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PAGE FOUR :-: SOCIETY : Division Street School Held Closing Exercises In Auditorium On Friday Parents and friends gathered in the Division Street School auditorium at 10:30 Friday morn- ing to enjoy a program presented by the pupils of the upper grades. Following two selections by the school orchestra the fourth and fifth grades gave several ap-j} propriate vacation numbers. A/classes to High School were: Poem “Vacation Time” was read; Nilo Albury, Forrest Arthur, by Mary Phillips Sawyer; Ann|Garland Cates, Herman Cerezo, Doughtry played a pleasing piano; Robert Cruz, Curry Herring, solo after which Miss Gladys|Donald Hughes, John Knight, Pinder’s pupils displayed the|George Lewis, Jack Matcovich, joys of vacation in a little|Robert McCarty, Robert Pent, Pageant. Mys. Cabot’s grade|Norman Roberts, Melvin E. Rus- gave a short Memorial Day ex-/jsell, Jr. Hilton Tift, Argelia ercise and Mrs. Mullinax’s grade|Acevedo, Anita Aguilar, Betty presented a vacation skit. |Boza, Evelia Chacon, Alice Diaz, The remainder of the program |Joan Doughtry, Ady Fernandez, was devoted to the Sixth Grades | Juanita Griffin, Josephine Garcia, that were promoted to the Junior | Antha Louise Johnson, Rose Mar- High School. shall, Gloria Martinez, Oscarina Donald Hughes gave a reading | Santa Cruz, Mary Thompson. entitled “No More Books.” For-| Francis Mora, Bertha Perez, rest Arthur recited “Mr. Rith-jHildred Roberts, Lauriette Rus- metic.” Juanita Griffin and Joan|sell, Florence Saunders, Phillip Doughtry sang a duet, accom- | Arevalo, George Charlow, Ovaldo panied by Elizabeth Ann Gard-|Gomez, Abelardo Gonzalez, Lee ner. Norman Cerezo also gave a|Griffin, Robert Gwynn, Gilbert | reading, “Explorers All”, which|Hall, Fermin Hernandez, Hugh; was followed by a promotion|Hinde, Edward Johnson, Wood- play entitled “Hidden Treasures.” |row Niles, Armando Perez, Gil- “Summer Vacation”, a reading, | bert Richardson, Harold Richard-} was given by Mary Thompson|son, Harry Sawyer, Joe Thomp- and the entire class sang the'!son, Ruth Beccaise, Onelia Gon- class song. Remaining on the!zalez, Gloria Knowles and Ray- Stage, they were presented with |mond Thompson. | Local UDC Chapter To Meet Thursday individual promotion cards by Principal Hamilton. Perfect at- tendance awards were also given out at. this time. ..The, exercises lconcluded . with, .a “Good-bye” }song and the Flag, Salute and Star Spangled Banner by the audience. : Promotions Those promoted Miss Castro Visits Oscar Milians Miss Elizabeth de Castro,| There will be a meeting of | daughter of Alejandro de Castro,|Stephen R. Mallory chapter, of Tampa, was an arrival yester-|United Daughters of The Con- day afternoon over the Overseas |federacy, on Thursday, June 6, | Highway, and will spend a short|held at the home of the presi-/ | vacation in the city as guest of|dent, Mrs. Ross C. Sawyer, 523) her cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar |Eaton street, at 4:30 in the after- Milian, at their home, 1100/noon. wees aoe A Raa il ee members of the chapter are | iss de astro is a student 0: i Hillsborough High School and |Teduested to be pres ae =| will be graduated next June. visiting daughters w = tended a cordial welcome. | iS Se | | | St. Paul’s To Hold ——— | Card-Bingo Party | Mrs. O. Velasquez announces | poe the engagement of her daughter, | A card and bingo party for the Marguerite Velasquez, to Rich- | henefit of St. Paul’s Episcopal | ard C. Smith, U.S.N. i i ish | Church will be held in the Parish The wedding will take pl. i 7 i the near ee © place "| Hall on Friday evening, 8:00 o'clock. es §=6There will be refreshments NOTES OF TODAY served and prizes galore. A large jattendance is expected. TR I aM i | Friends Had Lett |WHAT AMERICA IS . Schick, visitor from Cam-| DOING IN THIS WAR) Marguerite Velasquez’ Engagement Announced den, N. J., was an arrival by bus yesterday afternoon for a visit} from 6-A |was given by Miss Remond and 'NO FIFTH COLUMNS THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ANNUAL MEETING OF THE FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST, BOSTON, MASS., JUNE 3 Sage of Emporia Likes ae Spirit of N.Y> World's Fair bs Se - to