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Society at Kaietecusent Mr. and Mrs. George A. Tick- ‘erhoff, of Waycross, Ga, an- nounce the eo of their ig ee to Verne K. Sate sera, ber nig Tickerhoff is employed as governess in the home of Dr. and Mis. Mobley, at’Pelham, Ga. She ‘was born, and lived most of her life in Johnstown, Pa. and is a graduate of St. Benedict’s school Mr. Strahan has resided in Key West for the past year, and is employed as quartermaster with the Monroe County Ferry Sys- tem. He has lived most of his life in Arizona, and attended the University of Arizona. He is the eldest son of V. L. Strahan, Sr., of Douglas. Rehearsing For Benefit Ball Rehearsals are coming along Nicely for the masquerade ball to be held Saturday for the benefit of the Welfare Community Clinic, and Recreational Playground Equipment Fund. A mammoth floor show is be- be solemniz- il 30, at St. Sea Catholic in arranged under the direction of Mrs. Julio J. De Poo, and Pepito, assisted by Dixie Kay, a professional dancing teacher, for- merly of Miami. The countries represented by song or dance are, Amcrica, Spain, Russia, Cuba, Turkey, Italy, France, Austria, Hungary, Argentina, Mexico and Ireland. There is also a big surprise in store in the form of a well known artist who has never appeared in Key West before. She is expected to be the big thrill of the pro- gram. Announcement of Marriage epecee seocreeseseseee eeesee Miss Mary Lou DeBoer was a leaving on the early today for Miami where she be the guest of her sister, Anne Amant, who is ill, and be absent several she will return, ac- Charles Edgarston, who has heen vacationing in the city, left and this morning over the highway for his home in Philadelphia. Ulric Henson was a pasenger Jeaving on the morning bus for a brief business visit in Miami, and plans to return tomorrow after- noon. Mrs. L. W. Knapp, worthy Grand Matron of Fern Chapter 21, Order Eastern Star, left this morning on Florida Motor Lines bus for Little River, Fla., where she will attend a ceremonial at which will be honored officials of the Grand Chapter of the Twenty-Ninth District. Eugene W. Parsons, president of the firm of Parsons, Dorr and Hume, of Miami, advertising, was @ visitor in Key West in the in- Of the firm, and called at Citizen office this morning '@ chat, and later left on the return to Deereartet rs Services will be conducted to- morrow evening, beginning at & @elock, by Rabbi Joseph Malc, at Baai Zion church. in connection with Purim, Feast of Lots, which will be observed, beginning to- morrow afternoon. Megilo, tale of Esther, and Mor- dichai. will be read. There will also be @ program rendered by members of the Hebrew school ‘The two Appel boys, Jake Male and Donald Peariman will sing in ish, Hebrew and Yidish. are invited to attend these gles, Arizona. : | “Social Calendar TUESDAY— Weekly Dinner of Stone Church Service Club. 6 P. M. Church Annex. Meeting, Convent Alumnae As- sociation. 5 P.M. Home of Mrs. Lopez Johnson, Olivia street. “Four Leaf Clover”, Operetta. Benefit Harris School Music Department. 7:30 P. M. Har- ris School Auditorium. ae SS THURSDAY— Concert, Key West Hospitality Band. 8 P. M. Bayview Park. Rotary Luncheon. 12:15 P. M. St. Paul’s Church Annex. ti FRIDAY— Minstrel, Benefit of Commun- ity Chest. Rotary Club. 8:15 P. M. High School Audi- torium. A SE SATURDAY— Masquerade Ball, Benefit of Community Clinic and Bay- view Park Playground Equip- ment Fund. 10 P. M. Ha- bana-Madrid Club. =o SUNDAY— Concert, Hospitality Band. 4 BIBLE READINGS .- BY A. E. BOOTH A. E. Booth, of Pasadena, Cali-' fornia, will give Bible readings on Tuesday and Wednesday even-; ings, and a lecture on Thursday evening, prayer meeting on Fri- day evening, during this and the coming week, at 7:30 o'clock, at Grace and Truth Hall, 1127 Southard street. This is said to be a rare oppor- tunity for Key West Christians. Gospel services each Sunday night. | as FOR man SO «7 tion, held at this time, would re- INITIATIONS AT | STATE C0 STUDENTS FROM ISLAND! CITY INCLUDED IN ACTIVITIES (Special to The Citizen) TALLAHASSEE, March 15.— Spring initiations by 16 national sororities at Florida State College for Women have just been com- pleted here with a total of 154 students initiated within the past three weeks. Among the initiates announced by Miss Ruth Garcia, of Daytona Beach, president, and Miss Emma Randolph Elebash, secretary, of; Panhellenic, are: Misses Mary Sullivan, an Alpha Xi Delta in- itiate; Rose Appel, a Delta Phi Epsilon, initiate, and Fortuna Lo-+ | pez, a Theta Upsilon initiate, all of whom are from Key West. Sororities holding initiations in this period include: Alpha Chi/ Omega, Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha Xi Delta, Beta Phi Alpha, Chi Omega, Del- ta Delta Delta, Delta Zeta, Delta Phi Epsilon, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Delta, Pi Beta Phi, Phi Mu, Sigma, Kappa, Tee, apps and Zeta Tau, AHA cores » ag THE KEY WEST CITIZEN | } (Continued from Page One) j discovered by American whalers eR than a hundred years ago. } With the November elections |about eight months away, the Be 'publican Party is attempting #to | build machinery around the Cam mittee on Program to bolster 3it {for a test at the polls. Present plans include efforts to sound gut ithe rank and file of party mem- bers on questions of interest, which will be studied by a re- search staff, who will collect data ifor use by officials. The busi- ness recession, its cause and cure, will be one of the first questions ;studied by the Program Commit- tee, headed by Dr. Gleen Frank. He pictures the nation as headed toward totalitarianism as the re- sult of the policies of the Admin- istration. An effort will be made to secure support from conserva- tives in the Democratic Party and :to regain the backing of Republi- cans who have voted for the Democratic candidates. Meanwhile, a survey of public sentiment, made public by the American Institute of Public | Opinion, indicates an improve- ment in Republican ‘prospects. The Institute asserts that an elec- sult_in an increase of 85 seats in the. House for the Republicans. Last November the Institute esti- mated that the increase would be - only 46 seats. Gains have been Pictures were shown last night to a highly appreciative audience in the auditorium of Douglass school, and “I have never given an entertainment to a more ap- | preciative audience”, said Jake Schreiber, owner of the moving Key West, has been here ae jmonths and hasbeen having a most delightful time exhibiting All of the talking pictures and of the beautifully-colored ee will be-held at the|“River Stay Away From My ening, Mah 191 € Fri- | Door”, when the talking films »- day rene hal To round out a evening, be purchased at the Key’ West | Chamber of Commerce, only.) | were being shown. Mr. Schreiber to the plat- ‘form a half dozen of the best boy General admission tickets are on dancers, and says he never saw ceu at Chamber of Commerce, |@ better exhibition of the terpsi- Population was sufficient to en- San Carlos Book Store, Casa Ma.|chorean art, than was given by rine, Key West Drug Company, | those dancers from the audience. COSC reccccesesseseesoces Habana-Madrid Moonlight Dancing is .at its heigth, now—with a big, . full in our tropical skies . . Habana-Madrid Club an- ; toi a dancing fe tage of this | -, The Ci - KEMP FUNERAL Funeral services for Mrs. Nora Anica Po Roe eres who died 1 yesterday morning, will be sie aie AShow sir sain be “ico: WU lars. Another big Dinner Dance at Raul’s popular Club on Roosevelt Boulevard tomorrow night, read- ers, and you're ali invited to be on hand. A delicious meal is served from 7 to 9:30 p. m., dur- ing which time John Pritchard's orchestra will play dance num- bers. They plan on, after the din- ner, for those who are still mind- ed to dance. See ad on page ofie for admission information Sloppy Joe's George Dean's Rhythm Boys are in the limelight again tomor- row night when they are the main attraction at the famous bar, Sloppy Joe's. Big Free Dance will be held then to which resi- dents and visitors te our city are invited. Special Rhumba and oth- er dance features will be present- ed for guests’ entertainment. SUSPENDED BY ROPES Alviso, Calif. sit —Anxiotn neigh- bors entered the rain- home of Mrs. Ah Quong this city only to find Mrs. Quong sit- ting impassively in a chair sus- pended from the ceiling by ropes. safe from the swirling waters. John Paul Jones. the American naval hero, became an admiral in the Russian navy after the-Revo- jutionary war. The Shehane Quartet will at- tend the services and sing, “Abide With Me”. FEARS WAR: KILLS SELF Manchester, Eng—Because of his fear that there would be an- other war, Frederick Stanbury, 43, whose friend was killed at his side during the World War. com- mitted suicide. registered in the depression-hit areas of the Eastern seaboard and the Great Lakes, both “normally Republican”, but Democratic in 1932 and 1936. President Roosevelt recently re- viewed the five years of his ad- ministration and asserted that enormous gains had been made toward the goals he visioned be- fore March 4th, 1933. The Presi- dent insisted that these goals re- mained unchanged and _ stressed the distinction between objectives and methods used to accomplish them. Illustrating, he said a year ago stabilization of price levels was threatened. by _ inflation, which caused a shift in direction, but that later in the Autumn months, there was a threatened deflation and the course had to be. in the other direction, al- though the objective was the same all the time. Mr. Roosevelt referred. to the fifteen to twenty millicn Ameri- cans who are without purchasing power in connection with the problem of farm tenancy and the share-cropper. He felt that