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Associated Press Day Wire Service. For 56 Years Devoted to the Best Interests of Key West Che Key Wiest Citizen —. KEY WEST, FLORIDA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1936. China, Worried By Revolt Theat, (BLL UNE [HENRY Faces Trouble Along: Three Fronts}: COMMON a Latest Move Against Au-|C. ¢. CUTTER WILL CANDIDATE VOLUME LVII. No. 174. HASKINS 'PRESENT JEWELS CASE OF ISRAEL GOES ON TRIP) TO LODGE UNITS. BENJAMIN HEARD les SURVEY SITUATION BEAR. Ross & a MAD= a IN COURT TODAY. ING ON NEW ASSIGN- ‘MENT OFFERED ‘Many Different Views Given | Relative To Party Support sm no cme In Coming National Election SENTATIONS AT MEET- FOR PRESIDENT; | ING LAST EVENING thority Of Central Gov- CONTINUE SEARCH. ON’ UNION PARTY TICKET; GIVE OUTLINE OF PAST; | PERFORMANCES TO TRESPASSING; OTHER CASES ARE TAKEN UP DUR- ING SESSION TODAY COMPLETE PLANS Cpimion Becomes Divided FOR ENCAMPMENT 4: To Whit Orzanice From Impreved Basamess EQUIPMENT TO START ARRIV ernment Comes From | Henry B. Haskins, Southern Provinces assistant | “ superintendent of lighthouses, left: AE SR jover the highway this morning|"™°™e Chief, Knights of the Gold-| for Miami where he will attend to/°? Eases, had a pleasant task: 1 Ross C. Sawyer, Deputy = VESSEL WHICH LEFT; By HERBERT PLUMMER | matters pertaining to the district imposed on him last night when: Israel Benjamin, in Criminal (By Associated Press) ' (Asscciated Press Staff Writer) | and leave on Friday by plane for he presented brother members NANKING, July 22.—Trouble- GRAND CAYMAN FOURTH] “ wasHINGTON, July 22.—If ‘San Juan, Puerto Rico. lath jewels ofthe ocdec, : x y 1 The trip to the island is for the! ee aA SMNCE BEEN | past Sarton ea eam purpose of looking over the situa- bid‘ tion before deciding as to wheth- ev or not ke will consider accept- presented buttons, as rewards for! of others, although Union ing the offer of the superinten--long and faithful se dency of that district, which is’ interests of the order. : { the ninth lighthouse district. bras was at Pier B. naval station to-| gsplay. 1 Wis «afer: was mais) somol) oo St oe oe | ! , he had the right to iz : a presented a golden eagle watch ie ; time ago by Harold D. King, com- ; ? 7 BA in recognition “The time has come for a re-' missioner of lighthouses, who was. Charm search for; alignment of political factions,” ’on his visit to this district. Mr., services. Mr. Curry is Attorneys who were interested | the 57-year-old North Dakotan Haskins asked permission’ to make ' Noble Chief. jin the negro’s plight tod the} ; jasserts in announcing his candi-; the tp to Bernas soe \court the story and his attorney, | ‘42 Nat Nunoca, which has been reported! dacy. “The common people will J22" before making his decision. On tthe northern frontier, Nan- | Beceem ‘CUBA BRINGS IN |L. A. Harris, asked that his client; that sche missing for more than a weck. vote for their own best ve ion’ BEGIN WORK ON | ‘ke permitted to enier a plea of :' | ‘60 PASSENGERS ! NEW PARSONAGE: :Court, this morning entered a} i . . torn China faces major thre: To Charles Curtis, W. H. Hil-;Plea of guilty to trespass and the the cireum- vice in the ' tances surrounding the case were | is to indica- ispunity salen sutheee) frsutes, cach | ALOCATED AS WET ton and Chester Thompson were ,cutting timber on ‘tor, Rep. William Lemke’s far removed from the others. ; | for the presidency as the The latest Coast Guard Cutter Comanche) party candidate will be a lightning ING HERE ABOUT AUCUST move against the 13; CAMP ACTIVITIES START AUGUST 16 : such as to warrant him believing | ro authority of the central govern-| the : te remove the | Washington ment ; i ! Sena rom southern day, taking on oil and water be-} of retiring | a past , timber, | Provinces of Kwangsi and Kwang-| continuing a tung, where disaffected