The Key West Citizen Newspaper, August 12, 1952, Page 4

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Pert 4 THT KRTY VEST CITIZEN SOCIETY LOROTHY RAYMER, Society Editor o@ Tuestay, “ura? 17. 1952 on PERSONALS... NEWS OF INTEREST TO WOMEN ITEMS OF INi. 2EST TO EVERYONE Reitomie And Professional Women To Hear Admiral % Fay Foto, Boston, Mass. FORMAL GOWNS WILL BE THE “UNIFORM” OF THE DAY at the State BPW banquet, Saturday, August 23, at which Ad- miral Irving T. Duke, USN, will be the featured guest speaker. News of the Admiral’s acceptance to speak at the occasion has been “beamed” throughout the State and members are looking forward to the event with enthusiasm. Pictured, left, is Miss Sally, Butler, Past National and International BPWC president who organized BPW groups throughout Europe; center, Miss Helen Krauss, last year’s State president who will be here to aid the new president and shown with her, right, Mrs. C. B. (Our Wilhelmina) Harvey. Miss Mildred Lynn Archer Married To Frank Janssen In Church Ceremony Carrying a white satin prayer book with a white orchid at- tached, Miss Mildred Lynn Archer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ken- neth Archer of 1503 Von Phister, exchanged nuptial vows with Frank Jaussen of Chicago, Ill., at 5:30 p. m., Saturday, August 16 at St Paul’s Episcopal Church. The Rev. John Armfield performed the ceremony. Organist was Margucrite Hilton and Cleora Roberts, soloist, sang, “Ave Maria” and “The Lord’s Prayer.” The bride was given in mar. riag> by her father, She wore a Jong sleeved empress style satin redingote which formed a cathed- ral train draped over the satin strapless bodiced dress with nylon net hooped skirt. The redingote was trimmed with tiny | white satin buttons from the pearl embroidered Chinese neck line to the front of the waist. An orange blossom tira held her fingertip nylon net veil. Miss Deanna Archer, cousin of the bride, was maid of honor. She wore a full length gown of green with a lace bodice and nylon net skirt. Miss Gloria yr, another cousin of the bride. was She chose a similar gown in pink nylon net Both attendants carried a bou- quet of pink and orchid colored rs with head pieces to match. Flower girl was Cohnie Perez, dressed in an aqua organdy frock. She carried a basket of pir ters, The ring bearer was Arthur Grant Gardner. Jess Hale served as best man i Don Bradford as usher | rs. Kenneth Archer, mothe bride, wore a pink sparkle flecked nylon net gown with white accessories an dan orchid ights. Fern and white decorated the table id the three-tiered wed- Juated this Key West ng the wed- ! left for a b - “pp Coming Events UESDAY, AUGUST 12— Key West Players meeting, Barn Theatre, 8 p.m. Order of DeMolay Boys, Scottish Rite Temple, 8 p.m. Circle I, First Presbyterian Church, 8 p.m. home of Mrs. Charles Landen, 164-C Poinciana. Sparkling Waters Rebekah Lodge No. 14, Knights of Pythias Hall, 8 p. m. ZX-11 OW.C. coffee, 10 a. m., Aeropalms Southernmost Pistol and Rifle Club, Legion Post Home, 8 First of Methodist Y, AUGUST 1: ig of Junior Debs, an’s Club, 7:30 p.m. Scottish Rite Bodies, Rite Temple, 8 p.m. American Legion, Arthur Sawyer Post 28, Post Home, 8 p.m. BPW regular meeting, 8 p.m. at Woman's Club. | Meeting, Junior Ch. Commerce, at clubhouse, 8 p.m. nd City Navy Wives’ Club No. , Meeting at Bldg. 178, 10:30! Wom- Scottish | Tournament, K. W. se, 9 a.m. RSDAY, AUGUST 14— Fleet Re: meeting, 8 p.m. es Corps, 10 a.m. cof- es Aid meeting, Grace Luth-/ h, 8 p.m. eon, 12:15, St. ‘arish Hall. | Lions. meeting n, 1009 Semina: Key West Lions stree use, 8:30 p.m. Bowling League, n bowling. Apply To Wed William S. Hatt, 28, 812 South st. and Joan Audrey Porter, 23, 1925 Fogarty Avenue, have applied for a marriage license at the office of County Judge Raymond R. Lord. Nathaniel Arthur Pigel, 20, Sea- plane Base and Edwina Marie Tho- mas, 19, 319 Angela street have al- so applied, —— Ronald Eugene Dobbins, 20, USS Blackwood, and Winifred Miller, 19, Jackson, O., have applied for a marriage license at the office of County Judge Raymond R. Lord. Herbert Robbins Price, 23, 1325 Newton street, USN, and Gerald- ine Louise Chamberlain, 21, 1325 Newton street, have also applied. Mr., Mrs. Richard Wade Leave For Gainesville, Fla. Mr. and Mrs, Richard Wade, re- cently wed, left Sunday for Gaines- ville, Fla., where the groom will resume his studies at the Universi- ty of Florida. Mrs. Wade will teach music education in the public schools at Gainesville. The bride is the former Faye Bervaldi, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bervaldi of Key West. She was graduated in music from Florida State University in June, p.m. FRIDAY, AUGUST 15— Key West Amateur