The Key West Citizen Newspaper, October 12, 1936, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR POSooocooseseceeseeeeee® Society School Circle To Meet Tomorrow The second monthly meeting et the Division Street P.-T. A. will be held Tuesday at 3 m. in the auditorium of the Division Street] School. Everyone is urged to attend as many matters of vital interest will be discussed, it is stated. POPC SET OOOCESESESOOSES: PERSONAL MENTION 9900 Mrs. Clara Lewis and grand- daughter Betty Baumgardt, who were spending five weeks with relatives and visiting friends, left over the highway yesterday morning for their home Lauderdale. i (Mrs. Will Baez, who was spend-|, ing the week-end in Key West! with her mother, Mrs. Harry} Richardson and other relatives, jeft over the highway yesterday morning for the home in Miami. ] Fred Eberhardt,’ custodian at} ] ) Jefferson Natioyaly ,Monu-| mebt:at, Garden “Key; [brtugas. arrived by plane from Miami yes- terday, after visiting at Baltimore,| Washington, Tallahassee, andj other points in. the states. Miss Elizabeth Sharpley, who} had been on an_ extended trip} throughout the United States, was a returning passenger on the plane from Miami yesterday morning. T ‘PICTORIAL IN , MAGAZINE FORM MID - WEEK NEWSPICTURE WEEKLY NOW UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP Mid-Week Pictorial, the News- picture Weekly, founded in 1914 by the New York Times, appeared {last week in new dress and format under the ownership of Monte | Bourjaily, formerly General Man- jager of United Feature Syndicate. Considerable interest has been expressed in the past several ' months in the idea of a newspie- ture weekly. Publishing circles ‘REAL HEIR TO THRONE’ WOULD OUST EDWARD | EX-COP MAKING CAMPAIGN IN REAL EARNEST; EX- INCREASE HAT THEIR POPULARITY 1S GRO CONSTANT! PECTS T0:.HAYE, EQLLow.| ING OF MORE THAN 50,000 By ROGER D. GREENE (By Associated Press> LONDON, Oct. 12.—A:more or less royal proclamation, signed by| Britain’s throneless “King An- thony the First,” has restored the long-lost American “colonies” to in Fort- jto get into the field with such a English sovereignty. mistake about the Third,” otherwise An- have been hearing of plans for news picture periodicals for months. Mr. Bourjaily is the first “It was all a George explained publication. King Anthony, “The newspicture weekly is the one remaining field which has not been developed in this country,” said Mr. Bourjaily. ‘Its develop- ment should repeat in the maga- zine field the success of tabloid newspapers in the daily newspa- per field. The parallel may be extended further wher one ccn- siders that tabloid newspapers! have found their own audiences outside of existing newspaper readership. In the same way we expect to find our ovn audience.” In its first 22 years, Mid-Week Pictorial has Leen pub‘ished as a 32-page votogravure paper. Going into a magazine now, it becomes thony Hall, a former police in- spector in the Shropshire con- here. “He had no right to the throne. His name was just plain George Guelph. Therefore, I, Anthony,| legitimate successor to the crown won by my ancestor, Henry VIII, at the battle of Bosworth, hereby nullify George Guelph’s actions in losing the American colonies. “IZ my ancestors had been on the throne at the time of the Am-| erican revolution, there would never have been any trouble. The! colonies would still be living hap- pily under the flag of the Mother Country.” Says Sovereignty Hoax stabulary, in a recent interview | Do You Know 2 FORECAST A SIZEABLE THIS YEAR, STATING —| Seecescceseesese . >» i } HOTEL LEAMINGTON is MM. €. tet Strect at Siscayee Boulevard OVERLOOKING BAYFRONT PARK AND BISCAYNE BAT Oppesite Union Bes Station LOWEST RATES EVER in 1492 it was Columbus who | came across. Nowdays it’s the tax | payers. And that reminds me, it’s the tax- payers who furnish the feathers for ; LORENZO GARCIA PLACED IN JAIL Lorenzo Garcia, colored, was placed in jail Satufday night, charged with assault and battery. The complaining witness and the} one who signed the affidavit, 13 father of the accused. Still Coughing? | the politicians’ nest. Key West and Miami NOW MAKING DELIVERIES AT KEY WEST i TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY MORNINGS WE FURNISH AND DELIVERY OFFICE: & STREET TELEPHONES 68 AND 82 Robert Perky, owner of the! 64-page book with colored cov- Perky Holdings on Sugar Loafler. Key. was an arrival yesterday] Mid-Week Pictorial, the News-| Francisco, Calif., claims that the! morning on the plane from Mi-! picture Weekly, was founded in|whole system oz English