The Key West Citizen Newspaper, May 25, 1936, Page 4

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PAGE FOU JEWISH FEAST OF PENTECOST BEGINS TUESDAY REGULAR. SERVICES WILL BE CONDUCTED AT LOCAL SYNAGOGUE BY REV. PHIL- LIP KRISTAL The Jewish Feast of Pentecost, which will be observed this yea ameng Reform Jews for one day, and by the Orthodox for tw days, beginning at sundown, Tues-j day, May 26, is rich in spiritual significance. Regular services will be conducted at the local syna-} gogue in connection with the! event by Rev. Phillip Kristal. Pentecost, also called the Feast} of Weeks, is known in Hebrew as Shabuoth. It derives its name from the fact that it is celebrated} after a week of weeks, seven) weeks after the second day of. Passover. During biblical days Shabuoth was a time of thanks- giving for the harvest. Offerings) brought to the Temple and placed on the altar, were in keeping with; the gifts of the soil that had been} gathered. | Today the idea of the harvest is| carried out in the Synagogue by} decorating it with seasonable plants and flowers and by the} reading of the Book of Ruth) which contains a description of | the reaping of the grain and the} abundance of the earth. { Since post-biblical days Sha- buoth has come to have a more spiritual meaning. It desig-| nated as the anniversary of the giving of the Ten Commandments at Mount Sinai. The story of the revelation at Sinai, which lives in the heart of every Jew, narrates the epochal event of Israel’s ac- ceptance of a sacred mission as “a kingdom of priests and a holy peo- ple.” H Shabuoth commemorates today both this solemn occasion and its} responsibility. For this reason the} festival has been chosen by the Reform Jewish Synagogue as the appropriate time for its Confirma- tion Service. At this service the boys and girls in Israel are con- secrated to their faith and are ad-! monished to live in accordance! with the principles and doctrines of Judaism. The service is of} significance to all Israel for it] emphasizes the idea of spiritual] freedom and inspires the Jew to renewed loyalty to the great reli- gious teachings promulgated at Mount Sinai. TO CURB HABITS | OF COLORED BOYS | i is SPECIAL OFFICERS APPOINT- ED TO LOOK OUT FOR COLORED YOUTHS An important step was taken last week, it is said, when me bers of the colored population re- 's of the police department. Thg migsion of the new offi it was explained, was the de- sire of an organization, The Negro Progressive Club, to sup-| press the growing tendency of the! young of the colored race to- ward a life of law breaking, eurb} the habit of using profane lan-| guage, the nbling and other habits which have on a number of occasions been manifested. It is the intention of the offi- cers to keep a strict watch on the} youth, prevent them gathering in| the vicinity of churches during divine services, assembling onj street corners, and in a number of, other ways doing things which will) event: lead them from the di- rect path which leads to good; citizenship and a worthy life. — { The mayor considered their commendable and praiseworthy desire and appointed the follow- ing: Daniel Clark, Charles Dor- set, John Adderly, Edward Bur- ous, acl Farrington and An- thony Welters. The oath was ad-! ministered and they became law! enforcement officers. ' work has already} The good started, it was pointed out to The Citizen, and the special officers have accomrlished much in brief time they have been clothed} the, ' 'NO PLACE LIKE HER OLD HOME ENJOYS TH:kTY - ROOM HOUSE AT SOMERVILLE (ity Associated Press) SOMERVILLE, N. J., May 25. —Be it ever so palatial there’ 's no !place like home to Mrs. James H. R. Cromwell, the former Duke, who inherited the vast to- acco fortune of her father, the llate James B. Duke, and came to} be kngwn as the world’s richest | girl. She may roam the earth, as she did after her marriage, tasting the fruits of wealth in foreign lands, but she always comes back to Somerville. Here she enjoys a 30-room house on a 2,300-acre estate with} its forty-two miles of improved roads, its woodland glens where bronze satyrs and Greek