the Amer- | while there decided to give jher musical career to ' (Special te The Citizen) BOSTON, Mass., June 4—An||® appeal for calm and more faith in the omnipotence of God in the turmoil, featured the gathering here yes- terday of thousands of Christian Scientists from ll over the Matters, C.S.B.; of New York, daughter of the late Major Gen. eral Edwin F. Glenn, of the Unit ed States “Army, was elected || President of The Mother Church | to succeed George Shaw Cook, | losB, of Brookline, Mass. Ed-'}. {ward L. Ripley of Brookline and | | Ezra W. Palmer of Marshfield were re-elected Treasurer and Clerk, respectively. The chief duty of the President is to serve jas presiding officer at the annual meeting. Mrs. Matters spent her child- hood in various army posts in the United States, Alaska, the Philippines, China, and Japan. She studied music in Boston where she became interested in Christian Science, joined The Mother Church and three years after,, Second Church in New York, She then went abroad to continue her study of music, and up Hevote fill time to Christian Scjence prac- tice. : Following Normal Class in- struction in Christian Science in the Board of Education in Bos- ton she became an authorized | teacher. The following spring she was elected Second Reader of |The Mother Church. She served |as a lecturer on Christian Science | until July, 1938, and since then} Low food prices, county fair atmosphere and an appeal itan heart—these New York, declared William Allen White (above) in an editorial after visiting the big exposition. The noted newspaper editor pictured with Peter William Morris, 20 months old, beside Jo David- son’s heroic bronze figure of Walt Whitman at the Fair. “This baby takes a picture like an angel.” he commented. Besides Renond MILD TEMPERATURE On Cuban Vacation Miss Benildes Remond, princi- HERE pal at San Carlos school. left on} the S.S. Cuba yesterday to spend THERMOMETER FAILED TO the summer vacation with her relatives in Havana. REACH 90, DESPITE RE- PORTS TO CONTRARY Graduation exercises were held | at the school on Friday, May 31, at which several skits were pre-| sented by the various classes, pre- . pared by Mrs. Josephine Esquin. | According to the monthly me- aldo and Elva Esquinaldo, teach-!terological summary issued for ers. Cuban representatives were/the month of May by the Wea- present at the exercises as well|ther Bureau, there was not ‘one as: members of the school’s board day in the month that the ther- of dircetors and parents of stu-|mometer registered 90 degtees, dents. A resume of the school’s despite all things said to the bon- actviities during the past year trary. There was one day, May 26, the whole staff was compliment-| when the thermometer reached ed by the officials present. |89 but that was the hottest day {of the month—all others being j;cooler than that. with friends, and on arriving} (Continued from Page One) | found a telegram advising that, had constructed are the most; they had departed for Miami.| perfected of all those utilized by {| Mr. Schick took the 7 o’clock bus|the French troops. The volun-} OR WAR WANTED (Continued from Page One) eral communications law com-/| |fall was recorded on May - 26, |when precipitation registered 1.30 inches. Wind was in the prevaliing strike the keynote of thc World’s Fair of 1940 in | DURING MAY The greatest amount of rain-| for Mianti this morning. On Lake Worth Visit teers who drive them accomplish | pelled them to “treat all candi- their mission with a disregard to|dates for public office alike”. fatigue and danger which is. be-| |NO INTERVENTION jdirection during the | which was from the east, and the highest velocity was register- month, | Jim Voliva, member of the} yond all praise”. * | personnel of the Destroyer Aaron} Thus wrote Premier Paul Rey-| Ward, left on the early bus this|naud of France to James Wood | morning for a visit with his/ Johnson, president of the Amer-| family at Lake Worth, Fla. \ican Ambulance Corps. | a | Johnson announces that two) Returns To Birmingham |moré units'aré to be sent to! Donald Hughes, who had been|France and that orders for 50) visiting for the season with his}more have been placed. ‘Ship-| brother and sister-in-law, Mr.