The Key West Citizen Newspaper, July 15, 1933, Page 3

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SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1933. By the World FORGOT A New Serial by Ruby M. Ayres er 5 Bernie's maid, tells Geory Nicholas is leaving Lon night, that that Chapter 43 UNLUCKY MEETING — two girls stared at one an- other, and it was Nelly who Igoked away, “I thought you'd be sure to know,” she muttered, With an effort Georgie recovered herself. “Going away! Where?” Her lips felt as if they were cut in ice, “I don’t know—abroad, some where. Miss Boyd saw him last night, and from what I can make out there was no end of a row. Can’t think why she doesn’t divorce him.” “Are you sure?” Georgie asked faintly. Nelly aodded, apd then with a Fush of sympathy she added. “Here, don’t you worry about him. They're all the same, these film stars.” Georgie hardly heard; she was ptruggling desperately to drag her- self out of the mists that seemed to be closing around her on all sides; she wanted to say “I don’t believe you,” but she could not, because in her heart she knew it was true. Nicholas had broken bis word to her. He was going away. “Well, 1 must be off,” Nelly said She touched Georgie’s shoulder. “Cheer up,” sho said. “There are as good fish in tho sea as any that are caught.” The door shut behind her, and Georgie stood up wondering why she suddenly felt so cold, Going away after he had told her that she was very dear to him. After h that he would not go away without’ her, And Bishop too! Was there no- body in the world ‘who was really sincere and honest? The door opened quietly and p walked in. “Hullo,” he said. “I wanted to talk t you” Georgie stared at him without an- swering. She remembered that she bad told 1 it her love for Nicholas; ‘was the one per man, bad set him wp on an absurd pedestal. Life was horrible. Love was a lie. 3ishop said quietly, “I am not go- S1ftE sof eepe The man rose from his knees and! looked at her. “Can I get you some coffee, or something warming?” he asked. “No, thank you.” He turned to the door again and’ Georgie asked: “Is it tonight Mr. Boyd is going away?” “By the midnight train, Miss.” “Thank you.” She did not like to ask to what destination Nicholas was going. Where did midnight trains go? The door closed softly and she leaned her head on her hand. After Nelly left her that after- noon, she had felt that she did not eare; she had had wild ideas of ringing Clifford Asher and of telling him that she had changed her mind, but the impulse had died away. At dinner time she had gone to bed, pleading a headache: That had made Evelyn irate. “You’ve no right to have head- aches at your age,” she declared, un- sympathetically. “Bishop will be furious. He has got tickets for the theater. I thought you were so fond of the theater.” Georgie shut her eyes. “I don’t feel well enough to anywhere tonight,” she said, wa- dering vaguely it Bishop had ever been furious with anyone in all his life; he had always seemed to her to be the acme of patience, and en- durance, but perhaps in that also she was mistaken, as she had been about other things. “The time may come when you won’t have the chance to go any~ where,” her mother said. sharply. “You're getting thoroughiy spoilt.” She fidgeted round the room. “If you think I want to go to the theater alone with Bishop, you're mistaken,” she added. “He only got the tickets to please you.” But Bvelyn had gone alone with him after all, and then Georgie had got up and dressed again, and had come to Boyd’s rooms. 3 No doubt he would be angry with her; possibly Nelly had been right when she suggested that he was not worth worrying about. Possibly she was not dear to him at all, and he had only said it to—in his own words—“make things easier.” (BRE was a ring at the bell. Georgie sat up stiffly. It could not be Nicholas—he would surely have a key. She heard footsteps crossing the tiny hall, then voices—a woman’s voice. “Nonsense. Ishall certainly wait.” Then the voice of Nicholas’s man, “But, madam—” The door opened under an impa- tient hand. Georgie rose to her feet, pushing back her soft hair; how her head ached! She felt a little giddy as she turned round and came face to face with Bernie Boyd. She was in evening dress, some- thing white and fluffy, and an ex- pensive fur wrap was slipping from her bare shoulders. She was frowning, as if some thing had made her angry; Georgie Tealiged