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Misses'Notma and’ Clare The Kappa Pi Y Club, popular entertained’ a: number of: friends | *°¢ial organization. formed here at bridge. jast night.at the home ‘of ‘their: parents on Pei sireet, - The evening proved.to be an en- y one for all” attending, | 2: * ¥efreshments were atvifeinw Those Tie eieding were: Bilge Helen oon Ala 7 Ne ea peng Kemp, = ra pratitagy Curry, org Leonard + Dick Russell and Joe Po ie jorrow afternoon, sehool, according to an-| ~ polincement made by Mrs. G. N. y whois affiliated with the 115. e’elock at the, made this m # short time ago by many of Key West’s. young men, . will stage a “Carioca Cabaret” ir hall, the old Athletic Club | pattem, Saturday ‘evening, April Members of the organization state that arrangements are be- ing made to have a couple come here from Miami to put on a special | dance number, while spe- tialtiés will also’ be introduced ‘by Key West attendants ‘aswell. The hall is being beautifully Charles - Yates, Darnell| and ‘elaborately’ decorated» for|®° finely perceived and so finely the event, and all who propose attending are promised an eve- ning of real enjoyment. Wedding Event In Tampa, Fla.’ « “Miss Georgina Castillo, formerly of Key West, and Casimiro Yanez, of Tampa, were joined in wedlock | ¥' in that city Saturday, April 14, Mrs, Yanez is well known to a a large F 2302. Becond - Avenue, in Licata: neteiaialshel to leaf after. Ps oa Z *istory of his own youthful hard- Oscar Solano was a returning yesterday from& short business 1d two" passengers i on the Havana Special ee to Miami. rr iss’ Anna, left on ithe aft: ito | ernoon. train. yesterday for a stay ideas about the bringing up fete He had af’ abounding! children. ‘He once said?’ sympathy for the troubles. of, greater part of my observation a othiee, yet he was _ rarely. con-!the purpose fidential even to his children. As he had never related to them the story of. his: early, life, .so. did, he’ keep to himself his. ‘sufferings from fatigue and insomnia brought on by” his prodigious literary labors. In his own “way, Dickens main- tained strict. discipline among his children. Himself extremely tidy, and given to neat and dapper ‘but’ somewhat « brilliantly colored clothes, he insisted upon_tidiness in the little. crowd of his off- spring. His son Henry recounts that their father’s methods of im- pressing neatness upon the . boys did not meet with their complete. approval. In 1856, when Dickens parents and children has -shown selfishness in the: first, almost in- variably.” . He. himself was, never| selfish. His only early struggle had never been erased from memory, and he was determined that his own children. should never encounter the misery and hardship and injustice and’ misunderstand- ing that had tortured his own childhood. Justice was what he hoped to give his ‘children. He said: “In the little world in which children have their existence, whosoever brings them up, there is nothing felt as injustice. It‘may be only ‘a small injustice that the child can be exposed to; but -the child’ is moved his family to the country small, and its rocking-horse stands| estate, Gadshill, Kent, (the old as many hands high, according to! Gad’s ‘Hill, famed as the scene of scale, as a big-boned Irish hun-|Falstaff’s adventures) where . he ter.” spent the rest of his life; the "Therefore he was. invariably! £#M™ily had been increased to nine willing to ‘act as arbiter. | —seven boys and two girls. The daughter Kate Macready Perugini| Sizls were already of marriage- wrote of him: “He would leave sie age, and Charles was a young. his work in the middle ofa sen-|™8" of 19, but the other six tence, and without protest, if =| sonnets were a miniature gang Iferousness milist have ‘sometimes! r patience... srt was alw: inventing! igamesvind ‘entertaintnents for his! family, and he made: use of a game to maintain their tidy habits. It was called “Pegs, Parade and Ghost Each ‘of the wa: assigned a peg for his hat and coat, and* every week they would hold @ parade for the purpose of overhauling their clothes to ships. m move the stains of a Lvghe wear. a Each boy in turn would be as- But ‘he -had thought x Bisel signed thesffice of custodian for much worth the terrific effo | the implements used in this parade: ae ate eres J die geil of cleanliness, And. they didn’t that they might “know something like it—-but they obeyed! ” about the history of Jesus Christ.”