The Key West Citizen Newspaper, October 12, 1932, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR Meeseoocccocovesovosesce $ “Auto” Party Last’ Night The. junior choir of First Con- Btegational Church was enter- tained last night by Mrs. E. R. Evans, wife of the pastor of this chureh. The entertainment was an “Alito” party, and games as- sociated with automobiles were pore. There was a large at- nce and everyone enjoyed the evening. After the games a re- Freshment course was served. “Star Night” To Be-Observed | “Star Night” will be observed by Fern Chapter, Order Eastern Star, at a regular meeting Friday night in Scottish Rite Hall. All SOCIETY -EARIE CAPPICK, Editor - - - - PHONE 436 Seeesesossoooocooooooese |Plan Hallowe’en Entertainment Plans for a Hallowe’en enter- tainment were completed at a meeting of the Ladies’ Aid Society tof Ley Memorial Church yesterday afternoon at the home of Mr: Maud Sawyer, Varela street. This} event will be held on the church grounds Monday night, October 1 Members present were Mes dames John Park, Marie Adams,; Joseph Johnson, Ed Curry, Edj Gray, Will Menendez, Lorena Buckley, Thomas Whitmarsh, Ro-! land Adams, Charles Lowe, Fer- nando Camus, Vincent Archer. members of this chapter, and visit-/ ing stars are invited to be present, | After the meeting there will be aj social hour. CALE Wedn Primary Boys’ Club meets at Wesley House at 3 o’elock. Young Peoples’ League meets Young Adult Bible Class of meets at 4 o'clock. re Thar; +» Bridge party under auspices E: BS’ o'¢lock. Patriotic Order of America Camp meets at regular. hour. Justice Temple, No, 17, will hold regular meeting in Temple on Caroline street. » . Moung 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! reereational evening in Sunday school building. Sewing classes at Wesley House at 4:39 o’clock. Friday Girls’ Club of La Prinidad church meets at 4 o’clock. Fern Chapter, Order Eastern Star, will meet at 7:30 o'clock: NDAR esday at 7:30 o’clock at Wesley House. Fleming Street Methodist church sday astern Star at Scottish Rite hall at} THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Won’t Change His Color § (Ireland. Died in New York, April #|the most famous actresses on the Personal Francis E. Kirk, of the United States Coast Guard Service, left overt the East Coast yesterday for big station at Fort Lauderdale, , Miss Lucille Figueredo was a . fees: leaving on the S. S.! iba last night for Tampa where she will visit for a few weeks with Telatives. : © Rev. S. W. Rogers left last night for Tampa where he wil! remain for several days. ‘Norman ‘Lowe; son of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil S. Lowe, who had been ing several days in Miami md other points in that vicinity, has returned to Key West. He made the trip over the highway. * Basil Tynes, who was on a short visit with hia parents, Mr. and Mrs, Romey Tynes, of White street, | left yesterday for Miami and af-j tet & stay of one week there will Ieave for New Orleans. te = ¥+B. Putnam, former manager ef the Railway Express Company, } CARLTON, HOWEVER, SAYS i FLORIDA WELCOMES WIN./| TER VISITOR; WARNS OF IN. FLUX OF UNEMPLOYED Mention Lee A. Strong, chief of the Bureau of Plant Quarantine of Washington, D. C., and Dr. James Montgomery, assistant plant com- |missioner of the State Plant Board, jcame in on the Havana Special yesterday for a visit with the lo- cal bureau, and left in the after- {noon for Gainesville, Fla, |KEY WEST MAKES GOOD SHOWING IN EXPORT MATTERS ISLAND CITY ALSO FOUND IN THIRD PLACE ON IMPORTS FOR MONTH OF AUGUST, REPORT SHOWS 4 (By Ansoctated Press) | TALLAHASSEE, Fla., Oct. 12. —Governor Doyle E. Carlton, in a prepared statement, today said; Florida weleomes winter visitors and tourists but has no room for job-hunters this season. He said the question of an an- nual winter season influx of un- employed persons. secking “an easy living and a warm climate” is more serious this year than ever before because of the general eco- nomic condition throughout the country and Florida’s own unem- ployment problem. “Florida,” the governor said, “is making “every effort to take care of its own unemployed resi- dents and its needy families. The state has obtained federal funds from the Reconstruction Finance | Corporation and has organized re- lief units in each of its countie to cope with the problem within} | t In the statement issued by the collector of customs for the Eigh- teenth District of Florida on | Agriculture, born at . Curley, R. of Baltimore, born