying his bishop by allowing a woman to celebrate Communion in liis church last N'ov. 10. (UPI Photo)

BENNETT
WARD 2
(pd. Pol. Adv, by Barbara Bennett Campaign Treasurer)

MOOREHANDLEY
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Butane Tank \ Explosion Toil Climbs to Six


' JEAGLE I'ASS, Tex. ( D P I ) . '.Three more persons died "Vfadnesday bringing the death }oll to six in Ihe explosion of a 'butane tank hurled like a fire Ball 500 yards into n roadside .trailer park. ; .Yhe ex-plosion of (he tank was 'triggered by Hie wreck of ils 'farrier. Besides Ihe six dead, three of whom were killed in the crash Tuesday night, 40 ;i(hers were injured, half of them critically burned. -?The National Transportation Safety Board dispatched investigators to Ihe scene to begin ."the same extremely detailed investigation as a calastrophic airline disaster." ". The Texas Department of Public Safety said two Crystal CQy, Tex. residents were killed 'HVlhe crash Tuesday evening. Three of the 21 persons airlifted (o'hospitals in San Antonio died later. The truck driver, Jesus Berdusco of Piedras Negras, Mexico, was missing and presumed dead. "All we found is part of his billfold and part of his shirt," Said a DPS spokesman. "We never even found the front end ofjhe Iruck." ,' Police Capt. Donald Smith s.ald the but-ine (ruck swerved to,miss a car turning off U. S. 277 a mile cast of the border town. The truck jackknifed, overturned and exploded. "The lank itself came up about 50 lo 60 feet in Ihe air and traveled approximately -150 to' 500 yards hitting Ihe trailers," Smith said, "ft was shooting out flames all Ihe lime. It was just like a rocket." mith said the tank sailed over Ihe first row of trailers a.nd into Ihe second destroying one and burning two more.

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Boat Theft Rash Climbs -; To Three


JACKSONVILLE, FLA. (UPI) Boat thieves, operating under cover of night, have stolen Ihree vessels since last Saturday from the nearby flayport dock area. ;The latest theft came last night with the disappearance of Rear Adm. Justin Langille's 40foot fiberglass yacht from the Mayport Naval Station. It was fpu'nd beached five miles down coast Wednesday. .A 44-foot shrimper, owned by Robert H. Hollz, was also stolen from Mayport Docks Tuesday night and run aground on the east side of the St. Johns River, about seven miles from the river's mouth. ;Therc appeared to be little damage to cither vessel. ffowever, a Ihird boat owned by .Bill Aley, which was taken from its slip at Mayport Docks Saturday night and relurned . 9pe hour later, sustained $7,000 ' In damages to its transmission, $hafl, rudder and propeller, (Uey said. ;j;The FBI, Naval Intelligence j p n d . Mayport Base security i bcr'sonnel were invesligaling } jhe tiicft of Ihe admiral's yacht.
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MgeGA-PLAYGHOUND DAILY NEWS, Thursday Morning, May 1,1975

ekle Ends Career; Asked to Stay On


^TALLAHASSEE, Kla. (UP!) ;^Hal P. Dekle ended 18 years ,83 a judge Wednesday, but will lemain on the Florida Supreme ourt another month as a .'retired justice, called back to :Rjlp dispose of cases in which '.yt heard oral arguments. 'Chief Justice James C. dkins Jr. made the special ..assignment after clearing it ;fjth other justices. !* .\Vhen he leaves the court for Kiod in June, Dekle said, he ilans lo set up a private law ;fcactice in Tallahassee and ;ipecialize in appellate cases. ' -J pressed informally in an open 1 neck, long-sleeved cowboy shjrt, Dekle spent his final day isjan active justice working on foses and conferring with his Colleagues. * >'l am anxious to slart my law .JWdice," he said, apparently wjt anticipating any problems wjth the Florida Bar as a result jfjinvestigalions that prompted fcis early retirement, j He has been called as a wftness in the Bar disciplinary : frial Monday of Ed Mason, the ;vlorney whose improper legal Jicmo, prepared for Justice tfojseph Boyd and dropped off at fefkle's office too, led to a feommendation that Boyd and {Jfkle be removed. 4 Some sources say the Bar has .bejen asked to consider disciplining Dekle if it punishes Mason. The Bar cannot act Against a judge because jiibarmcnt would amount lo yejnoving him from office since a requirement for the bench is membership in the bar. A number of cases, including some in which Dekle wrote the opinion, are still circulating among the justices for a vote. Had Dekle not been persuaded to stay on through May, an outside judge who had not heard the lawyer's arguments would have had to be called in to vote. Dekle announced his retirement March 10, making it effective Wednesday. He said his health and finances were being exhausted by lengthy Judicial Qualifications Committee and a House impeachment committee inquiries. Dekle, 57, has served .continuously on the bench since his election in 1957 to the Dade County Civil Court of Record.

Bishop Defies Ecclesiastic Court: Fails to Show Up


WASHINGTON.(UPI) - The Presiding Bishop of the threemillion-member Episcopal Church Wednesday defied the order of an ecclesiastical court by failing to appear at the trial of a priest charged with allowing a woman to celebrate Holy Communion. Defense lawyers for the Rev.. William Wcndl, rector of Hie church of SI. Stephen and the Incarnation, sought to call (he lit. Rev. John M. Allin, head of the church, to testify on the question of the ordination of women. Allin, who previously said he . would not appear, failed to respond to his name when he was called by the defense during (he first day of the trial of Wendt. H is uncertain what action the court can .or will take in regard to Alibi's failure to appear. Under church law it Is possible that Ihe Presiding Bishop could be brought to trial /or violating canon or church law. Wendt is charged with disobeying nis bishop, the R[. Rev. William Creighlon, head of the diocese of Washington, and with violating his ordination vows, by allowing a woman who was ordained a priest in a controversial service last July to give communion. It called as witnesses the church's previous presiding bishop, the Rt. Rev. John Hincs who told Ihe court and some 300 speclalors that he believed the ordinations valid even though they did not comply with canon law what he called "in-house regulations." Wendt's lawyer, lay theologian Willfam Slringfellow, opened the afternoon session by saying the case was about "two events which are inter-related, intertwined and inexIricable." He listed them as the celebration of Holy Communion by the Hcv. Alison Cheek on Nov: 10 at St. Stephens and the Incarnation Church, and the unusual ordination service last July 29 in Philadelphia in which 11 women deacons, including Mrs. Cheek, were admitted lo the priesthood. ; VOTE NEIL A.

ECCLESIASTICAL TRIAL-Jusl before the start of the ecclesiastical trial of Rev. William Wcndt, left, got underway Wednesday, he chats with Kev. Alison Cheek, the woman he permitted to celebrate Holy Communion in defiance of a

bishop's order. In this first ecclesiastical trial of this century in the Episcopal Church, H'cndl Is being tried on charges of disobeying his bishop by allowing a woman to celebrate Communion in liis church last N'ov. 10. (UPI Photo)

BENNETT
WARD 2
(pd. Pol. Adv, by Barbara Bennett Campaign Treasurer)

MOOREHANDLEY
LUMBER-BUILDING SUPPLIES

Butane Tank \ Explosion Toil Climbs to Six


' JEAGLE I'ASS, Tex. ( D P I ) . '.Three more persons died "Vfadnesday bringing the death }oll to six in Ihe explosion of a 'butane tank hurled like a fire Ball 500 yards into n roadside .trailer park. ; .Yhe ex-plosion of (he tank was 'triggered by Hie wreck of ils 'farrier. Besides Ihe six dead, three of whom were killed in the crash Tuesday night, 40 ;i(hers were injured, half of them critically burned. -?The National Transportation Safety Board dispatched investigators to Ihe scene to begin ."the same extremely detailed investigation as a calastrophic airline disaster." ". The Texas Department of Public Safety said two Crystal CQy, Tex. residents were killed 'HVlhe crash Tuesday evening. Three of the 21 persons airlifted (o'hospitals in San Antonio died later. The truck driver, Jesus Berdusco of Piedras Negras, Mexico, was missing and presumed dead. "All we found is part of his billfold and part of his shirt," Said a DPS spokesman. "We never even found the front end ofjhe Iruck." ,' Police Capt. Donald Smith s.ald the but-ine (ruck swerved to,miss a car turning off U. S. 277 a mile cast of the border town. The truck jackknifed, overturned and exploded. "The lank itself came up about 50 lo 60 feet in Ihe air and traveled approximately -150 to' 500 yards hitting Ihe trailers," Smith said, "ft was shooting out flames all Ihe lime. It was just like a rocket." mith said the tank sailed over Ihe first row of trailers a.nd into Ihe second destroying one and burning two more.

A lifetime rain carrying system made of aluminum and finished in white. Ideal for the "do-it-yourselfer". Come in and we'll show you how to install it. Matching accessories available.

Our most popular selling lumber item, the 2x4 stud. For many years, Moore-Handley has been known as the place to shop when you need lumber. Come in today and see for yourself Check the quality of our lumber, the wide selection and reasonable prices.

add living space anyplace

Fiberglass Panels

21/2"*71
Treated Fence Post

Build Your Own Fence

&

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For long life snd low maintenance we recommend our pressure treated lumber.

Pressure treated for maintenance and long Eaiy installation.

Boat Theft Rash Climbs -; To Three


JACKSONVILLE, FLA. (UPI) Boat thieves, operating under cover of night, have stolen Ihree vessels since last Saturday from the nearby flayport dock area. ;The latest theft came last night with the disappearance of Rear Adm. Justin Langille's 40foot fiberglass yacht from the Mayport Naval Station. It was fpu'nd beached five miles down coast Wednesday. .A 44-foot shrimper, owned by Robert H. Hollz, was also stolen from Mayport Docks Tuesday night and run aground on the east side of the St. Johns River, about seven miles from the river's mouth. ;Therc appeared to be little damage to cither vessel. ffowever, a Ihird boat owned by .Bill Aley, which was taken from its slip at Mayport Docks Saturday night and relurned . 9pe hour later, sustained $7,000 ' In damages to its transmission, $hafl, rudder and propeller, (Uey said. ;j;The FBI, Naval Intelligence j p n d . Mayport Base security i bcr'sonnel were invesligaling } jhe tiicft of Ihe admiral's yacht.
2 x 4 2 x 6 2 x 8

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| Single Socket | Floodlight Holder Double Socket Floodlight Holder


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RUSTIC POST

Sam Shoemaker Marianna Galls Mass Meeting Enters Race For To Discuss Proposed Stadium Chipley Mayor
A mass meeting of Marianna tore* tracts of land were considercitizens has been called for Tues- ed for the projects, and a thorough day night to discuss with the City i investigation of their feasibility Commission the proposals for city i will be made prior to the mass A dull city election campaign sponsorship of a home-building meeting. came to life Monday night. Sam project, pmi the issuance of bonds The tracts under consideration W. Shoemaker, a Chipley realtor to construct and equip a stadium are: Property owned by Thomas and insurance agent, Joined EuKillenen in Hirerview subdivision, less Watford m the race for northeast of the city near the formayor. The primary- is to be j mer Tom Yancey property; properCleared by Court; held Tuesday. I ty of Mrs. Annie Baltzell McKinnon | in Section 32, west of North HighTwo candidates City Councili lands subdivision; and the Lewismen E- A. Tharp and Roland Fowi1 Mrrp->y nroperty east of the city ler will get new terms without near the Drive-In Theatre. a vote. Nobody offered to run against them. | The proposals for city sponsorship of the building of 150 new Watford had previously paid his homes in sub-divisions of 50 each, qualifying fee to run for a third and the building and equipping of term as mayor. Shoemaker joined a stadium at a cost of approxithe race Monday night. Monday mately $200.000 were advanced by was the last day to qualify. Former County Judge Sam May Watford, a Chipley druggist and has repeated his belief that he Commissioner Roy Beall at a represident of the Florida Pharma- "should never have been removed cent meeting of the commission. ceutical Association, left Monday from office." He also renewed a Public reaction has been both night to attend a national Pharma- prediction that "the voters will ceutical Convention in New York next year at the polls completely Jackson Flood Relief State. vindicate me by effecting my rein- Fund Goes Over Quota Before leavine. he issued a'state- statement to office " Contributions to the flood disment calling attention to the city's May issued the statement after a sound financial condition and the county jury cleared him of a drunk- aster fund of the* American Red Improvements to streets and prop- enness charge. The charge was the Cross had almost reached the $500 erty now underway. mam point on which May was sus- quota set for Jackson county Tuespended from office March 21 by day, according to a report by Rev. CITY BOOMING M. A. DuRant, chairman of the "The city is enjoying one of us governor Warren. fund drive. most progressive periods in hisHere is May's statement in full: Community chairmen reporting tory," Watford said. "A new sewerI am highly gratified at having age system with up-to-date disposal been exonerated by a Washington oversubscription of their quotas . Lawrence, Grand plant is being constructed. Paving County jury of the charge of drunk- were George Pender, Greenwood; Ridge; N. A. is scheduled oa several streets. enness on which I was removed Ann Collins, Malone; Mrs. W. B. Widening of U. S. 90 will soon start. from office by the governor. No additional taxes are being sad- Now, if what is right, just, fair Shores. Cottondale. D. D. Bevis, Hodges Justiss, Doc. Grant, Roy dled on the public." and reasonable in the sight of God Blackburn, Ben Barnes, Judge R. In his statement. Shoemaker could prevail, I would ba reinstated L. Williams, fcusaid as mayor he would "always to continue my term as county cienMcCrary. Henry Fred Kingry, Watson Jr., be available to citizens who wish to judge. This, however, will not be James Gillis, B. S. Sandusky and done, since it is not pleasing to the Rev. B W. Bi^-ns, all of Marianna. discuss city business " Shoemaker also said he will stand powers that be nor quite in ac- The Marianna report was not comfor "an aggressive, efficient, pro- cordance with the established plete, but the quota had been overrules. gressive city government." should never have been remov- subscribed on the basis of reports Shoemaker is 35 years old, a vet- edI from office since the evidence received. eran of World War n, past Jaycee submitted at the hearing was not president, a Mason, and a deacon legally sufficient, and since I had Bishop Heads Walton in the Presbyterian Church. He is tried and convicted of Quarterback Club married to the former Ann Cole- not been in the courts. anything man and they have three sons. It has been embarrassing that DE FUNIAK SPRINGS (SpeLIGHT VOTE SEEN my persecutors have made it nec- cial) At the organizational meetWatford and Shoemaker's race cessary that I face charges here ing of the Walton county Quarterwas making a lot of talk flow on and at Tallahassee. I feel, however, back Club held here this week, Sixth Street this week. But a light that the voters will next year at the Marvin Bishop was named presivote is expected, since only the one polls completely vindicate me by dent, John Neel, vice-president, race will appear on the ballot. effecting my reinstatement to of- Leo Andrews, secretary, and Eddie Voting will be carried on at the fice. Jones, treasurer. city hall. City Clerk E. B. Warren I am deeply moved and grateBishop says interest in the organreminded unregistered voters that ful for the deep sense of fairplay ization, founded to further the they can still sign up to vote any and justice manifested by the vast cause of high school sports time before Saturday. majority of you people here in throughout the county, is high, and More than 600 persons went to Washington County. I promise that that he believes a membership of 150 will be reached. The club has the polls in Chipley's last mayor's I will not disappoint you. about one hundred members at this race, two years ago. Then Mayor BODY FOUND IN BAT time. Watford uon a second term by The club's next meeting will be about a five-to-one vote over R. V. JACKSONVILLE, The body Rogers. of Morris Bryant, 33, a dredge held Tuesday night at the high That year's high vote was laid in worker was found floating in Ri- school auditorium here, when compart to the fact that Councilmen bault Bay near Mayport Friday. mittee members will be announced Fowler and Tharp also had op- He was last seen in Mayport Tues- by the president, and by-laws will position. day. be adopted.

