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SOCIETY PPP eOH SSeS eNSeeseseeeeseneeerte Martha Carbonell Is Honored At Birthday Party Louisa Delaney, Nell Rose Knight, Frances Ellsworth, Yolanda Men- doza, Cecelia Ellsworth, ‘Thersa, Falk, Fay Buckley, Blanché Her-' nandez, Consuelo Carmona, Solita Cobo, Juanita Mayg, Dora Ma- chado, Grace Rivero, Generosa Martinez, Martha Carbonell. Harris Sherman, William Phe- lan, Hugo Barcelo, Jesu Carmona, Norman Artman, Johnnie Black- well, Raphael Diaz, William War- ren, Walter Norman, Oliver Ar- mayor, Ygnacio Carbonell, Freddy Carbonell, Juan Carbonell, Jr., Howard Wilson, Charles Yates, ° Mr. and Mrs, Juan Carbonell entertained at a party last night ‘the Woman's Glub house in of the eighteenth birthday daughter, Miss Martha ‘affair wae one of the most a the social season, A orchestra furnished a) collection of popular hits large crowd whieh favored dancing as the most popular fea.’ ture of the evening. Refreshments of ice cream, pet- fours and sandwiches were: pany | Abelardo Lopez, George Allan ‘These present were: Warren, Isadore Rodriguez, Julio Kelly, Barbara Taylor,| Lopez, Paul Sawyer, Frank Lund, MeCann, Barbara Carey,}Joe Lopez, Delio Cobo, Goul ‘Thelma Atwell, Leonor Warren, Curry, Jack Hayes, Sammy Rus- Gelto, Georgia Charcon,! sell, Oswald Farga, Raymond Soe tenis, Marina Crespo,| Rubio, Leo Lopez, Andrew Pritch- Cravoe, Ruth Rose Galey,; ard, Charles Smith, Curtis Stan- ‘Thompson, Elizabeth Ayala,’ ton. at Program This Evening Auditorium Of Stone Church = ieee pap Pinder and Annie. Laprie Sun- ere. of the First Meth- ¥ | (together sAtnie Laurie Sum-| “wit ) Kindersai Behoot of ot N. P. Nebon, will present a of songs, recitations and Exercises by Junie Departnient féligious drills in the auditorium oo = program follows: < : wae of the church school under dfrec- tion of Mrs. James Singleton. Song by Junior Department. Reading—Robert Smith. ‘Opening exercises by Mrs, Nel- won's Kindergarten School. Exereives by the Beginner's De- of the church school un. Reading—Sylvia ‘Roberts. Song by Intermediate Depart- the supervision of Mrs. Chas. Ketchum, Department ment of church school under the direction of Mrs. Ethea Stricker. ading—Charlotte Summers. Song—Doyle Ray Smith. Ba dirbay of Mrs, Dexter. | of Day’—Congregation. : Betty Ruth Chastian.| Pastor’s remarks and — benedic- duet—Misses Margaret tion—Rev. Geo, E. Summers. Hymn, “Softly Now the. Light + Daniel nade Batertaine Many 4 Friends At Party Yesterday Daniel Lujan entertained ayJoseph Lowe, Alfred Lowe, W: ‘number of friends yesterday aft-|ter McCook, Frances Lou Collins, ca ‘Peggy Collins, Peggy Moss, Paul ‘Srneon with & partyin honor ath tkoerna. Ji. Hertell Bonni- “The color scheme of the event) Louise Buckley, | Loui Stein- wee pink and green, with balloons’ spring, Mary Lee Steinspring, Hu- given as favors. \ bert Dion, Robert Dion, Ray De- ‘ for games went to Paula) meritt, Lois Malone, Bobby and Joveph Johnsen, Re-| Braun, Fay Bervaldi, Otalee Rob- consisting of cake,'erts, Arturo Lujan, Jr. Adell jee cream were served,! Beccaise, Ruth Beccaise, E.. R. spent a most en- Thompson, Joseph Hoeffer, Char- lotte Johnson, Mary Johnson, Leo jJohnson, Joseph Johnson, Jack. Curry, Ruth Evelyn Curry, Rose Lowe, Benjamin! Marie Sands, Nellie Thrower, Lowe, Sarah Bertha Lowe, Joan. Joseph Young, Gloria Young, Billy Blbertson, Shirley Elbertson, Clay-| Warner, Macie Valenzuela. ton Conway Kelley, | Mrs, W. F. Collins, Mrs. Wm. -Bnola Papy, Frank Papy, Joseph' Albury, Mrs. Carl Bervaldi, Mrs. Papy, Lorraine Johnson, Donnie Benj. Demeritt, Mr. and Mrs, A. dane Wallace, Florida Pinder,} Lujan. Sylvia Pinder, Jack Ray Newcomb,! Misses Yyonne Pinder, Romalda Gerry Albury, Billy Albury, Rose | Johnson, Lillian Lujan, and Daniel Mary Demoritt, Paula Higgs,! Lujan. sat a Geverner Sholte and Comptroller Lee are shown chatting with ene of the