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PAGE EIGHT $900 000000000000010500000000000000000 000000000000 = Classified Column we SOCOSOCOOOOOCOOCOOOEOOOOOOEEOCOSOOSOOOOOOSOOSESOD -» Advertisements under this head Will be inserted in The Citizen at the rate of 1c a word for each in- s@rtion, but the minimum for the first insertion in every instance is 25e. Advertisers should give their street address as well as their tele- phone number if they desire re- bar for classified ad Payments for ifie ver- tisements is invariably in advance, St regular advertisers with ledger accounts may have their advertise- ments charged. = : FOR RENT EDRNISHED apartment, White weireet. Apply 503 Duval street. 4 June 28-tf “e liar etehtienreitcclhenesnt torical FURNISHED apartment, modern “tonveniences. Apply on prem- “ises. 1126 Von Phister street. : a july13-12tx FURNISHED house. Apply at 825 Duval street. july17-3tx NICELY f urnished. apartment; wide porch with awnings. Apply B13 William street. july19-3tx GORNER GREENE. AND ANN SSTREETS—Oppomte City Hall =-—Suitable for storage rooms, , repair shops, ete. Ap- garage, ply The Citizen, d3c20 & ~ WANTED ms WANTED good second hand cash aregister. “G,” care Citizen. ao 3 july14-tt RK as houseman, elevator run- “ner, waiter or any kind of hotel «work by experienced middle “aged North Carolina colored “Sman. Wallace Stitt, 728 Wind- «sor Lane. july 20 3tx .«ED—Those who desire en- ~graved visiting cards to give us sper orders. The Artman rs 125 Duval street, in The Citizen building a24 i FOR SALE FOR SALE—Ford touring car, in i good condition, $250 cash. Ap- “ply 604 Caroline St. july19-4t WARRANTY deeds, mortgage . feeds, notes and other legal We keep them in stock. FOR SALE FOR PRINTED SOCIETY STA- TIONERY, The Artman Press, 125 Duval street. Phone 66. RUBBER STAMPS— When in need of Rubber Stamps, see the Artman Press, 125 Duval street, Key West Florida. tf OLD PAPERS for sale. 100 for a nickle. The Key West Citizen, 125 Duval street. tf REAL ESTATE BARGAIN LOTS on Grinell street, 106 ft. 9 in. by 108 ft. 6 in; reasonable price. Address P. O. Box 92. mar 11 PRR ESSES TEE: Re ane aamesc Sau ‘ALUABLE CORNER—Southard and Elizabeth; 69 ft. on Eliza- beth, 100 ft. 6 in. on Southard, Easy payments. Address P. O. Box 536. mari1 MISCELLANEOUS _ TEACHERS—Get ready for ex- aminations and secure a better position. Take a course under Dr. Rogers' who offers special tates to teachers, Grinnell and Washington streets. july19-2tx Measuring Party To Be Given Tonight At Home of Dr. And Mrs. Kemp fHE KEY WEST CITIZEN recsccececcesccoccccoccccccocesccecccccsccescosoccsesscovcs coosecsoceoses | py of Mrs. Mary Widow and Children of Murdered Publisher ©0060 0OCOOOl 09OOSOSOOSOOOOSOSOOOOEO= = F0OSOOTOSSOEOOOOSODOOOSSOOOTOOOOESS sl Moo! Yulee Vignold Takes | LonDoN—Dr. stavros Damoe- ‘esterday lou, Greek dietitian, declared in a Place Here Y lecture here that persons drinking The funeral service for Mrs.|milk in large quantities developed Mary Yulee Vignold, who died {the brains and mentality of a cow. peer sear ges aoe S19] ‘The coachwhip bird of Australia afternoon at 5 o’clock in the St,|!® % called because its note re- Mary’s Star of the Sea‘ Catholic sembles the crack of a whip. church. Rev. Father Turner was|cemetery, with the following teh officiating priest. The cere-|friends of the family of the de- monies were sad and impressive,|ceased acting as pallbearers: and the floral offerings were/ George McDonald, John 1. Albury, numerous and beautiful. Louis Bierna, John Wells, Braxton Interment was made in the city|B. Warren and Will Freeman. TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1926. 4 STERLING, Ill.—Going to help of a dog his cows had tacked, L. H. Currier was gored to” death by the maddened animals, @ Get an Emerson Electric Fan and forget the heat. july12-+tf FURNITURE RENOVATED, Upholstered and Refinished. Mattresses Made Over Parlor Cushions Made W. R. Garing, 509 William St. The measuring party to be given _jat the home of Dr. and Mrs. C. F. Kemp, on Simonton street, prom- ises to be a delightfully interesting affair. An excellent program of inter- esting and feslourbce numbers will be rendered during the eve- ning, and superb music will add to the pleasures of’ the event. The measuring party and the interesting program were planned by the ladies of the parsonage aid society of the First Methodist church, and it will he given under the auspices of that organization. At the left is Mrs. Don Mellett, widow of ihe Canton (0.) publisher who was shot to death follownig h‘s editorial war on vice and graft. Above are their children. Betty is at the left, Evans in the center, Jean at the righi and Martha in front. At the top, a sketch shows how Mellett was shot down. ‘ Faneral Services Are jlovely floral offerings to beauti-'acted as pailbearers: Charles fully embank the casket and then Rosam, Thomas Watkins, Benjam- Held Yesterday Afternoon the