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THE-KEY WEST CITIZEN FRIDAY. OCTC = PAGE FOUR ‘BOMBING OF ROAD NO|MUSIC HATH CHARMS, CHESAPEAKE B4¥ |FAMOUS ‘QUOTES’ / -: SOCIETY :: | Hallowe’en Spirit Prevails At Marti Knights’ Dance Tonight #*¢, °5, "2 True spirit of Hallowe’en will prevail at the Habana-Madrid to- night when_ beautiful, senoritas will assemble with their gala decorated costumes and comical dogpatch style make-ups to attend the Grand Masquerade Ball to be staged with the Span-| ish atmosphere, under the aus- pices of the Order Knights of Marti. Prizes for the most prettiest, most attractive, most comical and most original costume will be awarded. The gifts to be given away are valuable, such that any young lady will be glad to have. fair | | (Continued from Page One) | prise, 1813, while being carried |below after being wounded dur- ing the engagement with the} : | “We have met the enemy and The dance will start Promptly | they are ours, — — —”.—Perry [at 10:00 o'clock and Jerome Col |at the Battle of Lake Erie. lins, popular orchestra leader of | the Beachcombers, will open with ja brand new “hot” nurnber. Daan ‘ | Hallowe'en favors, noise mak-|bells! Captain ers, serpentine, horns and hats ahead!”—Farragut at will be given away during the Bay. * ‘ pelt night |- “The best protection against | Out of town men will judge the enemy’s fire is a well direct-} |the costumes contests and the ed fire from our own guns”. ‘ girls will parade in the hall in a!Farragut’s message to his ships |Grand March led by either Joe |just before the dash past Port Medina, popular master of cere- | Hudson. monies, or Rene Diaz. “The more you hurt the enemy! The committee-in-charge prom-| the less he will hurt you”.—Da- ises every one attending the af-|vid G. Farragut. ifair a grand time. | “I believe in celerity’—David Civil War the torpedoes! Four Drayton, go Mobile Dancing Prodigy To Fezture Players’ Ball | Visitors In City G. Farragut, announcnig his de- \termination to pass the Missis- | | sippi Forts. “After you, Pilot”.—Comdr. T. \From North Dakota Announcement was made to-| Dr. and Mrs. F. Griebenow of day that Charlene Hooper, seven- | Bismarck, N. D., are spending a year-old honor pupil in third |stay in this city as guests of Mr. grade at Harris school, and ajand Mrs. George Smith at the talented dancing celebrity, will | North Beach Inn. make an appearance at the Key; West Players’ Ball next Thursday night, Oct. 31, in the Rainbow Room at La Concha Hotel. An added attraction, free to all patrons of the Ball. will be a Fortune Telling booth where all may obtain “information con- cerning coming events” as well as answers to personal and busi- ness questions. This booth will be presided over by a prominent Reader resident of Key West. Eastern Stars Meet Tonight Order of Eastern Stars, Fern Chapter No. 21, will meet tonight | at a regular stated assembly at | Scottish Rites Hall, Simonton and Eaton streets. Meeting will get under way at | 8:00 o'clock. All members and visiting Stars have been urged to attend. \IN THE BEGINNING AND IN THE END (By Associated Press) Ida Marie Pina Married Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. Aurelia Pina an- nounce the marriage of their) GRAYSON, Ky., Oct. 25—The daughter, Ida Marie, to Paul M. number ‘14” had an important Rodriguez, of Tampa. Marriage {Tole in the life of the late S. B. took place in Fort Lauderdale on|Stamper, farmer living near Wednesday, October 23. \here. The young couple will Stamper was born on the 14th their home in Key West. day of the month, married on the _ 14th, was baptized on the 14th, BALKANS ARE AT make jhad 14 children, saw his home } destroyed by fire on the 14th and THE CROSSROADS |aica on tne 141, The Rev. Harlan Murphy de- livered the funeral service. His text: 14th chapter of St. John. (Continued 1rom Page One) 4me, moved in on Albania, sent Zog packing. RB Is For Bulgaria New York and Ohio together and great wealth in oil and wheat. Bulgaria is at the crossroads, Her neighbors were all very just above the Dardanelles—the | jealous. Rumania kept a big army water lane from the Black to the |and made many treaties to guard Mediterranean sea. That might her wealth. be a place of power—if one were But she relied too heavily on strong French and British support. When A thousand years ago Bulgaria | that collapsed, Russia took a piece was strong. It even terrorized|of her land, then Hungary and mighty Constantinople. Then it Bulgaria. became a Turkish province. For Now Germany has centuries its people were very)/troops into Rumania, poor. They are still poor, still;Germany doesn’t want mostly peasants. Only 60 years/else to get Rumania’s oil. ago they revolted and set up the moved because someone 1A. M. Craven, sinking of U.SS. |Tecumseh at Battle of Mobile | Bay, August 5, 1864. | Spanish-American War | | “I have to report, sir, that the} ship is blown-up and is sinking!” | '—Report of Marine Orderly, Sergeant William Anthony, to ; Captain Sigsbee upon the blow- jing up of the Maine in Havana! |Harbor, showing the wonderful} {power of. discipline upon the hu-| man mind. | “You may fire when you are ready, Gridley’—Dewey at Ma-; jnila Bay. “Don’t cheer men, those poor} jfellows are dying”. — Captain| Philip of the Texas at Santiago} ‘Bay. | “We are ready for a frolic or} a fight’—Admiral Evans, De-; cember, 1907. | | “Gentlemen, a higher power than we has won this battle to-} day”.—George Dewey, to his cap-! tains after the victory at Manila! Bay. World War | | “Never!"—The USS. J. Lj Luckenbach’s answer to radio | message not to surrender until! help came. She had been tor- pedoed by a U-Boat and was j sinking rapidly. | i CLASSIFIED COLUMN: Advertisements under this head | will be insertea in The Citizen at’ the rate of one-cent (Ic) a word for each insertiou, out the mini- levery instance ig twenty-five’ cents (25c). Advertisers =nould give their street address as well as their telephone number if they desire we Payment tor classified adver- tisements is Invariably in ad- vance, but regular advertisers, i ledger accounts may have their advertisements charged. LOST LOST — Yesterday somewhere | between sunrise and sunset, two golden hours, each set with | set before anyone. It is delicious OF NAVAL HEROES SHRIMP- CELERY SAUCE for poached eggs OF waffles © | against Japan. F there’s one thing that makes me purr it is to turn a prosaic everyday food such as cold roast beef, eggs or carrots, into a dish hat's really interesting. One of my | Det ways of doing it is by means of | sauces. Not complicated sauces. | But easy ones that are fixed mostly from condensed soups already in | themselves beautifully seasoned. Here, for instance, is one such sauce that transforms simple | poached eggs into a luncheon or supper dish you would be proud to poured thickly over. too. Or even over plain Toate Keep this | mind for those times- when you must rustle up a meal or stretch out a meal for unexpected guests and “my dear, there was simply nothing in the house to eat.” Well, the guests will never suspect it. Shrimp and Celery Sauce, over Poached Eggs” 1 tablespoon butter 1 cup shrimps 1 can condensed celery soup % cup milk or cream Melt the butter and sauté the shrimps. Then add the celery soup with milk or cream and heat. A | little chopped parsley may be added just before serving. LEGALS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF) THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL} CIRCUIT OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR MON- | ROE COUNTY. IN CHAN-| CERY. ARTHUR F. BRODERSON, Complainant, sw FRIEDA BRODERSON, Defendant. ORDER OF PUBLICATION | It appearing by the sworn bill) of complaint filed in the above stated cause, that Frieda Broder-/| son, the defendant therein named, is a non-resident of the State of| Florida, and her residence as is particularly known is 1312 South Negley Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; that said de- fendant is over the age of twenty-} one years and that there is no person in the State of Florida, the service of a summons ‘in| chancery upon whom would bind said defendant. | It is hereby Ordered that said defendant, Frieda Broderson, be and she is hereby required to ap-| pear to the bill of complaint filed | in said cause on or before Mon-} day, December 2nd, A. D. 1940, otherwise the allegations of said | bill will be taken as confessed by } (Continued from Page One) {pilots are developed each year. (Continued from Page One) | they rolled great rocks into gul- (By Aanecinted Presse) KEYSER, W. Va. Oct B— States’ own “token army” of 10,-!stones beside the narrow strip ©o#! truckers learned. particular- | Best prepared is the United|leys and gorges. They piled Music hath charms. two thiewing |000 men, two-thirds of whom are native Philippine scouts. The! | Filipmos themselves maintain a! | 10,00@+man permanent army. | Géography Favors Defense | 'vors defense. of thé; islands |: That’s why Gen, MacArthur/ | Strides white-coated and furious | jaround his office in Manila: Bit-! ‘ing ferociously on a ten = inch |island stogie, he rasps: | “This talk about not defending the Philippines is blankety-blank | tommyrot. It’s defeatism. Pure) | and simple.” | | What could Japan bring? | Probably its gigantic navy. But carries only one man equipped; for a month’s campaign. By this | and old men‘sat all day breaking them with little hammers. They hewn from solid rock. When) For the moment geography fa- it it down with ox-drawn rollers ! had to be done all over again. The coolies bridged the roaring torrents of the Salween and Me- kong rivers, looking up a mile through the pines and wild rhododendron to the snow-cap-; ped Yunnan peaks. They bridged scores of lesser streams with stone and cement arches that from America. And when the floods caught them, token Japan’s available 2,000,000 |once more had to be done over} merchant tons, (the other 2,500,- | 000 being inadequate as trans-| ports or engaged elsewhere) | might ferry 150,000 fighters to, the Philippines. The islands offer few satisfac- | tory_zones for landing heavy ar- tillery or mechanized equipment. All.this sounds good, but well informed American officials dis- agree with any notion that the Philippines could ward off an at- tack single-handed. Manila harbor’s multi-million- dollar fixed defenses are the only | really strong artillery concentra- tion in the archipelago. Which brings us back to the| question of independence — of} whether the islands shall cut loose from Uncle Sam completely in 1946, as provided in the Ty- dings-McDuffy bili. When Paul McNutt was high commissioner to the Philippines, he coined the phrase “re-exami- | nation.” Re-examination is still} going on, with much being said! on both sides. Subscribe to The Citizen, 20c mu again. | Two-Year Job Finally, in two years. the) Burma road was finished. It) wasn’t a speedway but it was) finished—if such a road ever can be called finished. Nature never ceases her blasting. It takes an army of workers to keep it in re- pair. But the soldiers of China must} be fed and have guns and am- munition. So the army working on the Burma road will take its | rain of bombs along with the| blasts of nature and keep on} working. Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek says it can be done; the | Japanese say it can’t. In Wash-}| ington, nobody knows. Put one way or the other, the Burma road | will be in the history books. | =" COLDS VICKS VAPORUB MONROE THEATER Cesar Romero—Mary Beth in LUCKY CISCO KID and UNTAMED Matinee—Balcony 10c, Or- chestra 15-20c; Night—15-25e | or. as agreed sixty diamond minutes. No re-| Said defendant and said cause be modern nation. Russia helped them and the Bulgars have a kindred feeling for the Russians. Despite this feeling Bulgaria sided with Germany in the World war and lost territory. Now she has regained some of it from Ru- mania. That makes her larger than Kentucky, gives her twice as many people. Today Bulgaria is still at the crossrc But she is not strong and she wonders if the crossroads will become a battleground. H Is For Hungary The typical Hungarian is a farmer. He tills fields and raises stock as a peasant on a large es- tate in the fiat Hungarian plain. He leaves business to those in the cities who like it. He takes pride that his forefathers fought the terrible Turk to a standstill. Under Austria, the Hungarians proved so turbulent that they were set up as a separate king- dom tied to Austria only through allegiance to the Hapsburgs. This tie was snapped in the World war. But the peace that made Hungary independent clipped off her borders, leaving her without natural defenses. Hungary be- came a nation without a king and with a single passion—to become great and strong once more. To have a chance at this she has had to go along with strong Germany. Recently Hungary got back ter-; as ritory from Rumania, as well as making her about the size of Oklahoma. from Czecho-Slovakia, She wants more. R Is For Rumania The Rumanians speak a guage akin to Latin. lan- Their land is rich in oil and in surplus grain. Rumania got a lot out of the World war. She became the larg- ~st Balkan nation—as big as Ari- She had more people than rather be left alone, Is For Turkey T see ki y ward is offered for they are gone forever.