The Key West Citizen Newspaper, June 5, 1933, Page 4

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¢: SOCIETY =: Coral Isle Casino To eveesees eeeeceee Be “Scene Of Big Flame Dance . Tonight; Elaborate Event. Tonight at 8:45 o'clock the big parade in connection with a dance at Coral Isle Casino will form at the corner of Duval and Caroline streets and proceed to the casino where the parade will come to a close with a big Flame Dance. It is stated by those arranging the parade that it will start promptly on time, This dance is sponsored by the Drum and Bugle Corps of the{ Knights of the Golden Eagle and} is-a benefit for the corps. A midnight revue is one of the attractions effered in addition to dancing, The program arranged | for this part of the evening’s pro- gram includes a vocal solo, “Fare- well to Arms,” by Hector Cruz; magician work by Professor | Zoom-Zoom; tap dancing by Gould Curry. The Brum and Bugle Corps will be present and will see that or- der be kept, as it is expected that one of the largest crowds ever present at a local dance will be out tonight, it is said. Prizes will be offered for the best waltz couple and the best fox trot couple. The judges will be selected from among those present. Ladies will be admitted free, it is announced, Entertainment At Convent On June 7 _.The entertainment that was scheduled to be held in St. Ce- the smaller pupils of the institu. tion will be held on June 7, in- stead, according to an announce- ment made by those having the af- celia’s Hall, of the Convent. of fair in. charge, ~ Personal Mrs. Wesley Pinder ‘and’ son, | William, left over the East Coast yesterday for Miami, where they will spend about two weeks with relatives. Mrs. Theodore Motlow, for- merly Miss Jewel Nelson, and son, Buddy, who were spending a week at the home of Mrs. Motlow’s parents, Mr. and Mrs, W. E.| Nelson, left yesterday for their home in Miami. Mrs. J. A. Curry left yesterday for West Palm Beach where she will remain for a lengthy visit with her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Rupert Curry. Mrs, C. M. Hilton left on the afternoon train yesterday for Coconut Grove and will remain for some time as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cold. Miss Clarice Albury was an outgoing passenger over the East Coast yesterday for Miami where she will spend a few days with relatives, ey and Mrs. Noel Solomon and ‘son returned yesterday from Islamorada where they were spending a week with relatives and_ friends, Mrs. A. A. Torres, who was in _Key West for a week with rela- tives;eft Saturday for the home in Miami, accompanied by her mother, Mrs. G. W. Kemp. * Meer J. R. Sands and two chil- dien“eame in on the Havana Special yesterday for a stay as guests of Mrs. Lockwood Saw. | yer. Garl Rom, senior radio elec- trician with the lighthouse depart- — regal ge froma ness trip to Fowey Ri ight > Mrs.“ Wi'U. Saunders Was “at arrival over the East Coast yes. terday from a visit with relatives |. in Miami. George Pinder, who is visiting his son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Pinder in Tampa, left lust week on a motor trip to points in Georgia, North and South Carolina and. expects to be gohe about one month, Della Mae Pierce and __ sister, Dorothy Louise, left Saturday at- ternoon for Miami where they will spend some time with aunt, “Mrs. Ida Larche, Miss Elizabeth Johnson Saturday for Miami where she will spend some time with her unele and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Tanner, Herman Albury left Saturday left} Mention Miss Virginia Knowles left on the afternoon train Saturday for Miami where she will be the guest of Mrs. Otis Norris. Mrs. Charles Geiger who was spending some time in Key West with relatives, left Saturday for |her home in Miami. L. P. Artman, owner-editor of The Citizen, left Saturday for a business visit in Miami and will return tomorrow accompanied by his sons L. P. Artman, Jr., and Norman Artman. Miss Etta Patterson left Satur- day afternoon for a visit with sisters in Paterson, N. J.; after which she will spend some. time with friends in Westport, Conn., and