Page 14

Panama City New-Herald, Sunday, Aug. 26,1951

Thorp and Fowler Will Be Unopposed For Council Seats

a cost of $303.000. City Commission Invites atDecision to call the mass meeting was reached at * special sesCitizens' Views On sion of the City Commission Wed$200,000 Project nesday morning. At this session

May 'Certain' People Will Reinstate Him

strongly for or against the proposals, expressions ranging from "utterly ridiculous" to "just what this town has needed for a long time." In order to get a larger and more accurate cross-section of opinion, the city commission has extended an invitation to every citizen next Tuesday night. It will be held at city hall beginning at 7:30 o'clock. In support of his stadium-building proposal, Commissioner Roy Beall has pointed out that it would be used for all types of athletic contests, Boy Scout and 4-H Club meetings, singing conventions and many other events, with a minimum use of 75 times each year. The housing project would include purchase of land and installation of utilities by the city, with deferred financing of new homes to be handled through private lending agencies. The stadium could either be built outright by the city. or on contract financed through the issuance of bonds.

Walton Schools To Enroll^


An Increase of 112 Over Last Year
DE FUNIAK SPRINGS (Special) Nearly 4,000 school children in Walton county will be on hand Monday morning for the opening session of the 1951 term in Waiton County. According to information from the office of County Superintendent John Frank Bludworth, enrollment in county schools is expected to total about 3850an increase of more than one hundred from last year, when all Walton county schools had 3738 children on their rolls. All schools in Walton county will open on this date, but not as many will open as in former years, due to the process of consolidation and transporting students by bus to the larger schools. The schools at Sandy Creek, in the eastern part of the county, and at Point Washington, across Choctawhatchee Bay, have

discontinued due to the aunll Cblpley was some tlJOO richer number of pupils, and It is thought the Mossy Head school will not from another month's "take" of open for the same reason. cigaret taxes, according to the School finances in the county are Beverage Department. in * healthy condition, with no milL The city gets all of toe five-cent' age for interest and sinking funds a-pmck State tax on cigarets sold being levied in District One. as the in the city limits. county school board now has funds Vernon's cut for' the month was on hand to pay off the entire debt $254. on the district, and the mUlage in Chipley is using the cigarette District Two has been cut from money to pay for * quarter-mil* eight to five mills. Fou, new school buses are being lion-dollar sewerage project. added to the fleet in use by the school system of the county. They As many as three types of in&ecwere delivered during the past | tivorous plants cqmpete in their week and bring the total for the i trappings of insects in some North county up to 18. Carolina bogs.

pUr Gets $1,300 * From Cigorat Taxes

TF$twortli|l
for my >!

They're here! Ship'n Shore Combed Cotton Broadcloth Blouses


IANA $71 JO
17 jcwcli. 14k natural or white gold i

STARS
Chicken Shrimp A SPECIALTY

AT

BUCK'S
Sundaes

2' 3
Soft Drinks
EAT HERE OR
PACKED TO GO

98

.98

CLARA

$60.50

17 jewel*. 14k natural or white gold-filled i


Price* loclud* Federal T*x

Hamburgers
Barbecues French
Fries None Better

the same lovely back-to-school styles you saw in that full page ad in I

DEXTER $60.50 17 jewels. 14k natural gold-filled case.

AIR CONDITIONED BULOVA and ELGIN WATCHES KEEPSAKE DIAMONDS

WATCH CASH REGISTER FOR FREE RED STAR

BUCK'S DRIVE-IN
FORMERLY KITTRELL'S NEAR BAY LINE DEPOT DIAL 4571 FOR QUICK PICK-UP 474 HARRISON AVENUE

MOON
JEWELRY CO. Across from Ritz Theatre T E R M S IF D E S I R E D

SMITH FUNERAL HOME


505 N. Mac ARTHUR AYE.

OUR

RESUSCITATOR
FOR

AMBULANCE
is

DROWNING
OR

EQUIPPED
WITH

SHOCK
EMERGENCY CALLS

OXYGEN

AMBULANCE SERVICE
DAY OR NIGHT

DIAL 4646

Sam Shoemaker Marianna Galls Mass Meeting Enters Race For To Discuss Proposed Stadium Chipley Mayor
A mass meeting of Marianna tore* tracts of land were considercitizens has been called for Tues- ed for the projects, and a thorough day night to discuss with the City i investigation of their feasibility Commission the proposals for city i will be made prior to the mass A dull city election campaign sponsorship of a home-building meeting. came to life Monday night. Sam project, pmi the issuance of bonds The tracts under consideration W. Shoemaker, a Chipley realtor to construct and equip a stadium are: Property owned by Thomas and insurance agent, Joined EuKillenen in Hirerview subdivision, less Watford m the race for northeast of the city near the formayor. The primary- is to be j mer Tom Yancey property; properCleared by Court; held Tuesday. I ty of Mrs. Annie Baltzell McKinnon | in Section 32, west of North HighTwo candidates City Councili lands subdivision; and the Lewismen E- A. Tharp and Roland Fowi1 Mrrp->y nroperty east of the city ler will get new terms without near the Drive-In Theatre. a vote. Nobody offered to run against them. | The proposals for city sponsorship of the building of 150 new Watford had previously paid his homes in sub-divisions of 50 each, qualifying fee to run for a third and the building and equipping of term as mayor. Shoemaker joined a stadium at a cost of approxithe race Monday night. Monday mately $200.000 were advanced by was the last day to qualify. Former County Judge Sam May Watford, a Chipley druggist and has repeated his belief that he Commissioner Roy Beall at a represident of the Florida Pharma- "should never have been removed cent meeting of the commission. ceutical Association, left Monday from office." He also renewed a Public reaction has been both night to attend a national Pharma- prediction that "the voters will ceutical Convention in New York next year at the polls completely Jackson Flood Relief State. vindicate me by effecting my rein- Fund Goes Over Quota Before leavine. he issued a'state- statement to office " Contributions to the flood disment calling attention to the city's May issued the statement after a sound financial condition and the county jury cleared him of a drunk- aster fund of the* American Red Improvements to streets and prop- enness charge. The charge was the Cross had almost reached the $500 erty now underway. mam point on which May was sus- quota set for Jackson county Tuespended from office March 21 by day, according to a report by Rev. CITY BOOMING M. A. DuRant, chairman of the "The city is enjoying one of us governor Warren. fund drive. most progressive periods in hisHere is May's statement in full: Community chairmen reporting tory," Watford said. "A new sewerI am highly gratified at having age system with up-to-date disposal been exonerated by a Washington oversubscription of their quotas . Lawrence, Grand plant is being constructed. Paving County jury of the charge of drunk- were George Pender, Greenwood; Ridge; N. A. is scheduled oa several streets. enness on which I was removed Ann Collins, Malone; Mrs. W. B. Widening of U. S. 90 will soon start. from office by the governor. No additional taxes are being sad- Now, if what is right, just, fair Shores. Cottondale. D. D. Bevis, Hodges Justiss, Doc. Grant, Roy dled on the public." and reasonable in the sight of God Blackburn, Ben Barnes, Judge R. In his statement. Shoemaker could prevail, I would ba reinstated L. Williams, fcusaid as mayor he would "always to continue my term as county cienMcCrary. Henry Fred Kingry, Watson Jr., be available to citizens who wish to judge. This, however, will not be James Gillis, B. S. Sandusky and done, since it is not pleasing to the Rev. B W. Bi^-ns, all of Marianna. discuss city business " Shoemaker also said he will stand powers that be nor quite in ac- The Marianna report was not comfor "an aggressive, efficient, pro- cordance with the established plete, but the quota had been overrules. gressive city government." should never have been remov- subscribed on the basis of reports Shoemaker is 35 years old, a vet- edI from office since the evidence received. eran of World War n, past Jaycee submitted at the hearing was not president, a Mason, and a deacon legally sufficient, and since I had Bishop Heads Walton in the Presbyterian Church. He is tried and convicted of Quarterback Club married to the former Ann Cole- not been in the courts. anything man and they have three sons. It has been embarrassing that DE FUNIAK SPRINGS (SpeLIGHT VOTE SEEN my persecutors have made it nec- cial) At the organizational meetWatford and Shoemaker's race cessary that I face charges here ing of the Walton county Quarterwas making a lot of talk flow on and at Tallahassee. I feel, however, back Club held here this week, Sixth Street this week. But a light that the voters will next year at the Marvin Bishop was named presivote is expected, since only the one polls completely vindicate me by dent, John Neel, vice-president, race will appear on the ballot. effecting my reinstatement to of- Leo Andrews, secretary, and Eddie Voting will be carried on at the fice. Jones, treasurer. city hall. City Clerk E. B. Warren I am deeply moved and grateBishop says interest in the organreminded unregistered voters that ful for the deep sense of fairplay ization, founded to further the they can still sign up to vote any and justice manifested by the vast cause of high school sports time before Saturday. majority of you people here in throughout the county, is high, and More than 600 persons went to Washington County. I promise that that he believes a membership of 150 will be reached. The club has the polls in Chipley's last mayor's I will not disappoint you. about one hundred members at this race, two years ago. Then Mayor BODY FOUND IN BAT time. Watford uon a second term by The club's next meeting will be about a five-to-one vote over R. V. JACKSONVILLE, The body Rogers. of Morris Bryant, 33, a dredge held Tuesday night at the high That year's high vote was laid in worker was found floating in Ri- school auditorium here, when compart to the fact that Councilmen bault Bay near Mayport Friday. mittee members will be announced Fowler and Tharp also had op- He was last seen in Mayport Tues- by the president, and by-laws will position. day. be adopted.

Page 14

Panama City New-Herald, Sunday, Aug. 26,1951

Thorp and Fowler Will Be Unopposed For Council Seats

a cost of $303.000. City Commission Invites atDecision to call the mass meeting was reached at * special sesCitizens' Views On sion of the City Commission Wed$200,000 Project nesday morning. At this session

May 'Certain' People Will Reinstate Him

strongly for or against the proposals, expressions ranging from "utterly ridiculous" to "just what this town has needed for a long time." In order to get a larger and more accurate cross-section of opinion, the city commission has extended an invitation to every citizen next Tuesday night. It will be held at city hall beginning at 7:30 o'clock. In support of his stadium-building proposal, Commissioner Roy Beall has pointed out that it would be used for all types of athletic contests, Boy Scout and 4-H Club meetings, singing conventions and many other events, with a minimum use of 75 times each year. The housing project would include purchase of land and installation of utilities by the city, with deferred financing of new homes to be handled through private lending agencies. The stadium could either be built outright by the city. or on contract financed through the issuance of bonds.

Walton Schools To Enroll^


An Increase of 112 Over Last Year
DE FUNIAK SPRINGS (Special) Nearly 4,000 school children in Walton county will be on hand Monday morning for the opening session of the 1951 term in Waiton County. According to information from the office of County Superintendent John Frank Bludworth, enrollment in county schools is expected to total about 3850an increase of more than one hundred from last year, when all Walton county schools had 3738 children on their rolls. All schools in Walton county will open on this date, but not as many will open as in former years, due to the process of consolidation and transporting students by bus to the larger schools. The schools at Sandy Creek, in the eastern part of the county, and at Point Washington, across Choctawhatchee Bay, have

discontinued due to the aunll Cblpley was some tlJOO richer number of pupils, and It is thought the Mossy Head school will not from another month's "take" of open for the same reason. cigaret taxes, according to the School finances in the county are Beverage Department. in * healthy condition, with no milL The city gets all of toe five-cent' age for interest and sinking funds a-pmck State tax on cigarets sold being levied in District One. as the in the city limits. county school board now has funds Vernon's cut for' the month was on hand to pay off the entire debt $254. on the district, and the mUlage in Chipley is using the cigarette District Two has been cut from money to pay for * quarter-mil* eight to five mills. Fou, new school buses are being lion-dollar sewerage project. added to the fleet in use by the school system of the county. They As many as three types of in&ecwere delivered during the past | tivorous plants cqmpete in their week and bring the total for the i trappings of insects in some North county up to 18. Carolina bogs.

pUr Gets $1,300 * From Cigorat Taxes

TF$twortli|l
for my >!

They're here! Ship'n Shore Combed Cotton Broadcloth Blouses


IANA $71 JO
17 jcwcli. 14k natural or white gold i

STARS
Chicken Shrimp A SPECIALTY

AT

BUCK'S
Sundaes

2' 3
Soft Drinks
EAT HERE OR
PACKED TO GO

98

.98

CLARA

$60.50

17 jewel*. 14k natural or white gold-filled i


Price* loclud* Federal T*x

Hamburgers
Barbecues French
Fries None Better

the same lovely back-to-school styles you saw in that full page ad in I

DEXTER $60.50 17 jewels. 14k natural gold-filled case.

