Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Associated Press Day Wire Service VOLUME LIV. No. 267. Four Killed With Five i Injured In Plane Crash United Air Lines Passenger Plane Bursts Into Flames |. Following Smash In Wooded Area (By Associated Presa) PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 10.—Four persons were kill- ed and five seriously injured when a south bound United Air Lines passenger plane erashed into the thickly wooded hills near here last night and burst into flames after the pilot apparently lost his way in a dense fog. The four killed were burn-} -ed beyond recognition, and the heroic efforts of the 20- year-old stewardess and CO- pilot saved the other occu- pants from a similar fate. ~Theepilot and. three. pas- seligers are dead and the co- pilot and four passengers were injured. The steward- ess escaped unhurt. ' Miss Libby Wurgaft and Go-pilot H. -B. Woodworth, the latter with a breken nose, made a trip to the burning wreckage braving the danger of an explosion of the fuel tank, dragging out the injur- ed. Red Gross Drive To Get Going Here Tomorrow Tomorrow, Armistice Day, be- gins un ititensive Red Cross mém- bership dtive in Key West that will last one week, says Attorney W. ©, Harris, roll call chairman. What Red Cross means in the event of catastrophe and —_- can be under- kta stood, says Mr. Harris, when the 8 did such terrible damage in Mi- > ami and other points on the east coast of the state and in 1929 when Key . West suffered. He points out that the assist- ance given in Key West alone}. amounts to more than eight times the sum that has been been do- nated in Key ‘West by individuals or has been collected in mem- bership drives, * Only Part Seni Out Out of every $1 subscription! .4) afford it to give freely in this|the world doljar quotation for the) to membership paid in 50 cen goes to national headquarters, the! balance remaining in Key West.! trom the local chapter, sent here/ticating an effort to check th However, should the subscribed give $100, only 50 cents of that; leaves the city. Whatever the amount received not more than that half dollar} leaves the city for national head- SATURDAY SPECIALS Key: West Pork Milk Fed Fryers and Hea< Swift Hama, by half, Ib eyclone of 1926 | FURTHER COLD IN MANY PARTS OF SOUTH TODAY FROST AND. SUB-FREEZING TEMERATURES IN MOST| SECTIONS; COLD WAVE EX-/ TENDS TO PENSACOLA (By Asnociated Presn) Frost, accompanied in many sections by sub-freezing tempera- tures, covered most of the south early today as winter made its belated appearance after an un- usually summery autumn. Generally, temperatures | were several degrees lower in Dixie to- day than yesterday, when chiling winds brought out overcoats from the Carolinas to Texas. The frost line dropped 100 miles or so further south with last night’s cold blast drifting down from the northwest through the Mississippi valley. . Frost reports were as far south as Pensacola, | CHICAGO, Nov, 10.—After layipg out his balloon and mak- ing preparations to reach the stratosphere, Lieutenant Com- mander T. G. W. Settle today was forced to postpone his take-off due to unfavorable . weather. | | quarters for maintenance and other expenses. The minimum expense for op- erating the local chapter has been placed at $30 a mgnth, hence it will be necessary to collect $720 in the cowing drive in order that $360 can be retained in Key West for expenses of the chapter. While it is expected, says M Harris, that sufficient funds will | be secured to finance the local! chapter it is hoped that more than| sufficient will be subscribed and} that many of those who can afford to do so, will exceed the minimum of $1 for membership, subscrib- ing from $5 to $25. Cooperation Of Clubs Organizations that have prom- {iced their full cooperation in the} drive and will make every effort; to secure a record membership are | the Key West Woman’s Club, Ro- tary Club and Woman's Civic Club. As an incentive for those who! (drive, Mr. Harris cites that 738) {families have received clothing | by the national body. There have been 90 comforters, | yy blankets. 38 dozen sweaters. 