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PAGE FOUR SOCIAL ACTIVITIES Miss Vergie Corrine Key- Andrew Elwood Betrothal The wedding of Miss Vergie Corrine Key and Andrew Elwood took place at 8:30 o'clock last night .at the Fleming Street Methodist Church. Rev. J. P. Lilly performed the ceremony. The altar was banked with ferns and cut flowers. Miss Marie Knowles, organist, and Arent Sjursen, violinist, played a program of nuptial music. Miss Susan La Kin sang “At Dawning” and “I Love You Truly.” The bride was given in mar- riage by her uncle, Harold Key, of Miami. Her gown was of white satin, fashioned in the princess style, with a full skirt extended into a train. The long sleeves were puffed and ended in a point at the wrist. Tiny self-covered but- tons extended to the waist in the back. Her veil fell; a halo of orange blossons and she carried a bouquet of colla lilies and white dahlias. Her only ornament was a ‘strand of pearls. Gowns of the bride’s attend- ants were of of mixed flowers. Mrs. Carl Bervaldi, matron of gays of mixed flowers, with rib- bon of matching colors. Harry Elwood, brother of the bridegroom, was best man. Other attendants wére James Moore, Jr., of Miami, Orvis Kemp, Henry Higgs, Malcolm Pinder and yd Sterling. White linen suits and blue ties were worn by the groom’s attendants. The flower girls were attired in long taffeta dresses, and car- ried baskets of rose petals, which they scattered for the bride. Little Miss Barbara Anne Adams wore _ yellow. Jeanne Canova were blue, Andy Trevor wore pink and Marie Spencer | wore green. | Little Billy Osterhoudt, who | wore a white linen suit, was ring | bearer, and carried a satin pillow | with the ring. Mrs. Corrine Key, mother of | the bride, wore rose lace with ac- cessories of pink. Mrs. Ella Elwood, mother of |the bridegroom, wore a gown of | flowered triple sheer. Her ac- |ecessories were pink also. Immediately following the cere- mony a reception was held at the |home of the bride’s parents. Out of: town guests were Mr. taffeta. Flossie | and Mrs. Harold Key and daugh- | Mae Key Lilly, maid of honor | ters, Marjorie and Thelma, of Mi- | woere-pink, and carried nose-gay ami. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lowe} land daughter Dorothy and | Roberta Key from Miami. Mr. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN As i een is Mrs, Eva Warner Returns To City Mrs. Eva B. Warner, who had | been attending the Recreational Institute of the WPA which was held in Tampa _ University, Te-4 turned to the city Saturday night. There were a number of phases. jof the institute which were ex- cee@lingly interesting, Mrs. War- ner told The Citizen, and there were 132 other students from} levery section of the state taking | ithe courses of instruction. | Victor Larsen, who left at the ;Same time as did Mrs. Warner, | {did not return to the city having ! been dropped from the WPA rolls ;at Key West.. He has accepted a j very lucrative position in the rec- jreational activities at Lake Wales. ‘ % Plummers Arrive From Miami Mr. and. Mrs. Joseph Plummer and son J. L. arrived Sunday from if company of Hollywoodians made Ocala Premiere For Florida HERE'S TARZAN’S SON in the new MGM picture made recently at Silver Springs, which be shown in premiere at the Ritz Theater in Cca'a of Thursday, Friday and’ and 17, The youngster shown here nestling in a lilypad is Little Johnny Shef: | to have done wonders in his first film, the Florida-made picture titled “Tarzan Finds A Son”. This! | Photo was made on location at Silver Springs while Johnny» Weissmuller, Little Johnny and a large | the movie. |LOCAL POETS IN HARRISON ANTHOLOGIES ‘Miami, accompanied by Mr. Plummer’s mother Mrs. Lionel Plummer, and left in the after- ‘noon on the return trip. During thier visit Joe and his! Hildegard Ott Russell of 1210 father were fishing guests-of Re-| south St, Rev: ‘A: ‘Locke Mav-| presentative B, C. Papy, and re-| turned later in the afternoon |Te@¥; S. J. of the Church of St. with a choice catch of fine speci- | Mary, Star of the Sea, and Marie } |Cappick of 415 Olivia St. are re- {| -Made Picture will y, June 15, 16 7Pwho is reported ~ + TO FOURTH OF Combining a week-end holiday NOVASCOTIA CRUISE ATTRACTIVE | | | ‘JULY WEEK-ENDERS Gardens, now a profusion of color | TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 1939 MALARIA Speedy Relief of Chills and Fever When your teeth are chattering YOUR LODGE MEETS Equity Lodge. No. 70, 10.0F... meets fiirst and third Thursdays, \K. P. Hall, Fleming street. Spark- ling Waters. Rebekah Lodge No. 9 ith Chills an : id your body burn 14, meets 2nd and 4th Tuesdays With malarial fever, you want timely at 7:30 p.m. Cuba Lodge No. 16, and reliable relief! L0.0F., Varela Hall, 919 Eliza-' Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic is beth street. : the medicine you want to take for j Malaria. This is no Pai pte: = untried preparation, but a treatment Minoca Council No. 13, Degree ¢¢ considerable merit. of Pocahontas meets Ist and 3rd| __Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic con- Tuesdays of month, 8:00 p. m., at’ tains tasteless quinidine and iron. It Red Men’s Hall, corner of Caro- relieves the chills and fever due to line and Elizabeth streets. Im-! Malaria and also tends to build you . up. This is the double effect you want. Proved Order of Red Men mects. ‘The very next time you feel Ma- every Monday, 7:30 p. m., at Wig-' Jarial chills and fever coming on, get wam Hall. a bottle of Grove’s Tasteless Chill SETS Tonic. Start taking it immediately F. & A. M. Lodges meet at spit it will soon sie you sone ‘ Scottish Rite Hall as follows: iaececrecronsellrove's Teeianes Anchor Lodge No. 182 every sec- Sou much more for your money. ond and fourth Mondays; Dade, Lodge No. 14 every first and third | Wednesdays; Scottish Rite, second and fourth Wednesdays; Dr. Felix Varela Lodge meets at the Eliza- beth street hall every second and fourth Thursdays; Robert J. Perry: Chapter, Order DeMolay, meets! every Tuesday. Knights of Golden Eagle Lodges | meet at Golden Eagle Hall as fol- | lows: Key of the Gulf Castle No. 2 every Tuesday, and Ignacio Agramonte No. 3, first and third | Thursdays. Florida Temple No. 1, K.G.E., meets second, fourth | ‘Mondays at K.G.E, Hall, Fern Chapter No. 21, OES. meets second and fourth Fridays of each month at Scottish Rite Hall. | SPECIALS FOR WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY, honor wore Feusha with gold ac- and Mrs. Edward Sawyer and/;mens. | eb ‘ F - | cessories. |daughter Faye from Nassau, |presented in one or more of the|°f exciting shipboard. life with | and scent. |four major anthologies which |Cool and delightful ashore sight-) Driving through rustic Point Miss Dorothy Mae Dungan was} Bahamas, and Mr. Millard Rus- seeseegeerertt te. |Henry Harrison, New York Poetry ; Seeing is the four day all-expense | Pleasant and then out to ‘pastoral | ERSONAL MENTIO! attired in blue. sell of the Bahamas also. Miss Shirley Faye Russell was; The bride and groom left over} in orchid, Miss Phyllis Adams in the highway this morning for green, Miss Dorothy Lowe in peach and Miss Betty Rae Rus- sell in yellow. Each carried nose- Walkers Pay Visit To Key West W. H. Walker, president of the| Professor and Mrs. Emmett S. Federal Reserve Bank of Miami,| Walden leave Key West tomor-! Mrs. Walker and her parents Mr. | row. morning en route to Wild-| and Mrs. W. F. Heitman, were | WO0ds can eer taais pfationd Visitors in the oy. yesterday, on tion as Stele wal Principal one of their frequent visits to | of the school system, including Key West. |Grade school and High school, Mr. Walker expressed himself} next Fall. yas as being much interested in the} The Walden’s came to this city | luxuriant foliage of the city and | {vo Teena tothe Wall was particularly interested in the'qen as principal of Division profuse growths of bougainvillea, | Street Grade school and Mrs. | which is so abundant at this sea- | pela = ee ie the ae school. evious is appoint- = achat directed by The | Ment here, Professor Walden was a1 : | principal at the Columbia High Citizen to the locality where may |schoal at Dotham, Alabama, for| be found some of the most strik- | six years, following which period ingly beautiful of the vines, | he was.appointed to the school at which form complete bowers for | Holt, Fla. where he stayed but points up the east coast. Her traveling dress was of sport tan, | | with brown accessories. ! |Waldens Leaving | Tomorrow |Publisher, is issuing. Three of| them: Eros, Sonnets, and Music | J. J. Shea, attached of the New | Unheard, are out today; and the York Aquarium arrived in the | sourth, ‘Tha -Nosth vaiietlon Book e CORRS OEABEEESESESES | i city Saturday and is making ar-| i rangements. for the usual collec- | of Verse, will appear shortly, tion of tropical fish for the tanks | Rees Tees at the aquarium, —— _|ANSWERS TO "| ite haktiaane:| DALY QULE was recently graduated from a Solow aie tha) Auswecs to. Test! high school in Key West, left on| . . rs ‘the early bus for a visit with re-| _ Questions printed on Page 2 | latives in New York and to see| the World’s Fair. 1. The Gobi Desert. near | 2. No. Mr. George A. T. Roberts was} 3, Dominion of Canada. an out going passenger on the bus | Lai -tie- “not Td-nik. this morning for a visit of two} 5. Utah is 7) weeks with relatives in Miami. | &) Gecinany and: laly. 7. 8. 9. 0. Mrs. Manuel Sanchez left on) 4’ Se Hell. the early bus this mrning to spend; ,° 640. some time with relatives and j) wy... freinds in Miami, ple. Magee ese Loxley Arch, designer and | Hand of Evangeline, the Iroquois ideparts from New York City on |fax and surrounding countryside. | jvacation time will be lost, for a |gala, carefree holiday begins the} |spacious Iroquois. | pool provides funpacked hours of |swimming and water sports. Va- | builder of vessels, Mrs. Arch and | |their two little sons, left on the) jearly bus for an indefinite stay | |in Miami where Mr. Arch has se- | TRANSPORTATION °| STEAMER ARRIVES | sime of the larger trees in that section. Mrs. E. B. Mumford Left Yesterday Mrs. E. B. Mumford and daugh- ter, Grace left yesterday after- noon over the highway en route to Raleigh, N. C. Mrs. Mumford is the wife of Captain Mumford of the wrecking tug Killerig, sta- tioned at Kingston, Jamaica. The tug is at this time at New York undergoing repairs. Mrs. Mum- ford had been visiting here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jose Pelaez at the home on Caroline street. They will join Captain Mum- ford’s brother, Roland Mumford, at Raleigh, and will proceed to points in Virginia where a family reunion will be held. here. The Walden’s two daughters, |June and Mildred, and son, Em- |mett, Jr., attended the schools in Key West, being entered in the tenth, fifth and fourth grades re- spectively. Friends in this city | wish the Walden’s: all happiness and success in their new home. \Jaycees Plan For | Dinner Meeting oe ae 4 ‘Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue, will highlight the reg- ular monthly dinner meeting of Key West Junior Chamber of Commerce to be held Friday eve- ning, 6:30 o’clock at Gulf Stream Trailer Camp. In addition to the regular busi- } mess to come before the meeting, | there will be entertainment for Board of County Commissioners |a month prior to his appointment |. Talk by Howard Wilson, U. S. | ‘cured contracts for construction; Steamer Miraflores, of the of vessels, | Standard Fruit and Steamship} Co., arrived in port Sunday morn- ing and anchored in the stream awaiting orders. The vessel was to come up to! the Porter Dock Company’s dock | and take on fuel oil and water, | and it is anticipated that the or-| | derswill instruct the ship, to sail | | for’ Frontera, Mexico. Robert Madigan was a passen- ger on the;bus this morning en toute to his home in Detroit, Michigan.*¢ 9°)" George F. Archer left via Flo- jrida Motor Lines this _ morning }for. Tampa where he will visit | with two daughters, Mrs. W. D. ——— |Hearne and Mrs. Celeste Sanchez. STEAMER COMING IN Steamer Madina, of the Clyde- | | Mallory Lines is due to arrive} from Galveston today, will take freight at the Mallory Dock and proceed to New York. MONROE THEATER Florence Rice—Kent Taylor FOUR GIRLS IN WHITE George Bonniwell, engineer with the P. and O. S. S. Co., who had been vacationing with his family at the home 530 White street, left this morning to join his ship at Port Everglades. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Menendez and daughter, Nellie, Corrine, were arrivals in Key West yester- day from Gulfport, Miss., for a month’s visit with relatives and friends. Mr. and Mrs. William Richard- son, formerly of Key West, but who are now making their home in Jacksonville, were included in the recent arrivals here for a visit with relatives and friends. NOTICE “Notice is hereby given that the of Monroe County, Florida, will meet in the clerks’ office at the county court house at Key West, Monroe County, Florida, on Mon- day, July 3rd, A. D., 1939 at 11 o’clovk a. m. for the purpose of the tax roll for the year 1939. Dated at Key West, Florida, June 14, 1939. Fourth-of-July cruise aboard the newly-modernized . cruise ship! “Iroquois” to charming Nova} Scotia. Heading northward toward the | | | Saturday, at 3 P..M., July 1, and} reiurns, early the following-Wed- nesday morning, thus providing} an exhilarating ocean voyage and} a day’s visit to picturesque Hali- Not a single minute of precious instant the vacationer boards the| Deck games} excitingly while away the time; and a large outdoor swimmiig cationists will also thrill to the! dance music of the lilting orches- | tra of Russ Johnson, as well as to! talkies and gay parties. Visiting Old-World Halifax, a; tempting array of sight and scenes | present themselves in a conti-! nuous panorama of interest. If; vacationists desire, arrangements | can be made for sightseing trips about this quaint town, visiting the famous Citadel and the Public | Annapolis and Cornwallis, the} scenic beauty of verdantly-green | landscapes with their aura of | tranquility remind the visitorthat this is truly. the land- of . Evan- geline. And I'll Help | “I’m not asking anything for) myself”, said the colonel’s only} daughter, in her prayers one! night, “but- please give father a son-in-law”, Tom Walls—Lilli Palmer MAN WITH 100 FACES Also—Comedy and Shorts PRIZE NITE — TONIGHT “Key West's Outstanding!” LA CONCHA HOTEL Beautiful—Air-conditioned Rainbow Room and Cocktail Lounge “DINING and DANCING Fireproof Garage Strictly Open The Year Around Reksonable Rates Fishing Phone: Pigeon Key 1 .° . Thompiap N KEY THE VACATIONISTS’ PARADISE 52 Miles Notth of Key West on Overseas Highway DRIVE DOWN RAMP FHOM SEVEN MILE BRIDGE Meals Lodging Bar Special Rates Thursdays Through Weekends GEORGE G. SCHUTT, Manager P.O, Marathon, Fla. Highway Tolls $1.00 Car and Driver, $.25 per Passenger Enterprises “a ICE. DIVISION PHONE NO. 8 Bonnie. Louise Shop 522 Duval Street “SALE PRice - 91,89 $1.69 PLAY SUITS SALE PRICE . One-piece Play Suits, wrap-around skirt, pre- shrunk, fast color print. Originally 2.85, $9 99 now ‘WOMEN SAY: | “I like my Shelvador because of its convenience, its economy and its beauty.” i"You'll like it, too, and bought under our guar- antee and terms will give you complete satis- faction." *89ir PEPPER’S PLUMBING SUPPLIES ‘$12 Fleming St. Phone 118 {IMPTAIAT AES IIIA I TOM, EEURTRTEN EE LOREAL MD AUTOMOBILE HORNS Are mostly a bad habit. Their careless use is a menace to the health and peace of Key West. It is illegal to blow a horn “noisely or in a disturb- ing manner” or “after midnight and before 5 a. m.” In Rome, Italy no horns are permitted and the accident rate has been greatly reduced. Every Time You blow your horn it is heard not only by the man in front of you but by hundreds—hundreds who do not need any signal from you and to whom your noise is a breach of the peace. No Good Driver Uses the horn except in an emergency. Try driv- img one day without using the horn at all—use your brakes and your brains—you will be sur- prised how easily it is and you will be doing your city of Key West a lot of good. Don’t Blow Horns. Citizens Traffic Committee of the Chamber of Commerce of Public Service PIPL ALAA LLL LOE EL bh hiked Lede ded de ded diadkdedede didluddl PIPPLAPZLELLAZLLLLLALELLLAEPALLL ELLA EEA (Ld de MOTO IIIIIIIIIL . y