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bm ee ™e SOCIETY MARIE CAPPICK, Editor ------PHONE 436 Under the auspices of the Knights of Columbus a Bingo party was held in St. Cecilia’s hall last night. There was a large attendance: and everyone spent an enjoyable evening. Prizes of chickens, hams, aluminum ware and other valuable articles were, offered and won by those play- ‘mg. Billy Phelan won a turkey which was offered for door prize. St. Patrick’s Day Dance At Casino ve St: Patrick’s Day will be cele- brated tonight at the Coral Isle 0 with a big dance starting at 9 o’clock, The Night Owls will furnish music for the affair and it is stated that they have ar- ranged a good program of ap- propriate music for the occasion. Ladies will be admitted free. e Personal Abe Rosenthal, formerly of Key ‘West, Who has been in Miami for some. time, returned yesterday snd expects to remain for an in- definite time. A: L, Pooser, superintendent of transportation of the F. E. C. R’y. company, and P. L. Gaddis, dis- triet superintendent, arrived over the East Coast yesterday on a business visit with Agent John Costar. Mes. S. M. Moore, nurse from the: state hospital at Cliattahoo- ee came in on the Havana Spe- y and left in the aft- with a patient. ° « R A. Malone, representing one of the large oil companies, who ‘was"in Key West on a visit with FE. A. Strunk, Jr., left yesterday for Miami. » Mrs. Joe Vernon, who was in Key West to attend the funeral of her mother, Mrs. Cinderella Curry, on Wednesday, returned to her ~~ home in Miami yesterday. —— Captain H. S. Brown, well known in Tris West, of ni van coast guard, in command o e cutter Saukee, has been relieved of the command of that and transferred to the personnel branch in Washington, D, C, Mrs, J, Stritzinger, who, with ’ Stritzinger and daughter, occlipying one of the cottages Taylor, left yesterday aft- : to visit a son. in Raleigh, . C. pet satin Shannahan, use keeper, who ‘itrthe Marine hospital for assistant St. Patrick’s Day Dance Cancelled Jerry Trevor, president of the Key West Country Club an- nounced today that a St. Patrick’s Day dance scheduled for tomor- row night at this club has been cancelled, and that the next dance dated at this club will be on April b A tea will be given at the club house on Sunday afternoon March 26, according to announcement. Dance Tonight At Cuban Club ‘The crew of the S. S. Cuba will stage a dance tonight at the Cuban Club starting at 9 o’clock. Howard Wilson and his band are furnishing music for the event. Refreshments will be served to the guests free of charge. Mention E. R. Lowe, justice of the peace at Tavernier, arrived over the highway last night for a business visit with local officials. Talbot Wegg, prominent archi- tect of Chicago, who was in Key West as guest of Mr. and Mrs. Er- nest Hemingway, and caught one of the first tarpon of the season while out after the silver kings Wednesday night, left yesterday for his home. Geo. W. Sullivan, retired engi- neer of the Chicago and North Western R, R., Mrs, Sullivan ahd their son and daughter, who were spending a short time in Key West, left. for their home in Es- ‘canaba, Mich., yesterday. J. Van Landingham, of the state road department, who was on. a business Visit with Ellsworth Johnson, in charge of the work in this section, left yesterday after- noon for Miami. ee THE NEWS-JIGGER® HERE'S YOUR SOLUTION eration, has recovered sufficiently | to be-allowed to leave the institu- tion, "and will leave for his station in afew age tne Rom, DY radio electri- the lighthouse service, left £: East Coast yesterday aft- for radio work at Fowey Ft. Lauderdale and Eg- ee on ated Many a home run has Babe Ruth made. You’ve scored too, if your solution of the News-Jigger on page 3 looks like this central figure in the anrual salary check joustings. Subscribe for The Citizen—20c (DEFER CASE OF COLORED WOMAN | The case of _Violene Harris, charged with assault and battery on Richard Farrow, both colored, did not come up dor consideration in the court of Justice of the! Peace Frank O. Roberts this morning. Judge Roberts said that a! physician is attending Farrow, | who is exceedingly weak from; loss of blood, and it is found necessary to postpone the hearing until Monday morning. SPECIAL SALE ON GEM RINGS W. H. White is conducting a two-days sale on Madagascar Gem Rings today and tomorrow at Gardner’s Pharmacy on Duval street. Numerous mountings in both ladies’ and men’s rings are on display to select from and are limited at two to a customer. The coupon appearing in to- day’s paper and 49c will pur- chase one of these rings. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS 2000cens 20000 wecccce BIRTHDAYS 8 Pierce Butler, of Minnesota, As- sociate Justice of the U. S. Su- preme Court, born in Dakota Co., Minn., 67 years ago. Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, of New York, born in Hungary, 61 years ago. Major General Amos A. Fries, U. S. A., retired, born at Debello, Wis., 60 years ago. Robert Tyre Jones, Jr., (“Bob- by” Jones), Atlanta, Ga, golf champion, born there, 31 years ago. % Corra May Harris, of Georgia, noted author, born at Farm Hill, Ga., 64 years:ago. Wilbur D, Steele; author, born at Greensboro, N. C., 47 years ago. Paul E. Green, noted ‘Univer- sity of North Carolina professor and author, born at Lillington, C., 39 years ago. Hints for Homemakers By Jane Rogers ¥ using a screen like this you can have a little breakfast nook im your kitchen. You can make the screen yourself of pressed wood boards and decorate it to suit your own taste, The custard pie will be an even, nice brown when baked if a little sugar is sprinkled over the top just before putting into the oven, LEGALS To all Creditors, Lega tributees, and all Pers: Claims or Demands a. to: e Hon. Hugh Gunn, ty Judge of Monroe ve months from the the first publication of this he i “SOOM LS o: Notice To Sabscribers Please be prompt in paying the carrier who delivers your paper. He pays The Citizen 15 cents a week for the pa- per and sells it to you for 20 cents. His profit for deliver- ing is 5 cents weekly on each subscriber. if be is not paid | HE leses. Not The Citizen. "SIIIODOLD.. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN TIT PEOPLE’S FORUM URGES CONSTRUCTION OF OVERSEAS BRIDGES \Editor, The Citizen:, Eliminating for the sake of ‘argument all questions that might come up in discussing the merits of the legal controversy now being carried on in the courts be- tween the Overseas Bridge Cor- ‘poration and George J. Rosenthal jas to which of the two has a good :franchise, agreement, option or jeoritract with Monroe county, or ithe Road Department to build the bridges under the present condi- tions as outlined by the president, I feel that our hopes of having the bridges built are as bright today jas ever regardless of the awaited decision of the Supreme Court. I am of the opinion that the self-liquidating clause and other restrictions in the bill as the se- curity for loans and the rate of interest will have to be modified to a great extent to meet the jpresent immediate and pressing emergency and absolute require- ments for almost instantanous re- lief. The building of the bridges is not alone of local importance, it is of national and in a great way of international importance. And further, they will contri- bute materially to the welfare of the public as a whole. It will not be a work of temporary usefulness and temporary benefit but one of lasting and permanent public im- provement and a material contri- bution to the relief of present conditions, and will in the future be looked upon as a work of great foresight as a national necessity. It seems that while the bank question is as well under control as at any time in our history, and public confidence is restored, the question of unemployment is a serious one and cannot be solved by public confidence in our bank- ing institutions. . Legislation, I think, can help in solving the prob- lem of present conditions, but only ‘I struction, while many loans by devising some beneficial pub, lie improvement plan that will em- ploy labor and at the same time be of durable and perpetual good to a large portion of our people. For that reason I believe that there cannot be presented to the R. F. C, a more deserving and lasting beneficial project than the building of our bridges. They will be equally as self-liquidating as many other loans already made, the security will be equally as N.| good as that given for many loans and will in time pay some interest on the amount spent in their con- al- ready made are lost as to principal and interest. Let us think this over, get busy and show those who are selecting public works for the employment of labor that the building of our bridges is necessary, that they fare not of local importance but national in their scope, ‘and that every cent spent’ in- their © con- struction will pay good dividends one way or another, and that a very large percentage of the amount necessary for their con- struction will: go for labor and material. If there is any public work that can be selected that is more meritorious, that the work of building of our bridges, I do not know of it. DOOLEY. Key West, Florida, March 16, 1933. STAGE OF LIFE The scene is set The curtain’s let And lo! The act is on We're here today Our part we play Tomorrow we are gone. —RALPH GARCIA, Jr. —Specials For— || FRIDAY & SATURDAY |s.. stings SOE I it, sp ple 22c BUTTER, Monroe Meat Market 411 S10 Fleming St. “THE WEARING OF THE GREEN” (By UNKNOWN AUTHOR) Oh, Paddy, dear, and did you hear the news that’s goin’ round? The Shamrock is forbid by law to grow on Irish ground; Saint Patrick’s day no more we'll keep, his color can’t be seen, For there’s a cruel law agin thej’ wearin’ o’ the green. I met with Napper Tandy and he took me by the hand, And said he, “How’s poor old Ire- land and how does she stand? She’s