Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE FOUR SOCIETY e e oe MARIE CAPPICK, Editor ------PHONE 436 Seceecoseccnsoacncce ee! Renedo, who have been in Miamija month with relatives Music Recital At Convent Last Night Grand Success * ASinusic: recital’at the convent of Mary Immaculate last night brought together a large number of parents of pupils at this insti- tution, friends of the sisters, and 8 number of guests. The program was excellent and displayed the well founded principles and tech- nique of musi¢, for which music pupils of the convent are known, and which were exhibited last night. Reverend Father Dougherty, Pastor of St. Mary’s Catholic church, made a splendid address on music which was greatly enjoyed by all who heard him. The pro- gram as given last evening fol- lows: : Orchestra, Stolen Kisses, waltz —Piano, P. Phelan, E. Thompson. “In Rose Time,” Hamer—L. Fernandez. “In Schubert's Day,” Krentzlin —E. Lord. Violin, “Marche aux Flam- beaux,” Kern—J. Mendel, “Dancing Fauns,’ Rebe—D. Al- ry. “Little Playmates,” Mallard— “The Restless,” Sullivan. Violin, “Pizzicato . Serenade,” Franklin—H. Albury. Second vio- lins, R. M. Albury, C. Bethencourt. “Fairy Polka,” Moffat. “Song of April,” James. Violin, “Mazurka,” Dancla—E. Moffat. “Undaunted,” Gurlitt—O. Vas- quez. “Dancing Sunbeams,” Burgmul- ler—C, Bethencourt. Recitation, “Paul Revere’s Ride,” Longfellow—M. Bernal. “Cheerfulness,” Lange — B. Moreno. Violin, “Maybells,” Ducella—J. Spottswood. Piano M. M. Dion. “The White Butterfly,” (Left hand), Huerter—L. Warren. “Clear as Crystal,” Rolfe—A. L. Castillo. Violin, “Moment Schubert—G, James. James. - Streabog—T. Devaux—G. Musical,” Piano J. Spindler—E. | Personal Enrique o Nene. Renedo and for several weeks, arrived over the East Coast yesterday. Merlin Albury was an arrival on jthe Havana Special yesterday from Tavernier for medical atten- ltion to an injury to his right leg. Mrs. A. R. Coe and baby, who have been spending several weeks with relatives in Alabama, was a returning passenger on the vana Special yesterday. Mrs. Morris Holtsberg, who was spending a week in Miami as the guest of her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Suber, returned on the Havana Special yesterday. A. Canalejos, employe of the lighthouse department, left yes- terday afternoon to act as assist- ant keeper at Fowey Rocks light- house in place of E. H. Shanna- han, who is in the Marine hospital recuperating from an operation. Ha-! Mention John Pinder, who was spending in Key West, left yesterday afternoon for the home at Tavernier. Mrs. J, Keathley and chil- dren were arrivals over the East Coast yesterday from Miami ard will visit for several weeks with relatives, William Arnold, of the U.S. coast guard, attached to the cut- ter Saukee, arrived this morning on the Florida from St. Peters- burg, via Tampa, and will spend a vacation with Mrs, Arnold, who is in Key West with relatives, | Mrs. W. J. Muldrow, of Ft. (Meade, Fla., arrived yesterday on | the Havana Special for a day in Key West, accompanied by Mrs. W. P. Campus and Mrs. E. P. Wil- cox, of Miami, and left in the af- ternoon delighted with the tfip. Bernal Clark spent the day in Key West in the interest of “Dod- Key West in the interest of “Doh- city on March 10, ROBERT INGLE “With Lofty Strides,” Wachs— C. Narvaez. Violin, “Mandolinata,” Franz— M. Lowe. Chorus, “Rosebud”—5th and 6th grades. 7 “The Old Music Box”—V. Lom- Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sosin, 1100 Margaret street, entertained Tues- day afternoon in honor of the fifth birthday of their daughter, Violet Sosin. There were games for the children and a large birthday cake with five pink and white candles. The refreshment course was also in white and pink. The guests included: Violet Sosin, Frank Sosin, Jr., Marina Lois Sikes, Bobbie Sikes, Grace Estevez, Grace Carrero, Rosario Carrero, Emma Carrero, Delia Casada, Georgina Casada, Vilma Thrift, Thomas Renedo, Jose M. Renedo, Pepe Renedo, _ Olga Renedo, Louisa Castillo, Lidia Abael, Celia Gonzalez, Abelardo Gonzalez,’ Johnnie Sosin. George Mesa, Alice Kemp, An- gel Kemp, Bobbie Kemp, Lillian Pent, Joseph Pent, Rosa Mae San- ders, Helena Sanders, Juliette Sanders, Reva Sanders, Flora Mae Cruz, Oneil Adams, Jr., Argelia Aeenedo, Emilia Martinez, Grace Casada, Florine Sanders, Misses ‘Lidia Molina, Anna