The Key West Citizen Newspaper, June 1, 1934, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SOCIE oo eone School Exercises At Bayview - =. Park Grounds This Evening Louise Curry, Dorothy Elizabeth schools of Monroe County otficial-| ly.ended today. Principals ‘and Dobbs, Howard Maurice Felton, Ralph B. Garcia, Jr.,. Arthur. ers in th ity’s. grammer | Gorlzalez, Harriet Jean Hiort, | Thigh echogla sade final re-|Malcolm J. Johnson, William sort cards. to students, Anthony. Kelly, Anna .. Rose “This: afternoon, » fourty-five|Kirchheiner. . @raduates will receive ‘their “di-| Minnie Estelle Knowles, Flora as at the graduating exer-|Matilda Lopez, Frances Mae siges, to be held in Bayview. Park.|Lowe, Kathryn Lowe, Leonard " ing Jat 6 o'clock. Lowe, Arthur Galen Lund, Jr., 2 Phe program for this afternoon|Joseph N.° ‘Navarro, Selma follows: Eugene NeSmith, Walter H. * Overture—Howard Wilson’s Or-| Norman, Jr., Edna Mae Nottage, j A. Josephine Qvide, Gilmore . Aeademic Procession? Parks, Joseph Richard Peacon, >. Graduates. Howard Graham Pinder, Edith * School Officials, Mae Roberts. Hon. J. L. Lester, John Rutledge Roberts, 4 Anvocation—Rev. Alfred Elizabeth —-Russéli, — Armida tt. Sanchez, William __ Frederick _ Commencement Address, “The| Saunders, Lois Dorothy Sawyer, Graduate’s Future’—Hon. J. L,| Nathalie Kathryn Sawyer, - Eugene Sawyer, J. Louise Sawyer, Virginia Eleanor \Gonferring of Certificates—jShine, Barbara Doloris Stirrup, Principal Horace O’Bryant. Barbara Lucretia Taylor, Mary ~ Benediction—Rev. Shuler Peele.| Elizabeth Taylor, Charles E. ee Thompson, Florence. Elizabeth 4 juates §=who will diplomas ‘Sane school year for the public Edi De- * “Selection—Orchestra. receive} Torres, James Anthony ,. Wat- are: Hugo. Barcelo| kins, Harry .. Weintraub,,., Edith Emory Blackwell, Wil-|May.. Williams, and .., Kal »’ Benjamin Cates, | a Mary} Watkins, : : Alunihi' Assn.'Holds Reunion» i. At Key West Country Club the Key West High Schoolj supper was served which was en- mni Association held its an-|Joyed by everyone attending, ual reurfion last night in the Key} The compicte program was as . follows: Mam Country Clab in honor of} welcome Address—-Hollon BR. Tecgtaduates of 1934, who were} Repvaldi, president of the associa- ak this fession of the organization| tion, admitted into its mem- 2 Over 200 members, their friends| ‘Braduates assembled at the it. 9 o’elock and after the number had been played all tending were seated at tables around the spacious ballroom of elub to hear’ Hollon Bervaldi, it of the Alumni Associa- m,- welcome the new members } the fold. President Pau! Sawyer, of the Senior Class, responded and in of the class thanked the as-; for the elaborate affair Response—Paul E. Sawyer, Jr., president of* Senior Class. Dance Program 1—Fox Trot. 2—Fox Trot. 3—One Step. 4—Waltz. by 5—Fox Trot: (All: Requests): 6—¥ox Trot (Gents’ Tag). 7—Fox Trot. 8—Prize Waltz. Intermission. 9—One Step. 10—Fox Trot (All Requests). 11—Fox Trot (Ladies’ Tag). 12—Waltz. 13—Prize Fox Trot, - 14—One Step. 15—Fox Trot. 16—“Home, Sweet Home.” m in their honor. it midnight a delicious buffet CROWDS? Charck 4 Ann Elizabeth cl H HUB er of Mr.and Mrs. Henry |‘ Russell, and Maxwell Russell, Melville Russell, will . be tonight 8:45 o'clock at j Catholic Church, Rev. A. L. officiating, bride’s attendant will be Ellsworth, while Vin- -MeDermott will act as best| to the bridegroom, - - SWELLS’ PLACE kaon Sour Sop’ and Cocoanut Cream ‘will be served special felis’ ch Room, PULLING POWER OF ADVER- TISING IN THE CITIZEN DEMONSTRATED The pulling power of advertis: ing in The Citizen has been dem- onstrated time and again and only yesterday when The Hub Store | earried a half page. advertisement: announcing the opening of a June Clesrangé Sales M4 Wendell, man- faiger of the storé, was reminded of it. z The Hub Store sale officially Tee} started this morning and 30. min. at} utes before the doors opéned. at 900 Southard} 8:30 