The Key West Citizen Newspaper, July 7, 1933, Page 6

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FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1933 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN EQUITY LODGE © {MIAMIPLANS = INSTALLS ITS | ANNIVERSARY NEW OFFICERS CELEBRATION PAGE SIX 9900000000000 000 CO OGOOOOSHHOOOODOOSOOCOOCOOESECE SOCIETY nd Mrs. Coe | Dance Tonight - TOO MUCH TONGUE TO THE PATRONS OF THE PALACE THEATER i | LONDON—“What a pity it is The Palace Theater will close that women cannot leave their every Tuesday and. Wednesday, tongues at home,” said Judge Mea starting July 11, for the summer, Lure of this city as he heard the months of July and August. We evidence in a family conflict. will continue our usual shows for|—————————____-—— Thursday and Friday and Satur-, ngs ‘NEW ARRIVAL AT E. ROBERTS’ HOME A boy weighing nine pounds! }was born on July 4 to Mr. and} |LONG OFFERING RARE BARGAINS | IN FURNITURE Mr. A Have House Guest At Caban Club | | Mrs. Lester 0. Powers of York, | three Ala., accompanied by her h and children, Owen, Madge Lee Imogene, arrived in Key West to- day_on the Havana Special. During their stay here they be house guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Coe at their home, 701 Fleming street. Mr. Coe is connected with the will There will be a dance given to- ‘night at the Cuban Club which i will be the beginning of the “Silver |Cup Contest,” to be carried on for jsome time. | ‘rection of Howard Wilson with his band furnishing musie for the | occasion. in | weather bureau station West. Key Personal Raymond Higgs left yesterday afternoon for Miami where he will remain for a few days. William Yduarte, who was spending several days with tives and friends, left yesterday for his home in Miami. “Mts. Acadio Henriquez and three children were passengers on thé ‘Florida Wednesday evening, going to Tampa for a visit with relatives. Mrs. Edison Archer and three ehildren, who were spending two Weeks with relatives, left yester- day for their home in Miami. State Senator Arthur Gomez, left over the East Coast yesterday afternoon for Ft. Myers, where he was invited to attend a banquet and make an ‘address to business men, Sigsby Johnson, son of the late J, B. Johnson, Mrs. Johnson and child, who came for the funeral of Mr. Johnson, left yesterday afternoon for their home in Mem- phis, Tenn. Julius Collins, city councilman, left over the East Coast yester- day afternoon for West Palm Beach, to visit his brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, Harry Collins. Miss Aileen Bethel returned ye terday over the F. E. C. after spending a few weeks with her father, J. M. Bethel, at Rock Har- bor. rela- | Mention Thos, E. Roberts, city sanitary inspector, left yesterday {noon for Miami where he will re- |}main several days on business. Mrs. Jack Maloney and _ little daughter left on the afternoon j train yesterday for a_ stay with ‘relatives and friends in Miami. ; Mrs. Gavin S. Drummond, who \was spending a while with rela- ‘tives, was a returning passenger lover the East Coast yesterday for her home in Miami. | F. S. Robins !motive power and machiner. ithe F. E. C. R’y. company, ar- rived yesterday for a _ business |stay with J. F. Morrison, engine- jhouse foreman at Key West ter- minals, superintendent of Mrs. Perry MeCullough and {three children left yesterday on the afternoon train for New Smyrna where they will spend some time with relatives. | Baas Harry Perez, chief engineer of ithe lighthouse tender Ivy, left | Wednesday night on the Florida to join the vessel in Tampa. Bethel Phillips, who was spend- ling a vacation with his parents, Mr, and Mrs. Ed Phillips, left over the East Coast yesterday for New | York to join one of the ships of ithe Clyde Line and be employed ‘in the engineering department. | Harold Westcott, who is con- ‘nected with the Overseas Trans- , portation company in this city, left jover the highway yesterday to The dance wil be under the di-| after- | ‘HEAD OF MAMMOTH FURNI- CEREMONIES CONDUCTED DURING MEETING LAST NIGHT; REFRESHMENTS SERVED AT END OF SESSION TURE EMPORIUM EXPLAINS | HOUSEHOLD FURNISHING’ SITUATION IN PAGE AD | The’truth about furniture and! ithe household furnishing situation is being told the public today in a ‘full page advertisement in The {Citizen by Long’s Furniture Store at 800 Fleming street. { Despite the fact that the whole- sale furniture market is rapidly advancing and in some cases as ‘high as 40%, Mr. Long has kept ‘his stock marked at the lowest de- ipression prices, it is shown. “Future advances in prices are, sure to come,” states Mr. Long. “Present wholesale prices have John C, Park and Jack R. Hyman, not become high enough to cover| Junior members of the lodge. the rise in prices of raw Offi s installed at last night’s | materiale.’ {session were: | In view of these facts, the fur-| , ©: B- Johnson, noble ES niture store owner asks the pub-/\0un /): Gardner, vice grand; i . M. Hun:bert, recording secretar: lie to consider them carefully pel bistitb aed rtd Seas b ares F. F. Hoffman, financial secre- and realize what can be saved byt); William Mendell, treasurer; ; buying now. 'G. Kirchik, warden; F. F, Hoff- The present stock of furnitt sent : ure yan, conductor; W. P. Archer, }at Long’s Furniture Store con: chaplain; B. Brantley, right ‘of the newest styles and des' cne supporter; L. C. Taylor, Equity Lodge No. 70, dent Order of Odd Fellows, stalled its newly elected officers last night with William Mendell, district deputy grand master, pre- siding over the meeting. Talks on the past, present and future activities of Odd Fellow- hip in this community were made by William Mendell, district deputy grand m Ff. F. Hoffman, past grand master; W. P. Archer, past grand; C. B. Johnson, newly in- talled noble grand; John R. Gard- ner, newly installed vice grand; Indepen- in- y of Of present day furniture pur-)jeft scene supporter; John C./ orange growers came, the fi ichased recently while prices were | to noble Park. right suppor ‘at their lowest levels in history. grand; J. E. Lewis, left supporter iIn today’s ad, practically every-,to noble grand; Jack R, Hyman, |thing needed to make the home right supporter to vice grand; Lou comfortable is listed and priced. | Smith, left supporter to vice. In addition to the low prices on' grand; C. C. Symonette, inside this merchandise, this store is of-; guardian; Thaddeus Gates, out- fering an easy payment plan over) side guardian. a period of time from four weeks tefreshments were served at the to six months. During this sale|¢lose of the meeting. there will be no advance in the prices quoted on merchandise bought on time. To persons want- ing a longer period of time to ranged. i Mr. Long believes that this will| be the last opportunity to buy furniture at these prices and is FUNERAL SERVICES WILL BE i CONDUCTED SUNDAY AFTERNOON therefore urging his customers to buy now. |CUBAN SILKWORMS SPIN COCOONS AS Mrs. Margaret Thompson, 76 RIVALS OF ORIENT »¢2"5 014. died 6 o'clock this morh- ing in the dence. 816 Francis street, lingering illness. neral services will be held (Ry Associated Press) HAVANA, July 7.—That _ silk Mrs. Eugene A. Roberts at their} INCORPORATED AS CITY IN) home, 1419 Ashby street. \ “The new arrival has been given} YEAR OF 1896; COMING| 11. name of Eugene Alton Rob-| JULY 28 COMPLETES THIR-/| ert TY-SEVENTH YEAR ij | \ land in 1915 a census made by the} tate showed 24,536 population, In| 1920, the population was 29.571. (By Associated Press) { Then came the high finance} MIAMI, July 7.—Miami, grown| Years that led to the hectic real] from a straggling village of 3,000 | °State boom of 1924, 1925 and 1 lati " 1926, when visitors, real estate; , Population to a city of 110.000) .xiesmen and buyers flocked here { inhabitants, will celebrate its 37th; by the thousands upon thousands. ‘anniversary on July 28. So acute did the situation be- | On that date in 1896 its in-|come that at one time an embargo | ; ‘ corporation as a city was ratified| 0" building materials was declar- : ed. The railroads moved nothing jby the voters, the Florida East cas ; Coast railway stretched its rails| but foodstuffs inte and from the to the waters of Biscayne Bay and| Miami area for several days. This | Miami looked to the future. j embargo came at a time when the 1 As far back as 1840, there was’ Florida citrus crop was ready for a village here but it was known, ™arket in