1,240 yards of sheeting, in addi-} tien to socks, stockings, pants, jshirts, underelothing, —_ dresses, | dress material, bloomers, in large | quantities and distribution is cps going on. In addition to this wearing ap-} | ive | pare! the Red Cross has sent to} Complete line of ‘parts on hand Key West to be given to the poor} ' the sidewalks, waving little flags, and weeping. | ADMINISTRATION ye Key West Citsen —. KEY WEST, FLORIDA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1938. Seccccccccsesevesecccese seesevesece F eet---On Armistice Day, Marching ‘ Armistice Day 1919 ILLIONS of siStyeahe test Afota Otto. waned Db is Arinistice Daysthe first Armistice Day; the anniver- sary of World Peace. So they say. <The-marching feet say it. The message of peate rolls clear and strong from the sounding- board of pavements: » + Tramp! Tramp! Peace! Peace! Medals gleam of hefo, breasts. There is snap to the step of sol-} dier feet, swing to the soldier. hips. | Proud women stile from the crowds that line the sidewalks.| They cheer. | They. waye, handkerchiefs and little flags. i Some—a great mnahy—weep. | More to the womefp than to the men this is,Great Holiday. men fought. The women‘ waited. They lay awake through horrible, unending nights. Bombs that burst six thousand miles away. death, were no nore real to the men who crouched in trenches to these women who in silence of black night heard them at home, their hearts, | li The| in * The War to End Wi you can hear them say it, those Inarching fee Tramp! Tramp! Peace! Peace! There he comes! My Boy! How his helmet on no vpe cam see the u ar on his head, Johnny! Johnny! It’s me—Mother! He doesn’t see me. There are so many of us mothers * UT that is all over now! Surely! cht! How handsome! With here on] But he knows Lam here, He knows that wherever he marches Over There, over here—I am with him always. Tramp! Tramp! Tramp! Tramp! Peace! Peace! Peace! Peace! It is the Requiem of War. ‘ANOTHER PRICE FOR NEW COLD ! | | Kidnaped FIXES! SAN JOSE, Cal., Nov. 10.—1 PRICE AT POINT BELOW ! Brooke Hart, 22-year-old son of | WORLD DOLLAR MARK A. J. Hart, San Jose department | |store proprietor, was reported by (Ry Assectated Press) WASHINGTON, Nov 10.7—The | police today to have been kidnap. administration fixed its price of|¢d as he left the store late yes-| newly mined gold at a point bel ow | terday ckomaak: found arly today 10 miles northwest of Young Hart's car was first time teday, an action terpreted in some quarters as in-| | rmpid decline ‘of the dollar which| 9*™ Jove. and officers were secking |just previously had struck a new] to trace the kidnapers from there. low leve! Offi set the price of mined gold at five cents advance rer yestetdey: The car was reported the to sheriff's office by « rancher nam- the number and de- i wcrishion positively identifying it. who last September be- AUTO REPAIRS AT Standard Flat Rate Prices Hart, came a member of the firm of L. Hart and Son, owned by his fathe: helple | Though! | stroke their beards. Sau Of Wealthy Ciliteenion (By Associated Press) j hours, an Secccccccosccocccssocoocooces Armistice Day 1933. J GAIN they. parade in praise of Peace:.... Fourteen years —-1919-1933—is‘a long time, and memories are short. | Peace pacts yellow and crumble.. Words of everlast- ing amity, earnestly spoken,:fade, _ Always there has been Arnistace, and always there has been War. Again the marching feet: Tramp! Tramp! Peace! Peace! Thus they speak in America. But over there . A Germany shroud her conquerors fashioned, and eries out: “lam as good as you. I have a right to live.’ Imperiously she strides from Geneva, . Within her borders s will, | Ordérs snap. Heels. click. ance behind bulwarked borders watches. Barbed barriers bristle along the borders of Austria. Qver Italy roar clouds of fighting planes. In the Chaco trouble churns, y torm troope Wall, Chin racked by i over bowls banditti and by feud with Japan, si of rice. * z-songs N WASHINGTON, the fingers of a Veterans’ bureau clerk dance} over the keys of an adding machine . . . disability compensation . . Military and naval insurance, medical, hospital and domiciliary serv- ices ... The figures mount to seven billion dollars. And this is but! a dribble of the total cost of the war to the United States. Diplomats in frock coats gather. They say: “Peace! Peace!” The pavements resound to marching feet. Women who that tice Day waved handkerchiefs, twist them nervous! men shift uneasily, one foot to the other. Diplomats first Marching Feet! Tramp! Tramp! Tramp! Tramp! Forbid it be the Requiem of Peace! Marching Feet! -|CAMP WORKERS LEAVING TODAY As He Left Store| When he failed to appear at his AT CIVILIAN CONSERVA- TION CAMP home and was not heard from for | ive search was| | started. { Charles Saurez, Henry Officers told of what they be-) wWitisrd Saunders, Roland Curry, | Joseph Torres, Evangelino Bernard Elwood, Thomas kidnap the boy when three men in jand Tony Arthur, will leave over the East Const this aftern Jacksonville. Arriving there tomorrow mr lieved was a previous attempt to) a large car tried to crowd his auto- mobile to the curb, but were un- ing they will be served breakfast; successful, and after they had fol- and after the morning repast wil continue to Savannah, Ga, where lowed him for several blocks, he they will go to Fort Screven, Ga. At Fort Sereven there will be two weeks of intensive ¢ -'and setting op exercises which they will be sent to a ci lian conservation camp for a regu- lar period of work. outdistanced them. train es ine aft HOLIDAY NOTICE Saturday, November 11, Armis-| e Day, being a legal holiday in} These Key Westers were select-| e state of Florida, this bank will|ed by Captain C. G. w onquered in a war to end all war, throws off the! In Moscow and Tokyo envoys bow formally, and exchange mem- | oranda. | Japan’s growing army bivouacs in Manchukuo—even inside the | Great -;eeee SELECTED FOR ACTIVITIES xe Carey,} For 58 Years Devoted to the Best Interests of Key West CUBAN REVOLUTION HALTS They Mark Peace "¢ Hapedul F ied Aniditiowcadey Atal Its Troubled F ifteenth AFTER BITTER FIG By DALE HARRISON ‘KENTUCKY VOTE CONTINUING TO FAVOR REPEAL | WITH TABULATION ABOUT HALF THROUGH, a ISTS HAVE 179,000 AGAINST OPPOSING 132,000 (ty Amecinted Vevend LOUISVILLE, Nov. 10.—The| repeal vote continued to gain vie- | tory in Kentucky as the tabulation | reached the half way mark today.! With 21,000 of the state's am precincts tabulated, the count; j stood 179,000 for 132,000 against repeal of the Eighteenth! and Amendment, % pie Prohibition has been; abolished by the action of 36 other states. | AMERICAN-SOVIET ISSUE DISCUSSED NO DEFINITE AGREEMENT IS | REACHED BETWEEN ROOSE- VELT AND LITVINOFF already | { } (By A jed Press) | WASHINGTON, Nov. 10.—Ad- ministration officials reported} | progress today on American-Soviet) negotiations as President Roose-j| {velt and Litvinoff exchanged: views, but it was made definitely known that a lot of work mast) |still be transacted before a def- linite agreement is in m pronpect. | escce vecceee| | WHERE TO GO | ewccccccccercosccccccccs TONIGHT Palace—“The Fighting Cow-} “Morning Glory” and to Hollywood.” j TOMORROW Club—Armistice Day; Caba | es nners.” Moonlight and Pret-| orning Glory.” Legion's Arm- including Ps Day program, sports. | PARADE.OF SURPRISES 5 - j amatic climaxes are Hl packed into this gripping | story of the north woods 150 KILLED IN BATILE Fifteen Hundred Rebels Surrender During Fort Attack; Veteran Leader Of Revolters Killed (By Associated Press) HAVANA, Nov. 10.— Havana stepped off today in a resolute march back to order and calm after two of the bloodiest days in the \ city’s history in which Colonel Fulgencio Batista’s loyal soldiers put down the revolution that for a time | Shook the foundations of the present regime. and uncounted woundéd, a grue- some reminder of the - strife in which rebel troops. and oppositionist civilian groups sought to restore the former provisional :government uf President Manuel, de Ces- jpedes to poWer. 2}, | Among the dead was the picturesque veteran rebel leader, Juan Blas Hernan- dez, who lost his life in the first engagement within the city. Among the wounded was at least one woman who with several others entered Atares Castle with rebels shortly before dawn yester- day, a few hours before Batista’s loyal troops opened a devastating attack which | resulted in the surrender of some 1,500 revolters in what was regarded asa decisive blow at the revolutionary | Cause, The only remaining ob- stacle to complete tran- quility today was continued sniping by scattered rebel | bands, ‘ANOTHER PAY DAY FOR RELIEF UNIT Another pay is being distribyt- ed to clients of the Emergency Relief Council this afternoon who have completed the tasks for this | period. FORBIDDEN VALLEY Bs Wasss Brnos Mowsny [I | A SERIAL— | Starting Monday, Nov. 13 Disbursement teday amounts to This in addition to paid cut | previously | makes a total of $2,051.37 for the first 10 days in November. STRAND THEATER § a Dougias Fairbanks, Jr., MORNING GLORY ice Brady-Jackie Cooper in CENTRAL MARKET C. E. ALBURY, Prop. 805 Fleming St. land needy, 6,000 sacks of flour|| Meltzer Motor Company : nt open for business on that day.|8. A. and W. L. Qui [meme ‘Te Hollywood | that was handled by the forces = Chevrolet, Pontiac snd Baick Ji7™? “™eteslly punctual im biel tip FIRST NATIONAL BANK! senting the C. C.'C. who were in Phone 209! the lighthouse department. habits ‘ OF KEY WEST. nov9-2t Key West yesterday.