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The Tampa Tribune from Tampa, Florida • 6

Publication:
The Tampa Tribunei
Location:
Tampa, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TAMPA MORNING TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JULY 20, 1934 PAGE SIX The Gulf Gleam MEDIOCRE SONGS LAKE WALES. While there seems to be a general clean-up of the motion picture industry, which is a very commendable thing, might I suggest another field which needs renovating. That is the field of our popular songs most familiarly known as "tin pan alley." When the talking picture first made its debut back in '29, it seemed there was a great response by song writers to give something beautiful to the public. The songs of then are far superior to the songs of now. But popular music is pounded out now not at the rate of one a week but nearly at the rate of one an hour.

And it seems that the only theme of the popular song is "love, love, love!" Why can't there be a clean-up of the song industry? After all, people are judged a great deal by the songs they sing. And its something to think about in conjunction with cleaning! up the movies. CHARLES W. LOVELAND. TAMPA MORNING TRIBUNE Entered id Posiolfice at lampa Florida as Seoond class Matter.

Published by THE TRIBUNE COMPANY S. Tbomason Publisher D. Lambntht Editor Simpson Managing Editor J. 9. Mima General Manager SUBSCRIPTION BATES Bit CARRIER OR MAIL IS FLORIDA 1 Year 6 mos.

3 mos. 1 mo. Daily and Sunday $4.50 $2.25 Daily only 7.00 3.50 1.75 Sunday only 4.00 2.00 1.2a Delivered by Carrier. 20c per week. OUTSIDE FLORIDA ZONE 1 Year 6 mos.

3 mos. 1 mo. Daily and Sunday. 00 $5.00 $2.50 Daily only 9.00 4.50 2.2o .80 Sunday only 4.50 2.25 1.25 AU Subscriptions are Payable In Advance MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the nee for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the locai news published therein. National Advertising Reparatives: The sVXSlT: Ferguson-Walker Company.

Chicago. Palmolive Bias. JCew York. Daily News Bide. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation BIBLE THOUGHT FEAR NOT: Thus saith the Lord that created thee, Jacob, and He that formed thee, Israel.

Pear not: for I have redeemed thee, I have called thee by thy name; thou are Mine. Isaiah 43:1. THE TRIBUNE'S PROGRAM FOR TAMPA The Tribune-believes that the highest aim for itself and for the city it serves is to strive throughout 1934 to accomplish for Tampa the economical, social and ethical Improvement that President Roosevelt has set as the goal for the nation. SOMETHING OUGHT TO BE DONE ABOUT THIS 1 Trf OLD LAKE I MORE APPLES BRADENTON. Anent the number of apples that Adam and Eve ate, as in your issue of July 16, it seems to me there is a very palpable error.

Your estimate of 82,056 is far too low. In the first place, Eve 8142 please Adam. But she was sorry. So Adam 8124240fy Eve's depressed spirits, making a total of 8,132,382 apples in all. Or if they were the average size of apples of today, about 60,000 bushels, which amount it would appear, is none too large when one takes into consideration that the whole world is still sick from the effects of the overindulgence of our first parents in that apple-fest 6000 years ago.

C. F. DeF. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O. O.

MclNTYRE The PWA Is "Broke" The Public Works Administration is 44 just about broke." Allotments of in the last few days, it is announced from Washington, have exhausted its funds. It has expended during its existence the stupendous total of $3,700,000,000 appropriated to it, and must now "mark time" unless and until it can obtain more money. With work on federal and non-federal projects speeding up, it is estimated that real expenditures, represented by the value of material put in place on construction sites, plus the wages of men employed directly on the sites ran above $30,000,000 a week. Employment provided was put at about 1,800,000, of which number 600,000 were employed directly on PWA sites and 1.200.000 indirectly in the manufacture, SNOW AT SARASOTA SARASOTA. Noticed in Sunday's issue, under your headings of "Did You Know?" that it snowed as far south as Braden-ton, during the year 886.

Sarasota, 12 miles south of Bradenton, experienced this same snow storm; as I resided in Sarasota at this time, and distinctly remember making snowballs gathered off of the wooden sidewalks. The snow covered the shingle roofs of all the houses. Folks laugh at me when I tell them the above. FRANK HIGEL. forgot.

