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Page 4 TMf gfV WMT CrntCN rg 9nt Cttlmt • KtttMS.'S£2 fiBgSKSs 0"f Deity Miwwf to Key Wm m< Mmtm County i. P. AftTMAM H " liOtMAW 0. AMTMAM |ulhw „ - l-,~ UMmvdVut Weal IWT- Iwrt OaaakUttac TMWtOWI Mm mi i su] §*!s^y.** ".Tfcg Aaeerieted Pr*M It fWd) ir?7 ■% ,*??■ f!* rty / ld ! >ctloa - <rf •• * dispatch#* emitted to it i Oln 11 t, * iaU,a *“* *•**• •* *** **•* •** M—bf fhtKa Press AwtrtiUtt ito AmttoH DsUmw ef Florida **y *▼■), tPr woob; yewr, fuse, ADVERTISING BATH MAPI PQfN ON APPLICATION noßi^WiCEss A* S OCJATION IMPtOVIMINTf SOS (CSV WCST AOvoCATfD •V TNI CITtZIN L More Hotels sad Apartments. ♦6,600,000,000 FOREIGN AID The final foreign aid appropriation, pasted in the laat hours of the Ist pension of the 83rd Conrrww, *ave Dwifht D. Eisenhower the authority to spend over six and a half billion dollars for foreifn niliiar) and economic aid in the next year. While this was about $900,000,000 less than the President called for, as a minimum, it was nevertheless a victory for the new President and his executive branch. It was also somethinf of a surprise to some who had fa vored a complete halt in the foreifn aid program. There Is no denying, however, that the temper In both the House and Senate is for an early end to the foreign aid program. It might be that this appropriation is the laat one in which many billions of new appro pria ,Halts will be included. And even this year's appropriation included over two billions in carry-over funds. Only $4,- 131,507,000 of the total waa newly-authorised money. Paaaage of the big foreign aid appropriation is sig nificant, because such an event appeared so unlikely just three months ago. It to proof once again that Congress, confronted with the facta of the world situation, actual!) believes foreign aid a good Investment. Thoee who think of the aid program as a gift pro gram. or a one-way arrangement, should consider the President's plea in behalf of this program. The money we spend la not merely thrown away. It Is invested in a cause. With It we hope to build snd maintain strong alliss. With this aid we can show many backward peo ples the road to a better life, and higher living standards, as the choke over Ccmmunism. How many times have you been to church this sum mer? One reason people are so easy to fool is tha* fjw of tfiem realty seek out the truth. Not many hard-headed business men bother th m selves with the great purpose of human Ufe. It is amasing how much time two people t* ste trying to shift one person’s work between thrr The reason for the waywardness of many cocktail party contestants la their inability to stand up under the •train of contant moronic conversation and giggles. 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Deatli V.i l .iS .isiest On Holiday Roads By HAL BOYLI ! NEW YORK <J-Death gut up early this morning ' Most of Amenta slept Ist* at the start of this long Labor Day weekend rest from Its usual work, but death promptly went on over time. if an ex. a row , a horse conk! declare Meet! a holiday to show that hie holds • dignity and re jtrard beyond the sweat of toil, it would browse sad dream to pure animal wonder, apd rise refreshed on the morrow. And even death •might take most of the day off, too. But when mankind has • holiday 'for any reason, death ran know no idleness. He must tabulate a great human self daughter. And so it was death rose early today. . . He hsd a lot to do In the three busy days ahead ... He had many a mortal rendezvous to keep on highway and byway, in homes and saloons, on pond and pavement, on mountain cliff and summer pity ground „ For death bad a double duty. .. He hsd not only hu usual job to do. the escorting of the sick snd old sad life-worn across his pale frontier...He had bis extra holiday clients to attend to. .the lost* bat talion ef the needless dead.. On such days death, the fair FOR CRYIN’ OUT LOUD By CHAPLf* O MBNDO2A Hurricane Carol It starting to rah her skirts somewhere east u.' Guadeloupe in the French Antilles. At this ststoe, she is merely pu;Ma on her make up before site *:>vs m the warpath. And I do not kov If ‘this particular lady burr-ca- * has suffered any slights at the han*s of a rapacious male typhoon. If to j’bett hath no fury. . anj we might find ourselves right smack hi the middle of her furious fan dango. If this should happen to he the case, the residents V IVn clans and Pomciana Exl-osiov wont have to worry any V’-'r about the rent increases star October Ist. there hut wont be envthmg left to rent' If Hurricane Carol should head our wsy to vent her wrath oa our innocent brow*, you may be sure that the Navy *ifl evacuate all 'Navy personnel from Pofcsctan* The Navy wouldn't even risk a foal in Uus forsaken area, i Bid 1 know of at least one brave soul who might dare Card's tan trums to tbs dubious shelter of fered by the Pome ts as duett tags ?• is laf rn/% iraitti w do yfcrffti the rutt increase*. This incredible person must took t toe world through nee-colored classes. On his purported vaut to Key W§*t sad on hit inspection ft) tour of the Pateetoaa area, he waa struck bv I the hratn storm (as be lasiad NBramto bis rase raletaf g' * * sad sucb asagni'ice-t. *• ***• r tag, hurricane-dcf t-t. well-knot .helling stiwctum should be yi**e s vent increase. So having de: 'ti, without having eansu!*#! any of th local Housing Autteetiy members (th be burned back to his sir conditioned office to Atlanta and with a mat flourish af his pen he stoned aa order to torreasa tot rent el somethin* wonderful be thought he bad seta wbAa wearing roee colored glasses. * Tbit character should wke up! * la (act, tot ctiaras of Key best weather friend of the foolish, In tate turn members Into the D. O. A. dub. .This club has no dues and no life memberships . I It is mads up f unseeing people who art brought to hospitals and tagged with a card bearing three initials that stand for "dead on arrival. * Yea. death got p early this morning For in pest three days, there are hundreds of Americans be must meet and wave to their doom, a D. O A. tag... The po tential new membership crop was targe sad the laad was wide. .And death is conscientious . He didn't want anyone who earned that tag to miss tt... Wherever Americans set out to celebrate the holiday, this skeletal comrade of the stupid and care less went right along for the fun. And here is what he will say, or perhaps is saying even now: In tee thousand cars rounding tea thousand curves he whispers to the driver, “Go on and pass ithat csr ahead ef yen... How de yot know there is another csr coming around the beod* .Never mind what your wife is saying. '* And on some of the curves an other car dees come around the bend... There is a scream snd a crash of metal Death says to the silmtt husband, "80 long sticker *' Should wake up. What we nted to Xey West right now is • good old-; fashion Town Hall. A place where aa aroused cittornry eaa meet at less! twice*-month to abr their r Tvaaeee. This la • moat import iast democratic process. The cMi tens themselves can put • quick end to many of the unhealthy can- 1 dttoons that exist to Key West Uv day. We eaa form committees to Investigate anything that might have a slight odor about it. Public opinion la a terrible wet non. The eitisena of Key Weal (tout ave to take say stuff sad non terse from anyone. Our public of -1 Isis can hold public office only when and if they serve us aa our irm rvpreseataties. We have elect ’d or appointed them to office foe that note purpose and that alone, tf any of these officials are using toe power we have invested to them far self ngrandimnsut they should be banted out of office with out fanfhro. The people of Key West aren't dumb. They know what to goto* on la Key West. The pur pose of a Town Hall to for tbs peo ple to get together to bring these things out Into the open. In mm there to strength. No individual cit torn eaa acromptiah much by hie lonesome aotf. He seeds the help of bto neighbors Once toe eitisras start meeting regularly at some ap pointed place, they can accomplish - MUR Tmtol Hall can be the spring b 5 rJ to a gr.'Usr, bettor, Meaner * ey Wes*. If there are thieves Mid anr'dre's to onr midst, we should rret to~m out If there are pub lic officials who have nothing more to do than work crossword putties 'B day tong, we should throw them off the public payroll If we know of political should there is much to b* d** to • aroused estooury and Tees Hall to one method by whkh much caa to aceompttobnd Let us deceive our tons aa toaguri L And ssys to the silent wife, "Dear you'll never get to marry another fool.'