AIR CONDITIONED BULOVA and ELGIN WATCHES KEEPSAKE DIAMONDS

WATCH CASH REGISTER FOR FREE RED STAR

BUCK'S DRIVE-IN
FORMERLY KITTRELL'S NEAR BAY LINE DEPOT DIAL 4571 FOR QUICK PICK-UP 474 HARRISON AVENUE

MOON
JEWELRY CO. Across from Ritz Theatre T E R M S IF D E S I R E D

SMITH FUNERAL HOME


505 N. Mac ARTHUR AYE.

OUR

RESUSCITATOR
FOR

AMBULANCE
is

DROWNING
OR

EQUIPPED
WITH

SHOCK
EMERGENCY CALLS

OXYGEN

AMBULANCE SERVICE
DAY OR NIGHT

DIAL 4646

Sam Shoemaker Marianna Galls Mass Meeting Enters Race For To Discuss Proposed Stadium Chipley Mayor
A mass meeting of Marianna tore* tracts of land were considercitizens has been called for Tues- ed for the projects, and a thorough day night to discuss with the City i investigation of their feasibility Commission the proposals for city i will be made prior to the mass A dull city election campaign sponsorship of a home-building meeting. came to life Monday night. Sam project, pmi the issuance of bonds The tracts under consideration W. Shoemaker, a Chipley realtor to construct and equip a stadium are: Property owned by Thomas and insurance agent, Joined EuKillenen in Hirerview subdivision, less Watford m the race for northeast of the city near the formayor. The primary- is to be j mer Tom Yancey property; properCleared by Court; held Tuesday. I ty of Mrs. Annie Baltzell McKinnon | in Section 32, west of North HighTwo candidates City Councili lands subdivision; and the Lewismen E- A. Tharp and Roland Fowi1 Mrrp->y nroperty east of the city ler will get new terms without near the Drive-In Theatre. a vote. Nobody offered to run against them. | The proposals for city sponsorship of the building of 150 new Watford had previously paid his homes in sub-divisions of 50 each, qualifying fee to run for a third and the building and equipping of term as mayor. Shoemaker joined a stadium at a cost of approxithe race Monday night. Monday mately $200.000 were advanced by was the last day to qualify. Former County Judge Sam May Watford, a Chipley druggist and has repeated his belief that he Commissioner Roy Beall at a represident of the Florida Pharma- "should never have been removed cent meeting of the commission. ceutical Association, left Monday from office." He also renewed a Public reaction has been both night to attend a national Pharma- prediction that "the voters will ceutical Convention in New York next year at the polls completely Jackson Flood Relief State. vindicate me by effecting my rein- Fund Goes Over Quota Before leavine. he issued a'state- statement to office " Contributions to the flood disment calling attention to the city's May issued the statement after a sound financial condition and the county jury cleared him of a drunk- aster fund of the* American Red Improvements to streets and prop- enness charge. The charge was the Cross had almost reached the $500 erty now underway. mam point on which May was sus- quota set for Jackson county Tuespended from office March 21 by day, according to a report by Rev. CITY BOOMING M. A. DuRant, chairman of the "The city is enjoying one of us governor Warren. fund drive. most progressive periods in hisHere is May's statement in full: Community chairmen reporting tory," Watford said. "A new sewerI am highly gratified at having age system with up-to-date disposal been exonerated by a Washington oversubscription of their quotas . Lawrence, Grand plant is being constructed. Paving County jury of the charge of drunk- were George Pender, Greenwood; Ridge; N. A. is scheduled oa several streets. enness on which I was removed Ann Collins, Malone; Mrs. W. B. Widening of U. S. 90 will soon start. from office by the governor. No additional taxes are being sad- Now, if what is right, just, fair Shores. Cottondale. D. D. Bevis, Hodges Justiss, Doc. Grant, Roy dled on the public." and reasonable in the sight of God Blackburn, Ben Barnes, Judge R. In his statement. Shoemaker could prevail, I would ba reinstated L. Williams, fcusaid as mayor he would "always to continue my term as county cienMcCrary. Henry Fred Kingry, Watson Jr., be available to citizens who wish to judge. This, however, will not be James Gillis, B. S. Sandusky and done, since it is not pleasing to the Rev. B W. Bi^-ns, all of Marianna. discuss city business " Shoemaker also said he will stand powers that be nor quite in ac- The Marianna report was not comfor "an aggressive, efficient, pro- cordance with the established plete, but the quota had been overrules. gressive city government." should never have been remov- subscribed on the basis of reports Shoemaker is 35 years old, a vet- edI from office since the evidence received. eran of World War n, past Jaycee submitted at the hearing was not president, a Mason, and a deacon legally sufficient, and since I had Bishop Heads Walton in the Presbyterian Church. He is tried and convicted of Quarterback Club married to the former Ann Cole- not been in the courts. anything man and they have three sons. It has been embarrassing that DE FUNIAK SPRINGS (SpeLIGHT VOTE SEEN my persecutors have made it nec- cial) At the organizational meetWatford and Shoemaker's race cessary that I face charges here ing of the Walton county Quarterwas making a lot of talk flow on and at Tallahassee. I feel, however, back Club held here this week, Sixth Street this week. But a light that the voters will next year at the Marvin Bishop was named presivote is expected, since only the one polls completely vindicate me by dent, John Neel, vice-president, race will appear on the ballot. effecting my reinstatement to of- Leo Andrews, secretary, and Eddie Voting will be carried on at the fice. Jones, treasurer. city hall. City Clerk E. B. Warren I am deeply moved and grateBishop says interest in the organreminded unregistered voters that ful for the deep sense of fairplay ization, founded to further the they can still sign up to vote any and justice manifested by the vast cause of high school sports time before Saturday. majority of you people here in throughout the county, is high, and More than 600 persons went to Washington County. I promise that that he believes a membership of 150 will be reached. The club has the polls in Chipley's last mayor's I will not disappoint you. about one hundred members at this race, two years ago. Then Mayor BODY FOUND IN BAT time. Watford uon a second term by The club's next meeting will be about a five-to-one vote over R. V. JACKSONVILLE, The body Rogers. of Morris Bryant, 33, a dredge held Tuesday night at the high That year's high vote was laid in worker was found floating in Ri- school auditorium here, when compart to the fact that Councilmen bault Bay near Mayport Friday. mittee members will be announced Fowler and Tharp also had op- He was last seen in Mayport Tues- by the president, and by-laws will position. day. be adopted.

Page 14

Panama City New-Herald, Sunday, Aug. 26,1951

Thorp and Fowler Will Be Unopposed For Council Seats

a cost of $303.000. City Commission Invites atDecision to call the mass meeting was reached at * special sesCitizens' Views On sion of the City Commission Wed$200,000 Project nesday morning. At this session

May 'Certain' People Will Reinstate Him

strongly for or against the proposals, expressions ranging from "utterly ridiculous" to "just what this town has needed for a long time." In order to get a larger and more accurate cross-section of opinion, the city commission has extended an invitation to every citizen next Tuesday night. It will be held at city hall beginning at 7:30 o'clock. In support of his stadium-building proposal, Commissioner Roy Beall has pointed out that it would be used for all types of athletic contests, Boy Scout and 4-H Club meetings, singing conventions and many other events, with a minimum use of 75 times each year. The housing project would include purchase of land and installation of utilities by the city, with deferred financing of new homes to be handled through private lending agencies. The stadium could either be built outright by the city. or on contract financed through the issuance of bonds.

Walton Schools To Enroll^


An Increase of 112 Over Last Year
DE FUNIAK SPRINGS (Special) Nearly 4,000 school children in Walton county will be on hand Monday morning for the opening session of the 1951 term in Waiton County. According to information from the office of County Superintendent John Frank Bludworth, enrollment in county schools is expected to total about 3850an increase of more than one hundred from last year, when all Walton county schools had 3738 children on their rolls. All schools in Walton county will open on this date, but not as many will open as in former years, due to the process of consolidation and transporting students by bus to the larger schools. The schools at Sandy Creek, in the eastern part of the county, and at Point Washington, across Choctawhatchee Bay, have

discontinued due to the aunll Cblpley was some tlJOO richer number of pupils, and It is thought the Mossy Head school will not from another month's "take" of open for the same reason. cigaret taxes, according to the School finances in the county are Beverage Department. in * healthy condition, with no milL The city gets all of toe five-cent' age for interest and sinking funds a-pmck State tax on cigarets sold being levied in District One. as the in the city limits. county school board now has funds Vernon's cut for' the month was on hand to pay off the entire debt $254. on the district, and the mUlage in Chipley is using the cigarette District Two has been cut from money to pay for * quarter-mil* eight to five mills. Fou, new school buses are being lion-dollar sewerage project. added to the fleet in use by the school system of the county. They As many as three types of in&ecwere delivered during the past | tivorous plants cqmpete in their week and bring the total for the i trappings of insects in some North county up to 18. Carolina bogs.

pUr Gets $1,300 * From Cigorat Taxes

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Published: September 10, 1883 Copyright The New York Times

Published: September 10, 1883 Copyright The New York Times

Published: January 13, 1952 Copyright The New York Times

TRAVEL
30

Syracuse Herald American Slmil Magazine January 8, 1984

Former 'festering fleshpot' final destination of Buccaneer Trail


* EXPLORING Continued from Page 25 housed up to 12 families in each. They are arranged in two arcs of 16 cabins each, designed to provide a first line of defense against marauding pirates. Continuing north on this trip, as guests of Florida's Division of Commerce and Tourism, we come to Little Talbot Island, a state park with a beautiful and undisturbed four-mile beach. Little Talbot is a magnificent example of an unspoiled barrier island. About 30 miles north of Jacksonville is Amelia Island, the last barrier island along the Buccaneer Trail. Named for the rather homely daughter of England's King George III, the island has a fascinating history. It's the only part of the United States that has had at least eight nations lay claim to it including Mexico. But it was the buccaneers that gave this island, and its only town, Fcrnandina Beach, its reputation as a lusty devil's den seaport. Even as late as the 1820s. the town's five-block main street is said to have had 27 saloons and nearly 30 brothels. Today, that same street, now called Centre Street, is a restored historic district, a 30-block concentration of late 19th century Victoriana. Numerous specialty shops, boutiques and restaurants dot the quaint downtown area. One of the highlights is the Palace Saloon, essentially the same in character and appearance since it opened in 1903. Enter through the swinging doors and it is soothingly cool and dark, even during the hot hours of the day heavy red velvet drapes keep out most of the glare, and a comfortable breeze is stirred up by paddle fans hanging from its embossed tin ceiling. Other Fernandina Beach highlights include a historic tour through Fairbanks Folly. This eclectic Italianate home, at 227 S. 7th St., was built in 1885 by Ma]. George Fairbanks for his wife. It was meant to be a surprise, and when his wife laid eyes on it. she refused to move in, demanding he build another home for

her. He did. The Bailey House 1895. at 28 S. 7th St., is a beautiful Victorian bed-and-breakfast inn done in Queen Anne style. Its many gables, turrets, bays and fishscale decorations escalated the construction price of the home to $10,000 at the turn of the century. A final destination is Fort Clinch State Park, a Civil War fortress overlooking Cumberland Sound and the Atlantic. It's a pentagonal structure, with Frenchstyle brickwork. Crossing the drawbridge (a moat guards the fort's entrance), you're transported back into time. Suddenly the year is 1864. and you're at a Union outpost in the center of Johnny Rcb land.

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Jackie And Caroline Arrive For Visit In Caruso's Village


' RAVELLO, Italy (AP)-Jacque- through the gates of a crumbling dine Kennedy and Caroline ar medieval wall and to a side lane rived today, via a mountainous which took them to the vacation coastal highway with sheer drops villa without passing through the of 1,000 feet to the sea, for an tourist-jammed central square. Italian holiday in this little tour There was confusion as a cfowd ist town perched on a cliff I op. of spectators surged forward. Pf> They were guarded by police for lice restrained everybody in'the the 25-mile drive over the curving vicinity. road from the Salerno airport. Mrs, Kennedy and Caroline The U.S. President's wife and made their trip from New York her 4-ycar-old daughter, who is on aboard a regular commercial her first trip ahroad. are staying flight in a special bedroom. at an 11th century villa as guests Mrs. Kennedy smiled broadly of Prince Stanislaus and Princess for photographers as she walked Lee Radziwil), Mrs. Kennedy's from the jetliner. Caroline, wak ened after less than eight hours brother-in-law and sister in her berth, yawned and smiled The heat was in the sweltering sleepily. 90s on the highway, which runs along (he mountainous Sorrenton Peninsula. The peninsula is fa OFFICERS OF WALTERS FAMILY REUNION mous for wine, olives, breathtak ing scenery and nervewracking roads, Mrs. Kennedy and a sleepy Caroline, arrived in Rome three JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) hours earlier by commercial air The fishing village of Mayport liner from New York. They then and its neighboring aircraft car flew to Uie airport near Salerno rier base are under attack by in a small chartered Swiss plane. mosquitoes. The airport near Salerno, "They are about to eat us little-used military field,- has no alive," said Mrs. Amy Parnell, Serving the family organization vice-president, and Mrs. Dick Hef concrete runway, only a hard- Mayport restaurant operator. By CORA BLACK J. P. Whittlesey Jr., director of as officers are Milton Walters, lin. daughter of the late Morgan packed dirt landing strip. Staff Writer president, who lives on the place; Walters, secretary - treasurer, Mrs. Kennedy was met at the the County Mosquito Control Dis airport by her sister. They made trict, said extra spraying opera ELLISVILLE. Miss. - Three C. W. (Cotton) Walters. Laurel, Ridge Road the hour-long drive to Ravello in tions are being carried out. hundred members of the family the Radziwill's big American car. "This heavy flight is a tempo of the late Jesse Walters of Jones Police had spent hours this morn rary thing," he said. County will be coming in August ing checking for mines or plastic He said it happens about once 10-12 for the annual reunion which bombs Along the last, hazardous in six years, usually after a long will take place at the Walters three miles of the road up to Ra dry period such as this area ex Reunion Park one-half mile east By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS also said a visit by Tshombe was vello from Amalfi. perienced in the spring. of Pleasant Ridge School on the likely to provoke diplomatic diffi- The American car probably will Ridge Road. Princess Margaret of Great Congo's central not be used again during Mrs. Among the oldest expected to Britain inaugurated newly inde- vernment. Kennedy's visit here. The First attend is Mrs. Clnrrisa Collins pendent Jamaica's first parlia Lady's sister has rented two little Walters, 83, step-grandmother of ment with good wishes from Robert Kennedy jumped up and Italian cars to go up and down SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP)-Dillon Queen Elizabeth, her sister, and down at the Seattle World's Fair to the beach from their cliffside Dnohue, 35, of Syracuse, arrest Victor Walters Sr., of Ellisville who lives near the Reunion Park a document officially transferring and shouted: "Hey, let's go on village. The road is so narrow and ed for a parking violation, was the Wild.Mouse." end visitors from all over the powers. the curves so tight the American booked Tuesday at police head county and from Florida are com In ceremonious British tones, This Robert Kennedy is 8. His car can hardly make it quartersby Sgt. John Dillon and ing, said.Victor Walters Sr. Fami Princess Margaret " told Prime daddy is attorney general of the The visitors drove into Ravello'patrolman John Donohue. ly relations number those by the Minister William A. Bustamante: United States, and his uncle John names Graves, Collins, Mapp, "I also have it in command is president. Watson, Holifield, Shows and oth from the queen to present to you, Bobby, his two brothers, Joe, 9, ers well known in this area. Mr. Prime Minister, as represen and David, 7;.his sister, Kathleen, Some will spend the nights at tative of the people of Jamaica, 10, and a cousin, Bobby Shriver, the tabernacle-type building, oth the constitutional instrument em headed for the World's Fair gay ers will come and go at their con bodying the independence of J a way section while their elders toured the foreign exhibits and venience. The barbecue pits will maica." supply plenty of good meat, and U.S. science pavilion. oh Sunday, Aug. 12, the big din President Moise Tshombe of P.S. Bobby got on ths Wild ner of the celebration will be Katanga, now in Geneva, has been refused a visa to visit Brussels, Mouse, a compact roller coaster Served. Belgium. The Belgian announce The children tried all the rides. The park grounds have been de ment said that in view of politi veloped on the site of the original cal statements made recently dur Jesse Walters log house. The Hats of the Middle Ages were building provides ample cooking ing a so-called private visit to comparatively simple caps or facilities, has running water, elec Brussels by the Katanga foreign hoods, but in the 14th and 15th tricity, refrigerator, etc., and an minister, visits to Belgium by Ka open air style shelter. It. is 30x50 tanga officials could no longer be centuries, extravagant and eccen trie shapes and proportions were feet and was completed about considered private. two years ago. The Belgian foreign ministry developed.

WELCOME TO ALU THE TEAMS COMPETING IN THE

LITTLE BOYS' LEAGUE STATE CHAMPIONSHIP PLAYOFFS!


And a hearty Welcome to their families and friends who came here to cheer them on!

