The Key West Citizen Newspaper, May 12, 1933, Page 6

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SOCIETY Pocahontas ‘And Red Men To Have Program Sunday The Red Men and Pocahontas will hold their memorial service at their hall, corner Caroline and Elizabeth streets, Sunday after- noon, May 14, beginning at 4 @’elock’ at which time the follow- ing program will be rendered: America; Invocation—Rev. Logan; Solo—J. T. Jenks; Bitual—Red Men; ffolo—Mrs. Vernell Salono; Beading—Miss Edith Russell: Duet—Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Cor- ‘Addreas—Curry Harris; folo—Miss Vivian Saunders; Reading—Miss Isabelle Armay- or; Solo—Mrs. Eva Warner; Violin solo—Gerald Saunders; Duet—Mrs. Lena Bervaldi and Mrs. Leona Collins; Draping of charter—Pocahon- tas; Benediction—Rev. Logan, In connection with the obser- vance of the event, the members of both organizations will attend services on Sunday evening at the Fleming Street Methodist Church, {and will assemble for this purpose at the corner of Margaret and | Fleming streets at 7:45 o’clock. i Social Meeting Held Yesterday There was a social meeting of Evergreen Bible Class of the Methodist church held yes- y afternoon when . refresh- were served in connection the program of activities. ring the meeting a report was made showing that the organ- ization had made visits to 167 per- Yong Peaple To Serve Supper The Young People’s League of the Fleming Street church will serve supper tomorrow evening in the Renedo building on Duval street. A delicious menu will be served at 5 o’clock with homemade pies a specialty. Mesdames Antoinette Roberts, sons who were ill during the month past, while there were sev- ’ eral interesting papers read by the , members present. Mrs. Ellie Lowe g px ara at the meeting. members present were: pA RAM AC AREA oe Personal “Gabriel Smith left yesterday afternton for Miami and will re- main for several weeks with rela- tives. Mrs. A. E, Martinez and daugh- ter, Miss Zilia, left yesterday aft- @noon over the East Coast for where they will spend some with relatives and friends. John G, Meistersinger, Alfred Metcalf and brother, George, came in over the East Coast yes- terday for a few days’ fishing and will leave over the East Coast Sunday for Miami. Mr. and Mrs. Beverly Peacock, whe were on a brief business trip Key West, left yesterday after- noon for their home in Miami. Richard H. Kemp, who was at- tending the convocation of the Florida Episcopal Diocese, in Mi- ami, returned on the Havana Spe- cial yesterday. HUBSTORESALE {Ex GETS UNDER WAY {Phe Hub Store's Gigantic Clear- ; _ Mmee-Sale opened with a bang thie-morning where a crowd of bargdin seekers assembled to share in the many specials which this store is offering during this today’s paper, Mr. Mendel) ling a message to sd woman and child in to let ps be had at this store in , shoes, ete. merchandise sold during sale is of the finest quality, soeording to management. Tremendous purchasing power of the Hub Store from the country’s largest manufacturers makes it — for this store to have the lowest prices in the city, says Mr. Every item advertised in to- day's paper is displayed and sold ae stated in today’s advertisement. Besides these, hundreds of other bargains can be seen by paying @ visit EE an this store, FOR TT STORE MANY PETS BURIED IN | CLEVELAND CEMETERY), ,Sc"i8ipris Tift’s Cash Grocery on Divi-} sion ‘street will receive a carload of fresh fruits and vegetables} over the highway this afternoon which will be placed on sale to- night, Included in this shipment will! ‘ground here of 1,500 dogs, cats, | the State ef Plorida, resides at be extra tender corn and strawberries. fresh} NOTICE Any merchandise bought or pur- chased for the account of the Pi-| Yates’ Cove Fishing Camp will not! be paid for unless they are pur-' chased on written order from the owner, executors or their legal representatives. B. P. WRIGHT, ey them .know what rent patriotic tourists. Nellie Baker, Anna Eliza Richard- son, Eliza Young, Sally Lundguist, Constance McDonald, Anna Wat-- kins, Elmira Pinder; Misses Mary Stickney and Emily W. Ladd, Mention Mrs, George Maloney - and grandson, George Maloney Mich- ael Knowles, were