sover-| ami. 1914 by the New York Times to eignty has been based on a hoax Garcia was out on bail having ‘been ‘in jail charged with assault! and battery on the person of a! result negro woman. His weapon at that} Get Creomulsion time was an oil lamp. ru? ANI The 38-year-old King Anthony, vho lived for several years in San eed James B. Symonette, head of a local insurance company, left on the plane yesterday for Miami to be absent for a short time. Mrs. Josephine Gwynn left by plane yesterday afternoon for Mi- ami where she will visit for a while with relatives and friends. Roy Goodman, WPA director: in Key West, and Glenn Wood, finance director, left yesterday by plane for Miami en route to Jack- sonville to confer with Adminis- trator E. A. Pynchon relative to future activities in this district. Assistant State Attorney J. Lancelot Lester left by plane yes- terday afternoon for Miami where he will assist in the prosecution of a case in conjunction with State Attorney G. A Worley. Mrs, Rosaura Barroso, who had been spending some time in Tam- pa and was under medical super- vision and receiving attention in one of the hospitals, returned on the Cuba this morning. Mrs. Wm. R, Warren, and Mrs. Robert M. Spottswood, left over the highway yesterday morning to attend the meeting of the Southeastern, Planning Board be- ing held in Jacksonville, as rep- resentatives of Key West. CUBA BRINGS IN 39 PASSENGERS VESSEL ALSO HAD EIGHTY- SIX TONS OF FREIGHT FOR KEY WEST Steamship Cuba, of the P. and O. S. S. company, arrived this morning from Tampa with two first class passengers and 13 sec- ond class for Key West; 14 first and 10 second class passengers for Havana. Arrivals at Key West: Mrs. C. Roberts, J. A. Gardner, B. Garcia, Caridad Fernandez, Charles Fer- nandez, Onelia Fernandez, Charles Fernandez, Jr., Rosa Gonzalez, Miss Z. Morales, Mrs, L. Morales, Rosa Barroso, Joanne Miner, D. H. Miner, Mrs, D, H. Miner, James Miner, The Cuba also brought 86 tons of freight and two sacks of mail for Key West; two tons of freight and 183 sacks of mail for Havana. HELPS PREVENT Many CoLps designed aid for nose and upper throat, where most colds start. Double Quantity SO¢ Viexs Vat present the World War in pic- ltures. Now, at 22 years of age, lit comes under new ownership, enters into a new phase. FIRST OF HIGHWAY BIDS ARE OPENED (Continued from Page One) 933.91; E. H. Latham Company, Miami, $242,663.66. For Contract B, W. Horace Williams Co., $611,791.88; Hard- away Contracting company, $475,- 134.19; E. H. Latham company, $500,987.52; Tidewater Construc- ition Corporation, Norfolk, Va., 4 $407,139.59; S. J. Groves & Sons Company, $481,362.08. For Contract C, calling for \ grading and surfzcing, the bidders were: Duval Engineering and Contracting Company of Jackson- ville, $300,284.84; Belcher Oil Go., Miami, $180,143.59, Discuss Matters { Mr. Stowers said that following ithe meeting in the court house, jwhere the Lids vere opened by B. | iM. Dencan, chief enyineer and manage> of the Overseas Road {and Toll Bridze District, and read |by Arthur West, bridge engineer, [the members repaired to the of- jfice of Judge H. H. Taylor where jthe matters were discussed and j final arrangements were made for tabulating the bids and sending them to PWA headquartres in Washington for approval before the contracts are awarded. Attending the meeting said Mr. Stowers, was the entire member- ship’ of the road and toll bridge commission, which included Judge W. H. Burwell, Judge H. H. Tay- lor and P. L, Wilson, of Miami; T. Jenkins Curry, of Key Largo, and the Key West members who returned yesterdcy, with the ex- ception of B. D. Trevor, who went to South Carolina for a stay of two weeks. In the returning group were Mr. Stowers, B. M. Duncan and Mrs. Dunean, Arthur West, bridge en- gineer of the commission; State Senator Arthur Gomez, Judge William V. Albury, County Com- { ever since the death of Queen} Elizabeth in 1603, | “The real King James VI of} Scotland, son of Mary Stuart,; Queen of Scots, died in infancy,” | says Anthony, “and a changeling,: James Erskine, was placed in the dead king’s cradle and brought up and foisted on the British people; as James VI of Scotland and, James I of England. “In 1830, a coffin containing} the bones of the real King James was discovered in the walls of Edinburgh castle, but the bankers hushed the matter up. “In view of this fact, it is quite, clear that the Wettins, or Wind-' st-S as they began to ca] them- selves during the World war, are not of the royal blood of England. Consequently, the throne should should go back