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PAGE TWO E Che Kep Giest Citisen Published Dally Rxcept Sundaw By TRE CLTIZEN PUBLISHING CO. INC, fl. & ARTMAN, Presiden. From The Citizen Butlding Corner Greene and Ann Si oly Daty Newspaper in Key West and Monroe County. tered at Key West, Florida, as second class matter FiPTY-FirTa YEAR ‘of the Ansociated Press “e Ailleetates, Press is exclusively entitled to ase tor Fepablication of all news dispatches credited to ‘or ot otherwise credited tn this ‘paper ‘and ‘also local news pubtished here. : $UBSCRIPTION RATES ne Year . yne Mouth ++ dkeekly tees - ADVERTISING RATES Made know ation. L NOTICE. 4 otices, cards of thanks, resolutions of depo. apinety notices, ete, will be ‘charged for at @ of 10 cents a ling, Notices for entertainments by churches from which & revenue 18 to be deriyed are & centa a line. vos Cilaeh ig an opea forwa and inyites diseus- sium of public issues and subjects of local or general jetetest bat it Will not publish anonymous communt- \avwwaah ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES RUST, LANDIS & KOHN New York; 35 East Wacker Drive, eneral Motors Bldg., DETROIT; alton Bidz. ATLANTA. 0 vark A - eacat All the Dionnes in the world are “claiming kin” with the quintuplets— Tampa Tribune. Who said it won’t be long now? It’s “been Long for a long time now, and we're ogetting discouraged. Yot a trace gas been found of the perpetrators of the half million dollar day- light robbery in New York. Perhaps it is “Dillinger’s spirit carrying on. We haven't heard anything more abéut General Hugh Johnson since he got his raise. Celebrating? Or just getting used to a permanent vacation. Speaking of rugged individualism which General Hugh Johnson is seeking to destroy in favor of a form of regimenta- tion, he has that very property and in turgid form. When the weight of responsibility rests on Upton Sinclair's shoulders he will ehange Many a radical view he now holds. There are exceptions to this rule, however, notably the wild man from Louisiana. Dr. William Beebe, who with Otis Barton, went down to sea over 3,000 feet, reported a sea monster 20 feet long. No one could dispute the scientist’s statement even if he declared the monster to have been 100 feet long. There are enough men on govern- Ment payrolls to control any election, and as ordinary gratitude requires the patting Gof the hand that feeds you, it is an easy } matter to determine which way the cat is ag to jump, so long as this employment ast, Dolores de} Rio, the cinema actress, confesses to not knowing two things—what communist Is and Where -ker tax money ee While we niay haveseme idea What communist is, most of us are stumped, ike. Dolores, concerning the peregrinations of our tax mbney. 4 That the FERA recoghizes the value Sef publicity can be proven by a glance at any issue of the Key West Citizen. In every edition news of what the FERA is Pdoing in the rehabilitation of the city is Paisplayed prominently—and it makes fine reading for people who have been on their Fupper: for time.—Miami_ Daily a long The Democratic chiefs are beginning to wonder where Al Smith will pop up next. He has taken the dry-cleaned Tam- many back to his breast. But sincé mak- ng his famous “baloney-dollar” crack he has been very, very quiet despite the ac- claim he received then. No one believes She can be entirely silent through a cam- Spaign but they can’t guess where he might «4trike or for which side, (ttle eererte Defending his stand for the beauti- Sfication of Key West some weeks ago, Ad- Ziministrator Stone said with reference to bridges that if we got them we would have nothing to show folks who came _ here. ontrariwise, what good is it to spend i “heaps of dough’ to dike up and then Mes#have the usual few come to admire, the aucity of whom will persist unless we MARNE ANNIVERSARY Twenty years ago, from September 6 to 10, 1914, the momentous First Battle of | the Marne was fought, the victory of the | French and British under General Joffre saving Paris from capture by the Germans, and probably deciding the war in its first great battle. Prior to the beginning of this historic five days’ struggle the Germans had ad- vanced ‘through Belgium; and northern France and were within a few," milies of | Paris. Joffre had gradually retired in the face of the superior German force until his reserves could be mobilized sufficiently to enable him to take the offensive. i Having maneuvered his armies’ in to | positions which seemed to make an offen-} sive drive likely to succeed, Joffre attacked j the Germans at dawn on Sunday, Septem- | ber 6. After five days of the. most des- | perate fighting, during which Joffre dis- | t | played daring and masterly strategy, the Germans were in full retreat toward pre- | viously prepared positions. Paris had been | saved. i In this great battle it is estimated that | 900,000 Germans and 1,000,000 Allies! were engaged on a battlefront 120 miles | long. i Nearly four years later much of the | same territory was to be the scene of the Second Battle of the Marne, in which, with | Allied armies, Germany’s last hope of win- y ning the war was definitely blasted. r WOODEN SHOES WORN mobile accidents: accidents throughout the year, | pose that we save them all up and ha What a noise! rise up ‘and demand that something be | bo done co avoid a repetition of “Aci Week’ next year. down in one of our riv Seen * e ' ic Marshal Foch in supreme command of the | * pyre | DAYS ' THE KEY WEST CITIZEN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, » a 1.MINUTE SAFETY TALKS By Don Herold Dont hit him, John! Automobile dent Week Here is a dandy new plan for auto- | 600 (the Iroquois), the papers A Acci ire full of immense headlin Instead of scattering our automobile | instigated, new law pro- | event is remembered for 50 y e| But we kill 30,000. y hem all in one week to be known as | 850,000 with automobile; Accident Week.”* statistics vest rding to of The Travelers Insurance Just think what a headline this would | Company, and nobody seems to mind 0,000 KILLED AND 850,000 MC That's because the accidents are thinned out over the year and scattered in different loc les, a gigantic catast: installment plan, and anything we on the installment plan doesn t er us much, s why Vit bet if my smashtiy dd, some D LAST WEEK IN AUTO ENTS.” What a slaughfer that would be! Everybody in the nation would then ay concentrate em, of having all our one ek were ody wou When a boat gc urd drow Bepple fthe Genertif Sié; #@ theatre burns and kills onty | KEY WESTIN e passed, and the i hey constitute | phe, but we get it on | ' ROBBED BY CLIENT TODAY'S WEATHER ST. PAUL—After defending a man accused of lemme bere? Se SRE ae | —— Attorney J. W. Morin of this Températare* yinorning over the North Atlantic, was rebbed by elient, \Highest ......... 91! States and in the Lake regicr =a a> cea Baa ‘Lowest --78! Boston, Mass., 29.88 inches, and “ga "- bone es al Te: R4} e , out the i tea ae 4 Duluth, Minn., 29.84 inch ¢ when they were lower now § Residencia So ae relatively high pressure extends vive only in a few hot <prinan Rainfali* Yesterday's Precipitation Norma) Pre, i , high altitndes -T Ins. from eastern Texas and Arkanse north-eastward over the middle ST nln rece cavern 2 Atlantic ‘States, Louisville, Ky.,| Subserihe for The <itisam tga Pye oe eee 30.06 inches, and another rh Tomorrow's Almanac | pressure area is moving in “!North Dakota, Williston, # “linches, Showers and thunder "Istorms have occurred during “Hast 24 hours in Georgia and FI j ida, being heavy at Tampa, 1.06 un rises 6:10 3 un sets Moon rises Moon sets ‘Tomorrow's Vides p> i} eee a P.M: ‘inches, and there have been light od BM as ins in the Lake region and New Low .... 1:3) 2 England. Temperatures have en somewhat in the Plains State and Mississippi Valley, but below normal in most e st of the Rockies, except in sow {Atlantic coast districts, + jin northern Georg’ Barometer at 8 a. m., today: j . Sea level, 2 WEATHER FORECAST i (TH 8 p. m Key West and Vicinity: Partly Thursday) - #rees bele > si ° tonight and Thursday, ;£rees below the . this morning. The v showers Thursday; gen-! pigs re ean ; perature of 91.3 eta ie shly | West yesterday was the hig he Florida: Partly cloudy, possibly | (°F) Yestenuas showers on the northeast coast to | i eee c KENNEDY night; Thursday local showers. | ' of In Cha VELA | pole ciaciomisian af, y | Federal highway — authorit‘e estimate” more than 14 | gallons of gasoline were co: ;ed in the United State: Yi a] Partly Cloudy | Jacksonville to Florida Straits: | 68 id or Tablets Checks oughly mode verences. Mahe home or headye sts Gentle variable Winds and partly | ry si | GONE BY yer oint a el a erat a a eg, It may be