The Key West Citizen Newspaper, June 22, 1951, Page 5

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“BB BSS & 252 PREG A. GINGRAS, Society Editor , Friday, June 22, 1951 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Page 5 SOCIETY... PERSONALS... NEWS OF INTEREST TO WOMEN ITEMS OF INTEREST TO EVERYONE PHO Citizen Office, 1935 Another Coke Plant O pened Yesterday, | Visitors Watched Regiment Of Bottles City Manager Dave King grinned,’ photographers’ bulbs flashed, executives and guests posed variously, a big blue ribbon was : nipped, and another new renoyated Coca-Cola Bottling Company ' went down the ways. : Yesterday afternoon the Key West Coca-Cola Bottling Company was officially opened and several hundred visitors strag, through the plant watching’ the various details in the making of the “Pause That Refreshes.” &. Beginning on the second floor} of the building there were arrays Elwood H. Gooder of yesterday’s Coca-Cola girls of j . every variety from Gibson Girl to| Learns Protection flapper. The hairdos were changed | and. the skirts and their bloom a) rom Jungle Heat eee with time but the} poised bottle and with the straw! — Elwoo. , Gooder, Ui ss were the safhe, and the traditional | band sea pssceied i smile. And there w: Iso a large | Wijliams of 1011 Angela Street, display of all calendar tops and! recently completed ey first aid posters used currently in Coca-| course at the U.S. Naval. Air Cola advertising, everything from station, San Diego. California, the sprite with the bottle top hat |" "the course, which deals. chiaf- to. the glamourous gals of Petty lly with protection from the heat i : Pionero, of jungles and the:cold blasts of Upstairs also were the great ; vats of syrup which was channel- | ‘te Arctic region, is taken by Na- ed eventually down to the first |Y¥ Pilots and crewmen. They are floor. Another apparatus cooled |{"Structed about what to wear, how to protect themselves from the syrup on the way down so that when it was mixed with the spec- ially treated water the two met at the same temperature. climate. The men are also taught On the lower floor the visitor, how to treat wounds and “in- could watch the small regiments | Juries suffered by themselves or of dirty bottles move from their | by others wooden boxes into various soapy Gooder, an aviation chief elec- waters and ‘rinses, through tronicsman, is the son of Mr. and chines which filled sixty bottles a} Mrs. G. L. Gooder of 110 West minute and capped them at the| F Street, Casper, Wyoming. same rate. There were also machines thaat Bombards Korea swished the filled bottles around x a to properly mix the water and With Only Ship syrup, lined the bottles up for inspection, packed the bottles in-|Qat Of Moth Balls to their boxes and moved them various health hazards, and on personal hygiene in any kind of along a conveyor belt to a pallet.| Henry C. Daniels, USN, hus- On the pallet a dozen or so boxes! band of Mes. C les sM. Daniels are packed and moved out to the| of Fort Village is now partici- trucks which take them out into! pating in the naval shore bomb- the city for distribution to retail) ardment of the Korean coast, ac- dealers. cording to word just received Souvenirs and free cokes will; from Navy headquarters. be given to all visitors coming to Daniels is a steward serving | thé new plant today and tomor-| aboard the battleship USS New row. A stainless steel picnic cool- | Jersey, the only battleship to be er will also be given away each} prought out of moth balls and evening. The visiting hours are} put on active duty in Korea. from five to nine in the evening. 5 Yesterday was resérved for the} et . Mare ce daine otek teins Concha, Wives Will Hold Dance white general public and school children, and tomorrow for the The Tacki Dance to. be given | at 7 p.m., Saturday by the La} colored general public and school | children. | Last night’s stainless steel picnic | Concha Navy Wives,.Number 88, | cooler went to Robert W, Rath-/ will be held in Building 178, back, serviceman who works at|Naval Station. Dinner will also the Naval Commissary Store. |be served. At Wednesday morning's | F meeting of the group the follow- | Coming Events ling members were appointed | FRIDAY, JUNE 22— {chairmen of the various groups: Meeting, Fern Chapter, No. 21, | Mrs. Walter Oneto, . thrift shop: ‘Order of Eastern Star, 8 p.m.,| Mrs. Paul Smith, hospital; Mi Scottish Rite Temple. R. L. French, welfare; .Mrs. Meeting, Alcoholics Annymous,} James Smith, pins; Mrs. Betsy & p.m. First Presbyterian) Montgomery, correspondent; | Church Annex. i Mrs. Gerald Lampkins, nursery Beauty Contest and Dance, 8 p.