Radio Club meeting, National Guard Arm- ory, 7:30 p.m. Triangle Club of Pythian Sisters, meeting at K. P, Temple, 7:30 p.m. Key West Shrine Club meeting at 7:30 p.m. Knights of Pythias meeting, Py- thian Hall, 728 Fleming St., 8 p.m. Alcoholics Anonymous, meeting, First Presbyterian Church, 8 p.m. SATURDAY, AUGUST 16— Youth for Christ Rally, Fleming street Methodist Church, 729 Fleming street, 7:30 p.m. Youth Center dance, Wesley house, 7:30 p.m. MONDAY, AUGUST 18— General meeting Women of the First Presbyterian Church, 8 p.m. at church. W. S.C. S. of Ley Memorial Church, annex, 7:30 p.m. Elizabeth Taylor circie of WMU, First Baptist Church, annex 3) Butter; Beverage. p.m. Juvenile Council, Clinie Bidg., meeting at § p.m. Key West Temple No. 20 Py- thian Sisters, K. P. Hall, 7:30 nm The theme for the banquet is “The Ramparts We Build,” and Admiral Duke will tell them how. FAMILY REUNION ENJOYED BY COUPLE ON VISIT TO CITY Sgt. and Mrs. Frank H. Sawyer arrived from Cheyenne, Wyoming this past week to visit with Sgt. Sawyer’s mother and step-father, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Aritas and his grandmother, Mrs. Susan Sawyer. The couple, who were married a few months ago in Wyoming where Sgt. Sawyer is stationed, were accompanied by Mrs. Saw- yer’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Harris, and her sister, Miss Mar- ian Harris, all from Torrington, Wyoming. They have been enjoying a visit and reunion at the Aritas home on Eaton street. BAZAAR TO BE PLANNED BY LUTHERAN SOCIETY The regular meeting of the Ladies Aid Society of Grace Lu- theran Church, corner of 10th st. and Flagler Avenue, will be held Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Annual bazaar plans will be dis- cussed and it is urgently requested that all members be present. FAWTU O.W.C. Meet Wednesday In Coffee Hour FAWTU Officers’ Wives’ group plan a coffee hour at Aeropalms tomorrow morning at ten o'clock. The hostesses for the get to- gether, a monthly meeting, are Mesdames Lina Rock, Pat Buer- ner, Arlene Westman, Kay Jones, Mary Ann Matthews, Vi Forrester, Verna Whitford, Helen Worral, Ann Frank, Elmira Tyler, Beezy Kee- baugh. CONFERENCE REPORT FOR LEGION AUXILIARY An instructive report of the re cent conference in Tallahassee, Flo- rida, will be made by delegates who attended it during the next meet- ing of the American Legion Auxil- iary which takes place Thursday All members are asked to attend the session which begins at 8 p.m August 14, at the Legion Post Home on Stock Island. Cooking’s Fun Sunday Dinner Tomato-Vegetable Juice Cooler; Curried Lamb; Steamed Rice; Green Peas; Broiled Fresh Pea- ches; Coconut Cake; Bread and (Recipe for Starred Dish follows) BROILED FRESH PEACHES Ingredients: 6 fresh peaches crn lemon price % evn better or CONCH CHOWDER Back to the salt mines and swamped with material some of which has interest but must wait until Thursday for the writing. “Thank-yous” are due the guest columnists who ground up the Chowder for me while I traipsed up to Miami and then came back to move from the only hilltop in Key West to No. 4 Charles street, right next door to my old apart- ment of three years ago: In Miami | I got the firsthand, fact-backed at- count of the “flying saucers” that T’ve run across. MY BROTHER Bob Raymer who looks like Ro- bert Hutton of the movies, was out in his backyard with his step- daughter, Susan, showing her var- fous constellations about two weeks ago. He pointed to a moving light and said, “That is a meteor or falling . . .” he never finished say- ing “star”, for he noticed that the round object was moving straight across the sky, not descending. As a gunner’s mate in convoy duty during World War II he knows his air speeds, heights, arcs, angles, estimates, and how to correlate the relative facts. He immediately glanced at his watch and timed the moving gadget which he esti- mated was going well over a thou- sand miles an hour far above a 10,000 foot cloud level. He counted four seconds until it crossed the moon, during which time it had the shape of a glowing bubble. It moved in silhouette against the moon in another three seconds and flipped as it did so. The bubble-like sphere at this point of turning lost the orange glow and seemed to have a metallic lustre. What’s more, after flipping over, as if it had come out of a complete bank- ing, the “saucer” appeared con- vex on top and flat underneath. He observed it for another five seconds as it sped across the arc of sky, turned again and then dis- appeared in the dark blue yonder. He immediately called Army In- telligence. They interviewed him thoroughly for half an hour on the phone. Asked what he thought it was, he is non-commital. I can’t