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The Palm Beach Post from West Palm Beach, Florida • Page 10
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The Palm Beach Post from West Palm Beach, Florida • Page 10

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West Palm Beach, Florida
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10
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Ten THE PALM BEACH POST Monday Morning, January 3, 1938 TODAY'S RADIO PROGRAMS sity, speaker. WABC Radio Theater, "These Three." with Barbara Stanwyck, Errol Flynn and others. orchestra. All Girl orchestra. WOR-Irwin'g Musical Cartoons.

A Lady. -Wayne King orchestra. WOR-Famous Jury Trials. Prison -Warden Lewis E. Lawes.

New World." for Moderns. WJZ- -National Radio Forum. Concert orch. Family." WLW-Reggie Childs orch. WABC-Sammy Keye orch.

-Freddie Martin's Ritz Carlton Hotel Orch. 11:05 WJ7-Jerry Blaine's Park Central Hotel. McCoy's Orch. WIZ Jubilee Choir. Penn Hotel orch.

WABC-George Hamilton orch. Hines orchestra. WJZ--Lang Thompson orch. Stabile orch, River. NBC- (RED) NETWORK SOUTH wrYa wptt wwne wave wjaz wsun wiod wam wine web wapl widx wsmb kvoo wky wfaa wbap kpro woal ktbs kths wtar wis wesc wfbe kark kgnc.

CBS- WABO NETWORK DIXIE wsta wbre wqam. wdod kira wrec wlac wwl wtoc krid ktrh ktsa waco koma wdbo wbt wdae wbig wdjb wwva wmbg waj. wala ktul kgko 1 coa wine wnox kwkh know wmmm wino weha wpar wanaz wooc. NBC-WIZ (BLUE) NETWORK SOUTH wrva wptf wwnc wis wjax wfla-wsun wiod w.m wmo web wapi wjdx wamb kroo wfaa wbap kpre wtar woal ktba kth: wsoc wave wcac wfbe kark kgne. NEW YORK, Jan.

WABC-Pick and -Pat, comedy: Edward Rocker, baritone. opening session of the seventy-eighth WOR-Gray orchestra. Congress will be broadcast to the na- Hotel." tion at 1 p. m. Monday over WEAF.

varieties. WJZ-NBC, WABC-CBS and McGee and Molly NBC, WOR-Gabriel Heatter, WOR-Mutual. President Roosevelt's tor. message will be carried in full over Orchestra. me WJZ-NBC and WABC-CBS.

Dr. Fritz Neil Reiner, Carothers, guest Lehigh conductor. Univer- quartet. WABC-Fiddlers' Fancy. -Children's Stories.

Meeder, organ. -Good Morning Melodies. You Remember? -Fred Feibel, organ. and Lanny. Parade.

WJZ-Breakfast Club. -Women and news. to Person, homely philosophy and songs. Moods. Children." WJ2 Radio News.

Wiggs of the bage Patch." Kitty Kelly." -Margo of Castlewood. and Marge." Other Wife." -Aunt Jemima program. Plain Bill." WABC--Tony Wons. Regan, attorney. Woman in White." WJZ -Kitchen Cavalcade.

-Ruth Carhart, songs. Harum." -Mary Marlin. WABC- -Jack and Paul, songs. "Backstage Wife." Young's Family. WABC-Carol Kennedy's Romance.

to be Charming." and Sade." Sister." life stories. WJZ-Edward MacHugh. WEAF-ralk on Interior Decoration. AFTERNOON MORNING Alone." WJZ -Opening of 78th Congress. WABC-Mary M.

McBride, talk. -The O'Neills, sketch. WJZ-Jackie Heller, tenor. WABC--Edwin C. Hill.

Trent's Dallas." WJ7-National Farm and Home Hour. 12:45 -Thompson orch. Gal, Sunday." and Bob." WEAF -Markets and Weather. and Betty, vocal quartet. Sue Blake." 1:30 -WEAK -Words and Music.

1:45 Jack and Loretta, Wife." songs. Harding's orchestra. WABC-Kathryn Cravens, news. Band. 2:45 of the West." Pierce, soprano.