Babylon, L. L, and from there go on an extended motor trip to points in the north and west, Ben Gardner, employe of the F. E. C. at St. Augustine, who ‘was spending a week with his mother and other relatives, left) | Saturday afternoon. } sheen Chas. Aronovitz who was in Mi- {ami for several days with his} father, D.. Aronovitz, | returned yesterday. Miss Isabelle Moore is expected to arrive from Philadelphia to. | morrow’ aftrenoon over the high- ‘way and will spend some time as {the guest of Mr, and Mrs. Joseph Menendez. This will be the first time Miss Moore has been home in nine years. Mrs, Rasolie Martinez returned yesterday on the Havana Special from a short business visit in Miami. ~Mrs:-John Lowe, “who” “was spending“ short time with rela- ti¥és at Miami Beach, oe a re; turning passenger over the East Coast yestreday. Pere Thomas Taylor, who was away from the city for several weeks, came in over the East Coast yes- terday. Mrs. Walter Clay and son: were | incoming passengers on the morn- ing train yesterday for a stay with relatives and friends, | | Julio Lacedonia, Sr., Leonte Valladares and Frank Fraga, were passengers leaving over the; highway yesterday for an ex- west as far as Chicago where they the World's Fair, 1 Ernesto A. Rivero, Carlos; | Rios, president of the Cuban Club, | j and Frank Garcia, started yester-| j day on a motor trip west and wil spend some time in Chicago a‘ Mary Immaculate on June 8 by|: MEMORIAL ADDRESS | ~~ DARNALL AT FLORENCE, ALABAMA At the Memorial Day exercises at Florence, Ala., Marcy B. Dar- nall, fermer editor of The Citizen delivered the following address: “In Maeterlinck’s delightful iry play called ‘The Blue Bird’ there is a scene in which a dream fairy permits two children, a bro- ther and sister, to enter the mag- ical Land of Memory and talk to their grand parents and their lit- tle brothers and sisters who are dead. no one is really dead so long as he lives in the memory of some- one else, That when we think of the dead’ they awaken for a little while and then go back to sleep until someone thinks of them again. While this is only a fanciful idea, let us imagine it to be true as we think of those who sleep. For we, too, can each enter his own Land of Memory and seem to commune with friends and loved ones who have passed on. “This beautiful custom of deco- rating the graves of our soldiers with flags originated, it is need- less to say, in the minds of de- voted women, and has been per-, petuated largely through their loyalty and the labors of their loving hands. The women of Petérsburg, Va., were said’ to be among the first to adopt the cus- tom, when on June 9, 1865, they decorated the graves of Con- federate dead with suitable pub- lic ceremonies. Two or three years later Mrs. Logan, wife of General John A. Logan, then com- mander-in-chief of the G. A. R., visited Petersburg on its annual Memorial Day, and was so im- pressed with its observance that she recommended to the General that the custom be adopted in the North. He accordingly directed that each post of the G. A. R. ob- serve May 30, 1868, as Memorial Day, and the custom has _ pre- vailed ever since. So, this most sacred of all our national holidays was due to the inspiration of Southern women. “They also sponsored the ob- servance of Confederate Memorial Day throughout the South, but on various dates: In Alabama, Geor- gia, Florida and Mississippi on April 26; in North, and South Carolina on May 10; in Ten- nessee on the second Friday in May; in Virginia on May 30, and in Louisiana on June 3. “Early ‘in the history’ of the ob- servance of Memorial Day it w: noted that in some localities Southern women’ decorated the graves of Northern soldiers, as well as those of the South.; This touching tribute inspired a famous beom, “The Bible and the Gray,” written by a Northern man, Judge F,_M, Finch of New York. 1 will read it in part: By the flow of the inland river, Whence the fleets of iron have fled, Where the blades of the grave- grass quiver, Asleep are the ranks of dead; Under the sod and the dew, Waiting the judgment day; Under the one, the Blue, Under the other, the