The Key West Citizen Newspaper, March 5, 1934, Page 1

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Associated Press Day Wiré Service VOLUME LV. No. 55. Order Calling For Immediate Expulsion Of Samuel Insull From Greece Issued Today Earlier He Was Deseribed CONSIGNEE CALLS As Being Unwilling To/ FOR RIFLES HELD main There CLAIMED NO RESTRICTIONS, ARE PLACED ON TYPE of GUNS RECENTLY FOUND AT; FRE!GHT DEPOT PRINCESS WINS IN SUIT FILED LITIGATION WAS AGAINST METRO-GOLDWYNK-MALER FOR FILM PRODUCTION (By Associated Press) LONDON, March 5.—The jury in the libel suit of Prin- cess Irena Youssoupoff to- day awarded her 25,000 pounds, about $125,000, (By Associated Press) ATHENS, March 6.—The foreign: minister telephoned the American minister to in- form Washington today that he had ordered the immedi-| After an official investigation ate expulsion of Samuel In-| #5 to the ownership and destina- sulk: tion of the shipment of Krag-Jor- gensen rifles which was held up at! The minister of interior the F. E. C. R’y., freight depot, at the American embassy} instructions were received to de-| was imformed and was di-|liver the shipment of the con- rected to see that the former acs sts According to information re- a aeagae left Greece ceived by The Citizen the shipment | ape Suit St nipant ceoeie heard and that his expulsion was! consisted of obsolete army rifles break and sorrow for Judith Lane. expected at once. \that can be purchased at a num-! She is the principal character in Thus Greek intention, re-| er of Places throughout the the serial of that title, starting in country and there no restri ad ied Key West Citizen today. garding Insull, wanted at z ine < Chicago, to face charges tion placed on these sales. | Jeanne Bowman is the author. growing out of the collapse against the Metro-Goldwyn- Mayer Limited, makers of the film “Rasputin and the Em- press.” ‘JUDITH WILL FIGHT) | She Refused ' To Break Faith—A New Serial Pocccccccaesessoccccces® Five million dollars, power, j wealth, everything you could de- | F amous Sons Of Famous F athers (a The Kep West Citsen KEY WEST, FLORIDA, MONDAY, MARCH 5, 1984. SCIENCE EXPLAINS INHERITED TALENT Pr errr iii CLAES MARTENSZEN VAN ROSENVELT JANNETJE SAMUELS 4 HAMEL % ‘THOMAS. NICHOLAS HEYLTJE “JANS: KUNST JOHANNES CORNELIA adesevety HOFFMAN / JACOBUS I MARIA WALTON CORNELIUS VAN SCHAACK ROOSEVELT MARY R. ASPINWALL 1800 (saRan DELANO ELLIOTT | Horn Moseley, U. KEY WEST, 8 a. m. ........°5 Warmest City in United State PRICE FIVE CENTS Roosevelt Outlines Program To Code Authorities Seeking Much Greater Employment COMING HERE FOR INSPECTION POST; WILL BE ACCOMPANIED BY AIDE DE CAMP; TO LOOK OVER ARMY BARRACKS AND OTHER EQUIPMENT Major General George Van S. 4., comman- Area, will arrive in Key West Thurs- der of the Fourth Corps day to inspect Key West Barracks, He will be acc. panied by Cap- tain E. C. Bomar, aide de camp. Major General Moseley left} Atlanta Saturday and is today in! St. Petersburg inspecting the; cadets of the Florida Military Academy and tomorrow will be in} Miami for inspection of the regu- lar Army Ai- Corps unit at Chap-}| CENERAL MOSELEY Chief Executive Says Only In This Way Can We Continue Recovery For Return To Prosperity (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, March 5. —President Roosevelt pre- sented today to assembled NRA code authorities a sum- mons for further reduction of working hours as a means to spread employment. “I give to industry this chal- Tenge,” he said to industrial lead- ers confronting him at the Con: tuticnal hall. “It is an imme: ate task of industry to reemploy more people at purchasing wages and to do it now. Only thus can we continue recovery and restore the balance we seek, “It is worth while keeping in the *sont of our heads the thought jthat the people in this country whose incomes are less than $2,- 000 a year buy more than two thir¢s of all the goods sold here. As soon as this was establish-/ Big Tom Bevine, engineer and ed and orders issued to allow the builder, had been Judith’s employ- : ee consignee to get the cases, J. Ri-| er before her marriage. Even ear- of his enterprises, officially was declared. Earlier Insull was describ- ed as unwilling to prolong! vero, to whom the rifles and other | j lier, when Judith was a penniless equipment were consigned, was orphan, Bevins had guided her to notified and Saturday after noon | happiness and a career, he was allowed to take possession. | Bevins was building the Rio | to his genius—when death struck Diablo dam—a lasting monument COL. THEODORE ROOSEVELT ANNA ELEANOR ROOSEVELT” The Roosevelt family is an example cited by