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Ta SOCIETY — PERSONALS — NEWS OF INTEREST TO WOMEN DOROTHY RAYMER, Society Editor Wednesday, June 10, 1953 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Mrs. Henry Sands As President Hospi New officers for the Woman's pital were installed at a meeting held Monday evening at the home of | nleen Lucas, out-going president of the group, who lives at Avenue. The new president is Mrs. Henry Sands, who was | formerly first vice-president of the Other iadies who took office ar Mrs. Alfred Sawyer, first president; Mrs. Carl Berv ond vice-president. Mi J gado, treasurer was re-electe the new term as were Mrs. H man Gordon as secretary and Mrs, Earl Adams as auditor. The board of directors who sume duties for the coming are Mrs. Clarence Hig: Margaret Pritchard and Mrs. Lu- as. : Qutgoing second vice-president is Mrs. Roland Goulet Besides the officers, active mem- bers present included Mrs. Bernie C. Papy and Mrs, Marinus Abra hamse. Mrs. Papy was ine of the former board of directors who serv- ed with: board members Mrs. W. Earl Julian and Mrs. Pritchard, This is Mrs, Pritchard’s repeat term on the board. A business session preceded the installation and it was decided that the Auxiliary would purchase two more needed pieces of equipment for Monroe General Hospital. To the list of valuable equipr +} which they bought this past year, will be added a basal metabolism machine and a diathermy apparat- us for deep heat treatments, used for example on arthritic patients and those with deep injuries, It was also announced that the group will sponsor a girl to enter nurse’s training at Jackson Mem- orial Hospital. Her identity is sec- ret but she is a graduate from this | year’s Senior class at Key West High School. | It was also decided that no more} formal meetings would be held un-| til October, but that occasional | luncheon meetings would take place | vice. aldi, sec- | Antoinette Raberts, Sara Spencer, Pes >| The Golden Years Is Installed ee tal Auxiliary Auxiliary of Monroe General Hos- | organization. GRAY LADIES SLATE COFFEE MEET THURS. The Red Cross Recreational Hall at the Naval Hospital will be the scene of a coffee and business meeting for the Gray Ladies Corps on Thursday at 10 a. m. All members are invited to attend. Hostesses for the session are Mrs, T. O’Hare and Mrs, J. B, Hartley. Mrs. Tony Arango Hostess To Minoca Council The regular meeting of Minoca| - Council No. 13, Degree of Poca- hontas was held Tuesday night at the Redmen’s Hall with Mrs. Tony Arango, Jr. as hostess and presid- After the regular order of busi- Mrs. Erma Braxton gave ting report of the organi- tate Convention held in St. Petersburg, Fla. Others attend- ing this conclave were Mesdames Lou Bethel, Bernice Parks, Verna Lowe, Flossie Taylor and Myrtle ITEMS OF INTEREST TO EVERYONE —— * | particularly bright. don’t fret. A/ night. MR. AND MRS. ARTHUR A, ALMY celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary yesterday. Guests “at the Southern Cross hotel, they made the trip to Key West as part of their golden Jubilee. They live at Orlando, Fla. The home address is apropos of a happy domestic life . . , it is 3975 Orange Blossom Trail.—Finch, Citizen Staff Photo, | showed the gifts that were won by Sands. Mrs, hontas, Nimia Sikes, Past Poca- and publicity chairman, two Key Westers. Mr. Albury re- ceived a first prize, a beautiful handmade comforter and Mrs. Marie Welters, third prize, got a lunch a red rose at the neckline of her dress, moved in a little closer to the man beside her on the lounge. They turned to each other smiled and she said, “I guess we're ready.” But the man shook his head. He didn’t say anything, but he tucked her arm cozily in his, then nodded. The cameraman beamed. So did the couple, Mr. and Mrs, Arthur A. Almy. The golden years seemed concentrated in the smile. Yesterday was their 50th wedding anniversary, <= Guests at the Southern Cross | ate of Ohio State University in 1943 50th Wedding Anniversary Obesveed Kinse "5 Word By Long-Planned Journey To KW “4 ; By DOROTHY RAYMER The white-haired lady in a dainty blue -and white print adjusted On Women Will Be Disclosed August 20 Set As Date For Book Release By ALTON L. BLAKESLEE ‘Turn Out To Be: DIAL: Citizen Office, 2-5661 Colored USO