Gray. of the From the silence sorrowful hours, The desolate mourners go, Lovingly laden with flowers, Alike for the friend and the +. foes ‘ Under the sod’and the dew, Waiting the judgment day; Under the roses, the Blue, Under the lilies, the Gray No more shall the war cry sever, Or the winding rivers be red; They banish our anger forever, When they laurel the graves of our dead, inder the sod and the dew, Waiting the judgment day; U | Love and tears for the Blue, Tears and love for the Gray. “I shall not attempt any = ex- tended eulogy of the patriotism, their! tended tour through the north and/| the valor and the sacrifices of our soldier dead. It has always should come from those who were not veterans themselves. In any event, to paraphrase a sentence of Lincoln's immortal Gettysburg address, nothing we may say here ean add to or detract from the imperishable record these valiant for Miami, called there because! the Century of Progress Exposi-| dead have made—a record which of the critical condition of his brother, Charles, who underwent an operation for appendicitis Fri- day night. Charles C. Albury, teacher the public schools at Islamor who was here for the tions, left Saturday for his home and will in a few days, leave for summer school st Gainesville. Mrs. Israel Knowles, daughter Helen, Mrs. Eva Cordova and Or. moude Cordova, formed a party leaving Saturday afternoon over the East Coast for a visit with relatives in Miami. | tion, | |. Representative William V. Al- , bury, who had been in attendance jat the state legislature, returned! est last evening over the while we recognize the glory of: 25. ner quart, at all retail stores. j¥alient deeds, no true soldier de aiways * Strip to Jacksonville, returned on! the Havana Special yesterday. Stanley Saunders, first assistant keeper, and Benjamin H. Lowe, third assistant, at Tortugas light, station, arrived yesterday for j their quarterly vacation i fas the straight-thinking is a precious heritage of our com- mon country, North, South, East and West. In honoring their memory we honor ourselves. “In passing it may be said that sires to glorify war itself. No one W. J. Schoneck, lighthouse en-/ hates war more than the vetrean teite a wee gineer, who was on a business) who has experienced the horrors} But the veteran soldier, as well civilian, knows that in the present im- perfect state of civilization wars are likely te occur, And he knows that as ‘eternal vigilance is the price of liberty,’ so is cter- nal preparedness the price The children are told that} THE KEY WEST CIVIZEN BYMARCYB. _(C. E. SOCIETY DELEGATES T0 wea nd pace, oparcines| ATTEND CAMP aggressor to pause before in-}RUBY ALBURY AND BENJAMIN Raabe = Seacetal nate ROBERTS ELECTED REPRE- “We should be willing, and we are willing, to meet any nation] SENTATIVES FROM LOCAL ORGANIZATION security and peace. Preparedness | lee group of nations, more than half-way on the question of dis- armament. We have proved that} in recent years by not bringing) Rar os our Navy up to the strength per-| (By ©. E. REPORTER) jmitted by existing treaties. But; At'a recent regular meeting of in justice to ourselves and tO the Senior Christian Endeavor So- those who shall come after us wel ciety, éf<the: iret Congregational t % ts | rest. We all hope and pray thatitermine which two members will war may never again darken our} attend the Young Peoples’ Camp land, but we must be prepared'as its representatives. The re- to defend it if another war, with' suits showed Miss Ruby Albury all its tragic consequences, should] , 14 Benjamin Roberts topping the unfortunately be forced upon us... ne “So, while we honor the| list of those receiving votes. 3 memory of our heroic dead, let! They are expected to leave Fri- us not forget the duty we owe to! day afternoon over the East Coast the living, and to the future mil-|for Fort Lauderdale where the lions of Americans yet unborn.