The Key West Citizen Newspaper, September 5, 1933, Page 2

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Che Key Cest Citizen oPeshshed Wully Bx-opt Sunday By THE CITYN PUBLISHING “Oo, INC. ; | a ®, ARTZAN, Proatzont, o From Tze Citizes sutiding, Cortes Greens. ond Aun Crests only Dally Newspopar in Ky West ena Monroe County Fo PES RR RAS SE dic aceite te nn a isntered 1 t “oy West, Viorida, as secon? class ma‘te: FL'TY-FOURTH YHAR Meviber of the Associated Presa he Associated Press is exclusiverv gatitled to uss tehes credited to it or not, otherwise creaited ia ‘this paper and also for repub.ication of wll news di the local news published here, SUBSCCIPTION RATES One Yea Bix Mont! Three Mont! One Month EDITORL. sh days always bring gladness, both from re- | spite of noise, woe and extra work, and} ‘ASSOCIATION | RS 1933! ~~ ADVERTISING RATES Made known on application. SPECIAL NOTICE All reading n cards of thenks, resolutions of fespect, obituary notices, ete, will be charged for at the rate of 10 cate a line. Nottecs for entertainments by churches from which & revenue i to be derived are § cents a line. The Citizen i. an open forum and invites dt« Sion of public issues and subjects of local or gener: -but It will not publish anonymous com- munications. ea meen nse RE ae eR ee ae ae NATIONAL ADVERTISING og Space piri idahed FROST, LANDIS & 250 Park Ave., New York; 35 “past Wacker Drive, DETROIT; CHICAGO; “General Motors. Bi CO igaiton Wide, ATLANTA, rete * “|THE KEY WEST CITIZEN —— ee ae and pri. ie Ui teachers who will help them without fear and. without favor; never be afraid to attack wrong or to applaud right; always fight for progress; never be the or- gan or the mouthplece of any person, clique, faction of class; always do its utmost for the public welfare; never tolerate corruption or injvstiee; denounce vice and praise virtue; commend good done by individual or organ- ization; tolerant of others’ rights, views and opinions; print only news that will elevate and not contaminate the reader; never com- ee What's happened to the bread tines? | Modern bathing suits for ladies shouid be either reformed or abolished. Necking parties were probabl orig-; -Yove their capability. 31.00 — | | | i “CHOOL DAYS Happiaess and presumed sadness are v.Hen voo. many faces as the; school scason opens. C!-4nex;3 is shown on the faces of har- Tassed micthers, who see in the opening cf cchoot 4 >eccon of restfulness from the j strenucus duiues “f being peace arbiter, nurse, and performing multitudinous other duties imposed by thoughtiess though lov- ing youngsters. They are looking for- ward to obteining a few hours of leisure | in which te recuperate from the eects of a vacatioa for youth that was in direct op- position to them. To tired mothers, school the knowledge th... their children are re- ceiving an education, which they realize is all-impcant in the future of their off- spring. Melanchoiy is written upor the faces of the children, who sce in the coming days retard of their play hours, the having to get cown to deep thought and bring their minds vack to the task of solving what | the books have to teach, under the guid- ance of teachers who will brook no loud and boisterous laughter during study hours, their time taken up at night in preparing lessons) for the morrow. Still, another thorght prevails that creeps to the fore: | New friends will be made, new over the rough spots, and aew endeavors in the field of learning. There is always that feeling of pride when at the end of the six-weeks | period, an “A” can proudly be displayed | on the report card, to still prouder parents. The school faculty is faced with the stupendous task of taking over the charges of the mothers. They will have the prob- lem of organizing discipline out of hectic chaos. greater undertaking, that of preparing these children for the world of life that they will Le cast adrift in at the end of ieir schoo] journey. Key West is blessed with a competent faculty of teachers that realize their re- spousibility ww the fullest and are prepared to prove their capability. We extend to We extend to them our h.arty wishes for success .and They wi'l be guardians of an even | THE KEY WEST CITIZEN | ewpocoeccodaacecoDeoaceccceecoeeecocLosCsccKCCe Daily Cross-word Puzzle . Kind of tur . Informal con- versation Expectant anticipation Claw 6. Possess . Fish sauce . Part of an amphithe- ater . Title of Athena 0. Extreme pov- y i Hearing dis- tance ). Narrow back streets Own. Scoteb Pited with medicine Han river jose toreibt. ene of