The Key West Citizen Newspaper, August 24, 1936, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR wecveccvcccconc) PERSONAL MENTION cence e Charles Maloney, who was in Miami for a short vacation and on business, returned by plane yesterday morning. | Mrs. Emilio Lounders and daughters Mrs. Leon Albury, Janice, Lorraine and Doris, left; over the highway yesterday morn- ing for a visit of two weeks with Mr, Lounders one of the Florida it Coast Railway ticket agents in Miami. Mr. and M Eddie Wallace, of Homestead, arrived last week for a stay of several days and to join the children who are spending a part of their vacation with rel-j atives and friends. Miss Dorothy Schober, of the; Monroe County Social Welfare! Board, returned by plane yester- day from Miami where she went! last Thursday on a short business trip. Lieutenant Jack Mbrrissey, F. | -oecepenement THE WEATHER | Ccevccccoccaccscecsevecs H Temperatures® * Highest Lowest - | Mean ‘Normal Mean ' Rainfall” ' Yesterday’s Precipitation ‘Sun rises :Sun sets . | Moon rises 'Moon sets en | First quarter, Aug. 25 12:49 a. m, | Tomorrow's Tides i A.M. High 2:22 y | Low 9:48 Barometer 8 A. M. today: Sea level, 29.98. WEATHER FORECAST (Till 8 p. m., Tuesday) Key West and Vicinity: Partly 8:35 It uster be an honor t’start at scratch an’ make somethin’ o’ yer- self. Now’days yer supposed t’start scratch an’ keep scratchin’. Ike Hoskin’s oldest boy, Bob, has cut out smokin’ cigarettes. Sez they're effeminate. night and Tuesday; moderate east- ferly winds. N. G., reserve, was an arrival yes- terday and is attached to the of- ficial family while the encamp- ment is being held at Fort Taylor reservation. Yolanda Mendoza and mother Mrs. Claudina Men- doza, who were spending a vacation in Miami, returned by plane yesterday accompanied by Mrs. Mendoza’s son Alfred, who will visit for a brief time. Miss Harry Wilson, official of the Sinclair Oil company, arrived yes- terday from Miami for a confer- ence with the local agent Willard Albury. Miss Virgerine Lowe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Lowe, who} was spending a vacation of two weeks at Norfolk, Va., with Mr. and Mrs. William R. Baker, was a returning passenger on the plane from Miami yesterday morning, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Cuesta, after spending a very enjoyable} vacation of a few days with rel-[( atives and friends, left over the highway this morning for their| home in Miami. { Mrs. Mervin Thompson of Mar- garet street, who had been visit- ing in Miami, returned to the city last evening over the highway. Mr. and Mrs. John West, Jr. and son, were arrivals in Key West Saturday evening over the! highway from Miami for a visit with Mrs. West’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Cates, and other rel- atives. Fred J. Dion, who had been on a brief business visit to Miami, returned to the city last night over the highway. ‘Mr, and Mrs, John Fleming and daughter, Dorothy Mae, left over the highway this morning for a visit in Miami with relatives and friends. Mrs. Sidney Mathews and son, Sidney, Jr. left this morning over the highway for Miami for a visit with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. George Fischer, and children, Mildred, Wanda and George, who had been visiting in Key West wih Mrs. Fischer’s . and Mrs. Charles at the home on Grinnell street. left over the highway this morning en route to their home in Gloucester City, New Jersey. Miss Nell Joyce, who was spend- ing a short vacation in Key West and was a guest at the Hotel Colo- nial, left by plane yesterday aft- ernoon for Miami. . Barker, wife of W. M. Barker, of the P. and O. Estrada Palma, left over the highway Sunday for her home in Hollywood, after a few weeks visit with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Eu- gene Albury, 1119 Southard street, accompaning Mrs. Barker, was her granddaughter, Miss Delandette Roberts, who will vsit in Miami and Hollywood. Miss Gerry Guerro, who had been visiting in Miami with rel- atives and friends, has returned to Key West. ~George Roker, employed with the Florida Pipe and Equipment company in loading the Steam- ship Queen City, arrived last night with