The Key West Citizen Newspaper, February 23, 1933, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR : SOCIETY =-:-: v CAPPICK, Editor ------PHONE 436 e ©0900000000060000000000008000 0686000000000000 Entertains Aid Cuban Club Plans Society Tuesday — Elaborate Cabaret “Mrs. Lovie Ley entertained the} The Cuban Club house Siac lies’ Aid Society of Ley Me-|tee is planning an_ elaborate adise. earch Take piesa cabaret for the benefit of this when plans were completed for a} +). night of March 11. €oupon drive for adults which will] Miss Mary Elizabeth. Grillon Degin at an early date. This} will be in charge of the musical society interested a large number program and dance numbers, and of children in collecting coupons} rehearsals are being held for this with which to buy needed articles} entertainment. The entire pro- for the church parsonage. Yes-| gram when arranged will be pub- terday afternoon the children en-|lished and it has been announced _ Baged in collecting these turned|that many new and noval attrac- them in and were given a treat by|tions will be introduced. members of the committee on en-| The large dance hall of the fertainment. Coupons numbering) Cuban Club will be beautifully more than 1,800 were brought in| decorated for this occasion, and by boys and girls, willing to assist] with tables around the sides of in this work. Ray Pierce received) the spacious room, and on the ® prize for bringing in the great-| brightly lighted porches the club st number of coupons among the) will indeed be most attractive. ‘boys,.and Jackie Doughtry won| Members of the committee ar- the ‘girls prize. ranging this event state that they At the Tuesday meeting. the) feel that with Miss Grillon in following members were present:| charge of the musical and dance Mesdames ‘Lovic Ley, hostess;/ program, the affair will prove an John Park, Lorena Buckley,| ynqualified success. Corinne Curry, Joseph Johnson, Sem Pierce, Vincent Archer. Country Club Dance Changed To Monday Reverend Holmes Logan, pastor ef Ley ‘Memorial church, was’ guest of ‘the society’ on ‘this ‘oc- | | ‘The dance which was announced for’ Saturday night at the Coun- try Club in honor of the captain -casion. and’ officers of the Italian train- Jolly Merrymakers Clab Holds Meeting ing ship Colombo, will be given on Monday night, February 27, ‘The Jolly Merrymakers Clubjinstead. This change was neces- y with Mrs. Irving}sary on account of the time of Hedin, SGoorcla street, where|arrival of this vessel. ‘the afternoon was spent with| This entertainment will be for needlework, and playing “Cootie.”|club members and their invited Prizes for high scores in this game/ guests and promises to be well were won by Mrs. Vernon Lowe] attended and thoroughly enjoyed. and Mrs. Ellis Archer. Dancing will begin at 9:30 and The hostess served a delicious| continue until 1 o’clock. club which will be presented on! AMENDMENTS ARE MADE TO PLAN IN BABY BOND ISSUE MATTER THOROUGHLY DIS- CUSSED DURING MEETING OF COMMITTEE; NEW OUT- LINE OF PROPOSITION Plans for the Merchants and Citizens Association and for the issuance of baby bonds and coupons have been amended and changed to meet certain condi- tions as outlined at a meeting held in the office of Mayor Wm. H. Malone early this week. At this time a committee com- posed of the mayor, S. Owen Saw- yer and Charles H. Ketchum was appointed to confer with John Rice Scott, who conceived the idea and proposed putting it in ef- fect. The result of this meeting and the plans as amended are printed herewith in order that everyone in Key West will know exactly what the proposition means. 1. To stimulate and increase business by the introduction of a self-redeeming baby bond that can be used in taking up frozen items of value upon which cash cannot now be realized and to hold such frozen items as long as may be necessary and. until they can. be sold or disposed of to advantage; to relieve the city and county governments of the present de- mands upon them and to increase the revenues of the city and county. 