remember all the technical details he gave, but they were so clear to the Army that he was asked to give the intelligence office an official account eeord. INTERNATIONAL dancer, Chan- dra Kaly was my host during the first evening of vacation in Miami. At the Vagabond room, one of the four sages usiclans spotted me during théir'act and shouted a “‘hi- ya”, much to the amazement of the swank audience. Backstage. . big reunion with Henry Neyle, Peterson the Vagabond who plays bass and Dominic; Bob Daly, pub- licity man, and a lot of my old Showtime cronies of the days when the nighterie beat was my forte. “Southernmost” Term fs Old Spanish Custom? Frank Helling, ME! Div. 8, USS Howard W. Gilmore (As-16) has received a card from a Key West visitor now traveling in Europe which he thoughtfully forwarded to The Citizen with the notation: “Enclosed is a post- card from Miss Helen Johanes- man who visited Key West last summer. This year she chose to include in her vacation the “‘sov- thernmost” city in Europe, Algei- ras, Spain. It must be a fad to visit southernmost places nowa- days.” The message on the card also amphasized the term: “We left Granada this morning and are new in Algeiras staying in the Southernmost hotel in Europe (Does that phrase sound fami- liar?) We can see Gibraltar and the coast of Africa from here and Tangier is only 25 minutes away by plane. One of the interesting it in Granada ‘is the gypsy NEW YORK (#— Light selling, especially in the railroads, sent ‘the stock market down today. Also hit were selected oils with | some of them down sharply on a few sales. Losses ran from fractions to be- tween 1 and 3 points with a few higher priced issues dropping more than that. Lower stocks included Santa Fe, Union Pacific, New York Central, Standard Oil (NJ), Barber Oil, Amerada, Texas Pacific Land Trust, Chrysler, General Motors, U. S. Steel, Anaconda Copper, American Can, and United Air- craft. Some brokers reported today that wall street slowly is beginning to realize the bearish pressures present in the increase in the in- terest rate on loans to brokers on securities other than government issues to 2 % per cent from 2 4% per cent. Guaranty trust made the first move Friday, and by today most major banks lined up with the rise. It means an increase in the cost of doing business in the securities market, and it also has a tendency to discourage borrowing. Econo- mists regard higher interest rates in a deflationary light. The stock market right now is around its best levels of the year. Thursday the Associated Press av- erage of 60 stocks reached a new 1952 high, it stood still on Friday, | and declined irregularly Monday. Stocks on the curb exchange were mostly lower including American Republics, Sanada Southern Oils, Kaiser - Frazer, and Trans Em- Then to Martha Raye’s where she greeted me with a hug and “Wel- come Home!” She’s still the same wonderful entertainer of verve and vim. ‘‘Casey’”’ Castlemen, erstwhile Beachcomber partner is manager. Shook hands with Kirby Stone whose quintet got their first Miami send-off via my column. .and chat- ted with Jayne Manners whose pic- ture and recent divorce hit the pap- ers including The Citizen pages. She’s over six feet tall and a beau- tiful blonde who writes her own saucy bistro material. Ended up at dawn viewing wags in wigs at Tony Pastor's. I must say I felt nostalgic twinges, running into at others of ye amusement editor days. Aside to Marionne and Ruth- ie Simone. . .the Vagabond Supper Club was designed by one, Paul Simone. Any kin? Chandra Kaly’s troupe utilizes a most authentic modification of those Far East dance movements. He was born in ‘India of French extraction and grew up watching temple ritual dances like that of The Cobra. . . that’s the one where you stick your hands out at an angle and practi- cally unjoint your neck. Not advis- able unless there is a chiropractor handy. ON THE HOME FRONT: Be- lated birthday greetings to Vi Veidt who celbrated her natal day | August 10. Flier Tom Mosby back on a visit from Atlantic City had interesting conversation with her over the phone much interrupted by various well-wishers . .Ask | “Jeem” Cobb how he made out as | a substitute in a three way game | Sunday night.. It might be called | “Climbing Mt. Etna” . . with varia- tions in the spelling of course! least a score of show folk, and| pire Oils Ltd. Higher were Anglo- Iranian Oil and Mountain States Power, Corporate bonds were steady. U. S. governments in the over the counter market were down slightly. Arthur Sawyer Post Meets Wed. A regular meeting of Arthur Sawyer Post No. 28, American Le- gion, will be held Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the Legion Home, Adjutant