Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE FOUR _ ee SOCIETY Large Crowd Reserves Tables | For Knights Of Marti Dance One of the largest dancing and, Although reservations are go- fun seeking crowds in the history |ing fast there are still quite a; of the Habana-Madrid is looking | few more left and those inter- forward to attend the big Mas-| ested are asked to phone 9157 and querade Ball to be staged at this | have their tables for any size lovely patio possessing true! party reserved. Spanish atmosphere. The event| Elizabeth Gartenmeyer, pop- will be put on under the auspices ‘ular little singing star of this city of the Order Knights of Marti; will render a couple of numbers and entire proceeds will go to the 'as part of the entertainment of- organization’s convention funds. {fered by the committee in charge Jerome Collins and his Beach- of arrangements. combers will furnish music for; Hallowe’en favors have arrived the affair. The Beachcombers and will be distributed to all at- will introduce some new numbers tending. Prizes for the funniest. which will be happily approved | prettiest and most appropriate by all. (costumes will be awarded. [BERN IS CENTER FOR COURIERS OF U.S. EMISSARIES (By Associated Press) BERN, Switzerland, Oct. 23.— The iron gate of the United Mr. Harris will arrive this|States legation at Bern swings weekend to join his wife. They |Open several times each week to plen to return to their home on|admit travel-weary young men} Sunday. | bearing sealed gray sacks toward Mr. Harris is Johnson’s | Which their manner is something Johnsons Entertain Gables Visitor Mrs. Bert Harr: of Coral Gables, is spending a week visit- ing Mr. and Mrs. Walter Johnson at their home, 1128 Margaret street. Mrs. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Florida Medical Association In Fourth Annual MeetNov.2. {Special to The Citizen) - CORAL GABLES, Oct. 23.—Il-| lustrated lectures by Tampa, Fort | Lauderdale and Miami Beach; physicians will feature the fourt! annual meeting of the Southeast! WILL PRESIDE | Medical District here on Novem-| | ber 2. Members of the Florida Medi- cal Association in Palm Beach, Broward, Dade and Monroe coun- ties will attend, with Dr. Kenneth Phillips of Miami, senior coun- cilor for the district presiding at the general sessions Dr. R. L. Elliston of Fort Lauderdale, the junior councilor, will preside dur- ing the scientific program. Dr. J. R. Boling of Tampa will be the guest speaker on the pro- |gram. District members to be on that program include: Dr. F. H. Dieterich of Miami, Dr. E. M. Hendricks of Fort Lauderdale and Dr. Russell B. Carson of Fort Lauderdale. Dr. Boling will il- lustrate his lecture with a mo-/| tion picture, the others by lan-} tern slides. Dr. J. Sam Turberville of Cen-; tury, president of the Associa- | tion, will head a group of offi-| cials to attend the meeting, in-; cluding: Dr. Walter C. Jones, Kenneth Phillips, M. D. DR. KENNETH PHILLIPS, of Miami, who, as senior councilor, will preside at the fourth annual meeting in Coral Gables, November 2, of the Southeast Medical Dis- | trict. WEDNESDAY CLASSIFIED COLUMN Bellamar Apartments Open QZ, Advertisements under this head will be insertec in the Citizen at |the rate of one-cent (1c) a word) | for each insertiou, out the mini- jmum for the first insertion in imstance 1s twenty-five | jcomts (26). | | Advertisers =nould give their; [street address as well as their, {telephone nummer if they desire) PICTURE FRAMING, Diplomas;’ antique frames refinished. Sign painting. Paul DiNegro, 614 Francis street. octl2-1mo | FOR SALE PERSONAL CARDS, $1.25 per | 100. THE ARTMAN PRESS. fun25- The Bellamar | (beautiful sea), Gonzalo |completed and thrown open for | occupancy last week. | SIGNS—“For Rent”, “Rooms For) Purchasing the building carly | Rent”, “Apartment For Rent”, | this year, at 316 Elizabeth street, “Private Property, No Tres-!Mr. Bezanilla has conducted a | Passing’. THE ARTMAN ey | Dorough remodelling job on the | PRESS. nov25-tf | structure during the summer, re- |SECOND SHEETS—500 for 50c. The Artman Press. nov19-tf | complete apartments on each | arranging both floors into three, | Apartments | Apartments will prove popular Bez- to transient and permanent resi janilla, owner and manager, were dents. OCTOBER 23. 