about 80 negroes to be! employed in the stevedore work! “LHe BENJAMIN LOPEZ Announcement gagement of Miss {Ancient City, and Mr. Freyberg, Coast; Jacksony:ile, ‘parents, Mr. and Mrs. Otis John-' Florida: Generally fair tonight fexcept for scattered showers in ‘extreme south portion; Tuesday jpartiy cloudy, scattered showers jin south portion. : Jacksonville to Florida Straits jand East Gulf: Moderate easterly | winds except gentle variable ovér j extreme nortc portion; weather | part'y overezst tonight end Tues- Coccccvcvcsccccvcccccce Society Of Engagement iday, scattered showers cver south|' Announcement has been re-! portion. ceived by The Citizen of the en-! ‘ Nellie Char-| WEATHER CONDITIONS lotte Salvador, of St. Augustine, and Edward Joseph Freyberg. ; Pressure is moderately high this ‘Miss Salvador is the daughter!::0ruing over southeastern dis- of Mrs. S. Salvador, of the)ttacts and on the north Pacific Fla., 30.12 is the son of Mrs Eugenia Frey-/inches, and Roseburg, Oregon, berg, nee Wolf, and the late E.j30.14 inches; while low pressure B Freyberg, formerly of Key areas centered over the far north- West. ;east, upper Mississippi Valley, Mr, Freyberg is the manager of and northern Rocky Mountain the St. Augustine branch of the, States overspread most of the re- Florida Times-Union. | mainder of the country, Eastport, 'Me., 29.60 inches, Huron, S. D., on the vessel. George is a son of; 29.78 inches, and Salt Lake City, Mr. and Mrs. John Roker, for-| Utah, 29.76 inches. Showers and merly of Key West. | thunderstorms have occurred since - ! yesterday morning from the Lake Amos Johnson of Miami, arri-j7¢8i0n and upper Ohio Valley, ved last night over the highway one over the north Atlantic dren, Amos, Jr., and Malcolm, who' etnies lickt ee eine kee for the the past two weeks have! ourred in eas Geaieautheat been the guests of Mr. Johnson’s! jantie Stas, Culiee cee | prevails this morning in the Lake | region and portions of the north- ‘ern Plains States; while else- where changes have been gener- Eugene Martinez, former own-' #lly slight, with readings somewhat er of the Broadway Market, Mrs, above normal. Maximum tem- Martinez and baby daughter, left! Peratures of 100 to 104 degrees over the highway yesterday morn-! Were common yesterday in the ing for New York where they will, Plains States, northern Texas, and make their future home, Accom.|the middle Mississippi Valley. panying them was Miss Solita os 8. KENNEDY, Cobo, who will be their guest for Official in Charge. about two wekes, L E GA L s HEREBY {that under and by virtue of t Final Decree of Foreclosure rei son, at the street, home on _ Division Gabriel Gutierrez, proprietor! of a coffee mill in Key West, and Mrs. Gutierrez left over the high- GIVE! 4:17| , cloudy with scattered showers to-| THE KEY WEST CITIZEN New Deat.CrausHes FARMER 1932 conn EXPORTS 17 TIMES IMPORTS, WHEAT EXPORTS 6 TIMES IMPORTS THE AMERICAN FARMER has only begun to realize that visionary ‘New Deal policies are costing him millions of dollars. In 1932 we EXPORTED 33 million dollars worth of Wheat, 3 million dollars worth of Corn. In 1935, under New Deal policies which left our ere ee protection, EXPORTS of Wheat and Corn shrunk to almost nothing, while IMPORTS of Wheat IMPORTS of Corn to 20 million dollars. oe ares ‘No -wonder the-New Deal has failed-to restore: the purchasing power | of the American Farmer. it has wiped out his EXPORT. market and. flooded his home market with IMPORTED grain, grown by cheap labor In foreign countries. ée e+! matics, Barnard College dean, | pioneer in vocational placement, | born at Chesterville, Maine. Died erea College, Ky., Feb. 3, eaces “Today's Anniversaries 59 — William Wilherforce,} Britain’s famed anti-slavery .ead-|| 1884—Warl Derr Biggers, nov- er, born. Died July 29, 18.3. ‘elist, ¢ eator of Charlie Chan, the Chinese detective, born at War- 2784—Joseph EF, Worester.; ren, Ohio. Died at Pasadena, New England’s noted school-book: 2}, April 5, 1933. and dictionary-writer of his day,) ~ ” : born at Bedford, N. H. © at; Cambridge, Mass., Oct, 27, 1863, | +1887—Hal G. Evarts, novelist, ' born at Topeka, Kans, Died Oct 1 1832—Cornelius A. Logan, phy-| 18 1934. sician, Kansas medical editor, not- ed U. S. Minister to Latin Ameri-} ca, born at Deerfield, Mass, Died | Jan, 30, 1899. 