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PAGE SIX Christmas Program | Saint Paul At First Congregational Service Tonight A Christmas program will be} Christmas services at Saint presented at the First Congrega- | Paul’s Episcopal Church will be- tienal Church tomorow evening gin this evening at 11:30 e’clock at 6:30 o’clock in the auditorium with Carols, Procession to the of the church. The public is;Creche and first Mass of Christ- cordially invited. imas at 12:01 a. m. The program follows: | Other services on Christmas Hymn—Congregation. 'Day will be as follows: Scripture Reading. | Low Mass (Communions), 7:00 Prayer—Pastor. a, Mm. Opening Day—Elizabeth Ann; Morning Prayer, 9:45 a. m: Russell. Sung Mass \Communions), Welcome—Doris Faye Parrot. | 10:00 a. m. A Gift Evening Prayer, 5:30 p. m. Other services in the week will Sawyer. 3 Z be as usual. On Friday, Decem- The Puppy's Stocking—Billy ‘per 27, the eve of Holy Innocents DuBreiul. Day, the annual Children’s Serv- A Road Map—Elizabeth Ann jices will be held at 7:00 p. m, Walterson. i i followed by a trip to the Christ- The Evergreen’s Greeting—! mas Tree in the Parish Hall. Shirley Ann Walterson. pen Se A A Greeting—Di Primo. Christmas Candles — Leader, Ben Saunders; Red, Birdie L. Lowe; White, Robert Archer; Blue, Betty June Cottrell; Green, Thomas Key; Yellow, Rose Marie! Archer; Pink, Audry Roberson; Purple, Helen Norcisa. My Choice—George Gibson. Make It Snappy—Walter Wal- terson. My Precious for Jesus—Margaret Pageant At | Baptist Church A Christmas pageant, “Lasting Glory”, written by Ada Rose Demerest, will be presented by the Sunday School and choir members of the First Baptist Church on Christmas night at 7:30 o'clock, in the Baptist Brady. Church auditorium. A cordial 7 Musical Message—Barbara | iVitation is extended to every- Mae Buckley. oe A City Of Bells—Robert Arch- a ee | Joan Kirke aig It On—Barbara An On Holiday A Gift We Can Afford—Alton} Culex. Miss Joan Kirke, daughter of Gift—Betty Rae er. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN STORAGE TANKS _ FRANCE’S FALL PENETRATOR PENS | Col. J. E. Wall, postmaster of | Tampa, is a genial man, capable of putting his visitors at ease the Ite was the mother’s idea that if jthey were torpedoed on the way minute they step into his private over here, the children could be office, which greatly resembles a/hauled aboard a rescue boat by { i their ropes. trophy room. | Another more clderly woman The first thing that gr@sPSirefugee confided the informa- {your attention is a large bald- tion that she had slept in her |headed eagle, mounted on a light-'corsets all the wey over. “It |wood tree top. This eagle was wouldn’t be proper to appear in {presented to J. E. Wall by Col- public without them and one just onel Frank Burke, of the Secret’ never knew what minute one !Service department of the U. S.: might be called on deck”. jTreasury. It is one of the two WAR eagles used by the Bureau of Printing and Engraving, as a! (Centinued from Page One) for action in various North and model for reproduction on cur- Baltic Sea shipyards. trency, bonds and other legal pa-: pers of the United States. ; While we waited for Mr. Wall to finish an interview with an- other person we inspected other interesting articles in the room. jin one corner there is a glass case about three by four feet, contain- ing two mounted owls. The taxi- jdermist had made a very natural setting for the owls with cypress knees, Florida moss and lighter wood. Near the owls there is a large model of an airplane. We were inspecting this as Col. Wall fin- ‘reported here. ished his interview and turned to| Although no exact information jus. He has been extremely dili-| was available at the time this gent in promoting use of the air | cable was filed, it is helieved that mail and gave us 2 picture of an the Fascist vessels were carrying electrical map he had devised at munitions and foodstuffs to Il one time in connection with the! Duce’s legions in the Far East. air mail service from Tampa. We een ‘remember using the map. You POPE PLEAS pressed a button, plugged a hole; FOR PEACE ROME, Dec. SINK THREE FASCIST SHIPS LONDON, Dec. 24.