Mayport Fights

Walters Family Sets Reunion August 10-12


PEOPLE IN THE NEWS
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Published: May 4, 1901 Copyright The New York Times

Published: May 4, 1901 Copyright The New York Times

Walla Walla Union^Bulletin


Our 89th Year, No. 45 5c Walla Walla, Wash., Friday, June 1, 1957
Evtnini

The Weather
Partly cloudy tonight and Saturday. Low tonight , Mfk ' urday 84. High Thursday 72, low Friday morning {7. Seatwul moisture excess 2.61 inches. Five-day outlook: Above normal temperatures in Eastern Or^ gas, near normal In Eastern Washington through Wednesday. A chance of scattered showers early In the week. Hl*h 74 to W. the lows 44 to 54.-

Sixteen Pages

Judge Refuses To Let Beck Go to Europe


Road Death Is Third in a Week Teamsters
Walla Walla county recorded it third traffic fatality in a week's time and the fourth so far'this yeai Thursday night when one man wa; killed and another injured on th< Burbank-Eureka- highway, 11 miles east of Burbank. TACOMA, Wash. J Federal Dead is Charles Hale, about 56 Judge George H. Boldt Friday reBuena, Wash. Hale was a passen jected the application of Teamger in an auto driven by John sters Union President Dave' Beck York, t Tpppenish. York was criti for permission to go to Europe. cally 'injured and was taken to i Judge Boldt did give permission Pasco hospital as a result of se vere chest and head injuries. for Beck to attend a meeting of the executive board of the InterThe accident occurred about ! national Teamsters' Union in Los p.m. when the car driven by York Angeles July 1. crashed into the rear of a IVaBeck had asked to leave the truck which was parked on the jurisdiction oi the .Western Washshoulder of the highway. ington federal court to attend a A pickup, owned by R. L. Park m e e t i n g of the- International er, Kennewlck, which had been Transport Federation in Parix. towing the truck, was parked di The government, both through rectly in front of the truck. Atty. Gen. Brownell and Sen. MeState Patrol officers from Pasco Clellan (D-Ark) chairman of the and Walla Walla, who investigated Senate rackets investigating comthe accident, said Parker was mittee, opposed the appiitttion. changing a tire on the pickup when The Teamsters chief "is at libthe car careened into the rear oi e'-ty on $5.000 bord awaiting trial the truck. here on charges of evading $56,W. C. Caddell, Kennewick, owner POO in 1950 in'.ome taxes and of of the truck, told officers he hac aiding :i preparing a fraudulent just started down the road past inrome tax return. the truck with a flashlight to flag Beck was not in court but was oncoming vehicles. represented by William WesselCadell said he was starting to hoeft, Seattle attorney who was also his counsel when his plea of walk between the truck and the innocent v:as entered Tuesday bepickup when the car hit. fore Judge Boldt on the income No Skid Marks lax charges. Walla Walla c o u n t y officers READY FOR OPENEROne of these four misses will be Miss Baseball Sunday night when the The King . County ( S e a t t l e ) Walbs W=!!s Bears open tnetr 1957 season at Borieske Field against the Pendleton Ranchers. They'll noted there were no skid marks grand jury which has begun a take part in lively opening night festivities, planned to start at 7:15 preceding the game. From left and said the driver of the car approbe of the activities of Beck and are Susan Stoller, Marian Obacka, Vicki Miller and Gretchen Miller: Others scheduled to be on the parently failed to see the parkec jther Teamsters Union leaders program are the Fair Farmerettes, Mayor Harold Buerstatte, Commissioner Bill Russell, Baseball vehicle. The owner of the truck had agreed to postpone Beck's aptold officers that parking lights of Association President Lyle Quakenbush and Ray's Rhythm Rangers. pearance from June 17 to July 10 the truck were on. so he could go abroad. The engine of the car was The court's action was the first rammed bsck into the driver's seat disclosure of the date and place by the force oi the impact. of the International union's execuCoroner Leonard DeWitt of Walla ;ive board meeting which has reWalla, Deputy Sheriffs Leonard x>rtedly been called by other-top Krika and Dan McKay and Ray Teamsters' leaders s e e k i,n g to Wirt of the State Patrol investi brce Beck to resign as president. CAMP WHITTINGTON, Japan legal moves by other lawyers in U. S. military base while he wa gated the accident. U.S. Atty. Charles P. Moriarty ;old the court the Justice DepartUPlGI William Giraru declared the United States to forestall the on duty, and that the U. S.-Japa Two men were killed in_ Walla ment has no objection to Beck's -today Japanese charges that he Japanese trial. nese status of forces agreemen Walla county in accidents "over the SCENECharles Buena, was killlled Thursday night the auto riding in Judge Gives Order enticed a woman scrap collector provides only for the Japanese t Memorial Day weekend and a thirc DEATH into the rear of Hale, 56, on the Burbank-Eureka highway. when picture, he was by Steve raveling within the United States. a truck This taken But referring to Beck's intentions to her death were untrue. He said At the request of attorneys re- try servicemen accused of oi man died earlier this year as a re crashed photographer, the fatal shooting was accidental. tained by Girard's family, a fed- fenses committed while off thei suit of injuries received in an auto Severson, Kennewick in a week.' shows the damage to the vehicles. Hale is Walla Walla county's a go to Europe, Moriarty said: third traffic fatality accident. "It would be much better for The young GI added, .however, eral judge in Washington orderec bases and off duty. Mr. Beck to be preparing his de> that he expects a fair trial in the Army not to yield the soldier U. S. authorities in Japan orig Elsewhere in the county Thurs 'ense in this (income tax) case to foreign custody before a hear- inally held a similar position, re day night a Camp Hanford soldiei Japanese courts. than to make a contribution to Girard's Japanese lawyer and ing Tuesday on an application for sisting Japanese demands to yiel escaped injury when he went to mtl-Coir\piunism ;o: Hungarian rehis .U. S. Army legal adviser went a write of habeas corpus. Girard for trial. But^a- decisio sleep in his car on the same high .Jfctt'._ ,-, 'V .. " lief. ** T.-^V~^-.. """ ^ '., _,aheaA-,witb plans to. defend the .The Girard family's attorneys by. Secretary of State "dulles an way six miles west of Prescott.^- ' '"J-'-ll^ Beck had asked, approval to 21-year-old soldier in the nearby in the United States contended Secretary of Defense Wilson Tues He was identified as Eris Rose leave Sunday to attend the Paris Maebashi District Court despite Girard shot a trespasser on a day to turn Girard over to Japa who said he was returning to meeting June 12-20. Then, he said, nese jurisdiction in effect uphel camp. His auto crashed into a Viewing a breakdown in the le wanted to travel to Switzerthe Japanese contention that whil bank. Officers said he went to Washington counties will highway financing system when and, Austria and Italy from June Girard was authorized to protec sleep. Damage to the auto was ex about 50 per cent more federa various groups ask relief from pay 20-28 to make inspections of work military property, he was not au tensive. t funds available for county high ways than during the previous ing their share of the gas tax of the ITF's anti-Communism and thorized to shoot. David C. Guilbert, Inland Auto As- Hungarian relief committees. three years, William A. Bugge Maj. Stanley Levin of Los An BUFFALO, N. Y. W-The post state director of highways, tolc office here had a problem. Mail sociation, Spokane, warned county Moriarty asserted it was not geles, Girard's adviser, and Itsun members of the Washington Asso- handlers were annoyed by ex- commissioners Friday at their an- lecessary for Beck to be physicalHayashi, his chief counsel, saic ciation of County Commissioners haust fumes from delivery trucks nuatl convention here that highway y present at the Paris meetings in the legal action in the United The first steps toward formatio Dwelley Jones of Walla Walla and and Engineers here Friday morn- parked at a loading platform. funds should be used for what they order to make his "contribution." States would not halt preparation of a tri-state organization to c Harold Edwards of Tensed, Ida. a the committees' work. ing, Michael P. Gorman, one of the were intended construction and Judge Boldt said there was Baum will prepare a rough draft for the Japanese trial. They de ordinate wheat market promotion Bugge, along with E. C. Huntley, loaders, came up with a solution improvements of highways and jreat difference between permitefforts; of Washington, Oregon an of bylaws and submit them to Scribed the habeas corpus reques chairman of the state highway that won him $12.50 and a cer- streets. Idaho were taken at a meeting c Jones and Edwards for revision as a test of the constitutionality ing a defendant in a major crimSpeaking at the annual conven- nal case to leave the jurisdiction wheatmen in Walla Walla Thur before the final draft is completed. of the U. S.-Japan agreement al OLYMPIA W) Washington's commission, was a featured speak- tificate of merit for a beneficial tion of the Washington Association of his court for travel in the The final draft will be then studied lowing Japanese courts to try 1958 automobile license plates will er at the Friday morning session suggestion. day. His suggestion turn off the of County Commissioners and En- Jnited States and t r a v e l i n g Visualized is a body which wou by the executive boards of the servicemen. carry three numbers and three of the 51st annual" convention. 2 Months Delay Seen truck motors. gineers, Guilbert warned against abroad. coordinate promotional work on three state wheat grower groups etters, like those issued in Cali- Bugge said the counties are goany diversion of highway funds. regional Northwest basis, preven for further revision pending ap- Hayashi said the case probably 'ornia, Gov. Rosellini announced ng to feel the effects of the fedHe said it was long-etablished He said the state's ferry system iractice of the district's judges to overlapping of effort, and negotiat proval or rejection by the growers. would not go to court for two Triday. eral road program in two ways. It was emphasized at the meet- months because of the time needand transit systems both in and out grant applications sparingly for with government agencies for su Effect Seen of cities, are seeking to be favored ravel outside the court's jurisdicport of the programs. Wheat grow ing that no commitments were be- ed to prepare the defense. In the The change was proposed earier when sample plates subsy relief of payment of their share ion. ers associations of the three state ing made which would bind mem- meantime, Girard remains in U.S mitted to county officials were their "There will be more money for for roads as a result of the increased of the tas tax. would conduct the programs an bers of wheat grower organiza- Army custody at this camp of the consideration. Wesselhoeft i n d i c a t e d Beck allocation of money at the-federal 'If this continues either we must would have been willing to post a would participate as their mem tions, but that the work was pre- 1st Cavalry Division. He has been evel and there will be a consider- CHICAGO W Three young raise the tax, which will be re- 100,000 bond to guarantee his rerestricted to camp more ftian four To Be Made Here liminary to any definite action. berships desired. Formation of such a body had months while the case developed Approximately 1,600,000 sets will able effect on the county road pro- >rothers were killed early Friday sisted, or our system will deterio- urn. Verne Barbre of Ephrata, pre; je made at the State Penitentiary grams as a result of the new high- and a fourth was injured when he rate," he'declared. been requested of wheatmen in into a hot international issue. dent of the Washington Associatio a news arranged of Wheat Growers, conducted th the Northwest by U. S. Depart- oyInLevin and conferenceGirard de- n Walla Walla with new ma- ways we are going to be building," umped from the second floor of He said it was in 1933 that the Hayashi, said. a three-story building which was egislature diverted funds from the morning and afternoon session ment of Agriculture officials. They nied the accusation that' he en- chinery installed this year. The * * * ormer automobile license plate The new federal law provides a swept by fire. said negotiating with one group lighway department for relief purThursday. would be more satisfactory in all deed Mrs. Naka Sakai, 46, onto plant there was destroyed by fire 3-year program for the interstate The victims, sons of Charles W. joses. Then came the anti-diverAims and purposes of the pro posed organization were discussec respects than trying to negotiate an Army firing range last Jan. 30 during a prisoner uprising in ystem and a three-year program Yates, 44, a window washer, were sion amendment. sefore firing blank or the regular federal aid high- dentified as Paul Edward, 12, Now, he said, the transit sysand it was decided that the group with representatives from the three ridge from a a grenade rifle cart- 1953. launcher. The new plates will have a way system, the director explain- l,ouis Wayne, 10, and Richard Lee, tems are seeking relief. different states. governing board would consist o The Oregon Wheat League has Japanese newspapers have assert- jreen background. The t h r e e - ed. 8. Phillip Yates, 20,' was taken to Earlier T h u r s d a y , Daniel J. WASHINGTON W G e o r g e three members each from Wash threw shells ington, Oregon and Idaho. Thre conducted extensive; wheat promo- ed Girard Mrs. Sakai to to the mmber, three-letter combination The federal aid highway act will a hospital with injuries received Evans, King county representative, VIeany, AFL-CIO president, said retrive will be painted white. advisory members will be invite tional programs in the Far East ground forshot her. _ive Washington counties about when he leaped from the family's said the cross-sound transportation "riday Dave Beck should get out during the past two years. This and then s part of the state's highway sys- if the Teamsters Union presiRosellini said the plates will not 86,279,000 during the next three second floor apartment. to participate in the work from "I did not industries allied with the wheat in year Washington and Idaho are Sirard said. scatter any shells,' >e reflectorized, but the Legisla- years, he explained. Fire officials estimated damage ;em and the ferry system is en- lency, or be kicked out forthwith joining the promotional efforts. All ;itled to assistance. He said the without letting Beck finish the tive Interim Committee on High- The highway director discussed at $15,000. dustry. "I don't know I Members from the three state persons agreed" at the Thursday ;he right words,"ifthe can express ways will be asked to study that he limited access policy of the Yates, his wife, Virgie, and their ierry routes should be considered emaining months of his tern. soldier con- ype of plates for possible legislaas an important part of the state "Beck should get out tomorrow," will be elected by the wheat grow session that the organization they lighway commission. All interstate three other children, Betty, 6, Dentinued. shook er associations from each and wi are planning is a logical step in up and "I was prettyat well death ive authorization in 1959. A bill highways must be built with limit- nis, 3, and Larvin, 1 were sleep- lighway system and should come deany told an applauding lunchvery sorry" the calling for reflectomed p l a t e s ed access features if they are to ng in a first floor bedroom and in for a portion of the gas tax on audience of the AFL-CIO inserve three-year terms on a stag ;he promotional scheme. Raphael (Ruff) Ramond of Helix, of Mrs. Sakai. lustrial union department. >assed the House during the 1957 escaped unharmed when the fire money. gered basis. and Chuch Gabby of Lewiston, Girard said he hoped to visit session, but died in the Senate. ;et federal money for their con- >roke out. The dead brothers were Guilbert outlined the develop The AFL-CIO chief said there Committee Named traction, he said. Please See Page 5, Col. 7 Pfease See Page 5, Col. 8 bund on the floor of their iecond- ment of the highway system. From was no doubt the Senate rackets Would Cost More Dick Baum of Pendleton, execu This, he said, will result in traf- loor room. 1900 to 1910, he said, there was no committee's disclosures w e p e Reflectorized plates would cost ic intei changes. Some of these live vice president of the Orego Improvements ilacing "a stigma" on organized Cook County Coroner Walter through traffic. he state an estimated $800,000 interchanges are going to be conWheat League,, was named chair abor. But he said it was a good more than the non-reflectorized nected with county road systems, YteCarron said 11 families lived jvere made by the property owner thing to rid unions of corruption man of a committee to draw up by n the building on the near north or county commissioners. Between ype, the governor -said. laws for the proposed organization resulting in increased traffic on side that had originally been a 1910 and 1920 a state highway sys- and they would be stronger in the On the committee with him ar The new 1958 plates will be used county roads. tem evolved through connecting ong run. ;hree-fiat. or three or four years, being He declared that now is the time Cause of the fire was not de- routes between county seats and in revalidated each year with tabs, for the counties to get at their fu- ermined immediately. 1921 the gas tax was started. he governor said. ture planning required by the new NOW IN PROGRESS WASHINGTON UP) Senators Kralstein said the idea of tossTALLMAN'S federal highway act. digging into Bakers Union affairs ing dinners at which costly gifts came up Friday with a story of are given the guest of honor is In duscussing the effect of the 2nd Annual Will Help You a dinner that raised $60,000 for much older than he is. He named federal program the director exOptimist Club union Vice President Max Kral- some others he said have beneplained that considerable volume The old adage: "You don't get of private investment in factories, ,teinmoney derived chiefly from fitted from such dinnersamong SELECT^ THE , HOLE-IN-ONE 'pressuring" employers to buy them William F. Schnitzler, sec- something for nothing" is one shops, houses and all sorts of servwhich Mrs. Monroe Root, 135 ice establishments will be stimuickets and souvenir ads. retary-treasurer of the AFL-CIO RIGHT CONTEST Frank Dutto, union chairman for and a former president of the Green, has always firmly be- lated. MAYPORT, Fla, UP) - The Navyby a helicopter from a life raft lieved in. Now, she claims she he lavish dinner that added this Bakers Union. Will Aid Business announced Friday a jet pilot where he had spent the long GIFT Begins Tonite 7:30 um to, Kralstein's capital assets, Was it true that he got $60,000 has reason to be even more posiThe impact on retail trade will vhose plane plunged into the At- night. tive in that belief. ;ook the Fifth Amendment when at the dinner, K r a l s t e i n was Mrs. Root is one who has be a great one," he said. "More antic Thursday night has been The Saratoga diverted 16 of the asked whether he was a Commu- asked. And Daily Noon 18 ships from its escort to join in FOR FATHER'S DAY "never won anything in my life." and more shopping centers will be ound dead. nist prior to 1950. Yes, Kralstein said, if that's the So when she purchased her cus- constructed in areas which are The announcement c a m e as the effort, and sent out its own Til 10 P.M. Not Red Now total on the report he had given tomary powdered soap the other easily accessible to automobiles- 'resident Eisenhower debarked planes in relays of four to help. But Dutto said "I am not now a the committee, and he said he be- day and found what appeared to very likely near freeway inter- lere from the aircraft carrier The resulting cut in force, made SUNDAY member of the C o m m u n i s t lieved it was. with Eisenhower's a p p r o v a l , changes. General businesses, which Saratoga. be a diamond therein, she was MEMORIAL PARK JUNE 16th Party," and that since in 1950 he As tiave been increasingly concerned Only an hour earlier the Pres- brought about a sharp cut in the GOLF COURSE ... ias filed non-Communist affidavits ing a to the propriety of accept- slightly shaken, but only as long about the trend towards outlying dent had thanked the Saratoga maneuver schedule the President gift that big from men with as it took to get to the jeweler with the government. shopping centers; will undoubtedly ask, force for rescuing another had flown from Washington to see. See Page 10 , whom and for whom he bargains to check the stone. The dinner in honor of Kral- collectively, Kralstein insisted: The decision there that it was benefit, too, because of improved Tavy pilot who went down in the Tefft was found about 120 miles See Page 11 ^ tein, New York , national vice northeast of Jacksonville, Fla., his ame area Thursday night. "only a pretty piece of glass" access to central business districts For Details For A Gift It's the Principle resident of the union, was thrown Eisenhower h a d expressed home base. The second pilot's returned Mrs. Root to earth and in our cities and towns." He'll Appreciate y New York Local No. 3 in June "To me it's not- the amount. the restoration of her now even He forecast a readjustment of 'prayerful hope" the other man identity was not disclosed by the $100.00 MERCHANDISE Every Day Of The Yr f last year at the Waldorf-Astoria It's the principle." firmer belief that "you don't get traffic in the counties and declared iien still missingwould be found Navy. , GRAND PRIZE Hotel. Dutto is organizing director Joseph Tenczar, an ousted un- something for nothing." "I want to express my personal alive and well. ;he county roads will have to be Plus 4 Daily f the local. ion business agent, said much of However, that record must now suilt to higher standards "so they Eisenhower spoke to the crew of and my official thanks," EisenTALLMAN'S Kralstein was called to the wit- the money came from pressuring come to an end for Mrs. Root may contribute properly to the de- he Saratoga over the ship's pub- hower said, "to the officers and Prizes ess chair after the story had been employers for contributions. may have a ticket for two to the velopment of the full potentialities c address system a few hours crews of all the ships that we JA 5-1010 Employers both bought tickets Liberty by calling at the U-B of the freeway and to the full fter the dramatic rescue 'of a know have been hunting the- two 4 West Main St. Come Join The Fun! eveloped from others. He vigorously defended the pro- at $25 each and purchased ads in lews room. "The River's Edge" growth potentialities of the coun- ighter plane pilot, Cmdr. J. E. pilots that we know have been down riety of his accepting the 60,000. a souvenir program. Tefft, t sea. He was picked up in this region." , is playing at the Liberty.

