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PAGE SIX SOCIETY THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Ripley And A Diamondback Annual May Fete To Be Staged By Key West Schools Wednesday Parent-Teacher groups of the three Key West schools, High! School, Harris and _ Division Vera Waite; 10B, Canalejo, Gloria 9A-1, Lysle . McCown, Armanda! ! Hernandez; | Betty street, released the program to-|Kline; 9A-2, .Howard Johnson, for the annual May Fete to |Ruth Stricker; |Wells, Margaret afternoon, be held Wednesday May 1, at Bayview Park, starting | { at 4:30 o'clock. yeneral chairman for the af-} fair is Mrs. B. C. Papy and her assistants are Mrs. Lawton Wat-, son of the High school, Mrs. L.| O. DeLozier of Harris school and | Mrs. Alice Roberts of Division Street school WPA Bar1 will furnish music for the various dances and fea- ture numbers to be presented. Program will feature the fol- Jowing numbers: Coronation of the Queen. class, King Eugene Fabal, will be/ King, and Virginia Thompson, | also a senior, Will be Queen. At- tendants in the crowning cere- mony will be: 12B, Ray Pierce, Maud Roberts; 11A, Anthony; Perez, Carolyn Cherry; 11B, Eugene Sawyer, Olga Aguilar; 10A-1, Helio Gomez, Ruth Baker; 10A-2, Albury, Edna Suarez; Warren Russell, Masic Graduates Held Reunion A reunion of music graduates} and} Picked from the senior | 9B-1, Harold Russell; 9B-2, Buddy Miller, Rosalie Le Fe. Kitty Parade for children of, pre-school age. Prizes will be; awarded for this feature. Mrs. 'Magdeline Huddleston has charge of this number. Colonial Drill by first-grade “pupils of Division Street school. ;Mrs. Susan Gardner and Mrs. _ |Charlotte Boyden, of that school, jare in charge. ! Balloon Drill by }first-grade pupils. | Williams and Mrs. kins are in charge. Dance of the Fairies by pupils fof Harris school. Miss Alce | Curry in charge. Harris school Miss Helen Thelma Wat- “We. The only man, besides Ross Allen, ever to enter the pits at Sil- mnie Bee a ne pte, ver Springs where poisonous venom is ” ed” from rattlesnakes | ing of the Wadmal”, by fourth’ and cottonmouth moccasins was Robert “Believe-It-Or-Not” Ripley | and fifth-grade pupils at Division | (jn white) shown here holding one of the monster diamondbacks as | Street school. Mrs. Eva Warner he and Allen did a coast-to-coast broadcast direct from the “milk- | in charge. | ing” pits at Allen's reptile institute at Silver Springs. The pits con- | The Maypole dance by second, | tain mare than 500 deadly reptiles. third and fourth grades of Divi-| sion Street school. Mire. Warner queiaas saeTNC BLITZKRIEG ACTION | (Continued from Page One) | | |been hoping to use Narvik as| But there \their No. 1 port to keep from ;Confidential { The} In the lened with financist panic. ldepression has already begun. ithe “far distance is also | {spectre of starvation. evidence. from is more dispatches NOTES OF TODAY Botan: To Iowa Mrs. Frank Smith and son of the Convent of Mary Im-! maculate was held yesterday aft- | ernoon at St. Cecilia’s Hall. Musi- cal selections played by several! niembers of the group, contests! and community singing head- lined the program Refreshments! were served. Oldest graduate present was Mrs. Manuel Perez, graduate of' 1914, Others present were: Mesdames Robert Dopp, Mar- garet D. Green, Misses Alice! Jenks, Mary E. Whalton, Celina Betancourt, Alce Curry, Rose Appel, Beatrice Moreno, Yvonne Pinder and Messrs. John Robin- | son and Charles Roberts, Rasco" 1-Anderson Marriage Saturday The marriage of Miss ell, daughter of Mr. andj S. Russell, and J. Glen- | wood Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Anderson, took place Saturday night at 8:00 o'clock at the bride’s home on North Beach. Rev. O. C. Howell, of Ley Memprial church, © offi- ciated. Mrs. William Cates, sister of the bride, was matron of honor and Joe Russell, Jr., man to the groom Both Mr. and Mrs. Anderson