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VOLUME LV. No. 224. Congressional Election Campaign Now Gets Under Way In Earnest, Replicas Are’ Suid rol Be Laying High Hopes! For Gains In Coming, Contests By HERBERT PLUMMER 7 Associated Press) WASHINGTON, Sept. There is a noticeable ment in the esprit de corps among republicans as the improve- j inder way of the party admit things a¥e ooking up. “ They’ “declare preepecte ‘of a “the " “November Some of those who these months | ago shook their heads sadly when! the subject was mentioned now! speak confidently of picking up 40 or 50 seats in the house thi: i fall and holding what they have! in the senate, | The reason for the change inj sentiment is due to several dif-! ferent factors, The resentment reported in the west among farmers toward the AAA—aggravated by the drought is one, Unmistakable signs of a re- vival of party spirit is another. t ‘New Deal’ Criticism Then there is what they describe 8 the increasing criticism of the “new de: especially NRA; among business men who hereto- fore have been willing to stay in ec. A feeling of unrest about what ultimately be done with the eurrtney’is Feported, * Add theré’s uneasiness in some quarters over the final outcome of some of the gigantic enterprises launched un- der the w deal.” The democrats are not unmind- ful of this new feeling of en- eouragement among the republi- y are doing and will thing within their power to offset it. All signs point to an increase in briskness and roughness in the efforts of both parties as the cam- paigns continue, “Eager For The Fray’ Although the time for with- holding or tempering criticism of the “new deal” on the part of the Tepublicans seems near an end, the democrats continue to advance @s one of their main arguments that the welfare of the country; should come before politics, They want te cling as long as they can to the old argument that it is unpatriotic to criticize the! “new deal.” An example of thi had in a recent spéech de-| by Senator J. Hamilton Lewis of Mlinois, chairman of the democratic senatorial campaign Committee, entitled “Conspiracy Assault Upon er, it turns out, it can be put down as a certainty the con-! gressional elections campaign! from now on will be fought out bitterly on both sides, Republicans for the fray, democrats are overlooking nothing, { VESSEL TO ARRIVE HERE | FROM NEW YORK EN. i ROUTE TO MEXICO | | Charles Taylor, Porter Dock ¢ pany, is re evipt of advices stating that the} Steamship Granada of one of Ast large steamship companies, atrive at y West tomorrow night from New York enroute to Frontera, Mexico. The ship is engaged in running! fruit, but also carries passengers. The vessel has a number of - fengers aboard this trip, and they fe expected to come ashore when the shi the purpose of taking on fuel oil. manag f the j ant keeper ; African government “fertile areas offe docks tomorrow night for! TENDER IVY TO ARRIVE FRIDAY FROM LONG TRIP LIGHTHOUSE VESSEL HAD, BEEN ENGAGED IN BUOY; WORK AND OTHER ACTIVI- TIES OF DEPARTMENT Lighthouse Tender Ivy, which for the past severai weeks has} been in Tampa Bay working andj} repairing buoys, is expected to arrive in port tomorrow afternoon | haying completed the work on the west coast, Tender Poppy will arriye here today from intercoastal water- ways where jit has been repairing and replacing navigation aids, Be-| fore returning to Key West it will | stop at several light stations along ; the keys, Edwarc P. Johnson, tirst assist- at Sombrero Light Station, arrived here yesterday for treatment at the Marine Hos- pital. S. F. Saunders, fii keeper and B. H, Lowe, second as- | sistant keeper, at Dry Tortugas! | Light Station, are in Key West spending a vacation with their relatives, UNWANTED HINDUS. CLINGING TO HOMES NEW GUINEA AND BORNEO: SUGGESTED AS SUITABLE SITE FOR COLONIZATION (My Associated. Press) CAPETOWN, Sept. 20.