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THE. REY WEST CITIZEN aS ‘ coe MONDAY,: JANUARY 15, 1934. — : Bronchial Irritations | TODAY’S WEATHER nin . nerally fai ther toni form for coughs, eolds and bron- Temperature : paar ‘air weather tonight and chit, knowing how dangerous: it a re is to let them hang on. t| East Gulf: Gentle to moderate! Creomulsion with creosote and north shifting to east winds, six other highly important _medi- cinal elements, quickly and ef- fectively stops coughs and colds that otherwise might lead to seri- Pressure is moderately low this} ous trouble. 4 : oe reomulsion is powerful in the morning from northern Michigan! treatment of colds and coughs, yet PAGE TWO ~ The Key Wiest Citsen Published Daily Except Sunday By THE CITIZEN PUBLISHING CO., INC. i. P. ARTMAN, President. From The Citizen Building Corner Greene and Aiin Streets CAN SPEND MONEY *FOR’PEACE POCOOCOS OOS COCOOOOOSOLOTEDESECOEOLSESOVOOEOESOOSS Daily Cross-word Puzzle Doccccessocccecccccenscascessoescococesomcevcese ACROSS Solution ot Saturday's Puzzie 9 Pigment 1. Kind of bttip- : 10, Meiictnat: pine mango ABIL IE] pian! . Lopsidet aes ae }. Chum . Edible sea- wi Constructed Liquor 15, Pertaining to _ punishment Some people are terribly’ ‘alarmed about the volume of money being borrowed by the Federal Government. They. ‘ldse sight of the fact, pointed out by Walter Lippman, that while Federal loans have increased considerably loans by states and other units of government haye . been far below normal, that the total volume of loans by government in the aggregate are fa Highest Lowest . Mean .. Normal Mean Rai Yesterday’s Precipitation .0 Ins.! Normal Precipitation 05 Ins. | “Phin record covers 24-hour perio E Is Only Daily Newspaper in Key West and Monroe ‘ ‘County. land " . roundish underground stern . River ot for- etfulness . Infant 23. Tumuttuous OMe) (>| >|sTAl> lI ee ee nee ant Entered at Key West, Florida, as second class matter FIPTY-FIFTH YEAR Member of the Associate The Associated WEATHER CONDITIONS Gi EE) lated Press Press is exclusively entitled to use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or’ not otherwise credited in this paper and also DWE) Ge the Idcal news published here, SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year. Six Month: ‘Three Month: One Month Weekly ..... Maée known @n appfication, All reading notices, catds.6f respect, obituary notices, etcy the rate of 10-cents a line. Notices for entertainments hy..churches from which a revenue is to be derived are.5 cents a line. The Citizen is an open forum and invites discus- sion of public issues and subjects of local or general interest but it will not publish anonymous communi- cations. NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES he-chatged for at Pesorutions of |, probably not more than would have been borrowed in normal times, although the smaller political units and net the Federal Government would have done the borrow- ing. In effect, the Federal Government is borrowing because it has the credit and much of its expenditures are in the shape of loans which will be repaid. Those who are agitated bythe extent of Federal borrowing should think back to the days of the World War. This struggle cost the United States between - $40,000,- 000,000 and $50,000,000,000, spent in less However, ‘because the <[>[AR|Z/ SIRE MEARE: ir] >| aol) [OL Z)ral <] MRS nO] Zita] “y) lO] > |v] poser Atmosphere . Harmonize Bone . Like a tittle man 33. Endeavor . Symbol for ethy! 36. Asks: Scotch . Clear gain . Thsen char- Rane) Eb moe [=| bak4 |) [>| S|—|Z]>) >| . Debate . Depression between Mmenuntain peaks, 52. Binds . Wriggling 5. Inhabitant of: suffix . Purposes Rack for what hew acter . Conjunction + Voteano 2. Monkeylike animal . Custom - Comes into view disorder 22. Somewwat rough to the toucks 2. Employers 29. Hented cham- ber 30. Brisile Come forth Whole numiter FREI) Me Ee) WOME Loin SS -/=|2] . Soft fond + . Epoch, . The present ending at 8 o'clock thin morning. Sun rises - Sun sets .... Moon rises Sea level, 30.20. Sea level, 30.20. 1 ; areas overspread all m. m./ 4. . m.| tons of the m. j there has been northern California. a. m, today: {this morning in the Lowest High Night Yesterday light frost {land, and relatively low in north- - m.