|ment will be made within the and Mrs. Clyde L. Hughes, left/next few days. | on the early bus this morning} ———_— | for his home in Birmingham, |MACHINE TOOLS Alabama. | Pointing out that the govern-| See ment would need $200,000,000 of Concludes Visit machine tools to equip armament} Mrs. R. P. Meaders, wtio was! factories in the new defense pro-} visiting in Key West for two/gram, Secretary Morgenthau re-| months with Mr. Meaders, en-!ceived a plan advanced .by Toll joying her stay, left today by!Berna, general manager of the} bus for Miami and will there| National Machine Tool Builders take train for her home in Chat- Association, Col. H. K. Ruther- tanooga, Tenn. \ford of the’army, Capt. E. D. Al-} e: aoa | my of the navy, and others, which On Business Trip |ealls for an intensive training Joe Knight left on the morning program to provide skilled me-} bus for a short business trip to chanics for the machine tool in- Miami and expects to return this dustry. ercning, | The plan calls for training pri-j PRESS marily of both young men and Waite Boy Recovering their elders in the, factories al- Bernard H. Waite, who had ready producing’ n chine_ tools, been to Miami to visit Mrs. Waite |High officials consid “this plan and son, Bernard, Jr., the latter | 27) important ohe it the work of | undergoing treatment for in- | vegemanient, = pe > 4 | fantile paralysis, returned yester-| = ' day afternoon and said the boy| anwy TANKS i is coming along nicely, and the Funds for more than 1,600 light family has every hgpe of his re-| 244 medium tanks were included | covery. |in the supplementary budget re-/| | quests for the*army and navy—! | bringing visualization of a mech-| janized force comparable to that jused by the Germans in their Flanders’ drive. Approximately | $1,375,000,000 is earmarked for! this and allied projects, which would, among other things, bring! the total tank force of the United ; States up to 3,000 tanks of va- Tious size and types. | Meets Friends Here Charles Mott, retired machinist from, the U. S. Navy, is in the city meeting his many friends and expects to be. here for a week. Mr. Mott says that he has begun to feel at home. Left For Cuba Mrs. Maria Albury and daugh- poras Mrs. Cuca Nunez, left on the teamship Cuba yesterday for| with Mrs. Albury’s eldest =| Havana where they will remain ‘ter for a month’s visit. —_ i} ; ed on May 3 and May 30, when The “Roll Call of American'92 miles per hour was recorded. Women”, with ~ headquarters in | Highest in May since 1871 was on Chicago, has been organized.on|May 2 in 1937 when it was 43 a country-wide ‘basis for _ the ‘Miles per hour. pose of keeping the United! “There were 11 days Clear, 13 out of the European wer. |days partly cloudy. and ‘sé Formation ‘ was by lcloudys days. Measurable | Harriet’ E.* Vittum, na |itation of .01 inch or. aptre was known ‘social worker and World | recorded on five days. ee War I member of the council of} a national defense. She has been elected executive chairman of the board of directors. Millions _ of American women are expect-| . ed to be enlisted before the sum-| Realty transfer recorded at the mer is over. county courthouse this - morning Archbishop John T. MecNicho-| was‘as follows: ~ REALTY TRANSFER las, in urging “peace groups in| From B. M. Goetz and .:hus- every parish”, wrote in a pas-|band, L. M. Goetz, to. Mitchell toral letter the past weekend White and Nellie White, husband that “we hope our people, before and wife, Lots 1 and 2, Block 7 it is too late, will make every ef-/of Marathon, a subdivision of fort to counteract the work of Government Lot 3, Section 10, propagandists and“ to insist that Township 66, south, Range 32 Congress shall keep our country east, for $600. at peace”. — Dennis Cafdinal Dougherty as a priest and turned his mind SIDE ONE’S ON to things international. He de-| ——— a Sie clared that “we should mind our my An ay own business and not become BERN, Jun catspaws” in nations’ rivalties swiss who World War I taught Ameritans, ‘Republican. i n Brigad he added ,“not to intermeddle’ during the war in Spain got sen- with the rival struggles of greed tences ranging from one to six and vengeance of the European months in jail when they