The Key West Citizen Newspaper, January 9, 1941, Page 4

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PAGE FOU: FOLLIES IN OKLAHOMA CITY: (By Associated Press) OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., Jan. | 9.—Patrolmen J. H. Blackard and; Leedee Hunter scurried to inves-! tigate a nine-car pileup on an icy} street. i | abe their car, they began to| iece Yo} = SOCIETY = Miss Thelma Strabel Guest Speaker At Woman’s Clu (By RUBY MCRGAN) ‘The regular monthly business | luncheon at the _Casa.,Marina and social meeting of the Key | Hotel followed by.a meeting at the thér the puzzle of which | ‘West Woman’s Club was held at| club house. : Ly28 cere, L No.2 No. 3, ete. the club house on Division street} Mrs. Frederic W. Knapp re-| Then along came a truck and on Tuesday afternoon. ported on the proceedings of the wham! ‘The patrol car became During the business session, |meeting of Section Eleven which | No. {0 and the truck No. 11. presided over by Mrs. Frederic W.| was held 2 feet pcperner REE ok apeibee Fede Knapp, reports were heard from | 20th, and w! ich was attended by 7 hoa: chairmen and stand-|a representative group from the | LEGAL STRUGGLE WITH ing committees. cal club. At this meeting Mrs. | Mrs. William, R. Warren, public | Knapp presented application from RAILROADS NEARS END welfare chairman, stressed the|the Key West Junior Woman’s Ava nea cine need for volunteer knitters for|Club for membership with the| (Continued from Page, One) Red Cross sweaters, She called|Florida Federation of Women’s entire levy is not illegal—only attention to the charity work be: |Clubs. |that part of the levy proportion- ing accomplished by the Junior} Mrs. O. W. Bodler of Rochester, |ate to the appropriation payable Woman’s Club sponsored by Mrs. |N. Y., who is a regular winter visi- |to the bond company for its serv- Albert Mills. | tor to Key West spoke of plans be- | ices may be contested. Mrs. W. Jay Ingling reported on jing formulated to organize a/ School bonds issued prior to new books purchased for the|woman’s choral, group under the 1924 are not subject to See | Library She stated they had re-; sponsorship of the Woman’s Club. tive five mill levies provided in ceived fifty books of the quota of| In introducing the guest speak- | subsequent legislation. two hundred for the year. She re-|er, the well known author Miss; ], addition, the Coast Line, in minded members that they could | Thelma Strabel, Miss Minnie Por- lace to expedite school fund still contribute books if they had | ter Harris called attention to the | payments, agreed to drop its at- failed to bring same to the meet-| unlimited publicity brought to our tack on past budget levies based | ing. She also announced that it city by the publication of her re-| ony the 95 percent rule. appeared from plans outlined that | cent novel “Reap the Wild Wind.” uunties immediately affected 1941 would be a very auspicious |She very aptly spoke of Miss|py one or more of the various year for the library. |Strabel as Key West's greatest| points under contest included: Mrs. Haydn Illingworth, chair- | emissary. 2 Alachua, Clay, Citrus, DeSoto, man of fine arts department urged| Miss Strabel' spoke briefly of | Hernando, Highlands, Hills- all present to visit the art museum, | her pleasure at being in Key West. | }orough, Lake, Marion, Manatee. where a very splendid exhibit of |She told of plans for filming her Osceola, Orange, Pasco, Pinellas, paintings is now on display. {novel, stating this will be a two putnam, Sarasota, Sumter Sem- Mrs. J. J. Trevor, chairman of, million five hundred thousand | jnoje, Union and Volusia. house and grounds committee dollar production in ee asked that members send in their | She very graciously offered to an- | favorite recipes in order that plans pai mae pages) of i hades -e MAKING READY FOR could go forward for compiling | ‘s. John Gekeler’s solo, “Schu- | ” the cook book which her commit- | bert’s Serenade” was a very en- FD R S INAUGURAL tee ho to publish in the near |joyable number on the program. si re ee ye e . \She was accompenied on the piano| _ (Continued from Page One) _ The club will sponsor, as is their | by Miss Alce Curry. \tion of the District of Columbia annual custom, a tropical lunch-! Mrs. Haydn Illingworth, chair- Chapter, American Red Cross; and | eon in the club house January |man of the fine arts department |Dr. A. Magruder MacDonald, cor- ; 30th, at which time special Key read a poem written by Father | oner of the District of Columbia. | ‘West dishes will be featured. Mrs. | Abram J. Ryan, “Poet Priest of the) “The committee agreed to usc} Arthur Pastorini and Mrs. Grey- South,” “The Sword of Robert E. |the inauguration a8 an experi-| burn Pinder are authorized to Lee.” January is the anniversary |Ment for large-city disaster re-} take reservations and it is urged | month of this great general. lief”. 4 j These are direct quotes from a} ded sincere |recent release by the Inaugural that these be made as early as pos-| Concluding the program Mrs. sible. '| Frederic Knapp exten i ; igur There is much enthusiasm / greetings to the club and friends |Committee, Fifth Floor, District shown in the club at the proposed | for a prosperous New Year. Building, Washington, D. C. If) official visit of the state president,| During the social hour refresh- you have any questions, take it! Mrsé Thurston Roberts of Jack-|ments of cookies and tea were |up with them. I'm going to spend | sonville on February 18th, at’ served by the hospitality commit- inaugural day in my new dis- which time it is planned to hold a | tee. aster-proof shelter in the Virginia t |hills. . and I WILL be careful, I | promise. Few Civilians To March | Sartorial item: “Two hundred} [reperecniai aves each of the Civil-| Miss Betty Newman, made fa-| Two marriage licenses were is- ua Aron anawie eee ie mous by the New York World's | sued yesterday by County Judge|the Works Progress Administra Fair, will appear nightly at the/Raymond R. Lord. They were tion will be the only civilian] ee eer Seige 8D. lissued to Edward T. Wodoson, 25, inarchers in the inaugural parade. mahager Tred. Marvil. of the U.S. Coast Guard, and peu oe Pea eaayoacliy First performance each evening | Marguerite Brady, 19, of Pamlico, tdi ater . rade aL Senet will be at 11:80 o'clock. Sammy |N. C., and Emilio Garcia, 48, and | °*tY MUAY Barack Wie be Os Bird’s original Dixieland Band | Anna Laurie Roberts, 41, of Key |i in ride in automobiles. | plays music for dancing from 10 | West. “The CCC will enter 198 young till 3 p.m. Penny cocktail hour men. . .wearing the spruce-green daily from 5 to 6 p. m. |CCC uniform and marching emp- | Dr. And Mrs. Young PERSONAL MENTION « bene “The NYA young people will wear mackinaws made in the! Return To Home Miss Gwendolyn James, daugh- NYA sewing rooms. . .a third will} Dr. and Mrs. C. A Young and tor Gt Dleurenees, and aca thi 4 solid blu “Secu | son, Clifton, Jr., have returned to Thomas James; whose & junior st WEA. 3 archers, Lakehurat, N. J., after a visit in|the Florida State College for Seon the barks of onstae Key West. Dr "Young is senior | Women, left Sore Tat gute na fense workers, will wear orkit medical officer ‘at the U.S. Naval hassee ‘after ‘spending ig Aer i arb” : ’ Station there. a4 |with her Parents at the'home on 892 - ‘ss : While: here, the Youngs were Relies alls sk Pe terre oan Curt How about