| | Henry said of this game; “Our The Dickens household. was: a!Tesentment took the form of. whis- the publication of “David Cop- perfield” and the ‘resulting ‘com- parison of the novel to Dickens’s own life, that’ their father’s child- hood had been ghastly in its misery. He had never told the Y}last night. ~ of. English small boya whose voci-|Beach. Felatives.jof one week at “Marathon, -with} well-knit family circle. The chil- rélatives: phe Pi A. who iia i “afternoon| to ‘ffor a visit: wit Mrs. | Emilio’ Lounders and daughters, Misses Idalene, Janice, rraine and Doris, left on the S, 8. Florida last night for Tampa ‘Mrs. Lounders’ mia Mrs, Clai dren were dominated by Georgina Hogarth, Mrs. Dickens’s sister, who had come: to ‘live >with them when she was only 17. She had taken the place of Mary, another sister, of whom Dickens had been extremely fond,’ and who had died very suddenly at the age of pered mutterings among ourselves on the subjects of ‘slavery’, ‘deg- radation’ and so forth, which served as a kind of safety valve. and helped to soothe our ruffled feelings.” Dickens not only invented en- termainments, sometimes writing plays for his children to také part ea rived from Havana last night for NOT QUITE as LARGE’ }AS of taking on fuel-oil|-ywaNy OTHERS to ie co transferred to the Cruiser Se ants a = -ANGLER During the month of April to date there have been nine. mar- riage licenses issued from the of- fice’ of Probate Judge Hugh Gunn. 3 z For the first week there were Another monster jewfish a issuances of five recorded. Last caught yesterday: ‘afternoon j ‘by! week none and this week the rec- Number 825, |Eurie ‘Sterling while fishing Thom |ords show four to the following: ') ock.| “Cleveland Wells and Etta Li While ‘this’ is not as large» as/ Ranger; William W. Richmond, on her return to Ha- vana, Coast .Guard. Cutter Denton t which miday from Ft. Tauderdsle's ited 11:30 o’cloc! ee - Coast, Guard’ Ship. arrived ‘yesterday and is moored ‘be pierhéad) df /the Porter in the submarin ee Pratt ~ and} jangler, one of which weighed al-ilow and Emma_- Williams; {most 400° pounds, it is large |'Tharston, and Iona Skinner. , DELEGATES GO. ,enough ‘to be worthy: of note- “i ——— } * weighs more, than, 200 pounds. (CONFERENCE AT COLORED | CHURCH Snappers, muttonfish, yellow- A. T. McCaskill; pastor of New- | Eight delegates frm the ae, and other smaller fish are { Otis. West Senior H-Y Club will attend daily being caught at the wharf. the Florida State Hi-Y convention Tarpon are seen in great schools | in Daytona Beach. fand while many are hooked few| Frank Alvarez, Herbert Eddy, are Hoven: | Jack Pierce, Jeff Knight and; The largest taken at the dock’ Chester‘Knowles left this morning to date weighed 30 pounds, it is, ™& Church, and M.’A. Moreno, over the highway for Miami where said, and this caught by Mr. Ster-| Secretary of the church organite-, they: will spend a day and then ling after he had lost hundreds of | #10, amounce that H. W. Bart- proceed to the convention. feet of line with larger ones. Hey, district superintendent of the} Curtis Stanton, Maurice. Felton : |Atlantic | and Gulf area of the and Charles Smith will leave on SPECIAL S ALE ON: ; South. Florida section, will hold al RUGS AT LONGS 2 ibaa ‘the afteryoon.train for Daytona ‘conference at the church tonight,” 8 o'clock. ilfollow the bie! » ‘conducted, | aa cas ie 5 him KAPPA, PI_ Y's CABARET Saturday, April 21, 9:30-p, At.the KAPPA PI CLUB Ladies Welcome Gents $1. The Long Furniture Store. ‘| ; this week. featuring a special sell . ‘ing event on © Quaker Axminster. rues. One of the largest ship-! 2 <4 ments ever received arrived by fail ; In his letters Dickens . some-| several -daysago and’ was imme- times confessed comically that he} diately placed on display at the could not recall all his children by; store’s Iprge show windows. name, ‘and in later yearsthat he! Mr, Long was able to make a” . ‘was not-always sure of their] special purchase “on the“rugs at PA LA C E ; whereabouts. Mamie. tells. us that' pre-NRA prices and will give his” t “he had a peculiar*tone of Mun |customers the: benefit. of the et Stanley Lupino in and @.way of speaking fOzpeach “ofping. his children,: who cme ged An advertisement in todsir’s ie! You MADE ME LOVE. YOU out being called by name, whichisue shows the low prices that pre-' tia ie was the one addressed.” | vail on the floor, nee ~ pia 1 some of the others caught by this! Violet Mildred Allen; ‘David Char~}} pardoned after serving i of | two-year sentence at ' farm, arrived, yesterday - panied by his brother, . Wells, who. joined him in - Mi and-came home’ for # stay the family. Subseribe for. The Citizen. ¥ QUALITY. COODSI AT.TUE MORE: : ‘witsetitoe you the’ pee “to serve etre Reecgdhe Valdes, nee Al- ening’ passenger ‘en the Havana ; Special fore ard from Miami eg i re went to spend a few L, Maureau, 8. ‘J., aloe ‘ke daughter, Miss Clar- "sé Star of the Sea church, | ibel Contreras, who is employed train. yester-/ inthe. Miami. postoffice... ion in Mi- . Dr. Felipe Trinchet,,.brother-in- law of Dr; N; boob and Mrs.