2. Said baby bonds to be re- deemed through their coupons, one coupon to each dollar value of the bond, by requiring a two- cent redemption certificate or stamp to be pasted on said refreshment course and each guest coupon in the space provided for Feceiyed an American flag as a| Weatherford, Sam Curry, Bernard favor. Miss Edith Carruthers was} Roberts, Henry Saunders, Ellis ® guest of the club.on this oc-| Archer, Louise Thompson. easion, Others present with the] The club will meet next Wed- hostess were Mesdames Fieldon|nesday with Mrs. Fieldon Elbertson Elbertson, Vernon Lowe, Rolandion Francis street. Personal Mention Arnold Currie, who was in New] Joe Pearlman, was an outgoing Smyrna to Manna the funeral of| passenger over the East Coast yes- his father, returned over the East|terday afternoon for a short busi- Coast yesterday. fiéss visit in Miami. Smee 1.N, Meltzer, who was in Miami Several days on business, was a returning passenger over the East Coast yesterday. Mr. and, Mrs, Bert A. Linder- man, of Key Largo, who were here for the day as guests of Mayor and Mrs. Wm, H. Malone, left for os home yesterday afternoon. Mr. Mrs, George Lowe and little hter came in yesterday from: Miami for a: visit with; rela- tives. i J. A. Farrell, auditor with the State Emergency Relief Council, eamé in yesterday to check up the records of the local unit and re- turned to Miami in the afternoon, V. A. Johnson, local realty op- erator, left yesterday to attend a meeting of insurance représenta- tives in Jacksonville. Mrs. Morris Holtsberg was a passenger on the afternoon train going to Miami for a stay with her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Stephen F. Lowe, local repre- Mrs. Milton Suber. tive of several large sponge returned yesterday from a brief visit in Miami. Seas Lounders wala passen- ger * ing over theEast Coast yesterday to spend some time in Miathi with relatives. Mrs. George Kantor left yester- day afternoon for a stay with her son-in-law ‘and daughter, Mr: ‘and ine Arthur Mulberg, at Pahokee, Attorney William V. Albury, who was in Tallahassee and Miami on matters connected with the Overseas Bridge Corporation, re- turned on the Havana Special yes- terday! Mr. and Mrs, Lionell Plummer left ‘over the highway yesterday for Miami for a few days’ visit. While’ there they will ‘take in the Nebo-Canzoneri bout. to be staged tonight. Mrs. R. Givens Dies This Morning In Miami News has been received in the eity announcing the death of Mrs. Robert H. Givens, Sr., in Miami this morning. The body will be shipped to Tampa for burial. The deceased, who was 58 years old; is survived by her husband, Robert H. Givens; two sons, Rob- ert H. Jr, and Jack Givens; three dqughters, Lorena, May and Fan- nie Givens, and three Transters Cause Changes In Narses At Hospital There have been two changes in the professional nurses staff at the Marine hospital recently owing to transfers of employes to other scenes of activity. Miss Agnes Dill, who was trans- ferred to the hospital at Norfolk, Va., has ben replaced by Mrs. Charlotte H. Warner and Miss Thelma L. Goddard has replaced Miss Sadie Roberds, who has been transferred to the hospital at Mobile, Ala. | | sisters, ; Mrs. Asa L. Whitaker, Mrs. Wil- Nam Griner and Mrs. C. cocks, Mrs. Givens formerly resided in Key West, having moved to ‘Tampa some years ago, where she had made her home until recently when she took up her residence in Miami temporarily. Relief Council Auditor Makes Check Yesterday J. A. Farrell, auditor for the Jay- One Marriage License Issued In Past Week There is not a great deal of activity shown in the marriage market these days, according to the records in the office of Judge Hugh Gunn. There was but one license is- sued during the week endii 2 State, Emergency Relief Council, | ruary pare hs say wie? made his regular visit to Key! Hamlin and Ilma Johnson, Feb- West yesterday for the purpose| ruary 20. of checking the accounts of the Monroe County Council. The accounts were found to be —- in the usual excellent shape, it is! DULUTH, Minn.