that frown before Bernie stopped dead with a little sharp ex- clamation, The two girls stared at one an- other; Georgie said nothing, she felt as if she was an onlooker in @ queer dream. Then Bernie said blankly: “What in the world are you doing here?” Georgie found her voice with an effort. “T am waiting to see Nicholas.” “Nicholas!” Bernie came forward slowly, her eyes very blue against her careful makeup, When she was quite close to Georgie she spoke again. “Nicholas! How long have you known my husbandt” “Quite a long time,” Georgie said slowly; each word seemed a diff. culty, “We came back from Amer | ica on the same boat.” “T see.” The silence fell again, which Ber nie broke with a cutting little laugh. “Hardly tactful of him, is it, to have asked us both to his rooms at the same time?” “He didn't ask me,” Georgie said. “I just came,” “Really! And don't yon think it’s rather strange for a girl like you to be visiting a married man, at this time of night?” “I suppose you think so,” Georgie said, and then: “It's not very late, ia it?” “Have you been here before?” she asked, “Yes.” (Copyright, 1923, Dewbleday Doran) es Se ee cee | THE ARTMAN PRESS PRIN TING IN THE CITIZEN BLDG. e f THE KEY WEST CITIZEN BROWNS; SEVENTH STRAIGHT VICTORY PHILADELPHIA ATHLETICS WIN FROM CLEVELAND; DE- SOX, WINNING CONTEST (Special to The Citizen) New York Yankees scored eight in the first, and with the total of eleven, downed . the St. Browns who managed to tally si straight victory. The Chicago White Sox blanked’ ithe Washington Senators, 4 to 0, and sent the Nats into a virtual tie for first place with their leader- ship over the rough-riding New York Yankees reyresented by only a few precarious percentage points. The Philadelphia Athletics down- ed the Cleveland Indians. Bing Miller’s home run with two on base in the eighth inning gave the Mackmen the victory by a 3 to 2 ; Score, The Detroit Tigers outhit the Boston Red Sox 8 to 8. Tommy Bridges held the Sox to seven hits. The New York Giants were vic- torious over the St. Louis Cardin- als when the New Yorkers pound- ed Dizzy Dean off of the slab to go into a rout. This was the Giants third victory in St. Louis. As a result of the victory the New Yorkers increased their margin to four games over the second-place Chicago Cubs. The Brooklyn Dodgers downed the Chicago Cubs by a score of 5 to 3. Four of the Dodgers’ five runs were unearned as the result of two miscues by Billy Jurges and one tally by Bill Herman. y The Braves nosed out the Bucs and the Phils blanked the Reds. The summaries: American League At New York R. H. E. St. Louis . New York Batteries: Blaeholder, Gray and Shea; VanAtta, Brown and Dickey. At Boston Detroit .. Boston 8 9.1 Batteries: Bridges and Hay- worth; Pipgras, Welch and Ferrell.’ R. H. E. 813 0 At Philadelphia Cleveland - Philadelphia 3 9 0 Batteries: Ferrell and Pytlak; Oliver and Cochrane. R. HE. At Washington Chicago ... Washington Batteries: Miller Crowder and Sewell. National League At Pittsburgh Boston Pittsburgh Batteries: an, Hargrave; French and Grace., and Berry; At Cincinnati Philadelphia Cincinnati Batteries: em, joere = and’ Davis; Rixey, Frey and Hemsley, Manion. R. H. E. At Chicago Brooklyn Chicago Batteries: Mungo, Thurston and Lopez; Tinning, Nelson, Warneke, | Henshaw and Hartnett. At St. Louis New York . St. Louis ..... -716 3 Batteries: Fitzsimmons, Clark, Bell and Mancuso; Dean, Stout, Mooney, Johnson and O’Farrell. | BASEBALL TEAMS * READY FOR TILT A doubleheader of baseball is scheduled for Sunday afternoon at 1:30, The best that the recent cham- pionship series had to offer has’ been combined into two all-star teams and a merry battle is ex- pected all the way. The El Fenix nine will also take on the Sluggers. | Besides this attraction, there R. H. E. 4215 1 will be twenty honest- to-goodness cases of soda distributed absolute- ly free of charge to the fans | A large crowd is expected. ! TROIT TIGERS OUTHIT RED runs in the sixth inning with three | Louis, 4 city. This was the Yankees seventh] FURNISHED APARTMENTS with .