return- countries”. jed to Switzerland. Similar jail “Dear President | Roosevelt— terms face any Swiss who en- Keep America Out Of War” read ||ists in the army of any European an inscription in black painted country at war. letters on a gray imitation card-| Nevertheless, Charles Magis- board tank sent to the chief ex-'trini, a Swiss from Neucha! ecutive by the American Stu- now living in Corsica, obtained dent Union of Cornell University. the Federal Council’s permission The tank is approximately six to join the French army—to pray, feet high and on top appear a tur- not to fight. ret and gun. Magistrini, a Protestant clergy- —_— |man, wanted to extend his parish The platypus has a duck-like to cover mobilized French Protes- bill, four webbed feet, ai fur coat. tants in Corsica, but could not do It lays eggs, but suckles its!so unless he joined the French young. ‘army as a “captain-chaplain,” has been practicing and teaching | the annizal’ meeting of || couragem: lables the Christian Scientist to! MRS. MARGARET MATTERS Incoming President of The First Church of Christ, Scientist, Boston, Massachusetts Christian Science in New York City. Commenting dn the turbulent international situation, the in- coming President said that power of individual man to meet influences claiming to induce’ dis- ent and apathy. It en- (Till '7-30%p. m.. Wednesday? overcome the belief that war can | Occasional showers, tonight and be of permanent advantage, or|Wednesday; moderate east and that it is to be feared. It destroys | southeast winds. fresh at times the desire for an unrighteous, un-| Fjorida: Occasional showers just, and enslaving peace; and it tonight and Wednesday. sets right that wrong sense of ¥ values which would prefer this Jacksonville to Florida 3 so-called peace to that active |“ warfare between the flash and | ° Spirit which The Mother Church typifies, and which ultimates in the victory of spirituality and Love”. ‘THIEVES ROB TWO CHURCHES, | _ (Continued from Page One) jed. There were other funds in} |the safe the amounts of which} jhad to be checked, before any jidea could be reached as to the; amount taken. | News of the robbery was kept out of-yesterday’s issue at the; 'day it was learned that nothing jhad been found out as to the} robbers. It was also reported to the! sheriff by Rev. A. L. Maureau, | S. J., of St, Mary’s Star of The) |Sea Church that thieves had en- tered the church and had robbed | the “poor boxes” twice in the last few days. ! Two weeks ago they entered the church and it was found that ‘the box had been robbed} and that entrance was gained by filing off the locks. Recently al metal box, containing the money, } had been entered and the thief} used a duplicate key. It was said at the office of the sheriff that in neither case had the thief, or thieves, left any ~The pronunciation of many of | . places in the war news can iPr EE ile Pree Ree ee] ine i tit ut hel i ane ZUIDER ZEE SE eeEEEnEnEinnnEEnnEnnee William Lloyd abolitionist at one time, of the National | will be inserted in The Citizen at Possibly squalls tonight and Wes- CLASSIFIED COLUMN |“ ANSWERS TO ai te imate’ is The Cues ot| TODAY'S DAILY QUIZ Below are the Answers to Today's the rate of one-cent (Ic) a word Less. No. English—cn’-vel-op (ang as in open); French—on- vel-op. Monopilanc. Cinema. Gallup Poll Ann Morrow Lindbergh Battle of Jutland. No. Iran. fie their advertisements charged. Sepa oye EIGHT - ROOM FURNISHED| HOUSE, modern; two vei-/ Today’s Horoscope ———_ Tooms, excellent twin beds; hot water. Box CPC, The Citi- ‘ 7 zen. may30-tf} Today's native will be active jand strong. but restless and craf- | APARTMENT FOR RENT: Mod- ty; quick tempered and probally ern conveniences. Near air | secretive and with a wandering base. $20 month, lights includ-'tendency. Those born im the ed. 702 Pearl St. jun3-3tx | night hours will have more of a | chance for success and realizatios APARTMENT, 1104 DIVISION of hopes than the others. TUESDAY, JUNE 4 1948 BRIE Key West and Vicinity: Cloudy. woMam 01 DEES OF GEIEF — Taispe Toes Soha ——— DANGES FLIGET 3 —Seral Comaty LEADING HOTEL Se —<— = w= =<“ COmFORT ae oe ee oe oe = Ses ee ee i . ; > x i i ci i the first paper published i | for the i abstemption | ir F