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Conduct ~= SOCIETY By PATRICIA * Members Of Brownie Troop Their Initial Hike 4 members of’ the Brownie, the Brownie troop, were busyiget! Troop, No. 7, met at the Fleming|ting the rolls ready for Miss The). Street Methodist Church Annex | Cates, who was spreading th: Saturday morning 10 o'clock where they held their regular! weekly @ rea! surprise awaiting The )Preparation they were lined u j i ome a DB 5 days. He h treop’s American and “Brownie ‘and teady to go. = foe ie a oe a bel Ai fiqge bad arrived. This meant} Those attending the hike were:| » ge [Ranbachee! will visit histmnother! + : = they on gabate 1 ree ae ANNCH, Beenne: Ashes Miss Doughtry and sister, Gertrude, at The Tide i, pledge to their own x k Mae Ballard, Linda Brant-} Hotel. H Plag bearers and color guards ‘ley, Ladine Brown, Eunice ca-/ Weds Mr. McCown es kk were voted om and Ladine Brown;mus, Walley Cervantes, Mary was elected American Flag bearer Alice Clark, Deanne Ecton, Pris: Se When these MARCH WINDS and. Patsy Sands color guard. !cilla Cruz, Sylvia Fernandez, Mar Mr. and Mrs. William T.| are really blowing. Last night my! TT bearer p tgaret Fi i f Doughtry, 1329 Grinnell street,| latéhed door came open time and Oop was Linda'tg: ler, Juanita Henriquez, Brantly and Rose Nell Reese the ‘June Hubbard. today announced. the marriage} time again because the latch was color % ‘3 Jeanne Canov: il of their daughter, Jacqueline E.,' sliping. Each time Ye Old March : a, Jill Bergstrom, After the short meeting which} Alice Jenks, Betty Jenks, Louise! 224 Lysle McCown, son of Mr.| Wind came pouring it and it was was conducted by three interme-| Johnson, Jacquline Jolly, Nancy| 22d Mrs. G. C. McCown, 1409! terrific. digte Girl Scouts, Troop 4, Nellie | Ruth Jones, Lillian Ann Thrower, | Olivia. The ceremony was per-/ Menendez, Betty Canova and Bet- y Ann Baumgardt, the Browmes | their first hike. Théy hiked the Scout Hall down to, Si- monton street, then dawn Simca f After 4 Wnies were /' somewhat tired but Yidt too tired; te help gather wood to start a {ire | for the wieners that were waiting} to be roasted. Their leaders, the Misses Ruta and Theima Cates, saw to it that | every little Brownie rested up) after the long hike. After the rest period, games were played and songs were sung with the th.ce| elder Girl Scouts .n charge. At the pit, roasting the wieners| were Mrs. Ted Canova and Mrs.| Earl Baumgarct, leacers of Troup 4, Girl Scouts, while Mrs. Harry | Pritchard and Mrs. Andrew} Pritchard, committeewomen for Will U. S. Girls Choose |Barbara Trout, ined up and ready to start nedy, jPritehard, Barbara * Pinder, fmustard and. relish on them. This was really a hungry and thirsty bunch of little Brownies. Thev ate so much they were afraid that they wouldn't be able to hil: back to the hall, but after much! Fay Walterson, Donna’ Williams, Constance Ken- Linda. Kingery, » Yvoan2 Moore, Ronda Merritt, Patsy Mus Barbara _ Pritchard, Sharon Jo ‘Ann Pinder, Lucy Ramsey, Kay Reardon, Rose Nell Reese, Amer- ica Rickels, Barbara Roberts, Faye Ross, Jo Ann Ross, Patsy Sands. Betty Solomon, Dorothy Stir- rup, Mary Ann _ Sydenstricker, Millicent Taylor, Sandra Taylor, Sophie Valdez, Joyce Valenzue’a Freeda Weech and Sylvia Wii liams. Scouts Betty Canova, Netic Menendez and Betty Baumgardt. Leaders Misses Ruth and The!- ma Cates, Mrs. Ted Canova, Mis. Earl Baumgardt, and Mrs. Harry Pritchard and Mrs. Andrew Pritchard. To Keep Wartime Gains? By ADELAIDE KERR AF Newsfeaturer Writer im the, working » their role in the struggle for 4 women of the world, e. won the vote ia! ican women have| a sizeable achieve- ment in politics and the working moved increasing!y| » other fields, During Tl they hit their peak} achievemet to date and made) @utstanding contribution to so- | Work er Mot To Work a4 soon as the victory bells to ring, women heard on! sides the opinien that there longer need for their ser- im many fields, that jobs) for service men, that ~ oh was in the homef, (® where they should go.