Re- nedo, Anna Perez, Clara Perez, Jennie Perez, Lidia Acebedo, Mar- garita Perez, Celia Gonzalez. Mesdames Roland Thrift, H. C. Cruz, George W. Sikes, Oneal Adams, M. Acebedo, Enrique Re- nedo, Helio Renedo. Coupon Drive To Be Continued The coupon drive which the Ladies’ Aid Society of Ley Me- morial church is now conducting, will be continued during two weeks more. The drive now cen- ters in the society, each member trying to get as many coupons as possible which will be used in providing articles for this church. After the drive, a prize will be given the member who has brought in the largest number of coupons, This will be given at an_ enter- tainment at the home of Mrs, John Park on Tuesday evening, March 14, Those at the meeting yesterday were Mesdames John Park, Roland Adams, Lorena Buckley, Will Menendez, Ed Curry, Joseph John- son, Thomas Moore, Leon Curry, Marie Adams, Thomas Whitmarsh, Lovie Ley, Harold Russell, Stan- eliffe, Raisetrick, V. A. Archer. Woman’s Clab Unit Plans Food Sale The library committee of the Woman's Club will hold a food sale Tuesday afternoon directly after the education’ committee's Program which will follow the business meeting. The meeting will be called to order at 4 o'clock. There will be an election of officers held during the session. Pythians Entertain At Hall Last Night Goral City Lodge, Knights of gave an entertaiument’ | { last night at the Pythian hall on} Fleming street, which was en-! Joyed by 75 guests. A program} 6f vocal and instrumental musical selections added t: the pleasures! pf the evening, S. Aronovitz. Piano, R. Appel. “First Nocturne,” -Enna—A. Jenks. Chorus, “The Coming Spring’—7th and 8th grades. of Eastern Star Grand Matron Arrives Here Mrs. Katheryn E. _ McKay, worthy grand matron of the Grand Chapter, Order of Eastern Star in Florida, arrived today and will make an official visit to. Fern Chapter, No. 21, Order Eastern Star, this evening. After the of- ficial. visit there will be a social hour for this distinguished state officer. Tomorrow afternoon the local chapter will hold a reception at the Woman’s Club house, 1307 Division street, to which all for- mer friends and acquaintances of Professor and Mrs. McKay are invited. Several years ago Professor Kay was principal of the Junior-Senior High ‘School. and Mrs. McKay was a member of the teaching staff. They have numerous friends who will be de- lighted to meet Mrs, McKay to- morrow afternoon from 4 to 6 o’clock at } the Woman’s Club house, 1307 Division ‘street. Mrs. Claude Albury And Children Arrive Mrs. Claude Albury and chil- dren arrived over the highway Wednesday from Miami, and are house guests of Mrs. Albury’s sis- ter and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hattrick of Fleming street. They will join Mr. Albury later, who has been transferred to Ellis Island, N. Y., as inspector in charge of the deportation division of the U. S. Immigration Service. Emit F. Phillips of the same service, who has been transferred from Key West to Miami, drove Mrs. Albury’s car in which the family arrived. TILL YOU’VE HAD COFFEE By GEORGE ALLAN ENGLAND How many a gibe of cutting pow- er, How many a scolding, fretfully It uttered at pre-breakfast hour, When everything declines to “gee!” How many a home goes all a-lee, Neglecting this essential law: “Don’t argue till you've fed, par- die! Till you've had paw!” When kitty’s in a temper sour, What claws she hath, right well know we. But when she purrs, we'd surely vow her Soft paw was velvet. plea Is merely this: Right patiently Refrain from strokes with slash- ing claw Until you've had your breakfast, see? Till you've paw! coffee—velvet So, my had. coffee—velvet Astonishing, how tempers dour, How surly answers melt and flee, When coffee’s calm, heart-sooth- ing dower Stills troubled waters, wondrous- jy! Ah, list my wisdom, “She,” When hungry nerves are jangling “He” and JUBILANT OVER NEW GAS STOVE CLAIMS ‘JONQUIL’ EQUIPPED WITH EVERY MODERN CON- VENIENCE; NEW PRODUCT ON MARKET “What is all this about a jon- quil jubilee?” The Citizen asked Robert Ingle, manager of the Gas Company. “Don’t you think it time for us to have some explana- tion?” ‘Then My, Ingle told his impres-|™” sions when seeing for the first time the new Roper gas stove that has just been placed on the market by the makers and is what he con- siders the apex of cooking