The Key West Citizen Newspaper, May 20, 1952, Page 5

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Tuesday, May 20, 1952 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Page S$ SOCIETY ... PERSONALS... NEWS OF INTEREST TO WOMEN ITEMS OF INTEREST TO EVERYONE DOROTHY RAYMER, Society Editor James Edwin Felton, Student,To Marry Approaching Wedding Sarasota Girl At Lakeland On Saturday Mr. and Mrs. Escho A. Zeigler, 712 East Hawthorne avenue, Sarasota, Fla., Frances Marcella, to James Edwin announce the coming marriage of their daughter, Felton, son of Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Felton of this city. The wedding will take place this Saturday, May 24, at 6:30 p. m. in the College Heights Methodist Church at Lake- land, Fla, with the Rev. J. J. Rooks performing the ceremony. A reception will be held at the ¥ vies Ss church, No formal will be sent and all relatives and friends of the couple are cordial- | ly invited to attend both the | wedding and the fol- | lowing it. The bride-elect is a graduate | of Sarasota High School and is a | Sophomore in Florida Southern College at Lakeland. The groom is a graduate of the | Key West High School and is in his first year of study at Florida Southern College. The engagement was announc- | ed last February 9, It is expected that a number of Key Westers will attend the | marriage rites. B’Nai Zion Closes Season With Program Closing of the B’Nai Zion Synagogue season exercises were held May 18th at 10 a.m. new social hall with Rabbi Abra- ham Schwartz in charge and Jo- seph Pearlman as_ principal speaker. Mrs. Jack Elias repre- sented the Ladies Auxiliary. Fol- reception lowing invocation and the Na- | tional Anthem, the Hatikwah Hymn was sung by the assem- bly. The history of the Prophet Hillel wag delivered by Rabbi Schwartz. Traditions and customs were reviewed by all pupils along} with Biblical and historical sub- | jects, poems and hymns. Each student received a gift for good work and conscientious effort in attending Sunday School, The gifts were presented by the Aux- | iliary who also served refresh- ments. A number of parents were present at the affair. In charge were the following teachers: Mrs. L. Miller, Janet Brown, Michael Apple- routh and substitute teachers Mrs. Bernard Frank, Mrs, Mitzi Cohn and Robert Appelrouth, Receiving gifts were Daniel Appelroyth, David Lipshitz, Carl Herman, George Swimmer, Janet | Moore, Sally Lewinsky, Rochella | Elias, Ira Yellin, Sharon Gross- man, Yuddi Yellin, Linda Ber- man, Ronny Holtzberg, Brownstein, Randy Grossman, Ronald Lipshitz, Leona Berman, | Jeffry Berman, Bruce Harriet Barbara Frank, Marlene Elias, Mark Holtzberg, Stewart Cohn, Victor Elias, Bonny L insky, Allen Raphael, A Rosefield and Barron Weintraub Hebrew classes in the daily re ligious classes will continue on until June 15. A picnic will be give n by t congregation on S for all Suncay Sch ool pup ils companied by their pa party will take place near the Toll Brid, 10 a.m, on an all da This js the f 1 School season with t leader, Schwartz as s) Extinguish Fire Engine ed to an alarm sc brush and debris ner of Fleming and G streets. A booster hose was used put out the ¢ whieh spreading LOUIS P. MACHIN Louis P. M Wednesda Lopea Funeral Mor in the | Miss | Linda | Auxiliari JUNIOR WOMAN’S CLUB POSTPONE MEETING The Junior Woman's Club regular meeting has been postponed. ‘The next meeting will be ‘Tuesday, May 27, at the Wo- man’s Club on Duval street at 7:30 p. m. (eens | Poppy Day Plans To Be Discussed | By Auxiliary The sale of the symbolic Red | Poppy made by veterans of World Wars I and II will be dis- cussed at a meeting on Thursday | evening held by the Arthur Sawyer | Unit No. 28, American Legion Auviliary. The meeting will be held | &t the Post Home on Stock Island jat 8 o'clock, Mrs. Alice S. Robinson, presi- dent of the Auxiliary, asks that all members attend the important session in order to spur the sales | on Poppy Days, May 23 and 24. The poppy program is three- fold in purpose: it is worn in memory of those who died in World Wars; the disabled vet- eran who makes the poppy is aided by therapeutic treatment and financial aid; it helps secure | funds for the Legion’s program of | rehabilitation and child welfare. “The idea of the poppy as a memorial flower,” wrote the dis- | trict publicity chairman, Aimee Cotino of Miami Beach, “sprang up as naturally as the little wild flower itself. In the days of World War I, the flower was one touch of beauty whieh survived | amid the hideous destruction of war, Soldiers of all nations were amazed and impressed by na- ture’s profusion of these bright red poppies in a region where death reigned supreme, and they came to look upon them asthe living symbol of the