are graduates of Key West High school. QUES Bingo Party Tomorrow Large crowd is expected at the | Bingo Party Tuesday evening for the 21, Order of East is being given at the home Mrs. Olaf Soderberg, 1118 Flem- | Waterloo, Iowa. , Virginians Noted Changes Edna} was best benefit, of Fern Chapter No, | ern Star. Affair | of | They |a weeding out of nazis from the They warfare in the North Sea. were moving material up to Bo- |Swedish army and navy. den to double track the state-|indicate the Swedes have been | owned electric raliroad to Nar-!counting Germany naval losses vik. But now that Allies and jin the most recent clashes with Germans are figntnig for Narvik, | England, and figure they have as |that’s out—for the time being. |good a Baltic fleet as the Ger- And Sweden has no more than ; mans. a Saar (Che - a year’s supply of balanced ra-! The Swedes have many heavy r. ani irs. umphreys, | tions for her people, and who had been visiting for one cops of wheat in prospect. The week in the city and who noticed | stock market his a new low in many changes since their last earjy April. Manufacturing plants .visit, one year ago, left on the/in southern Sweden are closing early bus this morning for their gown, and the wharfs in Stock- | home in Norfolk, Va. holm are piled high with ex- bolstering their submarine fleet ports that can’t move out because & the Baltic, and in addition ap- lon Visit To ‘Leesburg of the British blockade, and the |parently have been buying un- | “Mrs. Andrew Pritchard and | German counter-blockade. |dersea boats from—of all people daughter, Barbara Irene, left on} Tyat means the Swedish gov: | Mussolini. the early bus this morning for a .nment must move soon to coax } Have Supplies Now visit, with relatives in Leesburg, | supplies into her country through ' Furtherthore, while the Swedes | ' Fla.+ somebody's blockade lines. She }face ultimate starvation due to can’t hope for supplies from Ger- | War pressure on their shipping, j|many. But she can hope the Al- for the time being they have lies will let her through at Nar- | Supplies for a quick thrust to the !aid of Norway. Stocks of gaso- line, and food sent to Sweden for trans-shipment to Finland a month or two ago are still held John, who had been visiting in Key West for a while with Mr. Smith, who is a member of the personnel of the Destroyer ; Twiggs, left this morning on the 7 o'clock bus for their home in have been able to transport into Norway aboard ships or planes. That too, is an advantage in war- fare. The Swedes have been Visited. Here One Month Tom. McDermott, who had’ been yisiting for one month with his |brother in the city, left on. the early bus this morning for his | home in Hollywood, Fla. Already Swedish manufactur- ers are moving their raw mate- rials and machinery out of south- | ern Sweden up to Norrkoping, near Stockholm. This is especial- ly true of rubber, an extremely important war material. Here's The Tip-off But the best tip-off on the \trend of events in Sweden are | dispatches from Stockholm you have been reading in your papers every day recently, quoting Swedish newspapers. These dis- patches doubtless report facts, but primarily they are reporting facts favorable to the Allies, des- pite the fact that the Swedish government must have known 'Germany would protest. Now that has happened. t And at the same time, Sweden has protested against German! airplane flights over Swedish }t¢r- |Returned To Miami | Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Shivers, ‘who spent yesterday in Key West visiting places of interest, left this morning for Miami. Fuller Warren Is THE DARK HORSE For Governor Judge Trammell Was Here Judge Worth Trammell, can- |didate for reelection to the Cir-| ;euit Court, Group 3, who was a | visitor in the city for two days, jleft this morning for his home in Miami, accompanied by Attorney |Charles Knowles. | Judge Barns On Visit