—Within five said, and Mr. Farrell left in the) minutes after G. F. Francis of this afternoon for Miami. city, had assaulted an opposing witness he was arrested, tried and sentenced to a month in jail. QUICK TRIAL Subscribe for The Citizen. that purpose, and a one-cent stamp required for a fifty-cent value coupon of the bond, to be pasted on said coupon in the space pro- vided for that purpose. Each dollar coupon before it is finally redeemed shall contain fifty-five two-cent stamps and each fifty cent coupon to have fifty-five one- cent stamps. The purchase money of fifty of said stamps to defray the cost of redeeming said coupon, and one of said stamps to be paid J. Rice Scott, the owner of the copyright of this plan, and the remaining four stamps to be deposited with the trustee of the association to be organized for this purpose, as an expense fund to defray the expenses of this sys- tem. The ‘purchase money of said, stamps and all collateral re- ‘ceived by this association shall be deposited with the! trustee, to be named by this association, who shall be required to give a good and sufficient surety: bond, con- ditioned for the faithful perform- ance of his duty and to faithfully account for all monies and other articles of value deposited with him. 8. There shall be organized a Merchants and Citizens Associa- tion for the purpose of issuing said baby bonds, coupons, and stamps, and for carrying out the purposes herein provided. Each member of said association shall be required to agree to accept said baby bonds coupons in trade for any purchase, ‘services or for any other business that. may re- THE KEY WEST CITIZEN PICTURESQUE KEY WEST ‘RADIO REVUE’ HERE TONIGHT (Continued fro: the Caribbean. How does it know one place from another, in the TO BE REPEATED UNDER DI-/open ocean? Mystery! RECTION OF MRS. VIRGIL CORDERO The fact, however, is proved by fishermen’s marks on the shell. Each fisherman always cuts _his| initials on every turtle he takes. And these initialed sea-monsters, The “Radio Revue”, under the}#f they escape, are soon found direetion of Mrs. Virgil Cordeto, will be repeated at the Garden Theater tonight at 8:15 o’clock. The benefits derived from this per; formance will go for an entertain, ment for the cast. ‘Every seat in the large auditorium is expected to be filled tonight. Members of the cast include: Edward Schaeffer, Howard Wil- son and his band, Warren Hill, Jock Lopez, Doris Roberts, Harry Betancourt, Charles Roberts, Ce- celia Knight, Buddy Dorgan, Mary Roberts, Lois Norman, Doyle Ray Smith, Bert Hernandez, Gerald Saunders, Harriet Johnson, V. C. Cordero, Barbara Curry, Gerald Alfonso, Julio Cabanas, Hilda Morena, Joe Catala, Gould Curry, Bernard Waite, Billy Knight, Ireta Bethel, Elizabeth Niles, Edna Johnson, Mary Dexter, Gladys Cates, John Esperdy, Marguerite Page, Nellie Mae Albury, Ray Rus- sell, Jerry and Helen Saunders, Virginia Blackwell, Piedad Perez, Alce Curry, Wilamite' Synette, Mildred Olsen, Florence ' Dillon, Francis Schaeffer, Sylvia Dillon, May Henriquez, Wilma Russell! Mary Roberts, Mary ‘Demeritt, Hilda and Blancho Martinez, Ruby Curry, Earle Weatherford, Rose Crusoe, Miriam Piodela, Bobby Curry, Edna M. Thompson, Ros- enda Piodela, Florence Crusoe, Alma West, Earle Thompson, Lil- lian Roker, Anna Tuttle, Walter Norman, Paulie Esquinaldo, Tito Schipa, Ed Fryberg, Liberty Val- dez, Falcon and Contreras sisters, Hector Cruz, Josephine Lopez, Mary Louise Davis, Alice C. Weatherford, Pauline Nash, Helen Albury, Gladys Cates, Ruby Curry, Charles Curry, Mary Etheridge, Iretta Bethel, Phylis Gomez, Daniel Lopez, Julio Lopez, Ramio Rod- riguez, Adolfo Bozo, Isadore Rod- riguez, Eduardo Alfonso, Becky Waite, Eloina. Moreno, Roland Keaton, Helen Saunders, Jerry Guerro, Nelly Villareal, Frank Johnson, Nancy Norman, Hilda Cabrera, Lillian Ackerman, Edna Johnson, Millard Burchell and the Night Owl orchestra including J Torano, Mrs. Miriam Piod Charles Curry, Clarence Sweeting. Alfredo Barroso and Jack Baker. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS eecceess 8200228000 000088 Roy D. Chapin, Secretary of Commerce, a pioneer Detroit auto- mobile man, born at Lansing, Mich., 53 years ago. Frederick | Warde, celebrated actor of a generation ago, born in England, 82 years ago. Douglas Volk, dean of Ameri- can portrait painters, born in Pittsfield, Mass., 77 yars ago. Admiral Henry Braid Wilson, U. S. N., retired, born at Camden, N, J., 72 years ago. Governor John G. Winant, of New Hampshire, born in New York City, 44 years ago. Margaret Deland, celebrated Boston novelist, born at Alleghany, Pa., 76 years ago. quire a medium of exchange; each member agreeing to take into his business an amount of baby bond coupons such as he can pos- and fifty cents each in proportion sibly use. to the principal amount of the 4. All collateral and