sacrifices of their dead comrades.” In 1920, the American Legion adopted the poppy as its official Memorial Flower. In 1921, the also named the poppy as Memorial Flower and pledged the profits of the sale one hun- Wolfson, | dred percent to welfare relief for service Mr n and their families. Nima Sikes, local publicity states that there is for the purchase of but when a volunteer worker on Poppy Day asks you | to w one, it should be con- sidered a privilege to give gen- | erously, se Teday’s Stock YORK ession after an uncertain Stock prices ¢ to more than two | L Market actly what BRIDE-TO-BE is Miss Frances Marcella Zeigler, whose engagement to James Edwin Felton, son of Mr, and Mrs. B. E, Felton of Key West, was announced in February. She is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Escho A. Zeigler, 712 East Hawthorne avenue, Sarasota, Fla, The wedding is scheduled for next Saturday, May 24 at Lakeland, Fla. Both the bride and the groom are students at Florida Southern College, Lakeland, Air Foree Men # | Monroe P.T.Av Urged To Contact Miami Office All inactive Air Force Reser- vists livng in Key West and vici- nity who haven’t participated im the Southeastern Florida Air Re- serve Survey were urged today to contact the survey office in Miami | to make arrangements for an in- terview. Major Joseph K. McMahan, sur- | vey project officer, said, “As our inventory reaches the halfway mark this week with approximate. ly 1,300 of the estimated 2,500 re- servists in the area accounted for and interviewed, I would like to stress that we need the coopera- tion of every reservist to make the | project a complete success.”” The Major went on to explain | that because the Air Force in many | cases has to rely on records dating back to 1945 or 1946, it can be as- Will Hold Panel, Install Officers The Monroe Council of Parents and Teachers Association will hold its annual meeting tomor- row, May 21 at the {session is set at 7:45 p.m. A panel will be conducted | concerning the year’s work by/ | the officers and chairmen of the council. Mrs. Glenwood Sweet- | ing will read the history of the} past year. Truman | School auditorium. Time for the} Horace O'Bryant, srintend. ent of the public i on, w install the incoming officers of the orga: i The public ted to attend. | | Subscibe to The Citizen MARIPOSA MIMI HAYES ENTERTAINS NCCS-USO Mariposa “Mimi” Hayes, member of the American Women’s Voluntary Serv- ices, representing France is visiting in Key West on holi- day. She is taking training for Red Cross nursing in Mi- ami. Sunday night, Miss Hayes put on an entertainment at the NCCS-USO in costumes of various countries. She sang French folk songs, English music-hall favorites and se- lections from operettas. sumed that a number of reservists | living in the area have not been | contacted by mail. This is espe- cially true if the individual has | moved into the area since leaving active service, “I want to urge reservi category to render the and their country a servi ting in touch with the survey office at 222 NE 2nd Avenue, Miami, to make arrangements for an inter- view at their conve: before his curre the Air Force is,” He MINOC 4 COUNCIL MEETS | THIS EVENING AT 8 Minoca Council No. 13, De- gree of Pocahontas. will meet tonight at the Red Mens Hall on Caroline street. All members are urged to attend the meeting which which begins at 8 pm. | Hi Where— THE FOOD IS SUPERB THE DRINKS ARE INTOXICATING THE PRICES ARE SUPRISINGLY LOW and THE AIR CONDITIONING IS OUT OF THIS WORLD o! Come To RAUL S Mrs. Grace Crosby will serve State President of the Florida Federation of Business for the year 1952 | last Saturday's election at the Suwanee Hotel, St. Petersburg, Fla. established the x- sional Women’s Clubs, Inc., Precedent has selection of a secretary from among the members of the pres- ident’s BPW Club to take care of the volumes of mail, incoming and outgoing, during the year. Mrs. Harvey selected Mrs. Cros- by for this honor and asked her club to so sponsor her. State re ident Harvey said! that Grace Crosby was chosen because of her devotion to the| Federa >n’s objectives and her loyalty through the years. To date, State Secretary Crosby has | attended every state convention when frequently it meant that she ~had to terminate her vaca- |tion in the mountains of North |Carolina to get back to Florida. | Mrs. Harvey announced that | | Key West was chosen for Mid- | | Year Board “feeting in August |with headquarters at the La Concha Hotel and over 200 mem- bers and family being quartered at this hotel and the various mo- tels and rooming houses of Key West. The selection of Key West was made in deference to the new president and to the efforts of the Key West BPWC, Harold ; Laubscher and the Chamber of | Commerce, “Bill” Kroll of the Key West Aquarium Mr. John Thompson and Mr. Mai.land | Adams of Thompson Enterprises, Mr. Charles Roberts of Roberts | Office Supplies, Mr. James Mc- Andrews of the La Concha Ho- tel, all motel owners, and Mr. Leonte Valladares, book store | owner, HATTRICKS LEAVE FOR SUMMER VISIT Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hattrick of 808 Fleming street leave today for a summer visit to their daughter | and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Har- old T. Hawly at Fort Scott, Kan- Sas. The Hattricks will motor to Mi- ami by bus and then take the train for their destination. They expect to stay through the summer months, The Missouri River watershed covers one-sixth of the area of the United States. | PHONE: Citizen Office, 1935 as Corresponding Secretary to the SEA SECRETS Q. What is the best treatment for fungus in fish tanks? — Clerk P. Douglass, Tampa, | ida. A. The best and most econom- | ical treatment for this appears to be added in sufficient quantity to impart a reddish tinge to the water. Mercurochrome is less to fish, but will quickly de- stroy body and fin fungus in most cases, and the reddish color will eventually disappear from | the water of its own accord. A} more gradual and continuous preventative treatment is pro-| vided by soaking a small piece of chalk in Mercurochrome and | condition placing this on the bottom of the | tank. As the chalk slowly dis- | solves in the water the Mercuro- chrome is released at a fairly constant rate. Q. What were the largest sea shells that ever existed? A. As far as known, these were the gigantic coiled ammonites; some of which were six feet in diameter. These animals, long | extinct, were related to the much smaller chambered nautilus which lives today in the Pacific and Indian oceans, slow closely they resembled the latter is im- possible to say, as only the shells remain and the soft parts of the animals are unknown. The larg- est shell today is the giant clam} (Tridacna) of the Great Barrier Reef of Australia, which reaches a weight of well over four hun- dred pounds. Q. What is the most valuable fish? A. As far as science is con- cerned, this is probably the Crossopterygian fish -Latimeria chalumnae, only one of which has ever been captured. This fish, like others of its family, was thought to have been ex- tinct since the age of the dino- saurs until a single specimen and Profes- | 53, as a result of | Flor- | Mercurochrome | harm- | Mrs. Grace Crosby Will Serve As B.P.W. | Barbara, Neal State Corresponding Secretary, 1952-733 | Will Travel LOS ANGELES (# — The cele brated Hollywood triangle of Fran- chot Tone, Barbara Payton and ; Tom Neal has been reduced to a | twosome. Tone won a divorce Monday from {the blonde Miss Payton on te j mony that she told him, “I went jto be free to move where a when I want to.” After the trial her attorney s she’s planning to do some moving— {in the direction of Europe, and accompanied by Neal. | The two have separate movie deals cooking on the continent, the attorney said, and will probably leave together about the end of the month. The Tones were married last Sept. 28, two weeks after Tone took a beating from Neal in a fight over Miss Payton. The couple | Separated 53 days later. | BAAti Lo? Bea | Southworths Entertain | Guests At Aeropalms |__ Mr. and Mrs, Albert Houghton, |New Bedford, Mass.; Mr. and | Mrs. William C. Gilmore, St. | Petersburg; Mrs. Robert Mat- thews, Taunton, Mass. were guests of Lt. Comdr. and Mrs, Clifton Southworth at their res- | idence, 1311 Laird. An anniversary party celebrat- ing the Houghtons’ 34 years of marriage was held at Aero Palms. Let gentleness my strong en- forcement be. | —Shakespeare. five feet long and of a bright blue color was taken off South Africa in’ 1938. Other rare fishes are the ribbon fishes or deal- fishes (Trachypteridae), which attain a great size in some in- j stances, and are usually found only when washed ashore dead or dying, though smaller speci- mens are sometimes taken in trawls. Q. Can fish survive freezing in ice? ypEUINES.... en roe Fleming OWNED & OPERATED BY | ADELINE RUSSELL | PORTABLE ELECTRIC Sewing Machine CHECK THESE FEATURES @ ROUND BOBBIN @ 2 THREAD LOCKSTITCH @ SEWS FORWARD & REVERSE @ WALKING FOOT — SEWS OVER PINS @ POWERFUL UNIVERSAU MOTOR @ 10 YEAR GUARANTEE Sewing Center LIBERAL ALLO TRADE-INS — EASY TE FOR FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION OR MAIL PHONE OUR KEY WEST NO. 36 COUPON BELOW ALLIED SEWING CENTER, 117 W. Flagler Without any obligation on my part, | would like & free home demonstra BRAND NEW ELE tien of CTRIC PORTABLE SEWING MACHINE AT $34.58 117 W. Flagler St Miami , ADORESS STATS’ ———————

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