Wilberforee Eames, noted York born ago. Public Library bibliographer, at Newark, N. J., 77% years Henry F. Lippitt, one-time U. S. Senator from Rhode Island, born in Providence, 76 years azo. Maj. Gen. William L. Sibert, U. S. A., retired, of Kentucky, born at Gadsden, Ala., 72 years ago. Howard M. Gore, West Virginia's Commissioner of Agriculture, one. time governor and Secretary, of Clarksburg, W. Va., 55 yeras ago. Peter B, Kyne, noted novelist, born in San Francisco, 52 years ago. Rt. Hon. James Ramsay Mac- Donald, Great Britain’s Prime Min- ister, born 66 years ago. Suad Hanim, Turkey’s first woman surgeon, has been appoint- ed head surgeon of the Etfad Has- ~ |Dr.’ Grant E. Ward. e New} -Today’s Anniversaries Baked Tomato Is Fine Entree 1775—Lyman Beecher, Presby- terian clergyman, the most wide- ly known and most influential jpreacher of his day, father of eminent sons and daughters, born lat New Haven, Conn. Died ati Brooklyn, N. Y., Jan. 10, 1863. | | 1803—Alexander T. Stewart, |noted New York merchant, born in| | ;10, 1876. | welcome, -And from. the | point of proper nutrition—nourish- {ment must not be overlooked even. | during the 1808—Victor P. Considerant, ithe French socialist who sought to establish a. Utopian settlement in Texas, born. Died in France, Dec, 27, 1893. i 1827—Josiah P. Cooke, Harvard | University chemist, founder of its ta jchemical laboratory, born in Bos-| contains a gory! | ton. Died at Newport, R. L, Sept. | constituents, 3, 1894, 13, { f pleasing Is beautiful, to see, andr 1844—Hel Modjesk: | see,” requi elena Modjeska, one of py nih ‘i Baked Stuffed Tomatoes. eee hee 1 Sm chopped Bu! tered ‘bread ynio’ erumbs: hopped 1 ci evapo. P rated mie % Db. American stage, born in Poland. | ; Died at Bay City, Cal., April 8, £1909, t 1844—George W. Cable, noted {novelist of Southern life, born in New Orleans. Died at St. Peters- jburg, Fla., Jan. 31, 1925, f 1860—Elmer A. Sperry, famous} Chieago and New York electrical engineer and manufacturer, born| {at Cortland, N.Y. Died June 16,! 11930. i aif 28587 E i i F The effectiveness of eleetra-sur- ;Zery m making operative incisions, :was described to members ‘of the; ‘American Congress of Physical! ' Therapy at New York recently by, Bs4 cif g o a Bi iti t é German hospitals have been ex- perimenting with a new method in | X-ray diagnosis, by using paper in-} jstead of photographic plates or| films. ; 3 fi z t } \ } 1 tanesi, the large children’s hospital! of Istanbul. ‘was transferred to St, Peters-| burg, left yesterday morning over the. highway accompanied by Mrs. Putnam, to take up the duties of THE Hew post. *MYe: S. P. Vecker, who was spending several weeks with her Mother at the home, 522 Elizabeth merchandise exported and import- ed during the month of August, 1982, Key West’s exports amount- ed to $284,260, which was second place on the list. In the matter of imports, this city was third, showing business { the state. “We have all we can do to pro- vide part-time work for our own! people and to prevent actual des- titution among large numbers of families, in all parts of the state. | We haye no room for unemployed ; persons from. other states-—no for the month amounting. to $73,-' room ‘and “no work for the Job= TAINLESS Same formula .. same price. In original form, too, if you prefer VICKS Stuffed |" WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1938. ~ ed pe '|GIRLS THIN, SKINNY : STRAND HAVE FEW BOY FRIENDS jase Try this easy way to fill~eut . Bringing a swift-moving ro-jyour chest and give your bedy the mance of two very different worlds; pretty curves men admire. Just. to the screen, “Hat Check Girl’,!take Vinol a few weeks and you'll shows tonight at the Strand Thea-|be surprised. Oriental Pharmacy. ter with Sally Eilers and Ben Lyon in the leading roles, 3 An electrical. device, developed Miss Eilers portrays the title/ny 2 professor at Boston Univer- pail ee aie Oe eae sity, will determine whether a lob- wraps at a famous New York night |ster is fit to eat or not. ;club, and Lyon that of a young ee Millionaire whose tirst meeting With ms future tiancee is when he » {finds her asleep in his apartment. .