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Tampa Bay Times from St. Petersburg, Florida • 30
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Tampa Bay Times from St. Petersburg, Florida • 30

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Tampa Bay Timesi
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St. Petersburg, Florida
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Page:
30
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ST. PETERSBURG TIMES THURSDAY. OCTOBER 14. 1982 nw ne nw ST. PETERSBURG TIMES THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1982 3 volunteers Events to aid foundation that helps handicapped artists BACKWARD GLANCES TjjH BETTE tefr SniH mm SOCIAL SECRETARY BsajM elderly; sale includes more than 100 tables filled with household items including handmade articles from the Neighborly Senior Services Dining and Adult Day Care Centers; information: Ruth Stoffel, 367-1702.

Square daaee and bos sapper Saturday, St Petersburg Catholic High School cafeteria, 6333 Ninth Ave. supper, 7 to 8:30 p.m.; square dance, 8 p.m. to midnight; sponsored by the school's Parents Association and Band Parents; $6 per person; information: Bob Bates (evenings), 393-6718. Mothers' Club taking evergreen orders The Mothers' Club of Shorecrest Preparatory School is taking orders for fresh and fragrant holiday evergreens from Washington state. Proceeds from the sale will benefit the school.

Items for sale can be ordered for delivery between Dec. 8 and 15. They will include a 20-inch diameter wreath of alpine fir (19.50); berried holly (14); a decorator kit of assorted pine, fir and cedar with red ribbon and pine cones; and a seven-foot garland of Western red cedar ($9 or two for $16). To order greenery (deadline is Oct. 29) call Dona Mullaney, 821-4081; Gerry Sauers, 898-1686, or Karen Richardson, 821-9314.

Weltha Buxton has logged 3,079 hours of service working for the Social Security office in Clearwater. Numerous events are being scheduled during the next few months as benefits for the Mont Blue Memorial Foundation of Arta for the Haadieapped. Betty Blue established the foundation in Seminole in 1981 in memory of her husband Monte Blue, a Hollywood character actor and one of eight men who started the Shriners' Crippled Children's Hospitals. Mrs. Blue offers free art lessons and supplies to 40 handicapped persons from 1 to 4 p.m.

Fridays and Saturdays at the foundation (also the site of the Betty Blue Art School), 9014 Seminole Seminole. Foundation officials hope proceeds from the various benefits can be used to expand facilities so art lessons can be offered to more handicapped people. One of the events will be 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday and Nov. 21 at the foundation, where Ms.

Blue will demonstrate painting techniques. Other foundation benefits include a rummage sale, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Nov. 7 (donations of everything except clothing will be accepted on Nov.

5 at the foundation) and a booth at the Community Charity Bazaar Nov. 13 and Nov. 14, Pinellas Square Mall. Additional funds for the Monte Blue Foundation will be provided by proceeds from a masquerade ball at 8 p.m. Oct.

30, given by Suncoast Affiliate 3, a Florida cosmetologist association. The dance is being held in conjunction with a Mardi Gras weekend, an event providing educational classes for licensed cosmetologists, barbers and students at the Don CeSar Hotel at St. Petersburg Beach Oct. 30 through Nov. Masquerade ball tickets ($5 per person) will be available at the door.

Music will be furnished by "The Best Beat in Town." For information, call 576-3340. Governor presents service award to 77-year-old woman By ANN ELLENBERGER St. Ptrfatirg Tlma Corraapondwit Groups sponsor children's project The song Jingle Bellt might be on the minds of members of Ix Gamma Mu and Phi Alpha Omega chapters of Beta Sigma Phi, because these groups are sponsoring the Foster Children's Christmas Project. They're seeking monetary donations and gifts to bring Christmas cheer to battered, abandoned or homeless youngsters who are living in foster, group or shelter homes. The number of children needing gifts this year is projected to be more than 500.

Groups or individuals can sponsor one child or several. To obtain the names of needy children or for information call Mra. Beverly Blair, (between 1 and 9 p.m.) at 522-2934. Mail donations to Foster Children's Christmas Project, Maggie Mayer, 5970 63rd Ter. Pinellas Park 33566.

What they're practicing for is a benefit show sponsored by the St. Petersburg Legal Secretaries Association. The show isn't until Feb. 12 at the St. Petersburg Little Theatre.

But the secretaries group is looking now for singers, dancers, actors and musicians. Auditions are open to any judge, attorney, legal secretary, police officer or member of the legal and law enforcement professions. Audition dates are Oct. 23 and Nov. 20.

Proceeds from the show will benefit the Legal Secretaries' scholarship fund. Performers do not necessarily have to perform solo. For information and audition locations, call Dolly Sullivan at 327-7526 (office) or 576-4053 (home). Auxiliary having luncheon, fashion show "Social Butterflies" is the theme of the annual luncheon and fashion ahow being given Oct. 22 by St.