—Horace Mann. Turkey used to be the bad man | of Europe. She ruled all the Balkans and threatened proud PICTURE FRAMING Vienna. ‘Then she became the (PIGTURE. FRAMING, Diplomas; sick man of Europe. Province aft- antique frames refinished. Sign er province revolted. | * | 5 painting. Paul DiNegro, 614 3: By: World ‘war time she had| Francis street. octl2-1mo become, apart of the Kaiser’s)___ Berlin-to-Baghdad plans for East-| FOR SALE | ern expansion -and -she threw in | —————______*"_| her lot with Germany. Her stout}; PERSONAL CARDS, $1.25 per peasantry fought bravely as; 100. THE ARTMAN PRESS. | lusual, but Turkey lost. { fun25-t¢ | | Outof that war one AQ | eee j|who made modern Turkey. He |SIGNS—“For Rent”, “Rooms For} was the first of the modern dic-| Rent”, “Apartment For Rent”, \tators. He modernized the coun-| “Private Property, No Tres-) jtry, made its army and its works| passing”. THE ARTMAN}{ respected. He transferred the} PRESS. . nov25-tf | capital from ancient Istanbul on} ‘the Dardanelles to inland An-/} TYPEWRITING PAPER — 500 Sheets, 75c. The Artman Press. | may19-tf | kara. Kemal is dead now, but the} \friendship he established with Britain, the army he developed / and the capital he protected from | the storms that rage around the! Dardanelles are decisive factors | in the present situation. \MOTOR BOAT, vi Palmer Engine. Y Is For Yugoslavia Ses It was in Serbia that the World | Gwynn. war started. Before it ended Ser-/| bia took a terrible beating, even; OLD PAPERS FOR SALE— Three bundles for 5c. The Citi- zen Office. nov25-tf 26-ft, 10-h.p} Cheap. .Now C. Rodney octl7-tf APARTMENTS proceeded with ex parte. Done and Ordered this 25th day of October, A. D. 1940 (Seal) Ross C Sawyer Clerk of the Circuit Court. RAYMOND R. LORD, Solicitor for Complainant. oct25; noyl-8-15-22,1940 Archer's Grocery “The Store That Serves ECONOMY IT’S REALLY CHEAPER TO TRADE AT ARCHER'S has though she made a magnificent | etyRNISHED APARTMENT, ail |p why. fight. Peace transformed her into| modern Yugoslavia with 14,000,-| 000 people and lands as extensive | Oregon's. But Yugoslavia wants no part in this war. Her. people are = largely ‘Slawie} Qe eS and so she has ties with Russia.| BRING YOUR VISITING friends Also she once had ties with Ru-} im need of a good night's rest | mania, Czecho-Slovakia and| to THE OVERSEAS HOTEL. France. Now she is pretty well; Clean rooms, enjoy the homey surrounded by lands under Ger-| atmosphere. man and Italian control. Yugoslavia occupies some of the highest hills in the Balkans. Back in her hills lie rich mines «i aa and forests. Her hardy peasants} WANTED—A chance to bid on are dour fighters. But they would! your next printing order. The modern conveniences. $20.00 month. 1014 Grinnell street. octl4-tf! WELCOMED Dressed Poultry - Meats Fruits - Vegetables Dairy Products PHONES 67 and 47 || TOMATO JUICE. 3 cans _ 25c | || DOG FOOD, 6 cans —_ || 510 Fleming Sz. Phone 411 The BERMUDA MEAT MARKET WILL OFFER MANY SPECIALS THIS WEEK-END eg When purchasing MEATS low prices is not the only factor to con- sider. Ea IT PAYS TO SPEND A LITTLE MORE FOR HIGH QUALITY MEATS (oes We Handle All Brands of SMOKED HAMS and PICNIC HAMS. Red Fryers. iB = 35e Two Butchers, Two Delivery Boys and an Expert Man to Dress Your Poultry. — PHONE 52 — | | |§ 3 for | PAUL LUMLEY | EINHORN’ Week-End Specials Ehler’s Grade ‘A’ TEA %4-Ib pkg. 29e with Free Glass Campbell’s Pork and Beans 3 for 19¢ Trappey’s Tomato Sauce pie Heinz Ketchup Palmolive Soap 25¢ large l]= se 3 for ineteliceaeatiadeatitte 19¢ Libby’s Junior Foods 10c 2 tall cams 15¢ Royal Scarlet EINHORN’S Service— Duval and Olivia Streets Phones 215 and 216 | Artman ‘] a’ iS ly when coming from a mech ical phonograph They borrowed |Sspread rocks on the road, filled it in Restaurateur 4 | the chinks with gravel, and pack- hart's chine, then looted the cash ter while listening to the record * The music drowned out jthere were Jandslides the work | of opening the register, Rin Teported, and also permitted the pair to escape unnoticed whi he was in a rear room. ROTARY CLUB (Continued from Page One) expressed his delight in his new assignment here. Lt. Comdr. A P. Storrs, I what’ about soldiers? Experts | would stand under the weight of | commander of seaplane squadron figure that 12 tons of shipping} 2,000 three-ton trucks ordered | VPS53, outlined the growth of the naval airforce since its inceptior the work |in 1911, ‘ With these additic s—Friday - Saturday Niblet E * CORN-ON-COB. No. 2 tall. cam —__ 15e 13 303 Can GREEN GIANT PEAS. can DRY BLACK EYE PEAS. Bb ‘s PINEAPPLE JUICE. No. 1 tall. 2 cams __ BARTLETT PEARS. No. 2% can l7e Our Store Is As Near To You As Your Telephone GRAPEFRUIT 2 ie SQUASH 2 TOMATOES. 2s TROUBLES AHEAD WORSE THAN NATURE) EVEN FOR THIEVES OFSTERS AT WELLS Cor. Francis and Southr-4 Sts. Free Delivery Phone 58