The Key West Citizen Newspaper, October 3, 1940, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE FOUR THE KEY WEST CITIZEN THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3 es ‘EXCURSION TRIP | estos aes ene |KAHW'STARPONES | ccontioncd tras Page One ites SOCIETY :-: MONDAY ON CUBA **Sruit rue eapen «Sc i I IAI IITA AY For Whom The Bell Tolls |from the tortures which clipped|of everyone is expressed for the’ = and burnt her scalp, after which |story. she had been raped by the Moor-! The adventure both succeed ish auxiliaries. A brave inno-|and fails—and this is the book cent, for two Officers And Committee Chairmen Who Will Serve K. W. Woman’s Club, Following th oi the new cl West Wom Tues of nouncer mittee chai during t year The complete with held the 1b, on} an- 0 will serve made. t follows here- Officers ric W. Knapp, presi- Mrs. fr | dent Mrs. Rob Roy vice-president. Mrs. Car! Berva president Mrs. A secretary Mr: spondi Mrs. er. Mrs Mrs. rector Mrs. Fredc second vice- M. Morgan, recording corre- , treasur- Jam Dan N: Step! auditor. W. Douglass, di- Louis C. Brinton, director. Departments Si ip — Mrs. nan; Mes- Louis Pierce, A. E. Sharp- L. Roberts, Stephen N. Goshorn, William Reardon, Willard Albu George Archer, Harvey Eagan Leo Pierce. American Watkins, c Stephen F. Herrick, E Cleare, James renus, Willia Peterson Fine Arts worth z Frank Ladd oa E. Berke iz Guy Caricton, F. Townsend Mor- gan, W. H. White, Cyril Marsha A. h Wilhelm Robert Ru Milner and Miss Gra H —Mrs. J. B. Mesdames nstance B. F. Trevor, Allan n L. Grooms, s D. Mo- i August Haydn Me grove, °c C. Duncan. liam Lee, Winter. Norbe Peirce Susie Porter pick re—Mrs. William R. Warren irman; Mesdames Julian J. Marks, } armond Barker, C Mills Ge Thompson, Charles Cu Edwards Golden We ardlow, and D. A. Printz. Publ Health—M: Charles Falk, c Mes: es Vesey John yuise / r, John rmar Carl Mrs. A. M eyburn Pin- High School S Seniors opening meeting} t for the Key! |Stephen F. Lowe 1 com-/| jchairma | quist, |chairman; _ |Spottswood, Philip Cosgrove and Standing Committees | Membership—Mrs. Stephen W.} Douglass, chairman; .-Mesdames | and Edward) Bayly. . AS Re Ingling, dames A: M. Hew- ett, E. E. Williams, Otto Lund- Cyril Marshall; Misses Mary Trevor and Ieen Williams. Book—Miss Mary Trevor, Mesdames Robert | John B. Maloney. Hospitality—Mrs. Eola Swic good, chairman; Mesdames Wil- liam Arnold, Homer B. Herrick, John Costar, Suzanne Staley. Jack Gaiti, James Adams, Bernie C. Papy, Ella Cash, Lillie Cold, Melvin Russell, W. Earl Julian, Gladys Mostinck, Lionel Plum- mer, J. G. McMullen, W. Hunt Harris, Sebastian Cabrera, How- ard Wilson, Jeff Knight, H. J. Miller, John Sawyer, Ross C. Sawyer, W. L. Bates, W. S. Putnam, Neil Knowles, J. R. Valdez, Harry Shaw, Leo War-}. ren, Allan Cleare, Jr., Victor Moffatt, Luther Pinder, Fort Cal- lahan, J. B. Sullivan, Frank De- laney, N. N. Hartley; Misses Mary Falk,, Louise Scheurer, Florence Sawyer, Camille Pierce, Rita Pinder, Caroline Zair; Mes- dames R. T. and Hugh T. House—Mrs. J. chairman; Mesdames Harry C. Galey, Chester Curry, B. D. Trevor, B. Curry Moreno, Fort Callahan, W. S. Putnam, William J. Trevor. s- R. Warren and Vesey Johnson. Decorating—Miss Etta Patter- son, chairman; Mesdames Arthur Pastorini, Louis Gruber, Harry C. Galey, Clifford Hicks, Julia Bean, | Hugh Williams, W. J. Phelan, Ralph Russell and Miss Ethel Decker. 