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*, SEPTEMBER SITUATIONIN. CUBA SAID T0 BE VERY PUZZLING WASHINGTON HAS MUCH TO ‘A combined _ political-ad: LEARN RELATIVE TO INS AND OUTS OF REVOLUTION- gas: further strengthened ARY PROBLEM By BYRON PRICE ‘(Chief of Bureau, The Associated Brazil by a chief exe Press, Washington) WASHINGTON has pat on brave face as it contemplates what is happening in Cuba. but under-; neath there is much real ¢oncern. Ordinarily, government over- turns in Latin America do not greatly excite even the state de- partment. They have come to be accepted as a part of the natur-| al course of events, like colds in the head and minor traffic acci- dents, No one really hopes to do much about them. One cause for worry is that the: revolution which. overthrew the} new de Cespedes regime, and the, events which have followed that} overthrow have taught the Wash-) ington government that it knew Jess than it thought it did about the in sand outs of Cuban political | currents, This whole new phase of Cu- ban affairs has been a ter shock to state department officials! who thought Ambassador Welles; had done a magnificent job in Ha- yana and, with the old Machado regime safely eased out, could: come home with everything rosy. American military men were; surprised, too, to Jind that the| Cuban army, which had acquitted! itself so well during the Machado crisis, was so deeply permeated| with discontent and even organiz- ed revolt. But the greatest shock of HUMAN was the realization that commun- ist groups had had and still have so large a hand in the situation., A Neighborly Angle There were other considera- tions not mentioned in, any of the official announcements. In everything they have done, American: officials have given the impression o2 thinking once of Cuba and twice of the rest of the ‘world—particularly the rest of Latin America, i Roosevelt cs been es- pecially anxious that his “good neighbor’ policy strike exactly the right keynote in this first test. On the one’ hand, the Presi- dent's ‘acivisers considered it ex- tremely important that Cuba’s sister republics understand | the big neighbor to the north would} gonduct herself. with. restraint,! and would not cross their thre-! sholds forcibly except as publi¢! order required it. On the other hand. no one. in Washington wanted to give Latin America the inpression that the/¢ Roosevelt administration had gone} pacifist, or that the United States! Marines had folded their tents. and disbanded, Tt has been a delicate task to steer a course which would give these neighbors just the desired notification that the United States has its heart in the right place, but packs a punch for emer- gencies, ‘{ottwet Dut there i also have been thinking o! the im- An Eye T pression ¢reated as tar away as! Tokyo: Japanese statesmen, in mal discussions diplomats, undertook during the} infor- avert with American j 14 1988, THE KEY WEST CITIZEN "BRAZILIAN F PRESIDENTIAL TOUR STRENGTHENS ELECTION HOPES freight’ waCremree ‘DEAD’ MAN DENIED Pa- by’ (By Associated Press) (14—A cargo of human itive trip to northern Brazil Provisional President Ge ‘KETTERING, En ngland, Sept. 14.—A man has_ been refused the right to yote here | because he is officially dead. | And all his pleas to be re- } surrected are in vain. Some time ago he became ill. Doctors thought he was going to die. Officials took the doctors’ word for granted and struck him off the list as dead. But the patient did not dic. He recovered and demanded his vote. The Revision court refused to. perform miracles. Pecple could not be resurrect- ed, it was said. So the man must stay dead —minus his vote. , stitutional presidential ties and clinched the strong position he has in that region. The trip, \ po: 2 i already is enjoyed | | | to northern ve since’ laimed in} first jthe republic was. p 11889, started at Victoria, \ Es-! | pirito Santo, where Governor Punaro Bley declared the entire region would back Senor Vargas | for the legal presidency. | The president will be by the. -constitutional ;¢alled for November 15. {a liberal from Rio Grande do ‘Sui i jin the gxtreme south, seems as- )Sumed gf the backing of dep jfrom his native region. He has | been in power since the liberal | revolution he headed overthrew), ‘the conservative regime headed by, PELL SSL EM: | Washington Luis 0° Sao “ON POLITICS IS elected | ‘Para, in. the. north, Pry tava a !nounced support of Vargas. P. |mambuco city and Para city, be- sides every other important sea-! port between Rio de Janeiro and {the equator, are on the presi-/ {dential schedule. The trip will lend in mid-September. i During his vovarg Varg: {program called i UE Spee | dedication of a monument i Parahyba. ‘inspection of the ied- eral drought relief program in‘ {the northern states of Ceara, Rio! ‘Grade do Notre, Parahyba and | Pernambuco. | The north, under previous re-| Wy Annociated Peean) gimes, clamored for more federal WASHINGTON, Sept. 14.