athlete ogle bronze dryads, and a multi. tude of bass and trout, fearless of capture, frisk in the eight lakes and the winding sreams. Across the deep woods and roll- ing greensward the big bell in the tower of the house bomos the hours, and now there is the sound of workmen’s hammers and song, for they are again enlarging the building, When the weather gets} warmer the regular force of gar- deners, farmers, woodsmen and| others who keep the estate in order, will be increased to 150. Mrs. Cromwell was born on the estate, lived here most of her life, and has spent many week-ends here since her marriage and hon-j eymoon. She has eleven servants, who occupy third floor quarters. PLAN MARRIAGE | THIS AFTERNOON| i ‘A: marriage license was issued} Saturday to Ralph B. Garcia, Jr., and Miss Marguerite Taylor from the office of the county judge. Mr. Garcia and M Taylor| planned to have the marriage cere- mony performed this after- noon by Rev. Wm. J. Reagan, of | St. Mary’s Star of The Sea church, CLASSIFIED COLUMN Advertisements under this head will be inserted in The Citizen at the rate of 1¢ a word for each in- sertion, but the minimum for the first insertion in every instance is 25c. Payment for ctassified adver- tisements is invariably in advance, but regular advertisers with ledger accounts may have their advertise- ments charged. Advertisers should give their street address as well as their tele- phone number if they desire re- sults. With each classified advertise-| }ment The Citizen will give free an | Autostrop Razor Outfit. it, Ask for | : WANTED WANTED—Boy or girl to address’ letters. Apply to ‘Rogelio Go-| mez, County ‘Court Mouse. MALE HELP WANTED INVESTIGATORS NEEDED} everywhere. $1.50 per hour spare time opportunity. Experi-j ence unnecessary. No sel&ng. | Give references. UNIVERSAL CLAIMS BUREAU, 1182 Mar-| ket St., San Francisco, Calif. may25-1t FOR RENT FURNISHED APARTMENT with} electric ice box. 1001 street, phone 879-J. may9-1mox TWO FURNISHED HOUSES. Ap- ply 1120 Grinnell street. mayl ' FOR SALE FOR SALE—House at corner Southard and Elizabeth streets, Doris! jand aunt, Mr. and Mrs. !State Plant Board, arrived je \ | | Eaton} PIPPI MIS SIM, HITLER, BACHELOR, | GIVEN LAYETTES (By Ansocinted Prenny BERLIN, May 25.—One of the birthday gifts for the bachelor “r e a I m leader,” Adolf litter, consisted of 1456 baby outfits, complete with cradles, from the women | of the reich’s civil servants’ | association. One half of the layettes were decorated with blue rib- bons, for boy babies, and the other half pink, for girls. The gift will benefit an ap- proved list of needy mothers of large families. TIIIL OMS SB PERSONAL ON Cccccccecescveccccaccees Mrs. Gabriel Cabanas and baby, who were spending a week with relatives in Tampa, returned on the Cuba this morning. R. Porter, president of National Bank, who was in Miami for a few days on business, returned oa the ‘ plane sterday morning. Miss Marjorie Roberts, daugh- ter of Mr, and Mrs. G. C. Rob- erts of 1307 Petronia street, ar- rived Satu y afterhoon Over the high from Tallahassee, where she has-been atte@dnig school at en, Mrs, Cleora Blanding and son Jack, arrived yesterday from Fort Myers by plane to attend the funeral of Mrs. Blanding’s sister, Mrs. Lorraine Schmucker, this Miss Oceana Hopkins, of the WPA department of women’s work who was in Key West for about one week, left yesterday afternoon by plane for Miami. Miss Edith Brockell, of Miami, was an arrival by plane yesterday to join a party of friends who with Judge H. H. Taylor are spending a few days in Key West. is Donald Williams, FERA ac- counting department, left yester- day for Miami and from there will go to Jacksonville for a confer- ence with officials. Miss Puro Vivo arrived this morning on the Cuba from Tampa and will be the guest of her uncle Harry Baldwin for a while. Jose Piodela, clerk in the of- e of the county judge, who was an operation, returned this morn- jing on the S. S. Cuba much im- proved in health and will resume his duties in the office in a few 1 days. Consuelo Carmona, who was ng in Tempa for a while with relatives, wns a returning passenger on the Cuba this morn- ing. Mi: beth Ayala, daugh- ter of Mr, and Mrs. Fred Ayala, stedent at the state colege for women at Tallahassee, arrived’ on the Cuba this morning’ from | Tampa. Dr. J. H. Montgomery and Dr. Wilmon Newell, officials of the this morning to look over the situation and be in Key West while the spraynig ope ons are resum- RY. 1 $ A. RIVERO, i Complainant, j v } JOSEFINA V. RIVERO, Defendant. ORDER OF PUBLICATION Florida State Oollege for Wom-j; afternoon. | in Tampa for several weeks for! THE KEY WEST CITIZEN | KEY WEST SEASON BEFORE LAST | 1 Mrs. Pauline Harrington has re- ceived a letter advising of. the jdeath of a friend, Miss Marie M. Emerson, who died Friday, May ; 22, in St. Vincents’ hospital in New York City. M Emerson visited Key West and spent several months here sea- !son before last, and during her stay made a wide circle of friends who will be grieved to learn of her ! passing. | While here she leari Key West and often s: would be happy to return at some future time to meet the hospitable and kindly folk who had made her stay so pleasant and enjoyable. Funeral services were held in Pulaski. Tenn., her birthplace, ac- cording to the letter which w: sent Mrs. Harrington by Mrs. Alice Luyben, whd was Miss Fmerson’s tgaveling companion on her visit to Key West. | BLUE-EYED GIRLS _ FAVORITES WITH BABY SHOPPERS (Ry Asvociated Prexx) ATLANTA, Ga., May 25.—The baby placement market here is bearish, but that doesn’t keep would-be foster parents from be- ing choosey. For instance, they’re demanding babies whose coloring matches their own, says Mrs. Virginia Lee Bennett, acting executive x tary of the Child Welfare A tion. which supervises all } adoptions in Atlanta. “Type selection,” she says, carried to such a fine point nowa-! days that adopted babies often de-1 ivelop striking family resem- blances.”” Mrs. Bennett also cites the fact that babies often adopt parents— by a coo or grip of the prospect. ‘Blue-eyed, curly - haired little girls are most in demand, she re- ports, but boy babies are not with- out takers. The preferred age is between six months and a year. COEDS GREATER SPENDERS THAN MALE STUDENTS (hy Ansociated Press) COLUMBUS, Ohio, May 25.— As a spender of dad’s money, a college girl outdoes a college boy, say students at Capital university here. A! survey shows that it costs | $695.43 to keep the average girl jin school a year, whereas a man spends only $497.71 annually while acquiring an education. It’s what they eat. rather than what they study, that costs the most. Meals for the average male student total about $120.44 for a college year, while Betty Coed spends $5.39 a week for board. The average girl spends $2.91 a week for clothes and the average man only $25.97 a year. Men students at Capital spend an average of $18.28 annually for recreation and $11.89 for refresh ments, undoubtedly largely spent on coeds who turn in no bil at all for refreshments and one of only $9.80 for recreation, Room rent cogts coeds $89.91 a year and college men only $56.67. Books cost women students more than men, and coeds spend more for stationery than do their male fellow students. TOMNSENDITES! cia- legal Concentrate On JERRY W. CARTER Your True Blue Proven Friend For GOVERNOR "ANNOUNCE DEMISE ‘ADVISES OTHERS _ OF MISS EMERSON | DECEASED WAS VISITOR IN| WOMAN AGAINST TALKING STAT& TREASURER, OF IDAKO GIVES TIP TO MEMBERS OF EER SEX (hy Associated Prenn) BOISE, Idaho, May 23 Myrtle Powell Enking, only woman state treasi in the; United States, advises those of her sex who aspire to public office) “not to talk too much.” | “That’s the conclusion I have! come to after 21 years in public. life,” the gray-haired but viva- | cious little official declared. “And, I intend to respect it in my eam-} paign for a_ third consecutive | term, rer “Ym not much of a campaigner] but I make lots of personal con-' tacts and they are essential in! polities.” Mrs. Enking believes the chan of a woman being elected P: dent of the United States is re- mote. “Winning the presidency takes} years of background and contact with political powers, and men are} way out ahead because more men than women like politics,” she! said. Mrs. Enking was born “some- time since the Civil W: at) Avon, Illinois, and came to Idaho} in 1909 to take a bookkeeping job] v i CHARLOTTE | may 18-25 5B Complains ARNOUX ORDER OF Pl It appearing It is therefore defendant be 3 quired to appear t plaint filed ins Monday D. 1936, otherwise said bill will | fessed by said def It is f r order for fo: . Key West Citizen, « lished in Done of May (Seal) Junel-S-15 Edward R hold at inger, application fF a issued thetéom, Sa embrace the © following property in the County in a store at Gooding. She mar-! vied William L. Enking, a Chicago! “e lumkerman in 1911 but was left; F a widow two years later. A son,/ Harrod, is a high school teacher. | She lives with her aged mother, Mrs. Margaret Powell. She was the first woman elected to county office in Idaho. Her _|present position is one of eight! high state elective po: She is a Democrat. | WPA AUDITOR ARRIVES HERE ' killing medicine: Jack Warren, field auditor of the WPA in Florida, is in Key West and is looking over the ac- counts of the administration with Glenn Wood, in charge of that division. Recently a new system of ac- counting was established and in order to determine how the sys- tem is being carried on, is the ob- ject of Mr. Warren’s visit, it is said. day in. the which is the day « Dated this 11th day « (Seal) I ¥ Clerk of Cir ‘or County, Florida weekly. No Itch Too Deep For This Liquid Imperial Lotion contains six itch that go down inte skin folds to reach and k cause of eczema, rash worm and common to use, Two sizes, THOMASINE M. MILLER —BEAUTICIAN— Late: ir Cooled Method Permanents: $2.50 to $10.00 Hair Dyeing a Specialty 407 South St. Phone 574-J ‘IMO ITIOOSISS SSO SSO, CLD PAPERS For Sale oeeerceeescsescecseseecs 5 Bundles for 5c THE KEY WEST CITIZEN CORIDFLILIGII LIZ IAS HS. SD ILI LL LL DS WO i MOO MMMM OOO MMe RICEZATORS ICE REF 109 Per ' SUBSCRIBE FOR THE CITIZEN—28e WEEKLY 2 Jackets, Double Cellophane, seal-in the FRESHNESS of the Prize Crop Tobaccos in “Double-Mellow” Old Golds OLD a Double-Mellow Old Gold up to your ear... and roll it around between your fingers. You'll hear no crackle or snap of stale, dried-out tobacco. Just the silken swish of the finest prize crop leaf, in the highest quality obtainable. Dry air can’t get im; moisture can’t get out! So at any cigarette counter, in any climate, you'll get FACTORY- FRESH Old Golds, as fresh as they left the cigarette machine. the very pink of smoking condition. Examine the package . . . and you'll see the reason for this factory- freshness. It’s wrapped in two jack- ets of moisture-proof Cellophane, Organizer and President Townsend Club, No. 1, Tallahassee with authority. { $50. Apply The Citizen Office. } a anieionk ln ona FOR POPPY SALE defendant be and she is hereby re-! to the bill of com- The American Legion auxiliary has arranged for a poppy sale to! SI RS ROSS C. SAWYER, i cause on or be- 5th day of June,} be put on in Key West during this week-end, according to an- | PRINTING—Quatity Printing at} (seal) Clerk Cireuit Court. | the Lowest Prices. The Arv-| THOMAS S. CARO, e the allegations | nouncement made today. . ° Solicitor for C lain . for the benefit of welfare work.’ man Press, aug? ner 1° Sau pee What a difference that freshness makes ... in flavor and fragrance! fe | FOR SALE—Beer and Wine Busi- . ness in good location. $150. Box K, The Citizen. may18-7tx Carter Meetinzs absolutely eek Wi Adah h ae a at the reception he has bad. ; SPEEDBOAT, 24 feet long, 125 horsepower, 30 miles per hour. Fully equipped and guaranteed. Write Box G, The Citizen. may4-1mox Jerry Carter everywhere is break- ing ail records -for attendance at political meetings. d by said defendant. Hl is further ordered that this] der be published once each week! four consecutive weeks in The West Citizen, a newspaper! hed in said county and state. @ and ordered this lith day of May, 1936. See Personal Letter of NOTE: A F taken as con-| The fands received will be used mayll-18-25-junel-8

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