Needs A Piano The colored USO is holding a j celebration Friday night at 711 | eanepees Street headquarters but |deperately needs the loan or gift |of piano to make the evening a — Uf your! success, County Commission Ger- as being not ald Saunders told The Citizen last |Smart Man Can Poor Executive By ARTHUR EDSON you : | smarter man might make a much, He urged any Key Wester who | poorer executive. jhas a piano he could do without | This advice comes from Dr. Wil-|eithér for the evening or perman- }liam J. Morgan, a psychologist |ently to call Mrs. Marie Welters, | Who can tell you how to pick a/ executive secretary of the USO. {man for everything from a boss | a. . = jenough to learn Russian if he put t SS ‘St. ~ : ,, his mind to it. Then he tried to ‘A man of high intelligence,” | figure how well each student would Morgan ‘told me, “often becomes | apply himself, how enthusiastical- impatient with other people’s fail- ly he would approach each job, ings. He may be too critical, tod how thorough he was, : |quick to find fault, Furthermore, | 4¢ still sounds tough, but Morgan jhe’ may bécome d with the had a tougher job while working | Foutine that goes with every job. | with the British in World War I. | ‘A man with a fine personality | pre's telling about it in a book he’s and temperament, but who | writing: “How to Pick a Success- so bright, may do much better.” | fj g Morgan said he had experiment-| Morgan says some le won’ jed with 13 students who were to/| go nhs spies ‘at all. sm ancag| ake a course in the Russian lan-! fojow was simply too adventurous. uage. |He couldn't resist adventures with He got all the data he could / the ladies. Another was so unbend- about each student. Had he studied ing that even in peasant’s clothes foreign languages before? Was he| he looked like the West Point grad- married? Any children? Had he! yate he was | won scholastic honors? Was he the| ‘By contrast, a rather unpromis- menalcste eee nm re |ing spy was sent on a dangerous rom this Morgan guessed w hat | mission. From. the: start, every- grade each student would get IN| thing went wrong. His parachute the ‘course. His guesses were) fouled up, and he broke a leg in jsealed and kept secret. landing, if At the end of the course they| pe was taken to a hospital run were opened and compared. with! by the Germans in occupied Eu- the grades the students actually | rope, His leg was amputated. made. Mérgan was right on the] With this terrible s ; nose with 12 of the students, The : ; a ii TODAY'S STOCK MARKET NEW YORK (@—Railroad steel shares showeq in early dealings market today while list was mixed. B shire Fietil F rich and U. S. Rubber. U. S. Treasury issves were firm COIFFURE DESIGNERS "J. REID'S Para Phone 2-5263 LA CONCHA HOTEL ‘ : ‘promptly organized his nurses into 13th was a near miss. an active unit, and did his job almost literally under the enemy’s YOuR CHILD nose, FREE se. Yet he didn’t know the students, the teachers or the Russian langu- age. He said he began by assuming that each student was smart ers said it was because the women talked too much.” NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY so that the nembers could keep |!ovely hand embroidered wyerine On De cputnare of the | gee refreshments were ser. hospital equipment. The regaulr " sp sit ‘sewing units will’ continue on their | Ved by Mrs. Arango. Everyone pre- projects every week, but with a| Sent enjoyed the social hour and) change in the day from Thursdays | the assortment of sandwiches serv- to Tuesdays, 2 p. m., at the hospit-|¢4 with fruit punch. “a during the summer, In the fall, | sla ose! * the sewing units’ Will meet again) McCarthy Family Plans on Thursdays. ©’ The hostess served ‘ice cream, cookies and coffee, The table was; Among the many families leav- | decorated with a cool, attractive ing on vacation this summer will _ centerpiece of a tropical house-}be Mr, and Mrs. Douglas V. Me- Plant ina low planter bowl. The Carthy accompanied by their chil- evening get-to-gether lasted for | dren, Mary Francine, Emelie and | two hours, | Dauggie. They expect to motor! | along the East Coast and will visit | ‘CUBAN VISITORS ARE _ | in Washington, D, C. and New York | | before returning home. ENTERTAINED HERE } In Boston, Mass., they will visit Dr. and Mrs. Eduardo