The Key West Citizen Newspaper, July 26, 1940, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR FLORIDIANS ON SALVATION ARMY | NWSA COUNCI HAROLD COLEE, STATE CHAM- BER EXECUTIVE, AND GEN.| Cc. P. SUMMERALL NAMED; 78 MEMBERS IN GROUP (Special to The Citizen) NEW YORK, July 26—The ap-! pointment of two Floridians to membership on the National War Service Advisory Council of the Salvation Army was announced here today by Thomas J. Watson, the council’s chairman. They are Harold Colee, vice-president and general manager of the Florida State Chamber of Commerce, and General Charles P. Summerall, former chief of staff of the Unit- ed States army and now presi- dent of the Citadel at Charleston, S.C. Seventy-eight members com- prise the council and included among them are Preston S. Ark- wright of Atlanta, Governor C. A. Bottolfson of Idaho, Congress- man Joe Bryson of South Caro- lita, Senator Arthur Capper of Kansas, former attorney general of the U. S. Homer S. Cummings, Governor Frank M. Dixon of Alabama, Mrs. Herbert Hoover of Palo Alto, Calif, Governor Her- bert'H. Lehman of New York, Governor A. Harry Moore of New Jersey and William Allen White ‘Dance In Rainbow Room Tomorrow Night Management of the La Concha; !Hotel announced today that a | dance will be held in the Rain- {bow Room tomorrow night, | starting at 9:30 o’clock. ‘Cripples’ Friend 'Heads B. P. O. Elks | THE KEY WEST CITIZEN | | | 75th Mer. Time (City Office) Temperatures | | Highest last 24 hours Jerome Collins and his Beach-! combers will furnish the music. Mr. Collins will be remembered jas the maestro who opened the 'La Concha hotel back in 1925. It is requested thag all gentle- men wear their.,e8ats at this dance. No admission is to be charged. of Emporia, Kans. | Immediate war service de- mands upon the Salvation Army are not anticipated, declared Chairman Watson in announcing the appointments, “but in the event of a national emergency”. jhe added, the army will be pre- pared. He said that army officers and volunteer workers now are rendering heroic service in all in- vaded countries with the excep- tion of Poland. Harold Colee said today that he had accepted appointment as a member of the Salvation Army’s national war council. “I have long been actively interested in its work”, he stated, that Florida patents of boys who will be called into the service of their country will be gratified to know that the Salvation Army, as it has so energetically done in the past, will be on the job”. Nlbury’s Economy Cash Grocery | Free Delivery—Phone 198—Cor. Francis and Southard Streets Specials For FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY GROCERIES SUGAR, 5 lbs. _ MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE, ib 22C SIAM RICE, 5 Ibs, 22¢ LA ESTRELLA GUAVA 24 lb box 9c oa 5e 15¢ 5e FRESH STRING BEANS. 2 lbs. 15¢ 10¢ FRESH CORN-ON- 23¢ nZ2€ THE-COB, 2 for PICKLES, quarts P. & G. SOAP, 3 for POTATOES, 10 Ibs. ONIONS, Ib. MEATS Country Roll BUTTER, lb. LARD, lb. -29¢ 8c HYGRADE 4 PICNICS, Ib. a ‘1B BREAKFAST BACON, a 18¢ peti RIBS, 25¢e 2i¢ 10c 22¢ HONEYCOMB 25c TRIPE, 2 lbs. 22¢c | TAILS, lb. LAMB SHOULDER. whole, Ib. LAMB LEG, whole, Ib. MORRELL HAM, string end, lb. FOR REAL SUMMER PRICES TRADE Tip Top Grocery Cor. Division and Thomas Streets AT THE and Meat Market Phone 203 j EVERYDAY 6 RING SPECIALS | ; & POTATOES noc 5 lbs. PICNIC HAMS, tb (2) Maxwell House COFFEE 21c can MATCHES large box, 10 c 5 for Gibbs TOMATO PASTE, can Se FLOUR, 6 lbs. for ____ Kellogg's CORN FLAKES, 2 for z 23c 15¢ “and I know} EADING the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks as its new Grand Exalted Ruler is Joseph G. Buch, of Trenton, N. J. Buch, who is general chairman of the New Jersey State Elks Crippled Chil- dren's Committee; chairman of the { New. Jersey Crippled Children’s Commission and chairman of the New Jersey Unemployment,Compen- sation Commission, is credited with | accomplishing one of the nation’s most outstandifig achievements in caring for the.needs of New Jersey's 15,000 j crippled children. A prominent hotel man, and a former president of the New Jersey State Hotel Association, Buch will direct the activities of more than 500,000 Elks in nearly 1700 lodges throughout the United States | and its possessions. Rev. Kelleher Left On Miami Visit Rev. P. J. Kell Mary’s Star of the Sea Catholic Church left over the highway; yesterday for a short visit in Mi- ami. Edna Roberts Has House Guests Misses Beulah Lee and Minnie Louise Williams of Tampa have been the house guests of Miss Edna Roberts for several days Kelleher of St./ Lowest last night {Mean _ |Rainfall, 24 hours ending 7:30 a. m., inches ___ | Total, rainfall since July 1, inches __ Excess since July” is inches Total rainfall since Jan. 1, inches Deficiency since “January a inches 2.74 Wind Direction and Velocity N—4 miles per hour Relative Humidity F 79% Barometer at 7:30 a. m. today Sea level, 30.06 (1018.0 millibars) Tomorrow's Almanac Sunrise - 5:52 a. m. Sunset 7:15 p. m. Moonrise Moonset Moon, 27th 0.00 4.28 1.65 14.66 a “12: 52 p. m. last quarter, 2 6:29 a. m. Tomorrow's Tides (Navai Base) AM. 2:52 - 9:41 204 | FORECAST 1 (Till 7:30 p. m., Saturday) Key West and Vicinity: Fair! ‘tonight; Saturday partly cloudy} fwith a few scattered thunder- showers; gentle to moderate va- riable winds. Florida: Generally fair tonight! and Saturday, except a few scat- tered thundershowers in extreme} south portion Saturday. P.M.; High - Low EAT VEGETABLES, PLEA (By Associated Press) tion to “seasonal surpluses” of; vegetables will help the farmer | and the nation’s general food sit- ; uation, says J. H. Holland, rep- resentative of the federal Surplus Commodities Corporation. land appealed to the public = buy vegetables when they are! plentiful. Before returning home from college this summer, Miss Rob-} jerts visited them in Tampa. Observation taken at 7:30 a. m,| ! LOS ANGELES—More atten-! Hol-j 'DRIVE STARTS TO | _ HONOR S. FOSTER |STATE GROUP SEEKS TO) | PLACE.NOTED COMPOSER IN HALL OF FAME | | 4MAYO, July 26 NS). —Editor ‘Paul Runge of the Mayo Free} “Press Salis. attention to the fact that an opportuniy is being giv-| en every music loving Southern- ,er to give Stephen Foster, com- ‘poser of “Way Down Upon the Suwannee River”,-a vote and a boost into the “Hall of Fame”. The election for the “Hall of | Fame” for great Americans will be held in September of this year. Every American is a share- {holder and the selection is made in accordance with the demand jot the public as evidenced by | votes sent to the electors. Certainly Florida should sup- port Foster, and Editor Runge} | urges that those who would like |to assist in the campaign to place | Stephen Foster in the “Hall of} 'Fame” write immediately to The! {Curator, Foster Hall Collection, | University of Pittsburgh, © Pitts- burgh, ‘Pa.,' requesting the list of ;electors. Each member should he! |written a letter, urging that they | |cast their vote for Stephen Col. jlins Foster, and set forth: wh; you feel the great composer is} entitled to this consideration. No finer tribute could be paid | the composer of America’s best; |loved_melodies than to elect him, | jand ail lovers of Foster’s grand | TELEVISION NEEDS Engineer Builds — Them| By E. C. BUTTERFIELD Associated Press Radio Editor NEW YORK, July 26.