* . . . Then he walks lover to the silent, huddled driver of the second csr snd ssys. "Pal. I know you dki.i t want to join our organisation. But 1 am only taking memberships, snd this other guy nominated you . .And now you belong..** Or death puts his arm around a teen-age high school driver snd says, "Faster, kid. faster ...Bey. you’re s real hot rod ...Sure you cm see clear to the moonlight..! See hew close you esa com# to. that bridge " ... A moment later) toe bo>’s ribs art in Ms lungs, blend drowns his whimpers* and death togs him and ssys. “You know. 1 almost thought you’d makei 8.. Weil even counting the Vwn oral costs. I meed your folks most of the 16.800 they'd put sway lor iyour college education * ; So death will move at fl cease less pace this Saturday, Sunday,’ snd Monday, playing a deadly! game of tag across all America with the holiday risk takers and their victims .And the foolish...] And the unwary. Wherever be pauses an ambulance will halt, pick up a still burden snd race with it to a hospital where it will get the epitaph—D. O. A.—"dead ( en arrival.’* Peoples Forum ▼We CHUM I ww> lw* •# Ik* nM m IU eea< 1 **. m*i il* (Site* ****> tk . *Wkl *• SHW M* e*Wl see enaaMeeuu n*i*S. Tk* m** *k*l4 *e j *lt mm 4 nsHm Mm NMteee So j saa wwrUs MHI wets# en one US* j mi ik* m*t Mil. *WMl*** et 1 Ik* Wrtl*f SMI nemsepawy She JHU** **4 IH U puMtobeU on- STATfMCNT CLARIPIIO Editor The Citiaear My letter published in the Peo ple s Forum la the Key West L'tti aea Tvesday night relative to the* collection af tolls did not convey the thought intended. What I desire to convey It this: The c >Uaction of toils at the Big Pine Tott <• at*, in my opinion, hurts the average Key West bus toeas man. and prevents him from getting his rightfel share of the aB year round and partktdady winter vtiitors who make Marathon their final stopping off place All visi tors entering the Overseas High way pay a toll at the North Lower M a tecum be Gate. By remaining to Marathon, and not venturteg south f the Big Pine Tall Gate they do not have to pay an additional toll when leaving the confines af the Overseas Highway. Hewsvm, nv af theta vaitor* drive on to Key West they are penalised as they must pay aa additional tott when they return This tott to cal ieeted at the Big Tine Tott Gate from all parties travelling North except bona fide Monroe County If. became of Bond banes, etc. tolls cannot now to removed, why penalise Key B oat busumaanm* by euOecttog aa outbound toll at Big Pin* Key Gate. Why not collect all tolls, to sad out, at the far aorthari gate and thus place Waal on aa equality with Marathon* The happy aoiotioa la the aboUtto* af ail lolls. But If not possible now. why not reduce tolls to tl to per ear regardfesa of the nuushse ef ortvwsata. all to 1 !* to be coßerted at the Lower Mstecwmbe Gala But batter still to cent* par car ai 6h Mutin'stt&U ; * By Tarry Adler . ■K. I W.6^61 * Chapter !1 ELLEK S #j widened as die continued Per itory "Whet Dr. Pray mid me that night was a story of one of the Shhiest low down tricks ever perpetrated by a human being It all mmrn berk to what happ*r,#<t tong tune sea about tOenty yvetw aSO, when Dr. Bray was a high school chemistry teacher in Memphis His rest name, he told me, was David Brooks He hod b*m mar rwd foe a few rears and they had a son. about a year old at that time WeU. both the boy sad hu wife had been very ill and they Just couldn't sea thetr was to paying all their debts Dr Bray ir |ir<ifc*, was desperate, and Anally he hit upon a scheme to make some estra money. “He rtggad up a *ull in the laboratory and Spent evening* and weekends distilling alcohol It was during Prohibit hh *nd