outgoing pas- }sengers to Miami yesterday for a visit with Michael’s mother, Mrs. Kathleen Knowles. Mrs. Benjamin Lopez and Miss Rosetta Knowles, who were spend- ing several weeks in Tampa as guests of Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Har- ris, returned this morning on the 8. S. Florida. Mrs. Camille Torres Watson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. Aurelio Torres, formerly of Key West, arrived here today from Miami over the F. E,. C. for a week’s business visit in this city. L. Johnson, chief boiler inspec- tor with the F. E. C., who was in Key West for an inspection of power units, left! yesterday ‘after- noon for his home in’ New Smyrna. ENGINEERS DEVELOP METHOD OF FINDING DEFECTS IN BEAMS (iy Ansosinted Peesay PHILADELPHIA, May 12.—A departure in building inspection may result from what proved to be a vain search for structural de- fects in the historic Independence | Hall. Last summér, the X-ray was used to determine whether there was any danger of the shrine’s tower collapsing on the heads of It developed that the sturdy old building had withstood suc- cessfully the ravages of time and that the timbers supporting the tower were perfectly sound. However, the examination stim- ulated the inventive genius of engineers, and experiments now are under way looking toward the development of a portable and ef- ficient fluoroscope outfit with which rapid and acurte surveys! can be made. By its aid defects in steel beams and girders hidden in the walls will be discernible readily. Unlike X-ray films, fluoroseope pictures do not require developing, for the machine does not make a per- manent record. i (My Anneciated Preand CLEVELAND, May A | five-acre plot dotted with little} white monuments of marble, con- jerete and stone, is the burial 1 | canaries, parrots and other pets. Some of the plots are surround-; jed by neat white fences There are! | two mausoleums. Others are giv.| jen concrete vaults. An imposing | } monument marks the grave of aj canary. At least two heroes are aut in the cemetery, one of them a} dog, who dragged his mistress; from a burning building. Others! jare just peta, with no distinction, | | Every memorial day, there are | tor APPLICANTS FOR BEER LICENSES VERY — WAVE MOVEMENT THE KEY WEST CITIZEN TALL BUILDINGS BEAT QUAKE BY steel skeleton skyscraper its repu- tation of being the safest big bus- iness building. In the California quake these buildings again stood their ground, : Like a Whip’s Motion The quake wave shifts the ground floor of the skyscraper as! during an earthquake to give ths een and buggy whips differ. The/this buildings are towering steel building’s top does not whip-snap, for its semi-rigid frame has absorbed most of the energy of the wave before the top is reached. Pulls Other Way When the quake giant jerks the basement to the left, the steel a 1 JUDGE HUGH GUNN BESIEGED; DESCRIPTION GIVEN RELA-' if a giant hand had a grip on the few stories above is resisting, try- WITH MANY ASKING VARI- OUS QUESTIONS RELATING! LOWER FLOOR TO PRIVILEGE These are the days when Judge Hugh Gunn is being besieged by applicants for licenses for beer, 8.2, fruit juices and light wines of the same alcoholic content. Applicants, and other potential -vendors of the much longed-for foamy beverage and its allied non- intoxicant drinks, ask numbers of questions relative to the laws gov- erning the isuance of licenses. Moral turpttiude and its diversi- fied definitions form the bulk of the queries, but there are other technicalities that need explana- tios other than those the judge is prepared to gfve. Hence Judge Gunn is_ writing the attorney general at Tallahas- see, outlining the quizzes and asking the legal head of the state to explain some of the obscurities contained in the several laws gov- erning the issuing of licenses, and the sale of beer. BURNS CHICKEN COOP RANDOLPH, Mass.