—Intro- ducing the gadget engineer—Bill Eddy—and his latest gadget, “Little Joe.” Eddy’s job at the NBC tele- vision studios is to put together all sorts of stage props and things that move for television programs. Eddy calls them video | effects. Everything But Talk As a video effect, or just as a gadget, Little Joe is a wow. An animated puppet, dressed in full cowboy regalia and full of mo- tors and wheels, Little Joe can smoke, ride a_ pint-sized horse named Alfred and do about everything but talk. The effect is of a cartoon in action. Later, says Eddy, there will be other Little Joes—a whole troupe of them. Little Joe’s primary | purpose in life was to appear | between acts in the drama, “The Rabbit Falls.” Eddy, as a 6 foot, 5 inch gadget engineer, speaks profoundly of | his profession. Hours Of Trial “The controlling factor in gad- get engineering,” he says, ecessity for perfect perform- | ance within the space of the few i minutes allotted to a special video effect. A gadgeteer must have a broad knowledge of art, electricity, mechanics, optics and chemistry. Still, he does have “js the| WINTER PARK, July 26 @NS —Dr. Hamilton Holt, presiden Rollins College, and a ii Democrat, today issued 2 stat ment calling on all Democrats » unite against a third term for President Roosevelt as a step to- ward. dictatorship. Dr. Holt: said that the Pres ‘dent's qualifications did met es i that be j tersinto the question, might be the best qualifi American for the next four lieutenant in the submarine divi- | sion of the navy before he | Switched to radio communacatior | and experimentation. He entered television five years age. He bh made so many gadgets—from optical mechanical dissolve ma- chine for use on titles, to mow ing whatzits—that he probe can’t remember them ail make them he uses most thing, including fishline. FIRST IN KEY WEST WITH THE FINEST IN MEATS — — — BERMUDA. MARKET | jold favorites are urged to act at | recurrent hours of trial. Not al- | jones | Cees aS See | Subscribe to The Citizen-—20c | weekly. es oe Tommie’s Skating Palace | Beginners, 10 to 11:30 A. M. Afternoons, 2:00 to 4:00 P. M. Evenings 8:00 to 10:30 P. M. | Clean, Healthful Recreation An Orderly Decent Amusement Establishment x —. 25¢; } Southard St., near Duval _ Baffled By A Budget? Then--- | CAMPBELL'IZE via Broadway | | A Wealth of Health and Freshness Sealed in Cans! Comblids., Sours AMERICA’S FAVORITES 16c 10c 25¢ | TOMATO ; SOUP, 2 for CHICKEN or MUSHROOM. each OTHER KINDS, 3 for COMBINATION SALE’ Franco-American as SPAGHETTI 1 \Franco-American MACARONI Rich With Fine Cheese Flavor ALL 3 FOR Meat Department | Old-fashioned | PICNIC HAM. ib | FRYERS 5 Nu-Maid OLEO or * PORK CHOPS, _25¢e _1e Grocery Department Maxwell House COFFEE, ib 21°C Lucky Dice CONDENS- ED MILK, = 9c PEAS, 2 cans 29c Pillsbury FLOUR: 5 25¢ oe A9e CHESTERFIELD or CAMEL CIGARETTES, ae $1.31 fea 2 ee 39c 25¢ Red Label KARO, 3-lb. can PEACH-PEAR MIX, 3 cans ___ ~ 19¢ . No can _ 25¢ SPRY: 1-1b. 18¢ - 49e can Suni CLEANSER, 3-16 =e 15¢ _22¢ Green Giant Ibs. it ORANGE JUICE, No. 5 can _ cans ____ RINSO. 2 small pkgs. __ SUGAR. Campbell's Fancy, STRING BEANS OUR LARGEST SELLER 16-o0z., 3 for 23-02., for Camella, TOMATO Nature made it keep that way. 14-02. 2 for 15¢ Be 15¢ FAY’S ways do his gadgets work.” Originally from Saratoga Springs, N. Y., Eddy was a MONROE THEATER Lucille Balli—Jane Ellison YOU CAN'T FOOL YOUR WIFE and CHAN IN PANAMA Matinee—Balcony 10c, Or- chestra 15-20c; Night—15-25¢ FAY’S Opening In Key West! See Us Saturday ‘NEW! — Bandeau Top Circular Skirt White and Novelty Weaves $1.00 We specialize in Sunback Dresses up to size 48. | We aso make Sunbacks in Silks |} OUR OWN— Dresses Uniforms Millinery Sport Wear Novelty Slacks and Slack Suits Yard Goods See Our... 10e - 25e - 5c COUNTERS LEE’S FOOD CENTER Duval and Angele Streets RRR RARE ; PFALIAS MaAcABCe |? = 10¢ : VACUUM Pack SE=CLE MANY OTHER SPECIALS FREE DELIVERY 602 Duval Street \) Phone 94 Free Delivery

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