The Key West Citizen Newspaper, April 27, 1953, Page 5

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RAYMER, Society Editor April 27, 1953 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN * Mis is U.S. and Canada good will» week. We should use every ‘week to create a little good will among nations methinks. ‘ Bverybody is getting an extra our today, except us, that is. We on’t Tate it seems. The’ rest of nation is going on daylight wing time. Well perhaps our Florida sun shines it’s alloted num- w of hours as it is and we don’t meed any more. ‘This is also the birthdate of two important in U. S. history. .S. Grant born in Ohio in 1822, nd Samuel Morse, (inventor of telegraph, born in 1791. What with birthdays and good il! and daylight saving, fs though perhaps we should make ‘+ that extra hour in shopping, so vs go! 4 x * . PF. “Sweets to the sweet,” is no Faw slogan, but very applicable this time when we are about honor the sweetheart of. them , our Mothers. Schrafft’s has up the most beautiful box- of candy imagineable to be ought as gifts for Mother, and ney are new at Betty Ann Sta- tioners. » Also at Betty Ann, and you'd Wetter hurry’ to get yours, those beautiful, beautiful Gibson cards - for Mother's Day too. Also the _ Cross, Treasure Master cards. A card for any mother from " Then, I’ve told you of the little Stinky sachet enclosures, and now they have special ones - for Mother's Day to enclose with » your gift. Approprite as can be. x * *€ Easiets coffee cake you can ip up when you have 30 minutes so is the recipe I've been using w years. The cake part is so sim- to one egg, and one half cup jar, add one cup flour and two ns baking powder. ...Mix add enough sweet milk to bake thick batter mixture. In, a separate bowl mix together one .cup brown stgar, one tea- <cimamen, and one table- flour, Pour cake batter in eight inch tin, and then cut very hard butter or margaine into tiny little hard hunks and dot the bat- ter, pushing the butter down slight- ly. Cover completely with spiced mixture and bake till cake is firm when tested with a tooth- pick, Serve hot. ~*~ * * One ef my favorite chores now days is whomping up those silly ads for the Sigsbee Snackery. In case you didn’t recognize them Saturday, the dubious look- ing characters with the elongat- Arizona and telling him it was her “New Look?” The gimmick of course being that she is a very pretty blond (natural too, kids), He got so excited he phoned all the way from Arizona to see if it was true. She still hasn’t told me whether he was doing nip-ups be cause he liked the new color, or because he was afraid she had dyed. - Anyhow the sequel to the. case of the red-headed blond was a} meeting.on the street yesterday and a very excited Mrs. Moss nee Walchick informing me that the knot was tied in Biloxi Mississippi seems{on April 4th, and she’s giving me} full credit too! Well you can see the full de- tails on this page, but this column wants to extend personal congra- tulations to Lt. Elizabeth Walchick Moss and wish her all the hap- Piness in the world. (If he has a friend who likes red heads honey, I saved out an- other lock of hair you covld send.) x*r All snide remarks and off col- or jokes to the contrary kids, the Milkman is your best friend, especially if it's # Home Milk milkman! As has been proven hundreds of times, there IS a dif- ference in milk products, and Home Milk has the finest milk, cream, eggs and deiry products in 1 am already a Home Milk user, but a tour of the clean airy bottling plaht out on Stock Island would have convinced me, if I hadn’‘t already been using his milk for over two years. You receive your carton of | Home Milk only 48 hours after it leaves Mrs. Bossy Cow. It has mever been touched by human hands either, from cow to you. The cows are milked in barns as clean as your kitchen by elec- tric milking machines. They (the cows) have to be therough- ly cleaned before and after milk- ing too, and the milk flows directly into sterlized cans and is immediately — refri: ed. it locks to her boy friend out in} AE RI HARRIS SCHOOL ROOM MOTHERS TO MEET Room representatives of Harris School will meet Tuesday night at 7:30 in the Schoo! Library. it | is important for all members to be there, as tinal reports must be made on plans for the May Day festival which will be held on the school grounds Friday at 4p. m |Marionne Simone | To Be Chairman |For BPW Luncheon| Mrs. Marionne Simone will act jas general chairman for the Busi- jness and Professional Women’s Club installation luncheon May 3, jit was announced today by the | president, Mrs. Blanche Miller. The Casa Marina will provide an especially beautiful setting for this, one of the club’s most im- pressive functions of the year; and the presence of Mrs. Opal Eckhoff, district director, will make it