to the Tudor line, of which I am the ninth in the; direct male line of descent.” Seeks Early ‘Restoration’ The self styled “King Anthony the First,” who gets into trouble with the police only occasionally, having been arrested twice and summoned five times, is engaged in a feverish campaign to bring about the “restoration” before next May, when Edward VII will be crowned. He addressed street meetings thrice daily, seven days a week, speaking to large and grinning crowds alongside the statue of Henry Irving, near the age-old Garrick theater. By Coronation day, he expects to have 50,000 followers and stage a counter-demonstration. Now that King Anthony I has restored the American colonies, he doesn’t quite know what to do { Garcia was first arrested by Po-. Franklyn Arenberg; lice Officer who turned him over to Deputy Sheriff Ray Elivood when the war- ; rant was secured and presented to the officer. Another arrest wes made Sat- urday night. This by Police Offi- cer John Nelson. This was a case where the accused, Manuel Mesa,; is said to have been caught in the act of siphoning gasoline from an- other car into the tank on his, The rubber tube which was being used is in the sheriff's office to be pre- sented as evidence. in, English essayist, has called him ‘“a man of undoubted charm.” He takes his claims in all riousness, but he realizes’ some people thing he is slightly “bar-* my,” as he put it, and with high good humor he accepts the laugh- ter of the crowds. “Tt doesn’t make any difference! if they laugh at me,” he said, with cheery philosophy. “I’m the king. Some day I’ll live in Windsor cas- tle.” BABCOCK for SENATE with them. : “Pm too busy now to think much about it,” he said. “Still, I understand Americans would like to have a king, and I'll have to give the matter my attention im- mediately after the restoration.” If he can’t get around to it per- sonally, he added, he might have one of his three brothers act as “assistant king” for the United States. Two of them live in San Francisco, he said. HOWARD C. BABCOCK for U.S. SENATE Se-, { | j Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Sampson |of Miami announce the birth of a {boy on October 7, 5 a. m. at St. : Francis Hospital in Miami Beach.| The youngster tipped the scales :at 7 Ibs. 11 oz. and has been given | the name of William Curtis. Mrs. Sampson was before her marriage, Miss Louise Casado of this city. ; Both mother and baby are doing nicely. MONKOE THEATER Ronald Colman and Claudette Colbert in UNDER TWO FLAGS || Matinee: Balcony, 10c; Orches- tra, 15-20c; Night: 15-25¢ i i | 1 Laughs At Jibes Wel-dressed, with keen bright eyes and a eultivated gecent, An- thony was the youngest, police in- missioner Norverg Thompson Commissioner Wm. R. Porter will remain in Miami another day and; i Cast your yote for a leader. ol sure a business-like representation! at Washington. Work for prac-! return by plane tomorrow. H e Bids for the next group of projects, Contracts D, BE, F and) G., will be opened on Qetober 24 in Room 1007, in the county court house in Miami, as announced in spector in England before he took up his restoration ‘campaign. He surprised his senior officers by writing book: on police! methods end fingerprints, and W. J. Mak- The Citizen under date of Octo-j ber 10, —BEAUTICIAN— Latest Air Cooled Method Permanents: $2.50 to $10.00 Hair Dyeing a Specialty 407 South St. Phone 574.. No Show Today Account of CUBAN HI AY —Sunday and Monday— James Dunn-Mae Clarke in HEARTS iN BONDAGE tical state and individual rights. Guarantee your future, vote fi H. C. BABCOCK for Senate (Paid Political Advertisement) YOUR DESTINY BY LE A 1936 Reading to The rangements for a Limited Time only TEN CENTS Coin Stamp. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN, 4/04 Citizen Readers by Special Ar- and All Qutside Rooms with Private Bath COOL—CLEAN—QUIET Qvericoking Biscayne Bay Two Blocks to Shops, Theatre | and Business Section —RATES— $1.50 Single very Games. ané chats why wc oe ey ‘ fematkabic boc of genume Seco Eaguscs Bosase See guns and Aemowncemess: = or Faw Se Special Family, Weekly and Monthly Rates s. D. McCREARY, THE ARTMAN PRESS CITIZEN BUILDING HOOVES & +» FOLLOW .THE ARROW! If you are looking for POULTRY visit or call Fulford’s Poultry Farm | I Deliver | Phone 518 Phone 880 ---And You Will Find In This To Serve and Please You. They Invite You To Visit Them! Far Recrwecem Vaet THE NAVY Cis Gewese 5 Ope Sere A SO cee MALONEY & PEACOCE Baker: of Baker Boy Breas (Cakes and Paste 812 Fleming Se ;

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