| “Southern hatched blood ‘tested, PLAY ALL STARS TWO STRONG DIAMONDBALL The tennis championship of Key} West may be decided this Sunday. ! At the Marine Hospital court! beginning at 2:30 p. m., A. “Cuca” TEAMS FACE EACH OTHER JN THREE-GAME. SERIES Aguilar’s challenge for a three-| game series between his All-Stars and the Lopez Funeral Homers has been accepted. | Al diamondball games will be starting with the coming series. SPORTS — DEFEAT |UNDERTAKERS 10 |NET TITLES AT STAKE SUNDAY: bi Gomez will attempt to wrest the crown from Peter Varela. Both Gomez and Varela are well kn own netmen of the city and made a splendid showing against the Miami players that came here for a match. Gomez The Funeral Home has won two, Varela in hand. straight series and won all games| on the keys, so they have a well crown, the match will also be for} : earned right to be called the out-|the Park championship which , for his complete restoration. They} yas given with reservations. Besides playing for standing diamondball team in the Gomez now holds. Both Varela and Gomez Whether Aguilar’s squad will dispute this fact or not mains to be seen in the series, re- been coming! their game with strenuous {tice and Gomez now has his place- working hard looked the es- NEW YORK, July 15,—The played on Monday and Thursday ‘pecially good in that match and {from his play then expects to take | city have improving prac- Aguilar’s team is composed of, ment cuts down to perfection and the following: M. Aceyedo, Curry, N. Hernandez, M. Medina, G. Acevedo, B. Goehring, A. Ace- vedo, P. Artman, L. Acosta, O. Lounders, C. Cremata, C. Nunez, W. Arias and Pie Traynor. CUTS POLICEMEN CHICAGO—When two police-1: men of this city tried to arrest Mrs. Bridget O’Brien for intoxica- tion she'cut both of them with a razor. jeqee “CLASSIFIED COLUMN Coeecsccccconvsccse rtisements under this head inserted in The Citizen at Ad will be sertion, but the minimum for the 25e. Payment for classified adver- tisementsds invariably in advance, but regulaz_advertisers with ledger accounty may have their advertise-. ments, Adverti should give” their street address as well as their tele- phone number if they desire re- sults. With each classified advertise- ment The Citizen will give free an querer Razor Outfit. Ask for FOR RENT garage, $15.00 month. 1212 Olivia street. Apply jly13-4t' FURNISHED HOUSE FOR RENT, containing 12 rooms, on lot 650x198 feet, in select section of city, 1807 Whitehead street, op- posite beautiful Cora] Park, and facing the sea. Garage in rear. Rent $50 monthly. Apply to L. street or The Citizen Office. P. Artman, 1309 Whitehead CHICKS * Missouri Reds, Barred Rocks, White Rocks, Wyandottes, Orpingtons, 100—$5.45; Heavy Assorted $.4.45. Prepaid; live delivery. Southern Hatcheries, Jacksonville, Fla.” july1-8-15x FOR SALE 500 SHEETS typewriting paper. Only 50c. Get them at The Artman Press. Phone 51. jan? BLANK SALES BOOKS—Suit- able for every business. In duplicate with carbon paper. Only 5c each. The Artman Prets, Citizen Building. Phone 51. junl4-tf OLD PAPERS FOR SALE. Five’ bundles 5¢, containing 100 old papers. The Citizen Office. J. L. Stowers Music Co. may] WANTED WANTED—Yonu to know that we Cdode de lh hhrhonchnchnthihoachahnhnhtnchaarbeorale ohencdachoarhndhtachordcadeachortoona Club— Washington aj New York .. weccvecece| Philadelphia . Chicago Detroit Cleveland Boston St. Loui John Mulcahy of Chicago was|sary, and that the projected issue the first patient treated for cancer; of public works bonds just with a new giant X-ray that uses a 14-foot tube to develop 800,- 000 volts. N./ Varela his short game. AMERICAN LEAGUE 51 52 42 42 40 32 Ww. L. 55 NATIONAL LEAGUE Club— the rate of 1c a word for each in-. New York hicago .... first insertion in every instance is! Pittsburgh St. Louis Boston . Brooklyn Philadelphia - Cincinnati = 35 41 43 46 49 price rise already accomplished a Pet. +595 -541 -531 524 -506 456 +432 417 g| the gold dollar. ’ PAGE THREE WILL BUSINESS, CONVALESCENT, ~|H. CRUZ MAKES FEEL NEED ROOSEVELT ‘TONIC’?| NAME AS JOCKEY By BYRON PRICE wheel, except for mediation ‘in al KEY WEST BOY OPERATES ON of Bureau, The Associated| Wage dispute. ‘ Press, Washington) soc hile 4t was gotting sendy, = MAJOR TRACKS IN * 5 Stati loadings jumped so unexpecte NORTH The big _ question — agitating that: the men higher op. bogen Washington just now is whether a * | s0 . : wondering whether it might not me of the major projects of the!) 1 ature apply her. Roosevelt recovery program ought} “4 Lea to lef narure anny to be put into effect at all. Chay pooper ner ‘i = Ts The sustained business urn, ot Unanimous flere making a name for himself as @ {coming before ae eat eee The hardest nut bein to crack jockey on the major tracks in the had a chance to try its new pow-!