surprising to many, as_ it ie ae Gare Peerieene ae oes ee suis, | Toutsday with seatered showers. | — i was to us, to learn that around a million | “tM Tolsy Ne qth. Fics Vaccan aa ie be Gulbe yy Gentle -vanabley : oe pairs of wooden shoes are manufactured ; The Files Of The Citizen “Tho Merehant of Venice.” | pitas | INVESTIGATE THE ADVANTAGES TO YOU and worn in the United States every year, | (Ye ARs eer ont ——— | WEATHER CONDITIONS i ot the but such is the case, according to the De-{ United States Senator Duncar W774—First Continentar Cun} SSS ' partment of peas F U. rete! . oh cet there a res opened in Philadelphia, | Pressure is moderately Tow this | NATIONAL HOUSING PROGRAM : Ten factories in eight states specialize | ‘he morning train Seats oo FAST DIRECT FREIGHT Your building is an investment r. New i e pacer eas “ted at juncheon this afternoon in 1826 Houston electedt } a P ‘ ; in the manufacture of wooden footwear, | the Deimonico by William R. Por-. fivst Pr of Dexia. { SERVICE TO lected, it pays no dividends and bri which ranges from sandals for women and | ter, who had invited to meet the a Nik { \ come, children to heavy work shoes for men. | Hie ae = as ah 1905—Peace Treaty between ) | Protected and improved ‘A a é tity, county ands govern. eae ena ae H eee : . : Soles from half an inch to three inches in| jients, and the army, navy, ma ; lie WU resKa | many times over in convenience Appi thick ifor the h rk \ M Sa EOE MCU UNENE Me | H comfort for your fam hickness are used for the heavy work jrine corps and the Merine he Petes nee KEY WEST i comfort for your fam shoes. jpital. After the Ezrly stone age men moved Batlingn trom Wey Went I The coming tou ease Prices of wooden shoes range from $1 | Nessonded to by Senator poe ne a ney a Fridays From New Yere, W'] Many opportunities for pre to a pair, while high boots with wooden | Senator Wm. H. Malone declared Rolie eeleoRWeaee aes altervate Wise nenangn. H “up to the standards of the times si bring $6. They are in demand by |! in his opinion, Fletcher will | Also NEW ORLEANS +! } a on ‘ falds i : fe | be renominated, that he Cini; Mrs, Clara Powell, Pla a panne gy ska i For Loans Under the National Housing Act i workers in damp fields in certain parts of | thought ich aet Feeley Meine Waite Key Went Nee H the country, and by those in factories who ! the hearty approve Mi By ‘i Saree: towinis. t must stand on wet concrete floors. The {of Deinocrats iu the state, = ren J. Watrous, Fla. Nat. (CLYDE*MALLORY || THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF KEY T movies and the stage also use some of this zt J. Moon, business man- | nese) | Member cf the Federal Reserve . ese: i Arrangements have been pré ror ‘The Citizen; Charles Smith Awent, | product. jty well compleed for the observ- Mallory Steamship Co.; Captain Key Wei ' ———s ee Wooden shoe factories are located inj ance of National Defense Day in) John J. Maher, chairman. a nalts) ee ee New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, | Key West on Friday of nexi = - a ee a ene ine eey 2 There will be a parade in which A. Ul, Melnnis, special deputy| MIMO DMD GD DIG DOME SF CSM EM Lae IHinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Nebraska, and Ligewiasdidists, ahilors, inembers of cheilft of Monree Cour | RR rte erste commen meee ces emer mete cnet to eee ee sea hearst ih Florida. They keep stocks on hand for} the maring corps, Battery B,' cherif/ in ence of Sheriff IN } immediate delivery, just as makers of | Coast Artillery Cor; boa Flor- 2 irry, placed a man un \ i) Ae fee , | ida National Guard, Arthur Saw- der t this morning on the ar- | 5 leather shoes do, but those — d on the j ver Post of the American Le 1 of the steamship Cuba trom y P stage are usually made to special order. | Boy and Girl Magan fellow. jes a &! ? 4 ae ees ‘jgations and re erally rena, is a captain i . ‘ NEED SPIRIT OF PIONEERS | will take part, Efforts are bets ae Sue Uni er or torm i utters z es | made to engaze a brass band. ‘ » of bigainy & ; A MUmor eens ton Mans) | Editorial Comment: ‘The polif- in Cuda, he hus a wife here whoin The government been pouring out re-| ical news in The Citizen is sure he married two or three weeks : oy i% lief funds f There has been an | interesting, but it is hard to get on passing through this city. it is} < = = ae 7 oye > ae eee an nce pe { the women folks to read it when i} 4x4 No. 3 BEADED CEILING PINE, 2 emergenc was imperative that relief be | i ‘the merchants advertise bar . ly is S 00 i given ople. In this land of plenty no | oes 1 ked Kav We ram Per M. e oe. iN one shoul y nor be cold for lack of clothes. | ' A y aU guna n which will p : a Univ. of Ha |% 14x4 BEADED CEILING, CYPRESS, | the old Piggly Wig Suilding, vana Sunday held a snappy prac But the velie? has been ebused, and it | sir ; : i 1% Per M. 0 ( \ Mant (fo esha (Carlos aii tice (aan terday. Before th . mencandiawemens for ther own tomorrow night and — Monday begins on Sunday, Maro loxl2 SQUARE EDGE PINE, mae 4 k of their situation, We | night, for the benefit of the vilgs peed deimon of “the may | ly - y 1 Crvlos Celebration, Many beauti-” Cify, will compete a the! Per Meio... ode) our people become improvident | nd useful prizes will be faytest emen: om the Cub 5 % ) and shiftless dependents, j including votes in 40,000! jn a raee around the bit 1x6 No. 8 FLOORING, 9 ly Relief? workers report that it is difficult or | r the Queen contest. d events will be put on in eon & Per M. at Oo iI] i | - nection yt um i leven, fiiipasible to induce some persons who are| _. é i% | | W. D. Byrd. representing the | asking for public relief to go to the exertion of | aythur Sawyer Post of the Ameri Parnas: Pel be | i< planting a garden or canning vegetables or fraits. |can Legion, and 1H. A. Gibson, as cuycivisine principal of the Har iy co i% ‘. ee a delegate from the Forty a d Division street schools Men have been hired to grow community gardens, | 4 elects trom tne Mt pune ee eas ee ql ® and women are to be paid for their services in j day for St. Paul, Minn., to attend bur eat PAG j a canning the vegetables from these gardens. The | the national convention and prom- Yor Ml 4 8 iY canned goods will then he given to the peopte who | nade to be held in that «ity rom Taw Mrs, am Yi iN ; i = - RM ' ee children arc | ave in need of food next winter, The garden and] J, charge of the National De: svoute to Weet Palm Bench, M AY li canning projects are commendable enterprises. | fone Day program are: Hon, Wm c meant id been yi a = fe families th this county Where the mether| i e he: ate senators u in, spans in the Adi ! . i% 4 - } Frank H. Ladd. mayor; Dn ondack expect rrive in 5 » inthe how and who has he strane ath Mass woo wets’ NE Week Ending Sept. 8th, 1934 jx or the equipment with which to can the vegetables, | Commerce; L. R Warne pr Chari id Mloise ver \ | She and her family must be given food that has|dent Rotsry Club; Lance Lester, Mr.vand Mrs. J & iN | been prepared for them, Ee a ee Oe &! HIBISCUS, BOUGAINVILLARA, POINSET '\ | PO wut according to/vepers there are teh andl ein: pe, E. 1. Rice, pastel ma trip to the weet east of AL SCOTT KEY ROSE BUSHES, Pr \% wemen who have the physical strength to plant ana | Bech i Me s. . a Mog E B i Sep Gal mn i RACH 25e i care for gardens and the produce from them who ; SMUCHEGIy | . ® i { y neglect to do so through shifilésaness. | ————— iN péople will have to be fed; they cannot be |[ eum ae as ae \ a = = ' allowed to starve, but the brunt of publie opirion | ST AMSHIP Co. Nii i hould bear down heavily on them. It is disgrace. |] UNITED STATES FAST i \% i for a person to ask for public charity or to MAI. ROUTES FOR i h Flo ° ° * R i® ke food and supplies from public relief agencies | PORT TAMPA—HAVANA—WEST INDIES j t rida ontracting ngineering Co. i® who does not actually need them iI Effective April 27, 1933 j ; : ene : |? Leave Key West for Havana Tucsdays and Fridays 12:15 | , & i The greatest recovery program that could bei} P.M. | i Phone 598 White and Eliza Streets | Me er ean on nice Schad auch. Ale. Leave Havana for Key West Wednesday. and Suturdays H 1% launched in this country would be to arouse the ; oun AM | e latent spark of pride in self-support. It is ‘| Leave Key West for Port Tampa Wednesdays and Satur- { & Your home is worthy of the best i% demoralizing to have thousands of people in this | days 6:30 P. M. H @! i Eo ees “ | Tickets, Reservations and Information at Ticket Office on the | ; state maintained by publie charity, We need more 5 " i | - Dock, "Phone 71 H } = peti: wide | of the spirit of the pioneers, | J. iL COST..R, Agent. 7. DISS Ia we =- -— —+ ~—-—-—-+ --—-_'» J SESeeeic tah oees eet emen eels iesmoteasieaatic (Ltt bneLteLLaicgizizs zs