2 Floor—Mrs. William J. Kemp, chairman; Mesdames Stephen W. Douglass, Louis C. Brinton, Hor- race Connable and Miss Etta Pat- terson. Floral—Miss_ Leila Pitcher, chairman; Mesdames Sam_ Gold- smith and J. R. Stowers. Pianist—Mrs. Ralph Milner. Scrap Book—Mrs. W. Earl Julian. Historian—Mrs. Harvey Eagan. Parliamentarian—Mrs. William R. Warren. Foundation Fund—Mrs. M. E. ck pekeeie New Public Library and Audi- torium—Mrs. William R. Warren, chairman; Mesdames Louis C. Brinton and Stephen W. Doug- lass. Junior Woman’s Department Mrs. Al. Mills, sponsor. Mrs. Joseph D. Lopez, _ presi- dent, Junior Woman's Club. s To Hold All-American Dance Tomorrow equipment. That’s why, extra effort is it was explained, being 2 put forward now to obtain as big the Cu- d to get 8:30 o'clock, with in for it will prob: of the complete for inst sound } NEED FOR AIRPORT, WATER STRESSED | (Contin ported th purchase of Page One) j d approved} 008 Monroe Coun- Frank two depo as fol- accruing from September 28, ) these $597.00: and Forfeitu standing chool, regular and number one accounts, $1101.70, upport of this dance as pos- sible. Key Westers have indicat- ed their faith in the project and, according to the above statement concerning reservations, will turn out. or RATES APPLY — CUBAN INAUGURATION DAY John H. Costar, agent for the jP. & O. S. S. Company in Key West, announced a_ special cursion on the S. S. Cuba next Monday with special rates in ef- fect for round-trip fares to Ha- vana. The excursion is being run in connection with Inauguration Day in Havana on October 10th. First-class fares are $15.00 for adults, second class, $10.00, with corresponding low rates for chil- dren in two age classifications. All tickets are good for ten days and selling date is next Monday, the date of sailing. BERLIN BOYS SCRAMBLE FOR BOMB SPLINTERS sociated Press) BERLIN ~ — War souvenir hunt- ing is a new hobby of Berlin lads. Splinters from anti-air- craft shells were much in de- mand after the first British raids, when no bombs fell, but after bombs wrecked a number of houses fragments of English ex- origin were particularly sought. It remains the boys’ secret how they manage to slip through tight police rings around bombed buildings, most of which are near collapse. U. S. WEATHER BUREAU REPORT Observation taken at 7:30 a. m. 75th Mer. Time (city office) Temperatures Highest last 24 hours Lowest last night Mean Normal Precipitation Rainfall, 24 hours ending 7:30 a. m., inches Total rainfall since Oct. 1, inches Deficiency inches Total rainfall since Jan. 1, inches Excess inches Wind Direction and Velocity NE—16 miles per hour Relative Humidity 94% Barometer at 7:30 a. m. today Sea level, 29.99 (1015.6 millibars) Tomorrow's Almanac Sunrise 6:20 Sunset 6: Mconrise 9:35 Moonset 9:01 Tomorrow's Tides (Naval Base) AM. since Oct. since January 1. m. High 1 Low FORECAST (Till 7:30 p. m., Friday) Key West and Vicinity: Partly cloudy tonight and Friday with scattered showers; moderate northeasterly winds. Florida: Generally fair in north portion and partly cloudy in south with scattered showers in extreme south portion tonight and Friday. Harveys Visit In City Cornelius Harvey and son, 1s, Jr., of New Orleans, ; ending a visit here as of Mrs. Annie Page) zabeth Street. Harvey was formerly Miss Ihemina Goehring of this city.) P. T. A. Room Mothers of Har- ris School will meet at the home f Mrs. Carl Bervaldi, 510 Fran- . Friday afternoon at D0 o'clock. Hostesses for this gathering RumrForpb RIDDLES ® Why does Dora Dalton spell every month with an “R? BECAUSE she's crazy about RUMFORD, the all- phosphate, dovble-acting baking powder that contains no clum— never leaves a bitter taste. Send for FREE recipe book. Address: Rumford Boking Powder, Box 8, Rumford, Rhode Islond. a) | will be Mrs. R. S. Rodriguez and Mrs. Bervaldi. A full attend- ance of the group is requested. Bors children willrerurn to school this fall, and of this number, more than 6,000,000— or one in every five—has defective vision—vision that can in most cases be corrected by the proper _ fitting of glasses. If your child is one of these, you probably won't know it without an examination. Headaches, dislike of school, poor marks, squinting anda cross disposition are symptoms, but only by a complete and scientific examination can you be sure chat his eyes are at their best. Bring your child in now—before school DR. J. A. VALDES OPTOMETRIST Address 532 Duval Street 38 something, usele 3‘ time - ture Monthly report of prize entries, and champions in class, in the George Ruppert National Fishing Contest was issued recently from head- quarters in New York. catch in the Tarpon classifica- tion, is that made by Gilbert 'W. Kahn, of New York. who ‘caught the monster, weigh- ing 176 pounds off Bahia Honda. Eleven other classifications are featured in this contest. wT TTTsgg" BOOTS AND SADDLES AWAY FROM I7 ALL|, (Axsociated Press Feature Service) DENVER, Oct. 3——The louder the burst in Europe the more do people shout “Bring me my boots and saddle.” “The war just speeded up our return to saddle and bridle days, Harold J. Alps, veteran hoss wrangler” at Estes Park, Colo., a tourist center. “The way I've got. it figured out is this: People have been living too much: in the whirl of the méchanical age. They want a@=breathing spell. One of the best solutions is to get a ‘hoss and go riding.” At Estes Park, Alps estimate: there at least 2.000 hor: now, more than double the num- ber there were a few years ago. This summer the town board or- dered hitching racks constructed at strategic places, including the U. S. postoffice. bombs are THE LOWDOWN FROM HICKORY GROVE If you h you have e ever been out west en a hound-dog tear- j ing up the landscape, chasin’ a jack rabbit. The whole perform- so far as I can research it is just a dog's idea of doing No dog wouid get any real enjoyment gnawin’ on a lean and tough jack rabbit, if he ever caught one—which he ly don’t. ut the human mind is half the kinda single track too, like We tear out lickety- t at the drop of the hat on any jack-rabbit political ex- mn that somebody will talk We never like it where we nt to be elsewhere. e person tells us that the greenest on his side, we anc out, cur: up. are—we w If gra: - don’t rest until we find out. And after we.do find out and get our vest dusted off. we are a good pro: t for the next gent. M be the next time, the pas- really will be greener—any way it won't be worse, this tir Yours with the low down, JO SERRA CAUGHT ....... COLD? 2.5 | with clinic-tested | FRIDAY and SATURDAY SPECIALS =e WING LEE’S GROCERY Monarch Corn-on-Cob, 5 ears to can Onions, 3 lbs. Potatoes, 10 Ibs. Sugar, 5 lbs. Trappey’s Tomao Sauce, 6 cans Tomato Catsup, 3 bottles (14 02.) Shipped Eggs, mixed. de loz. Waldorf Tissue, 6 rolls 25c Hy-Pro, 3 pint bottles re Libby's Cut Beets, can Maxwell House Coffee, Ib be Phone 107 508 Fleming St. FREE DELIVERY ee FOR YOUR VA 18 10¢ 18c 2lc 25c 25c 30c It will be a wise precaution before you leave home, to tanaio) the scpen) you. Mad piseeeen ao Sener ets: 0n | ate protected, s; American Express These Cheques are known and accepted everywhere, and if lost or stolen, a prompt refund is made. FOR SALE IN $10, $20, $50 AND $100 DENOMI- NATIONS AT 75c PER $100 BOUGHT THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF KEY WEST ..} peasants, are his closest jassociated, and from his own |precarious position, an outsider tin almost hourly danger of death jor betrayal. At the end of it all, {he says that the life of this band has become his life; among these friend: enemii jand most dangerous | Both past and future seem shad- jowy in comparison with this life jin hiding on the mountain. And jthat is the way the reader feels. | These striking personalities, dis- Bees from the Spanish type Hemingway’s unequalled power of dramatization in dia- logue, become so intimate and so self-expressive under the pressure of the events, that you have lived, felt, and thought with them—a triumph for a novelist. I do not know how true they are to a Spanish type; perhaps Hem- ingway does not. I do know that here is a group of fully realized * |human beings, real beyond ques- tion, even though the story in which they are involved is a psy- | chological romance. There is Pilar, the matriarch, ; a great woman with a great and varied past—once miStress of a matador, now old and wise, fore-| seeing doom; brutal