Boss Planned Trip to Paris

Girard Says Japanese Charges Untrue^ But That He Anticipates a Fair Trial

50% More Funds Due on County Roads: Warning Given Against Any Diversion
A Wizard!

Region Wheat Promotion Body Planned at Meeting

Licenses To Have 3 Digits And 3 Letters .

3 Brothers Killed in Fire

VIeany Urges Beck Ouster

60,000-Dinner for Unionr VP Is Revealed in Probe

Stroller

Dramatic Rescue Effort Viewed by Ike on Carrier

."SPA.T'FTU

PANAMA CITY NEWS. Panama City. Fla., Thur.. Aug;. 29, 1957IVDLP 590 on your dial

MIAMI, Aug. 28 (UP)An east- necessary to becoming tropical JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Aug. 28 erly wave dumped heavy rains on storms. ATLANTA. Aug. 2S (UP)Stale;tine the Negroes up North.'" hei (UP)A Navy flier from the air- an already water-soaked south The south Florida area, which Rep. -A. A. Fowler Jr. said wday'said. ' DADE CITY. Fla.. Aug. 28 C-PJ craft carrier U.S.S. Saratoga was]Florida today, flooding streets and has had more rain thus far this F o u r men that his proposal to have Georgia jhe Georgia legislator said the i accused in the shotgun killed near here today-when his'highways and disrupting telephone year than in all of 1956, got the parachute failed to open after he i service, buy homes in the better northern joans "won't cost the state a | shootin S of a white Tampa Tarpon first downpour in the pre-dawn tesidental sections for the state's ; c o m _" He said the commission.! Daseball pitcher as he sat in a ejected himself from his crippled) The wave, a strong band of hours. The showers were accomcal with jet plane. Negroes is the "answer to the in-; al - ter buying the homes, would i ' Negro players today i showers and sometimes a fore- oanied in some sections by winds tegration problem." 'underwrite loans on the property! waived preliminary hearing on the The Navy said the body .of the runner to a t r o p i c a l storm, up to 30 miles an hour. Fowler, of Douglasville. Ga.. j^p tne Federal Housing Autli-' charge, flier, whose name was being with- brought showers and thunder- But the greatest downpour came The four pleaded innocent to the gaid he's convinced that the Gi'or-' or i t y. held pending notification of his storms from Key West across the I early in the afternoon when cloudfia Legislature will go along with next of kin. was pulled from the state as far north as Tampa and'bursts sent heavy -downpours We'll send real estate agents i m ^^he^Di* his bill and set up a state com- , water about an hour after the pre- Vero Beach. "The Miami Interna- throughout the southern half of noon crash. mission to buv homes for the b" "h0mes"ri-itt nra"door to the Circuit Court for tria1' Probably tional Airport reported more than the state. Bonita Springs reported Bill Bryant. Jacksonville news-'three inches of rain since 4 a. m.inearly two inches, south of"Palm state's Negroes in northern and ^ Dromin * m white people in l ,tlre .Oe!b"' t61' Tby CUnty western communities. 'town "'he ^'id j Judge A. J. Hayward Jr. paper reporter, witnessed the: today, two and one-half inches (Beach had more than two inches, He said that all the mechanics] ' J:IV1<S ' "." i The four are: crash during a fishing trip. He [falling in less than an hour. j Homestead more than one ancL of the bill ire not poivectedj -rtioiieil ; Edward w. G askin. 27-year-old said the plane 'exploded into a| <-The wave should pass' us by one-half inches and the greate? basically it would set up a state! "The northern boys like (U.S.jDade City contractor, charged ball of flame when it hit the | tomorrow morning,"-said weather Miami area measured upwards of commission to buy lots in the Sen. Jacob > Javits won't dare to, with aggravated assault; Reece waters of the Atlantic, just off!bureau forecaster Walter Davis, two inches .in some sections.' ! "better residential s e c t i o n of;oppose us,_because we'll be giving Staton. 33. a mechanic: James The Florida Power and Light nearby Mayport. ,- It - s moving westward into the northern" cities and then give;our Negroes good homes." Fowler; Edward Gibson. 26. a packing Company reported two cables out ^ He said the plane appeared to (Gulf of Mexico." Georgia's Negroes long-term, low said. | house employe and Thomas David "shudder, then one wing dipped." j Forecasters watched the wave because of flooded conditions. Lointerest loans for buying the prop- He said the state's Negroes are!Abraham, 30. a bar and lounge That was when the pilot ejected ] moving right over their weather cal telephone service and long-diserty. now living "under the worst con-; operator, all of whom were 'i.mself from the cockpit, seconds i station and kept their eyes on an- tance lines were disrupted. Screening Propose^ .ditions" and the plan would be j charged with being accessories to before the plane dived into the. other easterly wave 1,500 miles tc The weather bureau said they In the language of the proposal'a fine opportunity for them. Hei Colgan. Tampa relief pitcher, ocean. ! jthe southeast in the lesser An- had received reports of flooded the commission would "screen the said there would be no limit toj w a s peppered with shotgun pellets Brvant the small "pilotitilles. Neither wave Showed signs streets and highways in several Negro applicants." but Fowlei;the number of Negroes the -state'Aug. S after the Tampa team had parachute" appeared to open, but!of developin. wind circulation locations. A section of U. S. Highsaid the screening won't be too': could send North. j stopped at a drive-in. The Tampa way One near Palm Beach was the larger parachute designed to thorough. i "I've gotten thousands of letters |p]ayers were returning from a reported under water. carry a flier to the land or water Britain Assemblies "All we really care is that they;about the bill and most of the j Florida State League game at At Fort Lauderdale. authorities safely, did not open. are Negroes," he said. I people, including people all over Leesbur-. said the water table had risen so The Navy said the plane, an Large Warship Fleet The Legislator said there won't the nation, are 100 per cent for They were asked by a curb girl high that septic tanks in some F3H Demon, was from Fighter be any strings attached and Ne- the bill." he said. to move because the car contained Squadron 31. which is home-based-11 LONDON, Aug. 28 (UP)Britain sections had overflowed. WANTS IT BACK No one has offered to give it back, so is assembling its largest fleet of groes being sent from Georgia to "I'm serious about this bill." he Negroes. Thev moved, but reat Oceana, Va., but currently sta- warships in home waters in man> Water was up to the running Standing Arrow, left, a Mohawk Indian chief, says that he is the different northern cities won't!said, "and I 'Sunk you'U find the mained near "the drive-in. They boards of automobiles in the street tioned aboard the Saratoga, an- years for NATQ flnd R j N ucKieu auoam u e acumoga, angoing to demand that New York State return the millions of tven have to be sure of a job.'other Southern states following i were shot soon afterwards. chored just outside the Mayport j(exercises in the Worth Ati,mt in front of the U. S. weather exercises in HIP North Atlantic acres taken from the Indians by the white men Standing Arrow "We're mainly interested in get-'suit soon." bureau here. Carrier Basin. next month, it was announced toclaims it was taken illegally. If the state acceded to the chief's The plane crashed shortly after day. demands, he would own most of New York. A reasonable fellow, taking off from a runway at the The fleet includes four aircraft Governor's Conference Standing Arrow says he will settle for cash to be used to build Mayport Naval Auxiliary Air Sta- carriers completed since World Celebration Approved an Indian city on the banks of Schchaire Creek at Fort Hunter, tion, the Navy said. War If. two cruisers, four fleet N.Y. Standing- Arrow, whose group of Mohawk Indians makes escorts, two destroyer and frigate WASHINGTON, Aug. 28 (UP) is home along the creek t talks it over with Wounded Buffalo, squadrons, a submarine squadron The House passed a bill today to a. Mohawk sub-chief. and a minelaver. establish a commission to organHAVANA. Aug. 2S (UP)Presiize the celebration of the 50th ai^ dent Fulgencio Batista's cabinet FADING SOUNDS niversary of the first govemoxjjf approved today after a night-long conference on conservation. session a new code to govern 1958 Higher pitched sounds NEW YORK. Aug. 28 (UP)It's ing through the air and in travel- The first conference was held -general elections designed to reover the May 13. 1908. The governors were easy to get lost in the big city. store political peace to Cuba. surface of the earth fade out more called together by President TheoJust ask William Henry Warren. The legislation was drafted earquickly than low-pitched sounds. dore Roosevelt. Bv WILMOT HERCHEK jly impossible for the small South- 29. He lay naked in a coal chute lier this week by a joint commise rn j"iTiyirte?i ti^r-i */> i^1L- +l-in T-iill ^ n for four rti'ti sion of both houses of the Cuban WASHINGTON, Aug. 28 (J> ' ' opposition to talk the bill to | A lower days before he _was found. East side resident heard Congress in which government | Southern Democrats fired some death in a filibuster. He told the I cries and opposition congressmen were parting shots at the compromise Senate that while some of his con- feeblecalled for help early today, and Police. Officers folrepresented. It was approved sub- civil rights bill in the Senate to- stituents would like to see himi 'lowered the sound of the voice unv< sequently by the Senate and day but acknowledged they lacked filibustcr he was compelled loj ''recoginze the facts of legislative til they found it coming below the House. the strength to wage a successDowntown Harrison Avenue sidewalk right under their feet. The cabinet also approved the ful filibuster. lifting of censorship on foreign They also expressed Jfear that if Sen. Robertson fD-Va) took a A policeman lifted the metal lid (Walgreen's & Christo's! 10-5 p.m. publication's entering Cuba. Amer- 'they tried a filibuster the Senate somewhat s i m i l a r view in a on a coal chute. There lay Warren at the bottom, on a heap of St. Andrews Kwik-Chek 10-1 & 2-5 ican dailies and magazines began might change its rules to make speech prepared for delivery later. coal. He was clad only in a "coat reappearing uncensored on Ha- it easier to limit debate. Miliviile Piggly Wiggly He said, however, he would be of soot..His clothes were in a heap 12-3.&4-7 vana newsstands yesterday. willing to stay in Washington and Paper Mill 7:30-12, 1:30-4:30 However, expectations that the Sen. Knowland of California, debate the bill all fall if he felt next to him.' Warren said the last he knew, the Republican leader, said he cabinet would restore civil rights, it would serve a useful purpose. he was drinking wine last SaturTyndail Field Laundry 9-12 suspended on Aug. 8, did not ma- hoped lor a final vote on the civil Both Robertson and Ervin made day. Then everything went black terialize. Unless revoked earlier, rights bill by tomorrow at the the oint that Tyndall Field Base Theatre 1-4 P opposition literally. the executive decree suspending latest. It was still uncertain, how- t o tile bil1 at prolonged e of th mis sta S constitutional guarantees will re- ever, how much time the South-jgame might impel the Senate'e to ern opposition would take to ctemain in effect until Sept. 15. last round of speeches. change its rule No. 22, which Police, meanwhile, announced iliver the arrest of an additional 12 per- passed by the House yesterdav on makes filibusters possible. Senate' sons accused of terrorist acts, as a 297-97 roll call. If approved by debate at present can be limited INSIDE THE EDSELThis is the driver's eye view of the inwell as the seizure of several 81 the Senate, it will become the first only by the affirmative vote of itruinent panel and "Teletouch" push button transmission conmillimeter mortar shells, appar- basic civil rights legislation to two-thirds of its full membership .trols located in the steering wheel hub of the 1958 Edsel, Ford's ently intended for conversion into come out of Congress in 82 years. 64 of 96 senators. new "medium price" auto. The speedometer is drum type. The Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of bombs, and other materiel intend- Several opposition speakers toheater, defroster and ventilator are operated by a single control, ed for sabotage purposes. v .right, center, eliminating knobs and levers. There are 18 Edsel day contended the bill in its com- Texas, the Democratic leader, has - -tnodels in lour seriesRanger, Pacer, Corsair and Citation. I Police said they also seized over promise form endangers the right said that as far as he is concerned the opponents of the bill -JS3 : 000 worth of medicines, includ- of trial by jury.. 'ing penicillin and plasma which "The cornerstone of human lib- can talk as long as they like. He were, to have been delivered to erty is being shattered," Sen. Olin added he still hoped Congress Fidel Castro's rebel forces in the D. Johnston ' (D-SC1 declared. - could adjourn by the weekend, but Sierra Maestra mountains of East- "The House measure to all in- that there was no guarantee the ern Cuba. tents and purposes nullifies and debate would not extend into next TAMPA, Fla., Aug. 28 ffl A two million dollar loss in liquor! renders meaningless the right of week. family style, multi-million dollar taxes to the government. J jury trial by jury except in the Ervin spoke for only 24 minutes. moonshine whisky operation ex- Kelly said the stills operated by discretion of the judge." Johnson of South Carolina followed tending over six Florida counties the Lanes were located in Pasco. A major section of the bill would him with a longer speech in which was smashed today when five Sumter, Osceola, -Orange, Citrus authorize the attorney general to he called the $300-fine-and-45-day members of one family were given and Hillsborough counties. seek federal court injunctions' imprisonment clause "the most long prison terms. He said the illicit whisky operagainst any violation or threat- asinine, puerile legislation proviened miolation of voting rights. sion I have ever known about." Five members of the Lane fam- ation was the biggest that ever COLP, 111. mA majority of an Persons disobeying the injunctions Knowland predicted Senate pasily drew prison sentences totaling came to his attention and was the 24 years from federal judge W. J. largest liquor ring operating in estimated 40 white children boy- could be charged with contempt sage of the legislation by about the Central Florida until it was broken cotting a previously all - Negro of court. Barker. same vote as that by which the grade school here had enrolled to- The Senate had attached an Senate refused last night to shunt Richard Kelly, asst. U.S. district upday in other schools. attorney, said the operation which Head of the Lane family opera- Not one white pupil has ap- amendment providing that in all the measure to the Judiciary Com_ tion was Walter Dade _ Lane, 59, eared cases of criminal contempt, not mittee. This vote was 66-18. extends back to 1936 has involved for classes at the school only in the field of voting rights In addition to strengthening en85 automobiles and resulted in a ivho aFready~Ts serving "a""slate P since the fall semester began Mon- but in labor, antitrust and many- forcement of voting.rights, the bill prison term of seven years Others drawing sentences were:i df ?'- Wilham Hatchett, a Negro other kinds of actions, the defend- would establish a civil rights diviClarence Lane Jr., Allene Rylesl* he f ds !he scho1 board > said ants would be entitled to jury sion in the Justice Department and any=mp wife nf Clarence, POV'- ne has . no intention to make any- trials. Lane, n-ifo of n^ronno Par provide an additional assistant attrammell Lane, and HKERBERT one do anything he doesn't want During ' the compromise, the torney general to run it. to do." Eighteen of the Colp children en- right to jury trials was limited to I would also set up a bipartisan with subpoena rolled on a tuition basis at nearby voting rights cases. It also gave commissiontwo-year inquiry.powers judges a limited -right to punish to make a Carterville. 111. Several others moved in with Carterville relatives without jury trial, persons they and were attending the school hold guilty of criminal contempt. there. Three enrolled in a Roman It provides that where judges Catholic parochial school at Her- proceed without a jury, defendth Portland. Lowest priced "Touchants may demand a jury trial if turn" iwivel TV with 262 q. in. viewabl* BOSTON7 ffl Gov. Foster Fur- ri n, 111. HOUSTON, Tex. (JB Patricia t h e y are convicted and the area . . . 21" tub* (overall diagonal). colo met today with representatives Negroes make up about half ofi exceeds a S30 fine or 43 Penalty Ann Jennings. S, who had received', da Stunning new tapered design. Mahog vs in of 11 nonstriking unions in a dis- the , 250 . residents of Colp, onetime ! nrvai ;v,;~ .. hail. The maximum nnnaltv in all three Salk vaccine shots, is any grained, walnut grained or limed cusston of the strike of 300 mailers 1*! f oak grained finishet. 21T824 Series. The town. 100 miles southeast O rj c a s e s of a J ur y conviction would dead of what was officially dewhich has tied up six Boston news-! be 51,000 and six months in jail. scribed as bulbar polio. now is a nightlife spot, papers, and he assured them Dr. Joseph A. Jachimczyk, for95 nightclubs, one Sen. Ervin (D-NC) protested to- ensic pathologist for the Harris would do whatever he could to set-j day the compromise teaves the I ot them operated by Hatchett. tl'e the strike. question of whether a defendant County medical examiner's office, laiKea whiteIp children of h'gh school age. shall have a jury trial dependant today said his examination of tistalked uC Even as the governor tdikea whl with the nonstrikers" representaon "the discretion and caprice" ,c sue confirmed the cause of death. tives for the stated purpose of ob- solidated high school at Herrin. man rather than on law. He said A National Foundation for Intaining the facts and status oC the he didn't belreve that power should fantile Paralysis representative labor dispute from their standpoint, be granted to "any human being, said only one other such death had COOPER'S-DRUG the state, began preparations for been verified. even if he be a judge." mailing out unemployment checks STORES Ervin said it would be physicalto 4,700 persons made idle. But no Yachting Mishap Results 2 Convenient Locations checks were to be sent to the strik-1 In Face-Lifting Job Cove Bvld. at 1 1108 Harrison ing mailers. LONDON, Aug. 28 W)The un-, Tyndall Hwy. I Avenue married motner is no longer auto-i SAN FRANCISCO (S^-Mrs. LuTh Olarfwtn P*Ivx* 108 iq. in. th Itllite Deluxe. Fomily-iiz* Woodrow Wilson issued the first rnatically regarded as a social out-j We Give S&H Green tamps viewable ptcturi coniol-lik* pericrvtn. 156 >q. in. viewable area. icretia Galbraith, a scalped grandMother's Day proclamation in 1915. cast, British welfare workers re-! formance. Tapvred <j*iign in gar1(1 gsmot, ivory, bony-ond-ivor)r, mother, is looking much younger M blu*-and-gray finnet, ivory, *bony-and-aold or goldported today. SANDS POINT. N. Y.. Aug. 28 today than her 50 years as the recnd -ivory finiihe*. isho. 17PDB09 StriiL *189 <i J A 9 inere seem to be encouraging (UP)Perry Como's three chil- suit of a boating accident. 14PD80J Stritt. 149 signs of increased public aware- dren were threatened with death ness of the deep-rooted causes of by an anonymous telephone caller Mrs. Galbraith's hair snagged SPACE-SAVING CONSOLES legitimacy," said the annual re- today, and police arrested a door- on a yacht's propeller shaft July 4. port of the National Council for to-door salesman a few hours later Parts of her scalp were removed AT BENBFIC3AL from the shaft and sewn back. the. ^Unmarried Mother and Her Ion a "hunch" of the singer's wife. Her facial skin was drawn still Fid close to the wall! Makes th SAVE $47.76 OE* $&OO LOAN room jcem "roomier'1 Savei up to Joseph Tito, 32. Astoria. N. Y., tighter in a series of scalp grafts 36% floor spacel The council, a voluntary organ- vas charged with disorderly conON 24 MONTH PLAN! .# zation, exists to aid unmarried duct for allegedly telephoning the by Franklin Hospital surgeons. "I've ahvays looked a little ^ Under the new law, you can save money on any loan here. On a jirls who become pregnant. Como's summer home on Long Is- young for my age." Mrs. Gal24-month S600 loan, you save as Its report said: "The baby born and at 5:30 a.m. eclt. EXAMPLES OF LOANS No diali or gadget! on the front high as 547,76 over the maximum out of wedlock is beginning to be Como was out of town, and Mrs. braith observed, "but now all my ON 2< MONTH HAN of rh* sell Blendi beautifully with wrinkles arc gone." small loan rate. Check . . . comregarded as a sign or sympton Moselle Como, his wife, answered Mrs. Galbraith. five times a jCash any decor! pare and you will choose You $412 $512 $600 of mental weakness or emotional the call, a mer were her three grandmother, hopes to return tc Get BENEFICIAL. Phone first for a loan maladjustment, the result of an children. Ronnie, 17, David, 11, her bookkeping job by (he middle Repay in just one visit, or come in and Monthly $23.00 $28.00j$32.40 unhappy childlood leading to lone- and Terry, 10. ask for the BENEFICIAL manager. of September and to yachting beNew picture-balance circuitt giv Above repayments made on time cover liness and lack of interests in "Is Perry there?" the caller fore that. The lenfpert. 262 iq. in. vttwobi* everything! Loans in other amounts or *iw depth ... dimension! Piclurei Tt> rlrhTn Deluxe, lowboy TY adolescent and adult life." asked. YOUR LIFE-INSURED oro. Mahogany grained, walnwt with 262 jq. in. viewable aro. Phonofor other periods, ore comparable. re sharp ... clear... real groined finishes; Kmtd oak groind or (Flo.-B) jock. Mahogany groined, 2 other finThe report stressed "the funda- "No. he's out of town at the AT NO EXTRA COST !*. 21D8.56 S.ritl. birch grained finishes. Jao Rail Deflation mental problem of any woman moment." she replied. lira. 21T842&S<rii. who must be mother and father "You better get hold of him and Visiting in China Loans up to $600 plus life insurance at no extra cost to her child, care for him and! Dring the three children to me or A* eke* hV. tCA|Vtor frdwySwYK. CoMnxt *# ft M-UHIWHr- Nner optional, eiM HI **eluWr/y hf kCA Victor Hf fwftn. earn for him." The problem, i( hey will be dead by sunrise this HONG KONG. Aug. 2S (.71A 1510 WEST FIFTH STREET, PANAMA CITY Phone: POplar 3*2891 Edward Stephens, Manager laid, is "incapable of a perfect nirning." the man said. member Japanese railwayman's OPEN EVENINGS 6Y APPOINTMENT PHONE FOR EVENING HOURS :olution." Mrs. Como called police, who union delegation arrived at CanIHKI mod* to residents of oil surrounding towns ^sked her if she had any idea of ton in Communist China today. he caller's identity. 15 WOMEN DROWN Peiping rad'o said they will visit PUSAN. Korea, Aug. 28 (UP)- She recalled thru a man selling Shanghai find ether cities before "We Sell The Best and Service The Rest" SENEHCIAl ""ii'teen women on an outing i "-igious candles had called at thr a'tcridinT 'ho Oct. 1 National Day nerod'callv for about usan harbor drowned \vhn th"'iins in Poining. T'^cv are E X'.tl. 3210 E. Hwy. 98 3-3831 sailboat capsized yesterday, police "ar. He last called a few days! """^s of the P-v'way Workers' ago, she said reported today. Trade Union of. China.