Now for a hot grapple with his fortune in guaranteed mortages. a long, cool lemonade. And there he is! Jules Brulatour is New York's most persistent first nighter. He was a first nighter back in the Diamond Jim, Dolly Sisters, day and has out-first-nighted many who came after. Since his marriage to Hope Hampton he has continued down front on the aisle.

He's not on the free list and It's estimated his long period of premiereing cost him more than $100,000, thus establishing him as the theater's first patron. his job cut out for him, from seedtime to harvest. This is the meaning of a planned agricultural program and is the end toward which the Agricultural Adjustment Administration is working under the leadership of Secretary of Agriculture Wallace and Undersecretary Tugwell, outstanding leaders of the Washington Brain Trust. Such brigading of forces spells the end of the old-fashioned capitalist, individualist American farmer; but so, according to the claims of these leaders, does it spell the end of agricultural chaps and the situation which alternately produces silk-shirted farm workers, driving high-powered automobiles in one decade, and down-trodden semi-bankrupts dependent on what amounts to the charity of a paternalistic government in the next. Fighting Southern Industry One northern interest is confirming the charge made by leading Southerners that northern industry in general is attempting to resist the development of industrial activity in this section.

The American Paper and Pulp Association has appeared in Washington in opposition to the plan to establish a big wood pulp plant in this state, at Fernan-dina. The Florida Agricultural and Industrial Relief Commission is asking the PWA for an allocation to build the plant and has already made a contract with a leading manufacturing concern to take over and operate the mill. The spokesman of the northern manufacturers urged, before the PWA the objection that it would demoralize the paper market to increase the world pulp supply. Spokesmen for the Florida project effectively refuted this claim with facts and figures. i The purpose of the northern manufacturers clearly is to shut out competition, especially from the South.

They realize the great future of the southern pulp industry and it is to their selfish interest, to kill it off before it can get a good start. Wise Foresight Noting the assured restoration of air mail service to the Tampa, St. Petersburg and Central Florida areas, and noting that the government's postal contract price on this service is 17 cents a mile, in contrast to the old rate of 45 cents, the Miami News inquires: What has become of the furore so audible the country over when old air mail contracts -were canceled? No one outside commercial aviation circles can become very angry, it seems, over an interruption of service tnat "was merely temporary even on such branch lines as that between St. Petersburg and Daytona Beach, when a saving of more than 62 percent in carrying costs can be effected. The "ruination" of commercial aviation now appears to have been merely a disciplinary measure necessary to spur this young industrial prodigy to become self-sustaining a hard, but valuable lesson.

Forced to study economy in operations, it should make more rapid progress than ever before in winning a permanent place in the transportation field. The administration had a keen eye for good business when it broke up the old arrangement. It could see ahead to the much better conditions and much lower rates which come with the new order. His Last Exit Many Tampans will remember Ed. Lawrence; the silver-haired actor.

Years ago, he was a familiar figure on local stages the old Tampa Bay Casino, the Greeson and Iris theaters a sterling player in "stock." at 67, is dead in Jacksonville. He was a capable performer, interpreting the best roles of the legitimate drama; and he was also a kindly, gerfial gentleman, whose heart throbbed in unison with the noblest sentiments of humanity. May his last exit prove to be the entrance to a happy eternity. William Green says the A. F.

of L. is not responsible for the San Francisco strike. He should get in and help settle it. The well seasoned sporting editor is an amazingly human encyclopedia. Most of them in New York have come up from copy-running, ink-stained, secluded and hard-boiled guys, the sort down and.

outers always find cinchy for the quick touch. Their capable heads are packed with figures and data. Any athlete's record can be spun off as quickly as that. They mostly select and direct but when exigency demands can, between the furore of editions, sit at a typewriter and slam out one of those unpredictably robust stories that remains long in memory. Ed Frayne, for example.

Or Bill Farnsworth. The star system still rules the box office. Helen Haye dropped out of her hit play is an illustration. The week before her exit the intake had been $28,000. The first week of her layoff.it dropped to $9000 and the At the Witching Hour We Reach a Bewitching Isle Our small ship is rolling down a southern sea tonight, seeking an enchanted isle.