—When her radio suddenly became silent, Mrs. Vitale Buttacavale, of this city, looked out of the window at the antenna and discovered that the hen coop, to which it was attached, was in flames, LEGALS NITED STATES CUSTOMS SERVICE, Port of Key West, Flor- ida, April’ 28, 1933, Notice is hereby given that the following described vessel was seized at Key West, Florida, on April 12, 1933, for vio- lation of Section 587, Tariff Act of 1930, to wit: the motor vessel V-16486, 23.7. ft. long, 7 ft. beam, equipped with a 60 H, P. motor owner of record Rufino Ortiz, 62: Simonton street, Key West, Florida. All persons claiming the above described vessel or any _ interest therein are hereby notified and admonished to file claim of owner- ship at the Custom House, f West, Florida, within twenty days from’ the first publication of this notice, otherwise the said vessel, its equipment and appurtenances thereto belonging will be forfeited and sold at public auction to the highest bidder at the front door of the Federal Building at Key West, Florida, at 12 o'clock noon on Fri- day, May 19, 1933, in accordance with the statutes made and pro- vided. Sidney C, Brown, Collector. apres; may2-12 Novice TO CREDITORS Las ana couRT or ‘THE COUNTY GE, MONROE Stare OF FLORIDA, In as the Estate of: RY LOUISE sapieceste coe To all Creditors, Legatees, tributees, and all, Per: Claims or Demands against cae Kstate: COUNTY, You, and each of you, are here- by notified and required’ to present any claims and demands which you, or either of you, may have against we estate of Mary Louise Knowles, eased, late of Monroe County, Florida, to the Hon. Hugh Gunn, County Judge of Monroe County, at his office in the County Courthouse in Monroe County, Florida, within twelve months from the date of the first publication of this notice. Dated March ois . D. 1933. ALFRED KNOWLES, Executor of the Estate of Mary Louise Knowles, Deceased. RAYMOND R. LORD, Attorney for Executor. 4-31; apr7-14-21-28; ma; IN ‘THE € TY JUDGE'S COURT IN AND FOR MONHOE COUNTY, FLORIDA: IN PROBATE. In the Matter of the Estate of MAY M. KEMP, deceased. To all Creditors, Legatees, Dia- tributees, and ‘Persons having claims and demands against said estate: You and each of you are hereby notified and required to present any elaims and demands which you or either of you may have against the Estate of May M. Kemp, late of Monroe County, Florida, to the County Judge of said C within Twelve months from the 24th day of March, 1933, the date of the first public tion under provisions of Laws of the State of Florida, Duplicates of said claims be filed with the undersig: ecutor of said Estate. All should be sworn to. SAMUEL BR. PINDER ete apr?-14-21-28; IN THE crn co 2eTH JUDICIAL aa STATE oF Plaintiff, xe. CANCELLATION OF DEED BVALINA SAWYER, Defendan’ ORDER OF PUBLICATION It appearing by the sworn bill filed In the above stated cause that Evalina Sawyer, the defendant therein named is a nonresident of 134 Decatur Street, Brooklyn, New fork; and that she is over the ax of terenty-om fore ardere hat said nonresicde defendant he and she is hereby re quired to appear to the bill 6 complaint filed in said cause on ¢ before the 17th day of May A. I } 1933, otherwise the allegations of —_— bill will be taken as com erder be published ance each week four consecutive w Key West Citizen, « published in said Count This 1th day of Amrit 19. «SEAL) Ross ¢. SAW = Cireuit Court, Monree County. Owner. ' many visitors, some of whom leave | JOHN & SAWYER, mayl2-6t Owner. i wreaths and flowers. Plaintiffs Seliciter apri4-21-28; mays-12 eeeTODeITTTTTTOCTITTATTUOTO TOOTS TOTTI ONE 772 FILZLLLL LL I basement and were jerking it back TIVE TO STRENGTH OF |and forth, parallel with the sur- seemed a oo od if the skyscraper were as ri WITHSTANDING SHOCKS |as it looks, its top would move in , unison and synscronously with the i basement. But steel buildings are Hye HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE) not rigid. They are elastic. sociate Press Science Editor)! pho yegylt is analo; i gous to a sim- NEW YORK, May 12 Earth: tar motion jerking the handle of quake wayes have to climb to! an upstanding buggy whip. The the tops of modern skyscrapers—| motion travels upward along both and even quake waves get a little the whip and the skyscraper, in jtired of doing that. | waves. Topping the buggy whip This—very approximately—is aj the wave causes a snap. one-sentence statement of — the} complicated things which happen! portant point where the skyscrap- N | MEN’S Tropicals, Flannels, others, on sale With Reversible Vests, Exception: tion for this $1 Gale ok ae MEN’S PANTS 193 pair Summer Pants, good quality, lights and darks, on sale MEN’S BROADCLOTH SHIRTS Fine Quality, all colors; special attraction, on sale MEN’S SHOES One lot consisting of Sports, Blacks, and wien DLOD pr. SILK UNDERSHIRTS Run Resistant, on sale ...... ular 75e sellers, sale, BATHING SUITS All wool, black or blue, reg. $1.50 and $1.95 sellers, on sale ............... Men’s Handkerchiefs A real fine 10c Hand- kerchief, on sale at ions ae dozen MEN’S SHOES Sports, Blacks, Tans; regular heels heels, on sale ........ Shirts at 15¢ and ... SHIRTS WITH TIES TO MATCH The most outstanding item in Shirts today; . a real bargain at is MEN’S DEPARTMENT SUITS Fine Tailored, made of Good Quality Serges, “ $9.85. YOUNG MEN’S SPORT SUITS MEN’S STRAW HATS Large assortment of reg- and 19¢ -89e MEN’S UNDERWEAR and Shorts, ex- ceptionally good quality 25e a Ss ing to go the other way, and ab- sorbing part of the energy of the upward traveling wave. So the weve proceeds upward, losing a little energy at each stage, get- ting more and more “tired.” This energy absorbing motion is! only the beginning of the applica- tion of engineering principles which give the final factor of safety. If, for example, the building had the same natural oscillation period as that of the quake waves, the latter might travel upward ' would exaggerate them. To offset: Six racks of Beautiful sale at— $1.65, $1.98, $2.95, $3.95 (Some worth more than double) designed in quake areas with oscillation per- iods different from the quake waves. In Japan the most destructive quake waves have oscillation pe- tiods of from one second to one and a half seconds. So many buildings have been erected with oscillation periods of only one- half a second and these short wave routes serve to “damp”, that is, eut down, the longer quake waves: that try to spread upward through buildings. In practice in the United States \ a 30-story steel frame building ca! pable of withstanding a wind pres-{ sure of 30 pouhds a square foot at the top is considered safe! against any shock that might rea- sonably be expected. It is in buildings taller than 30 stories and particularly those up to 40 and 50 stories that the strangling effect upon the upward The snap_at the top is one im- with a resonance agreement that) traveling quake waves is calculated to work best, te ‘Gigantic Clearance Sale! THE HUB STORE WE BEAT INFLATION! Prices are on the upward trend. They are higher today than they were yesterday and will be higher tomorrow. Our Specia makes it possible for us to give you the lowest prices available in this SALE. Therefore, our advice to you is BUY IN THIS SALE all that you may need in the next six months and BEAT INFLATION! SALE NOW IN FULL SWING LADIES’ DEPARTMENT LADIES’ DRESSES LADIES’ SHOES A large assortment on sale at al Attrac- 4.75 regul $1.00, $1.49 and $1.98 SHEETS 81x90, no seam, no starch, jar $1.00, on sale (Limit 3 to a customer) RAYON SILK SPREADS All colors, large double bed ‘sizes on sale 42x36, on! $1.00 PILLOW CASES ly 63 in the lot, LADIES’ BATHING SUITS Made of all wool, each .. sale at SILK BOBBY HOSE All colors, all sizes, on Good trimmed, each . LONG CLOTH 36 inches, fine quality, DAMASK TABLE COVERS Made of fine quality Damask, white or colors, on sale 1.00 BATH TOWELS Areal large heavy Stic towel, seconds, on sale _ "20¢ Dresses on RAYON SILK PANTIES 26 inches, made, on sale 10 yda. .. WIIIDIDIDIIIIVIIIIIOIIIaMIaaDa OID DODD aaa DM: FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1983, vai CLOTHES TORN OFF WAUKEGAN, Hl—AN the clothing worn by Herbert Law, an oiler, of this city, was torn off when he was caught in machinery, but he was unhart. Subscribe for The Citizen—20¢ weekly, 25c SUPPER 25c Auspices Young People’s League of Fleming St. Church RENEDO BUILDING Tomorrow, Starting 5 O’Clock Delicious Menu PALACE KEN MAYNARD in TOMBSTONE CANYON || Matinee, 5-10c; Night, 10-18¢ Sd ial Connection 10c _ $1.00 quality and nicely 15¢ best quality “ 89e FIT IIT, '‘SORIIVIIIIIIVIVIIIIIIIDI OGL. re

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