The Key West Citizen Newspaper, October 6, 1932, Page 4

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SOCIETY AARIE CAPPICK, Editor - - - - PHONE 436 Entertains The Jolly Merrymakers met yesterday with Mrs, Charles Lew- in-and spent the afternoon sew- ing. The following members were present: Mesdames Fieldon Elbert- son, C. M. Russell, Ellis Archer, Trvin Sweeting, Paul Archer, Ber- nerd Roberts, Vernon Lowe, Ro- land-Weatherford, Sam B. Curry, Henry Saunders, Louise Thomp- on: Social Clab ‘Holds Meeting The. Happy Gathering Club en- joyed the afternoon meeting yes- ferday with Mrs. Eddie Saunders | as club hostess. Needlework was th€-pastime and a dainty refresh- ment course was served. Those present were Mesdames Otto Kir- chheiner, Leo Warren, Ansel Al- bury, Ulric Gwynn, Cleveland Dil- jon; Russell Kerr, Ivan Elwood, Cabaret Dance Mach Enjoyed Arthur Sawyer Post No. 28, American Legion, gave an enjoy- able cabaret dance last evening at the Oversea ball room, which was voted a big success. The special numbers put on, one of which was a vocal solo by Miss the person of Prof. Berginsky, who recited a comedy monoloque, were well rendered, and greatly enjoyed by those in attendance. A quartet composed of Misses Rebah Pritchard, Miss Alce Curry, Bert Hernandez and Joseph Cates, was also another number that | proved to be pleasing and enter- | taining. Excellent. music was furnished for the dance, and all . present, thoroughly enjoyed the evening’s entertainment. Cleveland Saunders, Frank Papy, Lionel Plummer, Sam Kemp, Rex |Shaw, Ralph Russell, CALE NDAR Thursday Sewing classes at Wesley House at 4:30 o’clock. Young Peoples’ Chorus of Fleming Street Methodist church will hold*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. O. E.. 551, at 8 o’clock. Friday Girls’ Club of La Trinidad church meets at 4 o'clock. . Social meeting of the Junior Woman’s Club at home of Miss} Biizabeth Ayala, 707 Division street with Miss Ayala and Miss Tessie | Falk hostesses. Personal J. Bennett Buist, of Charleston, $.., arrived on the Havana Special yesterday from Miami and will remain here until tomorrow when “he will leave on the S. S. Cuba for a stay in Havana. Leo Warren, president of the eity council, left over the East Coast yesterday to attend the meet- ing of the executive committee of the Overseas Bridge Corporation in Miami today. W. M. McDonald, expert radio electrician, who.was here for a short stay as the guest of J. C. Whalton, left yesterday afternoon for Miami. "Mrs. “Rica Peacon left on the Owe? Sea Limited yesterday for Mi- anti Beach where she will visit with Professor and Mrs..G. E. Everett and other relatives. "HAVANA HIGH POINTS “By Local Cuban Consulate eeecsee A fleet of three planes of the army are taking a good-will trip ro Guatemala, Mexico and the United States. The two first countries lave been reached suc- cessfully and their respective authorities were high in their en- Sertainment of the Cuban aviators. The secretary of the interior has allowed an extension of time until November to all foreigners resid- ing in Cuba for their registration in the “foreigners registry.” By order of the president of the republie 125 prisoners have been set at liberty, who were serving sentences for various offenses. The department of the treasury has issued a circular disposing that steamship companies notify the arrival of boats to this port 48 hours ahead of time. There has been a great increase in the exportation of fruits and Vegetables to the United States during the first six months of the Year, as compared with the six months of last year. first} The sugar institute has agreed! te extend the “pool” of 700,000} tons of sugar destined for the Uni- ted ‘States, until July, 1933. They} have also agreed in part to the} coming suger crop beginning in} February and not to exceed two! milliow tons. H The national tourist commission is preparing a booklet on Cuba,} Which will be sent as advertisement te the international exposition in! Chicago to whomever requests it.) The department of sanitation has ordered the local sanitary in-! Mention