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Associated Press Day Wire Service. For 56 Years Devoted to the Best Interests of Key West VOLUME LVII. No. 287. PLAN STUDY IN BOUNDARIES OF | MAN PLACED IN HOSPITAL NATIONAL PARK iscariow sss aieecieee To}: KEY WEST LAST SHOWN THAT MATTER IS OF EVENING PARAMOUNT IMPORTANCE} TO ASSOCIATION HAND- | LING MATTER i (Special to The Citizen) MIAMI, Fla., Dee. 2.—The para-} i mount importance of the estab-} lishment of boundaries of the Everglades National Park in ac- cordance with the recommenda- tions of the Departmert of the In-: terior, 28 incorporated in the 1934! Act of Congress authorizing the} Park, is emphasized in advice re-} ceived st the headquarters of the} Park Association here that a com- mittee from Nationa! Park Serv- iee, headed by Arno B. Cammer- er, director, will arrive in Miami immediately 2fter Christmas for an intimate study of the subject. This close consideration of} boundary lines by Director Cam- merer will follow a meeting of the} Everg'ades National Park Com-| mission set for today whick. | time a report will be made by the Lands and Boundaries Committee! of which D. Graham Copeland of Everglades is chairman. In view of the fact that Harold | L, Ickes, secretary of the interior, has recommended the present { | | | at Che Key Wirst Citizen KEY WEST, FLORIDA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1936. |MATERIAL TO | REPAIR PIERS NOW AWAITED | GEOGRAPHY LESSON i LARGEST LATIN CITY levening and placed in the Marine ithe hand holds on the car jway and falling to the groundjbe started, it was said by Lieu- HAS ALREADY BEEN RE- CEIVED Marion M. Black, member of the United States Immigration! Border Patro] station at Miami,; was brought to Key West last Ritts. Just as soon as other material Hospital to be treated for a frac-} tured vertebrae, it was said. i Mr. Black was inspecting a car! ects the construction of the finger t Ft. Lauderdale wh { n a ee one | plers in the submarine base will arrives for the naval station proj- received the injuries which neces sitated his being brought here for treatment. itenant Wm. Klaus, U. S. N., of- VISITOR MUCH PLEASED WITH ° STAY IN CITY YORK RESIDENT SAYS anq other material and equip- NEW HE IS THOROUGHLY EN.|}™ent. : { The only remaining members JOYING WONDERFUL CLI-jto be received are the iwhich will consist of H beam sec- ASE ee Neeser i tions of the latest design and will, lit is said, be the first time that I this type of piling has been util- your delightful i7eq in any construction work in city daily grows more fascinating Key West. | Pierce. Jena channe} beams were received ivia Mallory Line steamship Colo- jrado Sunday from New York and “My stay in and my regret is that many of my! ..n4 has been here several times {project started, is expected to ar- |me to enjoy this wonderfully in-| ive in Key West several days be- ! vigorating weather, and meet the ;iore Christmas with Mrs. Bragg! surptise as the fact that from| \ficer im charge, and his aide L. M4! Heavy shipments of I beams; | practically all of the decking for! ithe piers are here as well as two| connecting continent is or that Mr.! ate enterprise provides opportun-| piling! | Commander Kenneth M. Bragg, | | DISTRIBUTING MONEY [NO NEW TAXES | BUDGET NEARS BALANCE ABOUT EXCESS RESERVES ‘CONTROLLING CREDIT | AGAINST LABOR PARTY | | UNEMPLOYMENT FACTS | FUNDS FOR WPA ' j By HUGO SIMS, i (Special Washington Correspond- ent of The Citizen) President Roosevelt's visit to | South America will, at least, cause imeny citizens of the United States to understand the geography jthat continent: better. Few of us realize how much further east the | Roosevelt, when leaving Charles- jton, had to look southeast to cast | ais glance in the direction of his tgoal. If he had looked due south he would have missed the entire continent, except a smali tip of ‘Ecuador, although his + would ‘have been almost straight to the |Panama Canal. remind th: Which reminds us to you that if you go through Canal, from the Atlantic to most directly southeast, because of lines. This may not be as much of a little link in the Isthmus coast | j, yto afrive at a balanced budget jas soon as possible. Some of the so-called nuisance taxes, which! cost more to collect than they Lee will be abandoned. Improv- ed buiness conditions, resulting in [better col'ections of taxes, is tak- jen to promise greater yields in the! ‘new year. Besides, a “rational” reduction of emergency agencies lis expected