Anderson | With an aunt of Mr. MeCarthy’s and son Eduardo Jr. arrived on| Whom he has not seen for many the Aerovias “Q” for a visit in| ¥¢8"S- The vacationers expect to Key West, with Dr. Anderson’s;>® @Way for a month. sister and brother-in-law, Mr. anc Mrs, Gilbert Ogden. Dr. Carlos M, Suarez, nerve} specialist of Cuba, also came with | TO BE MADE BY AUX. them for a visit to the Island City,} There will be a meeting of the = | Arthur Sawyer Post American Saw- Apply To Wed | Month-Long Vacation Hotel they said they had no elab- orate plans for celebration. “The trip to Key West is our celebra- tion,” Mrs. Almy said in the quick clipped speech of New England. “I always wanted to come here ard it’s a real treat." It seems that back in 1938 they started to motor down over the Florida Keys, but half way on the road, they learned of stormy wea- ther in North Florida and turned around, vowing someday to com- plete the trek. However, said she “That wasn’t our first journey to Florida. We got sand in our shoes a long time ago.”” Mr. Almy put in, “We came to Tampa back in 1911. I was a sales- man before I retired. We lived in Cleveland, Ohio for 35 years, but we never forgot Florida. Now we have settled down in Orlando. We have been there six years and that is our present home.” The address for the Almys after half a century of marriage is uniquely indicative of happy liv- ing. They have a trailer home in Orlando at 3975 Orange Blossom Trail. The Almys were born, reared and married in Rhode Island. Their old hometown is Forestdale, R. I. During the salesman years they moved around quite a lot. One firm for which Almy worked was the Armour Packing Company. It was during this time that they came down to Tampa. Mrs. Almy | he is now married, The Almys are proud of him and their four year old grandchild. It wasn’t necessary to ask either of them what the secret of harmon- ious living is, Mrs, Almy was dis- cussing the reason why they came to Key West besides the old vow to make the trip. “I wanted to go to New Orleans, My husband was- not sure. So we compromised. We picked a place both of us have wanted to visit.” ; Just before taking the Key West jaunt word of the tropical distur- bance in,the Caribbean came through. Mrs. Almy laughed, “But this time we decided that not even a hurricane was going to stop us this time.” The Almys expect to return to Orlando and the Orange Blossom Trail today, Daughter To Scadiocks Mr. and Mrs. V. J. Scadlock, 513 William, announce the birth of a daughter, Genevieve Ruth, Sun- day, May 31 at the Monroe Gen- eral Hospital. The new arrival weighed five pounds, fourteen ounces. Mrs. Scadlock is the former Miss Ruth Stricker, AP Science Reporter BLOOMINGTON, Ind, (#—Dr. | zealously guarded findings about |i humans, Under way simultan- the sex life of women in 10 weeks. on Aug. 20. | and -conflicting’ sex laws; sex life Newspaper and magazine writers | in institutions; homesexuals; de-| here this ‘week are reading proofs | ¥elopment of sex attitudes in chil- g-awaited book, “Sexual | dren; sexual factors in marriage | j studies | of his lon Behavior in the Human Female.” | @djustment; physiological ; They’ are pledged not to tell any- | of sex; Prostitution ; and nerotic one but their editors what the book | ¢!ements in art. says Until Aug. 20. The Kinsey book ; itself will actually be published ‘‘a , Sonal case histories have been few weeks later.” u One reason for the secrecy is to | Kinsey himself. Only about 10 per Prevent some book authors from/cent of all this information has jumping the gun—publishing what | Zone into the first two books on rts to be condensations of the men and women. female book, Dr. Kinsey explained. | AEROS “There are five books, to my} knowledge, which hope’to beat us | out as condensations,” he said “One already is in type, with just | blanks to be filled in with our) actual data as soon as the author | can learn it.” | Dr. Kinsey said he has refused | an offer of $100,000 from one pub- | lication for exclusive rights to the | female book. As with the book on sex life in men—which sold 250,000 | copies—all income from this book } will go to Kinsey’s Institute for Sex | Sama here at Indiana Univers. | 'y. Kinsey is permitting these conti! dential pre-readings, he explained, because he wants the public