new-made grave. The new in Curry, Louis Edwards, Robert For Mrs. Eva Baker rector of St. Paul’s Episcopal: Knowles and Otis Kemp. church, and the following friends) us LY a é Do ants. mobilize_in youricake-box? | Si detente gd genial Spray Fiit and kill them. Flit spray destroys ants, bed bugs and roaches. It searches out the cracks and erevices where they hide and breed and destroys insects and their eggs. Kills All Household Insects Flit spray also clears your home in « few minutes of disease-bearing flies and mos- quitoes, It is clean, eafe and easy to use. Spray Flit on your garments. Fiit kills STANDARD OIL CO. (NEW JERSEY) moths and thelr larvae which eat holes, Extensive tests showed that Flit spray did not stain the most delicate fabrics, A Scientific Insecticide Fit is the result of exhaustive researeh by expert entomologists and chemists, It is harmless to mankind. Fiit has re- Placed the old methoc's because it kills all the insecta—and does it quickly. Get a Flit can and sprayer today. For sale everywhere, — BEARUP'S DRY CLEANING S14 MARGARET STREET The Artman Press; 125 Duval street. tf} CPOIIIIIIIIOII Ls. CIP PPPLLARELL AL Lede de ded CLLLEUBETETLTLELITOIOML ATI L ED, MASTER~ CLEANERS AND PRESSERS A large concourse of sorrowing WORKS Louise Baker yesterday afternoon “To children an angel of PHONE 227 7 Y | Stood sixty years’ fest. Georgia street. | or by. mail, 500 @ botile, directions are followed, IT NEVER | 7, resi 9 FAILS, Despite scareit: ind enermous | at 4 o'clock at the residence, 916 Tot of sANTONIN. It contains Tull dose, verywhere Many friends brought and sent Est. C. A, Voorhees, M. D.. Philaddphi> —_— #4 SLOT NATIT relatives and friends attended the iH if iH Wi ms y Allan B. Cleare & Co. funeral service for Mrs. Eva umsteaiswo yrup y . Pig. Box 18 Wholesale Grocers ana Commixxion Merchants 511 FRONT STREET Key West, Fla. Cm. To the Editor of The Key West Citizen: In going over the returns of the recent election in The Citizen I was a great deal surprised not to find the name of the Chairman of the Board of Commissioners for Monroe County, Mr. Otto J. Kirchheiner, whom it was my pleasure to meet several times dur- ing my trips to Key West/last winter. At this distance I do not know why Chairman Kirchheiner did not stand for re-election. His reasons may be wholly, good but I am willing to doubt if any reason except serious illness would keep Monroe County from re- electing him were he to run. These days, these years, this decade are a critical time for Key West and Monroe County. Water from the mainland is go- ing to make a startling change in the living conditions of the Is- land City. The swift progress on the Oversea Highway gives in- dication of connections with the mainland of the Commonwealth within afew years. The bridges across the three long water gaps seem almost assured. A system of automobile ferryboats will certainly ring motors into the city before the bridges are done. A movement for city planning and Zoning is gathering speed, whereby the City Beautiful may be prepared to meet the develop- ments the water and the highway will bring. This is no time to change horses; no time to shift true and tried men and substitute true men who are not tried; no time to do any one thing to discourage any responsible board or commis- Letter To The Citizen From Frank W. Lovering Bedford, Mass., June 25, 1926 sion working for the ultimate good of Key West. It is no time for * Mr. Kirchheiner to subtract his capability, his energy and his vit- al interests in Monroe’s welfare from the Board of County Com- missioners, whether he remains as Chairman or not. This.is the day and the hour for Mr. Kirchheiner to stand by “*his County. I cannot believe the County has refused or would re- © fuse to stand by him if his name were 1 » sideration. I believe Monroe needs his continued services until fore the voters for con- the climax of the great good things for Key West and for the com- munities along the Keys shall have been reached. If the leaders in civic affairs—the men who pick men and the men who vote for men who are ified for the places for which they are picked—if the leaders in civic affairs can induce Chair- man Kirchheiner to stand for re-election, then it would seem to me as if the best interests of Key West and of Monroe County would be well served. As one who though far away has a warm spot in his heart for Key West that in home towns measures the love of a native son; as a property owner and a tax payer in both the city and the coun- ty; as one who in the North, shot through though the North is with anti-Florida propaganda, is steadfast in his preachments of a substantial Florida and a more beautiful and a greater Key West, I want to say in closing that in my opinion Mr. Kirchheiner ought to stand for re-election as a civic duty. I believe Monroe is calling and that Mr. Kirchheiner should heed the call. Very respectfully yours, FRANK W. LOVERING . : ; .4 t e gf ;