—Brit- ish Guiana, New Guinea and Bor- neo are suggested by an investi-| gating committee of the South as suitable} sites for a colonization program which would give Indian an outlet! for surplus population and enable South Africa to rid itself of its unwanted Hindus. South Africa has almost 200,-' , 000 British Indians as a souvenir of the decades after 1860 when indentured coolie labor was; ‘brought from India to the sugar plantations of Natal. Its present plan of giving free passage home to every Indian who will return, virtually has broken down because four-fifths of the} proposed emigres were born here end find India uncongenial. The investigating committee was appointed last in the! hope that the government of In- dia would cooperate in the quest. ! Its report notes the inavailability of other than tropical regions: un- der the British flag for colonization, but sugge them Indian colonists might: find ing great re- wards to effective and organized settlement.”. Indian leaders in South Afri regard the report coolly. countrymen are reluctant to leave jouth Africa, but de: from the “non-European” which classifies them with mixed and native population, the “TONIGHT Monroe—“Shoot The and “The Black Cat.” Palace—“The Man From Utah.” | High Sehool Auditorium—“Tom Thumb Wedding.” TOMORROW Monroe—“The Great Flirta- tion” and “Paris Interlude.” a —“The Man Utah.” CUBA BRINGS IN ‘104 PASSENGERS 8. S. Cuba arrived in port yes-! terday afternoon from Havana at 3:15 o’clock with 104 passengers, 70 of whom were aliens, The steamer left last night for Tampa carrying passengers freight. assistant ; re freedom } stigma | Works” | From} and} | "INTEREST GROWS IN CONTEST FOR’ NAMES OF THIRTEEN YOUNG LADIES OF KEY WEST EN- TERED IN BIG CELEBRA- | TION EVENT | | The names of 13 young ladies of Key West already have been en- } tered in the contest through which a queen for the celebration ! of El Grito de Yara will be se- lected, J. S. Moore, commander | of the American Legion post, said \ this morning. | Several more names ; pected by Saturday when the pe- contestants are }viod for registering | closes, he added. ' Ballots are being by. the Legion to merchants in | Key West who, it was shown, will; pdistribure them to their customer: “The young ladies are vieing } for the biggest honor of its kind; \ that Key West can bestow ! ing the year, said, pointing out that dur- Commander Moore the one selected as queen will reign with| ja king being sent from Havana | during the two days of the cele- bration here October 9 and 10. i Coronation Event A coronation ceremony will be staged the first of the two days of | celebration and from then on, the , queen and king will reign over the many festivities planned for the commemoration, Registrations will be received { cach morning during the remaind- er of the week in the ground floor office of the Key West Adminis. | tration just south of the entrance : to the building, and later ‘ votes will be tabulated there, it is planned. Those whose names have been entered in the contest for queen Nela Arno, 506 Bahama Marath Car- ponell, 611 Southard Stree Consuela Carmona, 410 Virgin Street; Anna Louise Castro, 1103 | Watson Street; Solita Cobo, 1107 Duval Street; Rosa Crusoe. Simonton Street; Ida Simonton Street; V 912 Division Street; Grace Rivera, | 1213 Division Street; Catherine Saunders, 5 Elizabeth street !na Tuttle, 321 Simonton Street; | Josephine Ubieta, 1109 Varela Street. and Josephine Vascos, 513 Olivia Street. Working — with Moore in the a dae and sale ‘ of ballots are C. P. Hogeboom, U. } J. Delgado, nai Gomez and John W. Pinder. CONSTITUTION | DAY OBSERVED | ginia Perez, Commander | BY ROTARIANS Indian | s that in| HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR CLASS PUTS ON PROGRAM AT REG- ULAR LUNCHEON OF OR.| a} Their | GANIZATION TODAY i} H Constitution Day j at the Rotary Luncheon today, which was put on by the Commun- ity Service Committee headed by | Melvin E. Russell. Several fea- tures made up this part of the, with the| program in connection proceedings of the meeting. ' A paper on the Constitution was read by Aquilino Lopez, Jr., | which proved to be very interest- | ing to those assembled on the oc- casion. The High School Senior Class under the direction of Mrs. Charles Thompson put on a program per- taining to Constitution Day. ; in costumes of the old days, | this feature of the luncheon prov- ed quite interesting. ane session was presided over A. Strunk, Jr., president of ee ne and after the singing of | the