| From this acciaental pegmaing {their acquaintance tiowers rapidby, : |¢ompheated by such events as her . | arrest ona false charge of selling liquor, a ride on the city sprink-| hing cart when their taxi breaks down, and a trip to the Andiron- aaeks during which Lyon proposes, and is accepted. The course of true love is sud- denly halted, however, when Sal-/ ly’s ex-lover, Monroe Owsley, ap- pears. at ‘their engagement party and tells things he shouldn’t tell. Subsequently Owsley is found dead in the apartment, and sus- picion naturally fails on Lyon’s shoulders, with the police deciding that they have a clear-cut case against him. The sparkling Ginger Rogers, who.enacts the role of Miss Eilers’ chum and. fellow-worker, supplies much of the comedy. in: the pro- duction; while the two principals are said to give brilliant perform- ances in their well-suited parts, F. W. Gist, state and federal} statistician, estimates Alabama’s corn crop this year will total 43,- 798,000 bushels. ‘ A cookbook published by the U.- S. Department of Agriculture -has* been reproduced in. the raised Braille type for the blind. The Coolest Spot In Town DRUMS OF JEOPARDY Matinee, 5-10c; Night, 10-15¢ street, left yesterday on the S. S. Florida for her home in Havana. 378. The report for the district{ hunters. eed follows: “State department and institu-| tion heads have been directed to; Amount|employ Florida residents | when-} 258,101 }ever there is work to be done and} 284,260 | employment to be given. The coun- $74,994 | tries and the city also are follow-; 278,650 | ing this plan. Private business in- 27,275 | terests, too, have adopted this} 46,775 | method as the best way to relieve, 16,060|@ serious condition within our | state. i 0} “In carrying out this policy we} 972| are following the advice of the} 117,399 | federal government, the Recon- | struction Finance Corporation and ——_—_——_| alll leading economists. $1,404,486} “We welcome the winter visit-| lors who have been with us year| jafter year and we invite others to |come te Florida this winter but} .. $161,242] We must warn unemployed persons | 73,378 | that there is no work awaiting | 299,493 them in this state this winter. We | 3} do this in justice to our own people | and with sympathy-for all in oth-/ 42,484! er states who have felt the hard 0| hand of depression and loss ef em- 0} ployment.” “\( BRIDGE PARTY THURSDAY AT 3 P. M. SCOTTISH RITE HALL Telephone 484 For Reservations Exports Port of Exportaio. =*@sear Cherry, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Cherry, who was on, ajTampa vasation in Tennessee and return-; Key West - ing stopped in Jacksonville for sev-| Jacksonville .... weeks, returned on the Ha.-| Pensacola vana Special Monday. ‘lange Boca Grande - Apalachicola St. Augustine _.. | West Palm Beach Panama City . Fort Pierce ... “NORTHER” BLOWS Will You SHIVER 27? Or Will You Be COMFORTABLE WITH A Gas Room Heater * ‘Mrs. Bertha McConnell was an Stival over the East Coast yester- day, called to Key West because of the iliness of her daughter, Mrs. Lewton Watson. a salle! | ; «'Jose Manuel Sanchez was a pas-| Penger leaving over the East Coast} — lest night for Miami where he will | laperte Spend several days with relatives. | port of Importation : —_ Tampa 7 Mrs. Winer Bethel and baby left ‘Key West con the S. Cuba last night for} Jacksonville ‘Tampa enroute to join Mr. Bethel} Pensacola in St.Petersburg. She was accom- | Fernandina eed by her sister-in-law, Miss! Miami y Bethel. {Boca Grande _—_—— j Apalachicola Rev, Smith Hardin, presiding St Augustine Baer of the Miami District, of the] West Palm Beach Methodist church, who was here) Panama City for several days visiting the local | Fort Pierce ist churches, left yesterday | @n-the Over Sea Limited for Mi- ami. Totals— i ease cee I go, I have to listen to the same thing. ‘Try Chesterfields. Honestly, they are milder, and you simply must try them!’ “Me... try Chesterfields! Why, I haven't smoked anything else. That’s how important mildness and better taste aré to me! “No wonder Chesterfield gnokers are so en- thusiastic.” Amount THEY’RE MILDER — THEY TASTE BETTER 360! e o e * Totals— 580,260 ; CHESTERFIELD RADIO PROGRA Every night except Sunday, Columbia Coast-to-Coast Network, Mexican or Barber's bottle Imperial Eczema LOW PRICES EASY TERMS Be Prepared Collins, William Freeman, W. Monsaivatge, Owen Sawyer and} John Roberts, who were in Miami] Eileen H. Miller, who forecasts tending the meeting of the| wheat crops for the financial dis- Bxecutive Committee of the Over-trict in Chicago, is the only woman seas Bridge Corporation, returned in the United States following this| yesterday. profession, i SIGHT .-. 1S PRECIOUS Correct Vision Is Vital To Your Child DR. J. A. VALDES 522 Duval Street © 1952, Loscer: & Mysas Tusscep Co

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