The Key West Citizen Newspaper, June 2, 1938, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR oe _ Society Social Calendar THURSDAY— Lions Club Supper. 6:30 P. M. Stone Church Annex. Concert, Key West Hospitality Band. 7:30 P. M. Bayview Park. Meeting, Sea Scouts, Ship 3. 7:30 P. M. Knights of Pythias Hall. Shower honoring Miss Felton: 4 p. m: Armory. pth , FRIDAY— Commencement, High School. view Park. Meeting Girl Scouts, Troop 1. 7:30 p. m. Golden Eagle Hall. Senior Ball, Key West High School. 9:30 P.M. Country Club. SUNDAY— Wedding of Miss Mary Louise Bowery to Albert Carey. Concert, Key West Hospitality Band. 4 P. M. Art Center Park. State Convention Jaycees will be met by Key West Jaycees and Junior Woman’s Club, taken on sighteeing ,motor- ‘cade, feted at dance and, buf- fet supper at 6 p. m. Habana- ladrid. Mary Key West 6 P.M. Bay- Fae 9 ae MONDAY— Boys Fellowship Club Dinner. 6:15 p. m, Methodist Church Parsonage. TUESDAY— Stone Church Service Club Dinner. 6 p. m. Church An- nex. Griswolds Leave Tomorrow ‘| Mrs. H. Griswold, who spent the. winter at her residence on United street, will leave tomor- row with her son, Oliver, who - has a responsibie position with the federal publicity department for Washington. After a few weeks in Washing- ton, she will visit with a daugh- ter in Rochester, N. Y. Oliver Griswold is a fishing enthusiast and a great booster for the Island City on his fre- quent jaunts around the country oe og work, While vaca- ning with his mother during the last two weeks, he has often = el Manuel Lopez in the Brothers” in quest of the roving sailfish, ward striking and barracuda, and has it in excellent speciments of He has been entertained as much by Lopez’ fishing yarns and “local color” lingo in illus- trating the yarns. Mr. Griswold said he likes to vacation best of all in Key West. Announcement Of Marriage “Ahnouncement has been made of.the marriage in Miami on May 30 of Murray Lowe and Mrs. Ma- rian Kirtland, daughter of the late Judge J. Vining Harris, of the eriminal court of record of Mon- roe county. ‘Mr. Lowe is well-known in this city. He was born here and is a son of the late Mrs. Maude Brossier. He has been jhaki his home in Miami for the paste years, TRANSPORTATION ee ereeeesosoeoeooes Steamer Arrives Steamship St. Mary, of the Standard Fruit and Steamship Co, arrived in port yesterday from - Frontera, Mexico, and berthed at the Porter Dock Co. The vessel took 35,423 gallons of fuel oil and left 4 o'clock for Bal- timore. Ozark Coming In Steamship Ozark, of the Clyde- Mallory Lines, is due to arrive to- morrow from New Orleans en- route to Key West, Miami and Jacksonville. Due Next Week Two other ships of the Mallory lines are due early next week. The Steamer Medina is due from on Monday and the Steamer Alamo is due Tuesday from New York. ODD COMPLAINT GLASGOW—Mark Forsythe of this city complained to the police that Miss Ethel Dugan tried to kiss him whenever they met Aan Sothern-Burgess Meredith THERE GOES THE GROOM —and— A Slight Case of Murder fre, 15-20c: Night, 15-25¢ A TWIRL OF THE GLOBE (Opinions expressed in this column do not necessarily agree with those of The Citi- zen). Seeeoeeceeeoeesesee BOY PROBABLY DEAD It is generally admitted that the Cash boy will probably be found dead. Kidnapers will not run the risk of returning the boy and being captured, or they would have done so long before this. There is a faint possibility that the boy may be found abandoned deep in the woods and _ brush around Princeton, but it is hardly likely that the kidnapers will al- low themselves to be identified even through the child’s eyes. There are many back roads and miles of brush country around Princeton, and the little child is probably dead and laying some- where there now. The kidnapers ; may have scattered by this time to facilitate escape. Serial num- bers of the banknotes, however, have been released and if any of the bills are used in the escape capture is imminent