regular songs, the luncheon was brought to a close. | CHAMPION JOB.GETTER CHICAGO—Ellis Warren of ‘this city has held 146 different paid jobs during the last years. ex-; distributed | the} | already ; was observed | Those taking-part were attired | and} seven) KEY WEST, FLORIDA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, | BOAT CONTEST Steamship Florida Due To Arrive At Key West’ From Boston Sunday information re-) bat kat) Bete ‘6 on the vessel, checking oe | steamer out upon arrival at Bos- ton. Mr. Miller returned to Key} jthe P. & O. Steamship Company, West, however, in the meantime,| * and left again recently for Boston! j which Ife Key Weat da. June 18 to Peticck tha shits after complet- | for Boston under charter by the) ing its contract with the company) which had the vessel under charter | i | for the summer period. The mes- operating between! sage stated that the ship would! ‘leave today en route to Key | West. The Florida was also used in running two excursions in connec- | tion with the National Regatta at ; the beginning of the races in |in a telegram received by Mrs. A.| Rode Island waters between the! {R. Miller from her husband,j American defender, Rainbow. Superintendent Miller, who left the British challenger, Endeavour. | According to ceived, the Steamship Florida of \ Eastern Steamship Company for the penener: Boston and Portland, Me., will re- j turn to this port, possibly this comirg Sunday. The information was contained Leader Of Textile Strikers Started In¢Mills As Child (By Associate | WASHINGTON, Sept. 20.—A ice, and facility of expression that | has made him an effective speaker. In his periods of relaxation—! anl there have been very few in recent months—he spenls hours listening to symphonies and other music. He’s something of joker and even during the nerve- wracking hours of the present. t tile is his merry qui fre quently relieve the tension at strike headquarters. Favors Idle Insurance Ordinarily Gorman is a dapper dresser, but of late his clothe: are rumpled as is his customarily sleek black hair. Driven by tre- mendous energy, he is quick, ner- vous in manner, but decisive in speech and action, i He appointed labor com- missioner of Rhode Island but the’ senate withheld confirmation. He a member of the advisory board of the United States re-employ. ment service of the department of labor and one of the first labor leaders to advocate unem- ployment insurance. He's mar-| ried and has five children. But he’s been so busy lately he doesn’t | know where he live: H His family is in Providence, R.! 'L, but recently moved and Gorman, doesn’t know his new address. | exs) diminutive, unassuming man who worked as a child in the woolea mills of England stands out as the principal figure in what may be ' the nation’s greatest strike. bas { Francis J. Gorman was thrust jinto the national limelight by the ivote of the United Textile Work- jers giving him supreme command ‘of the general textile walkout. He was a messenger in a woolen ! mill in Bradford, Yorkshire, Eng- |land, when his family in 1903 de- j cided to seek the greater oppor- tunities they heard existed in America, but for Gorman it meant merely another textile mill. Skilled Wool Sorter He became a skilled wool sort- er in Providence, R. L, and Law- rence, Mass., and within a fev years became president of the Rhode Island wool sorters union. He gained prominence in textile j union circles in a famous strike in ; Pawtucket, and in 1924 left the | textile looms to become a paid of- |ficer of the United Textile Work- ler: | Somewhere along the trail Gor- man acquired a fund of informa ition on economics and social serv- was was see | ECONOMIC HIGHLIGHTS {Happenings That Affect the the a Pails, Dividend Checks and Tax Bills of Every Individual; National and International Problems Inseparable From Local Welfare 00009000 00050000000000000002000000000000000000000 For so voters have gone to the polls| the last hundred years or , principals, and many of them, such as lette, and port him tion in 1% New partics, when and if they appear, will be definitely opposed | in principle as well as nam will consist of conservatives, other liberals and radicals. is a noteworthy