Under full sail the little Motagua is driving due South across the Caribbean Sea, and the phosphorescent sea fire flames white in the waves about her bows, and sparkles and boils in her wake astern, and the schooner rolls and plunges through the darkness, and the salt spray dashes over the weather rail; black storm clouds are flying westward overhead in the fresh Trade wind; the low clouds seem to be sweeping just above the tall swaying masts; between the clouds the stars are sparkling; the brilliant constellation of Scorpio is high in the southern sky; the Southern Cross is sloping down to the horizon on the starboard bow. The faint glow from the binnacle lights the dark face of the Caymanian seaman at the wheel. Under both sail and motor, the small vessel is swiftly rushing down through the darkness upon an unseen, unlighted, rocky, reef-bound tropic island off the Spanish Main. All hands are on deck with an air of suspense. We are four or five days out from Tampa.

Two nights ago we raised the light at The Cape Cape San Antonio, the western end of Cuba and passed from the Gulf of Mexico down the Yucatan Channel into the Carib Sea. According to the sun and the North Star and the sextants and calculations of the captain and the mate, we must be approaching our destination. Across hundreds of miles of trackless sea, by the compass steering for a tiny island less than 10 miles long, a dot on some charts, not shown at all on common maps of Central America The colored captain is conning his vessel safely home, standing in the fore shrouds. The dark night sky merges into the dark sea, and a point on the starboard bow a keen eye detects a darker spot. YONDER LIES BONACCA! Midnight; a golden moon is rising, spreading its glittering carpet to our feet; the clouds are clearing; the mysterious island is moving nearer, a black, majestic mountainous mass; a bright star in the southwestern sky seems to stand on a mountain peak like a beacon, until the mountain rises closer and loftier between ship and star.

We are slipping down the windward side of Bonacca, well offshore on account of the reefs. The mysterious mountain range looms high and black to starboard; there is a thin white line along its base that is the eternal Caribbean surf breaking white in the moonlight, all along the coral reef. There is a faint light, there another, in some little home on the mountainside just above the sea. Now some dark, low shape shows up on the starboard bow near our schooner; they tell us this is a low, sandy, rocky key with coconut palm trees. We roll past it and keep off more to westward; the island of Bonacca runs southwest.

Another dark, low key slides astern; a whole string of coconut clad keys, strung along the coral reef, on a white string of surf, half a mile or more off the mountainous island; there is smoother water inside the encircling reef. They are furling the sails of our little ship; the motor drives her along; suddenly she swings through a pass in the surf -swept reef; we are sliding close under graceful leaning coconut trees, bright in the moonlight, by white houses standing in the sea itself; in the lee of this tiny palmy key we swing in among other small vessels; the anchor rattles down; the motor is silenced. Now there is only the singing sea-breeze in the palms, and the sound of the surf outside. On the north, a high mountain of Bonacca hiding the North Star and all that part of the sky; the hills swing around the west side of the harbor." Between us and the sea to southward, another key, a tiny fairy isle with feathery coco palms in the golden moonlight. The scent of copra comes out from the little town.

Cocks are crowing in the night. A dog barks. In the morning, the Bonacca mountain peaks, more than a thousand feet high, were hidden in rain clouds driving westward. The Motagua moved In to a wharf, sticking her long bowsprit under a coconut tree. The town of Bonacca is built in the sea, a little Venice.

Two coconut-covered coral keys on a bar a quarter-mile from the island, each less than a square city block, and a block apart. Houses are built on these keys and on piling in the shallow water all between and around the keys, with wooden, unrailed bridges, walks and piers everywhere. The clear sea water flows about two feet deep all over the1 wide bar, so every house in town has a waterfront, which is pleasant, convenient, and sanitary." Every one has a dory, a Carib canoe dug out of a solid mahogany or cedar log, small or large, moored under the house. Most homes have a private island some 20 feet square, or other shape, and this is no easy job like merely dredging up Davis Islands. One paddles or sails his cayuca dugout half a mile to the coral reef and picks up rocks and paddles back and dumps them in the front yard, or hires it done.

Several hundred voyages of a dory should be enough to build up a wall two feet above the water on the bar. Several hundred more boatloads fill in the yard with rocks, sea mud, and a clean sand surface, suitable for planting flowers, plants, shrubs, and perhaps one coconut or almond tree. The little black boys play marbles on the sand. There is always a chicken house made of sticks, reeds and palm, over the water, and a pig pen partly in the sea. The reason why storms never sweep the whole city into the sea is, Bonacca is off the hurricane tracks.