scientists who say that heredity’s no accident, but .FRANKLIN DO, ROOSEVELT man Field and on Wednesday | cadets of Riverside Academy. His iti y also calls for in- spection of Civilian Conservation Corps camps at Miami and Home- stead and these will be visited “It is logical that if the total } amount that goes in wages to this group of human beings is steadily increased, merchants, em- ployers and investors will in the long run get more benefit from his fight to remain in his! Athenian retreat. UNERAL SUNDAY pie tien ra ponding * FOR FAY M. CRUZ 2s strom of business and court fights. rather something irresistible working through genes and chromosomes to carry on family traits from generation to generation. Here is a portion of the Roosevelt family tree to show the link of common ancestry uniting the late Theodore Roosevelt, his niece, Mrs. Frank lin D. Roosevelt, and President A friend said Insull had| commented “I am old and! © iste E will go “ronte-and/4NFANT DIED AT HOME HERE! “die.” PINDER FUNERAL THIS AFTERNOON DECEASED DIED ON FRIDAY AT RESIDENCE ON EAT- ON STREET Funeral services for Mrs. Char- lotte Pinder, 87 years old, who} died last Friday at her home, 924 Eaton street. will be held this afternoon 4:30 o'clock from the! First Methodist church where the body was placed at 2 o'clock. Rev.! George Summers will officiate. Pallbearers will be Robert) George Watkins, Christopher Knowles, H. Roberts, :James| og pes opie and Peter, a. deceased is survived by) two daughters, Mrs Ellen Kemp; and | Nellie . Russell, One son, les Pinder. Also 16} grandchildren, 38 great grand- children and seven great-great- grandchildren. { “Lindbergh Of France,” a - Overdue On Flight, Heard From (By Associated Press) PARIS, March 5.—Havas News Agency dispatch from Berlin to- day said Dieudonne Costes “the Lindbergh of France,” more than 40 hours overdue on a flight to Copenhagen, landed at Munster, Germany, last night. Costes report here said he ex- Pressed astonishment that oa had been anxiety in France con- corning his disappearace. SLEDS RI ER SESE JUST ARRIVED Fresh Shipment of WHITMAN’S CANDIES : From 25¢ Box Up GARDNER’S PHARMACY, Phone 177 Free Delivery, RELA CRITE BEDE | For Tom Bevins left to his for- | mer secretary the entire estate— with a secret letter 6f Mstructions. That letter told Judith that bus- iness associates were planning to double-cross Bevins and block the Rio Diablo dam for their own profit—and asked Judith to car- Fay Marie Cruz, two years old,!ty on. ‘It foretold with startling} daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar} accuracy that Bevins’ widow and Cruz, died 8:15 o'clock Saturday | daughter, under the influence of evening at the home in the rear! treacherous partners, would con- of 418 White street. j test the will, that they would seut- Funeral services were held 5) tle Bevins’ ideals, o’clock yesterday afternoon from | Judith took up the the residence, Rev. Shuler Peele, | of Fleming Street Methodist} church, pfficiated. Fay is survived by her parents, | two brothers, Robert and Oscar, Jr., Grandmother Mrs. Mary Eliza Brady and Grandfather An- tonio Cruz. TENDER IVY TO LEAVE TONIGHT | Lighthouse: Ténder Ivy will sail| this evening for -Caxambas and_ Cape Romano on the west coast! to replace buoys and attend hia | ‘other. work. On the return of the ship ma-| terial will be loaded and she will) “depart for Miami going through Hawk Channel. IN REAR WHITE STREET SATURDAY EVENING challenge. : | | JEANNE BOWMAN { She knew it meant pain and suf- | fering, but she must keep faith. | But the cruelest blow of all | struck Judith from a quarter she! least expected. Norman Dale,! her husband, was a partner in the lin, he said he landed at Munster,’ law firm contesting Bevins’ will. | Instead of standing beside Ju-' which te about (200 calles from ii, Norman was on the other| Paris, on a direct line with Copen.| side, “aire the battle for ‘Ma-| thile Bevins hildh t- | fogs Saturday. j Jeanne {dith Lane He again took off at noon to- paperwoman. Reached by telephone at Ber- wman author of “Ju- is a California news-! She was born in Tacoma, W gton, and sailed on her fathe: lumber schooner, ee) When she was less than a year old, WHERE TO co to San Francisco, She worked as a reporter on @ newspapers in San Francisco, Oak- TONIGHT land, Portland, Fresno and Salt Palace—“The Private Life of Lake in the west; and in Texas Henry VIII.” - ete Worth and — es eR ” ntonio, e once promised her Strand—"Going Hollywood: ; mother she would lets marry a {sea-faring man, because sailors ‘are at home so rarely, but says she “compromised and married a {traveling man instead.” “Judith Lane” starts in The Citizen today, day from Munster to Copenhagen. TOMORROW -“The Private Life Henry V M1: S Strand—“Easy to Love” “Ever Since Eve.” of and | of gifted fathers, } prove a newly established form-| | scendants in the present near-kin cestors. | group of the president may be: ed, | gifted persons. | Bencies | and the customs officials report- Franklin D. Roosevelt. By HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE | the laws of transmission of ‘chro- (Associated Preas Scie jitor)| niosonies from parents to chil- COLD SPRING HARBOR, N.' dren. Y.. March 5.—The new tables of | Two Dozen ‘Heredity-Makers’ genetics and heredity indicate! Every human being has 24 of that “F. D.” is by no means like-! these chromosomes in every cell ly to be the last of the great’ of his body. The chromosomes are Roosevelts. } almost inv Rather do these scientific a growing American tendency} to height. There seem to be toward Plato’s dream, the ideal| thousands of these traits, each republic of genius. carried by a gene, a particle ap- He is one of many famous sons} Parently no larger than a few or gifted fam-| atoms, The genes in strings form ilies, now stepping into key posi-| the chromosomes. tions in national life. All of — In mating, the child never re- | ceives all 24 chromosomes from one parent. He receives 12 from the father and 12 the mother— | with never a variation of even ne in this division. The mechan- All indicate that gifted famil ism of mating insureg this equal now that this nation has ceased t ivision automatica#y, and be- be a melting pot, may come into) yond any human control. increasing dominance. Such fam-!” Handi '¢ Down Good And Bad ilies are not new in history. There|* So a gifted father never can were the Gracchi in Rome, the} transmit more than half of bis Hapsburgs in central Europe, the) traits to his son. The half may be Stuarts with their peculiar gifts} either good or bad, or a mixture. for winning the love of the Eng-| Their choice by nature is as com- lish people. But never in the past have the} roll of dice. hereditary controls been well un- Not even half, however, is the derstood. As tabulated now, they] father’s contribution because show the surprising possibility] some of his chromosomes have that one out of every two ula of heredity, showing how genius is transmitted. Gifted Families In History cuts the father’s contribution lof qualities to his son to about These formulae of heredity; one-quarter of his own character. were worked out here at the eu-| record office of the Car-| All the rest- negie institution of Washington,| itance—is from near kin; it is] under direction of Dr. Harry H.| from near kin—parents, grand- | Laughlin. They rest directly upon’ parents, uncles, aunts and cous- or half of inhet- le threads, carrying! jn-! all the traits of heredity, from! dices spot him as one example of genius to crime and hair color) | pletely haphazard as the gambler’s| de-! come directly from his near an-) This fact, it is estimat-} The mother gives another quarter. | | ins—that the genetic index gets its predictions of the future gen- erations, ‘Influential’ Relatives There are from 30 to 40 such near kin in average families. If only one of these 40 has genius} for music, then the chances for} children of the group to be talent- ed musically is one in 40. Here is where the startling view of the Roosevelt inheritance | comes in. Of 30 of the presi- dent’s néar kin, 15 have been gift- ed persons. They included two philanthropist, financier, scien- tist, railroad president, banker, welfare worker, two authors,| sculptor, portrait painter, diplo- mat, writer and two architects. From the standpoint of hered-| ity even more striking than the Roosevelts with their two presi- dents, is the Barrymore family. Unpublished tables of this group of actors show what may happen when both father and mother contribrte the same talent—all 24 chromosomes-—with certainty, scientists maintain, that the talent will be present in the child. Born To The Stage The progenitors of this family | were John Drew and Luise Lane, | both with ability as actors, Their! descendants to date number only) 18. Yet four gained world fame} as actors. They are the late John; Drew and Lionel, Ethel and John! Barrymore. Already 12 have! shown unusual histrionic talent. | That is two out of three, and is probably too low a figure. Fi some of the descendants are still too young for their abilities to be} known. ! PEOERSELE DS ! South Carolina Man Kills Wife | | CAPTURE PIGEON | - And Three Children And Himself AT LIGHTHOUSE “ARTICLES SOLD AT. (fy Associated Press) LAURENS, Sovth* Carolina, CUSTOMS BUILDING March 5.—J. L. Rush, 50, killed | pees | inp TAKEN AT ALLIGATOR STATION HAD RUBBER BAND ON LEG can, Second assistant his wife and three daughters to-) jecper at Alligator Reef light- P day and then burned their home cigarettes and tobacco 4 down around his own body. were items sold at public auction Cigars, At the coroner's inquest meagre this noon at the customs house. They represented goods on which the duty had not been paid. wife and daughters, rangi in age from 11 to 16 with an axe, then shot himself after setting the house afire. Physicians said Rash had been There was some spirited bid- ding and at the conclusion of the sale the purchasers were satisfied | | ed satisfactory results. suffering from ill health lately,, the markings it is a homing and had been mentally depressed.i pigeon, commonly called carrier. | house, reported by telephone to the depot this morning the cap- ture of a pigeon at the light. Mr. Duncan gave no particulars of the manner in which the cap- evidence indicated Rush slew his ture was effected but advised the markings to be a rubber band on the left leg with the number 753 and on the right leg an aluminum band with the figures 29-2085 and the letters C. 0. H. While no description of the bird was given it is concluded from | Matinee: Balcony, 10¢; Orches- Wednesday afternoon, Thursday he will make his in- spection here. Afterwards he will proceed to St. Augustine for} a visit with Brigadier General | Vivian Collins, in command of the} Florida National Guard. Afterwards an inspection fs to be made of the ROTC unit of the University of Florida at Gaines- ville and then leave Saturday for} headquarters in Atlanta. NOU.S.SHIPS | IN PORT TODAY | For the first time in months] there is, not one United States| service hip in the harbor. The} Bainbridge, navy destroyer, sa ed at midnight last night to ec tact the U. S. S. Antares in Ha-] vana. The Antares is scheduled to ar-| rive at Key West with stores] within the next few days and other vessels are expected. | make our choice. increased volume of sales.” The president said that a year aco, the day after inauguration ; day, the nation was suffering and shrinking under ec@nomic pres- }Sare 86 Titolerable “that collapse was at hand. “We had arrived at the day to We made that choice, The American people re- i sponded to the call for action with leager enlistment in the struggle against ruthless, selfseeking, reck- less greed and economic anarchy. “We undertook lawful constitu- tional processes to reorganize the distribution system of production | and exchange. “Purpose of that reorganization was not only to bring back pros- perity, It was far deeper than that. “Reorganization must be per- i 'manent for the rest of our lives, in that never again will we permit ! social conditions which permitted vast numbers of our population to exist in an un-American way which permitted maldistribution of wealth and power.” Senate Committee Approves Wilcox Bankruptcy Measure THIEVES ENTER EXPRESS OFFICE : NO LOOT WAS TAKEN HOW. EVER, SAYS MANAGER OF CONCERN ' Thieves entered the down town office of the Railway Ex--ess company last nig*t but nothing} indicated that the » was any loot taken, The marau through a rea; gained entrance An exami- in the rear of ough which en. shows they must; as the spe: is only about e nes between frame and do Smith said he s broken open y and dirty eck of the goods and A t be made after finger package will (My Associated Prensa) WASHINGTON, March 5— The cenate judiciary committee by prise vote of eight to five, today approved Congressman Mark Wilcox’ lief bill as passed by the house at al bankruptcy re- | last session. The vote overturned the sub- committee ballot of four to one st the bill. The measure would permit cit- ies and other state taxing districts in default of their bonds to pe- tition federal courts for scaling down or extension of their debta, providing that creditors holding 30 pereent of the debt consented. AIRCRAFT SHARES SOLD BY MORGAN WASHINGTON, March ‘Evidence that J, P. Morgan, inter national banker, sold a block of 4560 shares of United Aircraft within twe weeks before govern- ment cancellation of airmail con- _| tracts, wan presented today to the | STRAND THEATER patie Davies-Bing Crosby in | GOING HOLLYWOOD tra, 15-20¢; Night, 15-25< senate banking committee. Morgan's name was on the list submitted to the committee by the New York stock exchange of thare who scold more than 1900 shares i air transport stocks from a long ; position within two weeks before ‘ cancellation,

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