Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SOCIETY : Patriotic Order - ‘enders Program The Patriotic Daughters of America put on a short program of entertainment following the iness session of the regular méeting last night, with ‘ refresh- ments served during the time. Mrs. Della Whitmarsh gave a Treading, with a vocal solo render- ed by Mrs. Martha Smith. Readings were also offered by Mrs. Irene Adams, Mrs. Henri- etta Tedder and Mrs. Lillie Saw- yer. In another vocal number ren- dered, Mrs. Martha Smith led with singing of the verses with the eamp joining in the chorus. All in attendance thoroughly enjoyed the festivities of the eve- ning. William Arnold Is Christened William Arnold, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. George Arnold, was christened yesterday afternoon at Saint Paul’s church by Father Woman’s Union- Holds Meeting The members of the Woman’s Christian Temperance’ Union met this week with Mrs. W: W. De- meritt. After the devotional service was concluded, articles — bearing on the subjects of temperance and prohibition were . read discussed. At the close of the meeting the guests accompanied: Mrs. De- meritt to a local drug store. where |they enjoyed ice cream and-other | refreshments. School Play | Here Tonight | The annual senior class play of the Key West High school will be presented tonight in school auditorium. The play this year will be “Seventeen”, by Booth Tarkington and is expected to draw a large audience. Howard Wilson and his band will give a number of musical se- Arthur B. Dimmick, Standing as god-parents Mr. and Mrs. Mario Viera. were lections between acts while Paul Esquinaldo is on the program to sing several late song hits. Personal J. Frank Roberts, who was on} Mention Harry Baldwin, assistant keep- a business trip to various pointsjer at Careysfort light station who on the east coast, returned on the | is spending his quarterly vacation: remain for a few days on business Havana Special yesterday, with his family, will leave tomor- row for his station. Webster Roberts, who was at! Wglamorada for a few weeks on| business, was an arrival on the} were incoming passengers morning train yesterday. Miss Aileen Bethel left the highway this, morning en: route to Rock Harbor where she will spend a vacation with her father, J. M. Bethel. Mr. and Mrs, George Gardner,' tary, who were in Key West on!for her home in Eaton, Ohio. who had been visiting in Key West with relatives, left this morning over the liighway for) Jacksonville, They will stop in Miami for a few days’ visit with Mrs, W. F. Perez, sister of Mr. Gardner. | Boston, Mass.,. to over; time with her mother, Mrs, Joseph: League. * Mrs. William Walsh, and baby, over the East Coast yesterday from spend some Lowe, and other relatives. ML. Gerstell, frequent visitor to Key West, Judge Earl Curry of Miami, and his private — secre- business in United States court, left yesterday, for Miami. Wm. R. - Porter, Thompson and ‘Charles erts, left over. the yesterday afterndon fori Miami to Norberg L. Rob- and; the _ high { little | East“ Coast! a (SPECIAL OFFER AT BUSY BEE BAKERY Another special offer on Betty | Crocker’s delicious milk choco-; |late eakes is being made this. | week by the Busy Bee. Bakery at {900 Francis street. Every cake purchased over the jweek-end will be beautifully] decorated. In addition to this, a! !9 inch lime pie will be given with! leach cake. COLORED WOMAN | LODGED IN JAIL. { Margaret Thomas, colored, was arraigned before Peace Justice} | Rogelio Gomez this morning on a j charge of threatening the peace! jand tranqulity of the neighbors. | The judge investigated the mat-! ter and decided that the defendant {should be more peaceful and to; insure her doing so placed her un-: der a bond of $25 or spend 30) ‘days in county jail. She went to! { jail. \ QUEER WILL FILED '- NEW YORK—Mrs. Harriet ;Cokely of this city, directed inj} ; her will that her relations should {receive “nothing but a bag of j Sand to rub themselves with.” ea | | Bobby Gene Smith, 8, Dawson,! 'Okla., lad, has learned to shoe a! prune in preparation for his chosen life worke matters. Quintin Lopez, well. known pitcher of Key West, left yester-|~ {day afternoon for Miami to be- jecome a member of that city’s baseball team in the East Coast] Mrs. Elora March, who was the , house guest of her brother-in-law and sister, Rev. and Mrs. J. G. !Gekeler, left yesterday afternoon Mrs. Morell Bradley and chil- {dren left over the highway yes- ter for Tavernier where they will join Mr. Bradley, who is now engaged in employment in that j Seotion. * bat to the death, _ Vegetations growing into - trees in the twinkling of an cg creatares di- o living entities as if by magic—all in a single Piep of water. startling, incredible world will actually be brought to life for the millions of vis- itors who will come to Chi- eago’s 1933 World's Fair — A Century of Progress, which will host to the world from nee Ne to November 1. aver um mot ac- quainted with /Peyptibanae unfolded by science during the past few years, @uch a revelation seems impossible and well beyond the realm of imagi- nation. But to Dr, Roemmer, noted eclentist, formerly of Germany, now of New York, this modern miracle is all in a day’s work. In an exhibit in the biology section of the Hall of Science at the World’s Fair he will demonstrate to any doubter “there is rea tes and earth than dream: in everyda: x te paraphrase Salamears: oo Micro-Projection Used Using « new method of micro-pro- fection, Dr. Roemmer for the firat time will exhibit moving pictures of the everyday life of that biological Weird World In Water Drop Is Shown At Chicago’s World’s Fair T,EROCIOUS animals family—the Protozoa, family of many branches of the tiniest of both animal and plant forms. Not only the aforementioned ferocious beasts, tapld-growing trees and éelf-bisect- ing insects will be exhibited, but Slso the activities of numerous other tiny plants and animale—inhabitants of @ single drop of watet—will be shown, Protozoa are little known to thé public, Although scientists have ob- served them for over a century, com- paratively few people have héard of them, let alone seen them. Tea- son for this is simple. They are too small to bé obsetved with the naked eyes. Only through the lenses of powerful microscopes can they be detected, aa many of their bodies roe le life-cell, ith apparatus bining princi- ples of both the microscope and Photo-projector, single drops of water will be enlarged to the dimensions of & four-foot sereen in the exhibit at A Century of Progress. Magnified to this extent, the Protozoa inhabit- ing the drop of water will be plainly visible. Protozes in Combat Protozoa. monaters of this single- drop world will be seen in mortal combat, One will watch twé kinds of animaleules ealled Didinium an¢ Amoeba Paramogcium in struggles that eventually always end in vie- tory for the former. But the Para- moecium will not take death as his battle prize calmly, per-sh thousands of cilia, hair-shaped shafts, toward the turtle-shaped form of the , Didinium. From his slip moecium, which momentarily protect him from the attacks of his enemy. { His strenuous éfforts do not reward him, though, because he is soon en- gulfed in the interior of his foe. ! Back in 1858, when the observa: | tion of the Protozoa was in the ini- | tial stages due to the lack of the | powerful lenses that are available | , today, a writer succeeded in having a short story published in the initial volume of Atlantic Monthly. story, which described beautiful for- ests of vegetation with trees and | flowers intermingling and a human- shaped being wandering in their | midst was considered at that time to | be a highly fictionized fabrication. At that period the Protozoa had not | been gazed upon in such minute de { tail as spectators will be able to in | the pictures at A Century of Progress. | Miniature Forest Develops Of course, F. J. O'Brien's tale of | Schiws! the tragic existence of a human- shaped being in the tiny-drop world | of the Protozoa has turned out to | be—just fiction. But his description of the beautiful waving forests, never intended to be true in his story, “The Diamond Lens,” becomes real in the | | projections that Dr. Roemmer will | pregent for inspection. l |UNITED STATES GOES | bill marks a final j being in California. form he will shoot out |° ‘These turn into a gelati- | ;,. nous protective coating for the Para: | © This |; THE KEY WES? CITIZEN OFF GOLD STANDARD (Continued from Page One) | Provisions of the farm re-, lief act. | Steagall immediately in-| troduced a bill in the house. Fletcher is to place an iden-| tical measure in the senate.| Steagall said,“I give it as) my humble opinion that this definite’ that will bring revival of business and determinate step and restoration of prosperity and happiness to the Ameri- can people.” HAS MONEY BEARING DATE OF YEAR 1776 (By Associated Pres) } DALHART, Tex., May 26.—i When it comes to money long} out of cireulation, Arch Sneed of; Dalhart has some. He owns a 20-: shilling piece of scrip dated January 1, 1776, “in the fifteenth| year of the reign of George III,”; ‘and “Printed by James Adams.” | VERY UNUSUAL CASE ! # j GLASGOW—Mark Forsythe of| this city, coniplained to the po- lice that Miss Ethel Dugan tried) to kiss ‘him whenever they met. | Mrs. Henry Berger of Pocono Lake, Pa., recently won the buck- saw championship in the annual wood chopping and sawing contest at Skytop, Pa. ! There are 918 gliders in the United States, the greatest number |} More than 45,000,000 persons crossed the border between Canada and the United States last year. Resolution of the Board of Pui lie Instrnetion of Monroe Cow i levy and the teen for xnid Laws of annual el Special Tax § determination of mills to be levied and the e of Trustees and whereas’ 1 to hold said election, and $s Special Tax School Dis- trict No. 1 of Monroe County, Flor- n created by ied electors , embracing of within Monroe County, ainland portion there- chool Distric the amount except th of, and hools 1 debts ry to de- millage and for the ex to serve district for ¢ next two| rs All qualified electors | residing within said. district who pay taxes on personal property and real es-|{ trustees to ensuing two s at which said —Harris High er of Southard Key West) and Clerk of 3 shall Robert} Prank | 2—~At Monroe} Building, cor- © Streets, in w ner “3. Vet P. i, ary ' her Re ction shall be pub 3. and last pub- 1, 1933 4 that said! ¢ and omed Monroe Counts < Instrection, May PH K. Je ke heard Pubtte Instruc- LEN K ROSS instr a MORE FRUIT AT TIFT’S GROCERY t A fresh shipment of fruits and. vegetables will arive over the; highway this afternoon for Tift’s, Cash Grocery and placed on sale} tonight. This shipment will include fresh strawberries, extra tender corn} and every variety of fruits and} |vegetables available at this time! of the year. | IDEN GOSS! 4 PETER HENDERSON \ IN LAYING OUT your home grounds, make the front attrac- tive to the world in general. The back belongs to you and your family. It should have a good appearance, but, most of all be comfortable. se ee PEONIES require ample rcom and do best when planted singly or in groups by themselves. Do not over-fertilize when planting but apply the fertilizer sparingly after growth starts. ee ee JUST AS soon as your lilacs have finished blooming they should be pruned by cutting out spindling wood and shortening back the branches. eee YOUR LANDSCAPE GARDENING . CQEOR. can be utilized to create pressions of space or distance, or the opposite. Blues and lav- enders lend distance. A path seems longer if these are plant- ed near the end. se ee THE OLDEST botanical work in existence is believed to be the “History of Plants” by Theo- phrastus of Eresius. His discov- eries still form the rudiments of botany. i ee ee WHEN TOOLS are put away in the fall or in fact at any time when they will not be used for || some days, it is desirable to | wipe them off with an oily rag being sure that the edges and points have a filament of oil to |; keep the oxidizing air from |) them. | see 8 LEAVE your daffodils in the ground through the winter. At intervals of two or three years they should be dug up, held all winter and replanted. se ee STRONG growing hedges of pri- vet and barberry rob the nearby soil of nutrients and borders should not be established too close to such hedges. eee e JOIN your local garden ciub. People who have an interest in the same things are always pleasant company. | tral American tropics. —_—__ | Traveling Around America Photo Grace Line THE OLD IN THE NEW IFE flows pleasantly and slowly under the blue skies of the Cen- Voyagers be- tween New York and California may well believe they have sailed into a | mew world as. their ship touches Panama, Salvador, Guatemala and Mexico on the weekly cruises. In Guatemala City, capital of the colorful republic, Indians from the mountains and the jungles drive their picturesque carts, drawn by oxen, through the cobble-stone streets. Be- side them pass the automobiles of the Spanish population, descendants of the gay and courageous Conquista- dores who explored and settled the high plains and beautiful valleys of Guatemala in the days of Cortes and his soldier-colonists. The Indians in GOT GOOD BREAK ST. LOUIS—Morris Saches of this city, was freed from a speed- ing eharge when he complained that the policeman had to borrow his pencil to make out a sum- mons. More than 412,400 pounds of air mail were carried in Canada dur- ing 1932. James MeNeill Whistler’s por- trait of his mother, exhibited in numerous American cities, is in- sured for $500,000, a week, >. PALACE BOB STEELE in Breed Of The Border Matince, 5-10c; Night, 10-15¢ must PLOW DEEP anp SOW WIDE NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING HAS BECOME THE SPEECH OF BUSINESS---the million tongued salesman who reaches a | imum cost and effort. rk | rived that this} million people with min- NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING ig news of wanted goods _ FOR PROFITABLE SALES AT A TIME WHEN PROFITABLE SALES ARE MOST IMPORTANT | THE KEY WEST CITIZEN i} Is The Logical Medium For Local Merchants their brilliantly colored hats and serapes, hand-woven and dyed with all the hues of the rainbow from roots and leaves found in the jungle, form an amazing contrast to the modern dress of the city population. The descendants of the conquerors and of the conquered live amicably together in this placid region of the tropics, each respecting the other's culture and mode of life. The In- dians, who form the bulk of the pop- ulation, are of Mayan stock, and are rightfully proud of their ancient art and civilization—old even before Co- lumbus sailed on his venturous voy- age. Their neighbors, whose begin- nings were in Spain, have brought their culture and modernity, and the two mingle pleasantly beneath the tropical ski ies. cost A total of 215 high schools were represented in triangular debates sponsored this season by the Uni- versity of North Carolina. , | | THE SELF“HEATING FRIDAY, MAY 26, 1938 SSTOEMETHA DO 8 wR Be invitations shouldbe. mailed two weeks wer the wedding itself, they” must be ordered well ing advance. And, because’ they are so critically in- spected. by their recipi< ents, they must also be ultra-correct, Linweive Wedding Papers can be shown you ‘at the more exclusive jewelers’ andsta- tioners’. Ask to see them, } } : WEDDING PAPERS nee eect ‘| ny ee THE ARTMAN PRESS © Key West's Oldest and Largest Printing Plant Phone 51 _ Citizen Bil | heheheh) ‘aera Boies. ent woman owes it to herself one of these irons that sa and Wine Colemen you can better, of only easier, in 54 less time and at @ 46¢ an hour. The Coleman Lights quickly, Heat may heavy wor! easy ironing under buttons, under . gracefully tay be k. Sole plate is pleats GARAGE SERVICE COFFEE ttt igtied4 i SHOPPE ASSOCIATED HOTELS JACKSONVILLE HOTEL GEORGE WASHINGTON _ HOTEL MAYFLOWER - HOTEL FLAGL MIAMI... HOTEL ALCAZAR