wearing your Christ- Ladthendislew 6¢:Bire: Pos, man at the Florida State College | | . Mrs. James Dunham, mother at Tallahisende, Thal” retired | to This Fast of Mrs. Poe, who was a guest at Tallahassee after spending a visit | A i PREVEN pete s Helen Pierce, freshman at the Col D the same time, has returned to in KeysWest with relatives. her home in Pensacola. eve Oping } : | Women’s State College, has re- Couple Married At turned to the institution after But Vicks Va-tro-nol up each nostril ab | spending a visit in Key West. | Te Catholic Rectory One On Mike Walter Anthony Serowick and| pat—Moike do yez know why} Miss Evelyn May Logsdon were an Irishman hits the pepper box married January 5 at St. Mary’s on the bottom an’ a Dutchman Rectory at 6:45 p. m. by Rev. A. hits it on the side? | L. Maureau, S.J., the witnesses! \ike—Begorra, Pat, Oi don't.; being Bernard F. Haney and Mrs. | why it is? Norma F. Haney Pat—Shure, an’ it’s to get the pepper out, Moike. Margaret Brady Weds * Edi 1 Woodson FOR YOUTHFUL SPIRITS ROLLER SKATE Miss Margaret Brady and Ed- aeeatnner ae an 4P.M. ward T. Woodson were married 7:30 P. M. sill 10 p. Mm. TRY IT TODAY— last evening at the home of Ca ‘CAN WALK t aaline tain and Mrs. Meuse on Margaret iF You ve 10 jee pa Sar rent street. The bride is a niece of Captai “eaten For il STAR * BRAND —— Shoe Skates For Sale Meuse, while the groom is a nep- CUBAN COFFEE hew of A. P. Knowles. The newlyweds will make ON SALE AT ALL GROCERS their home for the present at the residence of Cap 'Two Marriage jeanne Issued Miss Betty Newman To Appear Here chosen } de-| NO NAME LODGE | Famous Bahia Honda Fishing Reef - Tarpon - Permit - Bone Fishing Cottages—$3.50 a day and up Stone Crab Dinners a Specralty Phone No Name Key No. 1 For Information “TSIGANE” typsy Gift Shop Quaint West End Duval Street VIRGINIA PATERSON much my in- Hotel De Luxe American Plan 200 delightful ROOMS, each with PRIVATE BATH Beautiful Cocktail Lounge | DANCING NIGHTLY eecccecoces ee STRONG ARM BRAND COFFEE TRIUMPH COFFEE MILLS AT ALL . GROCERS VED ARSE SAVE. NOSE CROPS eee eseooesecesoonoeees | where along the line of endeavor |residence here during the term, jone of the main tourist attractions THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ~ THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1941 ~~ | “ATHLETE’S FOOT” DUE TO A GERM : PLAN CONVENTION-LUXURY YACHT WEST WINTER RESIDENT Sty PUNTA GORDA — SAILED TODAY. "Nano ro ai eee ESCENDANTS OF FIRST The luxury yacht “By Mash Soe ete peoarete jWith owner Byron Miller, of reaches. Get 30c worth of TE-Ol. Portland, Me., and party aboard, ! Soution from any druggist. Your left the Craig Dock this morning 30e back next morning if nob for Palm Beach on probably the | Pleased. Pleasant and'egSy 40 last trip of private ownership. co ay of “Athlete's ed It is learned on good authority | ¢.. (toot orden, ety ta: sae : feet. Feel it penetrate. : that the yacht will then proceed at Gardner's Pharmacy eave 3 to New York to be stripped be- fore being handed over to the) government, which has just ac-| quired this one of the last few re-, 9 maining luxury yachts for .de- fense purposes. | Mr. and Mrs. Miller entertain- | ed friends aboard last night, TRADE AT 11a Precaution ; ; Key West’s Oldest Smith—My wife look: : mii ly wife looks after me, Established G a all right. Why, she takes off my WEEKEND SPECIALS shoes for me every night. No. 1 19. ic Jones—When you come home from the club? POTATOES, 10 lbs. ___. Roll Smith—No; when I want to go to the club. Country BUTTER, ib Pure ONIONS. KEY Poems Of Mrs. Oscar Bodler Published Recently| SUBJECT OF SKETCH IN NEWSPAP Mrs. Oscar W. Bodler, regular | ceiving her B. M. degree