busi- ness would be better if the pur- chasing power of this part of our able it to buy the products of in- dustry. He was proud of what has ‘been done to control crop sur- pluses and thus support the pur- | chasing power of the fifty million persons dependent directly or in- directly on agriculture. On the in- dustrial side of the picture, he ex- plained, the Administration had sponsored measures to hold up the earnings of both the owners and workers of corporations. He felt that before long, more busi- ess.men would voice approval of fhese objectives. Pointedly, he de- glared the Administration was as ipstepained as ever to put an end to . “special privilege” which would be good for the entire . country, for stocks and bonds and everything else. The first revision of stamp de- signs since 1922-23 will inclufle Benjamin Franklin and Martha Washington, as well as twelve presidents not previously honored with postage stamp issues. Four denominations will present the public with a four-and--a-half- cent, a thirty-five-cent and a for- ty-cent stamp. The complete list follows: Franklin, %-cent; Wash- THEY'RE TOPS! .. . For Fit — ; ¥ prreionnernoe PHOENIX MENDELL’S . . - for Comfort —And for and wear! R-Ups keep oe cooler . . . look smarter. LAS- TEX holds them up. 55¢. le EV-R-UPS EXCLUSIVE MEN‘S STORE "SOILD ss. HIGHWAY PUTS KEY JOHN W. PINDER WEST IN LIMELIGHT The Citizen to keep up on FOIL ILIILDI#S Anyway. He Tried A medical journal mentions a | Budapest man who talked for seventeen days without stopping. It does not say whether he sold a vacuum cleaner, after all. — Humorist, DIED LAST NIGHT FUNERAL SERVICES WILL BE CONDUCTED TOMORROW AFTERNOON : John William Pinder, 74, died 10 o'clock last night in the home. at 931 Pauline street. Funeral ‘services will be held tomorrow afternoon from the chapel of the Lopez Funeral Home, Rev. W. J. Reagan, S. J., officiating. Pallbearers, who have been se- lected to serve, are: Cesar Catala, Ramon Rivas, Steve Whalton, William Sawyer, Frank Delaney, Wn. T. H. Boll. Mr. Pinder is survived by the widow, Mrs. Pauline Pinder; two daughters, Miss Mary Rita Pin- der, of Key West, Miss Sadelle Pinder, New York; one son, Chas. C. Pinder, New York; sister, Mrs. Charity Sweeting, and brother, C. C. Pinder. : FELLOWSHIP tnt Fellowship Club, “Feige “Street of the club was present and one new member was admitted. Charles Taylor, presidgnt of ‘the Rotary Club, was guest of the club, and gave a talk stressing un- selfishness, service and fellow- ‘ship. He used the follownig poem | The Duke of Lancaster seized | the throne of England and ascend- ; t's Easy Te Be Mistaken About ed as Henry IV while Richard Il was in Ireland. ington, 1-cent; Maftha Washing- ton, 1%-cent; John Adams, 2- cent? Jefferson, 3-cent: Madison, 4-cent;> Monroe, 4%-cent;>John Quincy ‘Adams; ‘5-ent;’ Jackson, 6cent; Vari’ Buren, 7-cerit; Wil- liam H.’ Harrison, 8-cent; Tyler, 8-cent; Polk, 10-cent; Taylor, 11- cent; Fillmore, 12-cent; Pierce, 13-cent; Buchanan, 14-cent; Lin- coln, 15-cent; Johnson, 16-cent; Grant, 17-cent; Hayes, 18-cent; Garfield, 19-cent; Arthur, 20-cent; Cleveland, 25-cent; Benjamin Harrison, 30-cent; William Mc- Kinley, 35-cent; T.- Roosevelt, 40- cent; Taft, 50-cent; Wilson, $1; Harding, $2; Coolidge, $5. entitled “Life’s Problem”: “To add to the joys of another, To subtract a thorn from his Path, Will multiply blessings around you And divide your own burdens in half”. STOMAC HH TROUBLE ULCERS, GAS, ‘cio. INDIGESTION, belching, etc., due to excess. TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 1988. TRANSPORTATION | See eccoccecoocaeeeoecose - Alamo Arrives Here | Steamship Alamo, of the Clyde- Mallory Limes, arrived im port | this morning and berthed at the | Mallory wharf at 8:05 o'clock. She | at once began discharging freight. | finished and sailed at 9245. ‘Power Boat Arrives ‘The power tain Veral Roberts, of the Over- seas Transportation Company. ar- rived this morning from Miami bt aaa aa! Key. Cost of a twin firet is by DuBose, Soon of ager eamneniengs tesco: =000 as | Liquid - Tablets - Salve-Nose Dreps sentete 3 | | Tey Rub My-Tiee ‘World's Best Liniment put at ; eeececesee boat Powers, Cap-) “DO I HEAR sor TERRE HAUTE. Ind — The chief reason why he wanted a @- vorce from his wife, W HE Wilsor of this city told the judge. wes that she “kidnaped” be feb teeth and refused te return them until he had perd ber $2 — SOSSSS ESSE SESS SSSOSSEOS Grace And Truth Hail 1127 Southaré St. 7:3 O'CLOCK EACH NIGHT "SIO IIIIIILILIDLS. A a TION!!! HOTELS APARTMENTS ROOMING Now is the time to talk— FURNI Be Prepared For the Rush "STOTT OOT TOOT EEE. Partly furnished two-story house and lot at 1307 Whitehead street. In exclusive overlooking Coral Park. PRICE: $2,000 CASH—Balance Easy Termes L. P. ARTMAN. The Citizen Office or Residence, 1309 Whitehead St. COCO SEES SEES ESSE ESE EEE SOLOS EEL OEE L OOOO LODO OED