the fall of 1925. ithen as Fort Dallas, It had 446 Then the boom collapsed. Thou- {inhabitants who fought Seminole | 224s of persons went back to the i Indians about as diligently as they | States whence they came. jfought mosquitoes that came in Show Census swarms from the Florida Keys and} The 1930 census showed Miami the Everglades. jhad a population of 110,637. Its Perhaps the Indians and_ the! winter population last winter was ! mosquitves shared responsibility; estimated by L, L. Lee, city man- | but at any rate the population de-/ ager, at approximately 500,000. {ereased and in 1870, old records| At any rate when Miami cele-} show, there were only 85 persons, brates it h birthday on July _ here. | 28. the speakers will refer to these | More traders moved In, Miami has 102 churches, 26,000, attracted others and the popula-| students in its public schools of tion started an upward trend. In} city and county, 1,200 apartment 1880 the population was 257; in’ jildings, 108 hotels, two rail-! ithe next ten years it gained by! roads, four steamship lines, an air} four, but in the decade from 1890 | transport tem extending to! to 1900 it jumped to 4,955. [South America, nine fire stations! Resort Hotel {with property and equipment} | The Florida East Coast Railway, ! Worth $1,500,000, a combination | |then guided by Henry M. Flagler,| “ity hall-county courthouse worth ; had established a resort hotel on. %:000000, a $1,500,000 federal | the bayfront and trains were Puilding, and fine highways from | bringing tourists. Business _in- | the north and w creased. The population in 1910 A page vas 11,953. ‘the city’s growth in 3 Advertising booklets were dis-| sented in Ba; tributed, some streets were paved,'a feature of the af nt of progress, depicting years, will ont Park as day, Sunday and Monday. P A L A C E { We Thank You. i MANAGEMENT OF PALACE) “Big Boy” Williams in THE PHANTOM THEATER. jly7-1t || Matinee, 5-10c; Night, 10-15¢ nf Subscribe for The Citizen THE SELF-HEATING Coleman MAKES IRONING EASIER — Cuts Ironing Time One-Third! Every woman owes it to herself to have one these irons that saves her health, strength and gives her more leisure time. With a Coleman you can do your froning better, easier, in 34 less time and at a cost of only 3¢¢ an hour. The Coleman Lights Instantly . . . heats quickly. Heat may be adjusted for light or heavy work. Sole plate is tapered just right for easy ironing under buttons, under pleats and along seams. The always hot point... gracefully tapered... slips easily into hard-to-get places, THE COLEMAN LAMP & STOVE COMPANY Wichita, Kans, — Chicago, Philadelphia, Pa. _ Los Angeles, Calif, ASK YOUR DEALER am | Mrs. Sarah Gardner, after a , spend his vacation in Atlantic City it of a few weeks in Miami with, and other points north. her son-in-law and daughter, Mr.! some day may come from Cuba instead of the orient is the hope of Miss Carmen de Gorivar, an F 4:30 o'clock Sunday afternoon from the Congregational church, where the body will be placed at 2 end Mrs. W. S. Perez, returned on the F. E. C. railway yesterday. W. S. Roberts, of Miami, who ‘was spending some time in Key West as guest of his brother in law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Ed- win Sweeting, left over the high- ; Capt. and Mrs. C. O. Stimmel and fwo daughters, Barbara and i Leona, of St. Augustine, who for ‘the past two weeks have been the house guests of Mr. and Mrs Aaron McConnell at their home ‘on Fleming street, returned home yesterday over the Overseas high- fo’clock. Rev. E. R. Evans will of- employe of the Cuban depart-| ficiate, The Patriotic Order of America will attend the services. ment of agriculture. | With Dr. Donato del Castillo,|” Survivors are the husband, has’ Frank C. Thompson; one son, a Havana business man, she spent 12 years experimenting with George Hamlin and one _ sister, ilkwork culture and now has 15,- Mrs. Eliza Hinde, of New York. 000 grubs spinning cocoons at her! Pritchard’s Funeral Home will home in San Miguel street. The/be in charge of arrangements. way yesterday for home. l way. COLORED YOUTH — __1S FOUND DEAD, partners also have 40,000 mul- — berry trees ready to plant. From egg to cocoon takes from 81 to 83 days in Cuba. Miss ‘PALACE THEATER RAYMGND HIGGS — GETS POSITION JOSEPH HAVELY FOUND IN|’ Raymond Higgs, who left yes- ;terday afternoon for Miami, has BED BY HIS MOTHER accepted a position with the Gulf} THIS MORNING | Life Insurance company, and will jnot return to Key West at pres- jent, This information was received Joseph Havely, colored, 18 Years this morning by Mrs. Higgs, who old, was found dead in bed at his’ expects to leave within the next| Will produce about 45 pounds of home on Center street this morn-' several weeks to join Mr. Higgs|Cecoons, it is estimated, which! LIQUID - TABLETS - SALVE ing. He had complained of fecl-|and make Miami their home. {should sell for $1.50 a pound. Checks Malaria in 3 days, Colds ing-ill yesterday, His mother en- - = This return more than covers the first day, Headaches or Neuralgi tered his room this mérning to! LEGALS }eost of the eggs, mulberry leaves| in 30 minutes, give him attention and found him | ——-—— — and labor, the experimenters as-| FINE LAXATIVE AND TONIC NOTICE TO CREDITORS ot a or THE of adding an industry to this 's resources Worms of ten different speci are being used in the experimen the list including Chinese White Japanese Whites, Japane: Greens, Kan Kows, Sier Moren: Perugias, Bagdads, Salas. Black Butterflies and Yel low Golds. The ten grams of eggs used During the summer months and tarting July 11, the Palace Thea- .| ter will not open on Tuesday and Wednesday. The management ,| States that this schedule will only \be through July and August. dost: na COUNTY | 2tt i Most Speedy Remedies Known. ogelio Gomez, coroner ficfo, was summonded and paneled the following jury; Gomez, Emerito Gomez, Joaquin! Osorio, Octavio Lacedonia, Fabio} tr Olivieri and Thomas D. Pinder. 4 After an investigation of the case it was decided there were neti suspicious circumstances surround- | 4", ing the death, said Mr, Gomez and ‘ BR. Je further investigation is necessary. op oe ger oa To this end Dr. William R. Wa: ren was to perform an autopsy this afternoon and upon the result of | me the avtopsy the jury will base their |?" verdict. IN ex-of- em- ar ee z i My OsePH BR {IPI IIIs ess. SSM MM, To all Creditors, ibutees, ' rsons having against said (L CSLOPODPIIDODIODIIOIIDIODS: A New Era of Prosperity Is Ahead of You bh of you, are hereby equir te present ¢ ty, Florida, Hon, Hugh Gunn County’ J © of Monroe County, at his office in the County Courthouse TAKE A VACATION NOW COME TO MIAMI “THE MILLIONAIRES’ PLAYGROUND” With Prices That Fit Everybody’s Pocketbook first Atrenoe> *| Weve taken the words right out of your mouth quality of their fine vobaccos. They pleasein the mildnessand purityof “Toasting”. They please the tane. They please the chtoat. In every way and always,” Luckies Please!” May we thank you, Mr, and Mrs. Smoker, for giving us chis phrase? HOTEL RATES LOWEST EVER QUOTED PRICES FOR MEALS IN KEEPING WITH THE TIMES New Low Prices on All Recreational Activities Inquire at Our Tourist Information Burean About Interesting Side Trips, Sight-Seei Ete., and See Our Recreational Host About Fishing, Golf and Other Sports. HOTEL LEAMINGTON “Miami's Most Popular Hotel N. E. FIRST STREET AND THIRD AVENUE NEAR BAY FRONT PARK Mrs. C. O. Wheeler, formerly Miss Lena Sawyer, aged 41, died ® o'clock this morning in Miami. The body will be brought to Key West for interment. Funeral serv- | * fees will be announced Jater. Mrs. Wheeler is survived by her pnt husband, Clarence “O. Wheeler;) County Jud mother, Mrs, Francis E. Sawyer; | '= office in the two brothers, Leland and Leonard | jha wine Sawyer, and one sister, Mrs. A. L. Borden. inst said “Luckies Please!” You, our per- sonal friends, have been saying it for years. And because it so aptly Bi sums up the Lucky Serike story, we've taken the words right out of your mouth.“ Luckies Please!” IG aot an A Re T TES / of course. They please in the are here . h you mi may have against ~ F. Morris, de Monree County en. Hugh Gunn, Monree County Son ‘ourth Ode hehe hack hulk Mchackerde Leuk deal ae dudeude uke Gasoline consumption in nois declined only 1.1 per cent 1932 from 1931. i ns | Bx ni ie in) RAYMO! Att i x a Fe ke he dd ed hd hh nd

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