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1674-4 Louis (Red) Snedigar l.s s THE CLI f� Ln A/.ia11//If bcs' , It Seems to Me By HEYWOOD BROUN MIAMI BEACH, NQ31,.6—I've often wondered what anybody did with the keys of the' city. Right them and still I'm puzzled. Louis F: Snedigar, the mayor of Miami Beac 1, most distinctly said, "Here are the keys of the city," as he handed me a small envelope. Perhaps he was only fooling, for when I examined the gift it consisted merely { of a card extending "the courtesies of the police department." But if May(_m_Silecligar must have his little joke it is justified, perhaps, by the tribulation which he himself once suffered while Jimmy Walker indulged in a little whim. Jimmy was recuperating at Miami Beach after being elected mayor of New York and he invited Snedigar to come up North and be his guest at the inauguration.' i.'" •- "`mow * * * , ii WHEN I got up there,"`-nf5I 11eQ►-the WHEN of Miami Beach, who will also sell you a lot if you need one, "they found that t I wa_s_just a Florida cracker who'd-never seen snow in allmy Life. And so Jimmy Walk- ser made a vow that he wouldn't let me_go home until I'd seen a snowstorm. "Well, it was just my luck, if you want to call it that, to wait for 24 days until the first si.•-iow fell. And while I was waiting, Jimmy took-.,me out on parties every night. I'm just a boy froi. the farm and the real estate office I and I c_anetand that kind of pace. It like 1 i to have killed tr.,e, and a m ie end of 24 days I I was pretty sick or•.,Zimmy Walker and he was pretty sick of me." Jimmy did not possess t se power over the eleme ui'iaa executives. As a timid but t. -tful person I asked Mayor Snedigar, "Is there ar,r, chance of any sort of high winds down here this n,...,.,` in the year?" _ "You mean hurricanes?" said the,mayor. "Oh, no, not a chance on earth. That season's been over for a whole month. It's ended." "Officially ended," he added. "What do you mean 'officially ended'?" I in- quired. "Well, the Indians and the Weather Bureau both agree," said the mayor, "and it isn't pos- sible that they could both be wrong. As a matter of fact, the Indians are never wrong." * * * SO it seems that my card entitles me offi- cially not only to courtesies from the police but from the winds and waves as well. Naturally, I should do something in return, and I would like to pay a brief tribute to the climate of Miami Beach in November. It is almost as good as September weather in Con- , necticut, and this is no faint praise coming from a man whose lots are all in Stamford.' And in my own right I would like to deny that the sun and sea along this strip are en- ervating. That's nonsense. I find'myself full of a pioneering vigor. Why, only last night I went to the Miami aquarium and I have yet to see the somewhat larger one in New York. Also, when Man Mountain Dean wrestled in Madison Square Garden and other convenient halls in Manhattan I never had sufficient initiative to walk around him or even go and see him. But under the stirring stimulus of the violet rays of this beach I allowed a friend to drive me a couple of miles to the Cinder- ella Palace where Man Mountain Dean ,and Chief Bearfoot engaged in deadly combat for 15 minutes. I