o'clock, a large crowd was treet, over the week-end. Short/ standing on the oufside waiting to, viders, hot souse and frosted rootishare in the bargains offered. beer will also be included in the}. “The results are better than I menu, anticipated,” stated Mr. Mendell. “Under present economic condi- tions, I did not expect to sell half jas much merchandise on the first morning of the sale.” Announcement has been made of the birth of a seven-pound girl | jal of his sister, Mrs. Nettie Pin- PERSONAL MENTION ete Dwight Russell was a passenger on: the afternoon train, going to Miami for a brief stay. Colonel M. G. Spinks, U. S. A., and Mrs. Spinks, who were enjoy. ing a’vacation in Key West in one of the cottages at Fort Taylor, left over the highway yesterday morning en route to New York. Antonio Olivieri was an arrival over the East Coast yesterday from Miami, to attend the funer- r. He was accompanied by Mrs. Pinder’s daughter, Mrs. Frank M. Pettis. Mrs. Eugene Russell and little daughter were arrivals on the morning train yesterday from Is- lamorada to spend a while with relatives and friends, Miss Catherine Montgomery,| instructor in physical culture, Miss Peggy Smith, librarian, of Florida State College for Women, and Miss Montgomery’s father, arriv- ed on the Havana Special yester- day for a short vacation in Key West, and were guests of Miss Dorothy Archer. William Vassie, machinist:.at'the lighthouse department, left «over the East: Coast ‘yesterday after- noon’ for Fowey Rocks light'to in- stall new mechanism for turning the screen of the light, t Alton Albertus and brother, Archie, left on the afternoon train yesterday for a business vis- it in Miami and expect to return within the next few days. Aaron Diaz was an _ outgoing passenger over the East Coast yes- terday to spend the week-end in Miami with relatives, Miss Louise Ketchum and Miss | 060 against the New Deal. 9 lof the Roosevelt- Administration ¢ $: as a salient.feature of its policy. Twelve States Sapper. Raper iehovgieen. rea P olicies And Two Disapprove Them Biresit” eposeg 201 Rbaee) orkinia: tic . politicians who interpreted s “e oa | Senator David A. Reed’s victory In Liter est New Deal Poll: Governor Gifford’ Pinchot in ; “ : the “Republican! primaries for the Senatorship as a defeat for the PER IS eee ES | Administration at Washington. And here’are.some other nuts to sah stians by a Geant ma: | crack: ae ig Vermont which| “Pennsylvania is second highést ; SED ercent against the | te Rhode Island in its ratio of hicks Hities, | 1932 Roosevelt voters who now First-returns are received _ this, V%¢ “Yes” -to the New Deal, Wwedle fromaliimois, Indiana, Michi-! ~“Pennsylvania is “highest in ite magazine. gan, Ohio. and” Wisconsin, The | ratio of Hoover voters who now The administration receives a! previous tabulation included . the | vote for Roosevelt, 59.29 percent confidence vote of New- England states and New} “Pennsylvania is highest in its the total tabulation to date. This York, New Jersey and. Pennsyl-j ratio of those who did not vote in compares with a ratio in the .pre-, vani 1932 and who now vote for Roose- vious return of 61.64 percent fox} o¢ the five néw states report. velt.” the president's policies. . hing, Ohio shows the widest varia-! Numerous complaints about the The balloting now is 240.424} tion ftom its 1932 election ratios. words'“On the Whole” which are votes for the New Deal-to 165,-| Then it” gave ‘Roosevelt 49.87 per- ‘included in the poll question are tent Of ‘its popular vote. Now it‘ answered in the magazine by In the fourteen states’. from | gives Roosevelt’ 59.23 péreent of! America’s foremost lexicographer, which votes have been received injits ballots. | Dr. Frank H. Vizetelly, Managing The Literary Digest poll so @ar,| “A suddent spurt of activity in| Editor of the New Standard . D Roosevelt obtained 51.89 percent/ national politics,” the magazine tionary, of the 1982 popular vote, which states