—Putting teeth into the speech of Prime Minister Winston Churchill yes- terday—in which he appealed to the Italian people to abrogate themselves from the Axis—R.A-F. flyers early this morning bombed and sun three Italian supply ships in the Mediterranean, it was 24—Pope Pius (Continued from Page One) ing institution. It will have about 100 students at all times. twith four destroyers and three ‘submarines for practice runs. Two storage tanks will built adjacent to the other nz structures of that nature. On will be a diesel oil storage ta 40 feet in diameter and 30 feet high, with a capacity of 10,00 barrels; the other will be 60 feet in diameter and 40 feet hig a storage capacity of 20,000 ba’ rels. Connections will be built t pier A and to the sea wall, so that ships may be refueled delay and without trouble. cost of the sound school buil and of the storage tanks will be known until some detailed ures are finished, Brady said. (Continued from Page Cne) Month”—Juanita Davis. Recitation, “All the Thi Want"—Jackie Wharton. wit Th fi . Wil- lie’s Prayers”—Nellie Thrower. Santa Claus enters to tune of “Jingle Bells”. Song “God Bless Everyone. Mrs. Solt and Mrs. Hooper are (ont, Tope was tied around their waists. SChool:in Key West is a grow+ place or re war America”— | pc mued trom Page One) 2 the equipment at of the defense program ible twelve months. ing, President mated $2,094,000,000 emed picayune by at year’s end—would r the nation’s mili- hment. A majority of ed. but a m t amou shocked and > opinion. Congress e the defense than $17,000,000,- Christmas asserted that lost its country was fail- slate available money plans into the ac- efense. airplane called for | s monthly only 700 Production id, was “no the program use needed tools Knudsen’s army admit- construction id schedule, uld necessary to planned induction of contingents the Fri TUESDAY, DECEMBER 24. 13948 COOSE ISIS S NORTHERN OYSTERS — ‘NO ROOKIES FOR XMAS AT WELLS EATERY Wells Lunch Room. 988 South- ard street. headquarters =m Ecy West for oysters. has jest tees ed a large shipment of mice lncree Chesapeake Bay Oysters for the holidays. Specusizemg = sandwiches, W: will also hav steak, turkey orsier dd dL ded XMAS PARTY AT LA CONCEA A real “old-time” Christmas party will start tonight 9:30 o'clock at La Concha Hotel and. according to Miss Elizabeth Sharpley, managress, there will be a large crowd attending. Scores of parties have reserved tables during the past week to be sure of getting in on the big entertainment of the year. Jerome Collins and his Beach- combers have a splendid pro- gram of appropriate Christmas music for tonight. There will be caps, noisemak- favors and balloons r everyone. There is no cover or admission charge. ine COLDS Misery of LrquiD 6 6 TABLETS SALVE NOSE DROPS COUGH DROPS Try “Rub-My-Tism"—a Wenéecfsl Limiment Atlantic Mutual Fire Insurance Company ers, How To Be Happy—Dolores;Mr and Mrs. Wallace B. Kirke, |in the map indicating the city you Penex. 3 |has returned to Key West from Were going to send air mail to, XIII, in his Christmas message Join The Givers—Frank Key. |her school in the north to spend and at the bottom of the map an from the Vatican today, declared God’s Gift—Ann Wood. the Christmas holidays with her |indicator gave you the time of |—regarding the war and what in many key used a 20 per in production in charge of corations, pro- gram .and arrangements. Layman, Mrs. Smith, M “TSIGANE” | PROSPEROUS, HAPPY Make A Merry Christmas—Ca- ‘Parents. mille Walterson. a His Birthday—Joyce Gibson. Sarasota Chief In Key West Two Stockings—Joan Knowles. Fire Chief H. M. Knowles, of Song—Norman Hicks. The Best—Lillian Stewart. Sarasota, former resident of Key West, is in town for the holidays. The Flowers Talk—Bobbie |! F.S.C.W. Student Walterson. Dolly’s Piece—Matilda Thomp- Home For Holiday Miss Betty Sawyer, freshman son. Christmas Bells—Carolyn Du- Brieul. at Florida State College for Wom- en at Tallahassee, arrived over the Highway Saturday to spend ‘Don’t Open—Patricia Lewin. A Path To Jesus—Rose Marie the holidays with her parents. \Ross E. Sawyer. clerk of the cir- Archer. cuit court, and Mrs. Sawyer. COUNTY VOTE Ker. Merry Christmas—Sally Goss. (Continued from Page One) | funding program was necessary to {make it possible for the city and Day—Lillian Ann Night—Kenneth Glad Bells—George ¢esus Wes Born In Bethlehem Dick- “| the school board to issue low in- —Maricus Cruz. The Starriest Baro. Hear The Thompson. A Big Word—Donald Key. A Message For Santa—Barbara Irene Pritchard. Christmas Lights—Dian ens. Silent Night—Myrna Lee Cur- terest-bearing bonds. The county ry. ie cannot have a surplus from the Helping