|is the industry control problem,/ north. He has surprised AG aes it affects the most peo-| A news pes onapee SE pbs |*brain-trusters” alike. They are| ple. phos ile mage igs ig leased, in a way, but confused as} Many industrial leaders who, on ‘ished in the Miami Herald wit Lie enya 4a lower market, prayed to Wash- the caption “Former Key West j li rari Boy Rides Three Winners,” says; They are like a group of ee se ngoey now at lisiey Gruz, up and coming lit-. geons, gathered in their -white} sap ee aaa e ag rea : tle apprentice jockey from Key robes to perform a desperate| on rhea uncer = aay Se West, Fla., who was slightly in- emergency operation on a patient | “ REA a) ne ume ae jured in a spill yesterday, today who suddenly sits up on the op- he a ae Ss, too, show sigms Of) showed the fall did not retard his erating table and shows a healthy, cis non ¥ kal Tiding effectiveness by booting jdisposition to go places and do}, hrough two feverish weeks|jome three winners at Empire pes bataaghe ve the textile) Cruz started his triple with Mrs. 1 Gems is phi pe ay iin hel rresidente signature on his re-| ing number. He got his second win- nae % fine tthat reall oltec |turn from vacation. He return-|ner aboard Mrs. A. J. Contento’s Fees SON ee y eftec-! ed. Nearly a week passed before} Haha in the featured Roundtree tive steps are about to be takenihe acted, and then his approval|Purse and then completed the day by scoring with Mrs. C, W. Wil-. Predictions what Mr. Roosevelt] liams’ Scotch Soldier in the fifth, will do in specifie cases are just Others shake their heads and} plain guesses. vote to let well enough alone. The! The only safe prophecy is that ° ll ces With all p* advancing ;eabinet is divided. So is the! he will keep a free hand respect- “brain trust” Mr. Roosevelt, with| ing the vast powers voted him, us- final say, is spending much of his} ing those which from day to day time listening to both sides. appear to him desirable, and pi- Then He Acts geon-holing the rest. In the matter of the wheat pro- gram, the President said, “Go } (Chief Harry Cruz, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Cruz, of Key West, is rapidly sur-} |fear he might lose confidence if} ‘the operation were abandoned. ahead.” The maximum processing tax| was imposed, even though the large part-of the improvement the+ processing tax itself was designed to accomplish. In the matter of inflation, he has exercised virtually none of the inflationary powers given him by congress. Apparently, he is giv- ing no thought whatever to using the extreme power of revaluing} AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago at New York, Cleveland at Boston, St. Louis at Washington, games. Detroit at Philadelphia. NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn at Pittsburgh. New York at Cincinnati, Boston at Chicago. Philadelphia at St. Louis, STINGY HUSBAND Most recently the public works and railroad’ coordination pro-} grams have been thrust into the center of this general controversy. Some of those highest in ad- ministration counsels would rather not spend a penny of the $3,300,- 000,000 authorized for, public! CHICAGO—Mrs. Rose Bardon works, With thousands going) of this city testified in her divorce back to work in normal activities, suit that her husband refused to they argue that vast employment} buy her a pair of stockings. expenditures no longer are neces- The only woman delegate to the disarmament conference being would do more harm than good. held in Geneva, Switzerland, is So far, the new railroad ad-! Mrs. Corbett Ashby, distinguished ministration scarcely has turned a’ British liberal. now screens, wire, each . each ....... Cypress Window Frames, “Your Home Is Worthy Of The Best” Cypress Doors, with galvanized $2.50 Cypress Doors, with bronze wire and fancy grille, each— $7.15 0 $7.50 Adjustable Screens, for windows, 16 mesh galvanized wire— 80c . $1.00 Screen Door Hinges, ALSO ALL SIZES OF LUMBER REQUIRED TO BUILD SPECIAL SLOPE L III RIDELDD DPD LIPOSIII ED | hcl aching rchtemeoma Che cheek ded huhu SCREEN MATERIAL For Doors---For Windows for “40¢ Bronze Screen Cloth: 24” wide, yard . 30” wide, yard 35” wide, yard Galvanized Screen Cloth: 24” wide, yard ............ 24e 26” wide, yard ............ 26e 28” wide, yard . 30” wide, yard Other Widths In Stock Sereen Door Sets, 35c complete, each SIZES OF SCREENS : : : \ ;

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