sponge divers aboard the “Ruth Elder,” the Florida tpenee beat anchored in the North Lagoon at the World’s Fair. ‘The «ponge beat is part of the Florida Exhibit at the fair and at- fracts hundreds of visitors daily. i? M. Bethel. { were spending several weeks in Ms seventh birthday anniversary. ye, Dotty May Hobbs, Dorothy’ ‘} with relatives and friends, was a Miss Aileen Bethel left Sunday for Rock Harbor, where she will spend a vacation with her father, Kirkland Albury was an arrival over the East Coast yesterday and will spend a while with relatives and friends. Mrs. Chester Harris and chil- dren were arrivals yesterday from Miamivand will spend a while i relatisry and friends. B. F. Royal, superintenderit of irrigation at the sugar cane plan- tation at Felsmere, is in the city for a vacation and is the guest of Mr, and Mrs, J. F. Cherry. | Mr. and Mrs. Victor Lowe, who Miami with relatives and friends, were returning passengers on the Havana Special yesterday. Bernard DeWitt, special writer for the Florida Times Union, came in over the East Coast yes- terday from Jacksonville, and will remain in Key West gathering material for a series of feature stories covering FERA activities. Mrs. J. R. Baker and coe Mipughters, ‘Misses Alice, Ruth an lay were, passengers on the ARE “yesterday going to Miami to spend a while with relativés and friends. © Mrs.-Charles Williams and Mrs John Roberts, who were spendi several weeks with relatives in Mi- ami and visited with Mrs, Roberts’ mother, Mrs. C. H. J. Roberts, were returning passengers on the Havana Special yesterday. daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Robert F. Spottswood, left on the after- noon train yesterday for New York’ where she will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. Aubrey Nicholas. | Miss Mary Louise Spottswood, — Walter Maloney left yesterday afternoon for Coral Gables, where he will spend a few days with his brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Peacock. Vernon Spencer, Slim. to his friends, left yesterday afternoon, for Colorado Springs, Colorado, ' for an indefinite stay at one of|!8!¥, have been on her way with the sanitariums. Mrs, William Barker and daugh- Mter-in-law, Mrs. D, M. Barker, left ‘on the afternoon train yesterday for Miami to spend a_ while with? relatives, State Senator Arthur Gomez! left over the East Coast yesterday! on business connected with sev- eral cases he has under advise- ment and expects to be absent several days. i Mrs, George A. T. Roberts left) over the East Coast yesterday for New York City where she will spend a while with her son, Charles, and daughter, Mrs. R. G. Walling, formerly Miss Norma Roberts, Mrs. W. A. Curry, who was spending a while in Key West passenger on the afternoon train yesterday returning to her home in Miami.’ Johnsons Have House Guests Mrs. Leonora Lee and father, Rafael Placencia, of Miami, ar-} rived over the highway this week | and are the guests of Miss Lulee} Johnson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Johnson at the resi- dence, 1122 Southard street. The visitors arrived in company! with Oscar Humphreys, manager} of the Boyd Shoe Store in Miami; and while guests of Miss Johnson will visit with other relatives and} friends, Another guest at the Johnson; home is Mrs. Wesley Hamlin, another daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Johnson, who came in from Tampa! recently and will remain for a while. Mrs. Arnold Bennett Returns To Miami | Mrs. Arnold Bennett, who had been spending a few weeks in Key West visiting with her aunt, Mrs, Harriet Saunders at her home, 1025 Fleming street, left yesterday afternoon over the East Coast for Miami. Mrs, Bennett will be joined in Miami by her husband, who has just returned from a vacation spent in New York and other points in the north and east, Mrs. Bennett, was formerly Mi Alma West, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John A. West, former Key Westers, who are now making “their homie iii Coconut Grove, | ing.” SYNOPSIS: Marsha soure nas refused Bob Powers after “leading him” into an engagement. But when she hears Geoffrey Tarleton, whom she fancies she loves. intro- luce her to “the new Mra. Tarle- ton” she marries Bod next day. Now, a little astonished and a lit- tle afraid of hurting Bob, she is be- ginning her honeymoon, Chapter 14 HONEYMOON SILENCE followed; Marsha broke -it. “You'll think me a fool,” she said, “I don't: know why I'm 60 oddly nervous.” “I'd think you a fool if you weren’t ‘oddly nervous,’” Bob assured her. He added, with a smile, “I'm a lit- tle nervous myself. What we need, my dear, is one of those patent medicines; the sort that is adver- tised through letters that run: “I was all run down and had no appetite. I had terrible dizzy spells. The Doctor said it was my nerves, And after six bottles of your won- derful medicine I felt a new per- son. I cannot thank you enough!’” She laughed delightedly. “And our letter,” he said next, “will read, ‘After eighteen bottles of your nerve cure, we had courage to start on our honeymoon!’” “Have you a sense of humor, Bob?” “My dear, I hope so... But then, have you ever met a man or woman who admitted they hadn't?” “No,” she admitted; she smiled for some moments over this, @ thought new to her. “Bob.” “Yes, Mrs. Powers,” he answered, and was instantly sorry hé had hailed her in that reminding way, but she did not seem to mind. “Where are we going?” “‘Mother, what's for dessert?’” he replied. “Aren't you going to tell me?” “No, Mam!” ‘Why, you brute!” “Yes, Mam.” “We're going somewhere on Long Island,” she stated triumphantly as they neared the Queensboro Bridge. “Um. Know your map and every: thing, don’t you? You tell me about | the turns. It'll save ‘my nerves.’ ” “You're a very funny person, aren’t you?” she questioned iron- ically. “You'll have to pretend to think so when we have dinner guests and you hear the old ones,” he assured her. She might, she realized wonder- kim to someone's dinner, or tea. He said, “Marsha Powers, sup pose you sit back and rest and know that everything is well.” They stopped for their luncheon at a small roadside inn where a broad, open fireplace was welc after the bite of the outdoor air. When Marsha returned, freshened by water, powdered anew, she found a small table before the glowing hearth, and Bob, back to the hearth, smoking a cigaret and waiting her. “THIS is charming!” she said, His eyes glowed. She felt a warming | of heart that was made by the way that pleasing her, pleased him. “I wish no one else would come,” she confided as he drew out her chair and she settled. “They won't,” he assured her; ‘there's another dining room and Uve arranged the matter. I'm really quite a ‘fixer,’ when I get a start. You're going to be surprised!” “And all ordered!” she said as a/ waitress appeared with a laden| tray. “Yes, and if it doesn’t suit we'll send it back and try again.” “I had not known I was hungry,” she admitted next, and after some moments. “I knew you were. I was afraid you would begin to chew the sleeve of my top coat. And I’m fond of that coat. It came from Bond Street. 1] was deeply troubled—” It was remarkably cozy; their luncheon time spread over an hour | and then a half. The fire died down | and the waitress came in to mend it and to send the “beautiful lady and her handsome, big man” an envious glance. So much in love, they were, she saw; talking, laughing; “and | him looking on her like he was starved, but keeping up his gay act- She sighed, leaving them. Again in the car, they found the skies darkened by the threat of a snow fall. Marsha’s eyes grew} heavy. “Why don’t you sag against my at your service, and a very service able shoulder you'll find it to be.” She did, after a little hesitation; he must driven with