the most distressful country that ever yet was seen; They’re hangin’ men and women there for wearin’ 0’ the green.” Then since the color we must wear in England’s cruel red, *Twill serve but to remind us of the blood that has been shed; You may take the Shamrock from your hat and cast it on the sod, But never fear, ’twill take root there tho’ under foot ’tis trod. When laws can stop the blades of grass from growing as they! grow, And when the leaves in summer time their verdure dare not show, Then I will change the color that I wear in my caubeen, But till that day, please God, I’ll “stick to wearin’ o’ the green. But if at last our color should be torn from Ireland’s heart, Her sons with shame and sorrow from the dear old isle will part, I’ve heard a whisper of a land that lies beoynd the sea, Where rich and peor stand equal in the light of freedom’s day. Oh, Erin, must we leave you, driv- en by a tyrant’s hand? Must we ask a mother’s blesing from a strange and distant land? Where the cruel cross of England shall never more be seen, And where, please God, we'll live| and die still wearin’ 0’. the green. Subscribe for The Citizen. PALACE HOOT GIBSON in GAY BUCKAROO Matinee, 10¢ Night, 15¢! FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1983. eecccccoeoovoevessesese® | coon remains unapproachable, Ra- STRAND THEATER gatzy hits upon a plan by which he will use Sturdee’s daughter in an ee eens 'effort to achieve recognition from A rich and’) beautiful girl who is|her father. kept from marriage by her father’s} The young composer is also negligence. brought into the proceedings, A young composer whose ambi-| Whereupon an unusual triangular tion is to be a “gentleman” but|theme develops with the girl un- who turns out to be a “cad.” dergoing a terrific dramatic ex- perience before it becomes clear to her which man actually loves ” her and which is pretending. Joan Barry, who is known as the most beautiful blonde in England, plays the role created: in the — original. stage production by Katharine Cornell. A mechanical genius who makes a unique agreement with a girl to further his ambitions but spoils everything by falling in love with) her. This is the unusual dramatic tri- angle presented in “The Outsid- er,” which shows tonight at the Strand Theater as a filmization, of the noted Dorothy Brandon play’ in which Katherine Cornell played the leading role on Broadway. The plot of “The Outsider” re- volves about an inventor with a marvelous knowledge of the hu- man anatomy, which will cure persons pronounced hopeless by recognized medical authorities. If Jasper Sturdee, the eminent Lon- don surgeon, will consent to in- spect this machine, Ragatzy, its inventor, stands a chance of suc- cess. When the distinguished sur- SOUTHERN KEY ST. PATRICK’S DAY DANCE Tonight at Coral Isle Casino Music by The Night Owls Admission 40¢ Ladies Free ness and 124 DUVAL STREET 49¢ Will Purchase One of Our Announcement-- MR. FRED J. DION Has Been ‘Appointed To Succeed The Late William Cates As The Key West Representative Of KEY WEST PROPERTIES, INC. END CITY HOLDING COMPANY Mr. Dion will be pleased to talk over your Real Estate problems. with you. with him valuable property suitable for busi- residential prices and terms can be arranged to suit buyer. IAM A Ah hed de dh hd didididdidh FI PPILLLLLAL LA AA A ddn\ LAND COMPANY He has listed purposes. Attractive PHONE 688-W SLA ALLA AAA AA A Lhd ddd Regular Price $1.00 AND THIS COUPON Madagascar Gem Rings Bring this coupon and:49c and receive Lady’s or Gentlem Limit two to a customer. Ladies’ Solitaire or Dinner or Gentlemen’s Rings. MADAGASCAR GEMS have the same fiery bi fect cutti1 's MADAGASCAR GEM RING, None sold to dealers. Many different mountings to select from in iancy, the same blue-white color, the same per- as the genuine DIAMONDS costing 100 times as much. MADAGASCAR GEMS are not imitation, but represent the utmost. skill of modern science. Social leaders, million- aires, and our finest people keep their genuine diamonds in vaults and wear MADAGASCAR GEMS. They stand all tests, A LEADING DIAMOND EXPERT OF NEW YORK WRITES: “I have subjected Madagascar Gems to acid, fire, water and microscope, nd beg to advise that Madagascar Gems stand up 100 per cent under all these diamond tests.” GARDNER’S PHARMACY PHONE 177 KEY WEST, FLORIDA “Key West's olds tid Linea mea a Plant ena One of the Best Equipped in Florida Five Presses That Can Print Anything From a Visiting Card to a Standard Newspaper 288 Type Faces From Which to Make Your Selection No Other Printing Plant in the State of Florida Has Such a Assortment Large A catalogue of these typefaces has been issued and may be had for the asking at this office. This labor-saving equipment together with large stocks of paper bought for cash at considerable discounts, enables The Artman Press to quote the lowest prices for printing requirements THE ARTMAN PRESS In The Citizen Building Opposite the City Hall PHONE 51