The Key West Citizen Newspaper, January 24, 1938, Page 6

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PAGE SIX ~ » cecccccccccccccoccsscovccsccccsccocsecososess seccccescosesessceressse bo spending a while in Key West and was the guest of Judge and Mrs. Reception Held Saturday was the guest of Judge and Bre For Officers Of Dunlap) :sis morning on te Cubs tor Over 200 guests were present; Wev, Lt John Munhoiland and at the reception given for officers | It. Levie.5.T: ckhke = of the U. S. S. Dunlap Saturday). se ayod ahd night at the home of Mayor @e4iGer and Mrs. Schr. der, Lt. Wil- Mrs. Williard M. Albity’frori5°7" iam M. Officer in! charge A striking and dainty, navy | Navy Stai and “Mrs: “Kiaiis. | Mrs. John Anti was a passen- on the Cuba this morning go- ing to Havana for a visit of sev- eral weeks with relatives and friends, | Chief Harry Baker of the Key West Fire Department, who left last week over the highway ac- companied by. Ed. Philbert, re- turned.Saturday afternoon. color scheme was carried out in| Mrs. Jerry’ Trevor, ‘Mrs W: R the decorations and refreshments. | Warren,’Mrs. Arthur Pastorini, The navy colors of blue and gold | Mrs. G..N. Goshétn, assisted by 2nd Mrs. Eola were represented by gold mari- | Miss A. E. Sharpley, oar okes oi cor | aka ele Louies 7A es, candy, cakes with navy anch- i i ’ Auxier, . = Sete Lnsigntn were also in the| Mra. Frank Ward, Miss ‘Dorothy | y As, MOwe Mo reas weiss Honored at the affair were Mary Curtis Williams, Miss Helen | toned to Key West day. Commander and Mrs. A. E. Shrae- ili - der, Lt. Charles O. Comp, Lt. Mal- ments and presided at the punch colm A. Hufty, Lt. Bosquet N. bowl Kingfish Chowder Entertaining at a kingfish chowder last week was former- Judge Henry H. Taylor, of Mi- ' Entertains Last Night With Dinner = Miss Dorothy Nottage, niece of Judge Henry H. Taylor of Mi- Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bervaldi, who ami entertained at dinner for Lt. izitine West fi Congressman’ Allan B. Walsh | Commander and Mrs. Schraeder| Wen. ise Sp the afternoon bus from Woodrow Wilson’s district | at the-Casa Marina last night.!c4erday enroute to her home in a De = ¥ Taylor has been a friend || lof Coptninder and Mrs: Schracx| wt. and der for'a great number of years: |Lt. Sehrieder was stationed ..at the local Naval Station. for, a | time. Mrs. Schraeder is the for- |mer Argentina Delgado of this city. Judge Taylor was formerly 5 Pee Judge of the Criminal C B4 mereage ge es ae par Key West and is at present an at- catego rs -iaxagg in Miami Frank W. golf pro at the Miami-Biltmore Hotel, are due to arrive in Key West in brief way on the return to Miami. _Mr. Mrs. Alfred Knowles atid two daughters arrived yester- day on the afternoon bus from a lengthy visit at-the plantation at Plantation Key. j The dinner was a means of re- | newing a very. happy and long | standing acquaintance. a Honoring Lieut Junior Clab To Schraeder and the officers of the; U..S.S. Destroyer Dunlap was! Social meeting of the Junior yesterday by Mr. and Mrs. Woman's Club will be held Fri- }. J. Degaldo at the home. ‘Mrs. Schraeder is the former Deigado. Jacksonville. Hostesses will be Miss Anita] J. E. Bub é t Commander | Berkowitz and Miss Joan Mac- P ‘ Lt Sass | Rites. 5 loess Stipes oo jo iar mle oe {Charles O. Comp, | ticipated. from there will go to Lake Wales. | day at five o’clock at the Public | Library. James Pinder left yesterday morning by bus for No Name Key J.C. Holmes of Benefit Community Clinic THE KEY WEST CITIZEN SSSSSHSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSEES | S.S. Cuba Came To Port Steamship Cube, of the P. and) By MORGAN M. BEATTY O. S. S. Co., arrived this morning) AP Feature Service Writer | from Tampa with 12 first and| WASHINGTON, Jan. 24—The three second cabin passengers) world crisis is giving Uncle Sam’s and 10 first cabins from St. Pe-| Career Diplomats the biggest/ tersburg for Key West. The ves-/ break they've had in aieke ; sel also had 49 firs} cabins and | 4 ae | _In the midst of the turmoil the! first cabins St. Petersburg | Roosevelt administration is turn-/ ing more and more to experienced C. Ewing,| ™en who have made foreign af- ardle, L. A.