security, bond. e&cept ‘city and county warrants} 7. The First National Bank of or other obligations, accepted by}Key West shall be the depository this association when said baby} of this association and the trustee bonds are issued, shall be dis-}to be named by the association posed of in accordance with the}shall deposit all funds of the As- agreement made with the PUr-| sociation in said First National chaser of baby bonds and the pro- ceeds of said sale, shall be used }for the payment of the expenses of this association and the balance! thereof shall be divided by the! payment of one-sixth to J. Rice} Scott and the remaining five- sixths to be divided among the} stamp purchasers of record in the | association, | 5. This association shall agree {to accept city and county war-| jrants, certificates of indebtedness) issued by the city of Key West} jor Monroe county, as collateral for the purchase of baby bonds | and baby bond coupons, which said city and county warrants or other! obligations as described in this} | paragraph, shgll never be pre-, {sented for payment to said city or jcounty, but shall be cancelled and jreturned to said city or county as fully paid. The stamps used for said purposes being revenue to said city and county, and thus re-/ ducing the city and county in- debtedness. call 51 and a paper will be sent 6. Any person may purchase aj] to your home. A complaint \paby bond with baby bond coupons |} boy is on duty at this office | with such collateral or secu asi] from 6:00 to 7:15 p. m. for the bass be approved by the Board of ;; PUTPose of delivering com- | Directors of this association. '} plaints. Help us give you 100 bonds shall be issued in the follow. || Percent service by calling 51 if a tty t receive The Citizen. fine denominations: $100, $50. $20,]) you do no “ $10 and $5, to which shall be at- tached coupons of the value of $1 Bank of Key West. PALACE Rex Bell and Norma Judge in || The Man From Arizona |] Matinee, 5-10c; Night, 10-15¢ { —$—<$<$<<— BENJAMIN LOPEZ FUNERAL HOME Established 1885 24-Hour Ambelance Seevics Skilled Kmbalmer, Miastic Surgery Phone 135 Night Phone 696-W TO SUBSCRIBERS If you do not receive your paper by 6:00 o'clock in the afternoon, use your telephone er your neighbor’s phone and eel | | again right back at home, One Key West expert has this to say about the hunting: “On a calm afternoon, the fishers can hear the turtles blow as they come up to breathe, Then; the fishers work their way to the turtle-set, and there they listen attentively, to. get the exact spot. They buoy this, and then re- turn to their ‘living-boat.’ Thus they can come back and pick up the place very early in the morn- ing, before the turtles have left for the day’s feeding, and catch the herd. Turtles may go as far away from their sets as 25 miles to feed, but at night they always come back to exactly the same place.” Again, the turtles are captured when they come ashore to lay. First there is-the “green meat,”| lished, it created a sensation all m. Page Three) dumped in for them. The hawks- bills and loggerheads eat fish and grabs, in addition to this grasm but the greens subsist on the grass alone. Once safely “crawled,” the turtles are in due time either shipped north, alive, or are | butchered. - Sometimes a shipment jof live turtles to New York amounts to 50 animals, weighing around 10,000 pounds. When wanted for canning pur- poses, the turtles are roped and hauled up a steep slide to the fac- tory. This factory is spotlessly clean, with big, scrubbed floors and tables, huge coppers and ket- tles, steam cookers, and other machinery. The turtles are swiftly dis- patched with an axe, and are re- moved from the shell with amaz- ing speed and dexterity. The various elible portions are sorted into piles, while the refuse is saved for shark-bait—Key West also having a shark industry, as we shall later see. Several portions are dis- tinguished for eating . purposes. Sometimes they put up a game: fight The hunters turn them on their backs; and once a turtle-is upside- down, he’s surely headed for the soup-kettle, against their capture which is made into soup. Then there is the “calipee,” and the “calapash,” which are the gelat- THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1983. STRAND THEATER eeccacaceca ° eeseeeest Gustave Flaubert, upon