| camp is beingtheld this year from ‘Let us not through any foolish) June 10 to. 17. Owing to the optimism or foolish altruism be] treasury being low this year only led into believing that national} Hobaicdks 6 can be sent by the security can be obtained through} cstentine de 2 an attitude of extreme pacifism. | Others expected to attend this “Our nation has become great; Sathering are Mrs, f.: K. Evans, lee: the genius, the courage, then and Miss. Doro- the patriotism and the sacrifices: : ig ve | of its loyal:men and women. It} Be ae Evans, wife of the {will remain great only so long as; |we are willing to stand for, fight) for, and if necessary ‘die for, the noble prineiples upon which © it was founded.” FORD CAR SETS ' local ngregational pastor, will be in chatgeof music at the camp. She will also teach a class in “The Use of Music in the Church.” This will be the last year Miss | Milligan will attend this religious gathering of young people. Only {four years’ attendance is allowed } any society member, and, as Miss UP RECORD FOR ECONOMY TEST RUN WAS MADE UNDER ALL| KINDS OF WEATHER CON. DITIONS, INCLUDING HEAVY RAIN AND STRONG WIND In an economy test run, held recently at Bartlesville, Okla., a new Ford V-8 Tudor Sedan set up the remarkable record of an aver- age of 18.9 miles per gallon of fuel for 10,0549 miles, The rin was sponsored by the Bartlesville Daily Enterprise. it Packed into/the run were more miles than the’ average driver cov- ers in a year’s time. The run was made under all kinds of weath- er conditions including heavy rain and strong wifds. " Operating at a speéd ‘of fifty miles or more per hour over good and bad roads, up and down hills,! through rain, fog’ and mud, it average 18.8 miles per gallon, using Phillips sixty-six oil and gasoline for the entire trip. No oil was added between 1,000-mile Milligan has ‘attended three years before, ‘she will graduate this year. As usual, each year members from Christian Endeavor Societies from all over Florida are sent to| the Young Peoples’ Camp. These representatives are usually voted on and expenses paid for out of the treasury, but members may attend without being selected by paying their own expenses. The eligible ages are from 16 to 25, beth ‘sexes. At this gathering the campers} = are taught religious leadership. It is from these studies, after four years, students are graduated. The playing of many sports are also indulged in, as well as music, Bibilical drama and other things that help the Christian Endeavorer TODAY IN HIS weccccanaacanccnacnsecoos 1783—(150 years ago) Discov- ery of the balloon—Joseph M. and Jaques E. Montgolfier, brothers, made first public ascension of a balloon, in France. 1830—Boston and Lowell R, R., first unit of the Beston & Maine, chartered. | 1851—"Unele Tom’s — Cabin” first appeared as a serial story in the “National Era”, an anti-slav- ery magazine—no particular at- tention attracted. 1916—British cruiser -Hamp- \shire, with Earl Kitchener, War | Minister, aboard, sunk by German mine, off Scotland. . 1917—Nearly 10,000,000 Amer- icans registered under selective draft law. PLAYS PIANO 61 HOURS LONDON.—Prince McBride, a professional musician of this city, | played the piano at the Olympian ballroom for 61 hours. physically, mentally and spiritual- ly. Last year the Young Peoples’ Camp was held out of Florida and the local society received one of the high honors for distance traveled. SII LDLDaDAs Notice To Subscribers 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 His profit for deliver- is 5 cents weekly on each subscriber. If he is not paid HE loses. Not The Citizen. 1S kak wh ahutututh YOUR VACATION THIS YEAR IN FLORIDA your HEALTH! YN { WS Mtr REE EEAERRA Leki y S = = HM i changes and not one cent expend-} ed for repairs. In view of the hot weather and gruelling pace set, a remarkable feature was that no water ‘was added to the radiator during the entire trip. All points on the jtinerary were reached on schedul- ed time. The Ford V Eight proved un- usual economy of operation and ability to withstand the most gruelling abuse. Drivers were high in their praises on the com- fort, ‘handling ease and perform- ance of the car. For ten days and nights the car was on the road. The route ! included the cities of Tulsa, Gu- ; thrie, Oklahoma. ..City, \El.. Reno, Enid, Ponea City and other points, and