so he had no trouble selhnc the stuff to some of the (oral politicians." She snorted contemptuously. “Shortly afterward." she went an. "be found nut that the poli ticians in turn were handing the stuff oeer to some of the apeak eastoe which were doing a flour ishing business with high school students. Bray drew the line at that And that's just what he told the politicians who were getting the alcohol front him. “The neat day there was a po lks raid on his laboratory Bray wm convicted and spent seven Br* in the penitentiary, at venwortb 1 think it waa. In the meantime hie son died, and I guess Mrs. Bray almost died. too. But she pulled through. “Well, while he was in prison Bray took correspondence courses so that he had a pretty good background ia Biology by the time he was Anally paroled. He decided that if he could get a Job In aome university he and Mrs Bray could lead the quiet but se cure lives they so desperately wanted. He changed his name and came here as a graduate student on an aesutantihip Today's Business Mirror By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK UP—Tha housewife who thought falling wheat prices on the Chicago Board of Trade might load to cheaper bread at the grocery may hs startled next week. Some brands of bread will eostj • cent a loaf mere after Labor Day. In a few cities too pries al ready baa risen. Bakers say that's because flour costs them mere than a year ago. Lard costs them more than at any time previously and baking and trucking the bread costa more. Pictures of wheat surpluses over flowing storage bins and being left on the ground led many to expect a drop in the cost of flour ami bread. i Purchasing agents to toe baking industry, however, say they pay g| cents more than last yesr for • hundred pound sack of the kind of flour used to bread baking Bakers of bread prefer flour from hard rod winter wheat. This year’s crop of tost variety wss only 70 per rent ef the slot of the 1062 crop to contrast to the entire wheat crop, which foil into the bumper class again this year Formers growing hard red win ter wheat, moreover, are aceu* turned to using u vernment leans, mostly have adequate storage fa ditties, and so could put much ef thetr IDS production under gov ernmeat price tupports. Millers 'say there was little or an distress selling of this type of wheat and that the going price for it now is above the support level. | Some of the woeat you sew p*r lured to pies oa the ground was at the soft red winter wheat van ] ety. Tha year's crop of that va riety, millers say. rao well ahead of last year. Bakers of cakes and pastries use flour from this soft red winter wheat, bread industry men aay. Thar* is plenty of wheat, of course, for the outline and baking i industries But millers also stress I that their own operating coots have . (men rising Freight rates are - higher, find the teg corn crop to . crossing them up. .1 That's because millers count nn dfflgitung milling mats to some i extent by the sal* ef aoimal toed , Titos comes from to* part of the , wheat which ain't made into flour I Thu year, however, they say this . form of animal feed is up against to* competition ef a btg supp> of | coca. f So toe demand from stock feed . ers tee the millers’ product a tern and prices are a round S mats a , bag towar than last year W ith in come from tost aouiee rut, millers each way, would produce a re marks We peychologiral effort oo all toumts and w* would sen • _ -* ——• *. fo-h toksmumnnw mi# /vitt Hoft BWiCrißit mrrfisf m our wn f town cars. The collection of tolls at Big Pm* Kay hurts Key West., The number af cart entering the Overseas Highway last year waa approximately JJOO. of which I im told about ItS.ow earns to; thrrHKb to Key West Doubtless the collection af outbound tails at Big Pm* kept many af them BIM w Bum coming en to KSy We* Comdr. lay W. Bryna. Retired Seps L 11SK “He must Have been a pretty good graduate student, because when he gut his doctor's degree he ws. offered e tob as instructor here He gradually worked turn •el! up until Anally, as you al reefy ton* Ave years ago he was Appointed head of the de partr >ent. Things were really rosy for the Bray* then And Jim my their second boy. was ax years old and growing up la be a uakv kid. “And then, out of the clear sky. the new aaauctale proftwaor. Huh bard, dropped his bumbaheU.* -nROF'VSSOII Hubbard.* ri ■ continued, “came into Brav's ofßre just about two weeks after he got here and told Bray Hath that he. Hubbard wanted to be head of the deportment, He had with him clippings of the Townee see newspapers of twenty years ago. with pictures of Dr. Brav and the whole <•; v of Bray* ronvtrtHA and prison sentence. He threatened to give the story to the newspaper* here and re hash the whole affair if Brsv didn't resign snd recommend him lor the job “Do you think this universttv would keep him if the story came out* Do you think any university would t ike him? No, they would not' And Bray realized that I*. sides, he was thtnktng of the ef feet it would have on his wife and especially on Jimmy You see, Jimmy didn't know anything of the old story. And an Dr. Bray did the best thing and kept quiet and resigned. And Dr Hubbard became chairman of the depart ment '' She stopped speaking ami stared at the sugar bowl “But that waa Ave years ago What happened a week ago Sun day night?" She routed herself. “Oh, yes W. U, jimmy Has de veloped s bad couch this winter and his doctor told Dr Bray he ought to take him to a milder climate Bray had an offer from Aritona State w hich would have bom an ideal {dace for them. I “Dr. Hubbard waa very depend- MI their flour price margins ore narrowed. The bakers have some more ex plana lions few prut pressure on bread, including even a five to] sis per rent rise over last year in the price of the paper they The World Today •y JAMIS MARLOBP WASHINGTON UR-T. (otomon Andrews, the trieraal revenue commissioner, figund when Preti j dent Eisenhower appointed him last winter It woulJ take him two years to reorganise the revenue service. He guesses now H will take s' tittle longer. When he's finished. ]< Andrews sags, be will toil his boss, r Secretory of the Treasury Hum phrey Then tf urn Eisenhower ad ] ministration wants him to stay be it decide about staying. I But to say a that if anyone Inside the admteistraimo attempts to force him tots favoring anyone, an individual or a corporation, nn one) UI see him for the dust as be gats out the dour He expects ao s*yk pressure he ssys. sod adds that be explained j fully his plans to Humphrey and received (be secretary's full ap-J proval. Andrew* says be to work tag in two directions: 1 Ha's decentrsusn* putting more authority la the field offices to make decuuons oa tea settle-j menu, less w W*shmtonj and ha s putting more manpower into checking ts* returns, leas in other lunda of job*. So far, Andrews aays, be has received wide jyprwval tor the steps be has token from the public and members of Congress. But be concedes the reaction to ha reor sanitation has mi* been aaaai- I The main complaint against him he say*, has com* from • few “Washington tax peactitionnrs ’ which, in effect, means tax tow j lit some members ef Cmgreas, those oo committee* dealing with tax and finance matter*, are wal ing for Andrew* to give them a fuller eaptonatMio ef what he to J*fcme at them to*l Andrews sad Humphrey rusted the iwnrfaatfs ttoo without giving them tome for consultation ton great could, of course. paM lagtslslmn at ita am sum next )*ar undoing Andrewt rcwrgaiuxatmn. or pw*t *• ' Andrew* Wmstef mmimito'S ertt irtsm from the CsfMsr. eiprotsiog toe view tost whan ha aito dawn w£h some ef the lawmaker* this month any dtfferrnee* between them Witt be ironed ou easily The Washington ts* 'prsetiton ers." be says, have aa understand able Mkteeeet m seeing to* revoim* service more mntr*ii*i to Wash iarvm Tki id Hit t# -tut iikdi pSvmutoy wbe* an mdivtonal or con-r.tio.ltod ****** tot government, tavolvmg a ta m money tba first dtp U>Q*H sc! tlemeot waa totem m toe field of fire nearest the tsxpayer 1 gat the ittnr — warn—tost tot rr^jl a*. h K ent on Di Bray for the actual running of the department, end as kmc as Bray stayed and kept S uiet he knew Be was safe lhn lubbard But thia thing with jimmy was serious, so he derided to have a fftak talk with Hub hard. which he did. And Dr. Hubbard ret used ptwnt-blank. He told Dr. Brav that if Bray left he would make sure that Bray would never get another job in s vel vet ity. And that wad diet “This hap tied fust before tha Sunday night when 1 surprised Dr. B ay in Hubbard's office. He tnought Hubbard might be hasp mg the clippings somewhere in the fUos and he waa trying to get them. Hrr weeds brought lift thoughts hack with a lark. The gne thing he had learned was that Bray tumself had an excel lent motive for murdering Hub bard. But then, whe had mur dered Bray? Or wae K murder after IT From what Dim had told him he had gotten some in sight into Bray’s character He micht well nove murdered Hub hard himself and then committed ojucide Imperially, argued Raff te himself, if Bray had thought the hospital was investigating Hub bard’s death And Bray would have arranged the suicide te leek like murder That wy it would seem unlikely that Bray himself had murdered Hubbard, and Bray's family could beneAt from his insurance. Yes. the more he thought about it the more pteuM* bie this theory teemed. “Incmentally." he asked, *4s you know which insurance com pany Bray did business with?* She shook her head. He frowned. “None? Are yen sure’* "Absolutely none. I'm sure of that. You see, they were always afraid someone would investigate his previous life.* And there, thought Raff, fee* my nice theory knocked straight out the window. “Come on," he said. “We've got te get beck te your oflka.' its he sselieosO wrap around the loom. The? stress that labor ace mints for a substantial pari ef the tori ef o loaf. And sons companies say they've granted two pay rises store the lari bread pr** kike aome li months ago. toxpayer should get • refund or pay more than be thought ha should have to-wes not final. The case then time to Washington foe review by a special group to tea main office here, catted the post audit division ho tar aa the bureau was eon earned this group's decision, re versing or upholding the field of fice. was final Andrews says B was whoa a case came here from the field fat j final review that the Washington [tax specialiat, hired by the tax payer to look after his totertata, usually got to aa the caaa. | Andrews abolished this poet-audM division In most instances now ton field offices util make the final Washington tax lawyers say mm plaints about Andrews’ roar* geniaatioa come not only from them but from Ux lawyers, sod some accountants, around toe country and that their cancans to centered on what they say they fear will be a lack of untforatoty io administering the Ux law. I One ef theee lawyers impbaiiaad there waa uniformity when there was a central supervision point j like the post audit group to son that the various field offices gave thr same kind uf dectosaua. J Now this lawyer saya rsvgnna employes m nine different regions will be making tha find dsrtoians. Andrews eeys there never woe ate solute uniformity bm that to ante j goat there will he noon under Ml pi an m to sev the asttoual head* quarters af the revenue servtos to incapable of keeping control over the service. Betides, Andrews says, tha rul ing* which set the pattern far dte r'<m will bv made m Washington. The tame tea lawyer mentioned above ssys ha ih.ok* tea much dte centralisation may food to crook edness ta the field offices which new wtti bv under toss direct note tral (mm Washington Andrew** comment oa that to this: "Tha field to forng to bg only as honest as the headquarters and wt her* m Washington certsbdy : don’t intend to sab out the tote i payers and the idmiototratton." STINOOtAPMIC RIPBIiALt $ OKLAHOMA CITY t*-A Capital stenographer, letting off steam In ( sa elevator, waa quit* imbsppy ever the fact the Legtotatuvo bad ratoad some salaries of state eta . ptoyes but skipped bar, li V*A you lobby to* iegtoLiMW?* 4 f she was stood. . No ** Mm tnappod, "but the . next time f walk down too eurrl dor and on* af them pinches me k la goang to ewat tom to tee eye."