|* were “spending a while: in Miaini during ‘the Pan. celebration, were ‘passengers. aver East, ‘Const Tuesday and left~ on, the Florida for their home in Hi STEALS TO BUY FLOWERS DULUTH.— Miss Rachael Cor- 17 in 1837, shortly. after the| in as actors, but took part in them author’s marriage to Catherine; himself. In 1849, at the ‘time Hogarth. They were the daugh-j ‘The Life of Our Lérd” was writ- ters of the head of ‘the London} ten, Kate and Mamie prepared “Morning Chronicle”, publisher of | their father for their brother's the “Sketches of Boz” which had birthday party by teaching ‘hiin to first made Dickens famous. dance the polka:’ He’ studied’ ‘as- “Mamie”, ‘the eldest daughter, } siduously but the night before the was the chief among the children! party he awoke in the middle of themselves, Although in 1849! the night almost overcome by the she was only 11 years old; she was} fear that he would: cat a ‘poor already, showing. that aptitude for} figutein the dance next day, and mangging household affairs ‘that to maké:surée he had not forgotten. made hér in later years, the “Miss! his steps he ran downstairs‘ and Dickens” upon whom her father} practiced them over and over, leaned. most heavily: .She never) again, all by himself. Gid- marry; ‘and-remained with her} . Dickens. had a fondness for giv- father, at home and sometimes: ing humorous nicknames to his road on his reading tours, until! children, drily humorous like the his death in 1870, { names he gave his fictional charac- Dickens was, to..his. intimates,|ters. Sharley, the eldest, was “a: good fellow.” He -had an in- | called “Flaster Floby”, a childish fectious laugh, and would romp; way of twisting about Dickens's ‘wen of this city was arrested for! gaily with his youngsters in sheer ‘stealing from her employer to buy] high spirits. The house was al- original “Master Toby”. Demure, | motherly Mamie was “Mild Glo. lowers for a friend’s funeral. Reports from Clear Lake, Cal., say thousands of fish are fying - suffocation caused | escaping from the: cneeclond ye thel ~ and Mrs, Frank Sheppard in over the East Const yes~ from Daytona Beach vacdtion in Key West relatives, | Seur peat Constipation lake. SAH AND ARMSTRONG QUAKER RUGS ‘ways full of company, at whieh | ‘ster’, while the fiery-tempered gatherings the author's absorbing Kate was affectionately referred conversation and joyous, although | to as “(Lucifer Box”. Walter, the bstemious, good fellowship, made, second son, was “Young Skull” for visit'a delight, {his high cheek-bones, and. ‘little’ Nevertheless, although noted’ Sydney, the two-year-old and the for‘his hospitality, Charles Dicketis| smallest of all the Dickens chil- ae tt Ribbon Felt Base Quaker Rugs | 6x9, $4.65; 9x1014; $8.20; 9x12, $9.30. Standard Felt Base Rugs 6x9, $4.10; 716x9, $5.10; 9x12, $8.15. Base Rugs 6x9, $8.00; 9x12, $16.00; 9x1044, $14.40. Gold Seal Felt Base Rugs 6x9, $5.15; 712x9, $6.40; 9x10%%, $8.95; 9x12, $10.25; 9x15, $12.80. Challenge Felt Base Rugs MANY OTHER prices quoted. A premium of 10 per cent ‘will “Gx9, $3.85; 714x9, $4.80; yment order. ot 9x10%, $6.70; 7-50; 9515, $9.60. 9x12, UCKIES are All-Wa Nays s kind to your so round, os hihi; 90 fully pasted td ice alg that’s why you'll find Luckies do not dry out *- we know saat. sou'D anni tealaiias ‘We think you'd be impressed if you saw Luckies being made. You'd sce those clean, silky center leaves—and you really woulda’t have to be a to- bacco expert to know why farmers get higher prices for them. They are the mildest leaves—they taste better. You'd be impressed by Lucky Strike’s famous process—“‘It’s toasted’*—~de- signed for your throst protection. And when you “It’s toasted”. "4 Pie A wae kind to your throat round and firm, and fully packed with’ see how Lackies are rolled’ * an ee ne Tenn ee ee