| a" rs, open question! ge E there will be jobs next they year for miltions of women, and the will not be srttiet ult @eonomig situation jefls ) Meamwhile the skills of many wo- | men grow rusty ina strapgly) competitive world American women's role in the international postwar struggle for peace is another $64 question Mra, Franklin D. Roosevelt's re- cont appointment as ted Na-; tiene delegate stresses a notable lack of women in American dip- lomgtic and policy making pro- om | Feminisr Goer Globa! Mer is the No. | position which American women held among the women of the world any long- er @ sinecure. Today when there are 24 British women in Parlia-| mest and 33 French women in the Constitutent Assembly and when women are playing a vital role in reconstructing many war-; tor@ countries, the are only) mime American women in Con-| gress and none im any important domestic administrative post. Nor is there any indication that they will play a stronger national po- litigal vole im 1946. Though millions of women fought the edict that women's plage is in the home—rome as a} matter of principle, and others beqpuse they had to work to live; hundreds of thousangs accepted it gpd turned back to the home with a starry light in their eyes.| In the lives of these women ro- magee and marriage had been on e abaky basis for the last four years Many had feared they might never know it: others had dreaded its loss. Fatigued with veer of de work, they turned to romance and home life wiih coger hearts, when they got tae chance, dreanung of being “pro- American women fece in 1946) tetted,” believing they wanted to and problemati~ work no more. But whether home won the vote-!iigs will satisty them complete.y, and whether their husbands will pe bie to provide tor them ade-Hrediana Folk... their No. 1 position /@ately, are‘ questions to be an- s Ihe! t * SATURDAY Is Swered only by time — in seme cases by the coming year. Postwar Problems Meanwhile, these women, and many others, are facing and grap- pling with crucial problems at home — all aftermaths of war Problems of juvenile delinquen assimilating service men back i to family and civiilan life, re equipping houses whose furnish- ings could not be replenished in wartime. Thousands ‘more face} the problems of reconstructing lives without a loved one who was lost in war or of rebuilding a life and career that was side- twacked four years ago. In the light of those pressi home problems will American w men find energy to battle for place on the economic, palitical and international fronts? Or w:'! become *immersed *in’ their personal affairs, let their position a sex dfift ant{¥perhaps lowe part of the advance they have made at. such heavy cost? Mineteen forty-six will gi least part of the answer. Social Calendar WEDNESDAY Woman's Business Association Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Woman’s! Clubhouse. Bridge Club, 8:00 p.m., Officers" Club. five at allie Hospital Auxiliary, Woman's Clubhouse. * * THURSDAY Ladies Auxiliary, Key West Hospital, 2:00 p.m. Poinciana Tea for Faculty Mem-| bers, 3:00 p.m., Recreation Hall of Poinciana Elementary! School. x * FRIDAY Luncheon at Home of Mrs. Hoe lon Bervaldi. Girt Scouts, Troop 4, 4:00 p.m., St. Paul's Parish Hall. * Brownie Meeting, Fleming Street Church. Patrick Dance, Office s* Club, Whitehead Street. 