elements! Majc . traces of the British Motor Ship oppose policies of Nanking. king fears further penetration by lin November—and therefore join! Prince Teh Wang, i i ; the Union party.” i had 22 persons on board when she} There’s nothing of the defeat- guilty on a misdemeanaor charge | iand be sentenced to 60 days, the ‘length of time he had the Japanese. The sturdy little banana vessel pleted a Mongol nationalist leader, it veen in! cording t hears, has been offered assistance if he will help set up an au- tonomous Inner Mongolian state Chinese Provinces of Suiyuan and Chahar (over part of which the Japanese comprising the preseni: already have extended their in- fluence) at the s‘art, and includ: | ing eventually the province Ninghsia. Nanking’s hold on Hopeh and Chahar has been precarious at best since the Japanese army pushed through from Manchuria! three years ago to halt only a few! miles from Peiping. Now with, Nanking’s attention occupied by} heard of. domestic troubles, many respon-t ~ Phree yearsazo the Nanoca was fellows. It’s the jump, the start, that north/ and that} ed hope of a united Chinese stand against a foreign aggressor has so dimmed that it will take years to kindle. sible Chinese fear China’s fate is sealed, the long che been re- On March Again To the west, the main forces of the Chinese red armies are re- ported on the march again, leav- ing their temporary hideouts in Yunnan, Szechwan and Shensi and pushing westward and northward, apparently in an effort to reach the region around Koko Nor and to push into Sinkiang. This cloud is not without its silver lining, for if fhe communist forces succeed, China prover will be rid of its greatest trouble mak- ers—although Nanking will be in} danger of losing the last vestige! of its authority over the poten-{ :at Tampa July 9. The vessel car- of ; ; Guard left Georgetown, Grand Cayman ist about dynamic “Bill” Lemk= Campaigned On Foot ! : ‘he! Ci is r ot She carried nine Americans, four; When he campaigned for con ‘gress in 1932, he walked from ; jtown to town in his district. He! junder the command of Captain} admits the crowis that heard him | | Moses I. Kirkconnell, and was due ‘Peak “took up a collection to .help me a‘ong.” He was elected | on the Republican ticket that! ried no radio and had provisions| Year, and two years later was re- | elected. | Back in 1900, friends recall | Coast | €verybody thought Lemke was + 1 | been /2mall when he went out for guard } on the football team at the Uni-} |versity of North Dakota. He not | jonly made the team that -ear was but two years later was cap- Collier; tain, d iS i Cyclops which disappeared during! “I always figured the ‘ghter m2n had the advantage,” he the world war and has never been} muses. “He could get under andj | throw over the bigger and slower! Island, July 4, bound for Tampa.| Britons and a crew of eight men for but nine days. Service and have planes Cutters searching in vain for some trace of the vessel and up to several days ago her disappearance likened to that of the placed in service and since that; ‘hat counts in the line.” Re time has been plying between! ; cies hee romchahow sitar Tampa and — carrying!" ea Vere sche pasengersiandi freight. | Of medivm hegiht. blond and| !freckled, Semke still weighs! | bone and muscle. ! | “It’s probably because he eats} DUE TOMORROW vegetables,” says Representative’ Burdick of North Dakota, an in- jtimate friend. “There’s nothing) Steamship Ceiba, of the Stand- | that grows in a garden he won't’ . 5 eat.” ‘ ard Fruit and Steamship com-| “you can’t turn his head with| pany, is due in port tomorrow jan axe,” Burdick says. “He once) the Porter Dock company. Thej vessel will take on fuel oil and continue to Frontera, Mexico. Dalmatian Island Cheese Finds American Market (ly Associated Prony row, but he won the eighth time.”