although not on the eee seale that some con- {servatives would like to see. j The present fiscal year, 1937, {Will see 2n encouraging progress jtoward a balance of the Federal jbudget and some observers be- {lieve that a balanced budget is ‘possible in the fiscal year begin- ining next July. The key item is {the amount necessary for unem- ployment relief. If business con- jtinues to improve and to take up :the emroyables, the government of | will be ‘relieved of a burden that. the President has plainly declared | } jit will’not throw down until priv- jities | for employment. There is hed ord to be learned in figures lrefiecting the growth of Federal ;revenue from slightly more than ;three billion dollars in 1934 to six i billion dollars in the present fiscal jyear, an estimate recently made and taking into consideration the faster tempo of business this fall Inasmuch as government ex- : penditures, exclus.ve of the bonus; the | hase hovered around seven biltion | ane | Pacifie ocean, you will travel al- : the ' friends in the north are not with'since the preliminary work on the! td {dollars a year for the past three ‘fiscal years, it is caleucated that fore the keginning of the next 1 year in July prospects wil! be bright for something like a if WAR VETERANS ‘'PLANELEAVES = NAME OFFICERS FOR TORTUGAS LAST EVENING ,GOES TO CET SKK MAN ON VESSEL NEAR ISLAND ‘OTHER ACTIVITIES CARRIED ON AT LEGION HALL DUR-' j ING REGULAR SESSION OF; | ORGANIZATION | American Legion hall on White- head street was, last night; the scene of the regular meeting of B. H. McCalla Camp No. 5, Spanish War Veterans, and a ber of the membership was present, to take part in the j arnual elections. During the evening reports of officers covering the period of: 1936 were presented and read,: and at the conclusion of the; recording of reports, announce- | ment was made of the election of officers Zor the year 1937. At the conclusion of this friend- ‘ly and interesting contest, the fol-; lowing officers were announced winners: P. L. Cosgrove, Jr., commander; John Peterson, senior vice commander; Thomas James,! ‘junior vice commander; Living-i ston Bethel, chaplain; Charles J.| Peat, officer of the day; H. Ketchum, officer of the guard; William M. Weaver, trustee for three years. Appointive officers for the en- suing year will be named during the month, it was announced, and all will be installed at the reg-, ular meeting to be held January {Miami wes a plane of the Charles Arriving this afterneon from Coast Guard, bound te Tortugas te get a man who is reported a= being -eriously ill on a vessel near the islands. The plane le‘t o'clock with Fred todian at Fort ticnal Monument pected to return about 3:30. Mr Eberhardt will retarn on the ves- sel, it is said. TRAVELLER, OF FERRY SYSTEM, GOES TO KEYS SERVICE WITHIN PRACTIC- ALLY SHORT TIME hortly after 2 cus Ne Jefierson Ferry Traveller of the Monroe county system was to weave Ne Name Ker this morning and go te the slips at Hog Key, Grassy Key and Lower Matecumbe to determ- ine if the recent changes at these docks conform correctly th shape of the ferry. There are no changes ant-cipat ed, said F.ank in E. Albert, FERA te and was ex = SHOWN TO BE MOST DEADLY oF All CaHEZEOOeDe oS EASES. Mas ITS ORICEE Moz scanty 3 a refectet ame coecey of <oue fe made sect ropd advance & Ge prevention =tc ‘reatmest of mm é that = inte excuse seaie , ellow-mg the d-at> rate trem daphthe: 2 te aunue 2 bah oe jand son and daughter, and willi New York to Buenos Aires is just! cn ares valance in the 1938 fiscal yea". spend their vacation in Key West,! about 300 nautica! miles shorter | This will occur on'y if relief ex- residing in quarters in the naval] than from Buenos Aires to Liver-! j 5, 1937. The death of member C. W. Richards was announced and a re- boundaries “with minor modifica-} gracious and hospitable people of tions” only, Mr. Cammerer has ) Key West.” director and manager ef the ferry syste:n, who ‘eft this morning 6 said they will consider such recom- ! mendations for elimination if they | may be made “without hurting | park values.” H It is their plan to go into the, area affected and to spend sev-| era! dayo-in the Turner River area} and to the south, which includes part of the park arca now under} discussion, { “I myself will want to study, these boundary suggestions,” states the National Park Servi head.” | It is estimated Mr. Cammerer'! and his committee who will pass on these boundary recommenda. , tions, will spend approximately | three weeks in the area prior to} making their recommendations to the Department of the Interior on} any suggested changes, 5 SCOUT EXECUTIVE COMING TO CITY DUE TO ARRIVE THIS AFTER-! {FORMER KEY WESTER DIED H station. CHECKING UP ON CARS MINUS OF PROPER LICENSE GFFICER OF TRAFFIC DIVI- SION SAYS THERE ARE MOR= THAN 100 WITHOUT STATE TAGS This statement is one of many of like nature which have been! made by James Monroe Leishman, of New York City, who is having a splendid vacation here and has met a number of congenial friends who have added ta his enjoyment, Mr. Leishman came in _ last week and is pleasantly located at 806. Fleming street where he spends some of his time. In the evenings he meets with other members of the fraternity of Elks at the home on Duval stree! and whiles away pleasant hou He is also a member of th Masonic order and expects to meet and know members of the local lodges before he returns to his northern home, | | | W. M. Green, officer of the \traffie division of the State Road | Department, who has been assign- ‘ed to duty in this county, is mak- | ANNOUNCE DEATH ling a check on motor driven rm | jhicles and to daté has found more |than 100 without the proper state tag. Many of these cars, said Mr. Green are liable to arrest at this time because they have outdated "OF MRS. ALBURY | THIS MORNING IN WASH. | poo!, England. So you see the/, pilton dollars from the figure United States has a littie advant-| for the presen’ twelve-month pe- age in position when it comes to!rjod, This depends, almost en trading with the Argentines, jtirely, upon the course of business jactivity within the next six months Incidentally, the capital of the'and the absence of any disaster, Argentine. nation.is.one of_ thejlikethe drought, next year. world’: ten biggest cities. Except-{ ing Paris, it is the largest Latin-| The President has instructed civilization municipality in_ the! aqministration financial agenciez word, being twice as big as Rome} to study the effect of foreign in- or war-tesieged Madrid. It con- ‘vestments in this country and the tains 2,500,000 of the 12,000,000) Federal Reserve Board has inti- | people who live in Argentina. For; mated that it will soon increase its | many year's Argentine was the hot! reserve requirements for member bed of anti-U. S. sentiment injpanks. This doesn’t mean much ‘South America and newspapersity the average reader. We are and political leaders vied with jot certein that we can make it each other in assailing the polic:es ‘elearer iut one should remember of this country. Happily, how-ithat business in this covntry is ever, since the inarguration of the largely ‘a matter of credit. The |“good neighbor” policy and acts, booms thet wreck our economic {that have convinced South Amer:-| structure have not beea caused ‘ca that it is real, the temper of the | py excess money Kut hy excess {people has changed. The we:come | credit, which feeds speculation un- {the President was given attests tc ti; a crast: comes. Banks are per- |the fact. mitted to lend money freely but they are required by law to carry certain reserves in relation to | Meanwhile, Secretary Hull and penditures can be reduced around ; ‘quest made that the camp attend ; the funeral services which are to be held Friday afternoon 4 o’clock from Fleming Street Methodist Church. | LAYRENCE BOOK | ISHOT; YOU MUST © WAIT FOR STORY: | WSON’T BE PUBLISHED UNTIL 1950; CANBY BARES CON- TENTS; TWO VOLUMES IN) CONGRESSIONAL LIBRARY { i (Philedelphia Record) Henry Seidel Canby disso'ved the mystery today surrounding} | Colonel T. E. Lawrence’s $500,000 | book, “The Mint,” which won't be | | published until 1950. } of | o'clock for the slip at No Name Key to join the Traveller and make the trip to Matecumee. However, said Mr. Albert, there may be slight differences which y regrire changes to be made im the slip, and_it is for this rea- son and to make al) observations and be ale to order any changes mide which may be deemed neces- sary to imsure perfect docking and depertures of the ferries, “that I am making the trip.” The Traveller came in at the Porter Dock company yesterday, took on a supply of Diesel oil, and sailed in command of Captain William Roberts fo- No Name Key wher: it was this morning await- ing the arrival of Mr. Albert. ‘CUBA ARRIVES FROM HAVANA VESSEL LEAVES LATE IN AFTERNOON ENROUTE {the delegates at Buenos Aires are; their deposits and this has a ten- INGTON, D. C. ‘licenses of the year 1935 and sev- eral with other licenses, There are | grappling with the problems of! dency to limit the credit that they It is a story of Lawrence | Arabia’s life under an assumed ! name in an air corps recruit depot‘ TO TAMPA of coufse some of the cars with NOON; TO REMAIN HERE ee THROUGH TOMORROW | Relatives of Mrs. James Albury, j before marriege Miss Elia L. A. S. Macfarlane, scout execu-|(eath in Washington, D. C., thi tive of the Boy Scouts of America,! morning in an emergency hos- is scheduled to arrive in key West! Pital. Judge H. H. Taylor, broth- this afternoon and will remain!€t, of Miami, is now in Washing- through tomorrow. A_ letter to| ten and announcement of funer- this effect was received yesterday |“ services are expected later. by J. A. Boza, scoutmaster of; Mrs. Albury moved to make Troop 5, Key West. ‘her home in Washington in 1930, Mr, Macfarlene writes that he!@nd her last visit to her old home will be in contact with the Rotary in Key West was in 1932. Club tomorrow and expresses a!_ Survivors are one daughter, desire to meet with the local troop Mrs. G. C. Carlstedt, of Gulf- and Mr. Boza while ie is here and Port, } brother, Judge Tay- gives assurance that he will be) !or, and sister, Mrs. C. E. Gilki- glad to do anythnig possible for $0", of Tampa. Troop 5 while here. Se In order that the local organiza-! tion will have the opportunity to! meet with Mr. Macfarlane, Scout-! master Boza has called the troop} to meet this evening at 7 o'clock } and requests that all members ap- pear in uniform. COUNTY BOARD MEETS TONIGHT Regular meeting of the board of county commissioners wil! be} held this evening 8 o’clock in ber) office.of Clerk Ross C. Sawyer in th + vty court house. Mr. sawyer said this morning that it is expected that only rou- tine matters, such as reading of bills and other usual subjects wil) be discussed this evening. SHOPPING DAYS LEFT 2 | ; Taylor, have been advised of ner 1936 til January 15 to 1987 tags. ; There is no desire on the part ;of Mr. Green to place any per- son in an embarrassing position, j but the law must be obeyed he said, and as an officer under oath to perform his duty, it will be necessary for him to arrest any violators found driving after the proseribed date. CAPTAIN RICE procure the ARRIVES HERE, Captain George T. Rice, U. S.) A. retired, arrived yesterday from Miami in his launch Casa ia, accompanied by his son-in- law Wm. Deegan, who returned to Miami yesterday afternoon by plane. * The eaptain came to join Mrs. Rice who is living at the old family home on Elizabeth ‘street and will remain for the win- ter with Mrs. Rice’s sister, Miss Teen Williams. {Captain Rice saw four barges aground south of Tarpon Basin, about 100 miles north of Key West, and reported the condition of the vessels to the lighthouse department this morning. It is believed the barges were in port here some time ago and j discharged a cargo of pipe forjever, that all existing levies will; which means one-third of the lev-| LOWE’S ( ASH GROCERY the sewer project. The vessels were towed by the Tug Luella. enses, and these have un-| ; the conference. The effort to work out formulas in the interest of {American democracy is somewhat difficult Because some of the | twenty republics have what looks} }like dictator governments at this! {time. In the end, however, no_ jone doubts but that great progres) ‘will be achieved and that, when;hanks Keep’ 10.5 per cent. The \the diplomats leave for theit|reserye rules were just helf of jhomes, they will have achieved!these percentages before last !something along the line of Pan-i August but the move was made | American solidarity in the face|to eliminate about a billion and \of likely perils of the future. { half dollers of excess reserves, ° ‘which might, otherwise, have serv- Coming back to happenings ined as a basis for injurious credit the United States, the nation has expansion. Since that time, how- j witnessed a remarkable flood of | ever, due to foreign purchases and i dividends and wage increases from | other causes, the excess reserves 'the large corporations of the land.'have continued to gain so that a |Some attriLute these moves to the | few weeks ago the excess was es- new tax on corporate surpluses. |timated at $2,270,000,000. Chair- j Whether or not, we do not know, man Eccles considers this amount | but the man in the street certain-'high and officials say that $800,- jly so defines them. Meanwhile | 000,000 of excess reserves are am- ithe talk continues along the line ple to provide low interest