Virgil S. Lowe left over the highway this morning for Miami and expects to return tomorrow afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Bergstrom, who were visiting Mrs, Bergstrom’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Pierce, left over the highway yesterday } morning for their’home in Detroit, Mich., accompanied by Mr. and Mrs, Pierce, who spent a_ while with relatives in Miami. L. C. Palmer, of Jacksonville, arrived over the East Coast yes- terday for a stay of one day in Key West before taking passage for Havana. J. F. Uhrbach was an incoming passenger over the East Coast yes- terday on a brief business visit ‘and left. in the afternoon for his home in Miami. tend the public schools ginated. be vac- Exportations from Cuba during the first semester of the present year had a greater value than the importations, for while the latter reached a value of $30,203,000, the former reached a value of $39,- 112,000, this being about nine jmillion dollars in exeess of the | first. The National Casino will be opened for the tourist season on December 29 and the horse races in Oriental Park will begin on January 21. Mr. Jorge Govantes has been appointed to represent the national tourist commission of Cuba in Mi- ami, Due to a bill introduced in the! senate which will allow contract| by bids for exelusive concession | for the sale of petroleum and its} by-products during forty years, to} any company that will obligate it-| self, in exchange, to pay the ex- terior and interior debts of Cuba, the president of the republic has declared that it is contrary to the concession of monopolies, due to} the fact that the constitution es } hibits it. Collections in the department of | the treasury are increasing with! the new taxes and the Secretary! of the Treasury Dr. Ferrara - is| meéeting all exterior and interior! obligations, having created a} special department for the collec-! tion of said taxes. H | Tt has been announced that Rus-} sian sugar production will be less} by 400,000 tons, which will enable! Cuba to place her sugar in the! European. market. Producers of} Java have agreed to place the ex-, portation of their sugar in hands/ of the government, the same as Cuba, which will prove advantag- eous for the even distribution of spectors to require that al! who at-jsaid product Susan LaKin, and John Esperdy in | -| Cruz, Junior **|DEMOLAYS PLAN FIRE CHIEF BAKER FOR BEACH PARTY NEW OFFICERS INSTALLED DURING MEETING TUES- DAY NIGHT | Robert J. Perry Chapter, Order jot DeMolay, held it’s regular week- ly meeting Tuesday evening at the \Scottish Rite Hall, corner of Eaton and: Simonton streets. James Curry, outgoing Master j Councilor, turned the meeting jover to Ben Adams, Majority De- gree DeMolay, who, with the as- sistance of Fernando Camus, John- ny Roker, George Peacon, George Adams, William Hamlin, Edward Johnson and George Roker, install- ed the following officers in their respective offices for the term of Oct. 1, 1932 to Jan. 1, 1933: Emilio Norcisa, Master Coun- cilor; Ben. Birs, Senior Councilor; Joe Cates, Junior Councilor; James Curry, Senior Deacon; Anthony Deacon; Malcolm Pinder, Senior Steward; Charles Sands, Junior Steward; Joe Lopez, Chaplain; William Saunders, Mar- shal; Howard Butler, Standard Bearer; Jack Johnson, Scribe and Tresurer. The Athletic Committee report- ed that a DeMolay basketball team had been formel and plans were being made to form a league. There was a report also from the Scoial Committee stating that plans were almost complete for a beach party to be given in the very near future. Call To Repentance To Be Preached On Sunday (Contributed) The ministers of the various churches of Key West on the com- ing Sunday will preach on repent- ance. This is in response’ to the Call of Repentance and Prayer re- gently issued by the Federal Coun- cil of the Church of Christ in America. The great moral need of today it is felt by Christian leaders gen- erally is a return of.the people to a sincere practice of religion. The call reads in part-as_fol- lows: “We therefore call upon our people to give