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1674-2 Richard Carney • UNI 4A SUNDAY,NOVEMBER 10, 1940 ALONG THE WATERFRONT Captain Carney Really Teller of Tali Tales Dean of Miami's Waterfront Can Do Wonders With Just a Shred of An Alleged Fact Or Mere Idea /2 By GROCER lis I., aLraL ataft Writer ilWriter Many in the newspaper businee become irritated when laymen broach that bromide about"you meet such interesting people.' The fact is,though,you do meet®) ' many interesting people on the' • waterfront or, rather, you get to know them. From time to time, some of these people will be pre-, seated here. T t off there is I , Capt_ Richard • He's been written up dozens of „,.' .times, but he properly leads the I list •St ,for he is the dean of our water - s ent„Mlamianr s about him,only - '°r recently his picture covered the I y • "r' ,y . whole front page of the d when ra e I .-� _ tire section of The Herald when he , ,`�. ',posed as a rope splicer. 1 They have read about his arrival -as one of the original coconut plant.. 4/1pr ers on what is now Miami Beach i they know him through the refer- + - - cores to him by the late Commodore Ralph Monroe in the Coconut Grove classic "The Commodore's Story;' they have read about his playful) performance-in mixing up a couple I of babies at a Saturday night'dance In the old Peacock Inn which,was I ' i immortalized in The Virginian. Good At Embroidery ', -, To those who are constant assn- /..r - . dates,Captain Carney shows many CAPTAIN ftICIL1RD CARNET traits that endear him to them. -Oddly enough one of them is an city docks is his current title.But astounding dexterity at embroidery;iit isn't. these th!nga that make another is his skill at legerdemain ti', He can take the tiniest fabric of I him one of the interesting people 'truth and weave marvellous pat-.mmeet or know.It is his compound- , terns of fancy.This is not to call 1t personality, and the word is shim merely an accomplished tall- .mpounded. tale-teller for he is more than that. . -- _ He Is an artist in what he stitches with the threads of fact.His accom- plishments In legerdemain chiefly -take that form of transferring aril- - des in your possession to that of -^ethers or vice versa.Watches,pens, notebooks,knives,indeed anything transportable is fair game.His in. nocent expression is a sight to be- 1 hold One version is that Captain Car-' ney kissed the Blarney Stone be.1, fore he could toddle. That is not ' true. Indeed, it is so untrue he t probably started the story himself. i Actually he was.just born that way. . He is reputed to have originated ' - the expression"sand in your shoes." The story is that in the real old, days of Miami he was one of those tt who carried mail on foot between I Juno(now Palm Beach)and Miami. Walking in the beach sand is very much like walking in snow; for every step forward you go back two.So Captain Dick Invented the sand shoe on the principle of the snow shoe,and that allegedly'staart- ed the term"sand in your shoes.” Carried Man"By Air^ That isn't an.Sand shoes weren't fast enough.He had long seen peli- cans and gulls circle and soar.That I. gave him the idea of wings. He didn't claim to be smarter than, - Leonardo de Vinci and think he could flap artificial wings.He con. t tved gliders.He would climb a tall palm tree. leap off, glide to the l next, climb up again, and glide again. The glider tale illustrates why Captain Dick makes life Interest. ing.If you doubt it,go to the library!, and study local history and improve your store of knowledge,learning l there were no tall palm trees In I -hose days,it is true he carried the mail. I Since 1900 Captain Dick has been, associated with yachts,mainly with' those of William L. Mellon. He staved months in the German yard - - where the last Vagabondia was �� built.Assistant yacht master at the-'