The Key West Citizen Newspaper, November 30, 1940, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR SOCIETY :-: Navy Wives To Hold Banquet The regular meeting of the Navy Wives Club was held yes- terday with president Ellen Price in the chair. Mrs. Gladys Arnold read a let- ter received from Mrs. Eleanor Judash in regard to the club pins. o have a Key with bn ber) in the cen- ter on the guard as the pin itself} is a miniature of the national| emblem. Mrs. Mizpah | Pierce was ap- > of making ar- banquet to be} 4th, Ocean-View | All are} pointed in char; rangements for Leld Wedne: December at 6:30 p. m., in the Restaurant on United street. ng to attend notified to contact Mrs. Pierce not later than Tuesday night. nounced that use the} Bowling Alleys at the station, any members wi: I lent Price a: | CENSUS REVISION (Continued from Page One) ling to the most recent popula- Club Directors To Meet Monday in respect to actual population: — District One with 472,729; . Dis- Directors of Key West Woman’s trict Four. 433,465; District Two, Club will meet next Monday ; 388,092; District Three, 305,544; night, 8:00 o'clock, in the club-| and District Five with 287,974. house on Division street. District Four has the largest Mrs. F. W. Knapp, president,/Percentage of gain; also the has requested all officers and largest actual increase in the ae ...,,number of le directors constituting the official Contage being 427 a aL | board to be present at this meet- ‘ylation gain 179,107. The per- Tampa to Havana totalled eight} ing. centage of increase of the other four is given according to rank: District One, 19.5; District Two, ENGLAND ORDERS 15.0; District Three, 122: and ALL-OUT CONFLICT | District Five, 10.6. | This study also shows that eae District One has 25.0% of the State’s population and the other ported concentrated damage on! nistriets rank as follows: District the German bases at Cologone' Four, 23.0; District Two, 20.6; and Bremen, believed to still! District Three, 16.2; and District hold the main threat of invasion | Five, 15.2 : by sea against England. fe The total population for Flor- ida, latest (Continued from Page One) according to the In Athens the reports. practic- figures on the 1940 census, is 1,-| ally coincide with those released | 887,804; thus showing a total gain earlier this week: “our armies are{in the ten-year period of 419,- pushing forward further into Al- | 593. |bania”. Italian planes were re-! RAISES INCREASE _ TRANSPORTATION * | Baten re a NR The per-| THE KEY: WEST CITIZEN H S. S. CUBA | Steamship Cuba of the P. & God gave Him no home when he came to this earth, ‘tion figures, now rank as follows O. S. S. Company arrived here at} Not even a place for His head; ;6:00 a. m. Thursday with five |So they borrowed a stable, the | first-class and one second-class | Place of His birth, |Passengers for this port and 20} And a manger was used for His jtons of freight. Twenty-seven; bed. first-class and one second-class! They, borrowed the water He [passengers embarked here for, 1¢umseécintoowine7.. |Havana and gwe-autos-were tak-| Tw Ashes’ and five loaves of en on beard:before the ship sailed! | ¥ 'te2 coy 2 = fat 10:30 o'clock... Traffic. from’ But ‘fhe ‘love. that He gave was His right divine, first-class and four second-class.| As throngs on the mountain Returning yesterday at 3:10 p.| were fed. \m. the Cuba brought 29 first-class | ey made Him a pulpit out un- Passengers for Key West, two! der the sky; autos and three tons of freight. The boat, it was borrowed, you Through passengers. Havana to} see. - Tampa, totalled 12 first-cl | , two second-class, with 18" toms|But the message a of freight on that manifest. Six| ¢ame from on high first-class passengers embarked} jhere for Tampa and the vessel | left at 4:40 o'clock. it lee. He asked them to borrow the colt that he rode To the city that looked for a King, GEMS FOR YOUR SCRAPBOOK : The Borrowings Of Jesus | As He taught them in old Gali-! _—_——— ‘But the cross that He bore was CITY FOLKS MAY LEARN ABOUT FARMS (Continued from Page One) partment report is how many of these “modern farm conveniences and luxuries” seem to be poten- tialities rather than realities so far as the modern farm home is concerned. ‘When the last general survey of farm income was made in 1935-36 (and md more accurate figure will be, available until the; Census Bureau comes through! with its breakdown on farm population figures) about one- fourth of the farm families re- ceived direct relief or had in- comes under $500; a little fewer | than a fourth had incomes of $1,500 or more; and the remain-| ‘der, slightly more than a half, had incomes from $500 to $1,500. | With an average of 4.5 persons | to the family (one more than av- |erage in cities of more than 100,-| |000), you can start your budget | ling. Take out for stuff you have| to have to be a “modern” farmer | - |—a tractor, other improved tools} land machinery, better seed, fer-| idition is spotted, there are many sections where the kerosene lamp is still a standard fixture. In the scutheast section of the country, the survey showed that SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30. 1940 clude such tems as 42 percent of the counthes = the Unated Staees have no regutere¢ genera Oes even among the better-off white , operators with incomes of $1,000 to $1,250, only 4 percent had elec- tric lights. Let's stay in this same com- paratively well-off mcome brac- mm ket and take a swing through a few states and sce what was re- ported, Psat jthe Percentages of ie re- farmers having mechanicel Wisconsin, 6; North and South Carolina, 5; Pennsylvania, Kansas and Ohio, 4; Georgia and Missis- sippi, 2, and Illinois and Jowa, 1 The report shows that im the whole country only 16 percent of farm families in the interme- diate income group ($500 to $1.- 000) had water piped into their gartment bovs have ther figures righ . lease & xt moter even 2 bed yeas homes and only 10 percent had .~ Joor toil ‘There's Plenty To Do This sort of summarizing could In loving memory of husband jand dad, Charles W. Richards morning or afternoon, by permis-| ported to be more active than| sion of Colonel Hatfield. She also said that Navy Yard Li- brary is open daily from 1000 to 1130 and 1230 to 1800. Mrs, Lillian Michael is librarian in charge. The club voted to meet at the Red Cross Room on Duval street every Moi afternoon at 2 o'clock to sew on layettes and other wearing apparel for the Service personnel, to meet other ladies in the city to sew and knit for the British welfare work. Mrs. Wm. Warren offered the use of these facilities to the club. Next meeting will be the busi- ness session. RODENTS ENEMY ON MAGINOT LINE NOW (By Associated Press) KAISERSLAUTERN, Germany, Nov. 30.—The war still is on with grimness on tt faginot line, Strassburger Neuste Nach- hten reports, ng, however, that it is waged against mice and Tats. Appro: rodents eled fr ately three million ready have been shov- the long battle line and carted away. But many more are still to be caught Evacuated villages and farms in front and behind the Maginot e in Lorraine and the Palati- nate have been virtually overrun by vermin. About six million squill cakes were laid out as bait besides a large quantity of fish poisoned with 1500 quarts of a liquid gained from squills. Eight hundred pounds of poisoned bar-j{ ley were applied against rampant | mice. ——— Sunday” Horoscope Today’s disposition is iastic, perhaps inspirational, very | impulsive and ‘headstrong, but! having an idea in mind constantly | kept sight of. These persons may | be very successful if the concen-| tration is properly directed; but} in any . it will carry with it its share of trouble, due to ex cess of zeal. | SECOND SHEETS | | 500 Sheets | for 50c MANILA, 8%4xli | | | PAPER 500 Sheets for | { SS ARTMAN PRESS The Citizen Bldg. PHONE 51 : | heretofore, and reinforcements} were said to have been landed} | from Italy. British planes were! | still strafing Italian supply lines; jand artillery action from mount-} ain tops in the central and west-! lern sectors was continuing to harrass Il Duce’s slowly re- treating armies. | From Bucharest j turbing news of came dis- the develop- |control of the nation turned over’ jto Germany. Statc funeral rites | for fifteen Iron Guards killed two lyears ago was held, with black- robed monks, Nazi and Jap dig- nitaries in attendance, with Pre- mier Antonescu. Rumanian censorship tightened to new heights, but news trickles across the frontier telling of the threat of civil war. King Michael is being heavily guarded against attempts on his life. Sudden action by the Nazis is expected ‘momentarily. FORTUNE SOLDIER TO WINTER HERE (Continued from Page One) vials, one of placer gold and one jof rock gold ore which he mined jin Arizona, and his Mexican silver badge as sanitary inspes- tor. “I was reported dead six times”, "Billingslea said. “I was shot once, stabbed once, knocked on the head and once went with- | ments that might bring complete| BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT Pinders Have Daughter Mr. and Mrs. Sam B. Pinder, {Jr., apnounce the arrival of a) hospitak baby,. bor -at a local last evening. The new comer is a girl, weighing seven and three- quarter pounds at birth, and has been named Eveiyn Ann. Mrs.! ‘Pinder is the former Cora Ren- dueles. She and her baby are re- ported as doing nicely. ————— DIVORCE ACTIONS Final decree in the divorce suit instituted by George Charles Hepburn against his wife, Doris Dixon Hepburn, charging deser- tion, was filed in the Circuit Court this week. Both are resi- dents of this city. MINISTERS MEET MONDAY MORNING Key West Ministerial Alliance will convene at a regular month- ly meeting at First Methodist Church annex next Monday morning, December 2nd, 10:30 o'clock, according to announce- ment by the group’s secretary, Rev. Ted M. Jones. MONROE THEATER LUNN and ABNER and FRANCES LANGFORD =a DREAMING OUT LOUD Matinee—Balcony 10c, Or- chestra 15-20c; Night—15-25¢ out food for five days. I also have a life membership in the Young Men’s Christian Associa- | tion”. TIP PIII ABABA A hh hdedked COMPLAINT SERVICE. .. If you do not Receive Your Copy of The CITIZEN By 6 P.M. PHONE—WESTERN UNION Between 6 and 7 P. M. and a Western Union Messenger Boy will deliver your copy of The Citizen. I IASALALLA LALA LA AAA Ad For Real Economy For Real Service For Real Protection DELIVERED DAILY EVERYWHERE Thompson Enterprises INCORPORATED ICE DIVISION PHONE NO. 8 Linked hide hale de deubeade dort | “His heavy ioad, KINDLINESS | tte? i P i | And the crown with its’ thorns The best’ portion “of a good | d its sting. |man’s life is his little, nameless,;. . <=... ‘ " }unremembeted acts of kindness} An ld yiber Foom, it wag bor- and of love.—Wordsworth. ¥ rowed, you know, — | And the table, by friends Kindness in ourselves is the! was spread, honey that blunts the sting of}But the wine was His blood, so unkindness in another.—Landor. freely to flow, And His body was broken for bread. it A pure affection, concentric, | forgetting self, forgiving wrongs and forestalling them, should! swell the lyre of human love.— Mary Baker Eddy. man’s tomb, The grave clothes, His friends did supply, But the’angels were His, they rolled back the stone, For God’s only Son could not die. The things He had borrowed were all given back, Not in fishes, nor grave clothes, nor home, But life in abundance He gave without lack, Within them God's kingdom had come. It is one of the beautiful com- pensations of life that no man can sincerely try to help another without helping himself.—Bailey. Those who bring sunshine to the lives of others cannot keep it from themselves—J. M. Bar- rie. The one who will be found in} trial capable of great acts of; love is ever the one who is al- ways doing considerate smali|—From The Palm Branch by ones.—F. W. Robertson. Rev. A. L. Burgreen. THAT EXTRA ROOM... at small Cost Any home cas use an extra room— a guest room or a playroom—and a few panels of plywood will build that room at a cost any one can afford. Plywood is easy to work, takes any finish. “EVERYTHING IN BUILDING MATERIAL” Cheely Lumber Corp. 731 CAROLINE STREET PHONE 297 | CHRISTMAS GIFT HEADQUARTERS AT. The Store of Fashion A full stock of every conceivable item for presents for every member of the family! | Doctor Denton’s SLEEPING PAJAMAS, Sizes 0 and up. Ladies” DRESSES, all leading shades up from All-wool SKIRTS, in plain and plaids up from D190 WAISTS to match $1.00 up $1.95 | |“ CORDUROY SUITS, A full stock of GIRLS’ Best grades of SILK UNDERWEAR For Evening Wear! GOWNS, SKIRTS, JACKETS, PAJAMAS, — for the “best- dressed SPECIAL MONDAY —on— 4-YEAR CERTIFIED SHEETS and CASES Better SHOES, Seasinds va ____ $1.50 APPELROUTH’S | tilizer, etc—and see what's left) who passed away from us Dec weekly | ‘ They. laid Him to rest in another j |for telephones, radio, junkets to the village movie, and/ such. } j In a survey made as recently | jas 1938, it was estimated that 40 |percent of the farm homes were | without radios. The 1930 census showed that only 34 percent of| all farmers had telephones and} j the boys at agriculture think the} percentage has changed little| j Since then. | Although the electric light con- | PALGCeK The Ritz Brothers and The Andrews Sisters in ARGENTINE NIGHTS COMEDY and NEWS TRY IT TODAY— The Favorite in Key West STAR * BRAND CUBAN COFFEE Be Sure To See. . . ARONOVITZ DEPARTMENT STORE for GIFTS Gifts to please the entire family and those SPECIAL friends. ALL POPULAR PRICES sabe ie 5-piece Luncheon Sets 50c set Embroidered Pillow Cases 50c Filet Table Scarfs, (three lengths). SOc each 54 in. Blocked Cloths SOc Guest Towels. (Emb.) box 2 50 Manicure Sets SOc $1.98 >, $18.95 Dress Up The Home! Curtains. Drapes. Blankets. Rugs. Bedspreads, efc. Selection Second To None! Shoes! Shoes! Shoes That Fit the Foot. the Eye and Pocketbook Biggest stock and finest selec- tion of styles in town ' 1, 1936: Four long yeart have passed dear “Dag”, “~ Since we saw your deer & face But in our hearts we _ love you And love you, we always will HIS WIFE AND CHILDREN nov30-1tx —By Ekcenct —FIRST— BAPTIST Invites You To Worship Tomorrow! 11:00 A. M—“Idle Words” 7:30 P. M—"A Special. Pre- : pared Hell For Christians. REV. TED M. JONES, KAY DUNSILL Dresses. . enteite s , \ | Ar T "i a if I ; TT ait ih il Wi ti "i HY r ry mt fi | “ |

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