fact, as the ways astute Frank Kent Baltimore Sun recently out, that President not once mention the name “Dem- ocrat” during the speeches he made on his tour of the United} ates and territories Many persons close to Washington af- fairs think that the president is{ seeking to effect the realignment | now, that he wants to do awa with the Democratic party start a new one made up of peo- ple who believe as he does when it comes to national policies, A more concrete illustration the current trend is afforded by the California primaric: In that state, Republican Senator John son filed for both ation carried them both by jorities, And Upton Sinclair, life-long Socialist, but a Demo cratic candidate, rode easily ir the gubernatorial nomination Jonnecs, Nezris, and found two lists of candidates | their One the | | name the other Dem-/ both major Borah refused to sup- on ballots. bore when he ran for reel Republican, Today are torn and battered, ause of internal ; Authoritative observers are fore- | casting that we are on the verge {of a political realignment that! will mean the death of the old parties, the birth of new ones. | If that realignment come: it! will have the support of logic and | reason. In the old days a political ; party stood for definite things! and every candidate who ran on | its ticket gave them his allegiance. | At the present, neither party hi a program that a majority of its) ; members honestly support; either | can consistently obtain the al-; | legiance that is essential to party | discipline. In the Republican} party, for example, are diametrically opposed men as | Senator Reed of Pennsylvania| and Senator Norris of Nebraska; | it would be hard to think of a sin-| gle issue on which they agree, yet each carries the same party! i label. In the Democratic party, | a conservative h Senator Glass of Virginia is faced with a+ radical such as Senator Bone of} over all egular’’ Democratic ! Washington—while the head of} candidates. In many states party the party, President Roosevelt, | maintains a middle be-} manner. i tween these opposing attitudes.; There will be The titular leader of the-Republi-| party in 193 cans is former President Hoover ja different story. By that time, —yet close to half of the party’s! President Roosevelt, if he is re- | members n the Senate oppose his' (Continued on Page Four) ! ocrat. parties mainly be- dissension. of It! a } the pointed | of Roosevelt. did and such | ‘eae ma: a as ground major tell no new 36—but 1940 mz ! morning, | the "10:30 a. | are: La Fol-| | States to learn the langud - One| the} cil, | he began a close ‘him an interpreter to his !men of the United States and it ideals. lines have been destroyeM in this! that s an attachment with, and vast ad wrote freque! ap | dent 1934. “AND DOLL SHOW “TO BE STAGED EVENTS SCHEDULED FOR} SEPTEMBER 29 UNDER DI- RECTION OF PARKS AND| RECREATION DEPT. { A sail boat contest one a doll! show will be staged Saturday | September 29, for youngsters of Key West, it was! announced today by the parks and| recreation department of the Key! West Administration. Prizes will} be given in each contest. Both events will take place at| Bayview Park, but the sail boat contest will start an hour earlier, at 9:30 a, i Any class of boat may the contest, it was shown, but! boat must be made by the! contestant. More than one boat} may be entered, it was said, but| only one award of recognition will] be made, i enter} The six events in the boat con-} test are, best sailing boat, best| ' show boat (most attractive), best constructed sail boat (judged for, workmanship), largest boat, four-' feet limit, smallest boat, six-inch | limit, and best sail-propelled boat. | Each boat must be named, ac cording to contest rules, and a! e will be given for first place | h division, while ribbons will | be awarded for second and third | places. The age limit for those en- | tering boats is from 10 to 16 years, The doll show is to start at’ m. in Bayview Park, and any type of doll may be entered. Prizes will be offered for first place winner in each class, and second and third place winners will receive ribbons. Classifications in the doll show prettiest doll (general beav ty). best dressed doll (originality | in self-made dresses), ugliest doll, | smailest doll and largest doll. THREE LEADING JAP CAREERS WITH TR PRICE FIVE CENTS Former Key Wester Awarded Silver Cup As Oldest Representative Ot Labor Union In Washington Parade MAN GIVEN MONEY IN LINDBERGH'S CASE ARRESTED BERNARD RICHARD HAUPT- MANN OF BRONX TODY OF POLICE YORK TODAY (By Associated Press) NEW ‘YORK, Sept. 20.—Police announced Tate today they have in custody a man who re- ceived $50,000 ransom money paid by Colonel Charles Lindbergh in an ineffectuai effort to re- cover his kidnaped son two years ago. The man is Bernard Richard Hauptmann of the Bronx. The said the man is an alien and came to this coun- try asa stowaway 11 announcement years ago. The contained no other tai ANESE STARTED announcement de- AINING IN AMERICA. (By Assvuciated Press) By GLENN BABB TOKYO, Sept. 20.—The three: eminent with “pasts” Korekiyo former minister of fi- Kaneko, privy Yosuk> Matsucka, chief defender of Jap- an’s Manchurian activities before most Japanese American Takahashi, Count are rance; Kentaro councillor, and | the League of Nations in 1932-33. Takahashi is 80 years old, with the American chapter of his life 65 years behind him. When 14, he served as an indentured worker in| chafing at his lot and! as driving the home for milking. When he was 13, he and another boy were chosen by the elders of their to go to the United cows clan and customs of the strang varbar ians” then knocking at door. They were bound for three years in California under a form of term-labor contract then much used in that state. But Taskahashi was such an unruly servant was glad to releas Japan's that his him after nine months. Returning to Japan, Takahash taught school, got into government service and rose to be minister of | finance, which post he held in six jcabinets. In 1921-22 he wa rime minister. Count Kane! ko, now 81 and on of the seniors of, the privy coun was graduated in law , Harvard in 1878. At Cambric friendly relation d Americans that a century, making country employer with America survived hal Admired Roosevelt At the close of the panese war in 1905, after h held two cabinet Kaneko was appointed to the dele ation that negotiated p Portsmouth, America, had posts, ace with During I at y ssia in he for, President Theodore Back in Japan, y of his talks w and insisted that the Pre= then (1905-07) approved miragion Roosevelt. pis Japan’s assumption of the mony of the Orient. When the American ciety was formed in he became 1924, law Tokyo 15 S ago, its pres dent, gress passed But in when « excluding Jap immigrants. Kaneko. deeply idency of anese h national pride resigned the society. Of a Matsuoka California University He from Oregon in 1900 and ez offended Yosuke of Oregon ties. received a di ye to carve out fluent, idiom liance were n the come han been graduated from that the Imper Me ledgling diplomat University of Tokyo. outsider, advancement was and he resig om t Chosen For Generel A! combination bu vice presiden Manchuria rail the eloquence h house anchurian chance her case before the Mat liant other natic Japan in delegation Back political head for the nt thro F The M parties. STORM REPORT ADVISORY ”) tended by —E IN CUS-} IN NEw! hege- | William W. 1. Maloney Has Been Affiliated With Columbia Typographical Union For 73 Years | Speetnt WASHINGTON, | Sept. 20.—Ninety-four-yé jold William W. | former Key Wester, |been awarded a silver fing cup as the oldest | Maloney, has lov- rep- resentative of any labor or- | ganization to take part the National Capital’s labor j day parade. The cup was award by |the parade committee, and s presented to Mr. Ma- by Clyde Mills, presi |dent of the Columbia Typo graphical Union, of which {Mr. Maloney has been ; members for 73 years, | Pre of the was made at a public © re- mony and Mr. Maloney was , roundly applauded, of his advanced years, marched the length of parade at the head of 5 poo a ntation cup In spite he the his TREVOR | FAMILY LEAVES ON TRIP WILL VISIT AT POINTS IN NORTH CAROLINA, VIRGINIA AND PENNSYLVANIA - FOUR BUILDING PERMITS ISS NOTICE T’ STICK TO WAGNER'S BEER, THE FULLY-AGED BEER-OF BETTER FLAVOR, AT EVERY GATHERING AND YOU'LL BE FIT AS A FIDDLE FOR