with Florida greatly aroused. More than a; thousand, farmers, C.C.C. boys, and Legionnaires: are. paw comb- ing the area;,; Dade, county. has jpested.a $4,000, reward. Mean-, while, the Federal, dragnat:, hadi! brought, in six,men, der) question. laDBucu U SUfGL fou a | BACK TO chia sR oy | The Washing vern disturbed by continued refusals |of Japanese generals to allow | American business men and! | women to return to Nanking and | Shanghai to look over their busi- | nesses, save future damage and estimate damage which has al- | ready been done. The University of Shanghai, owned by Baptist | missionary societies, is quarters! | for Japanese troops, who use the | campus as an air field. The | point that 800 Japanese have been jallowed to go into Nanking, | though the American return has been blocked with the excuse that |peace has not been sufficiently | restored was the principal fact is | a determining a strong protest to | Japan by American Secretary of State Cordell Hull. | | i { "|MEMBERS FROM ‘and college pan-hellenics. ALUMNAE WILL ATTEND SESSION KEY WESTER TO BE INCLUD- ED} IN GROUP THAT) WILL GO'TO CLEARWATER BEACH FOR CONVENTION i (Special to The Citizen) TALLAHASSEE, June 2.—Ac- tive and alumnae members of Al- pha Xi Delta will attend the Pro- vince IV convention of the sorority at the Clearwater Beach Hotel in Clearwater, June 8-11. Alpha Xi Delta active and alumnae members from Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, and Alabama will attend these meetings. Mrs. Marvin Walker, of Lakeland, Florida, president, will preside at all meetings except those of the alumnae work, of which Mrs. Robert Crane, Jr., of Tuscaloosa, | Alabama, vice-president, will be in charge. Group meetings will center around discussions ,.on rushing, publicity, chapfer management, pledge training, a cultural pro- gram, recommendation to nation- al council, model pledging and initiation services, alumnae work, Social recreation will include a beach luncheon, several swim parties, trips to local points of in- terest, and a formal banquet. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Fred Evans, Clearwater, Florida. Alpha Xi Delta was founded 1893 at Lombard College in Gales- burg, Illinois. At present there are 55 active and 65 alumnae chapters. A delegate from Key West will be chosen from among three, who are Miss Mary Falk, Mrs. Edward McCarthy, and Mrs. Ralph Mil- ner. eee ANSWERS TO TEN TEST QUESTIONS | ANOTHER RELIEF IDEA | Remember, some years ago, | when every third row and every third pig was either uprooted or | killed? Well, in the new relief | bill Congress passed last night | $212,000,000 was voted for farm | parity payments, bounties of 10 |cents a bushel on wheat, 2 cents |a pound on cotton, etc. to be paid northern and southern farmers. This is a very ticklish situation to touch with such inexperienced \hands as the Administration has shown. It is the old problem of supply and demand. Just after the rows were plowed and the | pigs butchered, the supply had | one of those “fall offs” which put | the country in very bad shape. | Now, in a lean year, the govern- | ment is putting in a bid for more supply. Lord, hold back your | bounty when next Spring rolls | !N. around! $100,000,000 was also | voted for rural electrification. STRONG FRANCO DRIVE stead te themselves town after town in theindriye from, Tenuel steer. celona in bata teal Ber north- as Ea nsysgentsqaptured | mountain .:heights,.; which were considered impassable. The two seas will soon be united by an Insurgent band. and taking un- | JAPS STILL TRAPPED Along the crescent which the Japanese troops form in Eastern j China near Hankow, the upper; tip, in which a Japanese army is! encircled by Chinese, was stormed | by Japanese troops in an attempt} }to liberate the imprisoned Jap/ army, but the attempt was un- successful. That is a sharp tip the } Japanese are certain to lose: j MORE CUBAN TRADE | The Cuban government which | is seeking a trade agreement with | Mexico yesterday rejected a prop- ! osition, which principally allowed | them to use Mexican fishing wa- | ters in retugn for many commer- | cial trade concessions. Cuba. has | an adverse trade balance with} Mexico and wants many more trade channels opened to her be- | fore she allows her trade to be available, ” Furniture R RUGS CLEANED and REBOUND TAYLOR & TAYLOR Roberts Lane—R. Francis Street NO NAME LODGE | Although Hemingway wouldn't Pris i aia forces are | a iP | in.dn acSmanch, | || COMPARE!! | j } Below are the answers to test questions printed on Page 2 eve Frank R. MeMinch. Ra. No. California. An instrument employed in the analysis of gaseous mixtures. Americus Vespucius. St. Lawrence. A double reed, wood-wind musical instrument. Latin for “greater bear”. No. . LEGALS NOTICE OF ENTION TO MAKE Raymo R Me ton nd proval of same, and apply f discharge in the estate Morris, deceased Dated Apri NE p- r final of Geo. F. 2 M Dr Ap June ‘HEMINGWAY-SMART ACCIDENT CASE eee eee Driving home from. the airport | testimony was important and be- where he arrived. after flying|gan with “You go to Sunday” down rom ew York Tuesday, | School, don’t you?” but Mr. Hem Ernest Hemi ay, Spanish war ;ingway stepped in with “No, no”, correspondent and author, was in- ‘A ienot of: - fetore info) eval: volved in an ecident, Spec : Happy.ov with his wife 800d dress an a group of WPA and again, Mr. Heming-| workers, ch g over tax rec- way, Hemingway, friend, {ord of the Otto Bruce, and two children were ceedings with interest from their driving in their car going to their | residence on Whitehead street.) They were on Simonton. They} came to United. There, accord- ing to police court testimony yes- terday afternoon, Mr. Hemingway brought the car to a stop. Onhis/,... ‘ : right were several tall brush | dismissed both cases, imparting plants. Going across, there sud-| that it was often thought police denly uashed into view on their| courts settled damage cases but right a car driven by Samuel) that they did not. Smart, a WPA worker, with Tony | Said Hemingway, “I will not Arthur as a passenger. Slamming c * on his brakes, Mr. Hemingway pay damages. T’ll counter suit any brought his car to a stop, he testi- Suit he brings up. I was struck”. fied. Here is where yesterday’s; Said Smart, “I should get dam- testimony is not clear. Which car| ages. Look where my car was struck the other was a question | struck and knocked» for some debate. At all events, | tables. Judge T. S. Caro then announc- ed that the slight infraction of the Smart auto, coming between 25 and 30 miles an hour, aceord- JEMONS ing to testimony, slid to the right, oe hit the curb, turned over, and AT BEAUTY SHOP slid exactly 10% feet, said exact number having been determined in the testimony of Otto Bruce. Then there was really a scene, Announcement is made today according to bystanders, in which by the Thomasine Beauty Shop arguments flew fast and thick. in the La Concha Hotel building Both drivers were arrested and‘ of a special demonstration to be brought to Police Court yester-' given at the shop tomorrow and day. Saturday. Free educational facials Samuel Smart in striped polo! for skin correction will be given Ernest Hemingway, serious, but by Kathryn M. Jackson, skin spe- able to smile from time to time cialist-representative of the Social during the proceedings, were the Register of Charm, Inc., of Jack- principal centers of interest. ‘ sonville, Florida. Young Patrick Hemingway, Miss Miller urges that all wom- Hemingway’s son, testified and en interested in the treatment of an hour. How did he know that? this opportunity and call for ap- He looked at the speedometer. pointment. This shop will be the Attorney George Brooks tried to agency for this well-known school make the child realize that his of facial treatments. Our Quality and Prices On GROCERIES and MEATS When planning meals for summer .. . be sure that the Foods you buy are Fresh! You'll find that kind at ARCHER'S. PHONES...* AT a0 67 ARCHER’S GROCERY “The Store That Serves You Best” —FREE DELIVERY— 814 Fleming St. Coprogies 1998, Laser: & Mysss Tosacco Co Charges Dismissed Against Both By Judge T. S. Caro, APPEARS IN LOCAL POLICE COURT) shirt, his face sunburned, and! to those who make appointments, . . COMMISSIONERS | HOLD MEETING (Continued from Page One) | 082 votes had been cast in the | election of May 24. Communication from Comptrol- |ler W. V. Knott authorized trans- fer of, sufficient funds from the | Kannet Bill account to the inter- lest amd sinking fund of Road and Bridg& Refunding bonds to pay interést due July 1, on Road and [Bridge Refunding Bonds, dated | July 1, 1936. On motion the First National = at the pro-| Bank was declared the depository | 8nd proceed on the same day to ,of the funds of the county. | Letter received from Jackson- | ville was relative to the purchase of one of the ferries. There have _ been several queries on this mat- |speed Smart was guilty of WaS | ter, all of which have been turn-| eecccecececesccecnccccces |not enough to demand a fine and ‘ed over to the Ferry Committee | | for handling. The letter was turned over to Mr. Porter. The question of mattresses to be used at the Mercedes hospital, of which they are in need, was brought before the board by Mr. Niles, and it was shown that they could be made at the WPA sew- ing room provided the material was purchased by the county. It was so ordered. THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 1988. CUBA TO ARRIVE | | HERE TUESDAY USES WOODEN LEG BELFAST—Stephen Flood of this city was sent to prison for beating his mother-in-law with ; his wooden leg. Contrary to previous advices} received, the P. and O. Steamship | Cuba will arrive at Key West on} June 7 instead of on June 9 as was expected and notices sent out to this effect, | | Agent John Costar at Key West | om Angew’ a telegram from the; offices 0: |b fi i |sonville that the Cube will arive|| Sst Srede Grvceetee—cold ot |at Key West Tuesday, June 7,| aoe peiege: di dicemgomaess |} the difference, ..|{ ISLAND CITY CASH i“oday’s Horoscope} — YOUR BUDGET... WILL LIKE THE BAR- GAINS WE OFFER EVERY WEEK! | You can't beat our policy of | Tampa. e You are inyited to visit our NEW STORE eet ee MRS. SUE SKELTON 1212 Olivia St. Phone 789 | The early part of today is} | strong and bestows an affable dis- | | position; but as it progresses, a | tendency to travel begins, which | may develop a wandering, alien) Inature with fickle fortunes and/ given to excesses. Such a one will ;do best to follow things as they are rather than go chasing after new experiences. Application of Mrs. Mary Cruz! for the usual assistance in the case of an operation for cataract | was read, and’it was orderéd,that the necessary papers be prépared , and $100 allowed for the opera- tion, which will be done in Mi- ami. “ENTERTAINMENT HABANA-MADRID Entrancing is the word for it . ho other word will properly fit the experience of dancing to the tunes of the best orchestra in town . . . Otto Divanti’s orchestra at Habana-Madrid club. . . . No other night club in Key West of- fers the atmosphere and full pro- said his dad was going 15 miles skin diseases take advantage of gram of genuine entertainment. . .. Habana-Madrid justly de- serves the huge popularity it en- joys. No cover, minimum or ad- mission charge, ever. IN LUXURIOUS NEW ZEP' LOWEST FARES——CHOICE OF ROUTES Save enough enroute to vacation coat your favorite Teese Lines" low stay longer. Forde Mates iat py Dus ct ih the cowl of dtving carl Round Trio Tie Jacksonville $17.55 Miami $ 6.75 15.95 New York 38.90 BUS STATION 210 ovat street | Light up a Chesterfield and tune in more pleasure! Chesterfield’s refreshing mildness and better taste will give you more pleasure than ¢ you eyer smoked. r of the best ingre- ¢ can have...mild ripe tog) dromatic Turkish

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