one year! winter visitor to Key West, was after her younger daughter had | the subject of a sketch in the Mi-| obtained hers. During this course ami Daily News recently when of study she kept house for four, directed a choir and taught 20 ¥ se pupils weekly. Poetry is.a later ee atin i column | interest, the natural outgrowth of Key West Ee eae. ilk gs her life long love of rhythm. Her y em i I'S: poems have appeared in most of rst ay aia ota econ ks the journals devoted to verse and heen lenich nee bee A a ne i many of the standard anthologies. o ffai 5: ae in other CUul-| From the magazine, La Paloma, tural affairs of the city. The! we quote this tribute done in the sketch as it appeared follows: | onciedt' Mala: Seen tie cane Emerline Wintermuth Bodler, a'igum: mee native of New York state, who has spent the last three winters in Key West, considers the poetic pos- sibilities of South Florida limit- | Afloat upon a jade-green sea, less. Much of her early education | Your palms and golden sands be- was devoted to music. With the! guile; intention of becoming a concert; You spell real loveliness to me. Pianist, she attended the Ithaca Conservatory of Music, the Uni- versity of Rochester and the East- man Schcol of Musie. but some- eee FAMILIES IN AMERICA” TO ASSEMBLE THERE PUNTA»GORDA, Jan. 9.— | ENS) The ‘afinual convention of the “Descendants of First Fami- lies in America” will be held this year at Punta Gorda on Jan. 16, 17 and 18 with headquarters at the Princess Hotel. The conven- tion is held always in Florida where there come each winter so many who are interested in their | family ancestry. | Affiliated with this organization are a number of family genealog- ; ‘ical and historical societies which | will hold their annual conventions atthe same time. The mectings are open to any who are interested jin their family genealogies that go back to and prior to the Amer- | ican Revolution. H Among the family societies that will meet at Punta Gorda are the | Crandall society whose president comes from New York; the Nichols family weep Beveidens lives in Massachusé' and the Mount family whose president lives in Palmetto, Florida. Mem- several of her poems were fea- | KEY WEST 'Key West, quaint little coral isle to colonial governors and others who helped to make history in the early daysof New England and Virginia. All interested parties are, pordially invited to attend. YRUP for American Breakfasts | Afloat upon a jade-green sea | You rest, so tropical and fair; ; You-spell real lovelinéss to me, | A paradise beyond compare. it was discovered that she had a} ‘i i voice, After this the full force of | yous carve tied walden sands be- training was centered on her sing- | guile, i : ing, until she attained her coveted | q paradise beyond compare— | bers of the “Descendants of First goal, the concert stage. Then along Key West, quaint little coral isle. | Families in America” and the af- came marriage, and her career} - ' filiated societies come from every was abandoned forthe more im-| Mrs. Bodler has made a study of | state in the Union, and all of them portant job of rearing two daugh- | languages and hand craft, and for|inspired with patriotic ideals ters, Phyllis and Catherine. When! exercise has taken up swimming. jcarrying on what their ancestors the girls no longer needed her en- | She finds a kindred spirit in the | began. | tire attention she taught voice and | writings of Shelley and Millay and |. There will be at the convention piano, and returned to Eastman/considers Nature the greatest here descendants of many who School for post-graduate work, re- | book that any artist can read. came over in the Mayflower--' ____ Elder William Brewster, John | Howland, John and Priscilla Al- |den and others. Many who attend will be able to give their line back Fresh TOMATOES, Ib - Libby‘s Chunk PINEAPPLE, tall. pour 2 cups BOILING WATER over 4 cups SUGAR am: by — SMe IPS, IN. GERMANY (hy Axsociated Press) ARRIVED FROM KENTUCKY BERLIN, Germany, Jan. 9.