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PAGE FOUR Today's Horoscop¢ BENEFIT AGAIN —= ‘NEW ARRIVAL AT = MILAN'S BORE —————— Mr. and Mrs Qscer L. Million « Sug Sor Necerre ant « acne Gopeemeoe The 2 —— em Ec ST he ode Sees Junior Club To Meet On Friday Members of the Junior H man’s Club this morning an- nounced a social meeting of the Will be held tomorrow evening at organization to be held 5 o'clock’ Habana-Madrid Club from 9 till! Friday afternoon in the rooms of | Key West Hospitality House. i Hos s will be Mrs. W. W.| Demeritt, Jr., and Mrs. Robert! Dopp. Bridge and Michigan will! be the pastimes, jchestra. | Moonlight Dance | At Habana-Madrid Wo-! ees CONDITIONS BEARING ON SIT. UATION IN U. S. AND CAN- ADA HELPS ARGENTINA IN} DEPRESSION | A Collegiate Moonlight Dance’ wmet Sek oe we oer} conti 5 ae ae et =< 1 o'clock. mw ay 2a sc = oce ar eee ee —<s i Good musie for dancing will be! *: £ (ity Associated Presa) BUENOS AIRES, Sept. 1.— For the third consecutive year,! Argentina expects to benefit _ by, the droughts which have dealt’ F j American farmers heavy blews,! although the weather has dealt a lot of punishment in this eountry, | vopeoncreesesoveceseoerec.esecnececcees |’ i xs | news-| Argentina this year has one of} of Marathon, Howard Pinder, Citizen j is morning for | boy, left over the highway yes-| the smallest wheat surpluses for) terday morning to spend a vaca-' export in a decade, and its maize} tion of two _weeks with relatives) harvest has been retarded and| and friends in Miami. considerably reduced by prolong-| ,ed and excessive rainfall, yet high- John Roberts. watchman at the! ey world prices as a result of the naval station, Mrs. Roberts and! North A‘merican droughts may al- son, Louis, who were spending a‘ Jeyiate what looked liked a poor vacation at points in the states,! business year for this country. travelling in automobile, return-| Droughts in the United States ed over the highway this week. land Canada have been a dominant ee ERIE TTT pee ee re officer, and Mrs. Arenberg, left| rote errr eee ross over the highway this morning! “Ma: ‘Gousterace Sli i for a motor trip through Florida, wi P Amproved grain prices, in 1934 Georgia and several other states.} id F : They expect to be away from the, 2nd 1935, coupled with American city for several weeks. | droughts and good Argentina crops! resultmg in heavy exports, in- cluding much maize to-the United! States itself, gave Argentina tre- mendus furnished’ by a popular local or-| ! | eeee PERSONAL MENTION :e@seccece. W. A. Parrish, arrived by p! a short bus Eli Potts has got him a trailer and is goin’ detourin’. Tobias Kipper, focal economist, | wonders why they didn't enter taxes in the Olympic high jump. |RUSSIANS DROP ‘ | (By Asseciated Press) + MOSCOW, Sept. 1.—Soviet paar ceereee eS citizens, embued with the spirit of *: Coronation Year Ball ant se — — 9. surnames they de not like. | To Resemblé George 5: Daily the leading newspapers ! (By Associated Prens) carry long lists of advertisements e{ LONDON, Sept. 1.—Qne of of the most brilliant social events of ! the period will be the Coronation TEMBER i Year Ball’ at Grosvenor House next June, of persons who have filed notice of their intention to change for VIRGO people are very orderly, | P $ methodical, and good magnetic’ It will be organized on similar ones more euphdnious names they consider annoying, amusing, of- fensive or generally unsatisfac- tory. The process is feirly simple. A Rp j trade boosts in those healers. Are genevous and great lines to the Shakespeare Ball which her daughter, Mrs. A. Cobo. and: Virginia and other sections, re-) Years. 5 : j ‘ child Consuelo, and. Miss Ruth’ turned to Key West recently over| This year signs of a slip were! ™atch-makers. Make fine ote ee meas the eam Rose Galey, left this morning over! the highway. j evident. The 1935-36 wheat crop, , Sicians, scholarly, can keep se-} Pas ee coe pes oon the highway for a visit in Mi-| [recently estimated at 3,800,000 crets, love dress and like to lead , WOE} BUSCA ie MM ay, wee ami, | tons, was one of the smallest in al the fashion; affectionate, devoted, | i 4 ¢ citizen simply appears at the Re- gistry for Acts of Civil State and | ighli; he time. decade. as a result of dry weather! 344 pelieve in blue blood. Are|°"% % the highlights of t e in the Argentine growing season. and believe in blue - Are! Accommodation at the ball is e HEN the crowd comes over foran informal supper why not center the “eats” around a platter of cold sliced ham? “But why bother to bake a ham?”