| fairs their life work. This is not mere accident. The from from Even now a shake-up is under Hugh Wilson, the quiet- C. M. Wood, Jr., O. W. Luck Chicagoan who started at bach. | ttom of the ladder, is head- Listed on the ship’s manif Berlin, to succeed Dr. Wil- for Key West-were: 34 tons of/ liam E. Dodd, resigned, as ambas- freight, one automobile and one| sador to Germany, one of the four sack of mail. Also on the mani-/ most important posts. Norman | en- | . fest for Havana were: 192 sacks} Armour, a naturalized English-} of mail and no freight. | man who has seen service in nine MONDAY, JANUARY 24, 1938. MENTION TRANSPORTATION SHOWS WORLD CRISIS TO BE of Beverley, Mass., is our diplo- matic contact with Mussolini; and that veteran or tne tar east, Nel-| leaned more and more heavily on son T. Johnson, has been shuttling! the experience and judgment of The 60-odd men in important! are heads of missfons. Some of them, | the ambassadors, make $17,500 a} the year, and others, the ministers, ; ti get $10,000 a year. All of them get a@ few extra dollars for some of) is seekers have regarded diplomatic | and i plums as their particular fruit. | portant of all. Some such men proved to be many have been stuffed shirts. Men of Merit ministers who didn't know their PARKING TEST STUMPS how to park his car. And so, behold the new gadget When the ship sailed for Cuba/ capitals, is on the way to Chile. international onions were the for- putting wealth and influential; she carried the following passen-/| | Salaries Up To $17.500 gers booked from Key West: C./ Other career men already are C. Wood, C. M. Wood, Jr., R. W-.| carrying the load in trouble spots. ! Steward, Adolph Greenbaum, Ul- | Ex-Lion Hunter Joseph C. Grew ; tic Pomerlean, i. Mes 2 i : yer, Joseph G. Molineal, Nat M i pez, H. E McCaliip, , Mrs. C. McCalip, Em Walter Culp; W. E. Brinsday, Marg Palm Beach, w ter, Wm. C. Graham, : it Wm. W. Demeritt, Graham, Elizabeth Smith, Nariet- | who was on his regular inspection ta Finger, James McGowan, Fay- | trip, returned 1:30 o’clock yester- the McGowan, John Mayer, Anna | day morning. i Mayer, Charles W. Fletcher, Louis} Mr. Demeritt said that the trip —| had revealed the necessity of re- for a few days, left over the high- | placement of some buoys, which way Saturday. | had been done, and supplies had | been placed at severai points. : Walter F. Pond, state geologist | ” lof Tennessee, Mrs. Pond and son, i -| Pat, who were visiting in Key) West and were much interested in the Key West Tropical Aquar-; ium, which they visited in com-] pany with Miss Mary Trevor,} left yesterday for the highway for Miami. | Edward F. O’Brien, publisher of | the periodical PAR, the Pan Am- ericani “Review, .is in Key West ee about one week, and ~ next Monday for Havana. < —and what a wide selec-;| $1.98, $2.98, || $3.98, $5.95 na op Drop in Tomorrow Key West's Only DEPARTMENT STORE +—— 618 Duval St, _— j eign service career men—consuls, men in important embassies, re- MUNICE, Ind. Jan. 2 secretaries, aides, and the like. All | gardless of their ability, has oc- of them were unknowns merely} casionally proved irksome to a “as much as I appreciate the hon- or, I cannot afford to go to Paris.” “Let me ask four or five public- $40,000 a year while you serve the nation in Paris,” countered the sides, the good posts always went to persons of political import- ance.. About 25 years ago congress de- cided to do something about all this, and passed a law protecting career men from the political whims of the party in power. Then, in 1916, Democratic Pre- i United States may soon a nation of ‘l would be a change no tling than the development of the automobile go-devil to “There is

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