a | meeting no BPW will want to miss, | Members may also bring guests. Reservations at $2.50 per person may be made with Mrs. Catherine McManus, reservations chairman, | until the deadline, April 30. Reser- | vations may be made at the Trop- ical Trader or by telephone at | | 2-6039 or 2-6262. Time of the lunch- eon is, one o'clock. |Room Representatives |For Poinciana Meeting | | All room representatives and all | linterested parents are asked to| | meet in the Auditorium of Poinci- }ana School at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday, April 28. This is an important meeting as it will be the last one of the cur- rent school year and there are sev- eral important items to be discus- | sed and all business finished for the year. The chairman, Mrs. Dorothy Ren- der, hopes to have a report on the successful musicale “Music in the | Air,” presented last week. Also |plans for May Day, which will be| held May 8 will be completed. | | sparklingly eye-catching right} |Beta Kappa, Sigma Phi ITEMS OF INTEREST TO EVERYON| rave S| Colin Jameson, Outstanding Short Story Writer, To Speak To OWC The Fort Taylor Officers Wives Club will have a rare treat Friday at their regular monthly luncheon. when Colin G. Jameson, short story writer, speaks to the group on. “How Not:To. Write Short Stories.” The luncheon group will congre- gate at the club Friday, May 1, at 12:30 for the pre-luncheon cocktail hour. The Naval Hospital Wives are hostesses for this month, with Mrs. T. D. Boaz serving as chair-! man. The guest speaxer, when he was | asked for a few particulars about | his iife and experience, divuiged | the following: He was born in Iilinois in 1908, and grew up in Southern Califor- nia in the pre-Hollywood era while it was still common practice to} ride a horse to school. He was} graduated from Williams College | in 1930, and he has spent several | summers in England, Germany, | Switzerland and Italy. i He was a trade paper editor and | publicity writer in New York from 1930 to 1932, his terse comment on | the termination of this job being | “fired, 1932.” Perhaps Jameson lost interest in writing at this time, or perhaps it lost interest in him, but at any rate he entered Harvard Law Law School from which. he was graduated in 1935. His interest in law must have been of brief duration, because his next job was as advertising copy writer and newspaper book reviewer in Chicago from 1935 to 1939. Since 1939 Jameson -has been doing free-lance writing except for a period of three years when he was, in his own words “a Mili- tary Secret attached to the Office of Naval Intelligence in Washing- ton, otherwise known as the Poto- mac Navy.” Jameson is the author of num- erous short stories, which have ap- pedted in the Saturday Evening Post, Cosmopolitan, Redbook, Blue- book and other magazines, as well as several science fiction maga- zines and McClure Syndicate news- papers. Although he is technically a resi- dent of Vermont, he has been a part-time Key Wester since 1939. He was married in 1933 to Betty Gould of Indianapolis. They have two children, Colin, 19, who is a freshman at Williams, and Adair, 13, who attends C. M.-I. Jameson is a member of Phi Society SELECTED BY GLAMOUR MAGAZINE as one of the top ten “girls of taste” for this year, Miss Mary Cobb, Atlanta, Ga., proves that she knows what kind of clothes to wear in Key West. Miss Cobb, who is a staff editor for Southern Bell Tele- phone News, is here on a combined business and pleasure trip with other women who work for Bell in a supervisory gapa- city.—Citizen Staff Photo, Finch, Glamour Magazine “Girl Of Taste” Is Weekend Visitor To Key West Weekend visitor to Key West Miss Mary Cobb who is one of Glamour Magazine’s 1953 Ten Girls With Taste is pictured on page 175 of the May issue of the magazine. Miss Cobb, who was in Key West on a combined business and pleasure trip in connection with a new human relations policy being instituted by Southern Bell Tele- phone Company, was selected from the 38,851 girls with jobs who en- rolled in the survey. According to the magazine, the prevailing level of taste was so high that it was not easy to make a choice, but two employees of Southern Bell} were selected. Each of the winners was re- warded with a travel wardrobe and a two-weeks vacation to the/| spot she selected. Miss Cobb will travel to California and the west, while the other Southern Bell girl, Miss Marguerite Stevens of Birm- and of the U. S. Naval Reserve, holding the rank of Lieutenant | Commander.’ All members of the Officers | ingham will fly to. Florida and) Havana by way of Key West. Miss Cobb was photographed by basins comes to Key West in huge i igerator tank trucks special ret | the | ed, six shooters were Joe and Phil, and they weren't out hunt- ing for the Snackery either! Fact of the matter is they were . leoking for me! it seems last week | went and made a derrogery remark anent the size of a Sigsbee Twinburger and Joe went into a decline and threw a fit on the nice clean floor, The way he carried on you'd think the whole dang town reads this lousy cloumn and no | one, but simply no ene would ever come out to Sigsbee for the purpose of purchasing a Twin- burger again. So alright padnuh, put down it all back. The Twinburger is | every bit as bi any other | hamburger, only it's just twice as delicious, because you get twe of them, thats why! 1 had one of those foot long hot dawys out there last week, jand t want te go on record as f= them thar shootin arns, | take | you can’t lose, especially is processed in the beautiful clean plant | saw. You don’t need to be afraid ever to give Home Milk to your tiny baby or your growing child, and milk for the whole family | will make them a peppier, more wide awake crew, ready for healthy wholesome work or play. x ek Things you discover, and things you can buy too. Now Ive read about a-shower spray, and I'd like | to know where to buy it. If threats won't get junior into the bathtub, a few little luxuries might! Newest contribution to the soothing shower is a shower head that transforms ordinary water flow into a controlled spray of stingless, soothing, air-filled water. It may not revolutionize the world, but it may give junior something | to put his mind on. | Since you won't be able to tell him in scientific terms just why the water feels better this way, he'll have to figure it out for him- self. And that will take time. . . time enough for quite a few thorough latherings! Looks like since I've heard the financial invest- ment is modest. Perhaps the in- vestigation of a few hardwar appliance stroes will turn sox these up. 1 ae, Sees | Suffering from a hot foot? Or maybe hot feet. Well the good “Doctors” at Globe Shoe Store have the right prescription in ait comfy barefoot san- w low prices. OF course at this time of year, | white predominates, but the rain. bow will turn all pure green at | the colors in some of the bare- feet sandals there. The popular comfortable bal- lerina of course is ewer present | }. too. . .im colors you bet, and all ether models ef bare tosey shoes you can think of. Prices start at | $2.99 and im the low price de- | partment of the store you won't | Pay more than $5.99. A? these prices you can af | ford several pairs. and the best cure | know for hot feet is fre quent shoe changes each day. 4 Rew Fashion note for Water Belles: The wasp-waist will go right into the briny this summer. . cinched by Sigure-fattering belts that take to the water, S ai. einstic- ized, others beits ip pastel fabric o gads of course, a8 res ther de to water { through the season. ; ee wee 4 Coolers’ for hot days. . .Ideal Togs new seersucker shorts for girls or boys. These are really Wives Club are urged to make | their reservations for the luncheon Friday. Reservations may be | phoned in to the Fort Taylor Club, and the deadline is Wednesday cute. In white with a wavy wat- | night, ery stripe in red, blue or green, | ‘clictelacusenisdeiapinend hand | they have smart cuffs and wide y elastic waist bands, |W oman's Club Has | 's so hard to tell how uncom. | fortable the wee ones are unless | Successful Card they start to cry up a storm, but |Party Thursday | one way to insure comfort on sticky deys, is to tog them out in cool sunsuits. Ideal Togs is the | The Spring Card Party and Food | comfort station of the city when | Sale sponsored by the Key West it comes to cool clothes for tots. | Woman's Club on Thursday, April The little panties are most of }23 was a most enjoyable affair. them snap on, and are water re- Mrs. Knight Johnson, Mrs. H. H. pelient lined so baby doesn’t even Duggan and Mrs, James Register need to wear waterproof panties | Were the winners of the orchid ever the diaper, Of cottons, ny- | Corsages. Mrs. Joseph Bringman fons, and sheers, they are hot (204 Mrs. Delio Cobo, potted Afri- weather insurance against heat | C82 Violets. Mrs. Charles Pierce, rash and discomfort. Congress Playing Cards. Mrs. k*r Cari Bervaldi and Mrs. J. R. Val- Somehow, all this quarreling| “2, Planter’s Party Paks. Mrs. | and fussing and fighting in the John Butler, embroidered linen ranks of the school system seems | Suest towels, Mrs. Hollon Berval- | so futile. Of course we want the | 4 box of candy and Mrs. Lisle right teachers in our schools, but | Kennedy a Key West Cook Book. this petty 1 business of hurling The committee wishes to thank eharees an pat galeensiitien all thos who contributed food and just doesn’t s t Amerian way | 22e* and those who assisted at : the party and sale. Over one hun to me. Now there weibge Pe ay dred dollars was realized toward folks 1 don’t p