If it gets the edge of a storm, the mountains of the island protect the keys on sides, the outer keys and the coral reef guard the south and east. MOUNTAINS AND SEAS AND CORAL KEYS! P. E. B. NEW YORK.

Thoughts while strolling: Whenever La Guardia talks I can't see anything but his tongue. Does anyone use those rocking blotters any more? Suggestion: Why not put an end to the New York boxing commission. Or better end all boxing. Eddie Cantor makes statements on 'everything. One word description of James Montgomery Flagg lanky.

Most of us wandering around seeking the blue horizon. Whatever became of the georgette blouse? And water spaniels? They say George Horace Lorimer encouraged Bernard Baruch to become a literary man. Alexander Wooll-cott's rubbery walk. Add debonaire men about town Harry Banister. French dressmakers are flocking as fast to New York as immigration laws allow to open shops.

If they won't come to Paris. Paris will come to New York. The sour expression of Western Union messenger boys airing kiyoodles from smart hotels. That attractive awning at Peggy Hoyt's. Octavus Roy Cohen is usually just back or starting on a cruise.

No-, body can look so tight-lipped as Frank Case. That comes from saying "No" to actors. Blanche Ring is one of the old-time troupers who always has a job. Those every half hour funeral processions over the 59th street bridge. The skittish brightness in Queenie Smith's eyes.

Major Bowes is always giving parties for widows of old friends. The widows are too often show closed until she can return the cast. A SAFETY MEASURE TAMPA. The Tampa Automotive and Service Staton Industry wishes to express its appreciation for the publicity given in The Tribune relative to motorists driving through service stations without stopping. We took the initiative by asking the city's cooperation not from a selfish standpoint but for safety of the public, specially children walking across driveways or entering stations.

(Not that the article indicated a selfish move on our part, It was well written and did not convey such. We are only emphasizing this point.) The publicity you have given this cause, probably will mean the avoiding of many serious accidents, even to saving a life. We do not wish to see any motorist get into trouble, go to jail or anything like that but we do ask their cooperation. We want them in the stations but we do not want them racing through. Of course, racing through does not apply to the careful considerate driver.

We need their cooperation and will show all the courtesy possible but we ask them to "Save A Life" by stopping when entering a station. C. E. HAMILTON. Executive Secretary.

Walter Huston's box office tun in Incidentally, the top yarn the Carnera-Baer brawl was -a sympathetic study of the forlorn Camera on the eve of the battle that cost him his crown. The piece was turned out in the running fire of a news room by Bill Corum and is another reason Boonvllle, should be on the map as Corum, Mo. the movies went suddenly off shortly before his New York stage experiment. No reason. So a bit bewildered he came to New York and his great success "Dodsworth." This sent the movie moguls into quick huddle and Huston Is back making a picture again as a feeler.

The 38th street sidewalk whers I waited today gave a sudden lurch. It developed I was standing on trap doors over an elevator that was coming up. As the entire street seemed rocking in seismic sway all I could think of was: "What a laugh for Los Angeles!" He sits on a traffic isle on a broad boulevard leading into Forest Hills. On top of his little box in front are a stack of summery beach caps and a mixed pile of smoked motor glasses. A smudgy sign proclaims "25 cents." In his 70's, few who bowl along recognize him as once owner of Long Island's most pretentious road house.

Ten years ago he quit and invested ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS By FREDERIC J. HASKIN processing and transportation of materials used. Originally $3,300,000,000 was allotted to the PWA and another $400,000,000 was allotted by the President under the last deficiency act. As this sum is already obligated, Secretary Ickes, the Public Works Administrator, is planning to confer at once with the Reconstruction Finance Corporation with a view to obtaining additional funds in exchange for securities of states and municipalities held by the PWA as collateral for loans. The PWA has financed many important projects and has contributed largely to the reduction o'f unemployment.

Projects now seeking approval mount into many more millions. It is a question how long the program can be maintained. The problem now is how to get more money, if there is any more to get. Easily Refuted We readily and easily refute the lengthy attempt of the afternoon paper to charge The Tribune with misrepresenting or maligning the Latin-American citizens of Tampa. Since our issue of June 28, two days following the primary, when we made a brief analysis of the vote of this county, which contained no harsh expressions, not one editorial has appeared in this newspaper on the election fox United States Senator or its results.