editorially, “serves to en-| “On the whole,” Dr, Vizetelly shows a gain for him of 7.30 per-}hance ‘the timeliness’ of "The Lit-! Writes, “according to the New cent over his official election ra-; erary. Digest’s “ 15,000,000-ballot ; Universal Dictionary (1933), this tio. > +'|jstraw:poll‘on President Roosevelt’s| Phrase means ‘all things con- In the 1932 presidential elec-/first-year_acts' and policies. j sidered” . The New Standard Di tion, Roosevelt . received ys aftgtthe publication tionary definies it as a shortened aeet th pouyjform of ‘upon the whole “anattét,’ with, the meaning,’: ‘taking ‘things into, consideration.” “The New _Interhatic tiénary defines: the ' ‘ca | sidering ‘all things; ‘in view of Mill launehed : the, circumstances: or eonditions,’ them. {an intensive Republiqgyy drive Wwith/Iv addition to definitions: differ- Of those who voted for Hoover i2 vehement speech ‘ini which he! ing but slightly in phraseology in 1932, 64.82 percent disapprove: declaimed against the ‘tyranny’ of |from these, The New English Di the New Deal while 35.18 percent|the New Deal and exhorted Repub: tionary or Historical Principles approve the administration’s poli-; icans to rally their forces against! says: ‘In respect of the whole, cies. its ; ‘ ! notwithstanding exceptions in d 76.46 percent of those who ’vot-}: - “Mr. ’Mills is regarded by many tail; in general, for the most ed for minor candidates the last’ Republicans’ as’ their ‘party’s log- part.’ election votes of confidence in‘ ical candidate. for: president. ‘in! “The idiom has been in good the order named: 1936. His appeal: has been fol- literary ‘use for more than two Pennsylvania, New York ‘and;lowed by a country-wide move-| hundred years. Macaulay (1849) President Roosevelt's acts! and} Maine, continues to disapprove policies are approved by. the voters of twelve states and disapprov by those of two states us’ shown by 405,484 ballots reported in the; third tally of The Literary Digest’s New Deal Poll, which will be pib- lished in tomorrow's “issue ae An analysis ‘of “Ho This Poll Voted*in 199R7agid: They Vote Now,” shows $0.54 per- cent of those who'yoted fer Roose» velt support his policies and the balance of 19.46 percent... oppose Ida Kerr left on the afternoon| train yesterday for Ft. Lauder- dale and will drive across the; state to Lakeland where they will attend the Young People’s Assem- bly of the Methodist church, Mr. and Mrs, E. A. Strunk and their three children are leaving tomorrow morning over the high- way for Miami for a vacation of three weeks. Miss Florrie Ketchings, of the office force, Key West. Electric Company, and mother, Mrs. T. L. Ketchings, left on the afternoon train yesterday to spend a vaca- tion with relatives in Moultrie, Ga. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lunn, Sr., left yesterday afternoon for St. ‘Augustine where Mr. Lunn will have his eyes. examined at the Florida East Coast hospital, then go to Jacksonville for a short stay before réturning to.Key West. Mrs, Luis Mendez, before m riage, Miss Claudina Lucignani, and two sons, Luis, Jr., and Nes- tor, who were spending several weeks in Key West with Mrs. Men- de: parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Luéignani, left on the afternoon train yesterday for the home in Miami. «~E. R. Lowe, justice of the peace at Tavernier, and. Mrs, Léwe, came in over the highway last night and will spend a few days with relatives and ‘friends. »Miss’ Celeste Archer, employed in the’ branch office of one of the} large packing houses in Tampa, arrived on the Steamship ‘Florida this morning and will spend her vacation with her parents, Mr. and ; Mrs, George F. Archer, Guy Herring, known to his many friends in Key West as “Eight Ball” was honorably dis- eharged from the U. S, Army this week and left yesterday afternoon for his home in Nashville, Tenn.. where he will spend his furlough | with his family and then leave for his new assignment with the