10:00 am, Methodist St * MONDAY Jay Shees, 8:00 p.m., J-C Club- house. * | TUESDAY Junior-Senior High School PTA,} by the various :hurct: 8:00 p.m., School Auditorium. Louis-Conn title fight is set] was extended for the Yankee Stadium June} Church for the summer meeting| cow Room Mothers sutvauaenqveigreaceestecaneiioaagaiie Personal Notes i Foinciana Elementary school are | i#iMiiaiiunimniuinuunuiusiHinni. : giving a tea Thursday at 3:00 p.m., in the Reereation hall for the Faculty. and Mrs. Gonzalo Bezanilla. Her husband, Sergeant Rowan Smith, is stationed on. recruiting duty through the west coast states. He is in the Marines. Mrs. Smith will be here several weeks at the (Bezanila home on» Elizabeth. street. American Legion - Meet Fonight A -regular . meeting of Arthur Sawyer Pose No. 28, American, Legion, will be held this. evening, at 8 o'clock, in the Legion Home, } corner White and Southard! ; Streets. A class of candidates will be} given the obligation of the Legi- wk *& er assistant to the secretary of first class. the Chamber of Commerce will Lane, Key be in Key West ‘in about ten jee cok “Did, you ever talk to Old Key West as personified in the Ship Chandlery, William Currys Sons.| There is ROY McKILLIP with his high collar and dignity. Theye is GILBERT McKILLIP, book- keeper, who always has a tale to tell anid they are mighty good. There are also EDWIN ROBERTS and ULRIC HENSON. Thest four) do not hurry in present day formed in Thomasville, Georgia. | The attendants “'were Miss} ;.Betty Joyee Adams,.Key West; Miss, Caroline Baker Butler, Cor-/ al Gables; Lieutenant John Rich-! ard £ Gibson, ‘Tallahassee, and! William C/Dékie, Jacksonville. * The bride'and:groom are grad- uates of the Key West High School. She is now a sophomore in the Florida State College for Women, and he is in the navy, stationed at Edenton, N. C. Hall. | days, | Rebekah, Ist | | thing there, you go away with a wonderful sense of good com- panionship and with the thought of tall masts rocking and ships} stores in the form of turpentine and linseed oil as poured from huge glass bottles in your mind. It is a delightful experience I} would recommend. ‘“sun lady” | the sun be Veterans Name New Officers Southernmost Post 3911, Vet-! erans of Foreign Wars of the | was sealed over. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN John H. Costar Give Tea ‘Promoted The room mothers of the vibes wieetd iain | (Special to The zen? | FORT JACKSON, S. C., Mareh | MRS. ROWAN SMITH, former-'13—John H. Costar, Jr., whose | ly Esther Bezanilla, arrived this address is Box 610, Key West,| week from San Francisco for a Fiorida, was recently promoted visit here with her parents, Mr. to the rank of corporal. Corporal Costar is at present a member of HQ 3rd TNG REGT ASFPRD. Howard Roberts To Honolulu (Specini to The Citizen) HONOLULJ, T. H., HAROLD. LAUBSCHER, form-'__Howard A. Roberts, tration and aircraft mainten- things, Behold, how great a mat- jance for other sqhadrons operat- “ter a little fire kindleth! ing over a vast network of air'the tongue is a fire, a world of ; bases in the Pacific. |Your Lodge Meets Fern Chapter, OBS, 2nd and 4ih! Fridays of each month, 8:00: of birds, and of sei p.m., Scottish Rite Temple. haeccnpen Pocahontas Lodge, Ist and 3rd | hath been tamed of mankind: but ‘Tuesdays, 7:30 p.m. Red-Men’s'' the tongue can no. man tame; it} ‘Pythian Sisters, 1st and ‘3rd ‘Mon- 7:30 pmé; Knights * of * Pythias “Hall: and 3rd Fridays, 7:3 p.m., Golden Eagle Hall. SUNSHINE FOREVER “ JACKSONVILLE.—At tempo. No when you buy some-j e:sonville, N. C. » is buried th who requested tha’ allowed to shine for- ever on her face through a glass vine, figs? so can tain u » ? no fou te aperture in her mausoleum. The yield Bat water and fen jonas | grave attracted so many curious! - jveople that a few years ago it with knowledge among you? let. ;:him shew out of a good conver- a , March 13] Hend- | Spiritual Food - a By J. W. BR. THE BRIDLED TONGUE AND WISDOM FROM ABOVE: | My brethren, be not many mas- |ters, knowing that we shall re- |ceive the. greater condemnation. | For in many things we’ offend ai', pe any man oifend not in word, the same isa perfect maf, ‘and , able to bridle the whole. bady. Behold,..we put bits in the hors- es’ mouths, that they may obey us; and we turn about their whoie body. | Even so the tongue is a litile and boasteth great And ti iquity: so is the tongue among jour members, that it defileth the the course of nature; and it is set on fire of hell. For every kind of beasts, ana! | things in the sea, is tamed, and jis an unruly evil, full of deadly poison. Therewith bless we God, even the Father; and therewith curse P we men, which are made after the \Similitude of God.