The Key West Citizen Newspaper, December 26, 1939, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR Hatchinsons To Give | PERSONAL MENTION (Concert Tharsday \ All lovers of good music are Herman Roberts was a visitor} Mrs. Ivy Deane and children | invited to attend a concert of in Key West from Miami yester-|left Saturday ,for Miami to |organ, piano and vocal numbers | day meeting relatives and friends|spend Christmas with relatives|to be given at First Methodist and left on the return on the 11/and friends. (Stone) Church, Thursday, De- o'clock bus. | |cember 28, at 8 pj m. | | Miss Dolores Boney, daughter; Miss Novelle Hutchinson will in of Mr. and Mrs. D. E, Boney, left)give several organ and piano his Saturday’) ion '!the’ early bus{numbers and accompany her Harry for Goldsboro, N. C., to spend the brother, Joseph, who will sing a relatives holidays ‘with her grandmother, | variety of selections. yesterday and will be back in time for the| Miss Hutchinson is a_ well- ‘opening of school. trained musician, having her} —— AB. from Florida Southern Col- Mrs. Dorothy. Rodford; who Mr. and Mrs. Constantine lege, with major in music. Her} came for a visit with her father, Garcia, parents of Raul Garcia,|Bachelor of Music Degree was Chief Ivan Elwood and Mrs. El- manager of the Key West-|given by Wesleyan Conservatory | wood, and other relatives and Havana Cigar Co., and Mrs. Da-|0f Music, Macon, Ga., and she has | friends, left on the afternoon bus miana Quesada, left on the Cuba |Studied two summers in Juilliard | yesterday for her home in Mi- Friday afternoon to spend the /School of Music in New York. ami. holidays in Tampa. |For two years she was official | pee | organist at Scarritt College, Nash- | Walter Price, son of Mr. and | Ville, Tenn., and she has had} Mrs. C. C. Price, left on the Some years of experience teach- | Steamship Cuba Friday after-|ing and serving as organist for noon, and will spend the time Various denominations. eT with his grandmother, Mrs. Er- | _Joseph Hutchinson is an offi- | nest Meres at Tarpon Springs, 'cial member of the Emory Uni- | and return tomorrow morning. | VeTSity Glee Club, and has been lin attendance with the club on Joseph Richardson came over Christmas to visit parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richardson and other and friends, and left afternoon for Miami. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hart were visitors over Christmas with rel- and friends and returned to Miami this morning on the 7 o'clock bus. Mrs. Hart was be- fore marriage, Miss Louise Curry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gideon Curry. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN 1 4%-oz. can strained apricots and | applesauce* 1 tablespoon lemon juice % teaspoon salt. Add slowly to milk mixture, stir- ‘i ring constantly. NEW NOTES ON SPECIAL DIET | erator tray and chill thoroughly. DISHES Before serving, beat with rotary .s | e&g beater. Even the most rugged family ha: *tzsined prunes tay be substi- a@ member or two every now and then with some sort of illness. It may be only a sore throat or an upset tummy—or it might be some- thing in the way of a major opera- tion. But most of us, sooner or later, have some sort of difficulty that calls for a soft diet as part of the treatment. When that day comes, it’s a great comfort and re- juice to 2 teaspoons. Strained pears Pour into refrig- | tuted in which case decrease lemon | Mrs. Camille Ley and daugh-! Harold Russell, teacher in the dec. Catvilla, — atrived ‘Sunday schools of Monroe county and at- morning from Miami for a visit fa¢hed to the school at Rock : gies Harbor, is in the city visiting yh pera tuothers oe relatives. and will remain until ‘ January 8. Mr. and Mrs. Tad Becraft,!_ Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Russell, | after an absence of 10 years, is Joan and Bobbie, Mr. and Mrs. back again for a visit and will’Ellis England, and Mary Ann, remain until ea . Le jton, are home to spend the Christ- Mrs. John R. Williams arrived ™@S season, with Mr. and Mrs. from Mia John Olsen. 1 days, and is the guest of | Mr. and Mrs. Allan Knowles at the home on Southard street. mi Sunday to remain se’ Harry Henry, patient in the Marine Hospital for a brief time, ee left on the bus Saturday for the Mrs. Henry Thompson and son C.C.C. camp in Miami. arrived on the 12:30 busj Saga eee yesterday, and is visiting Mr.; Rev. and Mrs. G. W. Hutchin- and Mrs. Percy Roberts at the son have as guests during the home on Fleming street. holidays, their children: Joseph, a | who is a senior at Emory Univer- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sands sity, Atlanta, Ga., and daughter, arrived urday to spend the Novelle, who is in charge of the holiday season with relatives and music department of Georgia friends before returning to Mi- Vocational and Trade School, ami where he is employed with Monroe, Ga. They were accom- the Florida East Coast Railway. panied by J. C. Lane, teacher of Vocational Agriculture, Greens- . E. B. Green ar- boro, Ga. Augustine yester- for a brief visit with their Mr. and M rived from St day Mr. and Mrs, Lawrence Mims daughter-in-law, Mrs. E. ©. snd daughter Dee Ann, were ar- Green, before marriage Miss rivals over the highway Satur- Marguerite Dion. They were day to spend the holidays with guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dion, Mrs. Mims’ mother, Mrs. and returned on the afternoon piort and other relatives and bus. friends. They intend to return = ae {to Miami tomorrow. Mr. and Mrs. Kellar Watson‘? ™™ and son, who were visiting Mr. | M Watson’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. te | Mrs. Lawton Watson, over the holiday | : : season, left on the afternoon bus | daughter Deanne, left via Florida aie f i ;_| Motor Lines yesterday for Miami, y sterday for their home in Mi | vi led t F 4 serious illness of their father. Sydney Mathews and Raymond di Primo and Mrs. J. L. Rutrey and Mrs. E.| ; M. Andars, who were on a sight-| Joseph Peacon was an arrival ly in the spring. 49d Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Fel- | | CHRISTMAS EDITORIAL H.| various trips throughout the na tion. He is studying voice with} ‘Miss Margaret Hect, foremost At- | lanta voice teacher. Those who heard him sing here in the early | ‘summer will be glad of the op- | |portunity of hearing him again. | These musicians are the chil- dren of Rev. and Mrs. "G. W. Hutchinson, of First Methodist | Church. ~ PEOPLE'S FORUM | The Citizen weleomes expres- | sions of the views of its read- ers, but the editor reserves the to delete 5 5 unwarranted. The writers | should be fair and confine the | letters to 200 words, and write on one side of the paper only. Signature of the writers must necor ny the letters and will | be published unless requested | otherwise. | Editor, The Citizen: ' I take pleasure in thanking | jyou for your editorial, “Christ- |mas”, in the December 23rd is-| | sue of The Citizen, especially the | part which brings forth the fact that Christmas Day is not the) anniversary of the birth of Christ | |Jesus. I am glad to see also the, | statement that it was used to su- persede some pagan festival. It lets. the people know that they | | have been deceived for centuries | by the very people who claimed | to be their duly-ordained spirit- ual advisers, Although the exact date of the; birth of Christ Jesus is not known ‘we may approximate the date by |reasoning upon God’s Word: Christ Jesus was brought forth | under the Law of Moses, in. which | we find the following: “Take the sum of the sons of Kohath. . ./ seeing trip yesterday, and had a|in the city Sunday from Wash-| from thirty years old and up- delightful time, left for Miami) ington, D. C., coming to spend! ward, even unto fifty years old, on the afternoon bus. | the holiday season with his rel-| 41 that enter into the host, to do | atives and host of friends. |the work in the tabernacle of the Mr. and Mrs. Frank Balek, who | —— | congregation”.