the restoration of the building I think that ¢ a [should be talke< Ps " we I first. Tf Navy Nurse Weds cher or suggests th up with the school but this hurling of bomb: a guy's serene existence j mighty upsetting. How can we ex | pect a littie old school board like the UN to keep peace in the | world, if we cant even keep peace fat. home? Maybe we have super- tti > se 4 in Biloxi, Mississippi | men sitting at the Peace Tables? The woking tock vlate ak Ge ; * * * Fi ‘ j ‘ ‘irst Methodist Church in Biloxi, W's a wise child whe knows his | o54 the service was performed by } Own grandmaw. . .especiaity after | the Rev. Dr. Tyson. The bride was a trip te Donald's. ded by Mrs, Tyson, wife of the bell * ~ and best man was Dr. * and a brand Coast Guard Lieut. In Biloxi, Miss. Of interest to her many friends and fans. . .at the Naval Hosital, is the announcement of the marri- age of Lt Lt. (ig) Rebert A. Moss, on April can be atte nd al The pew Mrs. Moss fs a popular ing stoff at the Moss ls a mem- d States of the nur ribe to The Citizen ,« su a beseath Elizabeth Walchick to | Coast | | The Citizen staff photographer in| | her suite at La Concha Hotel, wear-j jing a charming dark sheer print} | dress suitable to the Key West climate | According to Glamour's report, | Miss Cobb considers good taste as} “an acquired sixth sense. It is} warm and human, even humorous, | but never rates material things higher than human harmony.” ; A tall, handsome five feet, eleven inches, Miss Cobb is a staff editor for Southern Bell Telephone News. She is a writer-photographer and also does free-lance writing. Millicent Taylor Is Installed As |Junior-Deb Head | In a simple candlelight serv Wednesday, April 22, Miss Milli- cent Taylor was seated as presi- dent of the Junior-Debs, girl's ser- ives club sponsored by the Wo- {man’s Club at Key West High | School. | Other officers installed were: | Miss Lynn Sellers, vice-president, Miss Mary Fernandez, correspond ing secretary, Miss Isabelle Bar- MONTHLY WINNER in a local photograph contest was Roman Joseph, nine months old, son of Mr, and Mrs. Roman J. Olek, 13 D Sigsbee Road.—Na- tional Studios Photo, telona, recording secretary, Miss Silvia Fernandez, treasurer 3 Miss Nancy Pellicer, chaplain. In officer, Mrs Winston Jones, Junior Deb sponsor for the | Woman's Club. | The Junior Debs are affiliated with the Florida and General Fed j erations of Women's Clubs as sub | juniors. | The Debs were invited to a slum ber party at the home of the new } president on Thursday April 30 | Cicadas often are called locusts | because when American colonists | first: saw them they feared a pls gue like those they had read a! im the Bible. | YARD GOODS | Including ... Organdy - Taffeta - ind. Head O.K. SHOE SHOP. 706 DUVAL STREET CUIFFLEKE Desighias ~ SEs | Salon of Beauty } 423 Fieming #. Phone 2-526) LA CONCHA HOTEL SOCIETY — PERSONALS — NEWS OF INTEREST TO WOMEN DIAL: Citizen Office, 25661 Dame which was defeated in a game called football by another university called Purdue. “That's a lie,” said the angry “All you tell is lies. You had better tell the truth. “Now — i ee who is this bandit, a week they haggled to a lemate—the Communist never was convinced. Only the male cicadas can make sounds. How To Drive Commies Wild The Canadian bishop wrote years ago in a letter to another priest in China: | “N, D. bit the dust. Purdue took them after five years.” For that, Bishop O'Gara of Ot- tawa spent a week of round-the- clock questioning in a Red China “house for reformation.” Freed, the ailing bishop today told in a hospital how that terse thought sent his captors into a The Passionist priest was arrest- nigh galling ” ed in his Yuan Ling Diocese in | —__. pDEUINES commended by Hippocrates, Greek physician, as a cooling drink. Rolls used for cold rolling metals are slightly barrel shaped so they 1951. The Communists confronted him with the letter: “Who is this bandit, N. D.?” “Who is this man, Purdue? “Don’t hold anything back!” The bishop, ill from a bladder in- fection and months of imprison- ment, protested feebly—N. D. was only a university called Notre Is Everybody Having Fun Ci Even if you've never danced before - You can dance with carefree confidence after lessons at ARTHUR MURRAY'S. Come in or phone 2-3430. Open 10 A.M. to 10 P.M. Studies comfortably air conditioned. - Po" opeaing Tonight! = 1 "FANTASEA ROOM" 1 | At The t 1 TRADE WINDS i 5 Judson Smith’ s 4 Popular Singing Stylist and Pianist : Direct from the “Holidey Lounge,” Miami Beach, 4 and “Cocolobo,” Virgin Island Sn GS GE RR GE oe Ge ST Se Custom Werk Done In Our Own Decorating Workshop DIAL 2-265 904 FLEMING ST. KEY WEST LE eT Get Acquainted With Key West! Read THE KEY WEST CITIZEN News of the City, County, Nation and Worid

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