Other—Ray Elwood. State’s gasoline taxes to enable it Song—Primary to pay the city and school board This Merry Christmas $44,000 a year unless the bond re- Mary Know funding program was passed, Saw- Our Lord’s yer explained. Gates. “It is like putting 50 cents into What We Can Do—Milton Bazo, {On Pocket and taking 50 cents Our Christmas Gifts—Myrna |°Ut of another pocket,” Sawyer Lee Cur % said. Commissioners Carl Bervaldi, Norberg Thompson and William Monsalvatge voted in favor of the resolution. J. Frank Roberts, who was named to the commission by Gov. Fred Cone to succeed the late | Braxton B. Warren, had not yet received his commission and did not serve on the board. Good-Bye—Millard Solomon. Baby Boy For His bond of $2,000 was approved by the commission. The bond of Earl Sands’ $10,000 for Joseph C. McMakon, Mr. and Mrs. Earl E. Sands. 1010 Virginie St. announce the birth of a son at their home yester- dav morning. 5:45 o'clock who becomes county tax collector on Jan. 6, the $1,000 bond of Mel- jvin E. Russell, Monroe county !school superintendent, and the Day— Birthday—Gilbert Mother and baby are doing nicely. The young fellow tipped the scales to the tune of ten pounds. Dorothy Carter Heuse Guest Here county school board member, oa were likewise approved. Miss Dorothy Carter of Holly- sis wood is spending the holidays in | Key West as house guest ot Mrs |SAMMY . BIRD COMING Berlin Knowles. \TO KEY WEST NITERY Mary Bonniwell A real “jam-up” big program has been planned for those who Visiting Parents make the Samoa Club their head- : 5 P quarters for Christmas _festivi- Miss Marv Louise Bonniwell. ties, and Manager Fred Marvil student at Florida State College has not “spared the horses” to for Women in Tallahassee, is bring to the Samoa the best in en- Spending the holidavs at home 'tertainment for Christmas week. with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. On Sunday evening, December George Bonniwell on White street nie 29, the Samoa will present for Winifred Shine the first time in Key West Sam- my Bird’s Six-Piece Orchestra Home For Holiday from Galveston. Texas. This band Miss Winifred Shine. student at is said to be one of the best in the South. Florida State Ccllege for Women ®t Tallahassee. arrived over the! CHANGE NAME OF highway yesterday to spend STORK CLUB HERE Christmas with her parents, Mr. ~ end Mrs. Clarence Shine, on Glenn Billingsley, owner of the Flagler Avenue. Stork Club on Roosevelt Boule- vard ,announced today that he is changing the name of the club to the “White Heron”. Sherman Billingsley .owner of the Stork Club in New York, ob- tained an agreement from the Key West club operator which said that in the interst of both organizations the local club’s {mame would be changed. at Ye On Xmas Vacation W. ©. Molenev. Tr student at the of Florida in Gainesville. is spending the Christmas holidays in Kev West with his parents. Tle ierarciter {$1,000 bond of Clarence L. Pierce, | arrival of your air mail letter in Hitler is trying to impc upon that city. the world—“That any new order Ranged around the room there must be based on right, love for are many pictures of prominent fellowman and _ sacrifice.” His people. One of Senator Pepper is Holiness made a plea for peace. displayed on the much desired —_—- }“eye line”. 75,000 TONS | Col. Wall is the type of man SENT TO BOTTOM who can do two things at once, BERLIN, Dec. 24—D.N.B., the and do them both well. He told official German news agency, an- us about the eagle at the same nounced today that Nazi sub- time that he was writing out an marines, bombers and sea raiders order for us. Before we finished had sunk between seventy and another caller arrived, so we ter- seventy-five thousand tons of Al- minated our interview. Col. Wall lied shipping in the last week. escorted us to the door saying, “I am glad to have been of ser- DEFENSE vice to you.” H A department store which FS prides itself on its service to the (Continued from Page One) customer was nearly nonplussed sours. The program is now taking when a customer, recently arriv- gefinite shape. ed from Britain, asked the clerk ““qi,c latest development is a $9,- for a stockinette frock”. The 000,000 project in which 64 en- clerk was sure they had no such sineering schools in 35 states, the thing. but the Britisher_ insisted, District of Columbia and Puerto “I saw them acvertised this Rico are offering 250 intensive morning.” The clerk finally call- courses to turn out within a few ed the floor-walker, who asked months 25,000 industrial design- the customer ,what she wanted. 7. ingpectors and supervisors. “A stockinlette frock, you have ‘Those skilled men of tomorrow advertised in the paper this mor-' Gefensive iridustry will be sclect- ning.” The floor-walker under- 24 by the colleges. Their tuition stood and smilingly asked, “Are wi] be paid from governmental you sure it is not a Jersey dress funds. s pees : Only a few months older is the Kiki, our Key West oe = gone- exchange of students and profes- She has left us with disturbing sors between the United States thoughts on cruelty and kind” ong 12 of the 21 Latin-American ness. In our attempt to be kind -ooublics. This phase of hemis- to Kiki we may have been ex- pheric defense and “intellectual tremely unkind. cooperation” already has borne Kiki had a sore on her neck. fruit either in actual or cefinite- We tried curing it with home re- ly planned exchanges between medies but as soon as it healed the United States and Brazil, she scratched the seabs away and Chije, Costa Rica, the Dominican we started all over again, final- Republic, Guatemala, Haiti, ly binding her neck with gauze. guras, Nicaragua, Panama, This seemed to worry her a lot guay. Peru and Venezuela. so the next time we left off the “a ‘ittle older still is the na- neck bandage and put adhesive tion-wide vocational school pro- tape on her hind feet. This pre- gram. In offering short cours¢ vented her scratching but it of intensive training to both st also might have prevented her Gents and adults it already hi from climbing a tree an case of turned hundre of thousands of trouble. That though didn’t occur titled and semi-skilled workers to us until too late. into defense factories We let Kiki out late one after- Pye National Education A noon. Before she came in, a friend ciation and the Office of Ed of ours arrived with the news of tion have been issuing bulletins a sudden call to the north and to ,and over fist to instruct every jask us to help pack bags and one from kindergarten teacher to Para- jdrive her to the bus station. We college president in the practical deshed off to do this kindness yays which education may adapt jfor_a friend. A cruel outcome itself to meeting defense needs. ‘waited us for upon our return Commissioner Studebaker in from the bus station we found public addresses, pamphlets and that Kiki had disappeared. We the official journal of his office, have never seen her since. has given the green light to the | Cruel uncertain thoughts con- entire professicn and through tinue to torture us. Was she killed qepartment and many other edu- by a dog, did she crawl away in cation agencies is trying to get all some dark spot to die a slow the wav out to the educational death, or did some neighbor think grass roots with practical sugges- we were cruel to the cat and so tions for changing the three R’s took it upon themselves to dispose into Defense with a capital D jof her? If Fate be kind, some day’ The education office’s “radio we hope to learn the truth. but script exchange” is working like the refrain of a song we keep overtime to supply the demand hearing the words, “Cruel Fate”. for radio scripts and record trans- Something for the ladies to an- criptions for schoolroom use. In swer: the last two months they have Which is worse, to have a lot supplied requests running into of clothes and no place to go, or. the thousands. The titles run to have places to go and no something like this: “Let Freedom clothes to, wear? Ringe!” a dramatization of the , Which is worse, to have a lot backgrounds of civil liberty of pretty clothes to wear to please “Freedom on the March”, a dra a husband who doesn’t . notice matization of the setflement of them, or, to have no husband? the Northwest Territory; “Ameri- piste cans All”; “I'm An American”; There were refugee children “This New World of Peace”: and their mothers gent to Amer- “Making Democracy Work”; and ica from Britain during the “war “A Century of Pan-American- to end wars”. ism”. One mother arrived with both Commissioner Studebaker has her children trailing about 30 issued a seven-point health pro- fect of rope, behind them. The gram that already has been sag Mrs. Wharton nd White are acting as a committ for purchases and gifts. Ruth Putnam is in charge of c ganization and _ supervision committees. Music