effi- ciency. When he looked at the stove, from a mechanical standpoint, it was so beautiful in lines that a botanical idea intercepted his thought waves and he immediately thought of that graceful and beautiful flower, the jonquil, Right then he began to hum to himself that catchy and _ lilting melody from the “Mikado,” “The Flowers That Bloom in The Spring, Tra-la”, and realized that no other flower grows that has the lure to the eye like the jonquil, just as no other stove has the at- tractiveness of the Roper ‘Jon- quil”. No other stove so perfect in construction and. attractive as this. Efficient beyond the dreams of a technocrat.but feebly expresses the Roper, says Mr. Ingle. He even hates to think in terms of money in connection with this stove, but since they are to be sold, he states that the prices have been so reduced. by the manufac- turer that the Gas Company is of- fering them at a price that is with- in reach of the humblest wage earner but so wonderfully effi- cient and so beautiful as to be a credit to the home of the million- aire. Think of a”stove that has an in- sulated oven lining, automatic heat control and is enamelled in- side and outside that makes clean- ing it as easy as washing a china plate. And this stove is being soldat a price that is almost 50 percent less that the same style of stove was selling last year, with an allowance of $13.15 on any style of old stove now being used by the purchaser. So optimistic are Mr. Ingle and his employes today and so pleased are the many who visited the com- pany’s display rooms to see the “Jonquil” that when The Citizen representative was leaving the of- five Mr. Ingle voiced the thought uppermost in his mind and with admiring eyes fastened on the id: “Gee, but the depres- sion was tough while it lasted.” GETS GOOD DEAL DULUTH — Thirteen-year-old Ralph Andrews. of this city, charged with stealing a basket of coal, was released and given a new suit of clothes by the court. The annual bill for medicine in this country approximates $715,- 000,000, or an average of about $6 per person. raw, Just wait a bit; you'll soon agree! Till you've had coffee—velvet paw! > } ENVOY ; Prince of all soothers, King Cof- feeee, How wondrous is thy peaceful law! Humans, my counsel hearken ye Till you've paw! had coffee—velvet JUST BOILED DOWN (By STEPHEN COCHRAN SINGLETON) @Oeecegccccooscoooooocccs (Views or opinions expressed in The Forum are solely those of the ‘writers and not of The Citizen). It would take more nerve than is owned by this columnist to pre- sume to tell anyone what they ought to think about the problems that confront us. Our “Best Minds” have made a dismal fail- ure of that’job. But one thing is sure: if you are not thinking now, the time is near at hand when you will, All that this column can’ do is to keep-in view some of the things that we must think about. The rest is up to ou. If the lands that have reverted to the state for non-payment of jtaxes can be homesteaded by men {equipped to succeed, as Rep. J. C. Brown contemplates, he has made a fine motion. This column would, however, offer an amendment. Only those who have homestead- ed, and especially the homestead- er’s wife, can know what a back, heart and bank-account breaking venture the homesteader* under- takes. Suppose we approached thie thing from a different angle. We could make of Florida a commond-wealth that would pay divigends to all its stockholders and provide that no child born a citizen of this state should ever be a pauper. We could give the set- tler a fighting chance for success, We could employ our idle labor at a profit to the state. All the land that WE own is a part of our common-wealth—un- til we part with it. Let us never part with another foot that we now own, or that shall ever come into our possession. Suppose that instead of showing the settler eighty acres of land that can not come into use until after two years of desperate battle, we em- ploy our people to clear, fence, drain, build; and then say: “Here it is, ready to go to work upon. Your rent is the amount of your taxes and the amortization of the bonds that have provided the money to get it ready for you. You are assured of possession so long as you make. these payments and till the land, You shall not transfer your lease, without, shar- ing with the state the amount you receive for transfering