Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER Se ee 4, 1933. ‘HE KEY WEST CITIZEN wasn't very long, so he had hopes. Another minute "more and the hopes were justified. For a dia- ‘9 \jtance of five or six yards it was saa gt ae meet t = fc cep a brat ere ergpee # #. o dif- : Chapter 43 TRAILING NESTA J hcttbe abe stay Chore Bue “@id ‘not “even ask for the fife ‘thet ret 8 rt sth) jthe other side img] 224 elght or nine time’ atter eet the fellow. An his own’ ad- ‘contrive to co a a "on abe possible to s6e both turiings. These five’ or'siz yards coveted” wer gate and part ‘of the shrubbery of one of those large out-of-date houses which have been abandoned before “encroaching tide of bungalows and villas. The drive was green with thoss; the garden'a mere tangle. Be twéen if and“thé ran & low brick wall toppéd by.an unelipped don ‘Cotnty and Westminster ' Jim ‘went into a tobacco sho; of the High 'st paper, and unfolding a ‘a watch tipod the door ik. FTER about five minutes Nests, came out, Shé stood for an in- stant on’ the pavement, atid’ ‘then gave him the tright of ‘his ite by crossing te a : *’ K’ newspaper held wide open makes a good screen, There was & me t's suspense, and then he saw trom’ under the lower paper six inches of Driaht fies Night stocking endi tation leather shoe go up the two worn steps of the bake shop next » He was so near that he could hear her rather strident voice ask- ing for milk’ chocolate. He moved farther down the street, Presently ‘she came out and Pedra met |EVENT AT | Seve & E g = te acie * On the other hand, the Van a aoce crt era Halden ier Sa ae JACK STEWART HEADS CLASS, There recently appeared im one; of the Ithaca, New York, newspa-| pers an article relative to Jack) Stewart, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don- &ld Stewart, in connection with tie High School graduating class in that city. The article in part says: “The Senior Class of Ithaca high school, graudating in 1934, is Jed by Jack Stewart as president. The election is a forerunner of the opening of senior activities, in- {was formerly Miss Effie Bethe on the night that"he wae shot. He Temembered seéing the Smeralds In hand. (Copyright, 1933, J. B. Lippincott Co.) di ublishi: pea “Stewart is popular of the year inches of rather | & pie, ‘ ing in flimsy {mf- | promise of being ‘an interesting | exhibition. |DIAMONDBALL PERCENTAGE OF RECEIPTS IS REASON SHOWN The baseball game that. was scheduled to be played tomorrow afternoon at the Navy Field be- tween the Pirates and Sluggers has been called off, according to} announcement made by Roy Ham- lin, manager of the Sluggers. This fact will cause great disap- pointment to the large number of fans among whom such enthusiasm was b@ing manifested in hopes of witnesting the proposed exhibition, for which ‘arrangements had been long if the making, Pi Manager Hamlin states that the "Pirates first suggested the winners, take ll, but after that they later agreed on a percentage of 75-25, while the Sluggers asked for a basis of 60-40, There will be a game played to- morrow afternoon, however, at ekirt the Navy Field between the Slug- ers and Trojans, which gives MONDAY NIGHT Arrangements have been made for a diamondball ‘game to be played on Monday night at Bay- view Park between the Lighthouse ‘team and the Army aggregation, and banquets. | the Antlered tribe will, Both teams are said to be in og trim, anda good game is ing looked forward to. The con- test will get under way ‘at 8 o'clock. Sere er ON ARMISTICE DAY MANY PROMINENT GUESTS TO BE CARRIED OUT {Special to The Citizen) DeLAND, Nov. 4.—The city of Land_ plans to be the Mecca of entral Florida on Armistice Day this year, according to plans an- nounced today by I. Walter Hawk- ins, exalted ruler of the local Elks lodge. The national initiation program, ed ip, py Elks » San- ‘ord, Eustis and ssibly, Orlapdo, ill sée thitiates front ‘these Ries in attehdance’td swelf the group of candidates to’ be provided by the local lodge. - Many, distingnished guests will he present for the occasion, among these being Governor Dave Sholtz, Attorney General Cary D, Landis, Secretary of State Robert Gray, L. F. Chapman, superintendent of the state prison farm, and Walter P. Andrews, Atlanta, Ga., who is past grand exalted ruler in the order. The degree team, it was said today, will be made up of officers from the various lodges of Central Florida. With thousands of visitors ex- pected in DeLand because of Stet- son University homecoming cele- bration which is staged jointly this year with observance of Armistice Day by American Legion posts of Volusia county, the members’ of for the in socia) | most part, defer their, activities un- functions about the school, and he lig the evening hours. is also'a member of the Fren and Co ch Mrs. Stewart, mother of the lad. 1 of Key West, daughter of the Judge L!'W. Bethel, and Bethel. Mrs. Blanche Wileox Noyes, aviatrix of Memphis, has an-} PARIS. —Mme. nounced that she is making The initiatory services wil] be clubs and a past/ preceded, under present plans, by! | president of Junior high school.”|a parade of prospective new mem- bers through the downtown streets. This parade, held at 6:30 p. m., late | will signal the opening of festivi- Mra ties under sponsorship of the Elks. LOCKED IN CELLAR Helen Bravi- court of this city testified in her divorce suit that her husband im- Preparations for a solo round-the-|yisoned her for months in a smail world flight next year which she) cellar. made hopes will be the first to be bya woman, Subscribe for The Citizen. MISUNDERSTANDING OVER NEW YORK, Nov. 4.—“The National Recovery Act offends both the letter and the spirit of; the entire Constitution.” With this stern denunciation, Representative James M. Beck, solicitor-general under President | Harding, flatly declared that “the{ NRA is unconstitutional” in a sign- ed article ander that heading in the November issue of Fortune | Magazine. Mr: Beck, who is generally rec-| lognized as the greatést Constitu- tional lawyer in congress, is the first nationally prominent figure to challenge publicly the validity} of the law behind the Blue Eagle. | In the article in Fortune he pre-} dicts that the: issue “as to whether | thef Constitution ‘can be . tem-! porgrily suspended: to -meet:the ex-} igencies,: real’ or imaginary, of an} ecohomié. emergeng¢y” will shortly confront the Supreme Court of the! United States and that “upon/| its Becision may hang the fate of our form of government. “It is pFobable that such a case wil] reach the Supreme Court,” he writes, “for it seems inconceivable that the industrialists of America, who have been accustomed to economic freedom, will not... . challenge the validity of the statute,”- and this, he declares, “raises a question which goes be- yond the mere mechanics of gov- ernment. “The purpose of the Constitu- tion,” says Mr. Beck, “was to lim- it the-power of government and to provide a deadline beyond which a government could not go. It at- tempted to give concrete expres- sion to our deathless Declaration of Independence, that a man had eertaininalienable rights which no goyernment could take from him. . . .Amohg these inalienable rights is that of liberty of con- tract and the greater liberty to pursue ‘any lawful business free from unreasonable governmental interference.” These rights, charges Mr. Beck, have been violated by the NRA because: “Tt seeks to regulate the condi- tions of production. . . .in respect to wages, hours of labor, prices i and even maximum production; “It effectually destroys in the sphere of economics our dual form of government, for that was based on a clear distinction between in- terstate and foreign commerce, as to which the Federal government| was given plenary power, and the ; production and domestic trade within the borders of a state, as to which governmental power was reserved to the states; “It creates an economic dicta- torship over the business interests| of the U. S.. The president. . . . can permit or refuse to permit any business man to sell his goods in interstate or foreign commerce, art? thi8 “ih” *principlé * ‘condemns autre bondage; ‘ “4f Lives thé National Admixtis- trator.the power. ... to regulate. . « »spraduction, although ‘the. dé cisions of the Supreme Court... . have consistently held that the production of articles of merchan- dise could not be regulatédtb; Federal power. “In my opinion,” Mr. Beck says, “no express grant of power in the Constitution can be found to jus- tify the Recovery Act. Its pro- LEGALS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT. STATE LORIDA, TWENTIETH JU- CIRCUIT, MONROE ROSELLA J Defen ORDER It dppearing by the sworn filed in the above stated cau: Rosella Josephine Plun fendant therein named dent of the State of F she resides at 40 Water Street, Glou- eéster, Essex County, Massachusetts; that sa fendant is over the agel of twenty-one years; that there is Pes aie the State of Florida, the service of a summons in chan- cery upon whom would bind said } defendant It fs therefore ordered that said non-resident defendant be and she ired to appear to the nt on or be- day of Decem- AD. 3, otherwise the alle- «ations of the said bil! will be tak- em as confessed by sald defendant. it ig further ordered that this or- der bé published once cach week for four consecutive weeks in The Key West Gifdzen, a newspaper publish- e@ in Monroe County, Florida Dated Yhis November 4th, 1933. sv! GEAL) PUBLICATION bit that de- e re: | | | a vd ROSS C Clerk RAYMOND R >, Solicltar for the Complsinast. Rov. 4-L1-18-25; dec. Z | eeecescesese ‘an industry ; to economic]. NSTITUTIONAL,SAYS DECLARATION OF J. M. BECK (Special to The Citizen) ponents, however, argue that it may be justified under the implied powers, . . .One cannot conjure {an implied power out of a vacuum |*#! LARGE ASSEMBLAGE HEARS CANDIDATES (Continued from Page One) debtedness ‘and placed the muni- cipality on a cash basis, » Mr. Spottswood then called on the incumbent, Mayor Malone, who was in the audience. accepted the invitation and for 10 minutes devoted himself to mat-| ters pertaining to his personal ex-} periences during the eight months} “the has been in office + 3 Mr. Malone was the, only speak-} er who referred to any other can-! didate. “He cited the first ‘para-, graph on a dodger gotten out by Candidate for Mayor Delaney, and! id that if Mr. Delaney could show! Mr. Malone} PAGE THRE?! and asked for consideration .of, the voters. Concluding Speaker The last’ speaker was Sam Fart} who dwelt on the league and its candidates, making an impas-; sioned plea for the voters to put! | these candidates in office. The steamer Florida of the ..P. During the evening others offand Q. S: S. company, sailed yes- | the candidates were called by Mr,}terday for Havana with 42 passen- nottswood, a number of them|&ers, two tons of freight and two being specifically named, and automobiles, iS Ferry Parrott came in from Hat tasked to address the throng. hol conc «An ‘oné carload- of” sugar, chairman, showed there was n0/one of lumber, one package ¢ar, |bias in his, attitude nor that of}two cars of pineapples, 600 crates, {the league, but ‘wanted to cr ear with 173 sacks of mail and every man’ whose name appeared | éxpress. on the ticket a chance to address; Freighter Ozark of the Clyde- the voters in behalf of his can-j Mallory lines, arrived in port yes- didacy. ~ ‘)}terday afternoon 3 o'clock from Like so many. public gatherings} New Orleans and after discharg- that have been held in Key West,}ing freight sailed for Miami and the one of last night was inter-! Jacksonville 5:30 o'clock, in the Constitution as the-conjurer | how he could reopen the navy yard.| rupted a number of times by the} Steamship Henry R. Mallory, of takes a rabbit out of a hat.” CLASSIFIED COLUMN eecccee 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 oe insertion in eve-y instance is iC. R Payment tisements is jor dlassified adver varbly ined : its is van but regnlar erin sérs with Tedget accounts may have their advertise- t ments charged. + ; Advertisers should give , the’ street address ag well ag their tele phone ‘number if‘ they’ d re rults. : ie With each classified ‘advertise- ment The Citizen will give free an | Mr. Spottswood ealled on all can- seats of the grand stand at the jdidates or citizens who wanted to diamondball park and were closest | make short talks to get up on the to the speakers, were at times un-| Standard Fruit and S. S. Company, he would retire in his favor, in-! duce Mr. Trevor to do likewise, | and make five speeches in behalf of Mr.“ Delaney before election. | Following Mr. Malone’s _ talk,{ stand, giving the assurance that all! would be welcome. ‘Allan B. Cleare, Jr., accepted! and made a brief talk on his career| at school, his graduation from! Florida University and the man-' ner in which he conducted the of- fice of police justice several years ago, before completing his stud- jes, “Mr. Cleare was followed — by| Cleveland Niles, chief of’ police.” a resume of his services as peace! officer for city.and county and told of one service rendered when as chief with his deputies and a’ candidate for; Autostrop Razor Outfit. Ask for\20rce Of deputized citizens he had it. FOR RENT RESIDENCE, corner Caroline and | Convicted. Ann streets. Commodious andj Greeks had not returned. modern in every respect. Gas range and Kelvinator. Other- wise unfurnished, $30.00 per month. Wm, Curry’s Sons Co. sept25-tf NICELY FURNISHED HOME, ‘General Electric ice box’ and other conveniences. Apply 618 Caroline street. oct25-tf NICELY MENT—AIl modern convenien- eés. Apply 1311 Grinnell Street. nov2-8t FURNISHED APARTMENT, 421 | Duval street, opposite Colonial Hotel. nov2-6tx |FOR* RENT—Nicely © furnished, completely modern, 6 room home. ‘Apply 827 Duval street. FURNISHED APART- gone to the sponge beds and ar-; rested a number of Greek’ spongers, brought them to Key; West where they were tried and! Since that time the! Everett R. Rivas, candidate for! captain of police, told of his: record as.both county and city} efficer, and said that he is eminently qualified to fill the position. - “This is the third time,” said the candidate, “that I have been in the race of captain.” Wm. E. P. Roberts, aspirant for the council, said he was a young nian just venturing into the field Of politics. That he felt quali- fied by ambition and education to successfully perform the Key West's First Funeral Home ; Koy West's First Ambulance |. PRITCHARD Phone 548 Never Sleeps nov4-tt] t SALESMEN WANTED Fe RRA: IR, A rR: ; MARVELOUS INVENTION. New match gives million lights. Fast seller. Big profits. Everlasting Match Co., 443 South Dearborn, Chicago. nov4-1tx MALE HEEP WANTED MAN WANTED. Supply custom- ers with famous Watkins Pro- ducts in Key West. Business. established, earnings average $25 weekly, pay starts i diately. Write J. R. Watkins Company, 70-90 W. Iowa Ave., Memphis, Tenn, nov4-ltx RADIO. BEEAIRNS. FOR SALE FoR SALE—One igh’s Add- Shg*SacHine “ain dtie National Cash Register. See P. M. Crews, 512 Fleming Street or 417 Whitehead street. nov4-6tx 500 SHEETS typewriting paper. Only 50c. Get them at The Artman Press. Phone 51. jan7 BLANK SALES BOOKS—Suit- able for every business. In duplicate with carbon paper. Only Se each. The Artman Press, Citizen Building. Phone 61. jonié-t¢ ROSE BUSHES FOR SALE ida. For list of the best two- year-old budded roses, write ROSE HILL FARM, Box §, Tyler, Texas. nov4-Itx NURSERY STOCK ROSES—For detailed information and prices on world’s finest varieties of two-year-old field grown, budded ever-blooming roses—write McClung Brothers, Tyler, Texas. nov4-Itx MISCELLANEOUS DIVORCES IN MEXICO handied efficiently. Accredited Attor- neys; long practice. Informa- tion free. Border Law Office, 435 First.National Benak, E! Paso, Texas. Mr; Niles gave screeching, yelling and’ otherwise! the same line, arrived from Gal- boisterous behavior of poe ome Texas, 11:50 last night and whose ages ranged from 5 to 15{sailed-this morning 5:50 o'clock years, of both sexes. with cargo of sponges, cigars and Those who were occupying the} live turtle for Charleston, S. C., Se New York. “The Steamship Oriskany of the able to hear a word that was be-yhome port,. Montreal, Canada, ar- jing said.. rived this morning from Boston, Mass., for fuel oil at “the Porter Dale Jensen, 15, was chosen| Dock and was to sail after taking from 50 candidates for the title fon bunkers for Frontera, Mexico. | There are more than 1,024,000 of “Cowboys’ Sweetheart” at the {third annual congress of rough jriders and rodeo performers in| persans by the name of Johnson | Lee Angeles, {in the United States. “a ose SEW OL weer Eee S _ ENGRAVED GREETING Place Your Order Early Over 500 Different Sam- ples To Choose From PRICED LOW 40 Styles of Engraving CHRISTMAS CARDS ARE MORE FASHION- ABLE THAN EVER THIS YEAR. | WISH YOUR FRIENDS A MERRY CHRIST- || MAS BY GREETING CA FOR DISTINCTIVE Cards-To Suit Every Taste At All Prices THE ARTMAN PRESS CITIZEN BLDG. PHONE 61 SPECIAL PAINT SALE The following items are offered only for the present stock on hand. When these are sold, there will be no more at these extremely low prices: SHERWIN WILLIAMS Fi gallon cans only, regular per half ‘gallon, during this sale .. .Colani nd jow, orchid, pale green, sage, silver ‘gray, creant gray,.ivory, ivory sHERWD half ‘varnishing in lion cans only on ptice $2.35 per half gall during this sale ...... + Colors: Golden oak, dark hogany, extra dark maho; MODERNIZE OR ARMOR WALL BOARD Economical and Easy to Apply A UPSON WALL BO. ARMOR WALL BOARD, BAMBOO LAWN RAKES, to handle, for raking lea light litter BAMBOO FISH POLES, the bridges, each “Your | | Caem stone, sky Diite, cafiaty yel- olive ‘tan, WILLIAMS Flo-lac;, for) stain+, really best way to fish from SHERWIN WILLIAMS Floor Enamel, half’ gallon cans only, regular $1.90 per half gallon, dur- ing this sale .......... - Colors: . Tile red, dust color, gray stone, gray, it oak, light tan, oak, walnut brown, Florida green. ‘ SHERWIN WILLIAMS Porch and Deck Paint, all of ‘our present stork of r golors: Tile © red, * ‘brown, stone. 4 ytd Gallons, regular $3.55, sale .. $2.25 © 1-2 gallons, regular $1.90, sale $1,20 Quarts, regular $1.05, sale” lat-Tone, half price $1.50 . 98¢e buff, bright cream, tan. oné operation, sale, regular ™ $1.50 oak, dark ma- any. YOUR ROOMS WITH UPSON RD, $40.00 VIGORO: Plant Food— SE AOS iS at SST MO BF oid fight and easy ves and 40c¢ long, the A40c 20° AT AD lt home is worthy of the best” ot 7 TIT PIPPI PII OPIIOI IIL IIT IIIT S34