—yes, “why,” when there’s a new kind of tender-wade ham now on the market which may be served as purchased? This very same ham, however, is delicious when heated only one. hour in a hot oven. An inch-thick ham steak may be heated to a turn in a mere 12 minutes. The inexpensive shank and butt ends of this bam are deji- cious when used in summer salads or in casserole combinations. Miss Helen Williams, who has, been spending a vacation in the} mountains of North Carolina and} other points, returned on the plane from Miami this morning. i i] Mrs. Roy Roberts, who was called to Miami Sunday by the | death of her aunt, Mys. Carrie} Geiger, returned by plane this! morning accompanied by her uncle, Charles Geiger. Mr. and Mrs. L. Kiser, aceom- panied by their son, Randolph} Kiser, and wife, were arrivals in; Key West yesterday over the highway from Miami. YOUR DESTINY By LE MARS ecencce The character and talents those born between AUGUST 23 TO SEP- SRA DE rx af } Larry Gardner, accompanied by, re#eeedhis aunt, Mrs. Rosa Cruz. who} Mrs. J. Pelaez, accompanied by! had been visiting at points in Mr. and Mrs. John West, Jr., {and family, accompanied by Mrs Charles Albury, son of Mr. and John Wilbur Cates, left over th Mrs. George Albury, was a__ re-| highway Sunday morning for their! cent arrival in Key West over the; home in Miami. While here. they highway from Plantation Key for: were the guests of Mr. and Mrs.} a visit with relatives. ;Jonathan Cates of Virginia = | Street. Mrs. Lucille Gomez left over: the highway yesterday for Miami; Jack Long, visiting in Key West called there because of the illness with his sister, Mrs. O. S. Long, of her mother, Mrs. Louisa Higgs.' and who left on Sunday for a She was accompanied by Mrs. short trip to Miami, is expected to Eugene Pierce. | return here this evening. files notice of his or her imtention easily discouraged, natural philoso- being arranged for 2,500 guests. to change his name. Public announcement of the Newspapers estimate that Argen-| phers and accurate discriminators. ‘The proceeds will, be divided be- tina has only 600,000 or 700,000) Exec] in chemistry. Have great tween the many hospitals and ins- fact is published, and anyone who objects can appear and state hie objections. If there is no protest within 30 days the civil authorities issue the citizen a new passport tons of wheat left for export until | endurance, recover quickly from titutions assisted by the League of under his new name. the new crop comes up late this) defeat, prone to criticize too much! yerey who ane ec aoriiae pad year, But better prices, influ-i__stop it. Also imitating and a a maeuat Sipe nl enced by the American droughts,'toadying. Inclined to take tool tre te ing ae sitet? a will offset to some extent the lack! much medicine, imagine they have Ord jeague ani sat gn of quantity. jall sorts of maladies. They will “7°°" Argentina’s maize surplus for|confess every fault but the one 2 @ HOTEL LEAMINGTON ROE let Seremt at Baceree Seaerecs OVERLOOKING BAYFRONT Pa8k ASD BISCATSE Be" Subserine to The Citizen—20 ; weekly. Bombing Planes Disturb |Philippine President Lloyd George’s Slumber! Found Easy To Reach (M> Axsociated Press) | (iy Aawociated Press) LONDON, Sent. 1.—Lloyd| MANILA, P. IL. Sept. George declares he won’t join in, Members of the Philippine Na-j protests against warplane bombing tional Assembly find it com- practice—although he wishes to! paratively easy to reach the chief abolish bombing, and the practice | executive, President Manuel L.! flights keep him awake nights. | Quezon. “Where I live in Surrey military} After the executive moved into planes hum night and day over my | Malacanan Palace, former home house,” he told a minister who!of American governor generals, asked his views on the subject, he had the ground floor remodel-| “But I wouldn’t sign a petition! ed. He then announced that this! to remove this nocturnal torment! section of the palace would be al to another part of the country.j sort of club for the assemblymen| That would be illogical. It would! and declared that he expected to! simply mean disturbing other peo-| meet all the law makers there fre- ple. | quently. export has not been fixed, because! they possess. Should merry one : i i itch parvere | ber 23, or September 28 and Octo- ‘ ,,Jmperial Lotion containg Ss it) | BELOW THE DEADLINE Before the abnormal wet wea-! ber 23 (Libra). | Tonight: PRIZE NIGHT worm and common itch. Pleasant | | to use. Two sizes, 35¢ and $1.00. | Ss | ms“ ot bes Noltch TooDep [ParAGE of six weeks of almost continuous|born in their own Sign, viz.:; : i rain which has held back the! (Virgo) August 22 dese Ath aid, For This Liquid | Cecits parker-Russell Hopton in The Hyecinth is! skin folds to reach and kill the ther set in, predictions were for|their natal gem, also Pink Jasper.