Christ's. fir: 27. Tract of tang drained by a river . Pronoun melis Kind ot rea 43. Stalks of threshed grain 50. Tibetan ox or . Bresent 5) Devices for aging cloth . Guided . Nerve net- works . Marine mollusks . Cover with something solid . Crippled 9. Contend . One who gains 5 knowledge The red planet 5 - Communica Restrain . Large marine 9 gastropods sa aquare’ pblica char- Partially burned carbon Finishes . European fs 5 The. poniber nine Minute particie Cavity ; Not shut ca ee coe WY, ame He acon 48 LZ | W, Anniversaries The danger of this degree that it is liable to be too 1585 — Ca reer ARS Today’s Horoscope! self- CAPITAL | eocescoacedaceece By HERBERT PLUMMER | (Ny Axsocinted Press) WASHINGTON, Sept. 5.—Jim | Couzens of Michigan, in or out of | the senate, is just about as caus- tic, outspoken and hard-boiled an; individual as anyone ever en- ‘countered when something comes (up that displeases him. | He'll fight at the drop of a hat | anybody or anything and usually ja good-sized s¢rap has taken place ‘before he gets through. But there’s one particular. thing | that will rile the gray-haired sena-| tor perhaps moré quickly than any; other. And that is for someone to a do anything that he thinks will ‘harm unfortunate or whder- | privileged children. Such little chaps have been Couzens’ hobby for years. He has given liberally of his millions that Ithey might have a chance to win} back their health and happiness. | That’s one of the reasons he be- came so infuriated on the witness stand the other day in Detroit, where he was testifying in re- te city prior to the state bank holi- day. For The Youngsters Back in 1929 Couzens estab- which, with its income, estimated to amount to $7,500,000 addi- tional, was to be spent in . full within 25 years to promote tlie health and happiness of the chil- dren of Michigan and elsewhere. There’s an _ interesting | told as to how the senator came jto establish this fund. Couzens got into a terrific row | with Andrew W. Mellon when the [latter was secretary of the treas- ury over the collection of addi- tional taxes from him and other | minority stockholders of the Ford | Motor company. The senator previously had aroused the ire of “Uncle Andy” by demanding a senatorial investi- jgation of the internal revenue burean. | it is said that Couzens, during this figbt over the tax collection, }made the promise that if he won out he would give the entire amount to charity. He did win. Had he lost he | Atlanta gard to banking practices in that} Dodge City . lished a $10,000,000 trust fand| Huron story} New Orleans {Washington . TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1933. TODAY’S WEATHER jably o¢e: 88, and south 79} Wednesday. sal Jacksonville to Florida Straits: Fresh south and southwest winds |probably of gale force this after- |Noon over extreme north portion, ; diminishing tonight and mostly jovercast weather and occasional ‘showers tonight and> Wednesday. East Gulf: Moderate to fresh . m.| nds niostly sodthwest and west. " n'| . WEATHER CONDITIONS sional showers in east portions tonight and Tempera‘ Highest Lowest j Mean . Normal Mean Rainfall* Yesterday’s Precipitation Normal Precipitation - *Thte record covers 21-| euding st 8 o'clock tht ‘Tomorrow's Almanac Sun rises Sun sets Moon rises Moon sets . 03 iy ' The tropical disturbance which i¢rossed the Florida peninsula yes- turned northward and de- | créased in intensity, being central 4:44 this morning about 75 miles east lof Apalachicola, Fla. It has caused jshifting gales during the last 24 {hours throughout much of central and northern Florida, and heavy rains in the Tampa district. The | tropiea} disturbance in the western Gulf moved inland near Browns- jville, Texas, this morning, causing |northeast® gales at Corpus Christi. Rains have occurred during the }last 24 hours on the middle and west Gu om Arkansas ‘and Tennessee northeastward over |the Middle and North Atlantic states and the upper Ohio valley, and in the Florida peninsula. | Showers also occurred on the Flor- |ida keys and in northern THi- | nois. Temperatures are abnor- mally high’ this morning in the {Rocky mountain region, and gen- ‘erally near or somewhat above {the seasonal average in other see- |tions of the eae A. M. 11:15 " 7 Barometer ut 8 a, m. today: Sea level, 29.96. Lowest Highest Last Night Yesterday .- 68 96 . 70 88 66 76 . 82 86 ~~ 64 82 - 54 92 68 88 62. 86 56 74 LAG 92 . 82 86 . 60 84 -- 66 98 - 12 82 . 68 88 ae 88 - 68 76 - 80 84 .- 66 82 St) 92 . 64 76 - 72 92 . 84 - 58 . 70 60 58 Subscribe for The Citizen—20e a2 , a week . 68 | Abilene Boston .... }Charleston - Chicago Denver . Detroit ... Duluth ... El Paso .... Galveston Helena Jacksonville Kansas City . KEY WEST Louisville . Miami Minneap New York Pensacola ... Phoenix : Pittsburgh - St. Louis San Francisco .. Seattle . Tampa a jof Imperial Kerem |druggists are authe Tt to refund [your money if it. fi dvt. BENJAMIN LOPEZ FUNERAL HOM E! Established 1885 M-Houwr Ambulance Services Skilled Kmbatmer, Viastic Surgery 52 WEATHER FORECAST Williston . Key West and Vicinity: Mostly cloudy tonight and Wednesday, probably eceasional showers mod. erate southerly winds. Florida: Mostly cloudy, prob- is] would have had to pay the govern- ment $9.455,303.10 plus the in- inated by a pair of affectionate giraffes. vt proatise them the wholehearted support There. are still a iew oid-fashioned | thet The Citizen has been wont to empart folks who never had an operation. in the past. _ OS ESA al Richelieu, fa-| sufficient. There is decided ability| terest. The trust fund was set up} Nearly all prices have gone up $< B mous French churchman-states-' ‘and an. indication of profitable |in 1929, less than a year after ms man, born. Died Dec. 4, 1642. his vietory. jemployment, so that there should Hitting A Sore Spot 1758—Thomas Eddy, New York| be # sufficieney of success in life, On the witness stand in De- philanthropist and humanitarian, jit a -retsonabie ‘balance is. mein- 'troit the other day he ¢éharged “To err ig homan.” But few are hu- man enough to admit the error. The eut-in dance was probably invent- ed bya darky with a razor. Our idea of a soft job is that of tester in a taattress factory. . As good today as ever—“I have noth- ing to wear.” Latest fad—Get a nice bed and go to sleep. . A’ “reckless” driver “wreckless” driver. is seldom a Correct this sentence: “I never ask ~ peene for money.” has camo make humans diy, y want a drink—and Texas is ee exéeption. : The hobo feels slighted. No NRA has been around to propose any code to Es ‘Those squib writers wisecracking on the “blanket” code of the NRA certainly can “cover” the subject. & lawyer can make a better case out of one founded on lies than one founded on truth..A lie fits the case while sometimes truth avon't. A Liverpool man claims to have invent- ed a game which in some ways resembles golf. ~ We have been playing a game like that for years.—Humorist, London. ee (not The Citizen porter, but a relative, so he says) ‘was a good man, but he certainly set a bad example for stow- aways. Qnce again the perfect geographical posit?a; has enabled Key West to evade | the ravaging effects of a tropical The coral reefs successfully broke up the resultant tide influx that could have ecuced damage to any other seacoast city but Key ta Viva Cayo Hueso. storm. { Sunday school. UTILITY 2 ‘TES AND COST OF LIVING When George B. Cortelyou, President = the Consclidated Gas Company of New York, recently said that utility rates had not come down with the cost of living be- cause they had never risen to it, he was simply stating what everyone conversant with the gas end electric industries knows. From 1913 to 1928 the cost of living curve followed a’ sharp ascending course. Practically everything we bought—clothes, food, furniture, rent, amusements—in- creased in price by 50, 100, 200 percent. Electric rates were in direct opposition to thetrend. They went down, with never a rise—each year saw better and cheaper service than we had enjoyed before. And | this was accomplished in spite of heavy in- creases in the cost of things the utility had to buy— !2bor, supplies and so on. The electrical engineers gradually discovered how to make and distribute power more efficiently and economically, and rate re- ductions, were the result. Then the crash came and the cost-of- living rapidly downward. Utility rates were un- able to follow—even though there was a small average reduction—simply because the general cost of living has little influ- ence on utility costs. The utilities must provide the same standards of service in bad times as in good—through regulation they are not allowed to accumulate great profits during booms to compensate for de- pression—and they have the smallest cap- ital turnover of any major business. Even so, at the lowest cost-of-living point, utility rates were lower still in comparison to the pre-war level. Now cost of living is starting up again. But utility rates, as before, will not follow. They will stay down—in time, they will get lower. angue, will bring them down, precisely as it has in the past. A California judge sentenced three boys who stc!e some watermelons to go to If the judge had had any native pride he would not have admitted that Caiifernia watermelons are small encugh for three people to lift.—Boston Evening Transcript. curve reversed its direction. It went | And science, not political har- | pioneer prison reformer, born in} Philadelphia. Died in New York, Sept. 16, 1827. | } 1791—Giacomo Meyerbeer, cele- brated German composer of opera, born. Died May 2, 1864. 1804—William A. Graham,| North Carolina Senator, gover-| nor, Secretary of the Navy, born} jin Lincoln € N. C. Died at! Saratoga, N. Y., Aug. 11, 1875. fa-| born, 1831—Victorien Sardou, mous French dramatist, Died Nov. 8, 1908. 1835—John Carlisle, Ken- ¥ governor, Speaker of the U.| of Representatives, U. Secretary of the Tri born in Campbell Co. Died in New York, July 31, Ky. 7910.) | 1856—Thomas E. Watson,| noted Georgia congressman, U.'S.' Senetor’ publisher | and | author, born in’ Columbia Co,.. Ga. > Died in Washington} Sept? 26, 1922. 1883—Anna FE. Richardson, na-/ tionally-known home expert, born at Charl Died in Washington, 3, 1931 economies | ton, S. C.} D. C., Feb. ave *| Today’s Birthdays’ stesenccoces | ewett of New York, Bell Telephone Labora- sident American rns at Pasad Frank B. J president, | r } M | head, born ago. ph Buffington o Court n at Kittanning, Pa., the | Appea 78 years; | Chandler P. Anderson, Amer- ic the Mixed | minission, United States! ermany, born at Lakeville, years ago. ica } Ch and Conn., George E. Akerson, onetime } secretary to Hoover, born at Minneapolis, 44 years ago. Danger of landing an airplane | j im bad weather may be reduced materially by « hangar or hall with |: “floating” roof designed by a German architect. *) and be very cautious in your deal- pies apelin eects 7 IIL. j tained. Watch for any chance of entanglement with the other sex,|‘"&t ® bank there had “Jockeyed the children’s fund of Michigan out of $200,000" by selling the fund “participation certificates” based on rea! estate mortgages and pleading a temporary — strin- igeney of funds when payment be- jcame due. The fund manage- ;ment was asked to take “certifi- jeatén of deposit” instead. | The bank closed before all the l certificates were cashed. | Couzens is now demanding that | the proseevting attorney investi- | gate with a view to possible crimi- {nal proceedings. ings with them, for you will be at) a disadvantage. (Copyrighted) Constructed a almost entirely of | second-hand materials, a home- | made light plant to serve a large house has been devised by Ray- mond C. Halfer of Chicago. | Down to the airport go Puffy and 6 6 6 Bun, And buy 4 new plane. Fess the} Finfiy, “What font), 1 Mave’ ay ideat* ‘Lét’s® ny it to] firs day, ‘France, . jo 30 minutes, Phe land of ithe ‘Parlez | FINE’ LAXATIVE AND TONIC Frances and Romance!” Most Speedy Remedies Known, LIQUID - TABLETS ~ SALVE , Checks Malaria in 3 days, Colds Headaches or Neurdlgia vous,” = SOMTTTOTOTT TOTES EA \ ANewEra of Prosperity \ Is Ahead of You TAKE A VACATION NOW COME TO MIAMI “THE MILLIONAIRES’ PLAYGROUND” With Prices That Fit Everybody’s Pocketbook MT VLkLtikdkitikddkdehikddeddd HOTEL RATES LOWEST EVER QUOTED PRICES FOR MEALS IN KEEPING WITH THE TIMES New Low Prices on All Recreational Activities Inquire at Our Tourist Information Bureau About Interesting Side Trips, Sight-Seeing, Etc., and See Our Recreationa! Host About Fishing, Golf and Other Sports HOTEL LEAMINGTON “Miami’s Most Popular Hotel N. E. FIRST STREET AND THIRD AVENUE NEAR BAY FRONT PARK SBI GIDE RILID IID OIL You can still buy your GENERAL ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR atelen price in history .. if you do it now! AS thon next month’s probably higher price will more than meet today’s down a General Electric gera- ‘is the stason when a G-E ©n your household ¢x- penses. You save two ways by buying now. New G-E Monitor Top refrigerators have more penta! ger sper featares and more storage space than ever offered at where néar the pric:! They ficeze more icefascer,use less curremtand carry 4-Year Guarantee on the sealed- es] mecha. nism. Come in and s¢e them! Buy a0:vand avoid the peaalty of higher pri 2s later. THE KEY WEST ELECTRIC COMPANY A. F. AYALA, Sales Manager (Delrvered and Installed 2 new G-E Mositor Top motel at s new low peice! The greaten refrig~ etsvot value of the year! | We pay 3 Per Cent on Savings THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK KEY WEST, FLORIDA

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