Georgia Representative ask Stale! Four Accused J| To Buy Negroes Homes in North Pla er ing '
9

Carrier Flier Killed as Chute Fails to Open

Easterly Wave Dumps Heavy Rain On Wafer-Soaked South Florida

Cuba's Cabinet Approves New Political Code

Southern Demos Lack Force To Wage Successful Filibuster

Man Lies Naked In Coal Chute For Four Days

TB X-Ray Schedule
August 28th

OPEN HOUSE SHOWING OF 1958 MODELS


FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
FREE REFRESHMENTSPRIZES FOR THE KIDDIES

Family-Style, Multi-Million Whiskey Still Smashed when Five go to Prison

Most of Pupils Boycotting School Return to Classes

Governor Meets With Non-strikers )n Paper Shutdown

Girl Who Received 3 Polio Shots Dies

239

English Un-Wed Mothers No Longer Out-Casts

Call Threatens Como's Kids


^JTiJ.ii-'i^ J.\_>JL1 * , * . , J.1. J,., ra.U!. wO

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IT'S MIRROR-SHARP!

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TELE VISION CENTER, Inc.

NEW SMYRNA NEWS


NEW SMYRNA, VOLU8IA COUNTY, FLORIDA, FRIDAY, MARCH 23,1017.
$1.50 a Y

Volum* 4, Number 43

FISHING INDUSTRY IS WORD TO TRY TO BIG SAID TD FACE CRISIS LOWER OWN RECORD
AMENDMENTS TO STATE LAW FAMOUS PASSES FAST BACK. AUTOMOBILE THROUGH RUN TO DRIVER ARE TO BE OFFERED AT SESSION OF LEGISLATURE TO BE HELD SOON. HERE ON MIAMI AND

SAWFISH CAPTURED NEAR OFFICIALS ELECTED MUCH INTEREST IN HERE BY GILBERT WEBSTER BY FLA6LER SYSTEM PROPOSED CHANGE
ANNUAL MEETINGS OF RAIL- NAMES OF MANY CITIZENS SUGGESTED TO BE MEMBERS OP THE PROPOSED CITY CHARTER BOARD. ROAD, HOTEL AND CAR FERRY COMPANIES _WEEK. ARE HELD THIS The annual meeting of the stockThat much Interest is being shown holders of the Florida East Coast n the proposition to change the form Railway company was held Tuesda of municipal government of the city in St. Augustine and officers for th of New Smyrna, is indicated by the year were elected. The only chang fact that numerous names have been made was the re-creation of the offlc suggested for members of the proof comptroller, rbolished on the death posed charter board, which will be of the late W. II. Chambers and the elected by the voters at the special election to that re created office o election called for April 17. Theodore V. Pomar. The Florida One petition has been filed with East Coast Hotel company also held the city council asking that tha ts annual stockholders' meeting am names of J. J Birch, T. L. Howell, elected officers, immediately following D. C. Silvers, W. P. Wilkinson and he railroad company meeting, r'ol A. M. Yarbrough be placed on the owing this meeting the Florida Ea.si official ballot for the charter board 'oast Car Ferry ' company held a election. It is understood that other meeting and cieetfl officers for the petitions are being circulated and will ;nsnmg year. Officers of the severa' bo mod with the council later. ompanies elected are as follows: Tlio general sentin'ent among the Esst Coast Railroad Officers citizens w h o arc really in favor of Directoors lor the Florida East the i hang" to the commission-man''oast Uailuav compiiny chosen are ager form of city government is that follows: W. H. Beardsley, Wm. R careful section should be made Cenan. Jr . \V A. Mount, J. P. Beck for members of the charter board and vltli. J E. Ingraham, R W Parsons, that in making these soletions poli. C. Salter. L. C. Hamcs. O. W. Pcr- tics and factional feelings should be decimated in the desire to select 1 he directors then chose the tollow men who _are really qualified to pre.IB officers. President. W II Beard.5- pare a new charter for the city. ey; vice president in charge of op- The preparation of the new charter Cation and traffic. J. P. Beckwith; will require a vast amount of work ice president in charge of lands and >n tiie part of the members of the idustnal enterprises. J. E. Ingra- harter board and the members of , am; vice preident. Wm. R. Kenan, his board should be men who have r.; vice president, Mrs. Mary Flag- the time to devote to this work. er-Bingliani; secretary. .1. C. Salter; There are many things which should incorporated in the new charter*, reasurer. L. C. Ilaincs. the be.st interests of the city of The executive committee is comcmed ot W. H. Beardsloy. Wm. R. \ew Smyrna are really to be taken. nto consideration, and politics, pervenan. J r , and J P Ueckwith Tiic officers appointed are H. S. Jen- sonal feelnms and factional prejuison, assistant seere ary; T. V. Po- lices should be entirely forgotten iu iar, comptroller and assistant treas- his election. Every citizen of New rer. W A Hlount. general counsel Sni> rna really wants to see the city crow and progn ss and the new Hotel Company Officers The election of officers for the Flor harter will supply the rules and rcgla I'ast Coast Hotel company result- il'itinns for the tuture growth of the ili. il us follow s. A ( Directors: W. H. Deardsiey. Wm. The eKv-tion of the charter board ml the preparation ol the new clu.r. Kenan. Jr.. W. A. Blount, J. E. Iner has iK'thing lo do with the selccraham L r Haines O!nciis' President, W. H Beardv inn of the men who will later be \v; \ico president, Wm. H. Kenan, hosen to administer the alTairs of seirelary, J. I". Salter; Treas- he city. Tlio 'fundamental principles f the ciiv's government will be set rer. L C. Hailies. Officers appointed: H. S. Jenison. orth in the charterthe election of ssistant secretary; (\ R Maekcy. lie city officers- will come later, and ssistant treasurer; W A Blpunt. an be taken care of when the timo omes. eneral counsel. To Discuss Commission Form Car Ferry Company The ne\t meeting of the Men's The directors ot the Florida East >llowsliip club will be held npxt oast Car Ferry company elected are follows: W. H. Beardsley, Wm. U 'hursday night in the Trinity Methenan, Jr., J. P. Beckwith, R W. Par- >dist thureh and a very eordial initation is extended to the mcmins. Officers. W. H. Beardsley, presi- icrs of the Men's club, as well as >nt; Wm. R. Kenan, Jr.. vice presi- very man and woman in the city. snt; J. P. Beckwith. vice president; o attend this meeting. The subject C Salter. secretary; L C. Haines. or discussion will be a continuation easurer; J. S. Jenison, assistant if the subject of changing to the comrotary; T. C. McNamce, assistant mission-manager form of government, nd everybody will be given an opjcretary. Appointed officers: W. A Blount, lortunity to discuss the subject from ncra! counsel; R. W. Parsons, man- lis point of view. In order to have a comprehensive ger; T. V. Pomar, comptroller and ssistant trcasuier; Carroll H. Smith, lebate on the subject Dr. W. C. "howning has consented to discuss insulting engineer he suhjcit from the standpoint of ontinuing the city government as it OUNTY MEDICAL SOCIETY i;. and II U Bonnet has consented to MEETS AT PORT ORANGE iscuss the subject from the standThf Voluaia County Medical so- mint of the advantages to be gained ety met last Thursday night at rom a change to the commissionort Orange as guests of Dr. Mas- manager form. A symposium on nervous prosA cordial invitation is also oxtendation (neuresthenia) and a talk by d to the ladies to attend this mcet,e president of the state society "g. imposed a part of the program. Dr asters entertained his guests with AVERTING OF STRIKE six-course dinner. Those present BRINGS SATISFACTION It greatly repaid for going, although The settlement of the threatened is Is the busy season of the year, ailroad strike the first of this week r. .1. J. Kindred of New York, and rought general satisfaction lo the ienist of reputation, discussed the eople of New Smyrna and vicinity, ibject in detail. Dr. Hnntington of II S navy, was also a guest of o both employes of the railroad and onor. Resolutions of regret were thers. Granting of the eight-hour denand of the railroad men was particfered on the loss by death of an old ember of the society. Dr. Stephens larly pleasing to them, as it settles IVl.and Dr. E. W. Warren of ho uncertainty of whether the proilatka described how the charlatans isions of the Adamaon law were to. e being caught in the net of jus- e put into effect. Railroad men figure that the new o and how many, having obtained enses to practice under fraud are ight-hour law means a 20 per cent dug compelled to leave the state, ncreasa in the operating payrolls of ome of those present were Dr. J. he train, engine and yard employes, ake White, Qrmond; Dr. Dean T. t means that the men whq work ten mith, Daytona; Dr. W. C. Chownlng, ours hereafter will get a 25 percent w Smyrna; Drs. Reeves and L. C. ncrease over their old pay and for gram, DeUtnd; Dr. F. J. Walter, Ight hours work will get the same lytona; Dr. John MacDalrmld, De- pay as they formerly received for ten * ind; Dr. Hunt and Dr. Holland of lours work. Newton Butcher, who has been here for several weeks visiting hi* Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Hopkins will latlvns, Mr. and Mrs. Coleman are Monday for their northern Swlnford, left Wednesday for hla ome In Commonwealth, Wisconsin. home In Terre Haute, Ind. alno; Dr. DuBols of Port Orange.

