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PAGE FOUR SOCIA ACTIVITIES 5 (7 hat R. con Is SOCIAL CALENDAR TaURSDAY— Te A Meeting Key West Lions Club, Stond Ghureh Annes Vg, Concert by Key West Hospitality Band. 8 p. m. Bayview Park. Monthly meeting of Room Mothers of Harris School’ P.T.A. 3:30 p. m. Residence of Mrs. Allan Armstrong. oes ey West Choral Society regular meeting, ope: wint isi tors. High School Raditeaimn: eyepent sek Dance honoring officers and cadets of U. S. Navy Patrol Wing Five, given by City of Key West 10 p. m. Habana-Madrid. Betty Lewis, grand instructress, will conduct School of Instruc- tion at Fern Chapter 21, O.E.S. meeting at 7:30 Scottish Rite Hall, with officers, members and winter visitors in- | vited. Dance honoring enlisted personnel of Patrol Wing Five. m. Cuban Club. SATURDAY— Newly reorganized Young Democratic Club Dinner and Dance. Habana-Madrid at 10 o'clock. fai cae SUNDAY— Concert, Key West Hospitality Band. 5 p. m. Art Center Park. aR Te MONDAY— Regular Camera Club meeting, open to winter visitors. 7:30 p. m. Art Center. iid 9:30 p. aig od MUSIC DIRECTOR — vrg ADDRESSED CLUB 1 | TUESDAY EVENING | . | i STONE CHURCH SERVICE a GANIZATION HEARD T. B.| KLEBSATTEL ON “DOES MU- | | SIC HAVE ANY VALUE?” i j | | | (By CLUB REPORTER) Churen Service Club: , met Tuesday night with Charles 'H. Ketchum, president, presiding.! ‘Allan Hampton introduced T. |B. Klebsattel as speaker of the, ‘evening. Mr. Klebsattel chose as his subject for discourse, “Does Music Have Any Practical Val-; ete J | Stone THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Governor Presents First “Jobless” Check gsr Thomas M. Lilliston, jr. of Carrabelle, is shown receiving the first jobless insurance check from TUESDAY— si | 6 : | Japanese Color Prints; Historic Dolls) by Mrs, Kugsptt Winter; | 1. Ms (adGtess, the “speaker {said, “What America needs is Watercolors by Wallace Bryant Kirks, exhibitions open at = ey West ye ETC SEMEL: 10 a. m. Close Feb. 19. {more bum miusié”. In this he made! ane nerican ‘oetry Society Meeting. 8 p. m. St. Paul’s Parish lit plain that “bum: music” was! Luncheon in honor of Mrs. J. Ralston Wells, State President of better than no music at all; that Florida Federation of Women’s Clubs, by Key West Wo-; most all musicians played “bum Governor Cone. Left to right is Lilliston, Harold C. Wall, director of the unemployment compensation division, Governor Cone, Comptroller J. M. Lee, and Wendell C. Heaton, chairman of the Florida in- dustrial commission. Fons A. Hathaway, state director of the Florida employment service, was alse | Present. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1939 COUNTY BOARD | GRANTS FRANCHISE (Continued from Page One) Price of the tickets for the dinner jlast year was $5. | Communication Read Communication from George | Mills White, supervisor of the Federal Music Project unit in this séction, was read. Mr, White ask-/ ed that the regular donation to the project with which to pur-, chase music and other essentials, | as was done last year, be provid-! After some discussion the mat-| ter was decided by the board | agreeing to donate $50 monthly during the season to the project! to enable the securing of the ne-| cessary items. ie Cannon Thanks Board Letter of thanks from Con-} gressman Pat Cannon was read in! which the congressman thanked the board for the telegrams and} letters received in connection} with the proposal to establish a naval base. Mr. Carnon assured the board he would put forth every effort to have the base ordered for his district. | | Fund For Dances | | | An appropriation of $50 was auth¢yi the fund to be expended for the en- tertainment of the officers and enlisted personnel of Patrol Wing Five, U. S. Airplane Squadrons, d to be as part of Jersey Assembly Baby ed. = | 4 ABOVE STUNNING BLOND is the “baby” of New Jer- sey’s 1938 House of Assem- bly. She is the daughter of Monmouth county Assembly- man J. Stanley Herbert. Lois was introduced formally to the House. tor of the New York Dr. Chas. M. Breder, Jr., direc- aquarium, man’s Club. 1:30 p. m. Casa Marina. Stone Church Service Club supper, open to winter visitors. 6:00 p. m. Church Annex. ee WEDNESDAY— Catholic Club Benefit Card Party, open to visitors. 8 p. m. Woman's Clubhouse. Informal talk and demonstration of making color block prints by Miss Martha Watson. 8 p. m. Community Art Center. | Catholic Club | Plans Party Report of marriage licenses is-| Catholic Club Benefit Card sued from the office of County) Party will be held at the Wom- Judge Raymond R. Lord showed |an’s Clubhouse at 8 o’clock Wed- that there were 13 issues made | nesday night. during the month of January) There will be refreshments and 1939. . | prizes. Winter visitors are cord- A check showed there were 11) ially invited. issued for the marriages of! whites and two colored. The) there were two more issued in check for the month in compari-| that month than the same month son with January 1938 showed | in this year. Many Licenses To Marry Issued PERSONAL MENTION." TOMORRO Herman Wendt and William! Weber, who were spending a i music” before they played the | better type, and while groups of | young people were together mak- ‘ing “bum music” they were not in some devilment. The jazz came as a result of} the Great War, Mr. Klebsattel | pointed out. The people played | |it and listened to it as a relief j from worry. The effect of the) ; depression following the War| | took its toll from classical mu-; sic, the speaker said. From! jerashes and business failures, /men and women had more lei-; sure time and took up avoca-, tions in music which proved in- | teresting and remunerative. , As a result of this, Mr. Kleb- |sattel said, there are more than) | sveen hundred symphony orches- ‘tras in America today as com-| | pared with less than one hun-} idred ten years ago. | “If one does not earn money) {from his musical work”, the high} | school musical director said, “the | | social advantages are great”. | Mr. Klebsattel stated that more | people today are earning a living j through music than anything ex- cept school teaching. He brought ‘out that many factories had in-| vacation in Key West and were guests at the Casa Marina, and Jerry Navarro, who was visiting with relatives, left over the high- way this morning for their homes in New York. | Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Bairstow’ Presidency because of pressure of | and daughter Miss Josephine, who. were spending part of the season in Key West, left over the highway this morning for their home in Washington. : Francis X. Delaney, who had been spending a brief time with his family, left over the highway this morning for the toll bridge Committee, historical signs com-) at the western end of the bridges where he is he toll taker. i Wm. R. Porter, president of the First National Bank, and Norberg Thompson, county com- missioner, who were visiting for two days in Miami on busi-| ness, returned over the highway! 6 o'clock last evening. ——— jresidents of this city is announc-| J. R. Blair and E. Tillotson, U.'ed on page one today in the were the following S. inspectors of hulls and _boii- ers, respectively, arrived on the Cuba from Tampa this morning and are today conducting their regular routine inspections of vessels in Key West harbor. } J. P. Newell, executive secre- tary for four years to Dav Sholtz, and Mrs. Newell, of Fort Pierce; Mrs. P. W. Chappel and Miss Newell, of Washington, D. C., were visitors in Key West and left today for home. Mr. Newell was a pleasant caller at The Citi zen office this morning. Junior Chamber of Commerce} troduced music through the aid business meeting tomorrow night | loud speakers to their em-| i i" ~ _|ployes and had stepped up pro- will be a reorganization meeting] Guction from seven to ten per- FIRST JOBLESS CHECK HANDED UT BY CON PAID TO THOMAS M. LIL- LISTON OF CARRABELLE; AMOUNT WAS FOR FIFTEEN DOLLARS (Special to The Citfzend TALLAHASSEE, Feb. Florida today paid the “jobless insurance” check in the history of the state. Thomas M. Lilliston, Jr., of Carrabelle, a 42 year old civil engineer, who has been unem- ployed since September 30, 1938, received from the hands of Gov- ernor Cone a check for $15 as Hon. J. M. Lee, state comptrol- ler; Wendell C. Heaton, chair- man of the Florida Industrial Commission; Harold C. Wall, di- rector of the Unemployment Compensation Division and Fons a first IN KEY WES | C@oecccccccccccoccocoses | Regular City Council meeting. 8 p. m. City Hall. } Friday Regular Island City Basket- | ;ball doubleheader with Seafood Grill vs. Park Tigers in first game and U. S. Navy vs. Lions jin second game. 7:30 p. m. High | School Gym. | Key West Boat Club regular! meeting. 8 p. m. Lighthouse, Building Three. Junior Chamber of Commerce Business Meeting. 8 p. m. Cham- after a recent visit to Marine Stu- | dios, St. Augustine, made the fol- now maneuvering in these wa- ters. |ANSWERS TO TEN TEST QUESTIONS elow are the answers to test questions printed on Page 2 Egypt. George Washington. Hermes. Cri Tennessee. The U. S. dollar. In the Gulf of Mexico, off the coast of Louisiana. Lyr’-ic; not ly’-ric. Dependent on charity. Lepidoptera. ae 110. ber of Commerce Offices. Board | of Directors meeting at 7:30. Saturday Bicycle carnival of Recreation Department. m. Bayview Park. Tampa All Stars play Key W.P.A. 9:30 a. , West Roadside Pirates. 3 p. m.} Navy Field. Sunday Biweekly handicap golf tourna- ment. 1:30 p. m. Key West Golf Course. Baseball doubleheader with 'Tampa All Stars, managed by Al |Lopez, playing Key West Blue {Sox in opener and Key West |Conchs in nightcap. 1 p. m. Navy 7 ‘Today’s Horoscope | Oe recccccnsescccccoocoes Today gives a naturally ag- gressive nature, but one suave and outwardly cautious. The mind is fertile in expedients, but lacking in concentration. Be care- ful of the opinion of others, lest) up! your aggressive nature stir others, A total of 215 persons have Two dances are to be given t morrow night, one at the Ha bana-Madrid Club, beginning at 10 o’clock for the officers, and the other at the Cuban Club, begin- ning at 9:30 o’clock, for the en- listed men, Plan For Roads | Resolutions were read and adopted setting forth plans for the county for building lateral roads on the Keys from the | Overseas Highway to points in | the individual Keys to the Intra- coastal Waterway. This was agreed to at the hear- ing in Key West held by U. S. Engineers, January 23, and pre- | sided over by Colonel Lewis H. Watkins, district engineer in charge at Jacksonville. The promise was made in reply to Colonel Watkins’ question as to what activity was to be taken by the county in providing access to the waterway in the event it was constructed. Murphy Act Report Progress of the redemption of property under the provisions of! the Murphy Act was clarified by 0- | lowing statement: “It is the most ~| advanced development of marine display I have ever seen”. erty listed to be 860, advertisements of which oc- cupy columns of the paper. ment of the funds, fees, etc., for the county clerk, $4,300; The Citi- zen, Collector missions to family of the late Wm. F. Maloney for which amou Clerk Sawyer, who read the re-|. port for the month of January as | follows: The number of parcels of prop- Murphyized is 1031 inches of space in the Disburse- $2, Tax com- ; commissions, Ladd, $1,672.27; $1,239.43; the total is cancelled certificates, to $140,819.92. the eecccccccccscces The Favorite In Key West — TRY IT TODAY — STAR -* BRAND CUBAN COFFEE ON SALE AT ALL GROCERS with vice-president Isadore Wein- traub taking the chair of Earl Adams, who has resigned the business. It is expected that new com- mittee appointments for the re- mainder of the Jaycee year will be made and efforts to have a speaker and possibly a program at each meeting initiated. Reports of the Jaycee Tennis Tournament, Winter Program mittee, and boy scout troop com- mittee will be in order,, cent. | In closing his address, the mu- sic director said that the aims of public school music was (1) ap- preciation through participation; | (2) practical value in choosing ivocation or advocation, and (3) its value in breaking monotony, relieving tenseness and stepping up the work in other subjects. TRANSPORTATION Steamer Cuba Arrives Steamship "Cuba of the P. and O. S. S. Co., arrived from Tampa | _A. Hathaway, director of the, Field, |State Employment Service look- ‘ed on. ' Key West Camera Club meet- Collection of contributions for i open to visitors. 7:30 p, m. Art Center. |the jobless insurance fund was pee |started in Florida during 1937; Shuffleboard courts open to the ‘and some 6000 employers have | public daily are at Courthouse \contributed more than $1¢,000,- ! Square. ee Beaches are at 000 to the fund and almost 300,- /South ends of Duval and White i 4 .... 7 | Streets. Swimming pools are at 000 Florida workers are cligible' Roosevelt Boulevard and Yacht for benefits when unemployed. /Basin. Tennis and Handball ' Florida, with 21 other states;courts, diamondball field, picnic tand the District of Columbia, ; tables, riding devices for chil- started accepting claims for “job-| dren, checkers, chess, domino ‘less benefits” after January 1, | tables, horseshoe court at Bay- | 1939. sview Park. For further infor- In presenting the first “jobless; mation concerning Key West ap- Monday ‘filed applications to take the next merit system examination of | the State Welfare Board, it has| been announced by Ivey Fuch of Lake Placid, chairman of the} merit system examination com-| mittee and member of the State} Welfare Board. Those who pass! the tests will be placed on the eligible list for employment as} district director, unit supervisor, sitor. | tandby in most Hose country. MASSES, t, chest, an | In these days of war scares abroad, the opportunity to learn about the activities of our own} CITRUS FRUITS CAN 15 first and two second cabin) check” Governor Cone _ said, ply at the Chamber of Commerce this morning .with four first|«Wany years ago it was my!or The Key West Citizen. Tour cabin passengers for Key West, privilege to introduce the first! of-Key West booklets are at the | War Department welcome. The War Department’s elaborate exhibit in the recently- | completed Federal building at the is particularly | ‘pOtfering a— yu i | COMPLETE BANKING SERVICE TO KEY NOW BE SHIPPED A new service for tourists and form of a shipping service on all kinds of citrus fruits. passengers for Havana. |. Key West arrivals were: E. M. Henselmann, Mrs. Hensel- mann, J. R. Blair, E. Tillotson. Listed on the vessel’s manifest items: For Key West, 40 tons of freight, one motorcycle, and one sack of labor bill in the Florida Legis- | Chamber's offices. jlature and ever since I have a jbeen keenly interested in social) jlegislation and improving the VANDERBILT YACHT conditions under which we work | jand live in Florida. It was with a great deal of personal satisfac- tion that I signed the Unemploy-! ment Compensation Law and 1 As suggested—you can pur- mail. For Havana, one ton Ofjtake pleasure in presenting you! Yacht Alva, with Commodore chase boxes of oranges, grape- and ship north to friends. This | firm, the Wood Fruit ‘ompany, at 210 Duval street, also specializes in. crystalized fruit and marmalades, DAUGHTER BORN TO CARBONELLS Wm. J. T. McShane, associate, , , Wot ¢Dr. and Mrs. FY Si5Carbonell, editor of the Nassue Herald, pub-' lished at Lawrence, Long Is- land, was a visitor in the city yesterday and a pleasant caller January 28, local hospital. at The Citizen office. aes OF ee Mother and daughter are re- ported as doing fine. The little eoccce pets : ease: irl’s name is Sandra Jean. AT THE STORES The Tropical Mattress Com- pany, M. Schindler, proprietor, with headquarters at Simonton and Angela streets, announces full renovating services in this The fact that the cross-state {canal project has been reopened at Washington, and is receiving President Roosevelt’s support, is vastly cheering to the people of 'central Florida. They see a pos- issue of The Citizen. Expert. Sible realization of their hope to work js offered on mattress'develop their waterways into a renewing, and upholstery work’ statewide system, as the canal including studio couches and/ would intersect all the major wa- other furniture. ‘terway valleys of central Florida \freight, one automobile, and one jfruit in half or full-size boxes:sack of mail. | | Although S. S. Cuba brought ja small number of pasengers—17 |booked for Havana—when the jship sailed 10:35 o’clock for the ; Cuban port, there were 126 pas- {Sengers bobked for the passage, | 106 first cabin and three seconds | having, red their transporta- {tion: =} is port. | .¥ Steamer Here | teamship } bound. from ,. 'Gak , Te arrived in port} 611 Southard street, announce the! this morning and berthed at the | theirs through birth of a daughter Saturday,| Porter Dock Company for a sup-/check will be for more than $15, ‘ply of fuel oil. | Pipe line was connected and| ; Pumping started at once and | when the pumps were stopped it} this check”. Wm. K. Vanderbilt on board, ar- i Mr. Lilliston was one of the‘rived from Tampa _ yesterday, first to register with the State;coming by way of the Northwest Employment Service in January.'Channel, and anchored jin : the He filed his claim in the Talla-| harbor. jhassee office, served a three} The yacht was in port a short jweeks waiting period without! time ago and was taken te Tam- hie ar being referred to | 8/pa and placed in drydoek for |job, an ing able and avail-! F i i able for work, he qualified dor) oe eee benefits. | | While Mr. Lilliston was re- |ceiving his check from the Gov-; BY REPUTATION The Best In Key West ARRIVES. IN PORT - WESTERS AND OUR MANY WINTER GUESTS Pan-American DeSoto Exposi- tion, to be held in Tampa until | February 18, is something every- | one will want to see and study. | The Exposition began Jan. 31. JOB PRINTING of All Kinds THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF KEY WEST Member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation N No... These Are not 4 “Hot” Diamond Rings THE ONLY THING THAT’S “HOT”... Ophelie,|ernor hundreds of other workers} es, France, to|throughout the state who quali-! fied for benefits will the mails. receive No the maximum under the law. To be eligible for benefits un- der the law, a worker must have earned during the first nine “Aunt Molly’s” Bread | VALDES BAKERY TROPICAL |was declared the vessel’s tanks)Months of 1938 sixteen times ais MATTRESS COMPANY jhad taken 27,750 gallons. i] { ' Steamship Ozark, of the Clyde-| Mallory Lines, is due to arrive in} port tomorrow morning from ‘Jacksonville and Miami, enroute) | to New Orleans. jat this end of port and proceed to the the run. weekly benefit amount from a |person, firm or corporation from} S.S. Ozark Due Tomorrow | which a contribution or tax oil his wages is required; register for work; file a claim for bene- fits; and serve a three weeks waiting period. It is estimated by officials of areas ;.,,/the Florida Industrial Commis- ; The vessel will discharge freight | sion that mfore than 2000 benefit ! checks will be mailed to quali- Corner Simonton and Angela Expert Renovators sania. :| Mattresses, Upholstery. Studio { Couches, Inner Spring Mattresses ONE DAY SERVICE fied claimants during this week.' We are equipped io) do all kinds of print- ing — quickly, eco- nomically, and with the best of workman- ship. Call 51 for an estimate. RAPID SERVICE FREE ESTIMATES REASONABLE PRICES THE ARTMAN PRESS The Citizen Building PHONE 51 IS THE PRICE! ‘LADIES’ DIAMOND RING, weighing 2-K. Per- fect, cost to buy anywhere, $650, LADIES’ PLATINUM OL LLL LLL Le monds. A beauty Sacrifice for RELIABLE 519 Duval Street RING, set with 114-K, verfect center dia- mond and surrounded with 20 SEE THESE BEAUTIFUL : I MUST RAISE CASH POLLOCK AA hkededededdedide ttt ft 4 only $350 DIAMOND DINNER small dia- and cheap at $500. NGS JEWELER Phone 465 AAA A AL A hd hd dd dod