Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
COSSHOOHSEOSCOOSEHESRSOPAOROCCOSESS Mark coldly, 4t was characteristic of him that, although prepared to snub M! Roop as savagely ag)| DeMolays And Celtics In Basketball Tonight Much interest has been aroused lin the basketball, game to be {played tonight between the De- | Molays and the Stone Church Cel- ‘ties, The fracas will start at 8 jo’clock in the high schoo! gym- THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ! ee aenccee |" ’PEOPLE’S FORUM sympathizers of same, than for! the opponents. My efforts have PeocosegsoogsHreegnoeoor {been directed toward maintaining | |peace and order for the benefit of | CUBAN CONSUL GENERAL ali—friends and opponents, | DEFENBS PRES. MACHADO pans and foreigners. Yes, they may | 7 * Signs | return, with the assurance that my | Editor, The Citizen: | Government will lend the same : For the past several months wild | guarantees as would be offered to propaganda has been spread both!my most intimate friends, or my} e | | Cu- | PAGE THREE nasium. jhere in Key Wset and in other sec- | Most ardent supporters. | The first clash of these two tions of the United States against| “The fact that two members of teams about a week ago resulted ‘the Cuban government. The local | the Government have been seleet- jin a vietory for the Celties to the |press has published some bitter in- jed as Congressmen and a few other tune of 37 to 28. As both teams: formation dealing with the politi-\T¢@8Ms calls for a change in the have been greatly strengthened, cq} vonditions in Cuba, and by their Cabinet in the very near future. social custom would let him, he did | not antieipate for one moment that | she would withdraw her offer to finish his totals. He reached for his. crutch and, as the head-clerk dis- appeared into the manager's room, Key West Firms MARK IN A MAZE ‘was electric light in | Kings Mallard, twenty years later, but it had not come to the ‘Bank. The Bank was still lit by \gas, which flared and made dirty {patches upon the ceiling. Under badly placed globes, the clerks sat aid inseribed rows of figures jendiessly in their ledgers. i ‘To the eccentric perception of ‘Mark Lodely, the long rows of Sgures were ladders, lifting people to wealth—which he summarised as {treedom—or forcing them down- ‘wards to poverty, which he desig- mated quite briefly as hell... . Matk sat under the last gas-globe, furthest away from the door, furth- slid off his stool, lit is stated, a much faster game “Now, you know quite well what I meant—that it’s the young lady waiting for you that has got the new furs,” simpered Miss Roop, walking straight into the snub. “One of these days I shall be com- ing to yout wedding, I expect.” “Not tn any capacity,” dissented Mark and made his way with sur prising agility between the lines of desks to the door behind which waited his coat and hat, The manager looked up from his work as Mark’s erutch tapped to and fro in the adjoining lobby. “Is that Lodely going home?” “Yes, sir, I believe so. Found Someone to finish off for him, I shouldn’t wonder.” “It just oceurs to me,” said the manager, looking up again, “that there was some orange peel on the steps when I came in this after- noon. Go.after him, will you?— is expected for tonight, | The dine up is ag follaws: DeMolays ‘Pes. ‘Stone Church E. Johnson ¥ *E. Yates \J. Lopez F E. Keen iJ. Kirschenbaum C QO. Armayor ‘J, Baker G J. Cooper 'J. Cates G F. Knight Today’s Anniversaries 1786—Edward Coles, noted abolitionist and Illinois governor, |born’in Alhemarle Co., Va. Died in Philadelphia, July 7, 1868. 1793—Henry C. Carey, an Peoerecrersncesecareseres | tone, I may say they ave giving; some kind of eredit to the said }Pisory and exaggerated propa ; Banda. | Tn one ‘of your éditions of last week I read one of those articles |against the Honotable President of ;Cuba and his Government which I jhaye the honor to represent in my in Key West. It is not my intention to argue, jor to discuss with the authors of {such articles the truthfulness of aid information because I under- 'stand that everybody, right or | wrong, has the tight to say, or to ; Publish, anything they please; but | with the jdea of giving to your | American and Cuban readers the American political eonomist whose | gnpartunity to see the case from ; General