1948 brother. akin to that of a mother hen fo-{Jt. of Miami, president-elect; Dr. | | floor. Shaler Richardson of Jackson- !OLD PAPERS FOR SALE— Some of the appointments that! ; ward her. chicks. St. Paal’s Parents And Teachers To Meet Parents and teachers of St. Paul's Church School will meet in the Parish Hall tomorrow! night at 7:30 o'clock. An entertaining program has | been arranged, following which a | social period will feature. A large attendance is expected. Louis Geant Vacations Here Louis former em- ploye at the local Western Union office, now a resident of New York City, arrived in Key West! Monday afternoon to spend a three- * vacation here with his mother and other relatives. Louis left Key West about 15 | months ago and this is his first | trip to his native city. His mother resides at 1120 Division street. ee | Godinet, PATRIOTISM CHISLERS | RUNNING INTO RED) (Continued from Page One) from the state department. Such | permits are denied any group em- ploying paid solicitors or plan. ning a benefit where expenses will run above a legitimate, tiny percentage of the gross. About 300 legitimate groups have been licensed. ' Blasted By F.B.I. H Fake patriots who attempted to set up anti-spy organizations as a front to collect funds were! blasted by FBI publicity that izens to deal only with ment agen Those ed “official” patriotic! profiteer prices now y vigilant better bureaus all over the} al inspectors are on! to examine all patriotic | ermine if mail have been broken. | partment of justice also eye cocked for violations 1otion of patriotism-at-a- looks like a hard winter riots” willing to give their all—“for a small fee to cover ex- penses and mailing charges”. They deposit their burdens and hasten off for a shave, a thick Swiss steak, a stroll through Bern’s sedate but well-lighted streets and a night’s sleep in an immobile bed. Next day, surrounded by more bulging sacks, they will be roll- ing off to distant frontiers, through countries where no lights glow at night, where air raids} may halt trains and where food rationing makes thick steaks rare , indeed. The gray sacks are the diplo- matic pouches of the United | States Department of State. They are stuffed with the reports which influence American for- eign policy and the department’s confidential instructions to its emissaries abroad. The young men are the couriers who chap- jeron this freight hither and yon over Europe’s war-disrupted transportation systems. The legation in Bern is small, but war has made it the State Department’s central _postoffice i in Europe. AT 72, HE GOES BACK TO WARS (Ry Associated Presa) HANOVER, Germany, Oct. 23. —A few gray hairs didn’t keep ‘aptain Zohn sitting in his easy chair when guns began booming in the west offensive during the {summer. At the age of 72 he spryly jumped back into the boots of 1919 and reported for duty with the army engineers. At the head of his company he crossed the Somme under the hail of French artillery. For brav- ery before the enemy he received the Iron Cross first class. He wears it with the Iron Cross first and second class awarded him during the World war. MARRIAGE LICENSES Robert R. Knowles, 28, mem- ber of the Coast Guard, and June Parks, 28, of Thomaston, Maine, obtained a marriage license from county judge Raymond R. Lord yesterday. Rev. O. C. Howell was designated as the pastor who will perform the marriage cere- mony. SWING SWUNG, SWEET SWUNG— THEY MERGED AS SWEET SWING (Associated Press NEW YORK, Oct. 23.