painstak- ing care she knew, when he woke her with a touch and.she looked up to find higi gmiling down on her, and a fidrfy-of-snow in the air, and the small doorway, of a stone house seen through it and ne: “Home, my dear chil he said. Picked her up to.carry her over t! threshold. ““t have my superstitions,” he admitted, as she found herself set by him and reluctantly, upon her feet; “this is one of them!” A stooped old woman in black dress, white cap and apron appeared then from the rear of the low,ceil- inged, old-fashioned hall. She curt- sied in a fashion that told of her having started as scullery maid in another land. “I think you'll find 2veryth:ng in readiness for Mrs. Powers, Mr. Rob- ert.” she said, “and it’s honored we are, here, to serve you both.” “Ella, one of my mother’s oldest, most trusted servants,” Bob said to Marsha, She murmured something gently kind to find surprise at her- self. She had not known she could play this role-that bad been thrust upon her, so adroitly. A moment more and she went with Bob up the few stairs and into a room with a sloping roof. The walls were covered with an old fashioned, flowered paper, ruffled, dottea-swiss curtains were at the widdows, and two deepichintz-covered chairs and a few other old and good pieces gave the place peace, ‘ “QWEET,” she murmured, looking around. Swered; he did not glance away from her. “I'll bring up our bags. We're without any men servants, | think I didn’t want any rugged male thing to see how softly 1 shalt gaze at you. Why don’t you finish that nap hour and a half. “Perhaps,” she - admitted, “it would be a good idea.” She could be alone thus, she reasoned; and per- haps, alone, she could think things through a little to get beyond the old, and -diseoncertingly unsteady feeling that had been hers ever since she had learned Geoffrey was lost to'her and since. what shé had done because of the loss of Geoffrey. He brought up their luggage, set strapped each piece. “All fixed!” lie said. Hé moved toward the doorway; smiled at her ~ from the doorway; then he left, closing the low door firmly after himself. For some time she stood without moving. Suddenly she laughed; she did not. know where she was physi- cally, nor mentally! Where had his car turned as she slept? If only things would become real; if only he would act as she had expected him to! If she could feel. solid ground, Known ground through a normal man’s actions, even the name of the village. Then perhaps this ghastly new seriousness, which made deep crippling pressure, would slip away. She descended the stairs at half after six; he was waiting for her at the foot of them. “Sleep?” he asked. “Yes, I didn’t expect to, but there's @ peace here, I've never felt before. It’s a darling house!” “I hoped you would like it.” “I can't see how you arranged everything in this short while.” “It.took a little speed,” he admit- ted, “k spent the night telephoning --dragging people from bed—and Dersuuding them that no one needed so much sleep as they thought. Come in here and see the nice fire and the coektails that are waiting you—” The living room was broad and long; a piano stood at one end and near windows of tiny panes; at the other end of the room was a bank of books; their colors were gentle in the soft light. A fire leaped and scolded.: Deep chairs were before it and an old fashioned, chintz-cov- ered sofa, “I adore this place!” said Marsha. “1 thought,” he said slowly, “that if you liked it—as much as | shall after our time here, we might buy it, so that we can come back; make a pilgrimage now and again you know — between bridges—” He paused a moment. “Come here to me,” he said next. “I want to say something that is rather serious to you—” (Copyright, 1934, by K. Haviland-Taylor) Tomorrow, “Mr. and Mra. Pow- shoulder and sleep?” asked Bob. “It’s ers” have their first dinner. Overlooking Bayfront Single Room with Bath Double Room with Bath NE Ist Street at Biscayne Boulevard Opposite Union Bus Station LOWEST RATES EVER QUOTED ALFRED SIMONS, Manager. 1 COSCO SCC OdEH2eENTO585T9899888980098886 HOTEL LEAMINGTON “MIAMI’S MOST POPULAR HOTEL” Park and Biscayne Bay eae He stepped from the car then and | “Thought you'd ‘like it,” he an- ; before dinner? You have a long . hers on the waiting racks, and un- | “TTRAVIOLA NITE [NEGRO IS LODGED { CLUB TO OPEN Preparations are being made for the opening tomorrow night of the Traviola Nite Club and Beer Garden at 801 Duval street, | which will be under the manage- ‘ment of Miss Jane Powell, assist- ed by Miss Emma Frow. Miss Powell for many years has had expec jiné the operation of night elubs and is talented in- | | home, # The dance space has been beau- tifully decorated with the club !eolors. All persons who’ do not dance will have an excellent op- portunity to learn as Miss Powell and Miss Frow are capable in- structors, it is stated. Both have been dance teachers for the past four years. The club will be opened day and night and the management states that all who attend will be as- sured of a good time. Today” Anniversaries Coccccccenescseaacesoses 1763—James Kent, New York lawyer, professor and. jurist, au- thor of the celebrated “Commen- taries on American Law,” born in New York, Died there, Dec. 12, 1847, 1803—John Ericsson, famed | Swedish-American inventor and engineer, builder of the “Monitor” | of Civil War fame, born in Swe- den. Died in New York, Mar. 8, 1889. 1808—Frederick W. N. Crouch, English-American composer, au- thor of the music of “Kathleen Mavourmeen,” born in England. Died at Portland, Me., Aug. 18, 1896. i i i | so-far as making all guests feel at} } , 1836—Paul B; Du Chaillu, ex- plorer of Africa, born in New Or- leans. Died in Russia, April 3, 1908, i | 1864—Edward N. Hurley, Chi-! cago financier, wartime chairman } of the U. S, Shipping Board, born j at Galesburg, Ill. Died in Chi- cago, Nov. 14, 1933. 1867—Joseph M. Dixon, Mon- tana lawyer, Senator, governor, born at Snow Camp, N. C. Died May 22, 1934, RETURNS TO CITY P. M. Roberts, of the Peninsu- lar Life Insurance company, who attended a state meeting of the organization in Miami and after-! ward went to Louisville, Ky., to spend a short time with his son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roberts, returned on the morning train yesterday, 1 TUESDAY, JULY 81, 198% 7 3 was the one making the complaint and officers who saw him state be was a badly beaten man. PALACE Ralph Forbes-Gwenilian Gill in SHOCK —Also— THE LITTLE RED HEN Matinee, 10-15¢; Night, 15-25¢ IN COUNTY JAIL Leroy Dean, negro, was ar- rested this morning by officers from the sheriff’s office charged ‘with assault and battery. He was)\ lodged in the county jail. | George Cornish, another negro, ~ | ~~“ No Diseouraged Vegetables with THERE. is.-still only positively keeps your ( , B vegetables as fresh and crisp as they should be ..ICE! And fresh, more wholesome. Use good, pure I C BE. ICE REFRIGERATORS Made of All Metal—Equipped With They're Economical! 100 Per Cént Refrigeration Satisfaction. PRICED AT one refrigerant that crisp vegetables are not only more appetizing, WATER COOLERS $30 and $35 EASY TERMS—10 DAY FREE TRIAL Thompson’s Ice Company, Inc. More /e/si7e Hours nen You Warn Gas Cook with gas, and enjoy new leisure for the things you'd like to do. Gas is so quick and dependable . and TODAY’S gas range stands for the ultra modern in a cooking appliance. Here are some of the features that shorten kitchen hours almost unbelievably: Oven heat control, self-lighting, pull-out broilers, FOUR simmer-speed burners that supply a multitude of heats. Insulation saves gas and keeps your kitchen cool. Full enamel makes cleaning easy and simple. Why not modernize your own kitchen with an up-to-date gas range? FLORIDA PUBLIC UTILITIES COMPANY ROBERT ROBERTS, Mgr.