Excepting a few jocular paragraphs, we have made no editorial comment whatever on that election or on the charges of fraud made in connection therewith. The only comments on that election which have appeared on this page have been in reprints from other Florida papers and in letters from our readers. It is our policy. vnressions of the state press Q. How can the government tell whether hoarding of currency Is increasing or decreasing? A.

The Treasury and the Federal Reserve Banks judge chiefly by the flow of currency of the larger denominations which are used little in daily business but are used by Since the banking crisis of March, 1933, there has been a steady flow of bills of $50 and higher denominations back to the Treasury and the banks. Since March 31, 1933, about $350000,000 in bills of large denominations has returned while $20 and smaller bills have flowed out to the extent of $260,000,000. Q. What Is the inscription on the Kentucky monument in the Chicka-mauga-Chattanooga National Military Park? A. "Erected by the State of Kentucky, in memory of her sons who fought- and fell on this field.

As we are united in life and they united in death, letone monument perpetuate their deeds, and one people, forgetful of all asperities, forever hold in grateful remembrance all the glories of that terrible conflict which made all men free and retained every star on the nation's flag." Q. What states had the most tall and most short men during the World War? A. Texas had the most tall men and Rhode Island most short men. Q. Has a Jew held the heavyweight championship before Max Baer took it? A.

Max Is the first Jewish heavyweight champion of the world. In no heavyweight championship bout has there ever been so many knockdowns. Q. How old is streamlining? A. Streamlining is not the invention of modern engineers.

The Aztecs built streamlined temples to Quetzal-coal, god of the air. Q. How does an ebulliometer tell the percentage of alcohol in wine? A. It is an instrument for determining the percent of alcohol in fermented beverages by the boiling point, of the wine, in comparison with the boiling point of water, at the time the determination is made. The difference between the boiling point of the pure water and the liquid Investigated is shown by a table furnished by the manufacturer of the ebulliometer.

Q. Which are the largest and smallest counties in the United States? A. The largest is San Bernardino county, California, with 20,175 square miles. The smallest, New York county, Manhattan Borough, New' York City, with 22 square miles. Q.

What is the original version of "Woman convinced against her will will remain of the same opinion still?" A. "He that complies against his will is of his own opinion still," Butler's Hudibras. Q. Did Mussolini attend college? A. During his youth, Mussolini went to Switzerland where, after suffering considerable hardship and privation, he managed to graduate from the University of Lausanne.

THE BREAD LINE TAMPA. The bread line often proves to be the dead line. There are men and women who, rather than line up, take the long journey. i' When we get their past and point of view, we cannot wonder. The long, lean arm of poverty has a power that millions know nothing about.

We vouch for the truth of the following story by a thoroughly reliable man. In 1930 he was a high-salaried, bountiful provider for his family. His office, along with several others, was closed in North Carolina. He came to Florida presumably to bury his mother, a hopeless invalid. She lived three years after that, and his brother died two years earlier.

He had money, a good car, and spent his winters in Florida. He entered business in Florida and made more money. He spent four or five thousand dollars on his mother and brother. By this time business was dead he was broke dead broke. He had a brother In Alabama making a good salary- No help from him.

He had no outstretched hand to help him through the bog. This is the background to the bread line. There was no escape. Uncontrollable circumstances shoved him on toward the bread line. Here he is, with the keen sting of chagrin written, on his strong face.

As he stood there in the hungry, ragged throng, he was patient, determined. This man of culture, education and abikty was penniless, helpless. With poverty's bony hand clutching him, he had to fall in line. By being a loyal brother and son, he had lost all he had. In another city he had spent eight years helping, comforting His time, energy, and money were spent without compensation.

The bread line has crushed the heart and ambition out of many strong men, and yet, this man, with it all, remains cheerful and upstanding. He is over 50 and has splendid ability, but no work in sight. The bread line, like death, is a common leveller. All look alike. But in many cases death wins the victory, the bread line losing a number.

Fates stern commander sentences this man to the bread line. EUGENE BEASON. JUST A MINUTE WITH FLORIDA EDITORS Congratulations to Frank Wyman, Tampa, winner of the gold award for first honors in the pistol matches. Communists in San Francisco are being arrested as vagrants. Wouldn't that make Stalin mad? Not Quite Complete.

First thing they are going to do in Key West is to take a census. Looks like they could find that out from the relief rolls. Sanford Herald. on the front-page. Since the demise of the old Florida State News, no paper has had regular original editorial cartoons until The Tribune took up the practice.