it. | For- ever, this land is part of the com- mon-wealth of Florida, When you cease to till it, you lose possession. All that you can earn is yours. But you can not use this land as an in- strument to collect money that the other fellow has earned.” t There is nothing novel about all this. Long ago, Thomas Jefferson tried to make it a part of our Na- tional policy. “The land belongs in usufruct to the living,” he said. “The dead have no part nor title therein.” ) Still longer ago, it was written, ‘The land shall not be sold for- fever, saith the Lord.” (Ex. + 25:23). The novelty, such as there is, is in the suggestion that in the depths of despair we turn to the law of the Lord and restore the jancient landmarks. Surely we l have long enough been “putting our wages into bags with holes in them,” as Haggard very neatly Puts it. “The testimonies of the Lord jare sure, making wise the simple.” | | PALACE] Lane Chandler—Marie Quillan —_ Matinee, 5-10c; Night, 10-15< “STRAND THEATER Women who marry stunt men— daredevils who flaunt death and danger—are hazarding their fu- }ture, opines Bill Boyd, featured player of RKO-Radio Pictures’ “Lucky Devils,” showing tonight at the Strand Theater, stirring melodramatic romance of the film stunters. However, women will marry jheroes, daredevils, salesmen, : tramps, actors or clerks, regardless {of a mere man’s opinion or ad- monitions, Furthermore, a wom- an will marry her choice because | She hopes for his constant attend- ance, Boyd asserted. A stunt man’s wife cannot pect him to be a steady mate. B sides, Boyd declares, she can with certainty be ever apprehensive of his safety. The thrilling revela- tions in “Lucky Devils” demon- strates this fact, Boyd explains. A group of Hollywood’s most famous stunters participate in providing thrills for the film. They stand on burning roofs until their very clothes are afire. They crash automobiles through plate glass windows. They swing through roaring, scorching flames, clinging to a slender rope. A death-defier intentionally hurls his body fifty feet through the air to a concrete floor, crashing through a skylight and chandelier enroute. “I wouldn’t want my wife to be married to a stunt man. So, sir! It’s too dangerous!’ Boyd declared emphatically. * Boyd, nevertheless, portrays the head stunt man in “Lucky Devils”, with William Gargan, Dorothy Wilson. Roseo Ates, Julie Haydon and others featured. Ralph Ince directed the stunters, who include Bob Rose, Duke Green, Dick Dick- inson, Harvey Perry and Buddy Mason. « TODAY IN HISTORY 1845—Florida Statehood. admitted to 1846—Fire at the famous Brook Farm, near Boston, an experiment in social cooperation, resulting in the collapse of the enterprise. 1924—Turkish National Assem- bly abolished the Caliphate. 1932—League of Nations met in special session over the Shang- hai fighting. FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1933. Mother, Son And Daughter-In-Law Of Incoming President | Always Fresh =} ‘and Crisp ae See The New All Metal “li Ice Refrigerators Now Being Sold At _ Wholesale Prices Mrs. Sara Delano Roosevelt (left) is the mother of the new pres dent. At right is Elliott, a son, and his wife. f ANTISEPTIC Free Alemiting with a change of oil at the regular price | Sunshine Service Stati |Thompson’s Ice Formerly Collins Ser. Station, Cor. William and Eaton Sts. | \ GRITS, GRUNTS | | | | | } and GRAVY > MANY a meal is built around these three standbys—grits, grunts and gravy. Invariably they are the first dishes that come to your mind as you plan your meal. But in spite of their hunger-satisfying and nourishing quali- ties, this time-honored triumvirate can become monotonous ttiless it is supplemented by other dishes. However, it is often a problem to find these “side dishes” in your own head. Of course you can quiz your neighbor, or ask the members of your family what they would like. But even this source of information is often lacking in ideas. 2 The thing to do is read the advertisements The Citizen. You'll read of new vegetables and fruits that have “just arrived.” Your appetite will be aroused by the tasty creations of national food manufacturers. With pencil and paper you can make your market list and menus before you step out of the house. Read The Citizen and Patronize It's Advertisers. They Make This Daily Paper Possible & ‘ THE KEY WEST CITIZEN — PHONE 51