First; Division, U. S. Cavalry, at Fort Bliss, Texas. Mrs, Emma Freyberg, whe came Rhode Island give the president! ment toward mobilizing malcon- wrote: “The clergy were regarded his largest vote of confidence, im, tents of all parties to support anti-' as, on the whole, a plebeian class. From May 15 to June 15 you can buy a LIGHT- WEIGHT SUNBEAM IRONMASTER and a UTILITY BUSS LAMP for the price of the IRON- MASTER alone. Now within the reach of all! The iron is full, size, but weighs only three pounds. EASIER! FASTER, SMOOTH- ER! And FULLY AUTOMATIC! No excuse now for not owning the finést iron there That’s IRONMASTER! In it, extra heat replaces the dra; ig weight of old- fashioned irons—so that it saves you an hour each ironing day, and Icavcs you fresher, younger-looking. The utility Buss Lamp can be used as a table lamp, «8 a‘ted lamp, as a reading lamp, on the dressing table—or in any*place.ot position where'a lamp is desired, ‘Your choice two eolors—bronze or pastel green lacquer. } The regular price of both of these articles is $9.30, but dur- ing;this period:you can buy them both for. $6.95, - THE DATE--MAY 15 TO JUNE 15 TERMS—95c down and the balance in six monthly payments of $1.00 each on your elec- tric service bills. GET YOURS TODAY 3) THE KEY WEST ELECTRIC COMPANY A. F. AYALA, Sales Manager _ the order named. ‘3 | Roosevelt.:candidates. in the Con-' The Literary Supplement of the 64.25 percent of the 76,748 bal='gressional elections next. Novem-. London Times, with reference to lots received from ‘Pennsylvania, ber. x \Shakespeare’s ‘King John,’ wrote vote “Yes” to the question, j., {At the same time on the other in 1920; ‘We only have: the text) You Approve on the Whol side’of the ‘fence tanie the launch-| of the first folio of 1623, but that Acts and Policies of Ri ing'9f-'a ‘Progressive’La _Follette' upon the whole is admitted to‘ be First Year?” | party “itt Wisconsin, with support: good.’ ” 4 you looked at your complexion | this morning to Mr. and Mrs, Bur-|to Key West 10 days ago to be) ze Really looked at it? . . Is it | nell Sawyer at their home, 1417| present at the graduation of her) amvoth and clear? Or is it a little | ¢. ‘. “a little roggh? | Catherine street. unter days play havoc with your skin. | ‘er and winds exhaust its nat- ells. Cause your face to become and old looking. in today to use OuTROOR Gint Face , Tes umque Olive On! base gives Pahyn the moisture it needs to remain fem and youthful. Yet Ovrnooa Gini ts fully-dry. ke doesn’t clog the pores. re tree temples y Three nursery schools opened at Pittsburgh, Kas., as of the federal relief program. —SPECIALS— Seur Sop and Coconut ICE CREAM Short Orders HOT SOUSE Frosted Root Beer ‘WELLS’ LUNCH ROOM were 900 Southard St. Phone 207-J Sandwiches | grandson, Edward Freyberg, from | St. Joseph’s College and was the guest of Edward’s mother and maternal grandmother, Mrs. Ed. Freyberg and Mrs. Samuel J. Wolf, left yesterday afternoon for her home in St. Augusti FRESH KILLED PORK MILK FED HENS AND FRYERS { } i} MELTZER MOTOR Phone 16 We Deliver \SUBSCRIBE FOR THE CITIZEN—20c WEEKLY IGHT at the peak of Chevrolet popularity ~ with |-time. “highs” — Chevrolet dealers are displaying an sddditional group of four new models. These cars are ‘Sdentica! in quality with all 1934 Chevrolets.. And the prices have been set at such incredibly low figures that you can now buy a Chevrolet for $490! “A Chevrolet for $490" That's the world’s lowest price for a six- cylinder car. And a figure that sounds even more impressive after you find out what it buys: A great hig, full-size, long-wheelbase car. A cushion-balanced SIX of surprising smoothness, power, enap and dash. And every closed model has a Body by Fisher. Nobody interested in motor cars can afford to let another day slip by, without seeing this Chevrolet for $490.” CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT, MICH. Soe me ge seer COMPANY Phone 377

Other pages from this issue: