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PAGE FOUR PERSONAL MENTION ©*4°KS «xd COMMENTS E. D. Loper, of Miami, who was down for Labor Day and | spent the holiday at the home of | Mr. and Mrs. J. Otto Kirchheiner | on Whitehead street, left on the| bus yesterday returning to his| home in Miami. | FLORIDA CRACKER (Items under this head will appear from time to time in The Citizen—from the pen of a local lady-columnist. Naturally, she assumes full responsibility for all state- ments made.) NOSE, PLACE AND SHOW: Fraternity After Fifty Years aa a ead 1 | _ On August 31, at Philadelplia, | Pa., during the Fifty-first Annual | International Convention of the Su- | preme Lodge of the World, Loyal Order of Moose, Fred W. Zabel, of Davenport, Iowa, was unanimously elected Supreme Governor, the high- est elective office in the gift of the Fraternity. His term of office be- gan September 1. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Moose Names Its First Governor SCOUTS HAVING Abandons Title of “Dictator” | grou He became Director of Davenport’s | Chamber of Commerce, a charter | member and Director of the Kiwanis | Club, and Secretary-Treasurer of the Civic Welfare Organization of Davenport. i He has ever been an ardent frater- nalist, as witness: He is a Thirty- ‘second Degree Mason, a Shriner, _ | BACKGROUND | OF THE WAR GRAND VACATION (Continued from Page One) | |the World War. Thousands of} Members of Girl Scouts Troop ee ere SON in eee .. Waiting for transportation here. | SE ean an eee |e British Athenia was definite-| neg : ee wi any sails ly sunken by a torpedo fired from scoutmistress, and Lieutenant 399 to 1,000 yards range with the| Vanessa Collins, are having a/charge going through the galley} grand vacation at “Bugs Castle” and into the engine room. One! . WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1989 MARIUS CRUZ ARRIVES HERE Marius Cruz, first assistant en- gineer of the Coast Guard-Light- | house Tender Zinnia, arrived in| the city last evening, coming; from the tender which is operat-! ing on the east coast of the) | | | IIIa Sa ae [TWO OPINIONS, ONE OF WHICH COUNTED (My Associated Press) BUTTE. Mont.. Sept. 6—A man may have an “inalien- able right” to get drunk but a police judge also has an “inalienable right” to fine him for it, says Judge Louis ‘and Pine Villa, at Big Pine Key./°f the two shells fired at the | state. | Mr-and Mrs. Leroy ‘Roberts That’s our bet on Everett Rus- Like so many men who have built | |’ : | and son, who had been in Miami} sell for a big success as president to consult with a specialist in the | of the Key West Chamber of diseases of the feet, in eonnec-| Commerce, tion with the condition of the! enviable reputations for themselves, in politics, business, or the profes sions, Fred W. Zabel was born on a | farm. There, he spent the early part of his life, Fishing, hiking ‘and swimming | | Athenia by the sub tore away the main mast evidently being aimed } jand various other’ scout activities |at the wireless room. American} jare being thoroughly enjoyed by dead is estimated at 75 of 300/ |the members of the organization Americans aboard. 1,030 sur- feet of their little son, have re- | turned to the city. The little! fellow has been fitted with shoes CUTE AS A LITTLE WAGON: | ; That pretty girl that goes with | Jack Long. to relieve the condition. | Miss Faye Adams, daughter of WE'RE SORRY: About fifteen | A. Maitland Adams, left on the, married men want to know if early bus this morning returning;Cracker thought they were ; a sip pee ay her guilty of ogling pretty girls on! ar a 1e University o! =i ; “ Aishems, ‘Tuscaloosa, Ata. | Duval street. A hit dog howls. LOVELY MRS. WM. V. LIT- | TLE is vsiiting Key West and | |Key West is lucky to have her} for at least two months. Some} day we hope to tear her loose: from Miami permanently. Mr. and Mrs. Otis Carey of Mi-! ami, accompanied by their in- fant son, Michael, are visiting in Key West with Mr. Carey’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Horatio! Carey, and other relatives. They | Fok on ene ht THE: FOLLOWING -LEFTER| Pia jfrom a mother to her son on his | Willard Morris, nephew of s.| birthday could be most any| C. Singleton, was an arrival this|™ther to most any son: week and plans to spend a week September 6, one at the home of Mr. and Mrs. | Dearest Son: re Singleton on Eaton street. | _ Today, you have another birth- | day. It sems like a hundred; the | Years since you were a fat, blue- | Eleventh Judicial Circuit, who |€¥¢d little baby and certainly to; planned to spend several days in|™¢, the most beautiful master-| Key West, was called. back to| Piece God had ever made. Judge Arthur Gomez of | lowed, | position of Assistant Cashier at the Mr. Zabel’s birthplace was Scott County, Iowa. After leaving the public schools he entered St. Mary’s College, Kansas. He began his bank- ing career in McCausland, Iowa, as bookkeeper in the local bank. At the close of a year he was invited by the Durant Savings Bank, Du- rant, Iowa, to become Assistant Cashier, a position which he held for five years. Promotion again fol- In 1918, he accepted the Union Savings Bank & Trust Com- pany, Davenport. A year later he became Cashier of the same institu- tion, and soon was promoted to the Vice Presidency. (The Union Sav- ings Bank was one of the largest financial institutions in the Middle West, with total assets of $28,- 000,000 and Zabel was credited with being the youngest Cashier of an institution of this size in the Middle West.) A Conservative Banker During 1933, ’34, and ’35, he was with the Reconstruction Finance Corporation and the State Superin- tendent: of Banking. In 1936, he resigned to accept a position as Iowa representative of Brown, Har- riman & Company, New York, one Miami late Monday afternoon to attend to important legal mat- ters. Ausoancement Of Marriage News of the recent marriage | of Miss Isabel Johnson to D. W.| Treet of Pensacola has been re- | ceived here by the bride's par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton John- son of Margaret street. Marriage took place in Pensa- cola where Miss Johnson was visiting her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Sierra. | Discuss . Japanese | Art Tomorrow | The Art Appreciation Reading Group will hold its weekly meet- | ing tomorrow at 8 p. m. at the} home of Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Mar- shall on Fitzpatrick The subject for di: be “Japanese Art”. The members of the group find their meetings extremely enjoy- able and interestin and it is their hope more as will join their Thursday meetings. Plan Dance For Tomorrow Night Another in the scheduled for the Rainbow Room at La Concha Hotel will be given tomorrow ight, sta ¢ at 10 p. m. ‘End O’ Summer” s of dances Your feet were too large for the! number ore shoes that loving re-' lations had sent for your arrival but they were very, very beauti- ful feet. Your little hands had long, sharp nails and could claw |like a two-year-old cat when you! wanted your dinner, but the claw- ing was pure joy to your young mother. When you were two months old | you had two teeth. the smartest | baby in town. And then you started biting as well as clawing for your daily food, so to help painful matters existing between | rationed on likker and us two, you were milk and given pot |soft corn bread. You were the| fattest, healthiest baby in the whole community. No enemas for you, my dear. You never fretted and never cried once in all your babyhood days except when you fell or were hurt some small way. You were nev- er ill until you were eight years |old and an epidemic of influenza | sion will Swept the country. You grew UP ANNOUNCEMENT IS MADE in prohibition days but you were in) of the oldest and largest investment banking houses in the country. In 1937, he became associated with the | firm of Murdoch, Dearth & White, | one of the leading investment bank- | ing houses in Iowa. Today he is Vice President of the Merchants National Bank of Aurora, Illinois, which office he assumed August 1, 1939. During his entire banking career, Fred W. Zabel has been re- garded as a conservative banker, and has devoted years to the | study and analysis of high-grade securities. But the profession of banking did | not engross the whole attention of | this public-spirited citizen of Iowa. VITAMIN D MILK ~ BEING OFFERED BY ADAMS DAIR ir-conditioned | jdecidedly “wet” most of the TODAY OF PRODUCT THAT | time. | Once I carried you to church,| WILL BE SERVED KEY WEST clothed in a beautiful little dress) poOUSEHOLDERS |made with yards and yards of |lace and hand embroidery. By, {own lovely dress was part of my | m : | wedding trousseau. During the mnguncement is made by the sermon I was aroused from my |Adams Dairy to the effect that jday dreams by your incessant | they are now offering Vitamin | wriggling—and, oh, my beautiful’ D milk, containing the so-called dress—but never mind now. Vitamin”, to the When I dedicated you to God ee ce the day you came, I told him you | householders of this community. could either be President or a! A campaign of advertising to | “Sunshine and visiting friends. There were a number of guest friends visiting the encampment during the week end and Labor | Day, and showered the girls with ‘cake, ice cream, candy and ‘fruit. ‘MINISTERIAL UNIT | ELECTS OFFICERS FRED W. ZABEL Newly Elected Head of the Moose and an active Moose. He was elected Dictator of Davenport Lodge No. 28, and without interruption served in this capacity for fourteen years. As Dictator, the membership grew i from 700 to 2,800 members. When he resigned, the lodge had assets above $50,000. In 1931, his Moose associates in the Supreme Lodge, appreciating the magnificent service that he had | given to their Fraternity, unani- | mously elected him a member of the Supreme Council, and at the Cleve- land Convention, 1937, Supreme Prelate, and member of the Publica- tions Board. Further honors came to him at the close of the Convention in June, 1938, when he was unani- | mously elected Supreme Vice Dicta- tor, and in 1939, when he became Supreme Governor. He is affable in approach, urbane in manner and speech, and deeply sincere in all his relations with his fellow men, H Mr. Zabel is married and has two children—James and Joan. ‘and less troubles from poor teeth jin this world. “Milk is rich in calcium and | Phosphorus which is necessary. to! |the proper development of strong | bones and sound teeth. Vitamin |D aids in the assimilation of it jby the body. Ordinarily there is ;some Vitamin D_ naturally in milk, but the amount is extreme- | ly small. | “That's the reason for Vitamin |D fortified milk. } | “Youngsters and particularly expectant and nursing mothers ,should consume at least a quart” jof it a day. | “Youngsters need it because | | the growth of their body demands it. | “Nursing and expectant moth- | {ers require it because the de-}| . | oe ; i} great minister and in later years! popularize the product which is|™ands on their system made by |FOR SALE—Bargain; Furnished At a meeting of the Key West | Ministerial Association held on | Monday, officers were elected for |the ensuing term. Rev. C. W. Hutchinson was lelected president; Rev. Y. T. Shehane, vice-president, and Rev |O. C. Howell, secretary and treasurer. A schedule for chapel exercises were made out and approved dur- ing the meeting. ‘CLASSIFIED COLUMN WANTED WANTED — Representative to look after our magazine sub- scription interests in Key West and vicinity. Our plan enables you to secure a good part of the hundreds of dollars spent in this vicinity each fall and winter for magazines. Oldest agency in U. S. Guaranteed lowest rates on all periodicals, domes- tic and foreign. Instructions and equipment free. Start a growing and permanent busi- ness in whole or spare time. Especially adaptable for Shut- ins. Address MOORE-COT- TRELL, Inc., North Cohocton, N.Y. sept6-1t FOR SALE SIGNS—“For Rent”, “Rooms For | Rent”, “Apartment For Ren’ “Private Property, No Tres- passing”, 15c each. THE ART- | MAN PRESS. nov25-tf FOR SALE—2 lots, each 50x100. Run from Washington to Von Phister street. $1,000. Apply rear 1217 Petronia street. apri4-s COAL right kind for barbecueing. In- extinguishable. Burnt from buttonwood. Erskine Roberts, 903 Thomas street. SECOND SHEETS—500 for 50c The Artman Press. nov19-tf Naples Road, | FOR SALE—Just the. sept2-lwkx | vivors of 1,347 were brought ashore in England yesterday. ;QUICK POLAND CRUSH Strategists in Paris figuring out the course of the war believe ‘that a quick crushing of Poland is contemplated by Hitler. He ‘told Germans fighting the Poles \to do their duty so that the entire force would be behind them with the battles on the East over in a few weeks. German empha- sis has been on airplanes, tanks |and submarines to mass her air force on British-French naval units, airplane factories, rail junctions and civilian centers. | Submarines are to be an aid) against blockading _ battleships. | The Spanish Civil War witnessed | the destruction of a few warships! by planes but the evidence is still not said to be decisive. Mass air ,attacks on ‘cities do not demoral- ize the populations, but attacks ‘on Paris and London will be far {more terrible than they were in Spain. Many believe the French {can smash the sawtoothed steel and concrete barriers, ¢oncrete casements of the German Sieg- | fried line. Many also believe the ; French will leave their Maginot | line to attack the Siegfried line. Militarists in general envisage an even longer and bloodier war; than in the World War. | \ IMPROVED MEDICINE In a Chicago dispatch, it was pointed out from the great med- ical centers there that doctors| will win some of the greatest vic tories in the present war. Chie: developments were cited as (1) | “Blood Banks” for quick trans- | jfusions (2) Better treatment for | gas gangrene (3) New immunit: | protection before injury amninsty MONROE THEATER Lloyd Nolan—Heather Angel UNDERCOVER DOCTOR and PARIS HONEYMOON Matinee—Balcony 10c, Or- chestra 15-20c; Night—15-25¢ jdied from flu and 18,040 deaths N Mr. Cruz arrived in answer to} a telegram from headquarters | which was sent ordering his ar-}| rival here for the purpose of at-| tending to certain matters in connection with the engine room of the Tender Poinciana, which is berthed at this port. tetanus (4) Greater control of communicable ‘diseases (5) Port- able X-Ray machines (6) Ad- vances in surgery and anethesia| (7) Improved treatments for} burns (8) More knowledge of nu- trition. Gas gangrene in the World War among American sol- diers caused a death rate of 48.52; 23,359 American soldiers! were from pneumonia; menin- gitis killed 1,737 soldiers; vener- eal diseases caused disability of 15.4 days a case in the last war. A. Buckley. “Yes, 1 was drunk—plenty drunk”, admitted a defend- ant before the judge. “And I'll get drunk any time I want to. As long as a man can pay for his beer he has @ perfect right to get drunk. You pay the tax when you lay out the dimes”. “Ten days”. commented the PaLacs John Trent as Tailspin Tommy STUNT PILOT —also— COMEDY and SHORTS ° SIP O BODES 2S SSM SS MM, N VITAMIN-D MILK | . Produced under APRI PROCESS 400 U.S.P. UNITS ADDED PER QUART WILL BE AVAILABLE Place your order with your Milk Man or call— PHONE 455 Adams’ 77 APCLLELLLELL LL ,) you would tell the world your {mother made you. Your first Sunday School card dance proved quite successful and it has prompted the manage- ment to feature similar dances! ), ence each week at least until the opening of the winter season. never forgotten—“He will keep | heralded as an aid to the preven- tion of rickets in children and as ad a golden text that I have |@ dietary benefit to adults, par- | the consequences. ticularly to expectant and nurs- House, situated on two _lots,| 100x100 feet each. Apply to) 1306 Virginia Street. may25-tfs | their offspring robs them of these | ;minerals, and they must get it| from. some other source or suffer 'FOURTEEN-FT. V-BOTTOM fatcea tt Id adage to th ere is an old adage to the CYPRESS BOAT; Four Horse} Gould Curry’s orchestra will fur- nish the music again—and a fea- | \the feet of His Saints’—! took | ing mothers, has been launched that as a sure sign God would always be near you. Iby the ‘above’ named concern. : | Rickets is a ‘disease of the Your baby carriage and clothes |pones in children ‘which fre | were the most elaborate in town; | quently. results. in .. bowed legs, your black mammy and your{«pigeon-breasted” chests, and |white bull dog were with you/other physical deformities of the | when you were sent out on sun-|bony structure. Health statistics jny afternoons for the world tojindicate that more than 50 per | behold. ‘ jcent of the children in this coun- You were loved, admired, pet- | try, particularly those rearéd in jted and stuffed until you were |the larger cities, are afflicted |roly poly as a little brownie. jwith the malady to some degree tured singer in the person of Miss Allene Doyle will be an added attraction. NORWEGIAN SHIP "ARRIVES IN POR a anker Raila from Montreal, Canada, arrived in port this morning awaiting orders. At 8 o'clock the vessel was boarded by surgeons of the Marine hos- pital, who left on the Pilot Boat 3 to make the inspection as_ re- quired by law. Others of the governmental agents who went on the pilot boat for routine work of inspect- ing were officials from the tus- tom house and immigration units in Key West. WEAVER FAMILY LEAVES ON TRI Mr. and Mrs. William Weaver, accompanied by Mrs. Weaver's sister, Mrs. Allen Knowles, left yesterday afternoon over highw: enroute to Johnson City, Tennessee, where they will visit with relatives. They plan to remain there a short time and then proceed to Columbus, Ohio, where they will visit for a short time with other relatives of Mr. Weaver and will return around October 1. A few years pass, then came! the World War and because you were a little chap I knew the or other. Vitamin D milk is more im- portant to the daily diet than any the | world had lost a great general. other item of food according to When you were given an air gun Roland Adams, head of the for Christmas and shot up the | Adams Dairy. figured wall paper in the living | “Milk is generally accepted by room during my absence from nutritional experts as being al- home I knew you were just a lit-/ most the ideal food,” he ex- tle boy full of life. | plained. As you approached adolescence} “Now, with the addition of I read a book on child physiology | Vitamin D to it, that state of ‘al- ;and tried gently to tell you the! most perfection’ has been im- | facts of life, about flowers and proved upon. If more persons pollen and beautiful little birds! understood this, there would be from eggshells. But then you | less poorly developed youngsters were a smart, bright young lad! effect that every child costs its |mother a tooth. This is the ex- { Planation of it. “Vitamin D milk added to the} ietary of the usual energy foods | will help to prevent this.” | “As for calling Vitamin D | milk, ‘Sunshine’ milk, this is ex- plained by the fact that Vitamin D is also obtained from the ultra- | jviolet rays of the sun, but the! jeatch here,” he further eluci- | dated, “is due to the fact that in | | our present state of civilization, living in smoky cities where the |sun’s rays have little opportunity | to reach us, and wearing clothing | that virtually covers our entire bodies, we do not get enough of the sunshine to take care of our Vitamin D needs.” WHAT CAUSES EPILEPSY? | 1S THERE A CURE? | REE. while they last, any reader writing to the Educational | Division, 535 Fifth Avenue, New York, | N. Y» Dept. S-829 and I soon knew you could vast-| about the accident and jly enlarge on my own poor you sooner. | knowledge. | So many times I may have | When you were twelve. you/failed you, my darling, but only |hurt your hand poking your fin-/ through ignoranee and lack of ger into machinery. You came understanding but never lack of pone after a druggist had band-' love. aged the poor, torn finger and| Years are too long and some slipped into your room and. went are too sad to recall them all and to sleep hiding your wound from now you are a man with your |me. Late in the night I heard | own cherished family. All I ask your whimper of pain and learn-|is a corner in your heart and love ed of your injury. Through many |and loyalty to your family. So, years and quiet hours, sometimes!on this your birthday—God bless jalone late in the nights, tears'and keep you and those DEAR have poured down my cheeks TO YOU, MY SON. jand there was a deep ache in my! Your loving Mother, jheart because I did not know, comfort RNOON BOWLING Learn Now—Free Instruction TERRACE OUTDOOR BOWLING Johnson Outboard Motor; Four Life Preservers, One Fire Ex- ANNOUNCEMENT~- Effective Monday, Sept. 11, 1939 SAMALALAAAAAL LA CA bh hed hed dd a, TO OUR CUSTOMERS AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSN Dairy “I Saved a tinguisher; Pair of Oars and Row Locks; Anchor with Rope; Umbrella—all for’ $85.00. Apply 1217 Petronia Street. jun27-s HOTELS BRING YOUR VISITING friends in need of a good night’s rest to THE OVERSEAS HOTEL. Clean rooms, enjoy the homey atmosphere. Satisfactory rates. 917 Fleming St. mayl17-tf “Tor Finy Torre sce in Coffee in Key West STRONG ARM BRAND COFFEE THAT'S A REPUTATION — THY IT TODAY — | The Favorite In Key West | STAR + BRAND | __ CUBAN COFFEE ON SALE AT ALL GROCERS dollar today” It’s a great satisfaction to look over the day’s accounts and find you've been able to save money by careful buying. Knowing WHERE to buy is part of the trick. But knowing IP PAPAPPLPAPALALELLELLLLALALA LS LHOTVIIOIODIDIDS: HOW to buy is a bigger part. The wise “business manager” of the home plans her shopping as skillfully as a business man plans to spend a thousand dollars. Advertisements help greatly, of course. On daily necessities like meats, fruits, vegetables, they show you how to save 2c here, 3c there, adding up to much. But advertisements are just as help- ful on larger purchases—furniture, draperies, motor cars, cloth- ing. Followed carefully, advertising saves you money all down the line . . . helps you run the household more economically . . . gives the budget a chance to breathe! }Madeabakadadkehuh hdd ddd Added hhdhde hehe de daddi hdd diadeded, Ln nndtttt¢tittétttttttitt2ttihéedd