—Ap. j attention in improving transporta- parently, at least one of the G. O. tion, communications, and solving P. ‘leaders is getting a bit im- ‘periodie drought problems, aI VOYAGE | difference between the republican FIETEEN HUNDRED CONVICTS ‘strategy following the smashing Roosevelt victory last November ARE AWAITING BANISH- and that pursued by the democrats ‘ four years ago. MENT; WILL BE TAKEN IN pemociatic”” Chairnfan” “Raskob TWO DIFFERENT LOADS SENATOR COMES DICKINSON BE- IMPATIENT OVER SITUATION AS PERTAINS! TO G. 0. P. FORCES in By HERBERT PLUMMER ‘intends to do something about it. He is Senator Dickinson. The white-Haired Iowan, who entered the senate in 1931 after long serv- tice in the house, is not a great be- truces. ‘established headquarters in Wtsh- . ington. brought Charlie Michelson in, and launched one of the most vigorous publicity —_offensives against the G. O. P. ever known before. (By Axnocinted Preys) LA ROCHELLE, France, Sept. -RIO DE JANEIRO, Sept. 14.— f , condemned to expiate er in, The Machinery’s There the tropical heat of lonely French: Everett Sanders of the repub- Guiana, is being assembled © for ‘ican national committee has a pub- shipment to the notorious camps licity set-up in his headquarters there September 22. here, headed by J. Cal O’Laughlin, Fifteen hundred convicts are. 2 Veteran newspaperman, but the jawaiting banishment. Most of, republican idea seems to be that them will make the voyage of a policy of watchful waiting is the despair in two loads of neariy 700 best. each on a convict ship sailing on The necessary machinery has its first trip in two years. been installed to take advantage Escape offers the only hope of possible democratic blunders many will have of seeing the and the breaks in” the political | French shores again as they game. The economic situation and} despondently climb the ship’s lad- the popular prestige of President der, a file of drab figures in con-! Roosevelt at present hold them in viet dress, and three weeks later check. descend to the do of St.! Not so with Senator Dickinson. Laurent du Maroni. 0, miles In the 1932 campaign he was en- | from home. Many are lizers, trusted with the task of seeing while many others may return to, that 12 republican senators ce! | Frange only after servi long elected in the central states. When| hard labor followed by the republican senatorial elections | sf Years of exile. committee for 1934 is set up, he'll Moye Fo Abolish Colony | play an important part. Agitation for. abolishment of Shore ave 10 Tepwpliean si) Baa the convict colony has een re- WHO manat stany -t6p: ‘ret te vived simultaneously with reports pext year, Preliminary Skirmish of recent wholesale escapes. More than 10Q convicts have escaped So, in Chicago, the “ther day} 8 ie topos Dickinson made a speech that FRANCHISE RIGHTS) WORRY TO SOLON : patient at the campaign of silence; now. being waged by his party and! liever in such things as political { (DUCE IN CONTROL SCRIBES Fau.uRe to | NEW COMPETITION | TO INSURE PROFIT MUSSOLINI CLOSES DOORS TO | OUTSIDERS; PERMISSION | FOR ANY NEW ENTERPRISE, | 1 | ty hiaelniad Press) AKRON. °0., Sept. 14.—Not a faulty valve but “too much bal- loon” is believed by Lieutenant- ‘Commander T. G. W. Settle to haye caused his descent from 5,- 000 feet at Chicago as he was tak ing off on his proposed strato- sphere flight. His explanation is that the 600,- 000 cubic f ed to only about one-sis |capacity. The gas went to the top jof the bag, leaving long folds (By Axgociate: the huge bag falling loose below ROME, Sept, 14.—Il Duce has nq pushed in by the heavier air. | tightened control over Italian in-'In these folds Settle beiieves his MUST COME FROM BOARD of Press) ‘dustry by setting up machinery | line to the balloon valve became! ‘to keep out new competition in ‘entangled. I fields hi eececcecce iserved. Today In History” | Where, in a figurative sense,| mucacadouseucnsa ‘there is not enough food for more ban the immediate family, Mus- Peer pene jolini closes the doors to, out-| ian poet died, ged 56. {siders. It is better for all, he if holds, to haye 2° well nourished ‘ew than a half-famished many in! ‘industry. Committee Watches Industry he considers already amply Napoleon’s army entered Mo: i Russia, and Ru ow, | ns fired the city. | 1812—Aaron Burr, ill-fated; w York statesman and third e president, died, aged 80. The machinery is made up of a! }committee whose permission must} v: {be obtained before any new in- !dustrial enterprise may be in-| !augurated. The committee keeps} ja close watch on industry as com-} pared with the market. If, for instance, it finds were Today’ Ss Horoscope jis not room for another com-{ petitor in, the automobile manu-| ® |} facturing business, it refuses to! Resourcefulness in ideas permit installation of any lable in execution, is the keynote antomobil¢ plant. is assures|of the character in.these born to- {the manufacturers against a fur-|d Economical to a fault, ac- ither division of their field. quisitive and. fairly fortunate, the Only Recently Applied native will acqu | Some time has elapsed since} competency, jthe plan was announced, but it} He should avoid ‘the love of has only now been put to practi-| for itself, for this will su teal application. Alberto Asquini,|to trouble. junder-secretary of corporations, (Copyrighted) eads the committee, } Representatives of several other} government departments and of the principal Fascist employers’ and labor associations are mem- bers. ‘Final word in matters of supreme importance always rests with Mussolini. 1901—Presi yom an oeecosecoee POLITICIAL ANNOUNCEMEN eececevesso2se For Captain of Police EVERETT R. RIVAS { Mrs. Edith B, Millar, 33, mar- ‘ried and a mother, who has passed the necessary civil service exami- {nation, delivers mail in Montrose, Calif. Feweeeecescesesoeccooccs CLASSIFIED COLUMN Advertisements ander this head will be inserted in The Citizen at the rate of 1c a word for each in- sertion, but the minimum for the first insertion in every instance is 25e. Payment for classified adver- tisements is invaviably in advance, but regular advertisers with ledger accounts may have their advertise- ments charged. 1 Advertisers should give their jstreet address as well as their tele phone number if they desire re- jrults. With each classified advertise- jment The Citizen will give free an |Autostrop Razor Outfit. Ask for it. FOR RENT { el ee HOUSE FOR RENT, containing 12 rooms. on lot H 50x198 feet; in select section of | : | city, 1307 Whitehead’ street, op- | posite beautiful Coral Park, and i facing the sea. ite in: tear. a { Rent $50 monthly. Apply to L. | P. Artman, . 1309 Whitehead | |. Street or The Citizen: pecs . FOR SALE | STRAWBERRY PLANTS, Mis. is- lise Heit be ttt a ee tt ha tee aetna and! latest far eastern crisis to justify) within the past lead- what Japan was doing in Man-| ing to suspicions that a secret or- eburia by what the United States, ganized band is aiding them, 2 had been doing in Latin America. {a price, in fleeing through ee However open to dispute that! Perilous jungles or across the paraile] may be, Washington has Shark-infested Caribbean Sea. been anxious to give no further! Criminals condemned to hard | encouragement to such an argu-('ebor, mostly murderers and pro- ment if it could be avoided, i fessional thieves, are kept at St. All in all, the problem has! Laurent du Maroni. The criminally buiked so large in official atten- | insane. usually sent to the colony tion at Washington that at times; for life, are segregated at St, Jean it almost overshadowed the NRA|4u Maroni. —and ea saying @ great deal. | May Get Place On Farm a | Good behavior may gan .ONE- DISH DINNER iste a place on a piel lame at GIVEN APPROVAL ' ourrouy, or in Cayenne, waere they sleep in a prison but . may a Rae Ee hire out by the day as domestics 1 stores ATHENS, Ga:, Sept. 14. ogee Sea ie. dish dinners have won wider ap-/must stay there in exile af proval on the tables of Georgia! release for as many housewives this summer than ever term of hard labor calls / before, says Susan Matthews, ex-} who escape have tension nutritionist at the Univer- \ tence and are existing sity of Georgia. fean off the scant irregular One-dish dinners, as outlined by! ployment afforded by Miss Matthews, include a meat, a colony, where a tenth of Starchy vexetable. a root or other 900 population are. like Vegetable and a sauce or gravy.i banished criminals. They are often verved from the on dish in which they are eooked.! A newly patented indicator dial Most of them. she says. area meal for automobile steering posts in- in theniselves and need only bread dicates at a glance whether the and butter and a beverage te com-, car's ignition is working properly | plete them. or pot, them, might well be put down at defin-; sionary and Blakemore. 1,000; can-' « ¢ ing some of the issues that will be} fought out in the congressional | clections of next year. “Recovery in industry,” senator, “will be more certain and | business more stable if permitted | to return to its old channels of ac-} | tivity.” Referring to the present ermmental expenditures, he expected income will not be quate to meet them. Currency stabilization, he said. | is an all-important factor.” And, he concluded, as an um- pire in economic disputes, the gov- ernment will be either “politely ignored or driven from the field by a pop bottle barrage of conflict gov- said > said the/ arle- $2.50 or $1.00 per 5100. —10,- ; 000—$20.00. John Lightfoot, | | E. Chattanooga, Tenn. septt-25t! (500 SHEETS typewriting paper. | Only 50c.. Get them at The} Artman Press. Phane 51. i | jan7 H | OLD PAPERS FOR SALE. One! bundle 5c, containing 5 old papers. Thé Citizen Office. { maa tt) BLANK SALES BOOKS—Suit- able for every business, In duplicate with carbon paper. Only 5c each. The Artman Press, Citizen Building. Phone) 51. juni4-tf ‘ TEXAN WANTS IRISH SCHOOL ESTABLISHED | Re aeieaeeal Preand DUBLIN, Sept. 14.—Prof. C. H. . Slover of the department of Eng- lish in the University of —— and a recognized authority Anglo-Irish medieval relations, de- clares the growing interest taken by Americans in Celtic antiquities: justifies the establishment in} Dublin of an American school of} “Trish archeology. RADIO ree RADIO REPAIRING. We repair all makes. Guarenteed service, | ! J. L. Stowers Mus.c Co. may! WANTED on|WANTED—You to know that we | have the right prices on letter-| heads, envelopes, business cards. | statements and any form of printing. Satisfaction guacan- teed. Call 61. The Artman Press, jan? N 1812—French advance guard of; 'ASCRIBES FAILURE TO [Leer aewee aaa. COTO ELSE TOOL ‘ PAGE FIVE =} RENEW YOUR FLOORS AND CEILINGS DO AWAY WITH THOSE OLD WORM EATEN FLOORS AND RE- FLOOR WITH NO. 1 FLOORING B & Btr. Flooring, This high gra flooring makes the neatest of| floors, $60.00 1x6 No. 1 Flooring. The easiest working of all $50 0 00 flooring, per M. 1x4 No. 1 Flooring, clear yellow pine and easy $50 60 M. e 1x4 No. 2 Flooring. A cheap and $35.00 WALL BOARD UPSOZ] WALL BOARD, working, per Economical Flooring, per M. ARMOR WALL BOARD per M. VARNISH AND PAINTS FOR INSIDE WORK Marnct Varnish, best Flcor Enamel. A long wearing varnish, per gallon enamel that gives the hard finish desired, popular colors, per gal- grade clear Flo Lac Varnish Stain. Our best grade of varnish and stain, com@jFlat Tone Wall Paint. Cannot be plete line of colors, per gal- beat. Sherwin Williams’ best wall paint, variety of pale colors, per gallotesi isc oa Femily Paint, our kest seller, per gallon interior white gloss, $2.55 Decotint—cold water wall finish, al¥ porular shades, 5!b pkg. ........ 60c South Florida Contracting & Engineering Co. Phone 598 White and Eliza Streets Key West, Florida 2 PES I oe EF. PEDDIE IM. WHO is this victim of the sea’s fury? What - ; is his babbling of emeralds, intrigue, murder? WAS it coincidence. only that brought two women to the hospital, one seeking her hus- band Jimmy Riddell, the other her cousin Jim Randal? THE answers to these questions are woven into a thrilling, gripping story— Outrageous Fortune @ Caroline Leigh reached the hospital five minutes after Nesta Riddell had left with the man who didn’t know his name but whom she claimed as her husband. ® Caroline might have been satisfied about Nesta’s identifica- tion until she learned about the paper found in the man’s pocket, a scrap apparently torn from a letter and bearing one word—a signature—“Caroline.” ® And because she “played a hunch,” Caroline was dragged into the Riddell affair, a weird train of events, a nightmare of suspense, with a dramatic climax that transformed blind de- Spair into radiant happiness. Starts Monday, September 18 ---JN--- THE KEY WEST CITIZEN