The Key West Citizen Newspaper, May 12, 1933, Page 3

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FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1988. INDIANS DOWN BOSTON; TAKE LEAGUE LEAD ST. LOUIS BROWNS DEFEAT SENATORS; BUCS INCREASE LEAD BY WINNING IN GAM: WiTH GIANTS A (Special to The Citizen) NEW YORK, May 12.—The Cleveland Indians defeated the Boston outfit, and took the league lead in the American league, The victory gave the Cleveland club a half-game lead over the Yankees. In the fifth Harder smashed a homer into the leftfield stands. The. St, Louis Brown triumphed over the Washington Senators 4 to 3. Home runs by Melille and Guilic, each with a man on base, gave the Browns their victory. The Pittsburgh Pirates increas- ed their lead by defeating the New York Giants, 7 to 6. The St. Louis Cardinals nosed out the Braves 2 to.1. Bill Hallahan re- ceived great infield support as he chalked up his fourth victory for the Cards. The Brooklyn Dodgers whipped the Cincinnati Reds, 7 to 6. At Cleveland Boston .. Hadley and Ruel. New York-Chicago, wet grounds. Philadelphia-Detroit, rain. “ GOLF MATCHES NOW STARTED SEMI-FINALS REACHED IN CITY CHAMPIONSHIP PLAYING Semi-final matches are under way at the local golf course, to determine the next champion. Clem Price, the defending champ, will meet Joe Lopez, and Wm. Demiecritt will cross niblicks with Sam Goldsmith in the other bracket. Nip and tuck battles are pre- | dicted in both matches, as all four of the contestants in the semi- finals are on their game, and ex- pect to give the other fellow a run for his money, so to speak. Bob Spottswood was runner-up to Price last year. This is Demeritt’s and Lojez’ initial appearance in the city cham- pionshipfield. Quarter-final results: Price defeated Spottswood, 6 and 5, Demeritt beat Stowers, 3 and city golf 2. Lopez beat Strunk, 1 up. Goldsmith beat Watkins, 7 and RELIEF GANGS WORKING TODAY Emergency Relief Employes numbering 127 are working today. 3} They are in various groups in dif- ferent sections of the beautification programs. Others will be put to work to- morrow. Of the number for to- morrow 24 are to be at work in the city cemetery and five will be city, on National League At Brooklyn | Batteries: Derringer and Lom- pai Bénge and Haute, Suke- R. H. E. 29 0 + ole ee - Batteries: Hallahan and Wilson; Betts and Spohrer. - At New York en 4 Batteries: Weine, Harris and Grace; Hubbell, Luque and Man- “Jon the city park project. One group was paid off today. All-other employes who worked up to date are to be paid off tomor- tow. JAPANESE NOW WOO * MONGOLS AS PROPS (By Associated Prens)” COUNTY JUDGE GIVES HINT ON BEER LICENSES CAUTIONS ALL TO BE CARE- FUL IN STATEMENTS IN SE- CURING LICENSE FOR OP- DERN CALLS ON ‘GOLD BRAIDERS’ IN NEW FASHION WAR SECRETARY PRECE- DENTS GO TO CRASH WHEN MANIPU- NEW OFFICIAL ERATIONS LATES IN DIFFERENT STYLE) Taking out beer licenses under the existing laws is something that must be carefully considered, said Judge Hugh Gunn to The Citizen, in an interview concerning law and its provisions. “There will be ten supervisors of licenses, already appointed, who will keenly and closely investigate the conduct and management of and continued by issuing a warn- ing to those who have secured li- censes or contemplate doing so. Judge Gunn suggests that “all who make the necessary affidavit, as provided on the application, be careful in their statements as to the nature and sizé of the business conducted and in answering the questions propounded. “I make this suggestion in order that the purchaser of the license avoid future complications, em- barrassment and possibly criminal | in. prosecution. If a restaurateur, he should state exactly the number of tables and accommodations, and adhere strictly to all other de- mands. “Every phase of any business will be carefully investigated, not only. by the officers appointed by the state, but the internal revenue officers will also be investigating and it will be well for everyone engaged in the sale of beer to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, and thus play safe. s “It will be well to remember that the collection of revenue is the most important and necessary branch of all governments. Rey- enue is the oil that lubricates gov- ernmental machinery which, exclu- sive of state and national, includes the fire department, police depart- the; the beer business,” said the judge, | By HERBERT PLUMMER (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, May 12.