Anthony's Hospital Auxiliary. Proceeds will be used to purchase hospital equipment. The social hour is at 11 a.m., and the luncheon is at noon at the Bayfront Concourse Hotel, 333 First St. S. Maas Brothers, with Sylvia Mills as coordinator, will provide fashions for the show.

Mrs. Robert G. Keelean and Mrs. William C. James are the event's cochairwomen.

For reservations (tickets are $15 per person), call Mrs. Francis Kilbane, 522-7934. Mpjb5iff? 1b tmmrmm. mmm bbbbBBW El Um fL 'J WbbXeb1 Hsfl IpBjBj'' 'gnMSSL gf Ath 1 CTEjsBSaaaaaaaaaaaaM Coming Golden Baton Ball Oct 22, cocktails at 6:30 p.m., dinner and dancing to Jimmie Taylor Orchestra, 8 p.m.; 19th annual event sponsored by the St Petersburg Symphony Guild to benefit the Florida Gulf Coast Symphony Orchestra; information, reservations ($100 par couple, benefactor, $85 per couple, patron, and $35 per person, donor): Mra. Henning Anderson, 344-2020 or Mrs.

Albert Pityo, 367-4020 or 367-4094. Financial seminar Oct 25 and Oct. 27, 7 to 9 p.m., Northeast High School library, 16th Street and 64th Avenue free financial planning seminar for women (two-part program) sponsored by A. Dale Zinn and Associates; led by Denies Kuecken (Zinn financial planner) with guest speakers Luanne Eagle, attorney, and Susan McCormick, insurance agent; information: Ms. Kuecken, heme for the Social Secretary column must reach Madge McFall no later than noon the Monday before publication.

Send notices to Madge McFall, Neighborhood Times, P.O. Box 1121, St. Petersburg 33731. No regular meetings, installations or membership-only events can be considered. The column is a service listing of sponsored events for men and women, open and of interest to the public.

This week "World's Greatest Garage Sale" Saturday, 9 a.m. -9 p.m., Gateway Mall; sponsored by Gateway Mall Merchants Association to benefit Neighborly Senior Services, an organization that provides services for the Miss Pinellas of 1 9 1 2, Marguerite Blocker Bartlett, carries a green and white banner while marching in this city's annual parade. Forty attendants followed, representing towns and cities of the new county. Movies were taken of the big event and were used to promote St. Petersburg.

Legal secretaries to sponsor benefit Have you seen any police officers singing in their cruisers lately or dancing a jig while directing traffic? Don't worry if you do. they're not crazy just practicing. Washington's birthday was once city's biggest gala Long before the Festival of States parade became a popular annual event, people in early St Petersburg held their biggest celebration each year on Feb. 22 George Washington's birthday. Several years before the turn of the century, schoolchildren, including high school military cadets, practiced for months to perfect their "exercises." The patriotic celebration evolved into a parade which included war veteran groups and bands.

Children waved flags, marched in the annual parade, and played military music in the school band. The celebration ended with performances at The Annex, a large auditorium built and donated for school use by E. H. Tomlinson, a wealthy bachelor who bought a flag for each child and financed the festivities. Costumes representing several countries were fashioned and handed down from year to year.

Included were Spain, Holland and Japan. Youngsters in Scottish plaid danced the Highland Fling. Every year the high school faculty chose a "Goddess of Liberty" to be the flag bearer in the parade. In 1910 Marguerite Blocker (called Marge by most people) was selected to fill the role. For the occasion she was dressed in stars and stripes, attended by little girls in white and preceded by a small boy dressed as Uncle Sam.

TALL, PRETTY and poised, she was named two years later in 1912 to be the first Miss Pinellas after Pinellas County broke away from Hillsborough County. Now known as Marge Blocker Bartlett, she traveled extensively with her late husband George, but her residence has been and still is in her hometown. She was bom Nov. 14, 1893 at Central Avenue and Sixth Street and lived as a child in other homes which have all since been demolished. She told Neighborhood Times that Central Avenue, named in 1903, at that time was called Sixth Avenue.

The numbers began at the northern boundary of the settlement, which means that present-day Fifth Avenue was then First Avenue. She credited her mother with her successes in school and in life. "I listened to my mother's advice and started early in life raising my hand to volunteer." She said she played the piano for school programs, loved to recite, sang in the glee club, played basketball in period dress of white middie blouse and black sateen bloomers and was valedictorian of her class in 1912, the first to graduate from a new classically designed high school, now demolished. She said that her expression or elocution lessons were treasure island Antique cars roll into park for 'Run in Sun' Weltha Buxton, 77, was presented the Louella Dirksen Senior Citizen Community Volunteer Award by Gov. Bob Graham at Sea World Saturday.

"It's a beautiful large wood plaque with a big Shamu and engraved brass from Sea World of Florida and Eastern Airlines," Mrs. Buxton said in describing the plaque. It read: "Weltha W. Buxton, in appreciation of her untiring work on behalf of Florida's senior citizens." Mrs. Buxton, whose resume was one of 24 considered, was selected on the basis of her eight years as a volunteer with the Social Security office in Clearwater.

As a member of the Retired Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP), she had accumulated 3,079 hours of volunteer work by spending her Tuesdays and Thursdays at the Social Security office from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. What makes the award even more special is that Mrs. Buxton has terminal cancer but has decided to continue helping others. However, when the Social Security representatives submitted Mrs.

Buxton's resume it did not mention the cancer. She received the award solely on merit "It's (the cancer) a state of mind," she explained. She said she didn't want sympathy but hoped someone else in the same situation might be helped by knowing that she could continue with her work. Betty Hayward, director of RSVP in St. Petersburg, described Mrs.

Buxton as a delightful person able to accept her fate and not let it stand in her way when helping others. Mrs. Buxton is a charter member of RSVP. "She just gives everything she has," said Mary Jane Fitzwater at the Social Security office in Clearwater. Mrs.

Buxton helps people with Medicare claims. She is so well liked that some people will leave if she is not there and come back when she is, Ms. Fitzwater said. "It's a source of great satisfaction in that you're helping somebody. This acts like therapy for me.

I don't know who it's helping more," Mrs. Buxton said. Mrs. Buxton and her husband Waldo moved from Rhode Island to St. Petersburg in 1952, where she worked for the health department.

Now a widow living in Largo, she has two stepsons and six grandchildren. She keeps bus doing needlepoint and enjoys handwork. She believes; a person's attitude toward life is the most important thing. Neighborhood Times correspondent Bette Smith contributed to this report. "It's just an opportunity for the general public to view unusual cars and for antique car lovers from all over the nation to exchange notes on where to buy parts or how to rebuild engines," he said.

Rex Huskey, manager of the Howard Johnson's Motor Lodges in Treasure Island and St. Petersburg Beach, is the event's chairman. Refreshments will be served. By VALINDA ALMEIDA St Petersburg Times Correspondent TREASURE ISLAND Antique car buffs will have a chance Saturday to view automobiles that were made before 1949. Dubbed "Run in the Sun," the car show is sponsored jointly by the Treasure Island Chamber of Commerce and the Rod Club.

The show will be held in Treasure Island Park (Park Place and 106th Avenue, off Gulf Boulevard) from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. According to Chamber director Harold Bressler, the auto show is purely a "good will" gesture aimed at the public. No admission will be charged. "It's not a commercial venture or a fund-raising event," Bressler said.

ROUEDBACK PRICES! The small Pasco County settlements of Chipco and Blanton where the two families lived and she often visited as a child no longer exist, she says. Mrs. Bartlett's father John C. Blocker, the oldest of eight children, came to Pasco County with his family in 1884 from Cumberland County, N.C. He found work as a carpenter during the boom that began when the Orange Belt Railroad was being constructed.

He worked on the Detroit Hotel, then an ornate frame structure and the first hotel in St Petersburg. "He could do anything," she remembered with pride. He began work with the railroad wiping engines in Oakland, near Sanford at the eastern terminus of the Orange Belt. AFTER HE WORKED his way up to fireman, the engineer got mad about something up county, crawled down from his engine and left, she remembered. "Papa just slid over from the fireman's seat to the engineer's seat and brought the train in." After that he served as engineer.

Some years later he became the second mayor of Pass-a-Grille after he had built a summer cottage there in 1913, but his residence and real estate business was in St Petersburg. Her mother kept busy with community organizations and Mrs. Bartlett is especially proud of her own work with the Juvenile Welfare Board. Today at age 89 she is still busy volunteering her time and energies. Regularly she joins Everett Lehnert, President of the St Petersburg Historical Society Museum to assist him in identifying photographs of people and buildings from the early days.

taught by Inez Dale for 50 cents a lesson and that her family even sent her to the University of Tennessee one summer for lessons. Her dime-a-week allowance meant it was a difficult decision whether to spend a nickel for a streetcar ride to the end of the line at Booker Creek or to buy a treat of pickled pigs feet at the store owned by Ed T. Lewis where Mcln-tyre's is now located at Central and Third Street. ALWAYS INTERESTED in both her paternal and maternal family histories, she said that even as a child she followed her uncles and aunts around with pencil and pad. After she retired from teaching high school and junior college in St Petersburg in 1936, she wrote five books about her ancestors from the Carolines.

