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

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PAGE FOUR -: SOCIETY :-: St. Anthony’s Guild And Parents Of St. Paul’s Enjoyed Social Hour Saint Anthony’s Guild and the; the day of special service for parents of St. Paul’s church | parents and children at the 9:30 school children, met in the/o’clock mass. Parish Hall Thursday night for} Delicious refreshments were @ very interesting meeting and | served by Mesdames Marion Al- THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ‘SOUTH FLORIDA HAS 'SCOUTS ENJOYED REAL ESTATE HEAD @accmen Collin, TELLS OF FLORID ———— IED COLUMN NEW PAINT GUIDE [HALLOWE'EN PARTY |_ TRANSPORTATION _ If contemplating painting Of shepherd, Calvin Cates, Eugene | S. S. CUBA AMAZING GROWTH SP Sands Ss Rely Henry Selanne) Stamii Cub af he F 0 WANTED—Someone to donate|poo: 00073 Perez, Oscar Avila, Bert Cates, |S. S. Company arrived here from mattress for single cot for poor; cares -. Comanny, .maeeens family. Notify Miss Louise Be: =P a oo oft Eee Seer Se ees a PRR S55 ita ‘State Weilae oad Sherwin-Wiiliams paint and col- | Philip Strunk, Ray Shoeneck, P. | 0’clock with two second-class pas- Phone 491 oct26.t¢/oF St¥le guide, now available at/J. Scheurer, Odes McKillip, Em- |Sngers for this port and 8# tons ee i the office of this company. \estine Evans, Earl Adams, Alyma|°! freight. Embarking here for | ROSES It's the easiest and most com-| Aguerro, Richard Colgate, Ed- remypuer pr fest-cless a rai . . . class passengers cae ‘ged Soe eet: poe ward Strunk, Jack Sawyer, Em- seven autos were taken aboard jbefore the ship sailed at 1040 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1348 TRANSPORT ATION POINTS TO STATE’S sient INCREASE IN POPULATION. GREATER THAN ANY OTH- ER IN UNION fee ————— colors and contains scores of new | oct Ay: Mary Belle Archer, RED AND PINK RADIANCES.| ideas for painting and the latest |Sohn gles Wilma Sellers, social hour. Mrs. Laner Richardson, presi- dent, opened the meeting with assembly singing of “America”. Prayer was said by Rev. Dim- mick. The business session fol-| lowed. Miss Helen Roberts read the minutes and Mrs. Elizabeth Baker gave the treasurer’s report. Mrs. Gloriana M. Bayly reviewed the lesson “Christ at the Pool of Bathesda”. A delightful program followed. The assembly sang “How Do You “Do”. Rev. Dimmick gave a talk on the purpose of the meeting; song by John H. Williams; read- ing, Mrs. Reba Sawyer; an- nouncements and talk on the Youth of the Church, Mrs Glori- aia M. Bayly; song by all “The More We Get Together”. _. In the quiz contest Mrs Reba Sawyer won the prize. + It was decided to set aside Advent Sunday, December 1, as 'bury, Elizabeth Baker, Edith Ladd, Violet Sawyer and Misses |Rubie Edwards, Marguerite Hil- {ton and Gertie Curry. | Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Darnell Pinder, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Sawyer, Mr. and Mrs. Rodman J. Bethel, Mr. and Mrs. Reynold Thompson, Mesdames M. Symmonet, J. ! Marzyck, Josephine Mora, Angela Demeritt, Chas. Percy Curry, Sr., Sebastian Cabrera. Jr. Hilda Sands, Rose LEatherly, Katie Cochran, Emil Sweeting. Benj. Tynes, Oriette Archer, Clements |Jaycocks, Oscar Ramirez, Edith {Ladd, Laner Richardson, Harry H. Baker, Violet Sawyer, Marion Albury and Gloriana M. Bayly. Misses Gertie Curry, Helen Roberts, Rubie Edwards, Mar- guerite Hilton, Frances Cochran, and Leila Pitcher, Rev. Dimmick, ‘John G. Sweeting and John H. Williams. Navy Wives Hear Dance Report The regular meeting of *Navy Wives Club was held yes- 4erday afternoon with President Ellen B. Price in the chair. Mrs. Renee Reynolds, *man‘of the Navy Day Dance committee, reported that every- thing was in readiness for the dance tonight. Among the enter- tainment features of the event will be a prize waltz, fox-trot and balloon dances. An excellent floor chair- George Mills White as master of ceremonies. Among the special guests will Captain W. F. Jacobs, U.S.N.; Captain 4. S. Carpender, U.S.N.; Lt. Comdr. A. P. Storrs, U.S. Lt. M. O. Donohoo, U.S.M.C. A copy of an order from Cap- tain Carpender, granting leave for all Navy personnel from 1300 Saturday to 0100 Monday was sent to the club and read by the secretary. This Man Didn’t Read ‘Gone With The Wind’ (By Associated Press) SNOW HILL, Md., Oct. Isaac Wright, 94-year-old Negro, proved he still had excellent eye- sight by threading a needle by moonlight in one attempt. No reading, no eyestrain, he explained. IT’S AN IDEA (By Associated Press) ARKANSAS CITY, Kas.—The men of Arkansas City were grow- ing beards to provide atmosphere for a municipal celebration. Fred Lawhon, one of the town’s lead- ing citizens, took his adornment to a restaurant, asked for a hand- out—and got it! j the 26.—| ree ee: ;| BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT JOHN ALLAN LONG, JR. announce the arrival of a seven- {ning at a local hospital. The newcomer has been named ment of new John Allan, Jr. NOW BELLBOYS GO TO SCHOOL (Ry Associated Press) HEIDELBERG, Germany, Oct. cessful in the organization’s his- show will also be presented, with ,26—This citadel of higher learn- | tory. ing now offers instruction in ho- tel management and service. Not a part of the university, the “high school of the hotels” is conducted at a world-famed ‘hotel here, Business goes on as usual except that it is handled by | young girls, who do everything |from darning the guest's socks to jmanaging the hostelry. They re- [ceive the guest, escort him to his room, shine his shoes, take care of his laundry, tidy the room, 'serve the meals, supervise the kitchen, keep the books and han- dle the money. After a year’s service the stu- {dent hotel-worker receives a cer- tificate as a qualified hotel and jrestaurant employe. |Where There’s Smoke, | There’s——A Smoker i (By Associated Press) MEMPHIS, Tenn., Oct. 26.—It was an alibi the court hadn't heard before. Nevertheless L. C. Grayer had to pay a $5 fine for smoking on a city bus. “It was the cigar smoking—I wasn’t”, Grayer said. “I was holding it in my hand. I thought I'd knocked the fire off. But it started smoking again”. Judge Bill Bateman reasoned that cigars just don’t smoke by themselves. Romance in Your Coffee Cup By Jane FI ‘To the millions of Americans to jwhom the morning cup of coffee is @s much a part of the daily routine e¢ getting out of bed, it may seem wanbelievable that for many decades eoffee was a luxury enjoyed by only @ privileged few. * “Yet William Penn paid $4.68 for ® pound of coffee and for a century @r more thereafter coffee as a bev- erage was even more treasured than Tare wines and} liquors Today, 4,000, 000 women walked into the grocery stores of the United States each bought a pound of cof- Another 4,000,000 will do the ‘tomorrow and at the end of ninety-five of every hun- ilies in the United States have replaced the coffee in pantries. Every day in that week roasters will have de- 1,000,000 pounds of coffee and restaurants through- lan week 24,000,000’pounds of through the kitchen cof- pots at home, 6,000,000 through erns downtown. This week fAmerica will drink 30,000,090 of coffee. z There is romance in the cup o! . with which millions of} start off their day as a EQTERE fii 2 F ' af loyd Buck of miles of green plantations be | neath the hot suns of Chile and Brazil and the romance of great merchant vessels bringing fragrant cargoes of millions of pounds of coffee beans to American ports an- nually. ‘Not a small part of the romantic story of coffee lies in the system of mass merchandising which is pe culiarly American and which has taken the beverage from the class of luxury items and put it within reach of every household budget. A visit to the coffee distribution plant of the largest American food chain system reveals an interesting story of how millions of pounds of coffee a year are sent forth to the homemakers of the country at about one-twenty-fifth of the price William Penn paid for his coffee. This company has developed a sys- tem whereby the coffee only changes hands twice, once when purchased by buyers of the organi- zation and again when it is retailed to the customer. Thus, by elimi- nating the necessity of the bean passing from grower to an agent, through the exporter, importer or broker, roaster and retailer, sub stantial savings are affected. Coffee tasting also has become an art and the blindfold test is em- ployed by experts in detecting gra- dations of blend. Thus do Mr. and Mrs. Average American enjoy coffee at a few cents a cup which was worth its weight in gold before this country developed its own system of dix if ul @f course ... the romance tribution. PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Oct.) 26 (FNS).—Terming the imme-} Mr. and Mrs. John Allan Long during the boom years”. }pound boy, born Wednesday eve- tion on a sound basis, the associa- diate future the brightest in all] the history of Florida, President | S. H. Bowman of the Florida As-} sociation of Real Estate Boards, | pointed to the state’s amazing in-| crease in population during the last decade, greater than any} other state in the Union, and ex-} pressed the firm belief that the Freeman's, 1121 Catherine St. | styles in home color schemes. sept21-sat-tues PICTURE FRAMING PICTURE FRAMING, Diplomas; antique frames refinished. Sign painting. Paul DiNegro, Francis street. FOR SALE PERSONAL CARDS, $1.25 per 100. THE ARTMAN PRESS. 614 |tail Lounge, oct12-Imo |™akes its formal opening today. NEW RESTAURANT jerts, Catherine Connor, Rayford Rob- Marjorie Knowles, Charles Lowe, Ramon - OPENING TODAY |Gonz220. bs Archie Potter, Betty Kline, ‘vonne Pinder, A special dinner is advertised on | Master and Mrs. Milton Sawyer. page four of this issue. Miss Baas Tom- Ramsey, Columbia Restaurant and Cock-; Mrs. John Marzyck, Mrs. Emer- 117 Duval street,’ son Archer, Miss Marguerite Hil- ton, Miss Ruby Edwards, Scout- jo'clock. Through traffic, Tampa to Havana, was listed as 12 first- class. Returning yesterday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock, the Cuba brought 29 first-class passengers, two autos 2nd two tons of freight for Key West. Through traffic, He- 'vana to Tampa, was seven first-| | class and two second-class pas- “In order to satisfy the differ rr, ent tastes and wishing to please our patrons of more refined #un25-ts | taste, we have prepared a de- = | licious eight-course dinner which FOR SALE—Three lots, corner!iS composed of Spanish, Ameri- Georgia and United, 80x132’,|Can and French Dishes”, states; High land. A sacrifice if sold |the management. at once, $1100. Apply H. T,.| The .chef is formerly of El Roberts, 1401 Division street. |Chico, Miami Beach, and the oct19-sat-tf | La Concha Hotel of this city. next ten years would show even greater advances. “Thousands are pouring into the state in connection with the national defense program and thousands more will follow be- cause Florida is the only practical eastern state where military training can be carried out in winter months”, Bowman stated. “The time has come for Florida to take account of herself. We must work for a stronger and More modern real estate commis- sion to keep out of our state the same type of brokers and sales- men who exploited our resources Opens Today, Oct. 26 In order to satisfy the dif- ferent tastes and wishing to please their patrons more re- fined taste the Columbia Res- taurant has prepared a deli- cious eight course dinner which is composed of Spanish, American, and French dishes. The well known former Chef of El Chico, Miami Beach and La Concha, Key West, has had his own choice of selecting the highest grade merchandise to be used in the preparation of such dishes. Opening Dinner _ $1.00 Couple - _.. $150 From 6: lo 9:30 P. M. Hors’'d Odervues (Marie Antonieta) Soups Consomme (Maria Louisa) Spanish Bean Soup Filet (a la Capuchina) Salad (a la Ninon) Vegetable (English Peas- Saute) (French Fried) Dessert (Guava Shells with Cream Cheese) HOUSE ARRANGED FOR HO-} tel or Apartments with 13) rooms and 4 baths, including | $2,400 of furniture and fixtures} at 1104 Division street, opposite} Tift’s Grocery. $9,750; one third | cash; balance reasonable in- stallments to suit purchaser with low interest. See Raymond Lord at County Court House or| Phone 622. oct19-sat-tf HT EEN EYESIG To build up the state’s popula- SIGNS—“For Rent”, “Rooms For 5 s Rent”, “Apartment For Rent”, handicap that no child can over- : | come—a handicap because it produces “Private Property, No Tres- cp | passing”. THE ARTM AN’ besdaches, a dislike for school, poor PRESS. nov25-tf reticence, and a cross dispo- | iti insidi: because it can con- TYPEWRITING PAPER — 500 tiaue for years before its presence is | Sheets, 75c. The Artman Press. | discovered. Only a complete examin- | may19-tf | ation with up-to-date equipment can OLD PAPERS FOR SALE—! examination will assure him and will Three bundles for 5c. The Citi-| assure you that his eyes—whether he zen Office. nov25-tf | wears glasses or not—will give him | Coffee or Tea MOTOR BOAT, 26-ft, 10-np! Met bewties ‘Thank You- Col haute Palmer Engine. Cheap. Now ' 'ALDES eee ¢ P. DR. J. A. Y. on Wickers’ Ways. C. Rodney OPTOMETRIST iCHAS. ARONOVITZ Gwynn. oct17-tf ‘SECOND SHEETS—500 for 50c.| Address Phones The Artman Press. aes Duval Office: 332 Residence: 285|* DEPARTMENT STORE |; New shipment— Street COATS DRESSY COATS Fur Trimmed SPORT COATS FUR COATS tion head suggested the develop- types of natural products and the creation of new by-products of commodities al- ready on the market. The Silver Anniversary of the association was held at Ponte Vedra and was pronounced one of the most interesting and suc- LEON DEMS LEAD STATE PAID-UP MEMBERSHIP OVER ONE THOUSAND: FAR AHEAD OF OTHER FLORIDA UNITS | ea | SINGLE ROOM with adjoining; bath and private entrance. $5.00 per week. Apply 1001 Eaton; street. oct23-26x | APARTMENTS TALLAHASSEE, Fla. Oct. 26 (FNS).—P. B. Revels, executive secretary of the Young Demo- cratic Clubs of Florida, an- PEARLMAN’S, INC. THE STORE OF QUALITY nounced this week that with a paid-up membership of over one thousand, the Leon county or- ganization was now far ahead of all other Young Democratic clubs in the state from the standpoint of membership. Revels congratulated Leon County President Al Block and his co-workers for the splendid work they had done. The Leon group led the state in; the campaign last year with a FURNISHED APARTMENT, ail modern conveniences. $20.00 month. 1014 Grinnell street. oct14-tf 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. aprl7-tf Now is the time to FIX UP THE HOME—Get it Happy Yuletide Ahead! Our Drapery Dept. ne anton areeneaneeeaneneantomnteamee FUR JACKETS All At Popular Prices oS eS JUNIOR MISSES’ WOMEN’S HALF-SIZE DRESSES 917 Fleming St. Sizes up to 52 os Wool, Crepes and Prints $1.98 to $7.95 total of 1,415 members and ex- pects to make an even better rec- | WANTED ord when the drive now in prog-| ress is completed. Other leading WANTED—A chance to bid on units include Dade, 750; Alachua.! your next printing order. The 381; Escambia, 318; Volusia, 250 | ‘Artman Press. may19-tf Duval, 246, and Marion, 100. MONROE THEATER Joan Crawford and Frederic March in $1.98 to $7.50 Six Cases of BLANKETS Just Received Pure Wool Blankets as a as i TRY IT TODAY— | The Favorite in Key West SUSAN AND GOD STAR + BRAND | Matinee—Balcony 10c, Or- ;| | CUBAN COFFEE chestra 15-20c; Night—15-25¢ | ON SALE AT ALL GROCERS | HOLTSBERG’S $1.00 Day Monday ae | New shipment of LADIES’ HOUSECOATS .... $1.00 MISSES’ and LADIES’ DRESSES, fall prints . $1.00 Size 81x108 SHEETS, five year guarantee _.. $1.00 Five year guarantee PILLOW CASES, 4 for $1.00 COURDEROY SKIRTS, just in $1.00 SILK BLOUSES, prints and solid colors New SWEATERS, button down and pull-overs $1.00 RAYON SUEDE JACKETS, all colors, tricky meibers 22 e Oe “Sloppy-Joe” CARDIGANS .. $1.00 CHILDREN’S COURDEROY - $1.00 CHILDREN’S SWEATERS --- $1.00 INFANTS’ SWEATERS ____ -.-.. $1.00 NEW FALL BAGS, all colors __. $1.00 New COTTAGE CURTAINS, 2 pairs for $1.00 CHILDREN’S FALL CREPE DRESSES $1.00 BATHROOM CHENILLE ENSEMBLES $1.00 LADIES’ FLANNEL PAJAMAS . $1.00 LADIES’ FLANNEL GOWNS .. $1.00 New “Fruit of the Loom” SLIPS $1.00 CURTAINS, new patterns $1.00 Se Se FALL MERCHANDISE ARRIVING DAILY— WATCH OUR WINDOWS! ') SILK SOFA PILLOWS ; 8c Ruffled and Tailored CURTAINS, all shades. pair 50c PS LER (1-3) HATS, all shades WOOL COATS and HAT SETS ALL WOOL SWEATERS. sizes MONROE SUITS SWEATERS LEATHER JACKETS SHIRTS — SLACKS SHOES or any other item of MEN’S WEAR at “Style Leaders” Key West's Largest and Only Department Store Ph 598 1 ha i [ iH : i SOUTH FLORIDA CONTRACTING & ENGINEERING COMPANY White and Elize Suu COCO SOOSOSSSSSSOSSSOSESOSSSSSSSSSSESESSSSSSOES

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