Judge Paul D. Barns, candidate for reelection as Circuit Judge, Group 4, who’ spent the week- jend in the city. left yesterday jafternoon for Miami. { ‘starving under the pinch of the |Scandinavia also tell the story of | short | guns compared with the artillery | jeither the Germans or the Allies | ing Street. Refreshments will and prizes awarded. | vitory, and some press reports in- ; a . ‘dicate the Swedes feel they're Whites Visited In Miami | made to reconnoiter Swedish de- Mrs. Mitchell White and _ son, jengae Mitchell, Jr., spent a delightful cate eh weekend trip in Miami as house-|,,7neTe You have @ background {guests of Mr. and Mrs. George ? Manson. be served a | Quesado-Castro Naptials Saturday | "MONROE THEATER Gary Cooper - Ray Millard BEAU GESTE with Marriage license was granted to Marino Castro and Eloina Quesado Saturday afternoon and the wedding ceremony was |Home To Oregon Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Smith,! who have been visiting for sev- 3 na H 1 days on a sightseeing trip performed Saturday evening by |&T® as e “ a Raia aad +.|through Florida and had a very j Enrique Esquinaldo, Jr., at his gedpyeble eae, left over thel office on Duval street. Ine : . Witnesses to the wedding were|Mehway this morning for their} chestra 16-20: Haribert Quesado and _ Isabel Quesado and a few members of families of the bride and groom. Matinee—Balcony 10c, Or- Night—15-25¢ |Enjoying Sightseeing Trip | Mrs. Manthalus Woessner, W. W. Woessner and Mrs. Billee | Woessner and Mrs John W. Rus- sell, who are on a sightseeing trip and enjoying it greatly, especially Realty transfers recorded at the display at the Tropical Aqua- the county court house this |Tium, left for their home in In-| morning are as follows \dianapolis, Indiana, this morn-| From A. M. Adams and wifé| ing. Lettie Adams and N. Thompson | and wife Emma M. Thompson, to | Returns Home \ S.-H. Mead, part of government| Mrs. George Morrill. of May- |wood, Illinois, left last evening] lot 2, Section 10, Township 66,/ = and othe r valuable considera-| [tion ment yin the Hany. Beker From, Maude L. Sands, a | 1125 United street. Mrs. Morrill widow, to Berl Ralph Pinder, a|W@S honored guest at a tea given} lot on Washington street, for the | bY Mrs. Baker last Thursday sum of $200. | afternoon. | eecevccccccvccescosccs cnet Ferm Chanter 0.8 EGO GOGTES Benefit Fern Chapter, O.E. s.! Home of MRS. OLAF SODERBERG Leaded ee gatos 1118 Fleming Street My Little Chickadee Tuesday, April 30, 8 P. M. M. | ALSO—Selected Short Subjects EACH PLAYER For Fifty Years A NAME! In Coffee In Key West STRONG ARM BRAND COFFEE THAT'S A REPUTATION | Real Estate Transfers The First National The people are threat- Robt. Preston-Susan Hayward if Fuller COURAGE Fuller ENERGY Fuller YOUTH Fuller PERSONALITY Fuller HONESTY Fuller FIGHT for the BETTER | |LIFE for the BEST STATE in the Union. (Paid for by Monroe County Friends of Fuller Warren) Bank of Key West Member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Serving Key West and Monroe County Since 1891 PULUALEAEALALOLOOLESESEORIA SOL OSESEDSOSIDEEL DEAE TSELEAOOEDE TOLLE LL ALE LD lin Swedish warehouses, and can | |be requisitioned for war. \ Furthermore, the Swedes have evidence that Kussia is getting \friendlier with the Allies, these \days, and is dickering over a jtrade arrangement with Great | Britain. That lessens the fear of !a Russian attack on her back! door. Besides, there’s still little Finland between Sweden and | Russia. {There are several. people in he places in Washington ‘who pect that the escape of King (Maakon from the German forces at the outset of the Norwegian «(var Was not a Norwegian feat— | but Swedish. There was too much, efficiency | around the king near the Swedish border, and too little elsewhere jm Norway. 