! Non-Partisan Leaguer ' Although Lemke’s claim to a} national reputation has been his; ‘authorship and sponsorship in the! house of the Frazier-Lemke farm! | debt refinancing bill, he*has been, ja political factor in North Dakota_ {for 20 years. 22.| Active in the formation of the 22 : tially rich border provinces, The Chinese governor of Sin- kiang receives few and obeys few- er orders from Nanking. His ad- visors are appointees of Moscow; his chief source of revenue is the soviet organization which domi- nates the trade of the province. If they actually penetrate into Sinkiang, Nanking believes the communists, harassed by Chinese armies for eight years, might set SPLIT, Yugoslavia, July i 3 : !Non-Partisan league there, he Yugoslavs in the United States was attorney general of the state are consuming the entire produc-| in 1921, but was recalled from tion of sheep cheese made on the | that, office along with Lynn J.) little islands of Olib Silba and! Frazier, then governor and now Molat, along the Adriatic coast of; United States senator and co-) : isnonsor of the FrazierLemke Dalmatia. } ; ‘ bill. The inhabitants of the islands) He was elected to congress in have formed a cooperative to pro-| 1932 as a Non-Partisan on the) duce a special kind of cheese ob-| Renublican ticket. 1 ‘at 619 William street for Fleming *engers for Key W ;and the other with shower appur- | | iences. | VESSEL LEFT LATE EIGHT-ROOM BUILDING To} BE BUILT FOR FLEMING | STREET CHURCH | { ERNOON ENROUTE TO TAMPA Steamship Cuba of the P. and O. S. S. company, arrived from Ha- vana yesterday afternoon with one first and three : pas first and passengers for Construction under the super-/ vision of Contractor Horatio Carey was started yesterday on the new parsonaze to be erected jnine second class Tampa. Arrivals at Key West: Co'e, Leonde’ Cordova, Robinson, Nelda E. Collins. tenances. The ship sailed at 5 o'clock The structure is to be of bunga-|the following passengers booking low type with all modern conven-' from Key West! Miss Jennie Sey- It will be of wood with) mour, B. H. Wiblier, O. R. Kille, Much of the; Mrs. D. Perez, Antonio Perez, Street Methodist church, There wi!l be eight rooms in the , bvilding, two of which will be for: bathing. One of these with tub Frances Helene galvanized shingles. ‘heavier lumber in the building is Cecile Perez, W. D. Robinson, J. being salvaged from the old par-|H. Montgomery, Mrs. J. G. Al sonage and a building on Peacon' bury 7 3 Lane, which was the gift of the A!bury, Wm. R. Warren. Mrs. Wm. late Mrs. Rica Peacon. | R. Warren Lemke Still Asks Mexico i English Deputy M. F. H. To Pay For 1,000 Cattle| SERS | (By Associated Press) Congressman William Lemke of | Noth Dakota, Union party can-‘2 didate for President, has a c’aim|ty master of Old Surrey and Bur- against the Mexican government|stow foxhounds made hunting that has been hanging fire since {history by leaving his horse and 1912. mounting a passing bus in order Back in 1907, the ex-range rid-}to keep up with the pack. er went_to Mcxico to manage a{ The colonel later jumped from (iy Awsceinved Press} ARDINGLEY, England, July -—Colone! Ralph Clarke, depu- | from Philadelphia, consigned to; Jost a lawsuit seven times in ajranch and herd catlte for a grouy!the bus blowing his horn, re- of Dakota business men. For near-|mounted on Sir Walter Scoit’s ‘ly five years the ranch prospered. | horse and resumed the chase dur-| Came zevoletion and early one} ing which hounds had run un- morning 2 swerthy fellow named | checked for three hours. General Obregon arrived at the; The fox showed disapproval of ranch with an army. Ile demand-! this unorthodox method of pxur- ed a little beef—something tojsuit by going to ground. feed the men, he iold Lemke—} iand calmly commandeered 1.000| Versatile Gown Worn To Dinner And Dance! head of cattle. j “I didn’t b!ame him.” Lemke! drawls now. “It was war, and| he was a great fellow. I like! him.” Mail Must Go Through; Crossreads Folk Irked (My Associates Prexay LONDON, July 22.—A gown with a broken sleeve line \and a draped scarf which can be arranged to cover a low cut back expresses the latest trend in dou- a |ble-date fashions. It is becoming (Pr Associated Presn) ss i ; more popular than the OROSSROADS, N. M., July 22./less gown and coatee. ie IN AFT- jail. ith} Marguerite Foilows Hunt On Bus simple | sleeve- | —The postman doesn’t, ring twice | This dress is cozy for | Judge William V. Albury pass 5 and cost to date ed sentence of $ , the case or 60 da: in ‘from the day of Benjamin's ar- t As he had been in jail for that period, he was released. rest. implicated in simi ar actions on the Key Hen- ry Lowe, Ton¢ Lowe, Jr., Jesse L. and John have been out on bail time. Cartwright and were released this Four others are Thompson Cartwright |The Lowes for some Thompson morning. | When court opened State Sen- ator Arthur Gomez announced he was defending the four men. He ,had been away from the city and had just returned last evening. “‘4 He had not had any time to ques- tion his clients and therefore ne time to prepare a defense. He asked that the cases be continued ifor the term. County - Solicitor Allan B. ,Cleare, Jr., hereupon advised the lcourt that he had summoned the j witnesses in the case, and they j Were coming from different sec- itions, Miami, Homestead and Key { Largo. One witness, F. E. Sweet- ying was on his way from Bloom- j ington, Ill. | He had summoned these wit- iness in order to have the on cS for the trial this w he i attery “E” into carn ¢ tery and t from Jai i from Per til Frida remain INQUIRIES MADE ABOUT PRIMARY NECE™ said, and had been advised by Mr. daughter, who had long distance last night from Bloomington, that her Key , Sweeting’s jcalled over MO SARY, STATES JOHN ENC- LAND. SUPERVISOR REGISTRATION {father was then en route to | West. The judge told Mr. Cleare he ‘thought it possible to stop th | witnesses en route and then nounced that he would grant Mr !Gomez’s motion and continue the cases for the term. Herman Carey, colored, was ar- | raigned on a charge of aggravated jassault. It was specified in the information that he had stabbed one William Wilkerson, also color- ed, with an icepick. He entered a plea of not guilty to the charge jand jurors were called for the | panel. Before this was completed seven | jurors, of the veni of twelve. Regi England has bee inquiries re ative for Aug there law istration make per- dinner | had been challenged, either tained from native sheep crossed; The Non-Partisan _ industrial when the scarf is looped at the; emptorily or for cause, and it be- up an autonomous regime af-} ~~ 5 . 5 e with Spanish merino. They have| program was based on a series of here. Not even once, half the! filiated with the U. S. S. R., as} has been done in Outer Mongolia. or establish an independent re-y public. Expect Some Benefi's Likewise the possibility of civil war in the south has its bright side for the trouble-torn central government, Without attempting to mini- mize the still unmeasurable harm done by the raising of the standard of revolt, Nanking leaders, taking| the long view, see even in this’ blow to national morale. eventual! benefits for the nation. | Before Nanking can hope to stop the threat of civil war the national treasury will be poorer, by millions spent on military Prep-| arations, troop movements and; making sure of the loyalty of! Kwangtung’s military clique. | But in this process, Nanking ex- pects to extend her currency sys- tem and a degree of financial éon- trol over the prosperous southern province which for years has done to collecting and spending money. about what it pleased when it foie ee ee found a ready market among the measures largely prepared by Yugoslav owners of restaurants in! Lemke. America for their product at! about 25 cents a pound. ‘Gold Cross On Skeleton The output at present is small. | Held Proof Of Folk Tale! the cooperative owning only about (Me Accnetared Pres 1,500 sheep. ADVISORY DUBROVNIK, Yugoslavia, July! j 22.—The finding of a skeleton by} high ve is pe aweats Fla.,| ighway workers is regarded by} July 22, 1936, | Montenegrian peasants as cor-| | Poboration of an old folk tale. Advisory from San Juan: Indi-| The story is that during bloody cations of tropical disturbance | wars between Turks and Chris- of moderate intensity and small! tians many years ago a monk was diameter short distance north of | Mona Pessage probably moving tortured in attempts to make him tell military secrets, and finally northwestward or west-northwest- ward. | buried alive by the Turks. The soldiers, however, left a gold cross on his neck. In constructing the Durmitor} | mountain road workmen found aj } skeleton, upright in the way the) Turks had buried the monk, and) with a chain and cross around its, neck. Peasants started a movement 40c)to erect a monument at the! place. WEATHER BUREAU. SECOND COLLEGIATE DANCE Tonight 9:00 till ? ADMISSION .......... i time. | tables was carried by the S. S. [shipment in 1904. neck and hangs behind. For dancing the scarf is rearranged and draped about the waist to re- veal the low-cut back. Ithough he passes every day, mail is delivered only three times weekly. Crossroads gets its mail from | ————_________. Elida, N..M., despite the fact that | "PLP PIP Ima Oa it is on a new mait route between! Clovis and Lovington, N. M. |House Loud Speakers Senators Hatch and Chavez | Tested With ‘Promises’ have been asked to do something} (Ry Associated Press) about it. = See AUSTIN, Tex., July 22.— The loud speakers in the house First Shipper By Rail Ships First By Water sts representatives here rang Associated Prean) “ ny PORT ISABEL, Tex., July 22. —First shipment by water of; Lower Rio Grande valley ee i womise every voter a pension, a quart of gin if he wants it, a mule and acre of land,” the promiser on the floor shouted. “Moreover—” “Never mind,” said a voice from the mechanical room. “You don’t need to promite ‘Texas Ranger” when it sailed! with 640 crates of cabbage and} some experimental shipments of! beans, peas. and new potatoes. \ anything else. The machine's W. E. McDavitt of Browns-} O. K.” ville, dean of valley produce men,} They were mechanics re- maintained his record of “first”; pairing the loud speaker sys- by previding all the vegetables} tem. carried. He made the first railj VL hd Le jeame necessary for a_ special !venire of three, Fabio Olivieri, W |S. Edgar and Gregorio Rodrizuez * to be summoned. They were to ibe returned at 2 o'clock, after the | noonday recess. | The five who were tentatively laccepted were John Bright, Har- vey Brost, Charles Albury, Harry | Baker and B. A. Baker. i COME HERE TO ‘SMITHS LEAVE ; WITH OTHERS IN INTER- ENROUTE HOME ; Dr Mrs. W. H. Smith and ci@idren, | state beard of Klip, Avion and Myrna Hart, who L. Rianhard ‘were enjoving a vacation with Mre.. partment of Cora! ¢ ; Smith’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Al- ed this morning on lan Knowles, left over the highway Coast Guard plane f \yesterday morning for their home| ‘It is . Jacksonville. ‘hamson and Mr Other members of the group contact Dr. W |were Miss Edna Knowles, sister of local clinic, and :Mrs. Smith and a niece, Miss) in sanitation. ar Myrna Smith, of Sharon, Miss.,; observation for t lwho is visiting relatives and)|expect to leave tomorrow, on the j friends in Florida. jafternoon plane CONF =2 EST OF SANITATION the intentior Rianhar P_ Bice make 2% eres ro ° at 27s48 = Page Peer HOT WEATHER MEALS CALL FOR COOLING DRINKS--MY! HOW GCOD A BOTTLE OF DAILY DOUBLE BEER TASTES AT MEALTIME- ON SALE EVERY WHERE