Ralph Mulford. the noted automo The fishing industry ot Florida, which is one of the state's great bile driver, who established world's sources of income, is said by those in records on Daytona beadh last April close touch .with the situation, to be passed through New Smyrna Monday facing a crisis in which adequate pro- morning enroute to Miami and again tection' and the preservation of the Wednesday noon on his way back to Industry is balanced against the in- Daytona after the run to Miami. He roads made by interests which are was driving the same ear with which not far sighted enough to stand for he made the speed records on the better protection of fish in Florida beach and was accompanied by J. D Parmerlee, district manager for the waters. The News has been appealed to by Hudson Motor company. Recently Lord Gray, from England a well known winter visitor, who comes to New Smyrna every winter came to Daytona and announced that because he likes the fishing in this he proposed to have a try at breakvicinity, and who spends the greater ing automobile speed records on the part of his time while here in fishing, famous beach and for a couple of to ask concerted action on the 'part weeks ho has been making short of individuals and trade bodies to trials and getting things in shape to have legislation passed that will be :lo some real speeding 911 the beat h more of a protection than the pres- [rack AVhen Mulford, who made the ent laws. He submits four amendments which have been prepared for world's records on the beach last presentation to the legislature, and spring, heard of this, he made up his which he believes will give the smal minfl to come to Daytona and see fisherman a chance with the large what he can do in the line of breakfisherman, and that the provision ah ing his own records. Accompanied to nets will also give the fish a by his wife and son and an aunt, Mr. Multord arrived in Daytona last Sunchance to live. These amendments have been pre- day, and Monday morning he -md pared by men on the west coast who Mr. Parmerlee started for a run to }fte interested in the preservation of Miami, just to get the Hudson super the fishing industry, and are as fol- six tuned up in good shape for some Giant Sawfish Strung up with Block and Tackle speed trials on the beach lows: The above pit lure shows two of boats \\rre started for this city, and The car is the same one with which Size of Bar and Mesh he giant sawfish captured last week on the \\n" in two of them managed "Sec. 2It shall be" unlawful from ho made the records last year and is >y Gilbert D Webster, swung up by to make their escape, tearing loose and after September 30, 1917, for any in good shape. It has been on exhi- iloc k and tac kle on the Lasterlite, from the nel The other lour were person, persons, firm or corporation bition at the automobile show in At- nd gives a lair idea ol t h e -size of brm:U'l io Shnock's dock and were There were many ' to catch any fish in any of the salt lanta recently. he big fish. 'jvi<-\\ecl b\ luindreds of tourists ami waters of the state of Florida, with people interested in the sight of the Mr. Webster t a u g h t sit or these hon1" people as they lay in the shal - any seine, gill-net, pocket net or any rating car as It went through here ig fish and Itnwd fo.ir ot them eight luu water. Savfisli have been seen other kind of net of less size than one Monday morning and again Wednes- ules to the city. The fishermen ran in these \vat< rs t r c a u e m h , but ne\er and one-half inch bar, measured from day noon nto a st iiool ot flu 1 lisli iust a^ they bc-io '-, [u, e itRU, lls Uvrpe ones been knot to knot, or a stretched mesh of ' making the last dra^ of the breach! 1,1 to the cit\ where they ST. PATRICK'S DINNER three inches from knot to knot, after light with llicir n e t - , and the saws' cm'lu ]>o s.'( n and examine 1 *! by evAT THE O C E A N HOUSE bein tarred or shrunk, and the twine il the b,g sea mojister, became so erybcdy An Irish menu. Irish songs and ntanpled in the n"ls thej were un-;"'Mr. Webster had several photo in said nets shall not be Inr'gcr than stories, followed by old fashioned bio to e.\triialc thomselvts^L 9-20 cotton and 18-3 thread flax, and .[graphs ot the fish laken and the it shall be unlawful for any person, dances were the principal features Towine tile nets and the fish ihe above is one ut the p n l u r e s persons, firm or corporation to have of the St Patrick':! day dinner and In his, their or its possession an> social time which followed at the seine, gill-net, pocket net or other Of can House last Saturday evening Judge Hayes acted as toastmaster net than as herein provided . Violation of the provisions of this it the dinner and called upon a numsection shall be punished as follow.s: ber of the dinner guests to tell Irii.h By a fine of not less than $200 nor stories or sing Irish songs. The more than ffiOO, or by imprisonment ;ongs and stories were given between in the penitentiary not less than sl\ the courses and helped to make the months nor more than one year. One- dinner a very pleasant affair. A numDr. M E Heck, assistant state ! regulations- and he judged that little half of the fine to go to the person ber of the old fashioned dances were supplying information sufficient lor introduced in the dancing which fol- health oliicer, was in the city Mon-1 effort js being made to keep the orlowed the dinner. conviction." day and spent several hours making ' dinantes enforced. He requested the News to call the Length of Nets a hurried sanitary inspection of the 1 attenlion o! the people to the fact "Sec. 3It shall be unlawful for MR. AND MRS. J. T. BOLES ENTERTAIN FRIENDS city, and left on the afternoon Wain m0!,qlljto t i, lu > jh approaching and any seine, gill-net, haul-net or any other kind of nets of a greater length Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Boles of Pitts- for Follsmere, where he was ached ' that special attention should be given than 360 yards, to be set, fished or burg entertained a party of friends uled to give a talk before the mi-' to keeping tanks well covered and used in the salt waters of this state, Wednesday evening of last week at provement association in the evening j that no stagnant water should be perDr. Heck said that he found a lax mitted to stand on any premises, or for any seine, gill-net, stop-net,, their winter home on Murray st. The haul-net or any other kind of net to impromptu program was much enjoy- enforcement of .the sanitary ordin- Property owners should keep their be attached together in any nVanner. ed and consisted of piano selections ances in this city and that he was premises well cleaned of trash and ' making a length of more than 350 by Mrs. Boles and the following read- sorry to learn that the services of Ihe'rubbish, and a little effort on the yards, or for any. seine, gill-net, stop- ngs by Miss Anna Wehrhcim: "Maud sanitary inspector had been dis- j part of all t itizens will assist greatly net, haul-net or any other kind of net at the Movies," "Caleb's Courtship." pensed with. In several instances in keeping down the breeding of mosto be fastened by stakes or other- and "Major Guff on Suffrage." Mr. thc assistant state health officer said > quitoes' and keeping up the sanitary wise with ends nearer each other King contributed to the mirth of the he found violations of the city health i regulalions of the city. than 100 yards for the purpose of occasion with several humorous making a stretch or length of jmore stories. A social hour was enjoyed than 350 yards, to be used for the pur- and an appetizing lunch of sandpose of catching or taking fish from wiches, cake and. lemonade was servrivers, creeks, bays, bayous, lagoons, d. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. sounds, inlets or other salt waters on lohn llurd of Columbia City, Ind., the coast of the state of Florida Mr. and Mrs. John Tolbert and Mr. and when being so used within half ind Mrs. A. T. Tolbert of Potomac, a mile of the shore the depth of net 111., Louis Wchrheim and Miss Anna That the traffic ordinances/of the I of collisions and accident* at some shall not exceed fifty meshes; pro- Wehrheim of Sparta, 111., Mr and Mrs. ' vided. however, that a net or nets of ieorge King of Stuebenville, O.. Mr. / a length of more than 350 yards may anil Mrs. Perry Umpleby of Canton. danger of accidents at corners on - the placing ol these signs every ve' be used in regular mullet or mackerel Dr. A. J. Learned of Athens, O., Canai street, should tie strictly en hicle driver will be compelled to make fishing. ' and Mr. and Mrs. A. Q. Brooks. forced, is the sontiment ot the mem- the long turn in coming on or off Closed Season for Mullet bers of the city council and Mayor Canal street. Drive to St. Petersburg See. 8That from and after the Zipperer has been instructed to have The signs will be white standards Mr. and Mrs. C. I... Davis, Mr. and Keep to the night" signs made and passage of this act. it shall be un1 , . lawful for any person, persons, firm, Mrs. J. F. Jloke, Mr. and Mrs. Long placed at all street Intersections on placed e\attlv in the _ center of the itreet intersections, where they can or corporation to catch, or to cap- and Jos. Reed left early Sunday Canal street. ture, or to have in their possession, morning in the Davis and Hoke auWith the completion of the cement be plainly seen by every driver, and or ship any of the fish known as mul- omobiles for St. Petersburg. They paving on the business streets and t h e city authorities will see that the let, or any fresh or freshly salted are expected to return to New Smyr- the inclination to fast driving, partic- ordinaiu e which calls for every drivmullet roe, in this state between the today. ularly in turning corners, the danger er to "keep to the riglit" is enfo,eod. 15th day of December of any year Albert Gregory and sister, Miss and the first day of February of the POLES ORDERED REMOVED next succeeding year. The posses- Gregory, left Tuesday morning by au- MARINES GO NORTH tomobile, carrying their camping outFROM HILLSBORO STREET sion of any fresh or freshly salted , ON SPECIAL TRAIN fit, for Tampa and other points on the By an action of the city council at mullet or any fresh or freshly salted A special train bearing the United west coast. Later they will drive to mullet roe by any person or persons, States marines from Key West for the adjourned meeting held WednesWashington and other points of Infirm or corporation, during the closed Norfolk, Va., passed through here at day night this week, the New Smyrna .oCost in the east on the wa to their season shall be prima facie evidence an early hour Sunday morning. A Public Service company is ordered to home at Brooklyn, Ind. of the violation of this law. special train was also run southbound remove Its poles from the street Unlawful to transport Sunday night to bring the East Coast Hong Hlllsboro street around the old "Sec. It shall be unlawful for that any person having any mullet companies of the Florida militia from fort, either setting them In closer to any common carrier, agent or em- on hand at the beginning of the Jacksonville to their home cities. The ll:e property line, or removing them ploye of such common carrier,-to re- losed season shall have the right to companies had just been mustered altogether. ceive for carriage, or permit the car- ship or dispose of the same; pro- out of the regular army service. I riage of any fresh or unsalted, or vided, however, that the time of such Ernest Sallas and family moved Mr. and Mrs. J. Downs arrived Fri-. freshly salted mullet caught during disposal or shipment shall not exThursday to Mayport, and will make " Mhe ctoted *Mon mentioned In the ceed five days after the beginning of day night from Eminence, Ky., to that city their home In future. spend the balance of the season here. foregoing section; provided, however, such closed season."

STATE HEALTH LAX ENFORCEMENT OF LAWS

"KEEP TO THE RIGHT" SIGNS WILL BE PUT AT CANAL STREET INTERSECTIONS

lEWSPAPERr

NEWSPAPER!

NEW SMYRNA NEWS


NEW SMYRNA, VOLU8IA COUNTY, FLORIDA, FRIDAY, MARCH 23,1017. $1.60Yur
TO STATE LAW FAMOUS PASSES FAST BACK. AUTOMOBILE DRIVER THROUGH HERE RUN TO MIAMI ON AND

Volume 4, Number 43

FISHING INDUSTRY IS MULFORO TO TRY TO BIG SAID TO FACE CRISIS LOWER OWN RECORD
AMENDMENTS ARE TO BE OFFERER AT SESSION OF LEGISLATURE TO BE HELD SOON.