—The new secretary of war, George H. Dern, has ideas of his own as to how Uncle Sam’s military estab- lishment should be run and he’s handing some of the “gold braid boys” around the department a few surprises. When he took’ over the job, one of the first things he did was to go visiting. Instead of having the chiefs of the many different army bureaus come to see him he went to see them. Through those seemingly end- less corridors of the state, war and navy building (there are 12 acres of floor space in it) he trudged along, stopping at the various offices and paying calls. That was something new for @ secretary to do. But he got a big kick out of it. “They tell me,” he said, “that several officers almost had heart failure when they saw me come | There’s one visit, however, he hasn’t been able to make as yet and one that he is looking for- ward to. He has yet to call on General Pershing. That call will have a particular interest for the secretary. His sol- Idiering days began with the gen- jeral. Years ago when Pershing |was then only a lieutenant, Dern served under him as a cadet in jthe R. O, T. C, at the University of Nebraska. Pershing was the commandant of the corps at Ne- braska and Dern played second alto in the cadet band. He still remembers those days. He was only a Nebraska farm boy then. But they still look back to thim there as one of the greatest ; football stars the university ever turned out. } CHANGCHUN, Manchuria, May| ment, scavenger service, the use 12.—In order to win support of}of public utilities, keeping up the! the large Mongolian population in|courts and everything that: is .re-j guard and was captain of the all- victorious team that made football He played in the. position of E. | Jehol, recently wrested from China and added ‘to the’ fledgling state of Monchukuo, the Japanese and Manchukuo authorities in- vited seven Mongol princes! to confer here. The princes were brouglt by Japanese airplanes from Jehol and, were welcomed by Heniy Bute Mennakavs, trier iexecti- tive, and General Nobuyoshi Muto, Japanese plenipotentiaty in Mun- | Speeches, banquets, receptions and teas followed. The Japanese and Manchukuo spokesmen pleaded for friendlier relations .| among the Manchus, Mongols and’ wok. 15 12 RnR 10 Boston at Detroit. * Washington at Chicago. Philadelphia at Cleveland. (Only games scheduled.) NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh at New York. Cincinnati at Brooklyn. Chicago at Philadelphia, St, Louis at Boston, HIGHWAY FERRY ARRIVES HERE ‘The Monroe county ferry “Mon- ree County” arrived yesterday and is at the Porter Dock Com- pany’s pier where preliminary work is being done by the crew preparatory to drydecking the vessel, As soon as an East Coast dredge and barge, now on the ‘ways, are back in the water, the ferry will be docked for annual painting and repair work and en- gines will be overhauled, Japanese. COLLEGE DEGREES FOR 3 IN FAMILY (My Ansociated Preas) BOONE, N. C., May 12.—Com- mencement day at Appalachian State Teacher’s college here will be a family affair for the Dot- sons. Father Roy Dotson, 49; his son, Hight Dotson, 29; and-his daugh- ter, Mrs. Ola Dotson Furr, 24, are te receive their Bachelor Science degrees from the school of education at the same time. The elder Dotson two years ago received his high school diploma, although he had been teaching in public schools 33 years. He will complete his college work this year. Hight Dotson majored in physical education and _ science. Mrs. Furr is mother of a five-year. old son, REPTILES FOR BIG ~~ WORLD'S FAIR SHOW (Ry Aneeiated Press) WASHINGTON, May 12.—“Big Shots” of the reptile family will bask luxuriously under, the rays of infra red and violet lights when they are taken to the World's Fair at Chicago by the Smithson- jan Institute in June. One proud sand lizard from each continent of the world will be dis- played as a part of the Smithson. jan exhibit, illustrating the last word in the care of live animals. Other displays will summarize the varied activities of the insti- tution and its history as a govern. ment agency. A complete series im original specimens will be shown pe demonstate evolution in one of the lower forms of life. WORKS REGULARLY AT 101 BEATRICE, Ind.—Althougt he is 101 years old, James J. McCaf- iferty, blacksmith of this city, [works in his shop every day | } quired to bring. about the —hap-, piness and safety of a community. “Money makes the mare go, and without it the old gray mare must stay in the stable. Without oil no chinery can work long but will soon be like the old grandfather’s clock that ‘stopped short never to go again.’ “Not. until the old nian died, as the song goes, but in this case un- til Saint Peter will say to -us all |something like this: ‘As you have paid others so shall you. be paid ahd when the red ‘lines are drawn to strike a balance it will be well to have the closing entries read by balance.’ “In which you will be given a golden harp with many strings or a pair of golden wings. If the closing entry reads to balance due we will’ possibly be given a pick axe, hoe, shovel or machete and set to work in an arid region, where the flow of beer is never heard and its foam never seen, or in some other spot ‘far away from the shades of nothing, where few travelers ever pass.’ ”’ LANDS IN. TREE LOUISVILLE—Struck by a of | speeding auto, 8-year-old Robert| watch, Mercer of this city, was hurled in- to the branches of a tree but suf- fered only a broken leg. history in- 1894. Incidentally, the manager of that team and his classmate was Arthur J. Weave?, governor of Nebraska from 1929- 31, and a third classmate was Adam MtMullen, chief executive of Nebrask from 1925 to 1929. Dern himself served eight years as governor of Utah, Studying His Job Officers at the war department apparently like the jovial Utahan for his informality. 3 But at the same tinie they rec- ognize in hint other desirable quali- ties. Altough he is without military experience except that which he obtained as a member of the R. O, T. C. and as commander-in-chief of the Utah national guard during his term as governor, nothing seems to escape his notice at the war department. =. What he doesn’t know he finds out, And usually his method is to go personally to the authority. ROBBED AFTER ALL CHICAGO—A_ stranger who saved Frank V. Loring of this city from holdup men, walked home with him and stole his 3 Subscribe for The Citizen—20c a week JACKSONVILLE GEORGE WASHINGTON® NEWEST AND FINEST [% Op “G A BE FL MODE Every Known Facility - Gorege Directly Connecting Lobby - Redio MAYFLOWER® 300 ROOMS - 300 BATHS AUTIFUL HOTEL Splendid Focilities - Gerage - Radic Coffee Shoppe AGLERa RN AS THE BEST FREE GARAGE EVERY CONVENIENCE FOR SUMMER COMFORT : | } ROBERT KLOEPPEL very much to his liking. Sunday morning he attends a ‘Sun-| day school in| Washington and} teaches ‘a class with a membership of more than 100. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN SENATOR LOGAN FINDS WAY FOR DODGING CARES AFTER SITTING IN SESSION FOR A TIME AS FIRST-TERM- ER HE LEARNED HOW TO ESCAPE WORRIES By HERBERT PLUMMER (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, May = 12.— Marvel Mills Logan, the big fun- loving senator from Kentucky, has a way of his own of escaping the cares and worries of the senate. A first-termer, he found the senate rather disappointing when he came up at the beginning of the Jast congress in 1931. Back in Kentucky he had been chief jus- tice of the highest court in the ilethirs Dag Oksicoanes Takes Oe New Social Significance Nations wax and wane, govern- ments rise and fall, war and per- secution, as in centuries past, add day has taken on a new social significance. Formerly it em- phasized the remembrance of one’s own mother—flowers, gifts, mes- their weight of grief and anxiety! sages, if she were living, a white to a puzzled and disjointed world,| carnation worn if she had passed but Motherhood, with its ideals of|/to her heavenly reward. But the loyality, sacrifice and devotion, Dr. Luck E. Braun, of Cincin- nati, president of the Ohio Aca- demy of Science, is the first wom- an to hold the position. economic crises, which has, in ef-)= withstands all these, remaining the \fect, leveled society, bringing home | = one universal bond of sympathy and understanding on whcih hu- manity may depend. Whether in the wilds of Tibet or in the Africian bush; on a to countless thousands the kinship of poyerty and one’s duty to one’s neighbor, has emphasized anew the obligation of the more for- tunate to those who have borne fronded isle in the midst of the | the full brunt of the depression, Pacific or in the center of West-|So that*today we have a golden ern civilization, the Mother carries on. While this has been true since! tule observance of Mothers’ Day, with “forgotten” mothers and de- pendent children sharing in the man emerged from the primitive it| gifts and memorials to Mothers. has been only in the past twenty- five years that a Mothers’ Day has been observed and a public This plan is sponsored by the Golden Rule Foundation of New York, that reminds us that “these recognition given to her unfail- are praying not for flowers but state, and the quiet and dignity|ing devotion, her tenderness, her} for flour; not for candy but for of the bench appealed to him. After he had. sat in the senate; for a short while, he began to; grow a bit restless. Once he was caught shooting paper wads at Senator Connally of Texas in playful fashion while a weighty debate was going on on the floor. “I didn’t want to come here in the first place,” he once told a session of the senate. ‘And now that I am here, I am not particular- ly interested in staying.” Now He's Happy During the past year, however, Senator Logan has found a_ job Every Just recently he completed his first year as teacher of this class and admits that his chief enjoy- ment in Washington has hese from it, He has opportunity to canton himself there, perhaps, as he does not have in the senate. And what he tells the men in the class is indicative of the man and his at- titude. “The religious values of life are far more important,” he advised them recently, “than anything that can be accomplished by legisla- tion.” Perhaps his disappointment in the senate might be found in this statement: self-sacrifice. Recently the observance of the bread; not for books but for food and shelter.” EAST INDIES RUBBER TREES REMAIN IDLE (By Associnted Presa) BATAVIA, Dutch East Indies, May 12.—Nearly a fifth of the rubber acreage in the Dutch East Indies was out of tap at the last count, The figures showed 185,- 000 acres idle, being 18.8 percent of the tappable area. road to happiness. Happiness is the chief end of government. It is what we are all seeking.” The senator is frequently a guest speaker in various pulpits. Others Teach Too © Logan is not the only senator who finds enjoyment in this way. Down in Vienna, Ga., there’s a Sunday school class of young wom- en who welcome the adjuornment of each session of congress. For it means their teacher—Senator George—will be back again. One of the best known religious teachers on Capitol Hill, however, is an old, gray-haired negro in the senate barber shop by the name of Sims. Sims in the self-styled pas- tor. of the Universal Church of Holiness in the capital, Many sen- ators whose faces are shaved daily Se RRS ST eA e “STRAND THEATER Transportation of sixteen truck- loads of wild animals and veno- mous reptiles ten miles through Los Angeles, from the Selig Zoo lto tho Paramount studios, was ac- ‘complished recently with as much ‘care and precision as an army moving amunitions through a zone of fire. | The animals were needed at the i studio for scenes in “Murders in the Zoo”, mystery melodrama fea- turing Charlie Ruggles and Lionel Atwill, which is showing at the Strand Theater tonight. Ten of the trucks were loaded with cages of lions, tigers, leop- ards, panthers; pumas, hyenas, chimpanzees, and snakes. The re- maining six; ten-ton trucks with trailers especially remodelled for their unusual load, were used to transport 50 alligators, The al- ligators were loaded during the darkest part of the night, when they could not see to snap at the trainers, and when the cold at that hour made them sluggish, The caravan passed phrough j Los Angeles at about 4 o’clock in the morning, so that danger of ‘automobile collision and resultant } \ “The life of meditation rather} by Sims, visit his church on Sun-| possible escape of the animals was than the life of acquisition is the] days to hear him preach, most remote.» YOU WANT TO GO Throughout the South, East and West. Full seven-day limit MAY, 27, 28, 29 Sample Round.- Trip Fares 4.00 11.30 35.28 32.00 27.10 14.75 , 24:78 . 20.85 18.10 - 19.90 AND MANY OTHER POINTS Similar excursions will be operated July 1, 2, 3; August 4, 5; Septem. ber 1, 2, 3; October 6, 7, and November 28, 29. REDUCED PULLMAN RATES _ FLORIDA | EAST COAST RAILWAY > _____ FLAGLER S¥STEM_ RAR IST RSE ER NA You-1933 MODEL YOUR complexion perfect, your teeth excellent, your eyes snap- py, your hair glossy, your hands manicured, like a patrician’s, your skin fine, your feet trim, your health and body sound . . . and from inside out, your clothes, your tastes splendidly 1933! The best You, the world and its advertisements can produce. When you move, swiftest conveniences spring to your bidding. When you eat, the most delectable comes to your plate. When you work, when you sleep, exercise, play—the world’s latest stands servile, yours to command. You are lord of your living, and it is AD« VERTISING that makes you so, Read the advertisements. They equip you with sane judg- ments. They educate you to what is waiting for you to enjoy, and help you use it most wisely when it’s yours. Advertisements bring you the world from which you may choose

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