—The handsome little guy behind the drums put up his sticks, jumped off the bandstand, sat down, and mopped his brow as he explain- ed: “There's what I mean. Swing has swung’ to\sweet, sweet has swung to swing and whadda ya got? “Sweet swing”. That from Gene Krupa, the drummer man who helped beat swing into public favor back in 1934. His band had just finished its arrangement of “Ill Never Smile Again”. A ballad. A swing band play- ing a ballad. And getting a big hand for it. Unheard of four} years ago, says Gene. But let} him explain: “Swing roared in brand new. It was popular. So, every new band took it up, became a blast; band. Played every number al hot way, the raucous way. Feature Service) “For a while the roarin’est band was the best one. Every one tried to outroar the other. Final- ly, you couldn’t tell whether a band was good or not. Too much noise to hear the music. “Then the smart leaders—I like to think I was one of them—de- cided that'to show off their real band. get the instruments heard properly, they should modulate that blaring swing. “In the meantime the honey sweet outfits saw, the kids—and they make dance bands—going for the hot stuff. The syrupy bloola just didn’t lure “em. So those leaders stuck in a few swing licks—their style—and put on a little exhibition sauce. “There you have it. The swing boys swung to sweet. The sweet boys swung to swing. Neither one all the way, you understand, and there's still a difference”. But the two-way swing to sweet swing is still on, Gene says, ‘to raise soct23-1t |ville, secretary-treasurer; Dr. | following local Robert B. Mclver of Jacksonville, chairman of the Council; and Dr. Stewart G. Thompson, Jackson- ville, managing director. Dr. Joseph S. Stewart, Miami, president of the Dade County Medical Society, has named the ton, Miami Beach; Coplan, Miami; and Dr. Hitlerd W. Willis, Coral Gables. Mrs. j Willis has assumed the direction of the plans for the entertain- ment of visiting women. Dr. M. BAPTIST LOYALTY CAMPAIGN PROCEEDS In connection with the Loyalty Campaign in the First Baptist church, every Baptist in Key} West, whether affiliated with the local church or has been urged by pastor Rev. Ted Jones to attend the Mass Prayer Meeting at the church tonight, starting at 7:30 o'clock. Special music will be given by the choir and a fellowship meet- ing is planned. Strangers in the city have been especially invited as well as the general public. CONGRESS SETS SPENDING RECORD (Continued from Page One) to battleships and from forks to flying fortresses. From June 1 to October 1, Congress voted defense funds at the rate of $82,536 a minute for every minute, night agd day. The 76th Congress also made history by ordering the mobiliza- tion of military manpower on a scale heretofore unapproached in peacetime. The conscription law called for the registration of more than 16,- 500.000 men—every eighth per- son in the country—for selective W mititary service. a More Income Taxes The defense tax law, designed ,006,000,000 a year, puts the heaviest federal tax load on COSTES S ONE TIME THE BOSS (Ry Associated Press) VIENNA, Oct. 23.—Kicking the hired help in Vienna costs exactly $160. This expensive pastime was indulged in by a factory owner here, during a dis- agreement with a woman em- ploye. When he let loose a stream of invective and un- gentlemanly talk at her, she cracked him across the cheek. He countered with a swift one. At the first session of the social court of honor (for the protection of the honor of workers), the lady got her slap free but the boss had to pay. TSS SSSI SSS not, TRANSPORTATION S.S. CUBA Steamship Cuba, of the P. & O. Company, arrived in’ Key from Tampa at 7:00 o’clock morning with seven SS passengers and 84 tons of freight on board for this port. Embarking here for Havana were 25 first-class passengers, and two U.S. citizens since the World war. autos were taken on board be- An additional 2,050,000 persons fore the ship sailed at 11:00 with small incomes will become o'clock. -Through federal taxpayers next March 15. Tampa to Havana was listed as Exemptions are reduced and a 19 first-class and three “super-tax” of 10 percent is cl added. Congress also boosted by 10 at percent most of the excise taxes 2 —on tobacco, liquor, tires, ra- c dios, etc. five tons A “no-war-millionaires” law autos. Traffic,to Tampa from puts a graduated tax of 25-to-50 the Cuban capital included nine percent on excess