| ern Texas; while high pressure country. moderate snow has occurred dur- ing the last 24 hours throughout most of the Lake region and in} yse, -| the upper Ohio Valley and eaxt- ward over New England, and! light tures are somewhat below normal on jlantie and East Gulf States with reported eastern and extreme northwestern} {eastward over northern New Eng.| it is absolutely harmless and is pleasant and easy to take. Your own druggist arantees Creomulsion by refunding your money if you are not relieved after taking Creomulsion as di- rected. Beware the cough or cold that hangs on. Always keep Creo- mulsion on hand for -instant (adv.) _ | an James Abbott, of the Univer- he Mi sity of Southern California, who pera | is being hailed as the coming sprint sensation of the nation, re- cently ran the 100 yards in 9.7 Pe: and the 220 in 21 seconds lat other sec- Light to South At- in north-' Last than two years. q 2 country was prosperous, half of this Walton Bldg., ATLANTA. amount was paid with current taxation and E only half through bond issues. If the gov- ernment could borrow some twenty-odd eeu ion kde billion dollars, then, none of which was spent to build up the resources of © the 72 52 42 32 34 58 FROST, LANDIS & KOHN 250 Park Ave., New York; 35 East Wacker Drive, CHICAGO; General Motors Bldg., DETROIT; Florida, and freezing in northern Georgia, and readings are also below normal along the middle and north Atlantic coast, in the upper Rio Grande Valley and in portions of the Pacific Coast States; while elsewhere temperatures are gen- erally above the seasonal average. Key West’s First Funeral Home Key West's First Ambulance Service PRITCHARD Phone 548 Never Sleeps ee ee Buffalo Chicago Denver . Detroit . Duluth - Eastport Gi WILL always seek the truth and print it 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 mouthpiece of any faction or class; always do its u public welfare; never tolerate injvstics; denounce vice and; ! IMPROVEMENTS FOR KEY WEST ADVOCATED BY THE CITIZEN Water and Sewerage. Bridges to complete Road to Main- land. Free Port. Hotels and Apartments Bathing Pavilion. Aquarium. \ Airports—Land and Sea. Consolidation of County and City Governménts. Professional reformers will be unhap- py in heaven with nobody to-reform. Today’s best: Girl babies are hard- est to get to sleep says a nurse. Yea, es- pecially if they are about sixteen—Key West Citizen—Times-Union. The publisher of The Citizen once lent a man $25. It was worth that much to get rid of him forever. Sometimes a lesser amount will do the trick. Good riddance to bad rubbish. You get the best results when you ad- vertise in The Key West Citizen. Read the advertisements and benefit thereby. And patronize those merchants who have the p ‘galls for of $31,179 every minute, night and day, for six solid months. Even financiers are flabbergasted, perhaps more so than the ordinary mortal, because they know more about the proposed orgy. The youth who thinks education means that he will not have to work for a living is all wrong. The more highly ed- ucated a person becomes the more neces- sary it is to work hard for he realizes more than ever how much there is to be accom- plished. Education does not mean a soft snap for anyone. Lowell Thomas, the, news commenta- tor, Friday night attributed the slogan “To the victor belongs the spoils? to Thomas Jefferson, but in that he is probably ,mis- taken, though Jefferson may have'used the term. Bartlett's familihr quotations credits the phrase to Wm. L. Marcy, who was born in 1786 and died in 1857. In a speech made in the senate in January, 1982, he said, “They see nothing wrong in the rule that to the victors belong the spoils.” As a matter of fact the familiar quotation was used by the early Romans and is as old as politics itself. You simply cannot get away from human nature. country but all for purposes of destruction, why can’t it borrow as much time of depression to keep its starving to death, especially »when«by« far the larger: part of the: expenditures»isifor constructive purposes, investments** which will pay dividends in the future? s.9 A TRAGEDY RECALLED » «*: A rivalry for the affections of a beau- tiful young actress still in her teens, which led to one of New York’s : most noted tragedies in high life more than sixty years ago, was recalled by the death of Mrs. Helen Josephine Mansfield Reade in Paris, at the age of 78. ne For “Josie” Mansfield was the woman in the case. Jim Fiske, Jr., a powerful figure in Wall Street, was one of the suitors, while Edward S. Stokes, his one- time partner, was the other. In 1872 Stokes shot Fiske to death on the stairway of the old Grand Central Hotel? Through powerful political influence Stokes was let off with a four-year sentence. Whem he died i: 1901, Tammany friends gave him an elaborate funeral with a band of,200 musicians. Miss Mansfield married Robert L. Reade, a New York lawyer, in 1891. Reade, ‘an incorrigible drunkard and dtug addict, was declared insane in 1897 and died short- ly afterward. WAP Sips ee Mrs. Reade’s death was due to a fall while shopping in a department store in Paris. Thus ended a long life filled with many and varied experiences, including stage triumphs, romance and tragedy, which made big news in the days of long ago. NOTED NEGRO CHEMIST Dr. George W. Carver, Negro scientist, head of the Research Department of the’ has been. generally | Tuskegee Institute, , gen recognized as.a scientist of unusual ‘ability and originality” Usiig wel Riowir"ait | very ¢omirion articles he has! défronstrated | the..possibility: of extracting -mapyocthings: from them. His latest discovery: enngerns }i ‘the familiar peanut. ar i 4, It seems that Dr. Carver ~h is- covered a mineral oil in peanuts, which may aid wonderfully in the recovery of in- fantile paralysis. “It is the, greatest fat producer I have ever seen,” says the scientist, who says “I have used it on two hundred and fifty persons and it has never failed, so far as I can find out.”” However, he is modest and makes no big claims as yet. “It has been given out that I have found a cure,” said Dr. Carver; “I have not, but it does look hopeful.” A DIRTY TRICK A communist agitator rode into Hyde Park, and, after leaning his bicycle against the railings, mounted a soap box and proceeded to address the crowd. “If your family is hungry,” he shouted, “raid a shop and take food for them, and don’t care what anybody says. If your joney in a peyaia-brom | ot wl 13 eet a a ae : aa a i Sees agen Per rT Te . Ao wn wee ae 2nane ae neds Yi tcetoegen oll oo, KEY WEST IN DAYS GONE BY Happenings Here Just 10 Years Ago Today As Taken From The Files Of The Citizen Publication of an item in. The Citizen a few days ago that the chamber of commerce may ac-' quire the ¢ollection of marine ‘curiosities -owned by Chestey ‘hampson, of 324 Margaret street, has caused a lot of favorable com- ment. One visitor said he had, seen the collection on a number of occasions and said it is the best tof its kind he has ever seen. He’ is writing a seried of articles coy,; ering Key West and the marine ‘collection of Mr. Thompson is; ! prominently mentioned. He voiced | | the opinion that of all the curi ties of like kind to be exhibited ii Madison Square Garden nex! | month, none would be better than’ that of Mr. -Thompson. Major .George E. Brown, ; Joseph Watkins, Charles Lewin! and H. A. Gitison, comprising the engineering committee of Arthur Sawyer Post American Legion, will hold a meeting this evening | te consider the plans to have the post’s clubhouse completed as soon a3, possible. | ‘wo Key West negro boys and from Palm Beach’ wererkilled Flan, ‘ sautamobile. | fe car struck a stump while zo-| at a high rate rT. ed, .¢ The yy West boys wh Mire Bed Frank Sawyer ahd James Rob- erts. Ansel MicKens,’ ‘attother Key West boy, was badly injured} in the smash-up. The bodies of; Roberts and Sawyer arrived on; the morning train. ' Phil Pritchard, formerly of Key! West, arrived this morning from‘ West Palm Beach and left for Ha-; vana. He goes to try and arrange, a series of fights in Cuba with! some of the good scrappers of the | Cuban capital. | It has been decided not to open; the golf course today as was an-| nounced. It was intended to open | | four holes, but on further consid-| \ eration it was decided to not have jany opening until the course is jcompleted. ,,, As several residents of Key West have asked that Friday night! be substituted for Thursday night! for one of the weekly band con-) certs, JosephMarucci has given! } ae A | | Today's Birthdays . eenece Lieutenant General Robert L. Bullard, U. S. A., retired, of New York, born at Youngsboro, Ala., “1783 years ago. Henry Bruere, president of the Bowery Savings Bank, New York City, born at St. Charles, Mo., 52 i years ago. George M. Reynolds of Chicago, noted banker, born at Panora, Towa, 69 years ago. Gottfried von Purucker of Cali- fornia, theosophist leader, born 60. years ago. Governor Ruby Laffoon of Kentucky, born at Madisonville, Ky.. 65 years ago. Pierre S. Du Pont of Wilming- ton, Del., noted manufacturer, born ‘there, 64 years ago. + Rex Ingram, American moving picture director, born in Ireland, H 42 years ago. Major Leonard Darwin, son of the great evolutionist, Charles, born 84 years ago. cently f-om Key West to go to the assistance of the Steamship-Géor- gia, in trouble off the ‘Bahama | Bank, sent a radio’ nedsagée "tb advising that thé’* steamé¥'* béen fleated and wat being towed by the Warbler-to-her:destination } is: News, Vas Editorial comment:, In onder to, serve a community effectively a newspaper must have the stipport of that community and the édpport must be commensurate with the service rendered. Gus Reyes, of Key West, j moral victory in his 10-round fight with Frankie Nanci in Miami last ight, although Nanci was igiven the decision at the end of the bout. The fight was fast; from start to finish. Reyes was | 4} ed down several times, twige al- most taking the count, but ‘zallied each time before the gong anji fin- ished the fight. } Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lord an- nounce the birth of a datighter born in the home at 1118, erine street yesterday morning. The S. and F. Fleitas ci fac- tory, which. with all its effects and appurtenances was recently bought by Jackson Lowe. and wife hasn’t got a coat, pick the best fur |# Convincing reason why the band/ Charles J. Curry was opened yes- coat you and the sequences!” After several more minutes in this strain, he dismounted from his soap box, and his next words were: “Who are the scoundrels who took my bike?”—Toronto Globe. see, ignore con- would be handicapped if the sub- stitution is made. The entire; jroutine for the season has been) {mapped out the director says. Con- jcert nights arranged and practice nights sets. To have to rearrange this program would entail a great deal of inconvenience, he shows. , Tee Tug Warbler which left re. | terday by the new owners. _ [ Resingl it ey El’ Paso . Hatteras Oklahoma City Phoe: | WEATHER FORECAST Key West and Vicinity: and slightly warmer tonight rid | Tuesday; northeast or east winds. “Florida: warmer tonight and Tuesday; pos- sibly Sit. Ste. M: Seattle . Tampa Washington Williston Wytheville CONDENSED STATEMENT OF CONDITION OF THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF KEY WEST as at the close of business December 30, 1933, mix .. Overdrafts ie :. States .... Municipal, Pu United (TM 8 p. m. Tuesday) Fair gentle to moderate; Capital Surplus and U Circulation Deposits ... t Fair and _ slightly; light frost in exposed places | in north and interior of central, portions tonight. Jacksonville to Florida Straits: Gentle to moderate north shifting to northeast to east winds OFFERINGS FOR THE NEW YEAR ROOFING, BOTH SLATE SURFACE AND SMOOTH SURFACE, from $3.80 °"'"" $1.40" N . : . SLE aS SD EB. | Ld. SPOOLS BAGS and 87 t) GREEN “SOLKA,” cannot be torn, 60 i) GREEN “SOLKA,” cannot, be tern, per roll . (Slate Surface) SURETY :— _. Light weight, per roll Medium weight, per roll Heavy weight, per roll 1O4-49 hy $1.75 Sits bs 1x6 No. 3 Square Edged Lumber, good for sheathing and other purposes; mies. Gate 5,000 ft. in stock; now at bargain per M. Fao 1x8 No. 3 Tongue and Groove; also a very good sheathing, New shipment of Decotint just received. Water Paint in all popular inside colors, 5 tb package Sherwin Williams’ Master Painters’ Flat White. inside wall paint, in white only, per gallon Keep rubbish 6 with Large ringing Yaught, No. 2 and No. 3, .. 30c-36e Loans and Investments .... Banking House, Furniture and Fixtures Bonds of States and Pos- sessions of the United BULLSEYE:— Comptroller’s Call RESOURCES $ 244,549.92 13.41 82,907.75 169,370.68 a Railroad and Other Bonds and Securities Demand Loans, Stock Ex- change Collateral .... Stock Federal Bank 102,929.66 93,857.6F Reserve vern- ment Securities ....... 684,838.42 Cash and due from Banks 301,051.14 1,358,042.56 $1,635,513.64 LIABILITIES $ 100,000,090 59,774.06 100,000.00 1,375,739.58 $1,635,513.64 DEPOSITARY OF THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT MEMBER ‘OF THE*FEDERAL RESERVE’ SYSTEM MEMBER OF THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION GMS PID DDL DSTI EL. Light weight, per roll (Smoo-h Surface) es * $27.00 Try this popular Inside Cold 60¢c $2.00 GAL. GARBAGE CANS: Just A reliable LMF AP ES 8 BP SF f oa 4 N LILIES SIBLE SDE set ‘.