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PEGE TWD Che Kep Wiest Citien Published Daily Except Sunday By | $8 UITTRUN PUBLISHING Co, INC. L, P. ARTMAN, Preaident, Only Daily Newspaper in Key ‘West and Monroe Gece Ak Ray Went Wierida, eh pasvne dinde patter FIFTY-POURTH YEAR resolutions ny Bag wnt rs charged for at churches = whieh ved are 6 cents @ link i. an open forum and invites. discus- ‘of public issues and subjects of local or « but it will not pebiion anonymous com- {se RUS KORN FROST, LA} mst G55"agneral jeneral ‘Moiors Bids., DETROIT: re . valton Bide, ATLANEA. ie A IMPROVEMENTS FOR KEY WEST er: ADVOCATED BY THE CITI7EN 1, Water and Sewerage. _ 2. Bridges to complete Road to Main- 3 land. 8. Free Port. “4. “Hovdls und Apartments 5. Bathing Pavilion. » @ Aquerium. + %4 Airports—Land and Sea. 8, Consolidation of County and City Governments. | | ee void taking foolish chances. " Expect much, but be content with lit- - And now we have celluloid bath- ing waiial . Why wear aasintig? "What this country aed is more homes with the comforts of a family car. War Cry warns—Don't call the r because you have forgotten to Sn ee 1 in highway filling station: “Don’t | to ask for credit as our way of egg polite.” hie billion ‘dollars recently lost in the Headline. © Why not won? ; is losers, there must be win- Tf it is true that “the money in circu. lation in the nation is $39.34 per person,” somebody is holding out on us to the extent of pera 00. companies won't be able to sell w-fangled heat-controlied — stoves amen. It might cramp their hot- Ha leo had eaten the apple, she Kedness for. the first time, ‘Sekipturse! ‘Looks like it's. about time to pass the apples again. We sainted Republicans are now meek enough to inherit the earth, but there’s ‘not much chance the Democrats will turn it over to us, the stingies.—Philadelphia In- quirer. According to an axchange, a cizt has been talking for over a month, continucus- ly. Attending physicians say she is “otherwise normal.” What do they mean “otherwise?” Loyalty te one’s race is one of the wo-| and bent, as dean of the surviving Fifth | country, the American people are} ble traits of the Jews. News dispatches say that at a convention held recently in London, Jews are demanding a boycott on all German goods while Hitler remains in power. Labor day is a day of rest for father— all he has to do is to clean the yard, mow the lawn, spade up flower beds and gar- den spaces, spray the trees, trim the hedge, carry out and beat the rugs, air the bed-} ding, repair the fence, scrub the car, var- nish the floors and multitudinous other du- ties that the folks can find for him to do. So it was with a sigh of relief that Tuesday came.so he could ge back te work. th sree deal “ an Months 8 Se | j dra “CRED!T WHERE CREDIT IS DUE” Under the heading, “Credit Where Credit is Due,” the Meridian, Chio, Times | recently carried an interesting article on their local county tax situation. The Times | said in part: “Seventy-one percent of the past half of the 1932 taxes have heen paid, which is about ten percent less than last year. “jt should be observed that the public j end without their 100 percent support an- schools and other public necessities would be severely hancicapped. “The largest contribution to the coun- ty treasury is from the Union Pacific Rail- | road, with $96,344 for the year. The others include Idaho Power Co., $46,304; smaller railroads, $1,601.34; Bell Tele- phone Co., $41,780.71; Telegraph Co., $1,- 048.87; and Pullman Car Co., $1.971.84. “This makes a total of $187,536.03. | These payments made in a time of depres- sion, when the individual in many cases de- | faults in his payment, are a valuable help | and mean that the balance in the general | fund is held up to a figure that means no! registration of warrants is necessary. “If the utilities had not paid their tax- es promptly 21d when due, many schools in | the country would find it necessary to close | for want of funds. | “When we hear criticism of pcbuel utilities we -tould recall that there has | been no default in their tax payments in| Ada County for the ‘worst year of the de-! | | pression’. This particular Idaho county is not an | | exception. In thousands of cities and | counties throughout the country, taxes are | in arrears. Farmers, © property-owners | and businesses have been unable to pay. | Yet taxes of utilities have been paid when du, evea though investors had to go with- | utilities have paid their 1932 taxes in full, | other story would be told, and the public ; vi “8. Chigge = a8 ee THe KEY WEST CrrizeR ' Daily Cross-word Puzzle ACROSS 1. Neck pleces 5. Burns 10. Walk hea 14. Competen 15. Hindu queen 16, Pleasure ex- ursion 11, Entranceway 18. Place of wor- Solution of Yesterday's Puzzie VIATBISHAsTH]e YAS E[T] JAIL O[PAAHIE |AYZE [RISIE | MAIR IEMBAIRIT| 1 /SIAINIS} x WHI ee ey, neo BoA Saag WIEJAIRIE[R] . Kind ot antelope 10. One who irons clothes 11, Seaside resort 2 german river 2L Night before 23, Sieit,bet of “The ne Ro= sary 25. Small quarrel 27. Valiant 1e 2. Biblica garden Football team 22: Those who stand surety 24. Patron saint of lawyers y fe] SiH |NTS| 3. Kemale sheep [STE IR IAIC| E INITIALS It |S | 2 Make firm Face € xaludlis 32, Hinde bertp- 36. Wander = pen 8 10. Member of a state 42. Place for storing ha: 42. Pertaining te L Ordered 2, Ancient Greek eoin 8. Medicinal plant 4. Labor per- formed Yor another 5. Long-legged bird 6. City in Belgium : & 52. That which ts tent . Jabbers Dealer in cloth Rise of ground . Heaped . Triangular inset 66, Great Lake . Worship . Ireland . Moistens . One with a Y ar ted $3: Minute orifies 60. Goddess of discord 61. Lease 64. Before writing on the wall 41. Compound ether 48. Ocean 49. More ignoble Insects Farming oo |. Remainder machine 2E88an Jenn cere ee Ba a 7/28 Jaane out dividends and interest payments.. As | | taxpayers, exuployers and purchasers of | supplies, the utility companies have again demonsirat(:d ‘their, importance to every | _ community and the national welfare. ] 1S Ra oer ore | MILK TROUBLES | “How not to ao things” is illustrated in the troubles in the New York Milk Shed where a comparatively small, but.organiz- ed group of farmers are engaged in a milk strike. They have used violence, with threats of further and greater violence, to prevent the delivery of milk by others. Thousands of dollars worth of milk has | beensdumped by roadsides. A veritable | reign of terror has been in effect. In its official publication, the Dairy- mén’s Teague Cooperative Association, | which covers that territory, states that it |i and its members will continue, to the best of their ability, to deliver milk. They have no sympathy with violence. The League knows, from long experience, that force can produce nothing but trouble and | poverty for the farmer—that it can cost him millions of dollars and lost public con- fidence. “ The League is one of the many organi- zations fighting the farmer's battle. Through cooperation it is strengthening the agricultural situation. | Strikers offer the farmer nothing save ruin. | The majority of farmers in the milk shed are law abiding. They have stuck ‘with the League. But all farmers will | ere to pay Searly for radical action by the It is in the interest of all that agricul- tural warfare be stopped. HORSE CABS ad NEW YORK The nat:on’s secibanolis seems to be the first to take up new things and the last to discard the old. It is said that New York was the iast city to entirely do away with horse-cre-vn street cars, and a recent writer states that there are still 27 hgrse- wu cabs in the big town. Re nemes Benjamin Solomon, now old Avenue cabbies. Among his one-time} customrs were the one-time world’s cham- pion b-avy-weights, Sullivan, Corbett and | Fitzsimmons. Solomon has driven a cab since he was 18 and his father was a cab- | men before him. But Solomon's son drives | a motor taxicab. } it is just 100 years since J. A. Hansom |} introduced the vehicle which afterwards | became known as the hansom cab, for the | patents on which he is said to have re- ceived $50,000, a tidy fortune in those days. In muck !sss than a century from now many of the marvels of the present will be as obsolete as the once popular han- som cab. “KEY WEST i DAYS GONE BY} Happenings Here Just 10 Years § Ago Today As Taken From The Files Of The Citizen A special meeting of the Mon- roe County Commissioners will be held this evening in the county court for the purpose of passing on the resolution calling for a bond election to be held October 16, 1923. The issue is for the, | amount of $300,000 the sum ask- ed in financing the road to the! mainiand. An additional amount! is to be asked, it is understood, as soon as this amount is com-! pleted, if the issue is carried. | High over Newfoundland, Puff and his chum Listen with joy at the big motor’s hum. |“I hope we don’t fall,” says the Fluff, “It’s unwise, hear that salt water is hard on the eyes!” Deputy Sheriff Cleveland Di }enon called | Died Sept. 4, 1798. | born in Philadelphia. | April 29, 1891. IN. A, (ser, born there. Died Dec. lon arrested two men on Stock Is-} land charged with having liquor in! their possession. A complaint was entered in the sheriffs office by a woman who says she purchas-' ing party at La Brisa. During the evening a delicious crawfish enchi- lado was served by Abbie Roberts. | Troop 4, boy scouts, sponsored | novelist asserts that since the en- lentertained a Qnumber of friends} } last evening with a party at her ed liquor at both places. The owners of the places were plac under bond of $100 each. All who attend Knowles’ Thirty edi Acres tonight are promised several }xeal fights. The main bout will | bring together Battling Earl Yates Willis Carey, negro youth! and Fighting Kid Hogan. In the charged with aysaulting white wo-! semi-final Kid Nelson will go up men, was plated ih care of Con-/ { against, Kid Perez. Two girls will, stable Leroy Torres and taken to’ appear in the ring before a good} Miami where he awaits transporta-) old battle royal rounds out a per- tion ‘to ‘the reform school ‘at. Mari- Feet, event vot sport. anna, “Rumars ‘were> ‘cinchlated|: > « that the youth: @eaped, but, this! Emi Aguilar ria bout to tee was proven false. | “+ rts ett repal ers.of the F. E. C. rail- mor. was ‘that he had been taken! road last evening. A fish enchilado; from the train by masked men.! was served and a general good This also was disproven. ftime enjoyed by all. | Work will be started this week} removing the Y, M. C, A. build- ing from the Fort Taylor reser-! yvation to the American Legion} grounds at Whitehead and United streets, where it is to be used as a club house for the legion Second Lieutenant Watrous, of the local national guard, will leave tonight for Fort-} ress Monroe, Va., where he will | enter training school for Coast Artillery Instruction. All Jewish stores of the = be closed Tuesday and Wednesday | = lof next week in observance of the’ | Jewish holidays. A British! the legion, will hold their meetings in the building. Editorial comment: —_ on Feet.—ume man 6a: ad it over twenty years and one bottle Imperial eczema Remedy cured him. Druggiste are authorized to refund your money tf) jit fatle—Agw L> jhe hi this| Se, actment of prohibition in lacking in vision. Well, at least, }hot so many of them see double. | Subscribe for The Citizen. The dedication of the new high |sehool building corner of Ser nary and White streets, which was | to have been held on Wednesday, jafternoon of this week has been/ postponed until Sunday afternoon} at 6 o'clock, September 16. Miss Dora Villareal delightfully, MIAMI, jon 913 Division street. The <= was beautifully decorated with: flowers and potted plants and pre-| sented a picturesque scene. } i The Pirate's Club entertained! last night with a skating and danc-i if @eecondccccCCOC OC COO COO OOOO KC UwCOOEO OOOO SCO DB CRSES /00090GD9OSSUDSDS0G0SOG00 3 Today’s : . Anniversaries Cosocccccocccooseseovese 1737—Luigi Galvani, Ttalian discoverer of the electric phenon-| “galvanism,” born.) 1823—Joseph Liedy celebrated | naturalist, scientist, and physician; Died there j ereptnenee 1842—Elliott Coues, noted or-} nithologist, theosophist and writ- er of his day, born at Portsmouth, Died in Baltimore, Dec.,' 25, 1899. 1847—Henry Leffman, noted; Philadelphia chemist and profes- 25, ee a 1850—Victor F. Lawson, Chi- cago newspaper editor and pub- lisher, born in Chicago. Died there! August 19, 1925. \ 1980. eeevecece aece Today’s Birthdays, Mary Austin, famous essayist and author, born in Carlinville, Il., 65 years ago. William DeWitt Mitchell of Min- Attorney- General, born at Minona, Minn.,/ 59 years ago. Ralph Waldo Trine of Californ- ia, noted author of inspirational; books, born at Mt. Morris, Mll., ar 67 years ago. Owen R. Lovejoy, of New York, and Florida, noted sociologist, born at Jamestown, Mich., 67} years ago. Viscount Lascelles, husband of Britain’s Princess Mary, bern 51 years ago. SPECIAL NOTICE TO CITY TAXPAYERS The Tax Assessor of the City of Key West, Florida, having sub- ‘mitted to the City Council his pre- liminary assessment roll for the year 1933, for approval, all per- sons ‘desiring to have corrections thereof made, whether. im listing valyation of property or other- wise, are hereby notified that said assessment roll will be in the City, ‘Clerk’s office, accessible to the ;public, beginning Thursday, Sep- tember 7, 1933, to and including ; Tuesday, September 19, 1933, for " aid purpose, The Clerk’s office will be open for said period from 9:00 a. m. to 12:00 m. and from 2:00 p. m. to 4:30 p. m. daily except Saturdays and Sundays; Saturdays will be from 9:00 a, m. to 12:00 m. Any person desiring a correction as above shall file with the City Clerk on or before Tuesday, Sep- tember 19, 1933, his or her peti- tion to the City Council, setting. forth his or her objections to said assessment and the corrections desired to be made. The City Council will meet at the City Hall, Tuesday, September 19, 1933, at 8:00 p. m, for the purpose of equalizing the assess- ments and making proper correc- tions and will reeonvene from day to day until all of said petitions shall have Phone 135 Night Phone 696-W ee YN rew’Z SPEND S YOuR = VACATION THIS YEAR IN ORIDA - Wa nsw 1 MY sant (g i | GY ' Www" My Ati } FLORIDA | Mean | Normal | Dodge SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1933, TODAY’S WEATHER Temperature* jmoderate easterly winds. _.....88| Florida: Generally _...80| night and Sunday. _84{| Jacksonville to Florida Straits: 83 | Gentle to moderate southwest or }Wwest winds over north portion and | easterly over south portion, and “95 Ins |generally fair weather tonight ae ‘and Sunday. East Gulf: Gentle winds most- ‘ly east and southeast. Highest fair to- Lowest Rainf li Yesterday’s Precipitation Normal Precipitation -... This record covers 24-hour period ending at 8 o'clock thin moraing. ‘Tomorrow's Almanac Sun rises - 6:11 a Suan sets 6:37 p. Moon rises - 11:11 p. Moon sets ... .12:35 p. m. Last quarter, 11th .... 4:30 p. Tomorrow's Tides A. M. High 0:56 Low 8:04 Barometer at 8 a. m. today: Sea level, 30.04. WEATHER CONDITIONS Pressure is low this morning “|from Michigan eastward over the | North Atlantic States,.and mod- erately high over the South At- lantic and Gulf States, and north- westward over the northern Plains States. Rains have occurred dur- ing the last 24 hours ‘throughout [most of the Lake region and east- | Ward over New England and in | portions of North Dakota and | Montana. There were also showers jin extreme southern and north- } western Florida, in western Texas, land Arizona, Temperatures have risen in the Plateau region, | while it is cooler this morning in the upper Mississippi Valley, and readings continue above normal throughout most sections from jie eastern Rocky Mountain re- j zion eastward, St. Louis, Mo., Te- | porting a maximum of 98 de- grees yesterday. G. S. KENNEDY, Official in Charge Pr. t Lowest Highest Last ight Yesterday | 96 36 Abilene Atlanta Boston .... Buffalo Chicago Denver Detroit Duluth .. El Paso . Hatteras Galveston Helena ... Huron Jacksonville . KEY WEST . Los Angeles ...... Miami ....... Nashville -......... New Orleans New York ....... Pensacola .......... Phoenix ...........- | Pittsburgh St. Louis San Francisco .. Seattle -... Tampa .... Washington Williston ........ 'Today’s Horoscope Here we find a person of ver- satile character, well suited for social life. Many friends will be | made and the life will be very suc- | cessful through pleasant associa- tions with people who are cas- jually encountered in the course ,of ordinary business life, Con- i servation of the means will bring | financial as well as social success. (Copyrighted) i BSE ESE ae j Garfield H. Horn, 13, of Hous- ; ton, Tex., has been judged the | most intelligent high school boy in Fair, Texas to win a $4,500 scholarship to “to an eastern school. WEATHER FORECAST (Till 8 p. m. Sunday) Key West and Vicinity: tonight and Sunday; gentle Nearly all'prices have gone up .. BUT You can still buy your GENERAL ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR saves most on your household ex- penses. You save two ways by buying a0w. __ NewG-EMonivor Top refrigerators have “more beauty, more features ands storage space than ever offcre where near the price! They pig more ice faster,useless currentand carry a4g-Year Top price! The grenenae refrigr cenior value of the yeast We pay 3 Per Cent on Savings THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK KEY WEST, FLORIDA