whose famous novel, “Madame Bovary,” the Allied talking picture “Unholy Love” is based, is one of the most famous of French novelists. Born in Rouen in 1821, he became a contemporary of the renowned} Zola, Raudet, Turgeniev and the Goncourts. Besides “Madame Bovary,” his best known works are “The Temptation of Saint An- thony,” “Salammbo,” ‘“L’Educa- tion Sentimentale” and “Le Can- didat.” \ But it s fround “Madame Bovary” that his greatest fame is centered. Flaubert spent more than four years in the prepara- tion and writing of his master- piece. Not all the time was spent in the quiet of his studio. Be- fore the book was published, the French government _ brought charges against its author and publisher. In a sensational trial that stirred the interest of all of France, Flaubert was acquitted. When the book was finally pub- ‘over Europe and so great was the opposition to it that strenuous ef- forts were made to bar English} translations from the United| States. These attempts were un- successful and the book swept a¢ross the country like wildfire to become the best seller of its day, Commenting on “Madame Bo- vary,” Encyclopedia Britannica says: “Every critic finds a new aspect therein that has been made and is still to be made to illus- trate the most diverse literary} doctrines, “Unholy Love,” which features H. B, Warner, Lila Lee, Joyce Compton, Ivan Lebedeff, Lyle Tal- bot and Beryl Mercer is showing tonight at the Strand Theater. | inous flesh from the back and) @ No turtling ‘at all is done by|breast. The fins or flippers also Key Westers, all this work being] Yield meat, when split; and the petformed by Caymanians, Mex- icans and Central Americans. Oc- casionally a Cayman schooner brings in @ load, but for the most part the Granday Canning Co. sends its own schooner, the Ange- lina C. Noonan, down to the tur- tling-grounds, to bring back the catch made by other vessels. part of the fins left after this meat is extracted, yields an edible, jelly-like substance. The so-called “beef” is not made into soup, but is turned in- to steaks for local use. Key West is noted for ‘its turtle-steak—a delicacy which, if properly pre- pared, is impossible to beat. This .. chest DS Arriving here, the immense ani-} city is the only one in the United] mals are, put into the turtle-crawls| States where turtle-meat can be; obtained fresh. The meat is rich{ is to behold several hundred of/and juicy, and is hard to tell from) them being transferred to their|the most superior qualities of; —and a most picturesque sight it pens. These pens are enclosures surrounded by concrete piles, be- enters. weed Lu called “turtle-grass” is beefsteak. A’ for the green-turtle soupy} tween which the seawater freely! that is all shipped to one firm in} over the world. ckies Please! Lake Como, Italy In every comer of the world, both here and overseas, wherever you find joy in life, "tis always" Luckies Please” They’ re mild Plenty of ‘a kind of sea-|New York, which distributes it all! if and how they please! And mildness—fine, smooth, mellow-mildness—that comes real cigarette pleasure ...the Scrike! Character born of the when these fine tobaccos “Luckies Please!” “Toasted”. For these two reasons —Character and Mildness— Lecause\t's toasted” COUGHS Don’t let them get a strangle hold. Fight germs quickly. _Cre- omulsion combines the 7 best helps known to modern science. Powerful but harmless. Pleasant to take. No narcotics. Your drug- gist will refund your money if any cough or cold no matter how long standing is not relieved by Creomulsion. (ady.) Misses Ellie Gwynn And G. McLaughlan Win Cakes Misses Ellie Ray Gwynn and Golden McLaughlan won. the cakes given away Tuesday night at an entertainment sponsored by the Patriotic Order of America, Camp No. 4, it was announced by those in charge of this entertain- ment. Richardson's Store FRIDAY and SATURDAY Yard Eggs, doz. Peaches, large can Salt, 3 packs ... Matches, 3 boxes Safety Matches, 3 packs 2Be House — Coffs 27e Milk, 3 cans Sugar, 10 Ibs. Cream, 6 cans Potatoes, 10 Il Onions, 3 pouncs Flour, 6 fb sack Grits, 2 pounds Siam Rice, 5 Ibs. Jello, 3 packs .... Black Eye Peas, 2 Ibs. brow Beans, 2 Ibs. Toilet Tissue, 2 rolls Post Toasties, 3 pkgs. Phone 134 Eaton and Elizabeth Sts.

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