yet kind, -| with the imagination of a great artist. She is married té the drunkard, Pablo, leader of the gang, shrewdest of them all, who knows that the enterprise will ruin most of them, yet who will not finally betray them because his inner need to be brave is stronger than his reasonable fears. There is Fernando, the complete literalist, without an atom of imagination or humor, and so bravest of all. There is Anselmo, the good old man, who will have to kill and be killed. There is Maria, the Rabbit, e caped from a town devastated by the Fascists, still crop-headed | MONROE THEATER Lew Ayres—Lionel Barrymore DR. KILDARE’S STRANGE CASE and LIGHT OF THE WESTERN STAR Matinee—Balcony 10c, Or- chestra 15-20c; Night—15-25¢ EE TE Specials Friday, Saturday and Sunday Only—at TIP TOP GROCERY & MEAT MARKET Division and Thomas Sts. COFFEE, been ___ 2UC _6¢ CREAM. all brands, 4c 5c can TOMATOES, No. 1 can TOMATOES, No. 2 can SUGAR. 5 Ibs. POTATOES, Ze U.S. No. 1, 10 Ibs. 15¢ HY-PRO, pint bottle. 2_for 15c Meat Department PORK CHOPS, 45e 2 Ibs. PICNIC HAMS. 17e ib SKINLESS VIENNA SAUSAGES, 2 Ibs. 35¢ Phillips BEANS PORK and i No. 2% can, 2 for 15¢ ORANGE JUICE and GRAPEFRUIT JUICE. 15 No. 2. 2 cans c RADIO BEAS and White or Yellow . No. 2 can. 3 cans 25¢ OCTAGON SOAP, large P. & G. SOAP, large 3 for 10c We reserve the right to limit quantities Many Other Specials Travelers Cheques Member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation the almost mortal hurt to/except interpo her imagination is cured by the|Scenes of a horror mitigated instant love between Jordan and because they are told of he theme that runs through danger |of how Pablo and beside death. There is the |of his native town Gypsy, the untouchable, the etern- | let lf. Her story is an andante|nessed. The not fu the The second al frivolity and self-seeking .afjof the revenge o the man incapable of ideals, -|whom all these dangerous loyal-/ed, of her’ vi ties are to|upon the Red: just opportunities to|of hts" father is, Teal and mothe trap rabbits and make off with her mother who was nc jRépublican died, saying. Robert Jordan, preparing day} by day for an adventure almost, | loot. |but not quite, by a belated snowstorm and the orders to shoot the daylight, doomed to failure bridge is dependent for by suc-: cess upon the wavering wills of guerrillas, who be must persuaded to risk their own lives| for an alien in an_ enterprise | which they believe to be desper- ate, is behind him, Maria him, Pilar comforts Anselmo is his friend. The and which is desperate. rest shift and turn in a constant} tension from which, as in a good | play, every ounce of personality | HOTEL LEAMINGTON - © het Sheet ot See Sais Overlooking Bay: front Pennies really count when you shop here Take advantage of these marvelous bar- gains in quality and value. Now the Is time to stock up on money-saving items. Join the thrifty shoppers and buy all your food needs where PRICES ARE LOWER! BROADWAY. PEACHES, SLICED OCTAGON SOAP OCTAGON TOILET SOAP GRAPEFRUIT JUICE JELLO OR ROYAL DESSERT CAMPBELL TOMATO SOUP GiBBS TOMATO PASTE MOTHER’S OATS PAPER NAPKINS AUNT JEMINA GRITS P. AND G. SOAP. QUICK ARROW FLAKES CARNATION CREAM Fresh Fruits and Vegetables SQUASH, 2 tn 15¢ 10c 5c 15¢ Sweet POTATOES, 3 Ibs. Cooking APPLES, tb U. S. No. 1 Maine POTATOES, 10 Ibs. QUALITY VALUES IN THE MEAT DEPARTMENT Swift Premium HAMS, fb - -23e 18¢ “(Small Half) Lean, Meaty PORK SHOULDERS, tb PHONES 178 and 2200 _ 27 10¢e 3. 15e ary 4 : 3... Se 2 ns. 20 2 w= 200 2 - 10e 3— ane Dairy Department Features Frech Shipped EGGS, dez Country Roll BUTTER, & SHORTENING. 2 ibe Rhode isienc HENS, & (3 ibe and owe Old Fesbooned PICNIC HAMS. & Western PORK CHOPS. & FRANKFURTERS. 2 he 28°e 27¢ 19¢ IC 18¢ 23¢ 29e LALAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAALAAAAAAAA A AAA AAA dh hdd de dadadadidia dada dada dea dd dada dedi dadadadadadadudadadadeds

Other pages from this issue: