The Key West Citizen Newspaper, January 24, 1938, Page 5

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elidel » ~~ ss *» = oy =: 3 3 ed F SOPETCEERDEREE AREER REE: <a ‘SPOR Carbonelh $1 Des BY JOV The crack USS. Destroyer! semi-pre Dunlap basketball team will play the Carboneli Stars tonight at 7:15 at the High Sthool Gym to start eff sport activities in Key West. The Dunlap athletes are tall and rangy and have snappy pass- work. Sucinski, who will play geard for the visitots; made the All Navy five in 1935. Other navy men on the starting lineup will be McKay and Cardellino at for- ward, Adcock at center and O'Neil at guard. Subs are Metts, Hawkins, Basler. The Stars will have Wickers, Navarro, Saunders, Carbonell, Cates, Baker and Knowles on their squad, a seasoned ctew who will give the (sailors plenty of fight. The Dunlap five are rated as UNITED STATES SPENDS VAST AMGUNTS IN MILITARY PROGRAM been playi in Brooklyn. This year they have | lost_but one game and that by a MALGRAT single point. TO FOUR SAFETIES: vic- Tenight, also, a softball game will be played at Bayview Park TORS AIDED BY SIX ARMY between the Navy. ten and the Army outfit. Action will begin "RRORS at 8 o'clock. Tomorrow .the -crack High School Varsity will tackle the: AceVedo Stars won from the Sailors in a basketball game at Atmy nifie yesterday, 8-2. 7:15, and the Cafaballo Devils en-. , Malgrat pitched the full game gage them in a softball gamie at for the Stars, holding the Soldier 8 p. m. boys to four safeties. Wednesday, the Fellowship|_ P- White tossed "em over the Club will clash with the Gobs in fit frame for the Army and a basketball contest at 7-15 p.m, Howard Gates the remainder o: and again ai @ p. m. the Lopez the contest. 5 é Funeral Home, champions of the ary & a tie oe ieee City, League, will battle it out;i7 four times up and Gates con- with, the destroyer ten for the feet ao singles for alf the final sports activity of the series. Do iki Chicco Sigles in five tries at the plate for the Sters. In the field, Dotméneth had sev- m chanees at short and handled all perfectiv. Barcelo and D. Lo- pez also played well for fhe vic- HELD SOLDIERS CACTUS DW. IS tree-sized cactus spreads-it- 1 self like @ giant tanover thé village of JNoteped im Mexico. Shep, silhouettes suggest that nature:mas in @ most fanciful mood whe8’# créateé the cactus family and titer? relatives. Some. typestmve pipes ; tie a giant organ; athersare ipghe, form of immense candelaiita; omy suggest caricatures of animalé*dnd’ men; some, following the idea of ice | bergs, have but little growth above / the” ground and a root as targe} LOS ANGELES, Jan. 24—The federal government owns 38,900,- 008 acres of land in California, or | = , 39 percent of the staté’s atréage, | _ department reveal. The Jat is appraised at $413,- ARFS TREE have their practical side, however— een fovi with food and Arink, . eoBtributions to Wardrobes, and.to-homiebuilding and ishing. Oeetsidcspecies bear ins , s used to make majasses and paper; iene ets ar¢ used in making mat wmguey plant, in partietiar, fer- Bish the natives with sliingies for theit crude thatched huts; and front / the roots powerful drinks are com coctéd. After ofe expéfience with ' COLUMN: tors. Nodine had 16 putouts and =. one assist at the plate for the By ALEXANDER R. GEORGE able and vulnerable cities of out army Cates and Joe Smith did around as a huge tree trunk. Most/ these potent drinks, however, ttav- | all of them, as a further fantestic} ejors visiting the countty of the fort- ence with crews. Write imme- Topas werd THE STC RUG WHEEL FA CHS CAR CAO RT MMe OF (By Ansociated Press) BROWNSVILLE, Tex., Jan. 24. AP Feature Service Writer WASHINGTON, Jan. 24—Our defensé.-is costing big money these days—almost a billion dol- lars a year. That is more than it has ever cost before in peace time. Congress has decided to spend this huge sum annually because naval limitation treaties and oth- er buffers against war fave fail- ed. “Jane’s Fighting Ships”, av- thoritative yearbook on world navies, discloses in its 1937 edi- tion, just out, a world-wide face And America, holding that our commerce and property abroad coast- oday the 'round- feveals: strik- ing power, with a huge com- plement of speedy cruisers and ers. | « More impottant than anything U™pires. United States bumps the coastline. . . .” %& Vast Arc well for the Soldiers. Robinson and Roy Hamlin were - Score by innings: R. HE. else to a battle fleet are its bases. ¢..- ” 901 000 623-810 3 A baseless fleet soon would ex- Army __ 000 001 010— 2 4 6 haust its fuél and become help- Batteries: Malgrat and D. Lo- less. pez; P. White, Gates and Nodine. Therefore, or naval defense = plan is outlined. by out naval NEW WAY FOR QUENCHING FIRE baSés as a huge are on thé world (RY Astecisitea Press) map. The arc is anchored at one end@ in the Virgin Islands, in the = Atlantic, afd at the éthef in the, NEW YORK, Jan. 24—It takes Aleutians, off the coast of Alaska. ™OFe dynamite, or even pure In_ between, it swings south Rittoglycerine, to blow out an oil ire ;Well fire at high altitude than from the Virgin Islands to the me When ‘battles of the future are fought in the stratosphere this fact may be important to fighters. i af was ih an oil well fire, al outermost extremity. from the meridian. aot The United States fleet and its Mexieo, = @ Continental off com- subsidiary units have their main 7 } ; ‘When vety bad ‘these fires are base et the hub of this arc—San: os bya of fi glycerine, exploded close to the blaze. It is like blowing out a can- ale. In Lee county a blast of 30 quarts of nitroglycerine, the Tadiate outward to any point on the arc; liké the spokes of a huge half-wheelk To Réplece Old Craft | The navy has a million tons of armored ships, 1,000-odd planes, and 130,000 méh to stioot out from | | fhe cerifral base to a danger spot.! quarts iThis foree ineltideés, however, fabout 200,000 tons of old vessels, explosion, the largest ever used “incapable of delivering a swift, for this purpose. eavy blow at aci enemy. The explanation is the rarefied It is the pufpose of the new atmosphere. Thefe’s not so much naval program to replace these 4if to blow. ever-age cfaft with swift new ;. vessels. Among them are two bat- British Shoes Blamed 4 oo isis i H i A : i f : i ? i { e | file + +. g le A / ii ret | E & z . I Eg : z i a f isi 23 ry Fi tleships of 35,000 tons each, now * ‘building, and dozens of destro it’s been with ever poem written so far. SUNDAY DINNER American shoes; he says, are built on the model of a “perfectly straight inside” whereas British shoes are shaped as if the human a to “eat “fis cake” and keep it, too. He wanted to know what was inside an Indian fetish, kept by 4 iced Bananas with Custar! iam ot Coffee Mik Medium Cest Dinner Povk Sheatder Roast d Spinach and Creamed Lettuce Salad Shettap Canapes Celery Hearts Roast Beef Washed Potatoes Green Pea: Grapefrcit and Orange Salad Rolls anu Butter Vanilla ice Cream Wafers Cofee in Lee, cotinty, New | amount ordinarily needed to. ' touch, have bright-hued blossums lending @ rakish note to their stiff) spine-covered forms. These exotic looking plants doi nightly cruises to Geatemala and VOLUNTEER | practical side of the cactus and con- Mexico usually lose interest in the diately. CLOTHES, Box 1189, centrate on the esthetic. nooga, Tenn. OBSERVER MAKES COMMENT ON ANGLO-AMERICAN TRADE TREATY By MORGAN M. BEATTY AP Feature Service Writer WASHINGTON, Jan. 24 — ''Phere’s more than meets the eye in this prospective British-Ami- erican trade treaty. For instance, it is an open seq- ret that the two nations never would have announced they were negotiating an agreement if they thad not reached a tentative for- }mula.in private. Any othet course would have invited failure and a horse laugh from the rest of the world. Then there's the prospective ap- pointment of the New Deal's No. I Business Man as ambassador to Great Britain. He is Joseph P. Kennedy, the New Dealer who thas tamed Wall Street for Roose- velt once or twice, as chairman of the securities and exchange Doubtless Kennedy could help calm British business men who expect damage to follow a lower- ing of British tariff walls that now keep out American goods. Then, of course, there was an- other hurdle to take secretly in the British dominions, all of whith now get preferred trade treatment within the empire. s j othe words, dominion gogds ¢: lerally circulate through em- Bian oe oe itdin to go to hi ions in Private and explain away their feats that a British-American agreement would rob them of | trade advantages. | This was done behind the scenes. Also drawn up out of sight was a list of likely products of the two nations and the British dominions on which tariffs could generally. If it should spread’ to* the dictatorship group, maybe} they would fot Be so bee iere | BABY CHICES ous people want peace. | = White “Leghorns; « R: +E. Then, too, you have to throw in| “Barred Rocks, White Rocks, the persuasive logic of America’s! joan Orpington ‘a a secretary of state, Cordell Hull,! postpaid live delivery. Fain's the author of the trade agreement, ,,Hatehery, Edison, Georgia. program, as one big reason whyjvis® se ttadé agteement with the United! : : States. LOST—Conklin Pencil in Post Hull is recogmzed as a ae, Office on Wednesday. Valued authority on trade and there’s simply no getting around the Hull Beulah Howard, phone 491. trade theory, even if you think it jan22- won't work. Here’s the Hull idea: The United States and othier | ORAS ERO SS eS aE nations should get together and |FOR RENT OR SALE—26-foot knock a few bricks off each oth- Boat—T7-foot beam, ex's tariff walls, so business men| HP Chrysler motot, V-Type bot- can see over and make profitable, *™- Apply 1010 Varela a international deals. a jan24-Itx Moreover, the countries sh | FoR SALE agree to share any lowering of | their tariff walls with all the oth-/ er nations of the world, save those | CORNER LOT, 50x100 feet. insisting on making seeret trade} et 5th deals on the side. | A “Hhis is very important, siniee the | Cor- world is gradually restructiiig its | “Wade within the i € limits of secret; Such | be- | worth | moth gem, eel Rstaghee lke £2 Hull argues trade breeds trade, | 19-4t and it should not be restricted by ‘aiid _— the secret side deals that now cov- | pERSONAL CARDS—100 ted et Europe. These deals are known } $1.28. publicly as “preferential treat~; ment,” “exchange control,” “bi- lateral agreements,” and what- i restrict ae : — ro sheets, 75e. The be lowered without killing off the i ‘elude the question of world un- fest. It seems that Great Britain | Would never have disturbed her smooth-running empire trade pacts if she had not been convine- ed that any agreement between democratic natiens these days was worth its weight in In other words, thegritishers have been convinced tha¥>= trade agreement between the two great- est democratic powers will pro- mote economic peace. That's im- portant because the world strug- gle today centers on economic su- pPrematy, arid not political rival ry. = The dictatorship “have-not™ na- tions would like to stimulate their a & i | ofRERT. ve "I nin = ‘Fhe Art maylS-tt ik as gift. Reward if returned to Press. Burros are too expensive for Earl Thanks to Frank Barrem, come- P. Haliburton, Okizhoma "illion- tary caretaker, Alamosa pets will aire, so he has turned to airplanes have a burial plece nef fer from to transport his gold in Honduras, where their masters eventually His gold mine is located near may rest. Tegucigalpa, Honduras, and can He asked for donauens of from ibe reached only by burfo or $1 to $5 from animal Invers, snd | plane. The gold concenttate, 3,000 With the money prepared = let | pounds daily, has to be transport “ STUDY BEST WAY TO. | DROP FOOD + coute® 2 jana4-10e} ET | safely and two in damaged con- dition. i : a Fe i Foreign planes arriving in land from disease-stricken | may be forced to land at “sanitary | airdromes” and be “disinfected” under the terms of proposed finb- F i i j z i i 4 ~— | The Citizen Office or Residence, 1309 Whitesead St. | CROSS O OS OSC OSESOOEE SES EES EESEESESE SE OSSEEERES OOS 'IIILIILI IIL IL LILA L ISS.

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