| Mrs. G. R. Austin, finance; Mrs. | m., Elks Annex. | Norman Carrington, program; | SATURDAY, JUNE 23— Mrs. Melvin Edwards, publicity. | Luncheon, JayShee: Mrs. Daniel Braxton, president, 12:30 p.m., Raul’s Restaurant. ded at the meeting. | SUNDAY, JUNE 24— a Cocktail Hour, 4-6 p. m., Elks iliary, Arthur Sawyer Post No. 28, 8 p. m., American Le-!| gion Home, Stock Island. , | Meeting, Dr. Felix Varela Lodge | No. 64, 8 p. m., 919 Elizabeth | Street. } Rummage Sale begins, Catholic | Daughters of America, St.| Joseph’s Hall, Thomas and Angela Streets. Duplicate Bridge Club, 7:45 p. Base Officers Pool. | m., Corat Room, Overseas! Meeting, Mariner Sront Troop! Hotel A No. 8, “Flying Cloud”, 7 p.| Meeting, Scottish Rite Bodies, 3 Club. Beach Party, 6 p. m., USO. | MODAY, JUNE 25— \ Meeting, Anchor Lodge No. 182,| 8 p. m., Scottish Rite Temple. Meeting, Beta Sigma Phi Sor-| ority, 8 p. m., Simonton meet- | ing place. Swimming Class, Officers Wives Club, 3:30-4:30 p. m., Seaplane | m,, Sea Seout Headquarters. | __p. m,, Scottish Rite Temple. TUESDAY, JUNE 26— Meeting, American Legion, Ar-| Meeting, Kiwanis Club, 6:45 p.|__ thur Sawyer Post No. 28, 8 P.| m., First Methodist Church} _ m., Stock Island Home. Mecting, Junior Debs, 7:30 p. m., Woman's Club auditorium, Dessert Bridge, Airship Devron Officers Wives Club, 1 p. m., Aeropalms Seaplane Base. Meeting, La Concha Navy Wives | Club No. 88, 10:30 a. m., Build- ing 178, Naval Station Bowling, Officers Wives Club, 1:30 p. m., Naval Station | Bowling Alleys. } Meeting, Junior Annex | Bridge, Officers Wives Club, 8} p. m,, Fort Taylor Officers | Club. } Bowling, Navy Wives Cluby 9} a. m., Naval Station Alleys. Bridge, Officers Wives Club, 8} p. m, Fort Taylor Officers | Club. \ | * Tennis Class, Officers Wives] Club, 9 a. m, Tennis Court} Near Pool Chamber of Bowling, Officers Wives Club, Commerce, 8 p. m., Club 9 a. m., Naval Station Alleys. House ee Meeting, Order of DeMolay THURSDAY, U N Boys, 7:30 p. m., Scottish Rite| Swimming § Cl Wives Club, 2 Temple. a hddeschtal tamil Meeting, Young Adult Fellow-| Seaplane Base Pool ship of: First Methodist} Meeting, Monroe General Hos- Church, 8 p. m., Church An-} pital Woman’s Auxiliary Sew- | nex j} ing Group, 2 p. m., Hospital. ; | neting, Sparkling Waters Re-| Meeting, Ladies Auxiliary, V- F.| Mvekan Teage, No. 14, 8 p. m., W., Post 3911, 8 p. m., at Post Knights of Pythiasx Hall. . Home. ora. Meeting, American Legion, Ar FRIDAY, JUNE 29. = : thur Sawyer Post No, 28, Meeting, - Alcohol Anony- | p. m., Post Home, Stock I mous, 8 p. m., First Presby-| -| | terian Church Annex. | Airship Devron| SUNDAY, JULY 1— ‘| ne, AML Lp. m,| Cocktail Hour, Elks Club, 4-6| Bas Clubhouse. A alms Seaplane Base. | _ Pem: C — Mocting: La Conché Navy Wives} Swimming Cl Officers ad Club No. 88, 10:30 a. m,,/ Club, 3:30-4:30 p.m, Sea-| Building 178, Naval Station. | plane Base Officers Pool. } Bowling, Officers Wives Club,| Meeting, Mariner Scout Ship} 130 "p.m, Naval Station] No. 8 “Flying Cloud", 7 p.m, Bowling Alleys. | Sea Scout Headquarters. ame Junige: Meeting, Key West Temple No. | land. Chamber of| Meeting, Junior c noi | Re 5 Lub | 20, Pythian Sisters, @ p.m, Semen Fe CNP) Knights of Pythias Matt ces eting™ FAWTU-| Women’s Mission Union, Firs Tafant, Otficers Wives Club,| Baptist Church, 7:20 p. m. at} Church. 12:30 p. m. LY o— a F jt MONDAY, JULY 2 WEENSSDA®, JUNE ® Handicrafts Class Officers Meeting. American Legion Aux- | that the American male prowls the night look: Departs From Island City For Washington, D.C. PRESIDENT SENOR GALO PLAZA Y LASSA and party leave President Harry Truman after breakfasting in the Little White House, Key West, Fla. Clowns Ham Around In Farce To Sell Refrigerators And Stoves ley people built their skits around the favorite national folk tales| for cheese sand- a Boca Chica field for visit with SELF STYLED (Continued trom Page One) in Mexico. I have a theory that these Indians—and was _ not brought in from outside.” Three Students Off To Tallahassee To Attend American Legion Boys Stats SMALL FRY (CORNER | By Angele - | MRS. PANSY PIGEON VISITS = fr | THE PRESIDENT (What Went Before—MRS. | for tt P | PANSY PIGEON, who lives in| Henriquez, 9 Mr the park across from the White! H. S. Hol House in Washington has» made} Mr. and Mrs ner bill-crooked because she Was} The 2 greedy and grabbed too many E peanuts. She is trying to find:out are Key | iow she can make it straight) Rites Masons, p alope | again.) and the Ar s f CHAPTER V ri haart t MRS. PANSY. PIGEON said,| gation tomorrow ever f I don't want. to live like the| travel ‘ on ’ ‘EGGER MAN unless I have to. the| | H r the confereng don't want people to feel sorry State Unives xr me and give me peanuts be- cause they feel sorry that I have ed cataaican rea ase | eeoked Hue seas ie vi held in the Lite SPV Soguaproapnnietee tt Batters tre ing. Political medt- r husband, MR. PETER PIG-/ Boys State prov we nthe fours, Lame SON. “No,” said MRS. PA or boys to acc Pomme i IGEON, “I want a straight bill! knowledge of the ike all the other pigeons and! county and state ight for my peanuts. I don’t want They obtain ill be on hatd ation of th 3 at the openiqg harity-peanuts. I'm going to see he PRESIDENT again and see if —- 1e will help me.” 1 quawk and pulled her bill So MRS. PANSY PIGEON flew | out of the window. And when she »ver to the White House a second} pulled it out, it was straight! ime. It was early morning andj} . MRS. PANSY PIGEON was so he PRESIDENT s still in bed. | faint’ with happiness she had to eet the boys Judge Warns Him To Curb Obsession | But MRS. PANSY PIGEON in-| sit for a while on the window sill jsisted upon seeing the PRESI-|Then she tapped on the glass t | DENT. She went to his bedroom) thank the PRESIDENT and she), LONDQN -—(#).— Sydney Wordsworth bears a famous litef- ary name—and Sydney is cragy about books. He is not a rich mgn tapping on/saw him smiling into the glass with her crooked: bill. | while he brushed his hair. 2 was no sound from the} Then she flew all over the trees PRESIDENT’S room. But MRS.|in Lafayette Park and the White|—but over,the years he.has byujit PANSY PIGEON was persistent.| House lawns and told all the pig-| his library, to about 3,000 vgl- | She started poking: her bill into|eons that. the PRESIDENT hadj| umes. He spent most of his pay | the drifted snow in the open win-}straightened her bill. And the/ on books—$15 a week. He spetit | dow to see if she could get his at-| Democratic pigeons said the} His savings of $1,400 on books. j tention by going inside. | PRESIDENT was a smart man and} But he wanted still more. He hs MRS. PANSY PIGEON was so|the Republican pigeons said. it}now been found guilty of stealipg {busy trying to push tHe snow|was an accident. five books from, a bookstail Ww that she didn’t hear the} AND MRS. PANSY PIGEON) London. { | PRESIDENT get up and come,over} WAS A HAPPY PIGEON EVER} The judge let. Sydney ‘off wi to the window. He slammed it}AFTER! And she was never|a warning to curb his obsessidh down right on MRS. PANSY] greedy again, —after hearing that Sydney had PIGEON’s crooked bill, She gave (THE END) never read any of the 3,000 books. and started | | | | | DO YOU KNOW At last. night's carnival in the High School auditorium the Cros-|S°M€ culture developed among | wiches,.that unanncunced he invariably brings in three of the boys fora home cooked meai, and that ancient stoves explode. { Aided by ‘a plaid nightgown on the handsomest of the clown ing Crosley-men, adhesive tape all over the lean body of another,| and-a’pretty local girl named Ann Yates, the-show ; bpunced along} md was finally resolved. by the family taking to Crosley refrigera- tors and stoves and living happily ever alter. Local talent around town bols-* ad tered the show with songs, danc- es and pantomime. Gale Varela) with Norma Dipietro from Colur danced ajone and at the beginning eariler inthe evening “One Alone”| with Yvorine Camalier and Glen-| US: Ohio. Don Seyler sang “All| jak Saw Danny Deon andj the Things You are,” and Mis Glendora S; yerdid two panto-! Lillian Wuébold played