The is George White, who is to Florida what John T. McCutcheon (of the Chicago Tribune) is to Chicago. Ocala Banner. Avery Powell says Wauchula hopped into the headlines, with the slogan "Say it with frogs." Probing With A Vengeance. Down In Key West the County Solicitor's heart ought to be in that vote fraud prebe.

He got beat when they were out Jim Franklin. Fort Myers News-Press. Maybe that boxer thinks repeal makes it permissible to take liquor into the ring. The Supreme Court will soon rule on another of those numerous amendments. iU on subjects of current interest and discussion, and also the views of our readers.

In these clipped comments and letters we have printed both those attacking and upholding the Tampa vote. It is not our fault if the former are largely in the majority. The Tribune's friendship for and friendly relations with the good Latin-American citizens of Tampa have been too long established to be questioned by anyone. Planned Agriculture The time is coming when each American farmer will occupy a position somewhat similar to that of a soldier ready to do his part in a. concerted, balanced effort to bring about an agricultural production nicely adjusted to fit the precise needs of consumption.

Just as each soldier in every branch of a military line-up has his orders to be at a certain place at a certain time and accomplish certain things, so every farmer will have Jacksonville is now featuring women wrestlers. A suggestion to Jim Downing? West Is West. What with the rehabilitation of Key West, the. reformation of Mae West, and the strike situation in the West, the country seems to be going West in a big way. Miami Herald.

Aqua Pura, More Or Less. Millions may be invested in strong water these days but the half million spent on the aqua pura in Tampa harbor by the PWA will bring far better returns to south Florida. Winter Haven Chief. Florida Collects Orlando Reporter-Star: Prior to 132 Florida boasted it had no inheritance tax laws for the state. This fact was used as a means of attracting wealthy citizens to establish this state as their place of legal residence.

But unfortunately for the state Uncle Sam had a federal tax law which collected whether the state did or not. If a state had a federal inheritance tax law, 80 percent of the tax collected by the federal government was returned to the state, but if the state had none, it did not participate in what the federal government received. Florida endeavored in vain to have this federal tax declared inoperative in Florida, but to no avail, so the Legislature decided as long as those dying in this state and leaving property upon which the benefactors had to pay an inheritance tax, the state may as well have a law which, while not increasing that tax, would make it possible for it to participate in the sum collected by the federal government. The amendment was votecT in 1932. Comptroller Lee has announced the collecting of a $350,000 tax on the The Governor insists that the counties adopt the state's economy policy.

SENTENCE SERMONS By Roy L. Smith Anyway, the San Franciscans say they will have enough to eat. CRAZE FOR SPEED CLEARWATER. According to insurance statistics six times as many Americans have been killed by automobiles during the last 10 years as were killed in battle during the World War, and 50 times as many Injured. These figures are appalling.

Fifty percent of these fatalities might be avoided by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence. It has been suggested that pedestrians, for instance, be required by law to walk on the left hand side of public roads and those streets not having sidewalks. This precaution would be especially safer at night, as the claim Is so often made by autoists that they were blinded by the bright lights of approaching cars. But the craze for speed is responsible for much. K.

A. NISBET. A familiar saying has been changed to "It's hot as Kansas City." White And McCutcheon. The Tampa Tribune is being commended for its daily editorial cartoons printed estate of Edward Goodrich Acheson of St. Petersburg and Pittsburgh, and upon which $445,603 more will shortly be paid.

Eighty percent of this sum will remain in Florida which otherwise would have gone 100 percent to the federal government. It was wisdom on the part of the electorate to vote the amendment to the state's Constitution. Immediate And Future Profit. "Miami has captured another big convention the Knights Templar, In 1937," the Tampa Tribune remarks. Some are skeptical as to the profits claimed for convention cities, but if Miami breaks even and the delegates enjoy themselves, the increasing number of meetings is sure to bring future benefits.

Once they "get sand in their shoes," they are "steady customers." Miami News. Capital and labor should unite in expelling the "red" agitators. MAN IS ALWAYS Trying to believe and afraid to believe. Torn between the spirit of revolt and of conservatism. At war with his environment.

In danger of conceit and timidity at the same time. In fear of the mysterious. A victim of his own misdirected energies. Apt to be more swayed by his prejudices than his reason. Tampa ministers will help make a cleaner screen.

Florida Day at the Fair..

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