'MILLARD CONKLIN IN ATT’Y GENERAL RACE (Continued from Page One) and raised on a farm in Western Nebraska. He received his early education in the public schools of | that state, and worked his way through Nebraska Military Academy (high school) and four years of general colleze work at Park College, Missouri. During the World War he en- listed in the aviation service and was called to Berkley, California, for ground training. After the Armistice was signed he entered | Michigan University, working his | way through three years of law school, graduating in 1921. He has been a resident of the {East Coast since 1925 and for the|Convention in Oakland, Cali- MONDAY, APRIL 29, 1940 |past ten years has lived at Holly!W. V. LITTLE TO SPEAK - Hill, Florida. BEFORE W. P. A. CLASS Conklin is a member of the; 4, address on Citizenship will State and local bar associations, te a a the W.P. the Presbyterian Church, Masons, lelivered. to the A and an officer in his Elks Lodge. |Adult Education and Citizenship He also is an energetic member |class by William V. Little, head of the Young Democrats, and was | lof the local employment office, very active in the local and state | tomorrow evening at 7:30 o'clock Junior Chamber of Commerce/in the class room of Douglass until he reached the age limit. High school. He was President of his local} Members of the class are urged Lions Club; served as Deputy |to be present. Interested per- District Governor for the North-|sons have also been invited to east Florida area in 1934-35 and | attend the affair. then was elected. to two terms as} | District Governor of the Lions |Clubs of Florida, 1936-37, 1937-38, being the only District Governor jto be re-elected and serve a {second term in that office. In | July 1938 at the International; |fornia, he was elected as a mem- ber of the Board of Directors of the International Association of Lions Clubs in which capacity he still serves. Conklin’s campaign slogan |“Ask anyone who knows him.” is aK SITIO OTOM TES oe. TSI SS SSS Ss SHOOTITOOLL. ‘ Ti | | For County Judge RAYMOND R. LORD (For Re-Election) For State and County Tax Collector FRANK H. LADD (For Re-Election) For County Commissioner, Fourth District NORBERG THOMPSON 1 For Sheriff BERLIN A. SAWYER He's The Man (SOCKER) For United States Senate Mis Pro-Florida and‘ Pro- Americanism Will Serve You Well For Clerk of Criminal Court LEONARD 8. GRILLON (LENNIE) Service With A Smile! | | For Clerk of the Circuit Court ISADORE L. WEINTRAUB Better Known as “Izzy” | CHAS. FRANCIS COE! These Candidates Have Placed $ Their Hats In The Ring For County Commissioner, Fourth District WILLIAM T. DOUGHTRY, JR. For County Commissioner, Fifth District R. W. CRAIG Known Universally As “Poor Old Craig” of Craig, Fla. For Representative State Legislature BERNIE C. PAPY (For Re-Election) Always Fighting for the Interests of Monroe County Para Representante a la Legislatura del Estado HARRY JOHNSON For Constable, Ist District “A Capable, Efficient and Honest Administration” For County Judge ROGELIO GOMEZ J. TOM WATSON Candidate For Attorney General Efficient and Qualified To Serve Vote For HARRY L. HARRIS For Constable 3rd District, Monroe County For County Commissioner, Fifth District MRS. ELLIE LOWE. (Formerly Ellie O’Rourke) For Member Board of Public Instruction, First District DONALD CORMACK For County Tax Assessor J. OTTO KIRCHHEINER (For Re-Election) For County Tax Assessor CLAUDE GANDOLFO For State Representative For County Commissioner, First District EDUARDO C. GOMEZ. “Eddie” WILLARD M. ALBURY C. FLONEY PELLICIER For Constable 2nd District (For Re-Election) Para Miembro de Instru- cciones Publicas 3° Distrito (For Re-Election) For Justice of the Peace, Second District ENRIQUE ESQUINALDO, JR. (For Re-Election) Re-Elect KARL 0. THOMPSON Por Sheriff Re-Nominate JUDGE WORTH W. TRAMMELL For Circuit Judge (Group 4) For Constable, Ist District PAUL THOMPSON GOVERNOR \ Democratic Primary, May 7, 1940 (Paid Political- Advertisement) hdd de td dddddddddikkddddddddeided did d