was so arranged that the car |was kept on the road 23 hours ‘out of every 24. coming into} Bartlesville as at the end of each| thousand miles, for lubrication and oil change. NOTICE Members Key West High School Alumni A meeting of the Key West High {School Alumni Association will be held Tuesday night, June 6, 1933, will spend several weeks secing| seemed to me that such eulogies i, the High School building at 8 o'clock, when arrangements will! jbe completed for the Reunion Thursday night. At this meeting arrangements will be made for! the conveyance of those not hav-| ing cars; also arrangements will) be made for those attending who! care to play bridge. All members! ‘are urged to be present. HOLLON R. BERVALDI, , June S-1t President. | KRAFT SALAD DRESSING,| dependable—Kraft Salad! shipments received | k. jonedS-it! Dressing, RETREADED TIRES —— CN RAP Good As New Rocky Road Tire Shop of ‘ There is some doubt that people care goes on under the hoods of their cars. The driver knows that "driving qualitie 1 How the manufacturer creates 0 may not interest him. He judges entirely by the resu are put driving. Well, it is not Smoothness. methods Power. shaft for the driver's use. of this car——its life-like response-—-is ra Our V-8 develops more power on Mileage is partly a ma ns the Ford ¥-6 does 17 to Economy. any car under average conditior Of course, car economy is not only a ma too, but it is also economical in the compl operati Appearance. only be useful, but also good-looking. need our comment on its fine appearance. Comfort. motor car from a wagon to a coach. numerous ingredients. running engine. taste. MONDAY, JUNE 5, 1933. (Continued from Page One) when witnesses arrive from the keys, Ramon Cuesto, pleaded guilty to gambling. Sentence will a passed tomorrow. FOR GRADUATION GIFTS: Helio Renedo entered a plea of| Loft Candies for sale by San guilty to gambling. Sentenced to Carlos Book Store, Gardnet’s Phar- $50. and conte 060 days tu tail: macy and A. Einhorn, juneb-1t A roulette wheel, captured when} Subscribe for. The Citizen—20c the arrest was made was ordered|a week. destroyed. Manuel Sanchez entered a plea} of guilty to gambling and will be be sentenced tomorrow, George Lee Sawyer, aggravated, assault, passed for the present. Alberto Lopez, pleaded guilty to gambling. He was sentenced |to pay a fine of $50 and costs or spend 60 days in county jail. Violeen Harris, pleaded guilty to assault and battery. She had been in jail for 57 days. The | Judge sentenced her to 50 days in | jail to ‘start from time of arrest. She was discharged. aaa EE PALACE Diana Wynyard-Clive Brooks in CAVALCADE King of* Pictures Matinee, 10-15c; Night, 15-25¢ The best roof for any as building is the one which will combine good appearance with extra long life. Carey Roofs have been doing this for over 60 yeors. Made of the finest raw materials, their built-in, high quality insures complete satisfaction. We can supply the correct Carey Shingles or Roll Roofing for any building, new or old, and at money-saving prices. Ask us for a free estimate. South Florida Con. & Eng. Co. PHONE 598 WHITE & ELISA STS. * ‘WOMEN'S CONTRIBUTION TO THE MOTOR CAR there. of its manufacture. we have made. on, maintenance. This is woman's This also is woman We have al quality. ease, safety. essential to talk Drive the ‘Ford v-8 and runs with surpasSifig ‘Smoothness, due to its There it is, 75 horsepower With less weight to pu ‘gs concern. There is no comfort 1 the other ingredients too,——-color, roominess and convenience, to hear very much about what s" are not accidental; they r evolves those results lts he gets in "shop"; let us talk Results. you will find that the engine design and the extra precise (we could say 80) at the drive~ Tl around, the mettle ther remarkable. a gallon of gasoline than tter of individual driving, but 20 miles a gallon. tter of fuel. Ford V-8 has that ete sense——initial cost, The motor car must not contribution. Ford V-8 and you will not View the In 30 years she changed the Comfort is a quality made up of without a quiet, saooth- good

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