| cause of eczema, rash, tetter, ring- Matinee: 5-10c; Night: 10-15¢ one of the heaviest maize crops = on record, but new calculations : il must await knowledge of the amount of standing corn rotted by rain. Hope To Ship Beef The American droughts may re- sult in above-normal shipments of canned Argentine meat to the United States again this year, and} Argentine papers are expressing aj faint hope that sanitary restric-} tions against fresh beef will be} removed. ! The United States embargo! against Argentine chilled beef has prevailed for years because of hoof and mouth disease in this | | . | yas | COLUMN COececien, ccsesccccccess FOR SALE FOR SALE CHEAP—Brown Reed Baby Carriage and Atwater Kent Radio. Apply 1218 Mar- garet street. aug28-tf FOR RENT | FURNISHED BUNGALOW—Cor.! “My remedy would be to abolish | bombing altogether by interna-! tional agreement.” i Decccseccccccccccccoses Today’s Anniversaries i i i ee! 1785—Peter Cartwright, Ilin-/ ois Methodist preacher, whom Lin-| coln defeated for Congress in} 1846, born in Amherst Co., Va.! Died Sept. 25, 1872. 1791—Lydia H. Sigourney, not!! ed poe f her day, born at Nor-| wich, Conn. Died at Hartford, Conn., June 10, 1865, 1792—Chester Harding, noted early American portrait painter, born at Conway, Mass. Died in Boston, April 1, 1866, 1795—James Gordon Bennett, celebrated New York Herald pub- lisher-editor, born in Scotland. Died June 1, 1872. 1836—Aniceto G. Menoeal, U. S. Navy’s noted chief engineer, civil engineer, advocate of a c across N‘caragua, born in Cuba. Died in New York, July 20, 1908. 1868—Frank McKinney Hub- bard Kin” Hubbard) of India- napolis, cartoonist, creator of “Abe Martin;” born at Bellefon- taine, O. Died Dec. 26, 1930. 1898—Marilyn Miller, musical! comedy star, born at Evansville, | Ind. Died in New York, April 7 1936. j THOMASINE M. MILLER —BEAUTICIAN— | Latest Air Cooled Method Permanents: $2.50 to $10.00 Hair Dyeing a Specialty 407 South St. Phone 574-. | Today In History 1807—Riehmond, Va., jury ac- quits former Vice President Aaron Burr with plot to establish an em- pire west of the Mississippi. 1836—Dr.. Marcus Whitman, his Presbyterian missionary asso- eiates ‘and two women (the first white Women to cross overland to Oregoti) reach Oregon to make that eéuntry American and teach Christianity to the Indians, 1838—Half a million dollars, gift of an Englishman who had never been in America, reaches U.; S. Treasury—to found Smithson- ian Institution. 1854—Second party of settlers, about 85, sent out by New Eng- land Emigrant Aid Society to peo- ple Kansas, arrives at Lawrence. Kans. 1869—First National ance Convention opens cago. Temper- 1923—Japan’s great earthquake followed by tidal waves and fire took toll of 250,000 dead and in- jured. MONROE THEATER Owen Davis, Jr.,-Louise Latimer in BUNKER BEAN —also— A SUDDEN DEATH Matinee: Balcony, 10c; Orches- JOE ALLEN - Notary Public THE CITIZEN OFFICE country. A sanitary~convention signed in 1935 would change the| flat embargo to one permitting} shipment of meat from. disease-! free zones, which would free Pa- tagonia, in southern Argentina, from the restrictions. “And Pata-| gonia is a sheep, not a beef pro-) ducer. The faint but persistent Argen-| tine hope that it may one day ex- port chilled meat to the Unite States is coupled with British pro-' posals to place an import duty on} Argentine beef. This worries Ar- gentine cattle raisers because Britain buys most of the chilled} and frozen beef this country ex- Ports. | i NEGLECTED DOG HAMMOND, Hennard of this city was sent to! jail for leaving his dog without food for several days. Eng. — George} Georgia and Albury street. Ap- ply 905 South street. aug26-6t JOHN C. PARK PLUMBING DURO PUMPS PLUMBING SUPPLIES PHONE 348 ROOMS THE MUNRO, 128 N. E. 4th street, Miami, Florida, ROOMS: single, $2.50, $3.00 week; double, $3.50, $4.00 week. Close in. aug4-1mo H NOTICE WE WILL PUMP OUT YOUR! CISTERN and clean it for the: water therein. State Plant: Board.’ Phoné 701. aug29-6t! BENJAMIN LOPEZ FUNERAL HOME}: Serving Key West | Half Century 24 Hour Antbulance Service Licensed Embaimer Phone 135 Night 696-W Our Reputation ip Wrap- ped in every package of PRINTING INSURANCE Office: 319 Duvel Strest i { ; { OLD PAPERS 5 Bundles for 25 in bundle DONE BY US 4 WATCHMAKER, JEWELED AND ENGRAVER See Him For Your Next Work ALL PRICES REDUCED Hours: 9 te 12—1 to € Open Saturday Nights ee FRESH SHRIi=P ape Sees Sewers Poems 0: Mee 3 Lae FREE PROM’ SELIWERY oC ——By—— STAR COFFEE MILL jj ‘+ Ask for and demand— 612 Greene Street Phone 256 Im. eM heb A A dh did ded ded