She still shudders when she recalls the stories of hardships that her Grandmother Hill, the aristocratic wife of a Civil War-era physician, lived through. Leaving their home in Union County, S.C., her maternal grandparents traveled by covered wagon with eight children, two mules, one nine-year-old horse, a colt and two dogs through trails and swamps to the Dade City area. Their journey took a month because they did not travel on Sunday. That was the Lord's Day. When their furniture finally arrived by boat from Charleston, they found that storms had soaked and ruined everything.

Her mother, Nina Hill, and her father, John C. Blocker, met at a dance in Pasco County where their families had settled, she has been told. "He (father) was dashing. My mother set her cap for him and he didn't have a chance," Mrs. Bartlett said with a laugh.

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See it now at Wynne's. Also available Twin Size $399 said. "They (the Vernals) always talked about us moving down." Throughout the years, they celebrated numerous anniversaries together. Both couples said that their marriages are based on trust and honesty, strengths that have bound them for 50 years. "You learn to accept things about each other," Mrs.

Thierry said. "Trusting in the Lord has helped." "You have to talk everything over and agree upon things," Thierry added. "We always trusted one another and had faith in one another," Mrs. Vernal said. "You have to go 50-50." Thierry, handsome and fit at 73, said he is in such good condition because whenever he and his wife had an argument, he took a walk.

Mrs. Thierry, 71, said she was in even better condition than he. "Well, we got by all right. We're still living and in good health," Mrs. Thierry added.

"It must be all that walking." 449 along pretty smooth. "We've been friends a mighty long time," Thierry said. "Our friendship has always been very smooth and we always got along. If he (Vernal) had a suggestion, I went along with it And if I had a suggestion, then he went along with it. It's still like that" "We were always agreeable to what the other person wanted to do," Mrs.

Thierry added. In 1974 the Vernals moved to St. Petersburg. "It's cold up there (N.J.) and that's when firefighters are out in the cold," Vernal explained. "I told myself if I lived long enough I'd retire and move to Florida.

And we did." The Thierrys visited the Vernals during a series of winter vacations before moving to Pinellas Park in 1979. "We'd pull our trailer down every winter and stay about five months," Thierry Fiberglaee belte for euro traction SAVE $15 Ladies' Assorted Oxfords and Slip-Ons 6" Were 21.99 Vinyl Seat Covers 0 s88 P1SS80B13 Blackwall Tubal Plus 1.44 F.E.T. Ea. Bench or bucket seats. FREE DELIVERY Black, brown or blue.

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rCheck This Out At Set. Are the friends you had six months ago still your friends? Be honest now. Are they still friends or has time reduced them to acquaintances or replaced them altogether? All right Now that you've made your list, try remembering the friends you had 10 years ago. Where are they today? Are they still close, or just names on a dog-eared Christmas card list How about friends from 20 years ago, 30 years ago? Whew, the list you had at the six month mark sure shrank, didn't it? Now consider George and Hazel Vernal of St. Petersburg, and George and Isabel Thierry of Pinellas Park, two couples who each recently celebrated 50 years of marriage.

What's so special is that they also celebrated 50 years of friendship at the same time. Their story started on Sept. 28, 1932. On that date the Thierry were married in the Fourth Street Methodist Church in Vineland, J. Attending the wedding were their close friends, Hazel Keller and George Vernal.

Following the ceremony, both couples and guests traveled across town to the Lutheran Church where Hazel and George were married. "We stood up for them and they stood up for us," Vernal, now 73, told Neighborhood Times recently. After the weddings, he recalled, both couples headed for honeymoons in Niagara Falls, staying with relatives along the way. "We stayed in the same motel together. It waa a double room with a bath in between.

We were there for two days," Thierry said. "We didn't have a lot of money it was a Depression year," Mrs. Thierry explained. "Things were as rough to get started then as they are now." "We thought we would share expenses and share the fun," said Mrs. Vernal, an attractive woman at 72.

"We always had fun together." Actually Vernal and Thierry became friends in the sixth grade. The men met in 1924 while attending elementary school in Vineland. "We got into trouble together," Thierry said. "Yean, we used to run around with girls together," Vernal said, laughter etching the memory. The Thierrya met on a blind date, and the Vernals met during a group outing.

The romances blossomed. Mrs. Thierry and Mrs. Vernal met and became friends while dating their husbands. Following their marriages, the Thierrys and the Vernals lived fairly close together in Vineland.

They both had two children. Vernal was a firefighter and Thierry ran the pressing department in a clothing factory. They attribute their lasting friendship mainly to mutual understanding. "We always had things in common," Mrs. Vernal said smiling.

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