—(Numbers 4:1-3). had been visiting Mrs. Balek’s| Processo Cano, native of Key | saint Tukebwintess © Now: ier brother-in-law and sr, Mr.| West but who for years has made} 41) the people were baptized, it and Mrs. Stanford Watkins, left | his home, with his family in Mi-| came to pass, that Jesus also be- on the morning bus for their; ami, is in the city today meeting | ing baptized, and praying, the home in Paterson, N. J. |his many friends and members of jeayens were opened. . And Je- j ’ | the family. sus himself began to be about thirty years of age”—(Luke |3:21,23). From Daniel 9:26.27 |quote the following: “And after ‘three score and two weeks shall Messiah be cut off, but not for Edward Romaguera, who was visiting over the holidays with relatives and friends, left on the morning bus to join his vessel of the Coast Guard at New Smyrna. Lionel Plummer, chief disburs- ing clerk at the Coast Guard headquarters, and Mrs. Plummer, returned yesterday evening over the highway, from Miami where! they went to spend Christmas Mrs. Leonard Curry and two n with their son and daughter-in- children, left on the 7 o'clock bus this morning, going for a_ visit . with her parents in DeLand, Fla. | and family. Who’s Going To Win This Pig? Country Store Nite at Fred Marvil’s Cabana will feature a 50 to 60 pound pig as capital prize, with the usual excellent selec- tion of fifteen to twenty other prizes. Residents and _ visitors alike always enjoy these country store features and it is expected that the turn-out tonight vie for the pig prize (for bar-b-ques this weekend) will far exceed Patrick and Otto Bruce left on’ the usual attendance at the af- the Cuba Sunday morning for! fairs. Entertainment headliners Havana, where they will spend at the Cabana’continue to be The several days, and possibly angle |Girls of Note. for marlin before returning. Mrs. Joe Pearlman and daugh- ter M Synthia, left for Miami y bus this Iman will return to- morrow afternoon,, and Miss Cynthia will continue to Talla- | hassee to resume her studies at Florida State College for Women. morning. Mrs. Manola Perez left on the morning bus for Tavernier where she will spend a time with rel- atives and friends. Ernest Hemingway, his son — | THREE DIE IN CAVE Mrs. Walter McCook and son) - Walter Jr., left on the S.S. Cuba] WALTHAM, Mass. — Three Sunday morning for a visit with | boys, William Eveler, 13, Weaver relatives and friends in Havana! Tedesco, 15, and Paul Stutsman, over the holidays. 14, were buried under tons of — gravel when the walls of a cave Captain C. D. Harrington, of they had dug for their “Termites the P. and O. S. S. Co., attached Club” collapsed. A fourth boy, to the S. S. Florida, is in the city William Myer, 12, scrambled to for a visit with Mrs. Harrington, ;safety and notified police who at the home, 1213 White street. | worked for an hour before recov- \ering the bodies of the boys. URBE IN RUS Mr. and Mrs. J. L.“Menendez and daughter, arrived Friday | from Gulfport, Miss. Mr. Menen- dez will leave after the holidays to join his vessel. in Gulfport times”, ran a line in the examina- which will proceed to the At-/tion papers of the seventh grade lantic coast to carry out scien- history class. One boy wrote: tifie work. Mrs. Menendez and|There were not many cities and daughter will remain for a few| what there were were out in the months. country”, “Discuss city life in Colonial \law, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Plummer | jhimself, . .And he shall confirm |the covenant with many for one week: and in the midst of the week he shall cause the sacrifice and oblation to cease”.A footnote Jin the Douay (Catholic) Version |of the Bible says: “Christ preach- {ed three years and\a half: and ‘then by his sacrifice upon the| cross he abolished all the sacri- | |fices of the law”. | It is a fact that Christ Jesus was crucified about the first day | of April (the year unknown). If he taught three years and a half, he must have begun his ministry about October first. According to the Law of Moses he must have been thirty years old when he began to preach, therefore it reasonably follows that he was born some time near the first of October. He certainly would not \have waited from December un- | til the next October to begin, nor {is it reasonable that he would have begun three months before ‘he reached his majority. God's ‘workings are not done in such a manner. “Moses was admonished of God when he was about to make the tabernacle: for, See, jsaith he, that thou make all things according to the pattern shewed to thee in the mount.” (Hebrews 8:5) There are many other things which I should be glad to bring to your attention, ‘but which Ido not consider ex- pedient in a letter of this kind. |The above treats the subject! fully, although the manner | whereby the three and one half years is obtained may be found by a careful study of Ezekiel 4:6; | Revelation 11:2, 11. | i J. E. CARNEY. ; Key West, Fla., Dec. 26, 1939, | |. lief to be able to fall back on those fine flavored, superior strained foods that come in cans prepared specially for infant feeding and soft diets for both-adults and chil- dren. These foods range all the way from soups and cereals to vegetables, meat products and des- ‘.serts. They are all prepared from the choicest quality of ingredients, strained to a silken smooth con- sistency and packed with labora- tory precision to retain the highest | possible nutrient value of the food. | They are completely free of sea- sonings and spices so they are | adaptable to the most delicate and | exacting diet. And when the pa- | tient begins to come around, and the doctor permits, you can tone up the tempo of the menu by add + ing other simple and savory foods to these fine flavored specialties, Here now are a variety of new and novel suggestions made by mixing strained foods with simple staples: BEEF AND LIVER DRINK Combine, mixing well— % 4%4-0z. can strained tomatoes | 4% 4%-oz. can strained beef and liver soup teaspoon salt cup milk, : Chill and serve. (1 large serving.) SPINACH TIMBALES Beat with fork— 1 egg. Add, mixing thoroughly with fork— 4%-oz. cans strained spinach tablespoon butter, melted cup milk teaspoon salt teaspoon pure cider vinegar cup grated American cheese. % 1 1 % % 1 % Pour into well buttered individual |2 baking dishes. Set in pan of warm water, and bake in a slow over (325° F.) 40 to 45 minutes. Unmold, if desired. Serve hot. (Serves 4.) Note: One 6%-oz. can chopped spinach may be used, using 2 eggs. FRUIT MILK WHIP Combine, stirring until sugar, is dissolved— 2 cups milk ahd pineapple may be substituted decreasing sugar to % cup or add- ing 1° teas} lemon juice. and apple sauce, the milk may ap- pear very slightly curdled but the taste is not impaired. ‘ APRICOT TAPIOCA CREAM. Combine in top of double boiler— 1 egg yolk 2 cups imilk, Add— 3 tablespoons minute tapioca \% cup sugar Y% teaspoon salt. minutes after the scalding point is reached. Remove from fire and add a small amount of this mixture to— itd white, stiffly beaten. lend thoroughly, then come bine with tapioca remaining in pan. j Combinte— 1 4%-oz. can strained apricots and apple sauce 1 tablespoon lemon juice then beat into tapioca mixture, together with— % _ teaspoon vanilla. Cool. Serve plain.or with whip- ped cream. (Serves 6.) RICE CUSTARD 2 cups milk then stir in— % cup cooked rice. Combine, beating well with fork— slightly beaten 2 tablespoons sugar % teaspoon salt 1 4%-0z. can strained carrots or apricots and apple sauce or 1 5-oz. can strained prunes. Add to rice and milk mixture. Turn into buttered baking dish or individual: baking dishes. Set in pan of warm water. Bake in a moderate oven (350° F.) until firm, approximately 40 to 50 minutes. (Serves 6.) oe at By HUGO S. SIMS, Special Washington Correspondent of The Cilizen 1940 CAMPAIGN BEGINS PARTISANS ARE ACTIVE TEXAS TAX IS UPHELD PEACE NOT IN SIGHT silence. Reports that Mr. Ropse- jvelt will declare himself in Jan-/ ‘uary encourage ° the aspirations | lot other candidates, but no word | jcomes from the White © House. ‘n’using strained apricots | Cook over boiling water for 5 | 'There'‘continues to be a cam- | paign for a third term, the latest It might a3 well be said that |®dvocate being Ambassador Jo-| the presidential campaign of 1940 is aiready underway, re- gardless of what the Parties do about the date of the conven- tions. Hopeful Republican | as- pirants are taking advantage of opportunities to address the peo- ple in various sections of the country. The Democrats are waiting for the President to make known his intentions. The issues are already being formed. They include: farm relief, the recipro- cal treaty program, the budge- tary deficit, and the attitude of the Administration toward busi- ness. Governmental such as the TVA, will» heavy fire. = seph P, Kennedy, whose position | |comes as a surprise to other can- didates. Vice-President Garner's | ;campaign is growing and Paul V. | McNutt is striving hard to win} ‘the “heir- apparent” position. j Readers should understand that at this stage of the presidential | campaign, most of the stuff that they read is imaginative. Reports ‘as to how the delegates to the! {Conventions stand are entirely speculative. Hints of combina- | tions between various factions ‘are premature because the issues { usi- ‘are not yet clearly defined and | agencies, ‘the lines of battle remain indefin- be under ites: , Terai | Considerable interest is at-| On the Republican side, Thom- |tached to the opinion of the Su- as E, Dewey has undertaken. the | preme Court upholding the right | exposition of his ~politet= pon othe" Pee terested tion in a series of speeches. Sena*li¢y-taxing power beyond its bor- tor Taft is also active “on ‘the'!ders and other states where no| platform. Senator Vandenburg, | similar tax is in force may be | while making few speeches, gets ‘expected to follow the Texas ex- | into the limelight by attacking|ample. The Texas law. requires | what he considers the weak spots |a corporation to. pay a tax-on its of the present Administration. | total capital in the ratio that Even Mr. Hoover, on the Westigross receipts from its business | Coast, continues to occupy the jin Texas bears to the company’s | limelight and there are those who jrevenue from all sources. The | believe that he will make an ef-|levy is called a franchise tax, | fort to secure the *nomination.'a payment for the privilege’ of Alfred M. Landon, nominee in ‘carrying on business im Texas. | 1936, has taken himself out of The case arose when the Ford | the running but he is putting in |Motor Company paid under pro-| some good work for the benefit |test a tax of $7,529, which: it of his Party. é |contended. was More than seven _— i times what it should pay. On the Democratic side, the —_—_— hopeful candidates are some-! The opinion, written by Justice what stymied by the President’s|Reed, says there is no question * | 1 PpaLaes Cocccccccccccasecscecoes Judge Calvert Magruder of the \First U. S. Circuit Court of Ap- |peals, born at Annapolis, Md., 46 years ago. Gov. Lawrence W. Cramer of \the Virgin Islands, born in New |Orleans, 42 years ago. Maj. Gen. William H. Wilson, (USA, born, at Mount Vernon, |N. Y., 62 years ago. Dr. Isaiah Bowman, president \of the Johns Hopkins University, born at Waterloo, Canada, 61 lyears ago. | Paul Bellamy of Cleveland, | jnoted newspaper editor, born at Chicopee Falls, Mass., 55 years | ago. i Henry I. Harriman of Boston, ex-president of the U. S. Cham- |ber of.Commerce, born in Brook- llyn, N. Y., 67 years ago. Marion Telva, contralto, born in St. Louis, 42 years ago. Edward T. Allen of Otis, Oreg., {noted Western forester, born at New Haven, Conn., 64 years ago. ANSWERS TO... | | TODAY’S DAILY QUIZ | Ber are the Answers to Today's | ily Quiz printed on Page 2 | . — No. i Zero. Professional football. William O. Douglas. Battle of Bull Run (Manas- sas). Descent from a direct line ot | ancestry. Hubert Pierlot. Sen | 9. Gibraltar. 4 10. Galaxy. 1 | |but that the State has the me to make a charge against domes- |tic or foreign corporations for |the opportunity to transact intra- state business. This the Court jupholds and says that when the} charge is based upon the propor- jtion of the capital employed, | jcalculated by the percentage. of | jsales which are within the State, | no provision of the Federal Con- | stitution is violated. Every now and then rumors spread throughout the United States of an impending peace in Europe. So far, none of them | !seems to have any basis of fact. | State Department officials do not | believe that there has been. any- | thing to them except a desire in! {German quarters to. spread | jabroad a hint that Germany jmight join in a joint front against | |Russia. Every reader of war news should understand that dis- |Patches from Europe are strictly censored and that little news gets jout of these countries - affecting |the war, unless the nation in- volved is willing for the story to | \be printed abroad. } Seevcesesovecenedeavecoes — THY IT TODAY — | The Favorite In Key West oSTAR 2+ BRAND CUBAN COFFEE: ON SALE AT ALL GROCERS | eoecenecsenecoussaeseser Pcccccvcebessesesscocoo. John Trent as Tailspin Tommy MYSTERY PLANE Also—Comedy and News PRIZE NITE — iGHT We are equipped to do all kinds of print- ing — quickly, _eco- nomically, and with the best of workman- ship. Call 51 for an estima’ RAPID SERVICE REASONABLE PRICES FREE ESTIMATES THE ARTMAN PRESS PHONE 51 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1939 THE LOWDOWN FROM HICKORY GROVE I been reading where the Com- merce Department predicts the} biggest holiday sales since 1929. | I was nonplussed. So I adjusted my specs’ and ‘took a second look | thinking’ é must’ | take on’ ‘actoufit’néd known New Era_person ever before been guilty of sa something good for 1929. But it checked up—an: was no misprint, ' { Mr. Hopkins, he is flirting with the dog house. He is becoming non compos mentis—as we say in Hickory.Grove. Nobody up there tight next door to the Head Pay- master—if he is not a bit touched —is gonna make such a faux pas. (Latin or French, it is everyday vernac here at Hickory.) But to get back to 1929, brother, that is what I been waiting for— night and day. I had 2 pair of shoes then, and we had turkey— even without a double-jointed ‘Thanksgiving—and I kept my life LUTHER'S LAST EXPERIMENT Luther Burbank, wizard of hor- ticulture, was often pestered by ‘strangers, who desired to know why he didn’t develop this or that—as for example, a grape- fruit without partitions in it. “Well, Mr. Burbank, what mir- acle are you working on now?” one inquisitive individual asked. ‘“Well—it’s a secret”, answered the expert, “but I don’t mind tell- ing you. I'm grafting milkweed on eggplant”. “That’s interesting! And what do you expect to produce?” “Custard”, was the reply. Subscribe to The Citizen—20c weekly. ae | MONROE THEATER Jane Wyman—Allan Jenkins Torchy Plays With Dynamite and Ginger Rogers in STH AVENUE GIRL Matinee—Balcony 10c, Or- chestra 15-20c; Night—15-25¢ ' | | | insurance paid up. And as I look back I cannot remember anybody who was down-in-the-mouth or discouraged. , But there is one thing we did not have in 1929—we had no Docktors of Economics. But we hhad good business. § * Yours with the low down, JO SERRA. Lopez Funeral Service The Season’s Greetings TO ALL OUR FRIENDS AND CLIENTS The First National Bam of Key West Member of the Federal Deposit Insuretice Corporation ee LEN REO ARE RE I Serving Key West and Monroe County Since 1891 For Real Economy For Real Service For Real Protection \ \ DELIVERED DAILY EVERYWHERE Thompson Enterprises INCORPORATED ICE DIVISION PHONE NO. 8 i 8 "9m Glad I Tried Alka-Seltzer and Thery Say It With a Smile! metibers of YOUR family say this? 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