themselves by an act of will, personally and corpor- ately, in penitence and prayer to Almighty God. And in order to secure the spirit of fellowship in united intercession, we set apart the week as a time when pastors and people shall search their hearts and conduct, and by personal dedi- cation and public services appoint- ed to meet the need of the hour, discover for themselves and for the nation the way to peace and: pow- en.” CALLEJA’S GROCERY STORE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SPECIAL ROYAL SCARLET CORN, can Everyday Bargains BUTTER, Cloverbloom or Brookfield, tb 26c BUTTER, Daisy or Lakeview, Ib ..... CREAM, Pearl or Carnation, can SUNBEAM GRAPE JUICE, pint ...... SUNBEAM PRE- SERVES, 16 oz. jar .. ONION: b GEISHA WHITE MEAT 20¢ TUNA, can SHRIMP, 10¢ 5c can .. SUGAR, _. $1.30 oo ee COFFEE, Maxwell House, ib GAVHITE Chins, can LOC 5e SALT, » 18¢ CIGARETTES, Carton 2 pkgs. SWIFT PREMIUM HAMS, by whole, POTATOES, CRACKERS, all 5¢ packages 6 for 2 SWEET CHOCOLATE German’s, 3 cakes for LIBBY’S ROAST BEEP ...... LIBBY’S CORNED BEEF THE KEY WEST CITIZEN DOESN’T HURT HER LINCOLN, Kan.—By smoking an extra \pipe of tobacco, Mrs. Abbie Holman, pioneer resident of this city, recently celebrated her 102nd birthday. GIVES WARNING ON | MANY OF HAZARDS jserved from loss and that about ASKS FOR COOPERATION oF} 8909 people might still be alive if | proper precautions had been taken PUBLIC IN CONNECTION |to prevent fire.” WITH FIRE PREVENTION | 5, is reported by the National re Waste Council.of the United WEEK FROM OCT. 9 TO 15° ‘ | States Chamber of Commerce that | 70 pereent of the deaths from fire | occur in the city, and 30 percent | Fire Chief Harry Baker made a/i" the country.’ Of injuries sus- | public statement today regarding |‘#ined by fire, 16 percent happen jthe dangers of fire and requestéd | in the: country and 84 percent in every citizen, business man, prop-! the city. It is pathetic to observe erty owner, schoo! authority and | that of the deaths sustained sf welfare organizations to lend the! ‘i"es $1 percent are among chil- utmost aid. dren under ten years of age and “Fire Prevention Week,” -said of injuries suffered 13 percent are Chief Baker, “has been proclaimed ,°Y Children of the same age. |for national observance by the ., “More than 60 percent of the president of the United States | fives oceur in homes, which enne and will receive the support of that every minute and a half an- state and county officials as well ther home is burned. jas of local authorities and organi-; “No home or business voncern zations throughout the nation. ;can boast immunity with a new “The loss by fire during the fire breaking out on an average past year, amounting to more than of every minute of the day and 10,000 lives and almost half a Tight. The waste from prevent- billion dollars in property damage. ;2»!e fires is appaling. Immediate is reason enough why everyone concerted action to remove the fire should. be vitally interested in Pltgue from the midst of the fire prevention. All share in the, American people, will do much to tremendous financial loss through | Conserve Mie, property, emaploy- the economic effect of fire losses |™ent and business, and will pro- en prosperity,” said Chief Baker, |Vide the country with needed cap- who added, “furthermore, hazards (tal: to enhance its Rrogremy and on numerous properties throughout | Rrosherity,. said the chief. the land have been increasing for|. “D0 your part as a citizen and | more than two years until at pres-|enefactor of this community. ent they constitute a menace, not | Help in this national campaign only to health but to the lives and /2zainst fire,” the chief concluded. Property of thousands of people.! These hazards are spreading to a} degree which make large ont CASTOR IA } rations possible.” Chief Baker pointed out that in} For Infants and Children 1n USE FOR OVER 30 YEARS some communities hazards are so numerous, and p onal care 8», lax that the public is making in-{ Always bears cvitable the possibility of increas-! gignatare ed insurance costs whith are auto.