the ac mime numbers to records, which) companiments, | pleased the audience very much The prizes were announced at the end of the evening. Fred Sher | i won the big automatic stove, and} it was fumored behind the scenesj{ The local singers of the evening were W.C. Stallings, a good bai tone, who sang the “Road to Mandalay”. and “Because,” and} thet he was railroaded into com- ing to the carnival because th Rec- | current lady in his life was in the how | Wives’ ‘Club, 7 reation Building tion Seven baskets of groceries also | Meeting, Woman's Auxiliary,| went to people around town in St. Paul's: Episcopal Church, | cluding Mrs. L. H. Plummer, Mrs.| 3.p. m., Parish Hall. Nellie K. Pierce, Mrs. Anita Cat Meeting. Key West Mini Association, 8 p. m., Presbyterian .Church , and Miss Miss Meeting, Circle Two, Womer First Presbyterian Church p. m., Church Hall } TUESDAY, JULY «3 A. Di r..Meeting, Kiwanis - Club; 6:45 p. m., First Mett . r 79 dist Church Annex he youngest ist Bridge, Officers Wives’ Clul N p. m., Fort Taylor Offic f Club. The € Tennis Class Win f , Club, 9 a c ee " Near Pool Navy Hall Meetir Sea . Fini Coot Club 371; 8 p.m. VFW He Meeting, Catholie Daughter America, Court Mary Star of iJ the Sea No. 634, 8-p. m., St nidentified mountain box Aut Falls ted her last night on a trail, Meeting, Key West Woman's |® escorted her to a watden sta- Club, 3:30 .p. m., _Woman’s| tion in the general area where she Club. Auditorium disappeares : a Meeting, Key’ West Chapter No. The girl was taken to a hos-} 283, National Sojourners, 7 p.|Pital at Seiverville, Tennessee. | Ms Doctors and national park rang-) Church. ers expressed surprise at her good! ‘Meeting,..Cirele Number One,|condition—but until she tells her Women of-the First Presby-| story, the mystery of her disap- terian “Church, 8 p. m., at! pearance is just that. a mystery. | Church. Sa ee Meeting, Junior Woman’s.Club, 28 p.m. Wohjan's Club Audi- torium. First- ‘Presbyterian The Palestine of the time of Christ was about as large as New} Jersey. ee ee eee ae ee -| West Bob wants to do more careful } investigation"of the pre-stone age theory, befote publicizi i any scientific journals, “We are not college trained archaelogists or anthropoligi he said. “We have to be extra it in sure of our findings before wet talk.” |. Casually Bob took out of a bright colored straw bag some magnificient handwoven ha’ longing to the three knows best. “The colored ribbons on the hats show that a man is single and fancy free. When he gets mar- ried,” said Bob, “the ribbons are instead dull and grey—they are be- | even braided then in the form of ; a chain The hats are worn by the Chiap- as Indian tribes at a slightly rak- ish angle—whether the man is married or single. This is because the Indians ad apted their hats from halos seen in Spanish religious They not only fashioned their hats and halos but wear them at ”| the tilted angle of a halo. Sttange- ly enough these. Mexican Indians also wear dhotis—which are def- initely Eastern and not Western ments. The Mexican Indians—th¢ and that wear the dhotis are known diaper Indians because of the dia- per effect of the yards of wrapped cloth When their tic: the Russells go off on xpeditions they take prac- lly no from Key They eat what the natives provisions do. “We never get ill—we hz had any diseases as a result of our liet or way of life.” The friendly Ijdia’ Zoques, Tzeltal and Chontal keep the upplied with Russells the India y tous. If Sey We “We love an always as we plea: Russell. has. been touring the state lecturing on his expeditions to various large groups. He is go- ing to address a group here in Key} West, on July 2. Though planning on his next winter's expedition Russéll’s fu-| ture like everyone’s else depends | upon the war situation. Good tires} are a must if you travel thousands of miles over jungle. Without tires Russell will have to stay put. “If I do, I certainiy write,” he said firmly. “I'd rather do anything other than that. rij do mechanical: work which I love.” tribes he | paintings. | ve not} won't) | THAT IS CHEAPER NOW THAN IT WAS BEFORE THE WAR ELECTRICITY IS! | We Do Not Know Of Any Other | i * * i bihcrnispideeiere™ Eee Se

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