WJZ-Rochester Civic Orch. Concert. Peabody." Music. 4:00 "Lorenzo Jonea." WIZ -Club Matinee. WABC-Between the Bookends.

4:15 Marlin." WABC- Kelsey orch. "Pernicious Paternalism," talk. 4:45 WABC-Dr. Allen Dafoe. the Moon.

WEAR Dick Tracy, children's sketch. 2 -Neighbor Nell. and the Pirates." Winslow." of Mary Sothern." Armstrong." WJ7-Singing Lady. WABC-Dorothy Gordon, Stories. 5:45 -WIZ Tom Mix." Orphan Annie." House." EVENING Clark, songs.

-Creagh Matthews, tenor. WJZ-News; Army, Band. Horizons." WEAF- orch. Relief Fund Program. 6:30 WJZ -Waltz Serenades.

WEAF-News. WABC-News; Hall orch. Joan Edwards, contralto. WJZ -The Revelers. -Don Bestors Orch.

W77-Lowell Thomas, commentator. WABC-Hollace Shaw, Ray Heatherton. 'n' Andy." WABC- -Jack Fulton. Is My Hobby." 7.15-WEAF-"Uncle Ezra." WOR-The Musical Chefs. -Lewis Browne, comments.

WJZ-Three Cheers, songs. Lone Ranger." of A Business Man," by William B. Benton. WJ2-Lum and Abner. -New York on Parade: Mark Warnow John B.

Kennedy. Christine Johnson, prano. WABC-Boake Carter, commentator. and Martin; Ray Noble orch. WABC- orch.

WJ2-General Hugh Johnson, commentator. 8:15 W.J% -Liedersinger quartet. Symphony Orchestra, Alfred Wallenstein, conductor; Mixed chorus. Legal Notices No. 1247 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA IN AND FOR PALM BEACH COUNTY.

IN CHANCERY No. 13,748 WILLIE WILLIAMS and MARY WILLIAMS joined by her husband, WILLIE WILLIAMS, Plaintiffs, VS. F. E. HARTSFIELD and B.

D. HARTSFIELD. Defendants. ORDER SERVICE BY PUBLICATION TO: F. E.

HARTSFIELD, RICHLAND, OREGON: IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that you appear to the Bill of Complaint to cancel Mortgage and for other relief filed by, the, plaintiffs herein in the above entitled cause of action, on Monday, February 7th, A. D. 1938, and the Palm Beach Post is hereby designated as the newspaper in which this Order shall be published once a week for four (4) consecutive weeks: otherwise the allegations of the Bill will be taken 19 confessed by you. WITNESS my hand and official seal this 11th day of December, A. 1937.

(Circuit Court Seal) GEO. 0. BUTLER, Clerk. Circuit Court. By MERLE P.

JOHNSTON, D. C. NEWMAN T. MILLER, Attorney for Plaintiffs. Pub.

Dec. 13, 20, 27, 1937; Jan. 3, 10, 1938. CLAY TILE FLUE LINING BLOCKS BRICK RINKER MATERIALS CORP. We Are Experts In Letter Advertising Mimeographing Multigraphing Mailing Lists Stenography It you want to Increase your business call us BURKE'S LETTER SERVICE HARVEY BLDG.

Established 1926 TEL. $273 1-MINUTE SAFETY TALKS By Don Herold was thinking about a blonde I met last it In Topeka REMEMBER PEDESTRIANS Nearly half of the 36,800 people killed by automobile accidents in the United States last year were pedestrians. In most cases, the pedestrians asked for it. It is seldom that automobiles come up on the sidewalk and chase pedestrians. Sometimes they do, but not often.

As a rule, a pedestrian wants it and walks out where he can get it. He'll pit his frail, watery flesh and fragile bones against a ton or two of thundering steel and glass and flaming fire. He'll put his life in the hands of drivers of cars coming at him at 25 to 75 miles an hour-drivers, many of whom, if he knew them personally, he wouldn't trust with ten cents worth of dog meat. He'll walk along a country road with his back to traffic (instead of facing it as he should) and leave it to the assorted morons, nit-wits, "COP FIGHTER'S" CAREER CLOSED NEW YORK, Jan. 2.

-A bullet ended the career of Raymond McCormack, celebrated "copfighter," early this morning, and a tight-lipped young man critically wounded by policemen lay in hospital tonight charged with the slaying. McCormack, who engaged in a protracted gun duel with police after a holdup in 1925 and went to Sing Sing for seven years, was killed by a shot on a dark lower east side street soon after midnight. A few seconds later, Patrolman Joseph Piggott reported, Nathan Schneider, 24, dashed around the corner from the scene with a pistol in his hand. Piggott dropped Schneider with a shot in the abdomen. Tonight in the hospital Schneider refused to talk about the case.

Police records showed he was arrested for robbery in 1929 and 1933, but the charges were dismissed. Freedom Of Thought HANKOW, Jan. -A dispatch from Chungking, one of China's temporary capitals, today said the government had decided to abolish reformatories for political offenders and release all inmates as a step toward complete freedom of thought within the republic. REV. G.

W. ROSENBERRY DIES JACKSONVILLE, Jan. 2. (P)- The Rev. George W.

Rosenberry, 65, pastor of the Springfield Methodist Church, died at his home here today after a brief illness. He formerly was presiding elder of the Bradenton district of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, and once held pastorates at Tampa and Lakeland. OFF FOR CAPITAL STARKE, Jan. 2. (P)- sentative R.

A. Green left today for Washington for the opening of the Congressional session. He said he believed any wages and hours bill offered during the session would not contain features which caused many Southerners to vote against the measure offered during the special session. SIDE GLANCES By George Clark NEA SERVICE NC. REG V.S PAR OFF "Look, dear- the judge traded me.

a match folder from the Normandie for three, of my Atlantic City hotels." Belated Holidav By ELINORE COWAN STONE Copyright, 1937, NEA Service, Inc. Yesterday: Barrymore's plane is reported forced down at sea. It is a crisis for Mrs. Trent and Linda. They are about to retire after that first agonizing day when suddenly the telephone shrills.

CHAPTER XI At the sound of the telephone bell, Barry's grandmother settled back again into her chair. "Will you please see what that is, Miss Benton?" she directed. Linda down the receiver and said, "Yes. This is Mrs. Trent's secretary speaking." "Oh," said a man's voice at the other end of the line.

"Well, this is the United Press. We should like Mrs. Trent to affirm or deny a story we have here. Shall I read it to you?" "Read it," said Linda, "and I will consult Mrs. Trent." 'Miss Magda the voice read, "'thrice married, thrice divorced darling of the silver screen, let it be known tonight, friends say, that she was have been married next month to Capt.

Barrymore Trent of the United States Naval Air Force. Captain Trent has definitely been given up as lost since his wrecked plane was found floating in the Caribbean Sea after his recent dash to the rescue of the ill-fated Aurelius expedition. 'The names of the glamorous Miss Shirley and the daring young flyer were often bracketed when Captain Trent was stationed in California six months ago. Miss Shirley, friends say, is at present in a sanitarium, prostrated at the news of Captain Trent's Now what want to know is: is this truth or pressagent ballyhoo?" Linda stood for so long a time silent that old Miranda said tartly, "Well? Well, what is it?" "I think," said Linda from the blanket of fog that was closing in about her, "that you had better speak to Mrs. Trent." She handed the instrument to old Miranda.

The old lady listened, her lips When the sputtering redrawing to a dangerous, line. ceiver stopped, she spoke, her clear, cool voice very contemptuous, very sure. "You may say," she directed, "that this story is a brazen, impudent lie. That is all. Goodnight." Linda asked, in spite of herself, "How can you be so sure?" "Because my grandson was born with the tastes of a gentleman.

He may have paid the creature some attention. She has a pretty face, she is notoriously accessible, and he is a man and young," snapped old Miranda with that unbiased acceptance of the facts of life that had so often reduced her grandson to shouts of laughter; "but he would not consider marrying her if she were the last woman in the world. When my grandson brings a wife into this house, she will be a gentlewoman, born and bred to uphold the dignity of his name." "Then," cried Linda, "how did she dare?" "Because, my dear Miss Benton, she is shrewd enough to know that any denial I make will be discounted as the inevitable gesture of a doting and deceived old woman. And she will accomplish her purpose. Tomorrow the papers will be full of her.

sell my immortal soul to be able to prove that that huzzy is lying." "Would you?" thought Linda. "I wonder." The day he went away, Barry had said in those last crowded moments, "If--of course I'll be back soon, darling; but--well, some one might drop a brick on me, you know- you must promise me to tell grandmother soon as-as you're sure. She's really sis fond of you, Titania. Promise me you'll tell her." "Barry, don't!" Linda had cried. "If anything happened to you, nothing else would matter." But in the end Linda had promised.

"Mrs. Trent," Linda began impulsively-but at that moment the doorbell rang. It was a messenger with a ietter for Mrs. Trent. She opened it and read it, the fingers of one hand tightening slowly about the arm of her chair.

It seemed to be very brief. She read it again and yet again. Then she rose, and glancing briefly at Linda, went slowly out of the room and upstairs. All through breakfast next morning old Miranda was strangely silent. From time to time she glanced at Linda as if she were about to speak, but uncertain how to phrase something she had to say as if that something might be unpleasant.

"Perhaps," Linda thought, "she's getting ready to tell me she doesn't want me here any more. How am I to tell her aboutBarry and me, if she feels like that? But I promised Barry." So she vacillated all day, debating, dreading. She had almost summoned her strength for the ordeal that evening after dinner when old Miranda said, "Judge Baldwin's death has been a shock to me -why I do not know; for he has been ill for years. He was one of my oldest "Judge Baldwin?" echoed Linda blankly. "I--I hadn't-" "He died this afternoon.

Miss Chattam phoned me." It was at this moment that Jefferson appeared to announce Mrs. Rita Blanchard. Before old Miranda could speak, Rita was on the threshold behind him. For a moment she poised there, one THOMSON McKINNON Member New York Stock Exchange Comeau Arcade 272 S. Palm Beach Ave.

WEST PALM BEACH PALM BEACH Phone 8178 Phone 6156 hand resting against the door frame, the other against her throat, as if to control a an overwhelming emotion. Then she cried, "Oh, poor dear Mrs. Trent!" With a swift rush she crossed the room, and sinking to the low stool by the older woman's chair, caught one of her hands in both of her own and pressed it against her "I had to she burst out when old Miranda did not speak, but continued to sit, motionless, looking at her fixedly. "I thought perhaps can't we comfort each other? I I can hardly realize yet that we have lost him. Oh, but you you don't know yet, do you? You must not blame Barry.

He wanted to tell you before He begged me to marry him last night. If I could have guessed-" Then old Miranda moved and broke her silence. "My dear Rit," she said, a mirthless, must amusement forgive in me her if old I seem unresponsive. But there seems to be an epidemic of this sort of thing. Is it possible that you have not read the morning news? If not, this will doubtless interest you." Reaching behind her, she picked up the morning paper and spread it before Mrs.

Blanchard's startled eyes. Old Miranda had been right. The paper had made a noble display of Magda Shirley's story. Headlines blazoned: Magda Shirley Says Engaged to Wed Lost Navy Flyer and just opposite: Grandmother of Captain Trent Denies Pilot Planned to Marry Screen Siren There were pictures of Barry and -that of Barry caught as he stood by his plane that last night; that of Magda in one of her most insinuating poses. When Rita had gone, Barry's grandmother said dryly, "She really made a magnificent entrance.

The Shirley, herself could not have been more convincing. Too bad I had to spoil the act. Well, well! I wonder who will be the next." "Not thought Linda. "Not For after all, what proof had she that either Magda Shirley or Rita Blanchard had lacked. She had no papers.

Barry was gone. Judge Baldwin was dead. The only witness to that hasty ceremony had been that chance visitor, already, no doubt, steaming toward England. No, Linda thought, promise or not, she could never tell old Miranda now. All that long evening as she and Barry's grandmother -speechless for the most part--in that silent, empty house, she made plans in the back of her mind- -incoherent, stupid plans, born of a numbed, despairing mind.

All evening she was aware that old Miranda was watching her under veiled lids, a baffled, speculative look in her tired, shrewd old eyes. And all about them was the fresh, spicy odor of balsam from the tree that stood, stark and bare in the front parlor Tonight, Barry was to have been here to trim the Christmas tree. (To Be Continued) Nashville's Mayor Dies At Hospital NASHVILLE, Jan. 2. Mayor Hilary E.

Howse, who has headed Nashville's city government since 1909, except for an eight-year period following his ouster in 1915, died today. He lacked less than a month of being 72 years old. Howse had suffered from an intestinal disorder for some time and entered a hospital last Wednesday, but was too weak to undergo an operation. contracted pneumonia, which was the immediate cause of his death. Many Gain Aid WASHINGTON, Jan.

The Social Security Board reported today that over 2,100,000 persons- the aged, the blind and dependent children -were receiving monthly aid under the social security program. Chairman Arthur J. Altmeyer said the average monthly payment for old age assistance and for the blind was $25.80, and the average payment for dependent children was $27 per family. Chinese universities buy an average of 50,000 volumes annually from a London bookstore, which has customers in every country. SCIENTIFIC SOLUTION OF WAR AND POVERTY PROPOSED BY EXPERT Agriculture Department Writer Gives Views Before Scientists By the Associated Press INDIANAPOLIS, Jan.

2. A scientific solution of the problems of war and poverty suggested to the American Association for the Advancement of Science by an agricultural expert. Speaking in the symposium on science and society which the association conducted at its annual meeting, Gove Hambidge, research writer of the U. S. Department of Agriculture, declared that scientists hold the key to solution problems of, if the they world's will angreatest same approach used in such fields as medicine, chemistry and astronomyite of the advances of science which have created surpluses in agricultural and other goods so that no person or nation should I be poverty-stricken, Mr.

Hambidge said, there are still many individuals who cannot afford the minimum diet existence and many "which sometimes seem to civilizations" be on" for lack of other matethe way to smashing, rials. "Science has succeeded," he continued, "in increasing production to the point where there is no longer any need for much of the poverty and suffering that still plague the world, but the relative abundance created by science threatens periodically to ruin us because our economic social, equal to disinstitutions, where it is needed." One example of what be accomplished by socially-minded institutions in cutting across economic boundaries, Mr. Hambidge added, was the purchase of surplus farm commodities which were holding prices down and distribution of them by the Federal government to poverty-stricken families on relief. Another, he said, was the sale of helium, on which this country has a monopoly, to foreign countries for medical uses. "We shall not be able to achieve what we know to be possible, and in fact we are in danger of losing all that we have, unless we can apply this method to social problems as we apply it to problems in the natural sciences, putting aside prejudice and passion and seeking truth wherever it may lead," Mr.

Hambidge declared. POSSE SEARCHES FOR JAIL BREAKER FOLKSTON, Jan. 2. (P)- Sheriff J. O.

Sikes and a posse today continued their hunt for a negro prisoner who escaped here Saturday after binding and gagging a jail attendant so that he smothered to death. The sheriff's wife reported late today a band of more than 100 men was trailing the fugitive, listed as Walter Robinson. Funeral service for J. B. Mizell, 60, janitor at the jail, whose body was found after Robinson fled, were held today.

He is survived by his widow and six children. RILEY'S 301 So. Dixie Hwy. Specials for Monday Jan. 3 Only PRODUCEFancy Crispy Celery Hearts 4 to 6 In big bunch 9c Fancy Fresh Green Spinach 1bs.

First to Serve You with Boston Lettuce Head 5c 2 Heads 9c Thin Skin Grapefruit for 9c Staley's Cube Starch 3 Reg. Boxes 5c 11c Palm Island Sliced Pineapple Can Reg. 180 9c Red Tax Fresh Oregon Prunes Can Large No. 10c Reg. Price 15c Can MARKET Western Tender Beef Steaks T-Bone-Club-Rib Sirloin Lb.

Western 1 Lean Meaty Pork Chops Each Fresh Ground Hamburger All Meat Lb. Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities WPA OFFICIALS MEETING TODAY JACKSONVILLE, Jan. 2. (AP)State Administrator R. J.

Dill said Works Progress Administration officials would make plans here Monday for a $600,000 material purchasing program. In line with a recent order of President Roosevelt designed to stimulate business, the WPA will buy in advance materials needed for State projects, the administrator said. Washington officials have authorized expenditure of $400,000 for Florida. Additional purchases by sponsors are expected to total $200,000, Dill explained. The Queen Mary, new British liner, has four of the largest propellers ever constructed.

They each weigh 35 tons. kids, drunks and a certain percentage of careful, intelligent drivers to see that they don't bump him into kingdom come. He won't be a sissy, so instead of waiting for traffic lights in city streets he'll dart out into a mess of swift traffic and jump around among speeding cars like a fox in the middle of a pack of hounds. He'll cross in the middle of the block. (4,640 killed this way last year.) He'll step out from behind parked cars without peeking 320).

He'll cross busy intersections catty-cornered. Of course, some pedestrians are children whose parents haven't taught them the danger of playing in streets, but most pedestrians who get killed or maimed by motor cars ask for it and- -GET IT! I'd say that it ought to be easy to eliminate 10,000 pedestrian deaths a year--if the pedestrians were interested. The Washington Merry-Go-Round (Continued from Page Four) tion of about $140,000,000. Congress will insist on the present $275,000,000 appropriation. CONGRESS -Barring some unforeseen development, Congress will adjourn by May 15.

While the special session was unproductive of legislation, it did give Congress a running start- especially in getting a lot of hot air off its chest. PARTY AFFAIR At a recent Christmas gathering, a group of bachelor Senator Joe Guffey's political cronies asked him why he didn't get married. "The right kind of marriage would help you in public life," one of them urged. "That statement," laughed the Pennsylvanian, "reminds me of what Boies Penrose once said to some friends who told him the same thing. He replied, 'Boys, maybe there is something in what you say.

I'll tell you what I'll do. You get together and if the party can agree on a bride I'll marry MAIL BAG L. D. NEW YORK CITY.William Stanley is reported to have done a very superior job in the prosecution of the Astor tax case. It was this which caused Congress to continue him on a salary of $10,000 even though he spends most of his time on private C.

N. DALHART, TEXAS. -The Spanish translation of Secretary Wallace' book, "Whose Constitution," was published in Chile, under the title, "El Sentido de la Constitucion." G. T. BOSTON.

-Residents of the District of Columbia not only have no vote in national elections but are denied the right of selecting the three commissioners who serve somewhat in the capacity of mayors. The commissioners are appointed by the President. (Copyright, 1938, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) BOAKE CARTER (Continued from Page One) them to emotional excitement and upset by playing either of two cards: scare them with war hysteria with one play, or arouse their emotions by painting all business men as crooks with the other card. If the people rise to the bait -either way on either play--he obtains complete control of everything in the excitement of ensuing economic confusion and fear. He has been able to so stack the cards, because he has already assumed powers that go with onegovernment.

may, horror of the situation is that Mr. Roosevelt desires no suggestion or advice, is determined to run America the way be believes it ought to be run, and he has three more years in office. (The views expressed by Boake Carter are published AR A legitimate part of the daily news picture. They are his own and not by any means always endorsed by The Post.) To Get Cooler LAKELAND, Jan. 2.

(P) The Frost Warning Service reported temperatures over Northern Florida would drop tonight, but added readings would above the danger point for citrus fruits and vegetables. Temperatures in Northern ida will be near the danger point for tender truck crops Tuesday morning, the service forecast. TABLE SUPPLY BARGAIN STRIP WINO 1200 KILOCYCLES for the Quartermaster. the Coffee Cups with Howard Parker. 7:45 -Trans Radio News.

Devotions. Almanac. at the -CBS. Parade -CBS. News CBS.

9:30 -Allison and Starr. 9:45 Morning Moods -CBS. Radio News. Abbott's Hollywood on Parade. Stuart's Orchestra.

and Encores. 11:00 -Ruth Carhart, songs--CBS. Masters and His Guitar. 11:29 -Frost and Cold Wave Forecast. Time with Singin' Sam.

Tunes. Signal. Radio News. Dance with Chuck Warner. 12:15 Weather Report.

and Wave Forecast. Moments CBS. -CBS. Family Robinson. Lowe's Ensemble CBS.

Jim Jones- CBS. Minstrel- -CBS. Story. and Romance. School of the AirCBS.

for Strings- -CBS. Radio News. and Swing CBS. 4:00 -Rex Ingram's Deep River BoysCBS. 4:15 -Between the Bookends -CBS.

Orchestra. the Town with Mel Warren. and Cold Wave Forecast. 5:00 Over the Tea Cups, Frank Westerfield. Marches.

Market Report. A. Hazlewood, sports. Gordon's Children's Corner--CBS. Sonny Boy's Revue, 6:00 Howard Phillips, songs- -CBS.

Horizons- CBS. News--CBS. Earl's Dance Music. -Song Time--CBS. 7:00 -Poetic Melodies with Jack Fulton-CBS.

Novis Sings. :30 Trans Radio Freeman and OrchestraCBS. 7:45 -Ben Armstrong's Orchestra. Clark Entertains -CBS. Study Club.

8:45 -Louis Erwin's Music of Latin America. Ridge Mountain Boys. 9:15 -Vie Fraser Orchestra with Janice Osborne. 9:25 -Trans Radio News. Quartet.

9:45 Home Folks. 10:30 -Brave World -CBS. Radio News. Sisters. Gray and Orchestra -CBS.

Kaye's. -George Hamilton's OrchestraCBS. off. WAR VETERANS MEET UMATILLA, Jan. 2.

(P)-Spanish war veterans of the First Florida Volunteer Infantry held their semi-annual meeting here today. Speakers at the session attended by about 150 members included Major John Clifford of Portsmouth, N. former department commander of his State; W. G. Hankins of Kissimmee and E.

I. Weil of Tampa, both former department commanders of Florida. Judge J. G. Sharon of Sanford spoke at a memorial service for 13 members who died during the past six months.

CRISP ICEBERG LETTUCE 2 FOR GREEN TOP CARROTS 15c WINESAP APPLES 5 lbs. 29c U. S. Good Round, Club, Sirloin It. 35c ECONOMY CHUCK ROAST lb.

17c ECONOMY WESTERN CLUB, ROUND, SIRLOIN It. 22c SPRING Shoulder Roast, lb. 196 LAMB RIB LEGS CHOPS 390 256 BONELESS HAM Sugar Cured lb. 39c HEALTHO DOG FOOD 6 1-lb. Cans 25c NO.

2 CAN CUBED Pineapple, 2 cans 29c BULK PITTED DATES lb. 19c SUNSHINE--Glass Free With COFFEE 2 Its. 35c BALTIMORE OYSTERS Pint Quart ...550 .290 ELGIN or PARKAY OLEO 2 Its. 35c ASSORTED CUTS Pork Chops tai 3c MINNESOTA SHIPPED GRADE MEDIUM EGGS 36c FLORIDA LARGE GRADE EGGS, EVERY EGG SELECTED AND STAMPED. DOZ.

49c We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities TABLE STORES SUPPLY I 229 South Dixie 2009 South Dixie Northwood and Dixie Lake Worth Glades 66 KK 99 Motor Line Fast Passenger and Express Service to CANAL POINT PAHOKEE BELLE GLADE SOUTH BAY CLEWISTON FT. MYERS Le. Busses Leave Union West Palm Beach Bus Lv. Ft. Myers 7:15 a.

Station -Evernia 8:00 D. m. a p. m. and Olive Ar.

Lv. Clewiston West Palm Beach m. p. m. PHONE 4237 1:20 p.

m. 5:05 p. m. CASTe SYMBOL OF Photo Engraving SERVICE 8. ZINGS Phone HALFTONES- 3-2455 COLOR WORK QUALITY ENGRAVING Service Engraving Co.

MIAMI 8.

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