Bethel Johnson stated today. A report of the Department Con- , vention held in Tallahassee July | 31— August 3 will be given by the | delegation. Jack Coombs, who this year coached his last Duke University baseball team, pitched and won the | longest game in the history of the | American League — 24 innings be- tween the Athletics and Red Sox. THANKS We want to thank all donors that gave blood to _ our Mother, Nora A. Betan- court. At the present she has sufficient. THE BETANCOURT FAMILY And what will a certain drummer | do now that a certain pianist took over the down beat? margarine, % cup brown sugar. Method: Peel, halve, and pit peaches; sprinkle with lemon joice. pan. Cream butter and sugar to gether; put a portion of it in each peach cavity. Broil peaches under moderate (350F.) heat about 3 or 4 inches from heating unit. Serve p= Makes 6 servings. | End Bob Wilkinson on the New York football Giants has played ' feature parte in Hallywond movies Attention Little Girls! ENTER YOUR FAVORITE DOLL IN THE DOLL SHOW To Be Held Soon at the CASA MARINA ANNEX PHONE 1360 PHONE: Citizen Office, 1933 NEWS BRIEFS WASHINGTON (# — The Defense Department today identified 14 casualties of the Korean War. The | new list (No. 626) included 12 wounded, one injured and one miss- ing. : WASHINGTON ® — A Selective Service spokesman says increased needs for manpower soon may force the drafting of 19-year-olds into the armed services. Men 20 and older are now being used to fill draft calls, but an official said the need for more men—as indicated by Monday’s call for 47,000 draftees in October —may mean dipping into the lower age bracket. The October call was an in- crease of 17,000 over the Septem- ber call, and there are indications quotas for the last two months of 1952 may be as high if not higher. TOKYO — Kyodo News Serv- ice said today the Japan Commu- nist Party is publishing secret military manuals for its members under such titles as: “How to Grow Flower Bulbs,” “Engineering Handbook,” “how to Grow Saplings,” “Useful birds and Harm Birds,” and “How to Ana- lyze_neutrition.” The publications carry instruc- tions on concrete methods of strug- gle under the military policy of rains impeded the tortuous ¢limh up the rugged slope of 2,000-fooi mount Santa Rosa in the Mariveles Mountains of Bataan Province. —<$<$<<$_____ DOUAI, France w — Three miners were killed and 17 others injured in a coal mine explosion here in Northern France today. BOMBAY, India ( — Inaugurat ing the first jet airliner Passenger service from Britain to Ceylon, a BOAC Comet liner landed here to day only 17 hours and 10 minutes after leaving London. Actual flying time for the 5,954-mile trip was 1) hours 53 minutes. 5 Regular BOAC service takes 23 hours for the trip this far, SAPELO ISLAND, Ga. (®—Rich ard J. Reynolds Jr., and his third wife—an attractive 33-year-old Ca nadian divorcee—made plans to- day for a world cruise on the heir’s newest yacht. Reynolds, 46,,and Mrs. Muriel Greenough, Toronto, were married Friday night in his air-conditioned, 60-room mansion here. It was her third marriage also. The ceremony, attended only by estate employes and three of Rey- nolds’ friends, was performed by a Methodist minister from the main land in a forfial garden adjoining a sian tile indoor swimming pool. Reynolds was divorced Thursday by his second wife, Marianne 0’- Brien Reynolds, at Miami. She was given custody of their two sons and a two million dollar settle- ment which included their Miami Beach home and New York apart- ment, the Communist party, the news agency said. MANILA ® — A 50 man rescue team late today inched through tropical. jungle in monsoon rains to within about one half a mile of what is believed to be the wreck- ane of a U. S. Navy Mariner patrol lane. Thirteen persons were aboard the plane, last heard from Aug. 7. Little hope was held that’any sur- vivors would be found. DENVER (®#—A Denver sérvice station operator added a new twist to the city’s gasoline price war by offering a free airplane ride to motorists who buy a tankful of gas. He reported that he has quadrupled his business, He is selling bronze gasoline for 21.9 cents a gallon — a cent higher than most independent stations in the Denver area. Heavy undergrowth and pelting | | NOTICE 1 will not be responsible for any . debts contracted by anyone ether than myself. George A. Griffith 181-C Poinciana August 11, 1952 ADELINE'S Interiors Custom Work Done In Our Own Decorating 904 FLEMING ST. KEY WEST IT WONT BE , LONG NOW---, ICE MILK | Is Coming To You DAIRY QUEEN COR. WHITE & UNITED STS, “Watch for the Date” 117 W. FLAGLER ST. MIAMI KEY WEST NO. 13. KEY WEST No.

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