profits. A 3.1 first-class and percent levy is added to the nor- passengers and the manifest mal income tax rate for corpora-'showed 27 tons of freight. Five tions earning more than $25,000. first-cla: making the effective rate 24 per- pessengers embarked here for cent. Tampa and the ship sailed at 4:45 Congress voted $918,000,000 for o'clock. farm aid; $1,157,000,000 to finance Sea relief for at least eight months S.S. COLORADO beginning last July 1. Steamship ‘Colorado of It tightened the Hatch act. ex- Ciyde-Mallory Lines arrived in tending to federal-state employes'Key West yesterday afternoon at { restrictions on political activities |12:30 o'clock from NewYork, and limiting single campaign con- with 88 tons of freight for local tributions to $5,000. business and military The administration's reciprocal jments. The ship sailed . at trade program was extended for! u@elock for Tampa.:) + three years. And Congress begarr® hearings on proposed anti-third term legislation. yesterday first-class and one second- passengers for this port, CARD OF THANKS To our many friends, one and all, who so kindly helped during our recent bereavement, the death of our beloved one. Mrs. Lillian A. W. Albury. we wish to extend our sincere thanks. Words cannot express our ap- Preciation to those who gave the use of their cars and to the donors of the beautiul floral of- ferings and expressions of sym- pathy. THE FAMILY. HAVANA - MADRID MASQUERADE BALL Friday Night. October 25th Benefit Convention Funds Music by the Beachcombers Admission. 50c Ladies Free arrangements | ‘committee: Dr. Herman ors HAD TO ’COUGH’ UP | traffic from) second } afternoon 15 o'clock, the Cuba brought | VICKS VAPORUB} Auspices Order Knights of Marti | Three bundles for 5c. The Citi- ts make this apartment building zen Office. nov25-tf one of the finest in Key West are listed as follows: 10-h.p} All inlaid linoleum; sound- Cheap. Now proof walls; complete bath with C. Rodney |tile floor, showers, hot water; octl7-tf | electric refrigeration and gas MOTOR BOAT, 26-ft., Palmer Engine. on Wickers’ Ways. Gwynn. WANTED TO RENT | storage compartments; twin beds jand inner-spring mattresses and WANTED TO RENT—2 or 3 entirely new furnishings through- rooms; unfurnished apartment} out; door chimes for each apart- or cottage, by the year. Apply! ment with postal-approved, new- POLLOCK’S, or phone 465. }type mail boxes. oct23-2t| Situated only two blocks from |the center of town, the Bellamar ! APARTMENTS BORIS KARLOFF in DOOMED TO DIE also COMEDY and SERIAL | FURNISHED APARTMENT, all) modern conveniences. $20.00 | month. 1014 Grinnell street. octl4- tf FOR RENT FRONT APARTMENT, furnished | Apply rear 602 Duval street or | Army and Navy Store. * oct17-tf | :PARKS APARTMENTS, corner) White and Newton Sts. All| modern conveniences. Apply | 1324 Newton street or Phone aug26-tf ! SINGLE ROOM with- adjoining * bath and private entrance. $5.00 per week. Apply 1001 Eaton street. oct23-26x 240. HOTELS BRING YOUR VISITING friends in need of a good night’s rest to THE OVERSEAS HOTEL. Clean rooms, enjoy the homey atmosphere. Satisfactory rates. | 917 Fleming St. aprl7-tf WANTED eS | WANTED—A chance to bid on] your next printing order. The Artman Press. may19-tf MONROE THEATER | Warren Williams—Jean Muir || LONE WOLF MEETS THE j LADY and || THE RAMPARTS WE WATCH Matinee—Balcony 10c, Or- chestra 15-20c; Night—i5-25e j sf of freight and two! | one second-class | and one second-class | the; ' range; large closets and baggage | DELIVERED DAILY EVERYWHERE Thompson Enterprises INCORPORATED ICE DIVISION PHONE NO. & Thirst knows no season. That's true of the need for refreshment, too. Icc-cold Coca-Cola is the answer to thirst the (C7 year around ...and it always brings 2 DR. J. A. VALDES” OPTOMETRIST Address Phones \532 Duval Office: 332 ‘Street Residence: 235 oa Prescribed tor, contort— THE happy after-sense of complete refreshment that everybody welcomes. é~ ~* PAUSE THAT REFRE® BOTTLED UNDER ALTHORITY OF THE COC4-CDk« CD BT KEY WEST COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPAST