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PAGE FOUR ie i FEOOSOSOOOOCOOOOOLOLOOOOEOLOOOOO9OOOOOOOOOOOOOO® SOCIETY -IARIE CAPPICK, Editor - - - - PHONE 436 Bridge Party On Tharsday To provide lunches for needy schoo] children, the Harris School Parent-Teacher Association, will sponsor a bridge party Thursday afternoon at the Woman's Club bose 1307 Division street. Mrs. HS. Dexter and her committee for the month will be hostesses on thig occasion, and a delightful en- tertainment is promised. cote Woman’s Clab To Hold Meeting | Members of the Woman’s Club will gather at the club house to- morrow afternoon to begin the 17th year of club work in this city. The meeting will be called to or- der at 4 o’clock, and Mrs. William R. Warren, club president asks that all members be present. The officers in this club are planning an interesting year, and “4m view of the fact that the!only by whole hearted cooperation proceeds from this party will go, will anything the club plans be to provide lunches for needy school| carried out, it is shown. children, it is hoped that there will} Se ee be a large number of reservations} Breaking 15 out of 25 birds at made for tables. \the Legion Gun club shoot, John Reservations should be made|Pesek, 8, of Belmont, Calif., with Mrs. Dexter, phone 175-3. jcreated a sensation. os CALENDAR ESE SS ott ois ea Monday Parents’ Christian Club meets at 8,0’clock at El Salvador church. Temple No. 20, Pythian Sisters, will hold regular meeting at 8 o'clock. Tuesday : Woman’s Club will meet at 4 o’clock in club house, 1307 Division eet. Board of Directors of Woman’s Club will meet at 3(0’clock, Ladies’ Aid Society of Ley Memorial church meets at 4 ‘o'clock. World Friends’ Club and Bible hour at Wesley House at 4 o’clock. Junior Boys’ Club meets at Wesley House at 7 o'clock. Degree of Pocehontas meets at usual hour. Robert J. Perry Chapter of DeMolays meets at Masonic Hall, corner Simonton and Eaton streets, at 8 o’clock. Wednesday Primary Boys’ Club meets at Wesley House at 3 o’clock. Young Peoples’ League méets at 7:30 o’clock at Wesley House. Young Adult Bible Class of Fleming Street Methodist church meets at 4 o'clock. Thursday Sewing classes at Wesley House at 4:30 o'clock. Young Peoples’ Chorus of Fleming Street Methodist church will htold rehearsal at 7:30 o'clock. Young Peoples’ Department of First Methodist church will hold a recreational evening in Sunday school building. Regular meeting of B. P. 0. E., 551, at 8 o’clock. Friday Girls’ Club of La Trinidad church meets at 4 o’clock. Personal Mention Miss Claudia Bethel, trained nurse from Miami, came in over} the highway yesterday and will spend a vacation with relatives. Mrs. Ferris Lowe was a ‘passen- ger on the Cuba Saturday night going to Tampa for a stay with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Cates left yesterday afternoon for Marathon and-will be absent for about one week. Ralph T. Powell, of the veter-; Hubert L. Maynard, official of ans. byceau, who was here for some|the veterans administration time at the Marine hospital, left bureau, left Saturday for St. yesterday for Miami. Petersburg. z ‘W.-H. Pierce, keeper of the light station at Sombrero, arrived| were spending a few days in Key lastSaturday to spend his quarter-|} West on their return from a trip ly yacation with his family at 622|to Havana and other points in Ashe street: (Cuba, left Saturday for their home wn _ in Jacksonville. aAndrew Pritchard, who was! spending a few days in Miami with! Miss Cuca Domeneche, who was telatives, was a returning passen-| sponding several weeks with her ger on the Havana Special Satur-) sister, Mrs. Al Barker, at West day. }Palm Beach, returned yesterday 4 accompanied by Mrs. Barker, who Mrs, Harriet Hayden, stewardess} wi}) visit. for several weeks with Asuncion Castellano, who was spending several weeks -with rela- tives in Key West, returned Sat- urday to his home in Tampa. Mr. and Mrs, A. S. Purnell, who PLAN OBSERVANCE (PLAN HOLDING ~~ |SHOW MILDNESS OF JEWISH EVENT FOR NEXT MONDAY '|DAY OF ATONEMENT WILL BE CELEBRATED WORLD OVER; LOCAL OBSERVANCE ALSO NOW IN PLANNING October 10th is observed as Yom Kippur, the Day of Atone- ment, by the Jews throughout the world. This is the greatest fast! of the Jewish year. From sunset} of the 9th till sunset of the 10th,! the observant Jew neither nor drinks, but devotes the day to fervent worship. Yom Kippur is distinctive among Jewish holidays, for it is not associated with na- ture or with history. It is a day for the searching of the heart to find peace with God. The fast originated in biblical! times, and is described in the six- teenth chapter of the Book of Leviticus. In those days the peo-| ple fasted and afflicted themselves while the high priest made atone- ment for the entire house of Israel. | This atonement was made in an-j cient fashion by sacrifices, and especially by the symbolic rite of driving the scapegoat into the wilderness to bear away the sins} of the people. Now prayer takes the place of sacrifice. In modern Judaism prayer is the right form of ap-} proaching God, Jews devote the | Day of Atonement to prayers for} the forgiveness of their sins. They avoid all ordinary and sordid in-| terests on this Sabbath of Sab- baths. The fasting is abrogated, however, for children, old people and the sick, or in times of famine and pestilence, or such contingen- cies as are incident to the depriva- tions of war. The aim of Yom Kippur is atonement through prayer and re- pentance. ment of meditation through either a redeemer or a sacrifice, The only true repentance comes through change of heart and an effort to do better. Each human being stands before his Maker These contain no ele-jthe eighteen semester THE KEY WEST CITIZEN | COURSES HERE | — FOR TEACHERS MEMBER OF TEACHING STAFF OF UNIVERSITY OF FLOR- IDA WILL CONDUCT. SAME SATURDAY OCTOBER 8 i (Special to The Citizen) GAINESVILLE, Oct. 3,—Miss Fannie B. Shaw, of the Teaching Staff of the Extension Class Bureau will offer courses in Health and Physica] Education to the pub- lic school teachers - of Monroe eats{county for college credit begin-} ning Saturday, October 8. ‘She will organize a class in Key West in Health Education at 11 o’clock Saturday morning and Physical Education—plays and games for the first eight grades and theory and practice of natural activities, at 1:30. Both meetings will be held in the high school - building. Miss Shaw has been a member of the Extension Teaching Staff since the Fall of 1930, and a mem- ber of the Summer School faculty of the University of Florida for a number of years. She received her Master’s Degree’in' Health and Physical Education from Columbia University. For a number of years she was connected with the State Board of Health, and dur- ing the past winter shé was a mem- ber of the Committee on the Re- vision of the State Course of Study in Health and Physical Education, The courses to be taught by Miss Shaw in Key West are designed to meet the requirments of‘ the State Department for Public School Teachers in Florida. Health Ed- ucation is required of all holders of Graduate State Certificates. The course in Physical Education will satisfy the two semester hours equirement in that subject which must’ be met by elementary grade teachers; it will-also apply toward hours of Health and Physical Education re- quired of all Physical Education. directors. Both courses count as professional credit toward exten- sion of teaching certificate. Extension Class work, while of- seeking in honesty to make his} fered primarily for public school record clean. A feature of Yom Kippur is the Memorial service. Men and wom- en think of their dear departed and of the great and good who served mankind. Fervor animates these prayers by which the mem- ory of those who have gone is hon-! ored and their ideals served, Services will be conducted at the local synagogue by Rabbi R.| Rachmil. I. L.. Lloyd, Court Clerkship In Manatee} County Visiting Key West| are pre- Nominee For) I. L. Lloyd, nominee for cler the circuit court in Manatee county is a visitor in Key West and called at the court house this morning to] meet Clerk Ross C. Sawyer and rk of |), teachers is open to any adult who is interested in accumulating col- lege credit while otherwise em} ployed, and the public is cordially invited to attend the organization meetings announced above. Meeting Wednesday Night For Revival Of ' Scouting All boys in Key West between the ages of 12 and 18 are request- ed to be at the American Legion hall 8 o’clock Wednesday night to. lassist in reviving the scout move- ment in Key West. For more than one year scout activities in Key West have ‘lain ;dormant and most of the charters ave expired, But one charter in the entire city is said to be good at present. Parents of the boys are also re- TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Lilian Whiting, noted Boston author, born at Niagara Falls, N. Y., 73 years ago. “OF CIGARETTE ' CHOO: ; siasemdggasein ge a Dr. Virginia Gildersleeve, dean of Barnard College, N. Y., born TO ILLUSTRATE ADVER- there, 55 years ago. TISEMENT Rt. Rev. James DeWolf Perry, bishop of Rhode Island prim- ate of the Protestant Episcopal Church in America, born near Philadelphia, 61 years ago.’ Attila, who ruled over ceritral Europe from 433 to 453-A. D., was jknown: as the “Scourge of God’’ and’ of him it was said that“the ‘ass could not grow where his | horse had passed.” =.Frank Stewart Regan,. ‘noted Rockford, IIL, prohibitionist, years ago. lec-! lunch wagons. those early ‘days was mote. dread than this fier | Attila typified nature in the raw and the manufacturer of a | popular cigarette has chosen one jof his exploits, as delineated by a |famous painter, to. illustrate «an jadvertisement in a series now ap- pearing in The Citizen. The advertisements attribute the mildness of this brand to toasting so that raw tobaccos are nat pres- ent.. The ruthless Attila took part in one of 'the fifteen decisive bat- | tles of history when his forces met the allied Romano-Gothic’ army under Aetius and Theodoric at Chalons in 451 A. D. Attila’s de- |feat in this battle is said to have saved Europe from utter devasta- tion. Theodoric was killed at Chalons jand the total number of the slain is varieusly estimated at from 175,000 to 300,000. Attila died suddenly in 453 in the night fol- lowing a huge banquet in célebra- tion of his marriage to a young woman named Ildico. It is claimed that his body was buried in three coffins, made of silver, gold and iron, and that the captives who dug his grave were put to death, More than a million pounds of reindeer meat are sent to the Unit- ed States from Alaska every year. None of the : ‘ |chiefs of the barbatian. tribes: : sue lawxery morn. there), 72 Andrew.J. Montague, represent- ing the Third Virginia district in Congress, former ‘governor, born in Campbell Co., Va., 70 years ago. Prentiss B. Gilbert,: American consul at Geneva, born at Rochest- er, N. Y., 49 years ago. Prof. Robert M. Haig, noted Columbia University political eco- nomist, born at Columbus, ‘Ohio, 45 years ago. James H. Thomas, English, cab- inet officer and ‘statesman, born 57 years ago. f “TODAY'S HOROSCOPE The, person bern this day séems to be a lover of the maysteriout and may very likely be super: tious. The indications are for a tlove of study in retirement or for a solitary life, and if the other as- pects are at all vicious, there is danger of imprisonment, or at least, of very ‘severe . criticism, | however much deserved or not. | Hiss out died | Subscribe for The Citizen. II heard of after receiving thc bad MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1932. N D Coeccccacoocccosescoceoe As a big business man, James Dunn makes an excellent screen actor! This fact was revealed in his first interviews to the press fol- lowing his engagement by Fox Films to portray the masculine lead in “Bad Girl,” which shows at the Strand Theater tonight. _ According to Dunn, he onte amassed $10,000 during a year of hard, honest toil as a salesman for a concern manufacturing roadside American ‘historian, Secretary of the Navy, Ambassador, born “at Worcester, Mass. Died in Wash- ington, D. Jan. 17, 1891. 1832 — Albert S. Gatschet, American linguist and ethnologist, student of the American Indian languages, born in Switzerland. Died March 16, 1907. 1835—Charles Camille Saint- Saens, famous French musical composer, born. Died Dee. 16, “I imagined I was all set for a 1921, career of prosperity and indepen- dence,” Dunn sadly recounts. “The only thing that kept me res being a second Morgan was the jack of available sites for port- able hot dog stands. I lost sleep trying to figure out ways and means of increasing the speed of my sales. “Then the big idea came to me. It was a gift from a well-meaning friend... You’ve guessed it—a stock market tip. It took just twenty minutes to wipe out. the pool in which my hard earned ten] 1859—Eleanora Duse, celebrat- grand was a drop ed Italian actress, born in Italy, “But, after all, I'm glad. My} pied in Pittsburgh, April 21, 1924. going broke forced me to turn to “Night Stick” was the first thing Sally Eilers portrays the co-fea- tured title role in “Bad Girl,” zage from an adaptation of Vina Delmar’s sensational novel. “Edna Driggs” heads the support- the stage, since a job as cop in news from my broker.” which was directed by Frank Bo Minna Gombell, in the role of The Coolest Spot In Town THE SIGN OF FOUR Matinee, Sc-10c; Night, 10c-15c 1849—Jeannette L. Gilder, not- ed New York City journalist, edi- tor, newspaper correspondent and author, born at Flushing, N.Y. Died in New York, Jan, 17, 1918. 1854—William Crawford Gorg- as, army officer, sanitarian,. who freed Havana and the Canal Zone from the scourge of yellow fever, born at Mobile, Ala. Died there, July 3, 1920, ing cast which also includes Wil- liam Pawley, of the stage play Vicks Plan for CONTROL-OF - COLE ec 4 more an Ar ©ma gi quested to be present at the meet- other officials, {ing as, in the opinion of those who He is accompanied by his’ are starting to revive interest in mother, Mrs. Hannah Lloyd, for-| scouting, they should be just as merly Miss Hannah Parks of Key) deeply interested as their sons. West, who is spending several days} with relatives and friends. Subscribe for The Uitizen. withthe P. and O. S. S. company, who Was spending her vacation | with a daughter in Schenectady,} BN Y:, and another daughter in| Miami, returned Saturday and will | resume her duties on the 8, S.! Cuba. C. W. Davis, enginehouse fore-! man with the F. E. C .R’y. com- pany and D. B. s, car fore- man, who was attending the power meeting at St. Augustine, Friday, came in on the Havana Special} Saturday. | ad } Baron DeFoe, passenger agent! with the P. and O. S. S. company | in Havana, was an arrival on the! Ouba Saturday afternoon and le: onthe Over Sea Limited for Jack- svaville. Miss Claribel Contreras, steno | grapher at the Marine hosp left Saturday afternoon for Miami te leave by airplane yesterday for Cienfueg: Cuba, where she be theeguest of Armando Mato. manager of the Pan American air- port, and Mrs. Maty, for one month. Mrs, Arnold Currie and @ifidren ieft Saturday afternoon to join Mr. Currie at New Smyrna and remain for two weeks, Mr. Cutrie expects to return with his family. twe Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Johnson, who have been spending a visit With Mrs. Johnson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jefferson Knight of Washington street, left last week over the Oversea Highway for their home in St. Petersburg. Ac-! companying them was Mrs. John-: son's sister, Miss Nell Rose Knight? who Will make an indefinite stay! im that city. } | week with Mrs. Oliv » three days jat the home relatives in Key West. Mrs. Hugh Moore, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dalbert Bethel, who was visiting relatives and friends in Miami, was a returning passen- ger on the Havana Special yes- terday. Mrs, Albert Sweeting, who was in Key West for about two weeks as guest of her son-ia-law and daughte: r, and Mrs, John Lowe, returned turday to her home in Miami Beach. Antonio Olivieri, who came in last Sunday for a stay of one ri, returned over the East Coast yesterday to {his home in Miami, Mrs. Eva Pyfrom, who spent in Key West as guest of Mr. ‘and Mrs. William Weaver 809 Southard street, left Satur fterneon, having in charge s nese to be delivered at San Francisco for transporta- tion to Hong Kong, Jack Givens, forces of the customs in Tampa who was here with re s and friends for a vacation, left yesterday for a stay of several days with relatives and friends in Miami and will return to Key West this week and take the P. and QO. boat for Tampa. EDUCATED SWEDES MULTIPLY GREATLY (My Associated Press) STOCKHOLM, Oct. 3.—The national census research reveals that the most highly educated families in Stockholm have the largest number of children, MODES OF THE MOMENT Enough Turkish ... but not too much You can smoke pack after pack of Chesterfields...and never grow tired of the taste. That’s partly because Chesterfield uses just the right amount of Turkish tobacco. to “season” the mild, sweet Do- mestic tobacco. _, Too much Turkish makes a heavy-smoking cigarette . . . too little takes something away from taste and aroma. Just enough of the right kinds of: Turkish to- bacco—that’s one ‘reason why Chesterfields SATISFY! Reset 1 ERS SE hesterfie joes i © 1932, Loccert & + 3 > 1800—George Bancroft, famous ©