Gerardo Machado, before. works were known the world over aij angles, I take the liberty of/@n audience of more than 20,000 first American leader in the policy! asking you te allow nie, as you al- | persons, in an impromptu speech of protection, born in Philadelphia. | tow gthers, space in your valuable |made by him in Cacahual and at Hee capacity of Consul General {aoctvine in Cuba, nor will I be the Said ehanges will not be direeted in any way whatever toward form- ing a “Cabinet of concentration or ‘reconeentration,”’ as your question isets forth. I have always desired | {and do desire, to depend on the} ‘counsel of all the Cubans who can offer. with patriotism and good; ;faith, but my Cabinet would al- ways be composed of persons whom I can trust implicitly, in aceord- lance with the spirit and word of ‘the Constitution of the Republic. ‘There is no other Constitutional | one to establish it.” On December 7th—the thirty- 'sixth anniversary of the death of General Antonio Maceo, our Lib- erator—the Honorable President, You Should Know---__ The Following Are Representative In Their Various Lines and Offer CURIOS PROMPT, COURTEOUS SERVICE AT ALL TIMES | __MEDICAL | PLUMBING {publication to insert seme of the |the sacred spot which marks the it all. right.” i} imore_recent declarations of the gtave of the great General. said: The -headclerk left. the room 1831—George J. Brush, noted! Honorable President of Cuba, in! y “Yes, I eame to talk to my ‘ {Yale mineralogist, born in Brook-j which your neutral readers may ‘country with the same optimism lyn, N. Y. Died Feb. 6, 1912. | see hig sincere intentions of bring-'!and enthusiasm that I have always! est away from the girl and—by the final tally—furthest away from the manager's room. and make sure that he gets past | Died there, Oct. 13, 1879. THOMPSON'S Dr. L. Soto PLUMBING ot * ' beggar, tasks lengthy and so piteous— time Mark had dragged to his feet and found and his cruteh and nearly going round the head: desk and finally sunk ex- into the visitor's chair oy ithe fire—that even the manager to ignore the incomprehenst- Mark sometimes made of ascending and the de ladders. Instead, the head-clerk had tn- structions that that poor young Lodely, should be given monotonous in their sim- “Near threugh with It, Lodely?® asked the head-clerk in his not | pj # \name, born. Mark met the horn-rimmed gaze of Mies Roop, without He went, unwil- lingly, into. thi and still more unwillingly into the hall, Mark had already closed the main dcors be hind him, and the clerk, fumbling irritably with his sheaf of papers and disinclined to go out into the rawness of the October evening, turned back into the Bank, eee Farrell Armitage and Kings Mal- ; lard were taking stock of each other through the autumn dusk, ‘Armitage ‘became aware of the scrutiny as soon as he closed the Upper Mallard vicarage gate be- hing him and started down the hill frite the town. A passing laborer | stared and, lower down, a girl push- ing & perambulator full of washing slowed her pace; by the corner where once there bad been a candy shop, three lounging youths in caps vated on their heels to peer after unfriendly way. He stopped behind | him, Mark's chair and scrutinised a total. “Why you're just fooling--look’se here now, how can—” His pencil Presently, he mo’ and Mark resumed his con. templation of thé values-of the up fward-flung light, He began absently f@ place the curve of a shadow on Daper.... “Mr. Lodely, I'll finish off those Dotals for you." Mark met the horn. Timmed gaze of Miss Roop. “I'd Like to, I would, really. I've cleared up all mine and you look properly tired. I aay think you should be excused the overtime work, you id, really—you can't stand it.” “Besides,” added Miss Roop , “Miss Tanner is sitting by. the window this evening be says*a certain young lady been walking up and down the opposite side of the Market before the gas wag lit And Bhese autnmn nights aren't any too - warm. | Mark’s feelings for Miss Roop at rose from contempt to pure thing. She babbied on, unknow ly. “Doesn't she look fascinating, im those new furs?” “I didn’t know Miss Tanner had furs at all, new or old,” said Peccccescese eee Armitage did -not flatter himself that it was either his beauty or his brawn that drew attention, nor even the legend of his wealth nor of his trayele nor his interest in Lalla Cane, daughter of Sir James Cane—“Sugar” rice may- ‘or of the town and once Member ot Parliament for Kings Mallard. No, Kings Mallard stared because, in s way, he was a stranger and stran- gers had to be stared at; and be cause in another way he was not « stranger, being only the man-size edition. of the silent, odd twelve- year-old who had lived along of Parson at Upper Mallard for nearly @ year, Let's see now, wasn’t it in the same autumn Mr, Lodely shot himself, that the boy left? No "twas the year before, surely... . And so forth. Farrell walked on, frowning. He told himself that he had not come back to the west country before this because the vicar of Upper Mallard, his one intimate friend, 80 greatly enjoyed visiting him in London. And as for his money, ug- Mness might have made it but la its turn it could make beauty— let the metaphysicians disentangle that? And as for Leila (Copyright, 1938, Julia Claft-Addama) Mark Lodel morrow, that en lives, has a mishap, to- fluences a half goz- THE ARTMAN PRESS PRIN Pevecavccasosocsseceesses TING tN THE CITIZEN BLDG. oO oPeseccvecseonese jin England. ‘ing Cuba te peace, normality and} 1841—Franklin B. —Sanborn,| congidence. ‘ é Concord, a: editor, author and; Jp his declarations of the 28th/ philocophes# born at Hampton of November to the Cuban and As-{ |Palls, N. H-” Died Feb.'24, 1917. sociated Presses he says: aS |. “Neither at present or ever have 1832—Gustave Eiffel, the | desi¥ed that one single Cuban be French engineer who built the fa-| detained, due to political causes, mous tower in Paris that bears his} fo, even one day. The freedom Died Dec. 27, 1928. | of those who are now in prison for 5, S ms | things affecting the public order | 1845°— Richard W. Clark’ depends on the decisions of judges (“Deadwood Dick”), pony express who are in charge of their cases,! jrider, Black Hills pioneer, hero of |and on information from co {the old-time novel thriller, born responding authorities, both civil Died in Deadwood,| and military. I am at present 8. D., May 5, 1930. ‘onsidering that matter with a! . {broader spirit of benevolence. | 1866—John E. Jenks, long time; “My wish is that Cuba may al-| editor and publisher of the Army|ways live under: the very broad} and Navy Register, born at St-/ guarantees offered by the Consti-| John, N. B, Died in Washington, /tution of the Republic, broader D, ©. Nov. 8, 1932, than those of other countries, both} |to foreigners and home people. If ela pee Bil pat dele gri ‘my Government has suspended; TODAY 5 BIRTHDAYS {them it has been for reasons of| peeeceeescacereccceesoos (utniost yee and only in order “ ‘ to maintain public order and insure Bdwin H. Blashfield, famed New, ria : } York artist, born there, 84 years| {Ne gsc iecesine or ie ee bas ce ‘in Cuba, which is the greatest duty c - s |imposed upon the by the Constita- Silas H. Strawn, of Chicago, law-j; pos eke oh T have been as-| 4 {tion. sedis ne ag Loge ant ee Ot- | cured that these guarantees can be | Bas put into effect without danger to Arthur D, Little, noted Boston|!ive* and property that the soe \chemical engineer, born there, gp {etitotion forcga me to protect, said) reasé aca | Suarantees will be re-established | y sit j with full effect. It is my most | ‘ ‘ardent wish. Most Rev. John T. MeNicholas,/""Ga1) members of the opposition Catholic Archbishop of Cinginnati,| yng are abroad may return to this born in Ireland, 55 years ago. lewenien <i Dav demmsanin that B. jsovereign and those who do not jis right. jsubmit to their will; if they are 2 ‘ Dr. Harrison E. Howe, noted Washington, D. C., chemical auth- ority and editor, born at George- they will not be persecuted nor molested. The greater number of | |them—more than 95 percent— jhave left Cuba of their own free town, Ky., 61 yeurs ago. jwill, without having been subject-| ted to persecution of any kind.| More danger, much more, has there been in Guba for the members of j my Government and friends and} Alice W. A, McCully, Seattle, Wash., writer, born there, 50 years i ago. Maxwell Anderson, author and|—-~——-—-—— playwright, born at Atlantic, Pa., | 44 years ago. | TI TPCAPLIS LAL 2 Over and under the waves speeds the “Fright,” i It sails through the day and it skims through the night. It's headed for home again, home —yes, and Chris ! j Today it is wending its way near} ; isthmus. bargain enables us to offer. A PHONE CALL | TODAY'S HOROSCOPE aoe TOI IPLILEL LL LL Ld MD A socialistic temperament is ere indicated, and literary activi- ity. The disposition is inclined to be jealous and dissatisfied; the} [affections are insecure, and very; Hliable to be given to the wrong] |persen who will not return them. }Do not allow the iron of disap- | }pointment to enter the soul, but; jturn the abilities to the improve-| others. t Ph $1 ‘ }. BEARUP’S DRY CLEANING hgpvote 5i4 MARGARET ST. PHONE 227. N eeeeeTeegess WOOT DaMaaIIIIIL IDS. felt, I speak here for the first time, byt I do not come to talk about Maceo and Panchito Gomez beeause I always leave that for good orators. I know their life’s history very well, inasmuch as I fought side by side with them on | the battle fields. I speak to re-! mind you that Maceo did not fight in Cuba for tyranny; we all fought for liberty, democracy and justice, but not for “libertinism.” We are alone, free, independent and think as I do—that Cuba has been made free by the blood shed by Maceo and all others who fell in battle—are wrong. “Without hatred, with religious love for our country, is how we should continue being ‘big,’ as we were when we threw ourselves into the Revolution. “I, as Chief Executive, do not have complaints nor hatred against anyone as long as he loves my country. In the opinion of some IT am wrong. Let us come to the | field of legality and let us see who If they_are right, I shall wrong they must submit to mine. | « ‘At this most sacred spot, before the graves of Maceo and Gomez, T vow that “tyranny never; liber- ty always.” At the last moment General Machado made good his words, set- ting free from their politieal pris- isons the two most prominent lead- lers of the opposition, Colonels Mendieta and Mendez Pefiate, and about one hundred more of their | followers. Having nothing more to add, I thank you, my dear Editor, for jyour most courteous kindness, Very respectfully yours Dr. RAFAEL CERVINO, Cuban Consul General. Key West, Fia., December 14, 1932. FOE EL hh hd hh db dead MS ST IM, 500 Sheets ECONOMY BOND Typewriter Paper Regular Size—8'\4x11 only 60% A chance to obtain a, lot of this paper at a make you this special WILL BRING IT HH Citizen Bldg. LLAMA LLLELLELELLLALB AMAA Added MARINE CURIO 324 Margaret Street Here you ean find XMAS GIFTS that really please your friends. Your next LOBSTER or CRAB DINNER will be much more delicious if it is baked and served in our GIANT SCAL- LOP er HEART SEA SHELLS. Fernandez SPECIALIST 525 EATON STREET. Key West, Florida Treatment of all kinds of Chronic Diseases through means of Healing Agents, Physical Elements and Biochemics. DURO PUMPS : PLUMBING SUPPLIES JOHN C. PARK 328 SIMONTON ST. PHONE 348 DEEP SEA FISHING |_ NURSERY] RE: TAURANT CHARTER BOAT BARBARA FOR HIRE GULF STREAM AND TARPON FISHING Rod, Reel and Bait Furnished Reasonable Rates. Day or Week Modern Accommodations —sEE— Captain Johnny Lopez Phone 65 416 Margaret St. FISH — PAUL DEMERITT & BROS. FISH COMPANY PLANTS, FLOWERS, VINES Coconut Plants, each ........18¢ Hibiscus Plants, each .. 10¢-28¢ Bougainvillaea Red or Purple .. 50¢ to $1.00 Poinsettia Plants 50¢ to $1.00 Crotons, each . - 25 Turks Cap, each - . 2Be Roses, dozen ... $1.20 South Florida Nursery Phone 597 Catherine St. NEWSPAPER Subscribe For— THE CITIZEN Fish House at Sweeney's Dock Perfect Sanitary Condition CHOICEST FISH AT ALL TIMES Prompt Delivery of Telephone Orders —PHONE 44— Courteous and Efficient Service PHONE 51 GROCERIES a Sheet Metal Work Plumbing The People Know Us For Dayton Pumps The Quality That We Give. BATH ROOM FIXTURES AND SUPPLIES 20c WEEKLY Order From the Carrier or Once Ap ARCHER Customer Always An ARCHER Customey § Let Us Estimate On Your Nout PHONE 67 PLUMBING JOB 814 Fleming Street 132-134 Simonton Street FREE DELIVERY ru as Office: 319 Duval Street TELEPHONE NO, 1 NORITA CAFE AMERICAN AND SPANISH COOKING Hot Souse On Saturda: Balf Dozen Fried Oysters Wi French Fried Potatoes ...... i Short Orders Sea Foods A tvial will convince you that we have the cheapest prices in town, Duval and Fleming Phone 307 WATCH MAKING. AARON MeCONNELL AND ENGRAVER See Him For Your Next Work ALL PRICES REDUCED Hears: 9 to 12—1 to 6 Qpen Saturday Nights _