to! have the widest opportunity to learn, factually, what has been | eoomore foot than shoe—more fashion ously are studies of sex offenders | Already, 16,500 confidential per: | taken, 40 per cent or more by Dr. | This second book is part of a| | long-range project to learn all Alfred C. Kinsey will disclose his | Kinds of facts about sex behavior | YOUR CHILD'S PHOTO OUR GIFT TO YOU! This te Bonafide Offer | No Purchase, Necessary Te Receive | ra sar | We Will Have An Expert Photographer Our Store On The rn BEAUTIFUL 547 BHOTO MADE FREE” __ Age Limit: 1 Month te 6 Years Limit 1 ares. To 4 ag om Children YOUR CHOICE OF PROOFS 3 Days Only June 11-12-13 FOR “CHILDREN’S BEST” IN KEY WEST, ITS... IDEAL TOGS DUVAL AND SOUTHARD STRESTS discovered through interviews and | Kitchen arithmetic: You'll need | observed that progress had chang- | Post Home, Stock Island, The time “sor Lane have applied for a mar- | that all members come to the meet- Others applying for marriage | 20, Tampa, and Murray Schwartz, 22, a half eup of boiling salted water yer Post American Legion Auxil- jary on Thursday at. the Legion Dominick Anthony Yaccarino, 27 i k » “*> | set is for 8 p. m. and Claudina LaFe, 21, 1011 Wind-| "Mrs. Florence Gamble _ urges riage license at the dffice of} in; scus ig as plans are to be discussed for | County Judge Raymond R. ‘Lord. | the installation of officers on June licenses are Paul Everret Giblert,| Marathon, and Lillian Mae Hurd, PCS, 1385 and Marion Grace Rose-/| to cook a pi i CS, 3 i, | pint of frozen mixed witz, 19, East Norwalk; Conn, vegetables. If you are planning to} ed Tampa so much that they would not be able to recognize any of the British Editor In recent years, Sweden's ship- | yards have often accounted for 1- 10 of the world's new ship tonnage. | old landmarks with. which they add a cream sauce to the cooked | were familiar forty-two years ‘ drained’ vegetables, be sure to use| They have one son living, Mervin any of the vegetable cooking liquid | Almy, who is a government ac-! left in the saucepan, in your sauce. ; coutant at Arlington, Va. A gradu-| Denies Red Tie NEW YORK (#—British editor | Cedric Belfrage, f other studies of women. The female nook has been in | preparation 15 years—the book on | men took nine years. The women’s book will be “a human document,” organized differently from the 800- page book on ma.es than price Just barely there-the open sandal, smartly fashioned, beau- tifully made. Unmistakably spring fashica, ly Planning For Coming Year ‘WOMAN'S AUXILIARY of ton of efficers. The cox was hostess to the group yer, sex Reary S Mource General Hosp for be oJ 3, George board a business session and installa- Lucas, past president, who directors: Mrs. Alfred Saw- Deigade, treasurer fter twice refusing to tell con- is a Communist, says in a sworn Federal Court statement that he is not and never has been one. Belfrage adds in the statement that he has not engaged in Com- munist activity or espionage. The statement was made public yesterday as Federal Judge Ed-|— ward Weinfeld ruled that Belfrage should go free in bail pending the outcome of the deportation case against him, Weinfeld asked attorneys for the defense and government to sub-| mit suggestions on the amount of | bail. These arguments probably! will be heard today. | Belfrage, an alien resident here j since 1926 and editor of the news }weekly National Guardian, has been held on Ellis Island for de-j | Portation since May 15. representatives will open negotia-| tions with the Austrian government June 22 on their claims for Festi-| tution as a result of wrongs suf-! fered by the Jews at the hands of’ the Nazis. | Austrian authorities were said to be willing w agree w an over-all settlement if Jewish demands are kept on a moderate scale. | Publication had been expected earlier, but there was just too much information to be collected and analyzed, Dr, Kinsey said. “People have advanced many reasons for the ceiay,"" he re- marked. “Some said it was because of censorship. Others said it was because women wouldn't talk. Oth- | gently priced. Ctr —a Contact Lenses NOW AVAILABLE IN KEY WEST “WE FIT THE HARD TO FIT” Formerly Pic’M Shee Store KEY WEST'S NEWEST AND LARGEST TAmMiLy SHOE STORE 538 Fleming $1. 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