\\ut of . {same mouth proceedeth ’ bless: Jand cursing. My brethren, thes: things ought not so to be. Doth a fountain send forth at © the same place sweet water and bitter? Can a fig tree, my breth- ren, bear olive berries? either a Who is a wise man and endued United States, at a meeting held! March 7, nominated and elected officers for the year 1946. The new officers follow: xk Besides. the beautiful store erected for Overseas Radio shop by DR. J. A. VALDEZ, two Edward F. Haury, post com- Rovaciee cet ‘ 2 : ried y ly go up. Onele mander; Earl S. Keirstead, senior}... iy be...right in front. of Dr.|§ paged commander; Samuel H ivaldez present colonial type Clark, junior viee*comrhander:} office. The floot will) be lowered Carlton F. Smith, quarter mas-) ang a beautiful front, placed in. ter; Roger Watkins, judge adyo-l Also the little orange juice. stand mag resteereT Seae tio, alobigsidd’ of ‘the-Montoe ‘Theater ie 4 wilt be completely renovated. eit Charles D. Riggs, Jt. trustee, Vatdez upon completing these] three years; A. Alverez, trustee.| two other buildings will havel$ two years; Arthur Meska, trustee! contributed greatly to making |¢ one year; Alex Warnox, adjutant. nuval street, shiny and bright with new buildings. Sgt. Caruthers Return ae (Visiting Here Returning for a winter vaca- tion after an absence of a num- Sergeant Allan Caruthers, who ber of seasons, were: Mrs. Harry) had served in the signal corps of Lassen, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Las-| the United States Army for 30 sen, Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Lassen months is in Key West visitin: Mrs. Victor Fleming, Mr. and) his mother, Mrs. H. R. Saund Mrs. Neal J. Nordstrand, Capt.! and his sister, Mrs. Clarence and Mrs. Chris Lassen, all from | Sweting. He is accompanied b; Cedar Lake, Indiana. | Mrs. Caruthers. The entire party was delighted; Sergeant Caruthers, a forme with the many changes and im-| Key Wester, whose home is now provements in Key West, but) in Perry, Florida, served at Hol- expressed the hope that Key) landia, New Guinea, and in To- West will not lose its individual-| kyo. He has received his honor- ity and old-world atmosphere—) abe discharge, and intends to re- for if once lost, it can never be) main here two weeks before re- reclaimed. turning to his home. eeceecencococe REAL ICE is More Economical It's Healthy and Safe .. . It’s Pure (ICE DIVISION) eeccce Place Your Refrigeration BASIS and ‘you will get GUARANTEED "Refrigeration Service t omeegerrnsee Key West, Florida aa ee Behold also. the ships, | 1 'which though they be. so. great, ;- USNR, 618 Canfield’ and are driven of fierce waa West, Florida, has yet are they turned about with a : n transferred: to the Honolulu very small helm, withersoever the W detachment of Spuadron 12, Nav-' governor listeth. Transport Service. The squadron handles admin-' member, whole body, and setteth om fire f. sation, his works wi of wisdom. But if ye have bitter envying and strife in your hearts, not, and lie not against the truti>, | This- wisdom descendeth not from above, but is earthly, sensual, devilish. For where envying aid strife is, there is confusion and every evil work. But: the wisdom that is from above ‘is first pure, then peace able; .gentle, and easy to be.ev- |: treated, full of mercy and good . Colo., seafcl b bran racic ne Jacquin L. (Jack And. the fruit of rig! peor, Cit - is sown in peace of them that| author, born - make peace. nea Chapter of James) le . St. Paul, Scripture Quotation: “My little sor of creative religious children, let us not love in word, | born Des Moines, Iowa, 64 years neither in tongue; but in decd) ago oes and in truth. And, hereby we’ Rt. Rev. William P. Remington, know that we are of the truth,} Protestant Episcopal missionary and shall assure our hearts before f bishop of Oregon, born im Phila~ him. For if our hearts condemn! delphia, 67 years ago. us, God is greater than our heart, ! and knoweth all things. Beloved, have we confidence toward God.” if our heart condemn us not, thea —I John 3:18-21. —_———-— ae: AAA Mrs. Gertrude Ricketts ~ Announces the Opening on Mareh 18th of . . « An Outdoor. School for Kindergarten .aeeea nae ‘ollment Limited . = a ’ MPF or 768-R. om te Da alll nich attic Dadian dy nnd ol ie eos sf aivetbeae19--tase CONTRIBUTED by The CITY ELECTRIC IWEV UV VV VV VT rrr | Poinciana P.-T. A. ~~ News . The party renewed many old} aequaimtances. and visited var- ‘iéus points of interest which they enjoyesswith as much enthusiasm | ds they did on their first visit to) the Island City. , 3 ig By Mrs. Marcel Adrian Mazeau AmAAdeeeesesrasese Church Group Holds Meet “> « | Chief of Police Louis Eisner a | spoke to the Poinciana P.-T. A. The United Council of Church) Monday night. His subject was Women of Key West met at First| “What Is P.A.L.” He explained Congregational Church Friday | it was the Police Athletic League, March 8 to observe World Day non-profit membership organ- SEPre ization, which offers social aN eventy-fi " repri .| recreational opportunities to a i ae yomen represent | children of the City of Key West Poinciana gathered. together for| Its Prime function is to develop an all day meeting of prayer and| and teach civic pride. The objec- fellowship. Mrs. Rhoda Baker of| tive of PAL is to make tod I the First, Congregational Church) Children into responsible citiz hed charge of the worship and| fr tomorrow's needs, by teack Mrs, George Archer was chairman ing sportsmanship and commun- of the business session, as vice} ity spirit through the medium of esident: Mrs. Milton Sawyer| Wholesome and healthful recrez verved as. secretary, and Mrs.| ton: PAE will provide. youth Florence Moss, treasurer. j with an opportunity to develop During the morning prayers! a the right way of thinking and < were given by Mrs. E. S. Doherty, | Be or Secricae we . sist se Mrs. W: S. Smith read the Serip-| plans for the coming year con- | cures aie Miran EL ‘MacCongell| sists first of enrolling ins lead in the responsive reading. A} Se cane act Pe mayer duet was Sung. by Mrs./ associate members. To a Julia Nelson and Mrs. Vernan L. recreation program having track Booker. The benediction was Pre-| and field meet, softball and swim- mounced by the Rev. Guillermo; ming with the hope of | craneneon was served by pansion, tov.embrace | ledies of the host church and the | | other sports. ; In closing Mr. Eisner invited ¢ prayer given by the Rev. E S.) everyone to become a member of Doherty. | PAE. In the afternoon session, pray-| During the business er was led by Mrs. John Picke::s.| Mrs. Brahms, Mrs. Strout, The Rev. Vernon Booker geve| Mrs. Brill were named the nom- the address on “The Christian} inating committee. Mission In Alaska”. Reports given} Mrs. Williams announced the on sick) Room Mothers would be hostess calls and work projects were) Thursday afternoon of the Fac- very encouraging. An invitation) ulty Party to be given in the by the Baotist) Recreation Hall. At the close of the meeting a social houg was enjoyed. of the Council. Printing Embossing Our Representative Will Call Promptly 00000000000 00000000000000000000S0OCCOOO0E® Business Stationery The ARTMAN PRESS CALL 51 ON YOUR NEXT PRINTING JOB? 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