1847—Charles Follen McKim. famed New York architect, among the country’s greatest, born in Chester Co., Pa. Died Sept. 14, 1909. 1860—Laura Nrake Gill, ampton, Mass., teacher of 1 MONKOE THEATER Shirley Temple-Guy Kibbee ithe- nes CAPTAIN JANUARY Matinee: Balcony, 10c; Orches- tra, 15-20c; Night: 15-25c | 25e. | tisements is invariably in advance, t MIMEOGRAPH PAPER — 500 way yesterday for a vacation of about one month in New York. dered in that certain cause pending in the Circuit Court of the Eleventh Judicial Cireuit in and for Monroe Florida, in which M. as Liquidator of Bank Glen Wood, WPA' director of finance, who was spending a va- cation of two weeks at different, points in the state, returned over} the highway last evening. | ANNA J. ENGEL, h Equi undersigned Chane ap- y the Court in d De- will offer for sale at_ public on to the highest and best + for cash, at the front door Mrs. Arnold Bennett, former: the Court House of Monroe Coun-, . in the City of Key West, Flor- Miss Alma West, was a recent ar-{t,,"On the 7th day of September, rival in Key West for a visit with A. ‘Dp. 1936, between the hours sf ji ends j eleven o'clock A. M. and two o'cloc relatives and friends. aesetibed’ tn ’ in . Monroe orida, to-wit: nning at a_point 328.86 st of the Northeast cor- ner of Lot 2, Section 14, Town- ship 61 South, Range 39 Kast, Key Largo, ‘Monroe County, a, and 15 feet South of the North line of Lot 1, running North 87°30’ and parallel to the North line of Lot 1 for 197 feet to the shore line of Key Largo Sound, thence Southwest along the water line of Key Largo Sound 115.04 feet, thence South y West 150 feet, thence 2 h 2°30° West 105 feet to the point of beginning; d sale to be had for the purpose ying said decree. A Miss Theda’ Guerro will leave, over the highway tomorrow morn-! ing for Miami where she will visit! with relatives and friends for a! few weeks. H | Mr. and Mrs. Wm. -A. Crosby! left recently over the highway! for their home in Tampa, stop-. ping in Miami and Everglades! City en route home, after an en-} joyable visit with Mrs. Crosby's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry L.: Lowe of 1013 Southard street.; Mrs. John J. Romero, Jr. and John} J. 3rd, who accompanied them here, remained for a longer visit. Noth Toooe PALACE For This Liquid Francis Lederer in 1 Loti: i ix itch killing medicines that go down into. ONE RAINY AFTERNOON Cartoon in Color skin deer to Seeley ee es cal czema, rash, tter, ing- etal wacko teh. nt | Matinee: 10-15e; Night: 15-2S¢ 1 Master in Chancery. NELSON, Plaintiff. aug3-10-17-24-31 worm and common itch. Pleasant to uses Two sizes, 35c and $1.00. | Erfective December 22nd, 1935. S. S. CUBA Leaves Port Tampa on Sundays and Wednesdays at 2:30 P. M. arriving Key West 7 A. M. Mondays and Thecslape: Leaves Key West Mondays and Thursdays 8:30 A. M. for Havana. Leaves Key West Tuesdays and Fridays § P. M. for Port Tampa, Fla. For further information and rates call Phone 14. SS OVERLOOKING BAYFRONT PARK AND BISCAYNE BAY Opposite Union Bus Station One Block from Shopping District and Amusements LOWEST RATES EVER QUOTED $ Single Room with Bath . 8» eDouble ‘Room with Bath ALFRED SIMONS, Manager $1.50 2.00 ADDING EQUIPMENT FOR MORE AND BETTER SERVICE Soe Berti spent twelve million, three hundred and siaty-eeven thousand dollars dv 1935 for improvements and replacements in telephone “plant” in o1 to meet the public’s service needs in nine Southern states. This money was requir d for such item: land and buitdings, switch- board and other equipmext, subscriber teleshone equi! pdocal and Jong distance lines. The estimate for 1936 is that Enea mili, dollars will be needed. v4 The increased demand for service in 1935 resalted in a-1ét gain of 55,950 telephones, Local calls increased 8.6 per cent over the previous year, and toll and long distgnce messages gained 9.6 per cent. Better business was zeflected also by the addition of twelve hundred employes, bringing this to:<l to seventeen thousand by the end of the year. The payroll was nineteen million dollars. ‘axes, too, increased to .he highest sum in the company’s history, when six million, t ve hundred and five thousand dollars was paid to fed- eral, state, county and municipal agencies. This was an average of 60.9 cents per telephone per month, or $7.31 per telephone for the year. Calls were handled eficiently—service criticisms 35 per cent, although 8.39 originating calls per telephone per day were averaged, the highest calling rate in more than ten years. ee Such facts as these <:ow how well telephone folks are accomplishing their determination to give the. most service and the best, at the least possible cost. e SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE and Telegraph Company ANGORPORATED SERGE sts DREN EAA RS AR AERTS AIO MONDAY, A —— POPPY CLASSIFIED © on | | Lighthouse Tender Poppy sail- ‘ jed this morning with a working Advertisements under this head! sorce to make authorized changes wili be inserted in The Citizen at} on the structure American the rate of 1c a word for each in-! Shoals lighthouse. These are the sertion, but the minimum for the, same kind of changes which have first insertion in every instance is; been made on other lights on the : | reef. | In the party are Leroy Sawyer, boat builder; Harold Thompson, carpenter; Wilbur Johnson, black- smith; William Brady, blacksmith helper; Wm. Vassie, mathinist, V. wyer, laborer. Shaw also left on h will leave Am- eco ot Payment for classified adver- | 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- ca tae. See a sults. ito make adjustments to the me- With each classified advertise- chanism of the light at Hen and ment The Citizen will give free an Chickens Shoal. Autostrop Razor Outfit. Ask for} it. Tender Ivy is continuing to re- lieve buoys in Tampa Bay. The j Ivy was on drydock at Tampa and oe a —|Wwas floated late urday after- THE MUNRO, i28 4th noon. street, Miami, Florida. ROOMS single, $2.50, $3.00 week double, $3.50, $4.00 week.'! Close in. aug4-1lmo NOTICE WE WILL PUMP OUT YOUR CISTERN and clean it for the water therein. State Plant Board. Phone 701. au; Stamp. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN, KEY WEST, FLA. ) FOR SALE Name Address __..... The Artman aug7 sheets, Press, $1.25. City and State Date of Birth OLD PAPERS FOR SALE—Two bundles for 5c, The Citizen Of- fice, octl6é WANTED WANTED—A ghance to bid on your next printing order. The Artman Press. THOMASINE M. MILLER —BEAUTICIAN— Latest Air Cooled Method Permanents: $2.50 to $10.00 Hair Dyeing a Specialty 407 South St. Phone 574-. SSS SS ON, POP PELL PLL PP ESL KEY WEST COLONIAL HOTEL In the Center of the Business and Theater District First Class—Fireproof— Sensible Rates Garage Popular Prices Elevator 5 Bundles for 25 in bundle THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Lb tttdtittAskittsttititih Subscribe to she Citizen. CKSONVILLE FLORIDA YOUR individual comiot and entetaement fe 0 motte: of rest mportance ats Bose. | home-like hate! . volt water sedio and ceilng an...every bed with ane ores mater: and admdual cence 3 amet AIR CONDITIONED COCKTAR LOUNGE - COFFEE SHOP YOUR DESTINY BY LE MARS A 1936 Reading to The Citizen Readers by Special Ar- rangements for a Limited Time only TEN CENTS Coin and Write Plain—Enclosin; 10c Ccin and Stamp IO PIPPLCLLOC LPL LLL LO OLD PAPERS 5c An Index To RELIABLE _FIRMS FOLLOW THE ARKOW! ---And You Will Find In This Directory, Stores Which Aim To Serve and Please You. They Invite You To Visit Them! LIQUORS—BEER x CURRO’S PLACE Duval At Petronia Street Package Liquors of All Kinds Beer and Wine POULTRY | | COMPANY | Specializing in Fresh Fish Foot of Front Street Phone 44 BAKERIES MALONEY & PEACOCK Bakers of Baker Boy Bread Cakes and Pastries If you are looiing for POULTRY visit or call Fulford’s Poultry Farm Phone 880 *” MUSIC CHARLES ROBERTS STUDIO OF MUSIC Thorough, Individual Piano In- struction—All Grades Studio Address: 613 Margeret St. Free Delivery Phone 379 as 10 ott Peg OF | DRUGS DEMERITT BROS. FISH ORIENTAL PHARMACY Emilie Romero, Prep. PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS 1060 Dewal Stree CLUBS For Recreation Visit THE NAVY CLUB Greene St. Opp. Western Unica You Are Welcome

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