— Dr. Friedrich Syrup, state secre- TO SPEND WINTER AT VENICE GENE AUTRY in TUMBLING TUMBLEWEEDS also COMEDY AND SERIAL | ecccccccccccccs| Lopez Funeral Service | Established 1885 Licensed Funeral Directors and Embalmers 24-Hour Ambulance Service {| Phone 135 Night 696 || tary of the German labor minis- try, reports that 1,100,000 for- eigners, in addition to 1,000,000 | prisoners of war, are employed in Germany. | When the war broke out there VENICE, Jan. 9.—(FNS) Arriv- | were 63,000 unemployed persons ing by special trai in Germany as against 32,000 now. y special train, 325 cade's | Of the latier figure, fewer than 10 SAVE TIME AND EXPENSE— For Your Qut-Of-Town Remittances Use Our— CASHIER'S CHECK SERVICE THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF KEY WEST Member of the Federal Reserve Member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation faculty and Staff of Kentucky | per cent would be able to work, Military Institute of Lyndon, Ky.,| py. Syrup says. went into winter quarters here this week for the 27th year of win-! of this section, drawing hundreds tewing in Florida. ‘of spectators from coastal towns The school will be in session for | and cities for the events. { three months at its own complete | | nd modern plant maintained here | | in order to make the shift to the Men and | When In Need Gf A TAXI-| Women! Call 9125 OLD. state possible. Oldest private} Everready Taxi Co, 24 Hour Service 1 could, military schoo] in the Amerieas, Ostrex. Introduct: Kentucky Military Institute wasi often (needed after 40 by ize now only 200. Start to get new pep TODA: Indian wars, and was the first in- stitution to begin the practice of transporting its entire personnel to the state for the winter. In addition to the cadets and staff, some 200 of parents and friends of the students will be in founded in 1845 by Col. T. P.} Allen, veteran of the Seminole For sale at Gardner's Pharmacy and all other good drug stores BROADWAY’S Super-Specials Meat Department FRESHLY K D PIG PORK LEGS, Ib. .......... iy “SHOULDER, Ib. ......... 18¢ 9c PIG HEAD, Ib,: WESTERN. PORK HAMS, Ib. (7 to ® ibs.) TRY RUMFORD TODAY — making the school’s arrival the ITS THE QUALITY WAY largest single-unit migration of sun-seekers to this west coast re- sort. Dress parades staged on each alternate Sunday afternoon by the cadets, beginning January 18, are . 22 “Key West's Out: standing” LA CONCHA HOTEL Beautiful—Air-Conditioned Rainbow Room and Cocktail Lounge DINING and DANCING Strictly Fireproof Garage OPEN THE YEAR AROUND VEGETABLES 19¢ 15e 2¢ LIMA BEANS, Grocery Department «|. 2a PREM, can 6c | Feathes, 25¢ 23¢ lle Swift Premium HAMS, Ib (Whole or Small Half) FRUITS AND U.S. No. 1 Maine POTATOES, 10 ibs. Juicy ORANGES. doz. Green CABBAGE, English PEAS, 25¢ 15¢ 3lc 15¢ 8%c 35c all-phosphate double-acting FREE. Send for srw book! dozens of bright ideas t ing ... Address: Rumfi Be containing we your bak- | Fresh SPARE RIBS. Ib Fresh Shipped EGGS, doz. Fancy RICE. 5 lbs. Log Cabin SYRUP, can For Real Economy For Real Service For Real Protection Banner BARTLETT PEARS, Hearts Pillsbury FLOUR. 5 Ibs. FRUIT COCKTAIL. s PINEAPPLE JUICE. 3 cans DELIVERED DAILY EVERYWHERE Thompson Enterprises INCOR? ORATED ICE DIVISION PHONE NO. 8 Red SUPER SUD. 3 pigs. Radio Octagon PEAS. TOILET SOAP, 3 bars Yellow PHONES 178 and DUVAL omd Ab

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