The Key West Citizen Newspaper, August 6, 1926, Page 5

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FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, , 1926. Notes Return to City 3 Archie Sheppard and Ivan Rob- erts, who had been spending some time in Houston and other poinis in Texas, have returned to Key West. -_** Many Tampa Passengers There weve a large number of | passengers arriving here this morning on the steamship Gov- ernor Cobb from Tampa, many of} whom left again on the boat for Havena. we de | Marry Yesterday Joseph A. Garrod of this ci.y and Miss Mary Meredth of Geor- gia were. united in marriage yes- terday afternoon by Coutny Judge Hugh Gunn in his office at the/ county court house.. e * Girl Scouts Meet Today There will be a meeting . of Troop 4, Girl Scouts, held this af- ternoon at their headquarters in the Scottish Riie hall, corner of Eaton and Simonton streets, and 2 full attendance of members is desired. « To Hold-Cake Sale The Boy Scouts of Troop 5 will sell cake cn Duval street tomgr- tow in order to increases the fund to pay the expense of the!r sum. mer encampment. They will ap- preciate a liberal patronage. * Personal SODDeeSseesecoesesr.e000 Joseph Baker was included in the arrivals here this morning over the East Coasi from Miami, and will spend several days’ businecs visit in the Island City. Mr. and Mrs. Santuel Higgs, who hed been visiting in Miami an other points up the East Coast returned to the city on Wednesday | ir afternoon, over the Flagler System. 5. T, Knowles of Vernon Ave- nue, who had been spending a month's vacation on Big Pine, re- turned to Key West yesterday. Mr. Knowles was accompanied by his wife. “ Charles Pent, former Key West- er, but who has been res‘ding in rivel-in the city yesterday after- noon for several days’ visit in the Iplang .Gity. H. L. Knowles, who is employed at Miami by the Florida East Coast Railway Company, was an arrivel on the morning train, and will spend several days’ business visit in Key West. at US 4 Eugene A. Carey, who had been in Tampa and other points on the West coast for the past several returned to Key West this morning on the steamship Govern- or Cobb. of The Passing Day | Leave On Trip | Mr. and Mrs. William Weaver | were passengers leaving last night over the East Coast en route to Johnson City, Tenn., where they | will spend several weeks’ visit with |relatives at Mr. Weaver's old home. ‘. ee | Many Arrive On Train The train arriving here this morning. from the north had a jJarge number of passengers on | board. Several of. those arriving on the irain, left on the boat for Havana after a short stay in the Island City. * * * Leave For Miami Mr. and Mrs. N.. W. Johnson and children who had been spend- ing several weeks visiting in Key West with relatives and friends, were passengers leaving over the East Coast last evening en route to their home in Miami. ¥ * Leave On Trip Mr. and Mrs. Charles Taylor, accompanied by Miss Ada Milli- | gan were passengers leaving Mon- ‘day on the schooner Eureka for {Marco from which point they will start a motor tour through the ouniry.. The p i int i ded in their’ it! y | Buffalo, N. Y., Mr. Taylor’s old home. They expect to be absent from the city fcr several weeks. * -9ee Mention s nley Baker, who has been Vv og in Havana and. other poii in the Cuban republic for the past few weeks, is expecied | to return to the city this after. |noon on the steamship Miami. } Mrs. G. elton, who had een spending several weeks visit- jing in Key Wesi with relatives and | friends, was-a passenger leaving | last night over the East Coast en |. | route to her home in West Palm Beach, |. Harry Wellacoi, formerly o | Key West, but who has been mak | ing his home in Tampa for severa by y Was on-arriyal.in the city terday afternoon. Mr. Wella pend several days’ bus in the Island City. | AR. Edwar jaWc st,. but who (his home in Miami for the past several years, where he is con- rected with the fishing indusiry, | was included in the arrivals on the | morning train, and will spend sev- eral days’ visit in the Island City. formerly of Key been, making William Pent, formerly of Key West, but who has been making his home elsewhere for:a number of » Was an arrival in the city sterday afternoon over the E Coast, and will spend a while v ng in the Island City. Man Is Arrested On Liquor Charge; Case Goes To County. Judge Through a warrant sworn out by A. E. Whitney, prohibition agent, Erie Gwynn was .this morn- | ing arrested on the charge of il-' legally transporting and ‘having in hts possession intoxicating liquors, to-wit: two quarts of brandy. U. S. Commissioner C. Rodney Gwynn suggested his own ¢ qualification for trying the cs eo the preliminary hearing was transferred to the court of Coun ty Indge Hugh Gunn, who at hearing this morning found cause to have the defendant furnish bond and security for his appear- ance at next term of U. S. court in Key West, which convenes next November. Bond was immediate- Ladies Auxiliary of American Legion To Hold Meeting Tonight Tonight at 8 o'clock the Ladies’ Auxiliary of the American Legion -will hold their first meeting at the club house since that body was reorganized, The officers of the auxiliary have requested all members to be present, as it is expected that sev- eral new names for membership will be proposed. i | | ly furnished and the defendant released. HEART SEWED UP MARSEILLES—A knife wound in the heart of Antonio Palli, an | Italian sailor, was sewed up and he is recovering. The Vitamins Of Cod-LiverOil Are At Their Best In SCOTTS EMULSION| The Builder Of Strength ‘Scott & Bowne, Bioomfeld, N } ee i § 8. S. is just the thing needed to strengthen the nerves, restore muscular power to the ‘body and increase the endurance of weak, failing women and men. Don't keep on going dowa simply because your blood is starving for want of healthy, red blood-cells, You can get back your strength with 3. S.S. Why! You'll begin living all over again. You will enjoy eat- ing and above all, you will be able to stand up under the strain of daily life and enjoy it. You can take S. . with confidence — millions testify to its merits, An unbroken record of service for over 100 years ix @ great testimonial to a great medicine, @ Remember S$. S. S. is made only from fresh roots and herbs. THE POWER BEHIND there suddenly descended a kind o! sequences, but even its few days of a great cit most people course. h New York found itself without its usual strike had halted their publication. day, it became suddenly and distressingly ‘was no paper on the doorstep, The news-st: trains rushed city-ward instead of renewi of joint. Store sales sagged abruptly, for only the show windows pot eet the daily bargains, Finance, always dependent on| the Satest news, was thrown back upon the, thin stream of information. that came} trickling through the tape. What was hap- pening in Washington, in Chicago, in Lon- Gon? The world of business was hesitant, uncertain, because it was poorly informed. Even for the humblest. tradesman this sudden stoppage of news was an incon-| venience; for many others it was fraught with the gravest possibilities. Why was this experience so disconcert-| ing? Because it juced a feeling of isola- tion; it cut off the city from the outside) “NEWS and PROGRESS” ECONOMIC SIGNIFICANCE AND SERVICE OF THE AMERICAN NEWSPAPER AND NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING—From latest volume in Manhattan Library of Popular Economics, republished in serial form through courtesy of Bank of the Manhattan Company, New York. N the Fall of 1923 an odd form of calami New York City. It was not an “Act Fire, flood or famine did not threaten. There was neither rumor of war nor suggestion of riot. The weather was friendly, the public health good, transportation was uninterrupted and business moved smoothly—yet into this peaceful picture happenings of the four continents. The world seemed strangely out ly jin. the THE KEY WEST CITIZEN PROGRESS fell eee f community paralysis that filled multitudes with dismay. Had it not passed as swiftly as it came, it would be hard to calculate its con- of duration cost mil- lions of dollars. More than this, it revealed in a some- what startling way the degree to which all the activities were dependent on a commodity which ad taken unthinkingly, as a matter of What had happened? Iferely. that for the first time in two centuries newspapers. A press room While most people had been aware of a controversy between pub- lishers and employees, it had generally been regarded in the casual way with which one is apt to view the affairs of others until, on a certain personal. On that day there ands were unnaturally bare. Commuters were driven to watching familiar landscapes as their ¥ wspaper enters every home in the land ing their contacts with the strangely alone, People cann lark. When the newsp: pended, co-operation became difficalt—in| some cases, impossible, here are communities abroad where|cha ithe lack of a newspaper may. be merely a vexation, Not so with America, for America, in a unique sense, is thé land o! columtary co-operation; this is the basi inciple of its wonderful development. Machines can operate in the dark, but not men. When judgment and volition are de- imanded, pippie must be keenly aware of one another. The newspaper is a happy in- ‘strument for satisfying ls curiosity, | but its real function is to bring about that plant and of thousands on the outside, but a part of one of those great of newspapers through which of the world is daily gathered, ex- and made available to all, Not less significant and quite as import- ant is the tri ilar co-operation between blisher, advertiser and public. Once it sy publishing, merchandising and ing all languish and the wheels of progress stop. When it is considered that there are 45,009,000 copies of each issue of 13,400 newspapers entering every home, office workshop of the land, we begin to ize the vastness of this co-operation. PAGE FIVE ; QUITS PULPIT A’ "re MOSCOW.—A supply of gas} SUNDERLAND, * Eng: f bombs has been sent to the Cri-|72 years as a minister,..tew mea to exterminate the locusts | Charles Green has retired at the destroying crops there. age of 96. ae | Miss Gladys Sawyer BOMBS TO FIGHT LOCUSTS. Weds Lyman Gallotte Here On Tharsday | Miss Gladys Sawyer, youngest jdaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph |Sawyer of this city, and Lyman | allotte of Ocean Springs, Miss., | ‘were quietly married Thursday | |ternoon at the home of the bride’s jsister, Mrs. Ralph Lovejoy, 522 | ‘Rose Lane. | The ceremony was pestaemes j | | None survives | Me T wipes them out! Every fly U& every mosquito SW every: roach 44 inside your home dies © —BLACK FLAG doesn’t miss.one. - It’s different because it’s deadlier. *™ iby the Rev. W. K. E., James of .t ‘of the First Baptist church and jonly relatives. and a few close (friends were present. | The ‘newly wedded couple will | |live in Key West, Mr. Gallotte be- | ing employed at the naval station. | | saat | Police Officers Make Raid; Three Men Are | Placed Under Arrest | | Berlin Russell, corner Division | and Grinnell streets; Jose Lopez | Alquez, 509 Petronia street, and) | James Moran, 1009 Watson street, | were arrested by Chief of Police Ivan. Elwood and Police Officer | Valter Vinson on the charge of | having intoxicating liquor in their | ; possession. They were tried be-| | fore Municipal Judge T. S. Caro | | in city court yesterday afternoon | | and fined $25 each. ne sam sl whites | eid rere sane rc | Surer, quicker, more thorough in its de- struction—those are points which impress you when’ you first use Biack Frac. It kills till every bug is dead. Kills in a dif- ferent way. The pests breathe it and die. All of ’em! Strangled by the secret, vege- table ingredient—the deadliest ingredient ever discovered for all insect pests. But ‘" absolutely harmless'to humans and’ *”’ ' animals. : | | | Breakfast It’s not only deadly to flies and mosqui-' ia at9 take KLO Ke LAX constipation | toes, Back Fac kills and rids a place of =» fleas, ants, bed-bugs, roaches, moths. Try it. Buy the form you prefer—liquid or powder. At drug, grocery, hardware and department stores. Powder is 15c up. Powder Gun, 10c. And look at the low liquid prices below. Compare them, NOTE! Sprayer ..sses00. world—not physically, but mentally; it even cut off the residents of the city from knowledge of each other, because people} have come to rely almost entirely on the’ fewspaper is in itself a temarkable papers for their local news. One may be injexample of voluntary co-operatign. Not a room with a number of others, but if thejonly 18 it a complex fabric woved of the lights are suddenly turned out, one feels!labors and abilities of hundreds within its! Start every day with food that “stands by” you gin also to sense the extent of the constantly renewed influence which brings our millions of people into continuous con- scious touch with each other. (Next article, “From News Letter to Newspaper.”) awareness so that Bop, however widely separated, may work together intelli- erat and effectively. OW you feel all morning de-| se | pends largely on what you eat for breakfast. Thousands have un- | energetic forenoons because of wrong ATLAS Se | breakfast eating. STONE, Eng.