SAWFISH CAPTURED NEAR OFFICIALS ELECTED MUCH INTEREST IN HERE BY GILBERT WEBSTER RY FUGLER SYSTEM PROPOSED CHANGE
ANNUAL MEETINGS OF RAIL- NAMES OF MANY CITIZENS SUG> GESTED TO BE MEMBERS OF THE PROPOSED CITY CHARTER BOARD. ROAD, HOTEL AND CAR FERRY COMPANIES _WEEK, ARE HELD THIS

Ralph Mulford. the noted automo The fishing industry ot Florida, The annual meeting of the stockThat much interest is being shown -which is one o! the state's great bile driver, who established world's holders of the Florida East Coast in the proposition to change the form sources of income, is said by those in records on Daytona beadti last April Railway company was held Tuesday of municipal government of the city close touch .with the situation, to be passed through New Smyrna Monda> n St. Augustine and officers for the of New Smyrna, is indicated by the facing a crisis in which adequate pro- morning enroute to Miami and again vear were elected. The only change fact that numerous names have been made was the re-creation of the office suggested for members of the protection' and the preservation of the Wednesday noon on his way back to Industry is balanced against the in- Daytona after the run to Miami. He of comptroller, rbolished on the death posed charter board, which will be roads made by interests which are was driving the same ear with whicli of the late W. II. Chambers and the elected by the voters at the special not far sighted enough to stand for he made the speed records on the election to that re-created office of election called for April 17. better protection of fish in Florida beach and was accompanied by J. D 'lisodore v. Pomar. The Florida One petition has been filed with Parmerlee, district manager for the waters. Sast Coast Hotel company also held the city council asking that th9 The News has been appealed to by Hudson Motor company. ts annual stockholders' meeting and names of J.. J. Birch, T. L. Howell, Recently Lord Gray, from England :lected officers, immediately following D. C. Silvers, W. P. Wilkinson and .a well known winter visitor, who comes to New Smyrna every winter came to Daytona and announced that he railroad company meeting, r'ol- A. M. Yarbrough be placed on the because he likes the fishing in this he proposed to have a try at break owing this meeting the Florida Ea,it official ballot for the charter board 'oast Car Ferry ' company held a election. It is understood that other vicinity, and who spends the greater ing automobile speed records on the leeting and elected officers for the petitions are being circulated and will part of his time while here in nshing, 'amous beach and for a couple of g year. Officers of the several bo filed with tho council later. to ask concerted action on the'part weeks ho has been making short companies elected are as follows: of individuals and trade bodies to rials and getting things in shape to The general sentin'ent among the Esst Coast Railroad Officers have legislation passed that will be lo ^ome real speeding n the beach citizens who arc reeilly in favor of DireMoors for the Florida East the cluing" to the commission-manmore of a protection than the pres- rack. When Mulford, who made the Coast Kailwav comiimiy clioseu are ager form of city government is that ent laws. He submits four amendas follows: W. II. Bcardsley, \Vm. n. a careful f-elsction should be made ments which have been prepared for vorld'b records on the beach last Kenan. Jr.. \V. A. Mount, J. P. Beck- for members of tho charter board and presentation to the legislature, an spring, heard of this, he made up bis with. J E. Ingraham, II \V Parsons, that in making those solctions poliwhich he believes will give the smal mind to come to Daytona and sec fisherman a chance with the largi what he can do in tile line of breakJ. C. Salter. \j. r. Haines. O. W. Pcr- tics and factional feelings should be Lim;. fisherman, and that the provision a; ing his own records. Accompanied decimated in t h e . de.sire to select The.directors then chose the follow- men who are really qualified to preto nets will also give the fish i by his wife and son and an aunt, Mr. Mulford arrived in Daytona last SunniK officers: President. W II. Beard.;- pare a new charter for the city. chance to live. Icy; vice president in charge of op- The preparation of the new charter These amendments have been pro day, and Monday morning he -md Mr. Pamrertee started for a Tim to eration ar.d traine. J.. P. BecHwith; will require a vast amount of work pared by men on the west coast vice president in charge of lands and on the part of the members of the site interested in the preservation o Miami, just to get the Hudson super industrial enterprises. J. E. Ingra- charter hoard and the members ot , the fishing industry, and are as fol six tuned up in good shape for some Giant Sawfish Strung up with Block and Tackle speed trials on the beach. iiam; vice preident. \Vm. U. Kenan, this board should be men who have lows: Tlic above picture shows two of boats were started for this city, and Jr.; vice president, Mrs. Mary Flag- the time to devote to this work. The car is the same one with which Size of Bar and Mesh !ie giant sawfish captured hist week on the way in two of them managec "Sec. 2It shall be" unlawful t'ron ho made the records last year and is y Gilbert D Webster, swung up by to make their escape, tearing loose ler-Bingham; secretary, J. C. Salter; There are many things which should in good shape. It lias been on exhitreasurer. L. 0. Haines. be incorporated in the new chartei* and after September 30, 1917, for an) lock and tackle on the Lj.slcriite, from the net The other four were The executive committee is com- if the best interests of the city of person, persons, firm or corporation bition at the automobile show In At- nd gives a fair idea of t h e size of brm:!4M iu Shryock's dock and were There were many posed of W. 11. Beardsloy, \Vm. R. .\ew Smyrna are really to be taken to catch any fish in any of the sal lanta recently. e big fish. ' j v i < - \ \ o d by hundreds of tourists ant into consideration, and politics, perKenan. J r . and J P Heckwith. waters ot the state of Florida, will people interested in the sight of the Mr. Webster t a u g h t six or thpse ani people as they lay in the sbal The officers appointed are II. S. Jen- sonal feeltims and factional preju- any seine, gill-net, pocket net or any raring car as it went through hern K fish and towed four of them eight lou water. Sawfish have been seet other kind of net of less size than one Monday morning and again Wednes- jiles to the city. The fishermen ran in llic*-? u-jtrrs trcrfuenily, but never nison, assistant secre ary; T. V. Po- dices should be entirely forgotten in. mar, comptroller and assistant treats !hN election. Kvery citizen of New and one-half inch bar, measured fron: day noon. ito a si-hool ot" tin 1 lish lust a^ they c umr UH larpc ones been ircr; \V. A. Dltnint. general counsel. Sm> rna really wants to see the city knot to knot, or a stretched mesh o! ' making the last dra^ of the brpjshl n to the cit> where the\ crw and progress and the new Hotel Company Officers three inches from knot to knot, after ST. PATRICK'S DINNER AT THE OCEAN HOUSE igiit wiih t h e i r n e t - , and the saws [ cuulu lie !>..'cn and examined by ev The election of otiicors for the Flor charter will supply the rules and regbein tarred or shrunk, and the twine f the big sea niohstcr., became HO eryiicdy. All Irish menu. Irish songs and [Handled in the irHs they were un-;'""Mr. Webster had several photo ida Kust ('oust Hotel company result- u l a t i o n ^ for the tuturc growth of the In said nets shall not be Inr'gcr than citv. ,, ed as follows: ( 9-20 cotton and 1S-3 thread flax, and stories, followed by old fashioned [do to extricate thomselvt s. graphs of the fish taken and the Directors: \V. H. Dcardsicy. Wm Tiie election of the charter board it shall be unlawful for any person dances were the principal features Towing the nets and the li.sh Ih above is one of the pi( lures. R. Kenan. Jr., \V. A. Biouut, J. E. In- and the preparation of the new clu.rpersons, firm or corporation to have :>f the St. Patrick's day dinner and ter has iH'thing to do with tile selccgraham. L C. Haities in his, their or its possession an> social time which followed at the Odk-eis: President, \V. H. Beards tinn of the men who will later be seine, gill-net, pocket net or other Ocoan House last Saturday evening. \v; vice president, \Vm. H. Kenan. chosen to administer the affairs of Judge Hayes acted as toastmaster net than as herein provided . Jr.; secretary, J. C. Salter; Treas- the city. Tho 'fundamental principles Violation of the provisions of this at the dinner and called upon a nuni of the c i t v ' s government will be set irer. L. C. [tallies. section shall be punished as follows: ier of the dinner guests to tell Irish Officers appointed: II. S. Jenison. forth in the charterthe election of By a fine of not less than $200 nor stories or sing Irish songs. The issistant secretary; C. R. Mackoy. the city otHcerK will come later, and more than ?(!00, or by imprisonment longs and stories wero_ given between issistant treasurer; W. A. Blpunt, can be taken care of when the timo in the penitentiary not less than six lie courses and helped to make the comes. general counsel. months nor more than one year. One- (inner a very pleasant affair. A numTo Discuss Commission Form Car Ferry Company half of the fine to go to tho person ber of the old fashioned dances were Dr. M. E. Heck, assistant state regulation'! and he judged that little The next mooting of the Men's The directors ot tho Florida East supplying information sufficient, tor ntrodueod in tho dancing which fol health officer, was in the city Mon- otYor* is heinjx made to keep the or 'oast Car Ferry company elected are Fellowship club will be held npxt lowed the dinner. conviction." day and spent several hours making dinances enforced. Length of Nets He requested the News to call the is follows: W. II. Beardsley, Win. U. Thursday night in the Trinity Metha hurried sanitary inspection of the attention of the people to the fact Cenan, Jr., J. P. Beckwith, R. W. Par- odist church and a very cordial in"Sec. 3It shall be unlawful for MR. AND MRS. J. T. BOLES vitation is extended to the memENTERTAIN FRIENDS city, and left on the afternoon train mosquito t i m e is approaching and jns. any seine, gill-net, haul-net or any Officers: W. H. Beardsley, presi- bers of the Men's club, as well as other kind of nets of a greater length Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Boles of Pitts- for Follsmere, where he was sched that special attention should be given than 380 yards, to be set, fished or liurg entertained a party of friends uled to give a talk before tho im-' to keeping tanks well covered and dent; Wm. R. Kenan, Jr., vice presi- every man and woman in the city, used in the salt waters of this state, Wednesday evening of last week at provement association in the evening I that no stagnant water should be per lent; J. P. Beckwith, vice president; to attend this meeting. The subject for discussion will be a continuation or for any seine, gill-net, stop-net, their winter home on Murray fit. The Dr. Heck said that he found a lax vnitted to stand on any premises, . C. Salter. secretary; L. C. Haines. haul-net or any other kind of net to mpromptu program was much enjoy- enforcement of .the sanitary ordin-, Property owners should keep their reasurer; J. S. Jenison, assistant of the subject of changing to the combe attached together in any manner, ed and consisted of piano selections ances in this city and that he was premises well cleaned of trash and iccretary; T. C. McNamce, assistant mission-manager form of government, N and everybody will be given an opmaking a length of more than 350 by Mrs. Boles and the following read sorry to learn that the services of the rubbish, and a little effort on the ;ecretary. Appointed officers: W. A. Blount, portunlty to discuss the subject from yards, or for any. seine, gill-net, stop- ngs by Miss Anna Wehrhcim: "Maud sanitary inspector had been dis- part of all citizens will assist greatly net, haul-net or any other kind of net ,t the Movies," "Caleb's Courtship." pensed with. In several instances ' in keeping down the breeding of mos- genera! counsel; R. W. Parsons, man- his point of view. In order to hove a comprehensive to be fastened by stokes or other- and "Major Guff on Suffrage." Mr. the assistant state health officer said i quitoes'and keeping up the sanitary !gcr; T. V. Pomar, comptroller and ssistant trcasuier; Carroll II. Smith, debate on the subject Dr. W. C. wise with ends nearer each other Cing contributed to the mirth of the he found violations of the city health i regulations of the city. Chowning has consented to discuss onsulting engineer. than 100 yards for the purpose of iccasion with several humorous the subject from the standpoint of making a stretch or length of jmore torics. A social hour was enjoyed continuing the city government as It COUNTY MEDICAL SOCIETY than 350 yards, to be used (or the pur- and an appetizing lunch of sandK and II. T.'. Bonnet has consented to pose of catching or-taking fish from wiches, cake and. lemonade was servMEETS AT PORT ORANGE discuss the subject from the standrivers, creeks, bays, bayous, lagoons, d. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. The Volusia County Medical so- point of the advantages to be gained sounds, inlets or other salt waters on tohn llurd of Columbia City, Ind., iety met last Thursday night at from a change to the commissionf the coast of the state of Florida Mr. and Mrs. John Tolbert and Mr. ort Orange as guests of Dr. Mas- manager form. and when being so used within half ml Mrs. A. T. Tolbert of Potomac, ers. A symposium on nervous prosA cordial invitation is also extenda mile of the shore the depth of net II., Louis Wchrheim and Miss Anna That the traffic ordinances/of the | of collisions and accidents at some ration (neuresthenia) and a talk by ed to the ladies to attend this meetshall not exceed fifty meshes; pro- Vehrheim of Sparta, III., Mr and Mrs. he president of the state society vided, however, that a net or nets of ieorge King of Stuebenville, O., Mr. city, at least so far as rrdm ing i of the corners is increased and with ^imposed a part of the program. Dr. ing. a length of more than 350 yards may nil Mrs. Perry Umpleby of Canton. danger of accidents at corners on the placing oi these signs every ve- tasters entertained his guests with AVERTING OF STRIKE be used in regular mullet or mackerel )., Dr. A. J. Learned of Athens, O., Canai street, should t>e strictly en hicle driver will be compelled to make six-course dinner. Those present BRINGS SATISFACTION fishing. ml Mr. and Mrs. A. Q. Brooks. forced, is the sentiment ot tho mem- the long turn in coming on or off ett greatly repaid for going, although The settlement of the threatened Closed Season for Mullet bers of the city council and Mayor Canal street. his Is the busy season of the year. railroad strike the first of this week Sec. 8That from and after the Drive to St. Petersburg Zipperer has been instructed to have The signs will be white standards 1r. J. J. Kindred of New York, and brought general satisfaction lo the passage of this act. it shall be unMr. and Mrs. C. I... Davis, Mr. and "Keep to the Right" signs made and lienist of reputation, discussed the lawful for any person, persons, firm, Mrs. J. F. HoW, Mr. and Mrs. Long placed at all street intersections on plated exactly in the center of the tibject in detail. Dr. Huntington of people of New Smyrna and vicinity, or corporation to catch, or to cap- nd Jos. Reed left early Sunday Canal street. street intersections, where they can he II. S navy, was also a guest ot to both employes of the railroad and ture, or to have in their possession, morning in tho Davis and Hoke auWith the completion of the cemont be plainly seen by every driver, and onor. Resolutions of regret were others. Granting of the eight-hour deor ship any of the fish known as mul- omobiles for St. Petersburg. They paving on the business streets and the city authorities will see that the ffered on the loss by death of an old mand of the railroad men was parties let, or any fresh or freshly salted re expected to return to New Smyr- the inclination to fast driving, partic- ordinaiu e which calls for every driv- lember of the society. Dr. Stephens ularly pleasing to them, as it settles mullet roe, In this state between the ia today. ularly in turning corners, the danger ,-r to "keep to the rigUt" is enfOiCed. f Del-and. Dr. K. W. Warren of the uncertainty of whether the pro15th day of December of any year 'alatka described how the charlatans visions of tho Adamson law were to Albert Gregory and sister, Miss and the first day of February of the re being caught in the net of jus- be put into effect. Gregory, left Tuesday morning by auRailroad men figure that the new next succeeding year. The possesPOLES ORDERED REMOVED ice and how many, having obtained omohllc, carrying their camping out- MARINES GO NORTH sion of any fresh or freshly salted FROM HILLSBORO STREET censes to practice under fraud are eight-hour law means a 20 per cent , ON SPECIAL TRAIN it, for Tampa and other points on tho mullet or any fresh or freshly salted By an action of the city council at cing compelled to leave the state, increase in the operating payrolls of A special train bearing the United mullet roe by any person or persons, rest coast. Later they will drive to States marines from Key West for the adjourned meeting held Wednes- ome of those present were Dr. J. the train, engine and yard employes. Washington and other points of Infirm or corporation, during the closed Norfolk, Va., passed through here at day night this week, the New Smyrna lake White, Qrmond; Dr. Dean T. H means that the men whq work ten season shall be prima facie evidence eCest In the east on the way to their an early hour Sunday morning. A Public Service company Is ordered to mlth, Daytona; Dr. W. C. Chownlng, hours hereafter will get a 25 percent ome at Brooklyn, Ind. of the violation of this law. special train was also run southbound remove Us poles from the street New Smyrna; Drs. Reeves and L. C. Increase over their old pay and for Unlawful to transport Sunday night to bring the East Coast Hong Hlllsboro street around the old ngraro, DeUtnd; Dr. F. J. Walter, eight hours work will get the same "Sec. It shall be unlawful for hat any person having any mullet companies of the Florida militia from f.irt, either setting them In closer to Jaytona; Dr. John MacDalrmld, De- pay as they formerly received for ten * any common carrier, agent or em- n hand at the beginning of the Jacksonville to their home cities. The il:e property line, or removing them >and; Dr. Hunt and Dr. Holland of hours work. ploye ot such common carrier,-to re- losed season shall have the right to companies had just been mustered altogether. ilalno; Dr. DuBois of Port Orange. Newton Batcher, who has been ceive for carriage, or permit the car- hip or dispose of the same; pro- out of the regular army service. here for several weeks visiting hi* i rtage of any fresh or unsalted, or Ided, however, that the time of such Ernest Sallas and family moved Mr. and Mre. E. W. Hopkins will relative*, Mr. and Mrs. Coleman Mr. and Mrs. J. Downs arrived Fri*.. freshly salted mullet canght during Ispoaal or shipment shall not exThursday to Mayport, and will make eave Monday (or their northern Swlnford, left Wednesday for hla * the etoted season mentioned In the eed five days after the beginning of day night from Eminence, Ky., to ome In Commonwealth, Wisconsin. home In Torre Haute, Ind. spend the balance of the season here. that city their home In future. foreiotn* section; provided, however, uch closed season."

STATE HEALTH LAX ENFORCEMENT OF LAWS

"KEEP TO THE RIGHT" SIGNS WILL BE PUT AT CANAL STREET INTERSECTIONS

NWSPAPEfllCHlVE _

?APERr

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