rates. jof amendnient, with many cor- | porate chieftains believing some| Understanding that excess re- {changes are possible. While there/serves ere idle funds, over and jmay be minor adjustments andjabove the required reserve to jsome eorreetion to help corpora-: protect deposits and that econom- |tions with debt problems, no ma-) ists estimate that every dollar of ‘jor amendment seems likely. Re-'sueh excess ean support from $8 jean otherwise extend. Undér présent rules, issued last August, New York and Chicago banks are réquired to keep re- , deposits, banks in reserve cities jkeep 25 per cent’ and country V | gardless of what the corporate in-/to $10 of credit and you can see| During the trip to Key West'terests may believe about the levy,/fer yourself that a speculative! the mass of public opinion is in| mania has fertile soil, To guaré| ‘its favor. —— runaway inflation of creé a fit the Reserve Board attempts tc contro! the exee-s by raising its {required reserves. Under exist- | From Senator Harrison, of Mis- .sissippi, chairman of the Finance jcommittee, comes the opinion that ing law the ;ower can be exereis- | ‘No new tases will be levied at the/ed to the extent of fifty per cent {mext session. He declares, how-/of the level prior to Aug. 15, ;be retained because the govern-jel at this time. Chairman Eccles [ment needs the revenue in order} (Continued on Page Four) the serves’of 19.5 percent of demand | | after his disillusionment of | betrayal of the Arabs. j | There is an abundance of home- ‘ly Saxon words, which Lawrence lfaithfuly copied from his panions’ profane and obscene con- |versation, the editor of the Satur- jday Review of Literature reports. ; Some Might Envy It | ship. ; “James Farrell, James | The sole arrival at Key West ; Joyee and Ernest Heming- ‘was Domingo Ubieta. way might well envy k's dia- { Passengers jeaving from Key | logas,” Canby said. {West when the vesse! sailed at 5 j., Canuy got an advance peek at! o'clock were: Mrs. Ernest Meres, the book by going to Washington ‘y-. 4 F. Tolle, and Mrs Valen and reading one’ of the two COp- tine L Tolson ies filed in the library of Congress wg — to protect the copyright. Anya Weak simone the on {American has this privilege. per Transportation Company, =r- Only 12 copies of the book were | rived in port this morning at 9-15 printed and the publishers re! o'clock from Miami with five tons asking $500,000 each for the re-! of freight for Key West. maining 10 so nobody will offer! ‘ eae to buy them and thus they can se-; {cure the coypright. Almost P: Steamship Cuba. of the P. and O. S. S. compeny, ar-ived from Havana yesterday afternoon with ione first class passenger for Key West, and 12 first class passen- gers for Trmpa. There were no ; Second class passengsrs on the Lawrence tells how he resigned as a political adviser to the Brit-| ish Colonial Office. Finally, he was down to 15 pence, one shoe jhad burst, his trousers were fray- jed. For three months he had not | formerly the i been decently fed. ONeill, noted playeraghs Then, he enjisted under the! thor, has written friends name of T. E. Shaw. He was put | West that he? mothér and jon garbage patrol, got soaked to|Will arrive im Key West |the skin; “with stinking slops.” | 2fternoon and remain fer the | Truck Arrives Tonight With largé shipment of Fresh FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Mrs, Agn@® «Bouter ~ OSei fe if ites th ‘ I & ¢ | 1117 Division Street i S Phone 675 palate a grarsh productic ibe Es 2 Ste ee 2 tlammat: when abreri-¢ causes creat merve- The az ity oe ten ycars. Fortunste’y cure rs avatistie and re tha: mo treated carly © recover. Im most cases there was dcia, m callmg tor, death cc - Parents should recize tazt promptacs cal ing im the doctor when 2 < shows at icast suspicion « theria the they can de te the recover. anythins « + memercae gad the Posen er tox ajury lar: is betucen the a soe ore. os £ the dc whete the auc curred 2 best and comtni-utes mo the child than because the specific antitex’n must Le used eariy Dishtheris can positively cured if you will send for the tor at the beginning ef the eose. Nearly a! cases get where the doctor + antitexin given om the first dar Most of the deaths occur @ cases where the doctor = called @ aft er 2 dels of from three te five ders Onc prominent autherit quoted as steting that im 62 of dee e well anc calee of EGAL HAS THE REPUTATION OF BEING A BEER THAT IS THE SAME ALL THE TIME. FINE FLAVOR, MELLOW AND BEST QUALITY. TRY IT TODA