{ matically controlled by conditions? The Coolest Spot In Town jthe public’ itself creates in the }communiti | SON OF OKLAHOMA Matinee, 5¢-10c; Night, 10c-15¢ x 4 “According to official records,” said Chief Baker,.“‘80 percent of! jall fires are preventable al should ‘not have occurred. . This means that almost four hundred million dollars a year could be pre- "STRAND Back to his native Oklahoma again after filming his recent pic- tures against various foreign lo- cales, Will Rogers has the star.role in “Down To Earth,” his new Fox offering which shows today at the Strand Theater, With the recital of a business man’s efforts to balance his dwindling income against his family’s social ambitions and ex- travagance as its theme, the pic- ture is being Hailed everywhere as the most timely as well as the fun- niest production of the noted hum- orist’s career. Rogers fans will recall the hectic adventures of ‘Pike. Peters and his family abroad in'“‘They Had To See Paris,” his first’talking — pic- ture. In “Down To’ Earth” the whimiscal “Pike” reappears after his trip, once more ‘guiding the destinies of his oil company. ‘The recent Wall Street crash, however, has seriously affected ‘his. hold- ings and he becomes worried over his family’s expenditures. The failure of a bank in which he is interested brings matters to a eris- is, hastened when he wife’s social Richardson's Store - Friday and Saturday © Maxwell’ House _ or « Del Monte. Coffee,a-tb- Ham, by half, 1 Ib -. Butter, 1 Ib 24c Sugar, 5 Ibs. : Milk, 3 cans Cream, 6 cans . Grits,'3: pkgs... Potatoes 10 lbs Onions, 3 Ibs: 3 Ibs Matches, 2 boxes Salt, 2 pkgs. Tomatoes, can Sliced Bacon; 1 Flour, 6 Ib sack Pork, 1 Ib © Crackers, 6 boxes: Palmolive Soap, 4 bars Tomato Paste, 3 for Corned Beef, ean Phone 134 é Eaton and Elizabeth Sts. BeRREe Rene BERSEREEER They are not present in Luckies | ty THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1932. cease eae While his father, sisters and brothers work ina cotton mill near | ve their farm in Lindale, Ga., Ralph; VERSAILLES, Ky.—State Sena- Watson, 12, does a man’s work tor Drake Naive of this city, has inot found a single plank of his storé since it was washed away in ‘ SSS a eee ENTIRELY GONE around the farm, aspirations wreck his attempts to | negotiate a loan from the local flood. bank. { Irene Rich Ie Wife Again | This combination of bad luck} proves the final straw—and Pike}; goes berserk. His original and|” surprising methods of getting his} family back on its feet again form} the climax of the story and round ; out the unfolding of the picture. | Irene Rich again enacts the role; of Mrs. Peters, with Dorothy Jor-j dan, Matty Kemp, Mary Carlisle, | Theodore Lodi, Brandon Hurst and | many other noted players in the) supporting east. Homer Croy, the| author of “They Had To See Paris,” wrote the story for the new offering, with Edwin Burke making the screen play and David Butler directing, E rel lany fives chenenlahiigel ‘ . = ” gestion, constipation, head- ache, colds and fever, 10¢ and 35¢ atdealers,. = Wherever you dee you. find this malt the favorite of the nation RAW FURY “Nature in the Raw”-as portrayed by Meissonier’s famous painting (1855)... inspired by the savage pas- sion held in check by Henry IV’s stern edict against duels among the of his court, —and raw tobaccos have no place in cigarettes W vobacc you ever smoked buy the finest, the very finest in all the world—but that does not explain why folks everywhere regard Lucky Strike as the mildest cigarette. The fact is, we never overlook the truth that “Nature “If ¢ man write a better book, preach a buald bis bouse im the weeds, the world will make a beaten path 10 bis door.” —BALPH Does nor this explain the in the Raw is Seldom Mild’’—<so and mellowing, are then given the benefit of that Lucky Strike purifying process, described by the words— “‘Ie’s toasted”’, That's why folks in every city, town and hamlet say that Luckies are such mild cigarettes. 66 It's That package of mild make 2 bane cumsenn) Vann Memmigiiee Se oe Pel he

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