—Mrs. Bertrude!~ To feel right, you must have wrll- | Comyns, aged 83, set fire to al alanced, complete breakfast rat.o: i tke | At most other meals—lunch and | Rewspaper while lighting a cigat- | dinner—you get it. But breakiast is tte and burned to death. | a hurried meal, often badly chosen. | Thus Quaker Oats, contaii n | 16% protein, food's great tissue) | builder, 58% carbohydrate, its great _ | energy element, plus all-important) vitamines and the “bulk” that makes | ' faxatives seldom needed, is the die | | tetic urge of the world today. | | It Gs food, that “stands by” you | Of ise teroweh he tags ber It Eni start a) % oe every breakfaést-in* your * 5 a (Suitable Bucilla-Packages Don’ deny. yourself the natural ° ty ~—- | stimulation i$ ric! food offers. For. Christmas Gifts? | "Cet Quaker Oats today. Grocers tr Now'is the time to start work on Raye two kinds: Quick Quaker, jgsome-suitable gift that can be made | -whtt in 3 to 5 minutes, and from our new line of Bucilla Pack- iker Oa jeee gvods just received. They in- Quaker clude: $ i e Toys of all Kinds k A ; Floral Boudoir Pillows Qua Fat Lid Lifters Library Set Seti Dining Room Sets | z, Laundry Bags, Etc. ourt. | Most anything desired will be found in this new Bucilla line. CAKE SALE TOMORROW eae eee B.C. Abraham, tried in x Brook-| THE GIFT SHOPPE Pay only $1.00 down, Read lyn. court for forging two checks, 618 FLEMING 8T. Key West Electric Company’s ad.| proved that he could neither read | aug. 4-tfinor write. 1 WOMAN’S SMOKE FATAL | | DIES AT 105. | SHEFFIELD, Eng.—John nson, who never smoked or d died a the age of 105. CITY COUNCIL DISCUSSES MANY | IMPORTANT MATTERS | (Continued from Page One) ‘ob- ' wececeees « 45C *»fEmeralds ir:prove in color 0} exposure to the light. tracting many tourists who are always anxious to view the large number of different kinds of sea products that are usually placed on exhibition. The speaker also stated that the Key, West aquarium could carry many varieties of fish that won’t survive at the Philadelphia aquarium and at other of the larg: er cities in the north and east. Dr. Vanduzer offered to. coop- erate in every way possible to- ward the building of the aquarium at Key West, and stated that he thought .t would be one of the best investments yet made in the way of furnishing attraction to the tourists, especially, who come here annually from all sections of the country. SS SER ee DO YoU WANT— » Defendant, ing by the sworn ‘bill above-stated cause that Ethel Gray Garber, the defendant therein named is a nonresident of the State of Florida, and re: of North Carolina, 4 over the age of tweny it is therefore ordered that said resident defendant hereby required to of complaint filed in said ¢: |before Monday, the 6th tember A. PD. 1926, othe; allegations of said bill will be tak- en as confessed by said defendant. It is further ordered that this or- der be published once ‘each jfor four consecutive weeks in the | West Citizen. a néwspaner tfah- id County and State. | It appe tiled in th CHICKENS | FRESH KILLED CHICKENS Delivered At Your Door Daily ARCHIE THOMPSON Phone 879 1001 Eaton St. Gi | WILLIAM H. MAL‘ Solicitor for Ce aug’ | 0-27 ;septs | | There's a Beaver now - Clearing a.path to. get anew ig sf of wood down to the water will (greater ease. 5 wn tr ir bra Prope Here's one swimming . with his ressing a stick close to his chin: He Is using his hind feet as paddies,histailasa rudder and also sometimes. topropel him forward. Hs the pond made ir dam | | cut them' into _ built across: the stream. they build.a h THEM DAYS ARE GONE FOREVER (A New, Tune Each Day By Vincent Lopez) - YOURS HANDY AND EFECIENT- - YOU WOULD MIAKE A FIRST-CLASS SPOUSE:

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