will be furnished Key West -WPA orehestra. public is invited. LEFTOVERS CAN BE GOOD, YOU KNOW By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE 7 AP Feature Service Writer ¢ Meals that fol'ow holi can be made beguiling by use of foods left from the feasts themselves. . Tomato and fruit JUICES, and ‘fruit cockta’ di soups can be stiffenc tin and perched r lettuce or other salad gree dressing may be pepped up w a dash of cocktail sauce mustard pickles or the si off the cheese dish. / cheeses give better flavor single kind. atop shr ee Salvage leftovers RELISH TRAY. grind them, moisten with a little dressing or chili sauce comes a brand new canapes or a_ sandwi Spread some between hot rolls or bread slices at time. from Make SWEET POTATO BALL! with this surprise touch. C 2-inch balls of seasoned m Hon- weet potatoes raisins Roll in cereal flakes and shallow, well but le or brush with m and bake 10 minut brown—in a mode: CONFECTION ROLL that leavings c t the beginnings. M with 4 teaspoons % teaspoon salt granulated sugar spoons butter. of candied f raisins. Add 2-3 cup when a soft dough forms. out until % inch thick with butter, mi brown sugar, teaspo mon and '% cup ch prunes, curants or apricot up quickly and fit int loaf pan. Bake 30 mint moderate oven. Serve leftover hard and bey For a crinct nuts mixed into half a cur liquid sauce over the top of th loaf after it has baked 15 m Crushed candy brittle can be used instead of the nuts. 1 hot adopted in thousands of gr and high schools. Seventh p of the program is establishm of camps, a new phase of heaith education movement wt ome predict will become portant. Under direction of the offi library service and the Ameri Library Association, both and school libraries are rev their stocks to meet defe: needs. Nearly all were cau short on the mushroom for books on machine tool. design, aerodynamics. explo air raid protection, first naval architecture. 2 and industry to ompromise to per- ck production en more frank. ¢ must work hard- when necessary, its resources ut unbuilt— were at the would re- o fill the vision for d to Britain. 6,000 tanks n said only it 1 building zed in 1940 called 294 ps by U S. a fleet of But the pro- re were available ys Suitable for The program’ so the navy 120,000,000 to ex- before the could get un- ‘orm by next training camp will prevent atisfied with or construc- not begin plans would force to 350,000 ired major ar subsidiary fields ned the army air At the end of the year 1 y under way. defense orce priorities defense goods 1940. Many i Smith -curb laws tc < stoppages. dent, pro- dgement of labor's and there was argument nated to defense. JOLLY GOOD FELLOW Connors of ul candidate ve in the filed an expense t included a pint of ree cans of beer, a a pound of ham- cigar. ? hn unsucce jon, The Citizen, 20c Gypsy Gift Shep GIFTS FROM EVERYWHERE | Jefferson Hotel Bids. ' Quaint West End Duval Street VIRGINIA PATERSON NEW YEAR 1026 White Street PHONE 52 FOR YOUTHFUL SPIRITS SESSIONS: 2 P. M. till 4 P.M 7:30 P. M. till 19 P. Mw IF YOU CAN WALK YOU CAN SKATE —— Shoe Skates For Sale —— WE WISH YOU A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS Peel NEW YEAR We sincerely hope you have a truly happy. bealth- ful New Year and 2 Merry Chrirtmas. a = When In Need Of A TAXI Call 9125 Everready Taxi Co. 24 Hour Service RAYMOND Extends the SEASON'S GREETINGS to its PATRONS AND FRIEND: o—— Mav 191] Be AB You Wish Fer SAMOA CLUB Fred Marval | 512 Caroline Street -: “GG ES Ee SSA SEBEDAAD ISD IID a* TO Aii CUR FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS During ali the years we've been im busimess we've Leen lucky enough to get 2 let of friends. To each «f them now, we want to wish « truly — MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY. PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR SAN CARLOS BOOK STORE BERNARD ALLEN, Owner (LAbkb Lb AAA AAA Ld ad DIXNER WIXE SHRIMP COCKTAEL OF OTSTER CELERY HEARTS CREAM OF CHICKEX sot SAUTEED FLOrmps CEA re Croace of Extree POAST DUCK WITH FEAXKTT BrEsstwc ROAST TOUNG PSG. ¢ ANeED 5 ae AKED CHICKEN. OTSTEE BRES-eNc 2AST TOUNG TORRE SEX. Seer NG CB EEX. SOUTHEES <TTLE ECOTTAGE CHEESE saiap BC ITERED CAULIFLOWER *SOw FLARE Puta sue FRESE STEING BEANS (Chesce of HOME MADE PUMPERIX PEE aor SE ee HOME MADE EXGLIS# PLO = PT pec TEs . : ) . % ow OLD-FASHIONED HOME-COOKED XMAS DINNER coer COFFEE Orientale R 319 DUVAL STREET GPAL FUSSELL