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rs eeesee SOCIETY vs and Mrs, Leo Gomez and Urbien, of Cleveland, had been the house Mr, and Mrs. Henry 0. their home, 701 South 5 ft 28 yesterday i were accompanied on the to Cleveland by Wil- of Mr, and Mrs. attend schoo! in i son will iit i first time that Mr. Urbien have i they stated favorably im- West, speaking delightful climate Hf § iT as i ; : if & 4 : i if iF F it was scheduled evening under the American Le- Bugle Corps, has ? ht E i i | i Fish company and interests, who was in Jack- on business, returned over | Bast Coast yesterday. Baldwin, first assistant at Carysfort lighthouse, on the Havana Special for his quarterly vaca, his family, ; r f if i - i ; director of for the FERA returned yesterday visit in Mi- ! : j FH? fi Weatherford, spending a while with in Miami, returned over i i? i Mrs, Eugene Sawyer, who was Visiting her sister, Mrs. J. Albury, on the afternoon train yes- for Miami. “Mr. and Mrs. Fred Naatier and} . and Mrs, Dudley of Plant! » who have been visiting Mr. Mrs. J. W. Ludlum, ou White- ftreet, have returned to home. Mrs. George Maloney, grand- daughter, Barbara Maloney and} Brandvon, Michael Knowles, who| Were spending se’ weeks with feney's daughter, Mrs, Knowles and other relatives, over the East Coast yes- bn Mrs, Fane Skibsted and \ two children; who were spending a WRK MI Key West with retutive: and friends, left yesterday after- Boon for the home in Miami, Ben F. Gardner, who was spend ing short vacation in Key West With his mother and other rel tives, left on the afternoon tra yesterday for St. Augustine, whe: he is employed by the Florida East Coast Railway company, AvP. Baumann, traveling aud (er for the Clyde-Mallory Lines, who was in Key West for se eral | days installing a new system of} aevounting at the local office, left | Feasterday afternoon for Clearwa-| ter, Fla. } Salhi | Mrs, Albert Sweeting, who was | spending a while with her son-in-! law and daughter, Mr. and = Mrs.! John Lowe, left yesterday afte feon for her home at Miami! Beach, | Mrs. Norberg Sawyer and} mother, Mrs, Lusi Diaz, left over the East Coast yesterday for Ne i York to join Mr. Sawyer, who is! . employed in New York City. i A. W. Richards, retired em-| joye of the Florida East Coast | Beiiesy company, left yesterd: afternoon for a visit with rela-| tives in Pennsylvania and New! Jersey and will afterward go to Aransas Pass, Texas, to spend a while with his son-in-law andj daughter, Mr. and Mrs, KR. S., Erickson. S oe Miss Lillian Brown, of Lake! City, Fla., is a house guest of! Judge Jefferson B, Browne, at} the Air Station Apartments. ‘Miss Brown is the dat of this state. The family h for four generations ..beeh resi- dents of Florida. phe Mr, And Mrs. White’ Have House Guest - Included in the arrivals in Key West yesterday, was Miss Helen Lee of Fort Lauderdale, and Ala- ma, i Miss Lee will remain here for a lengthy stay, and-while in the city will be the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. William H. ‘White at their home, 1013 South street. been postponed until next Thurs-| day night, according to announce- ment made by members of the or- ganization, Mrs. George Stewart and daugh- ter, Yvonne, left on the afternoon train yesterday for Miami where they will spend a vacation with relatives. Miss May Sands, teacher in.the public schools of Key West, who had been spending -a<vacation. in Asheville and the mountain sec- tions of North Carolina, returned to Key West yesterday over the East Coast. / B. D. Trevor, head of the Trevor and Morris company and the Columbia Steam Laundry, who was in Hendersonville, N. C., for the past eight weeks, returned to Key West yesterday. J, H, Sealey and daughter, Eve- lyn, will leave Sunday for Chip- ley, Fla., for a visit with Mrs, Sea- ley’s parents, Mr. dnd Mrs. Gus Morris, G. C. Albury, of the Florida East Coast Railway ‘switching forees at Key West, left on the afternoon train yesterday accom- panying his son, Eugene, and daughter, Nellie May, going to Chicago to be the guests of L. C Schuldt, of the Interstate “Com- merce Commission, and Mrs. Schuldt for several weeks. SUNDAY DINNER SUGGESTIONS By ANN PAGE IS week and next yellow Elberta peaches will be at the height. of their season and the price is! erate. Since late peaches will be scarcer and high. now, is.the time to do canning preserving. Thompson seedless cand Malaga grapes: are plentiful.and tigetfely pripes, and honeydew at ly. pri joneydew fat Soe fine te ‘expensive. are pl ‘These vegetables help to make su: and cold plates t petizing things they are. Meats in general area litt or no more expensive—whi news. ‘The Quaker Maid suggests the fol- lowing menus: Low Cost Dinner Pan-broiled Round Steak } Creamed Potatoes —_ Buttered Beets Bread and Butter Fruit Cup ‘Tea or Coffee Milk Medium Cost Dinner Baked Ham Mashed Potatoes Creamed Cabbage Bread and Butter Seediess Grapes in Lime Jelly Coffee (hot oF iced) Milk Very Special Dinher { Melon Cup Roast Lamb Parsley Potatoes Creamed Corn | Tomato and Cucumber Salad Hot Biscuits Butter Sponge Cake Sliced Peaches Whipped Cream. Coffee (hot or iced) SPECIALS Large shipment of— "+ EXTRA LARGE HENS AND FRYERS Milk Fed Veal Spring Lamb FRESH PORK Pork Sausage Wieners ALL CUTS OF MEATS, CUBAN AND AMERICAN STYLE BY FIRST CLASS BUTCHER, PUBLIC MEAT MARKET PHONE 17-J .. . Frée Delivery cheaper is good Milk ter of; * the past several weeks,| Dr. Edgar F, Brown,,one of the; ‘en route to their/deading physicians and surgeons ino to epend the reat of her tife ing to epen 1 making Bob happy. What had geemed.in prospect dreadsully, dreary, orpe idyl of low vee Chapter 17 - «+ 4+0 94 MARSHA’S CALL 'B third week of the, honey: moon. was changed in -pattern by a necessary trip to town. Boh had run in before to see his mother, but his visits had been short, and he had broken all speed laws in transit in order to “get there—and back.” Now Bob had to see one of the heads of his company about “an- other bridge,” his mother’s birth- day must be celebrated by them to- gether and Marsha wanted to go to talk to Doctor- James—a want she did not-confide to Bob. “Hang it,” he said on the night before their early morning start, “I hate leaving here. It’s been so per- fect. I have an odd idea that it won't when we get back. I rprised to come back ~ and find, where this house stood, an empty space, and you a dream. But I couldn't gurvive it! Couldn‘t! And, iy dear, please, remember that!” ‘she glanced around the room where she, who had not thought herself to be domestic, had begun her housekeeping to find she loved it’... plamning meals, arranging flowers, ordering things. At the start she had said and tim- idly, "I think that little table would be prettier by the window,” and Bob answered with an easy-going, casual, “And why not?” And they had changed it. “lt trange how it had made she had suddenly known it"was her house. too, and that Bob saw it.so,.wanted it so. She had said, “I mever could change any- thing at Aunt Gertrude’s and of course I had no right to, but this is interesting; 1 do like it—the real- ization that'1 can move a chair!” “We'll tear down the place, if you want to,” hé promised. It made him ,“fighting mad” to think of Miss Ger- trude’s “sitting om any little thing Marsha wanted to do,” who was still ‘so-wholly the child when en- thusiastic, and charmingly, appeal- itigly so. % She had not understood his rise of tenderness. that had seemed to Brow from their moving the little table. She had only begun to know that happiness hurts those unused ‘to it. She did not sleep easily nor long at any one time, that night before their start for the two-days’ visit in town; Bob's pretended fear about tie house and its fading, and her * Hoping away, had troubled her. meéthing could happen any time, je reasoned, to so change the higuse for them that the ground might as well-bé barren. , {She would-tell Doctor James al! about it;-of:how. she had come to inhrry Bob, Powers and of what had jappened to her, married to him. nd.of how ineptly and weakly dis- dlute she had been, before Bob. And she would ask Doctor James whether she could make up for chéating Bob by the utmost of sin- cerity. She gave him nothing but that now; she could give him noth- ing less. STRIP of cold winter moonlight lay across a braided rug; sit- ting up—she was so restless—she saw it and in that gray, half-light, that Bob slept, she thought soundly. '. An impulse that had never before swept her, made her slip from the bed and to her knees; and here, ‘head buried in her arms, she asked of a something or some one whom circumstance had made remote for her, the boon of being always with Bob. When she lifted her head she saw Bob raised by ‘an elbow. “T hope you don’t mind, dearest?” he whispered. “No—” she murmured. He took her hands in his to kiss them lingeringly. “I've always believed in trying anything once!” she explained. She, somehow, had to get back to “a sort of ease,” but it was difficult to do so with Bob, more serious than Doctor James in his chancel ‘and equally, seemingly even more, hushed and devout. “Some day,” he said, “will you tell me what you asked?” “I hope I shall be able to, some day,” she answered. She shivered then. He laid a hand on her bare shoulder to find it chill, but it was+ not the winter night's cold that had made her tremble, but the realiza- tion that she might not ever have a chance to tell him that she had asked to stay with him always! |, He was scolding her alittle, in ‘his dear, gentle, but ratHer amus- | ingly firm, way, , about , “running risks,” He left bed to get a water bottle for her; a-very hot one with a shag- gy towel wrapped around it. She lay laughing at him, but tears were on her lashes, “There!” he said triumphantly he tucked it against her. And, sit- | ting up, he smoked the cigaret that now he always sought with waking. “Did I crash in horribly by’ wak- | ing?” he asked abruptly. ' “No,” she answered. | “One of my best waking night- | mares is made by thinking of doing fided. “I can have that sort of day dream, or nightmare, myself!” she answered him. “You!” He “You!” “Don't you think I could do any- thing you disliked?” ‘she ques- tioned. If he would say, “Yes, and Til forgive you! | love you enough to. forgive anything!” But, he did not; -he staid, and slowly, “Possibly, and the world coud end too 1 sup- pose; and it would for me, dearest one, if things weren’t right between ys." And then he had to kiss her hands! 5‘ NM ARSHA saw her aunt the next day in town; Miss Gertrude was even more acid'than usual. She / had not expected Marsha to make | this sort of marriage. Her friends all said, “How de lighted you must be!” Some of the ! more astute of them sometimes looked a trifle doubtingly and prob- ingly at her; as if she had manufac- tured the tales about Marsha! And she had done “everything—every- | thing” she could to “bring the child to a realization of her depravity!” “You say you are enjoying East- | hampton,” boomed out Miss Ger- | trude, “It is, [ have heard many folk say apropos your—sojourn, an odd place for a—a—” “Honeymoon,” Marsha supplied boldly. “We like it,” she went on, and in her new, gentie, way, “and it’s near mother. I don’t want to shorten her time with Bob. We're coming in to stay with her soon. You see I don’t want her cheated.” “The new role is very pleasing, Marsha,” said Miss Gertrude. “I can only say that“I trust it may en dure!” Marsha departed a little bruised and a little downcast, but faintly amused. Her aunt so consistenly ex- pected the worst; anything less than the worst actually disappotnt- ed her. Perhaps, Marsha decided, she had not had quite a fair chanée. Yes, the maid answered as she stepped into the hall of Saint Tim- othy’s Rectory, Doctor James was in and expecting Mrs. Powers. And hé asked that Mrs. Powers come up to his study; the door to it was the one at the head of the stair. The maid sought rear-rectory quarters haunted by Mrs. Powers, @ beautiful young lady who looked “that frightened” and whose lips trembled, but who did not forget to smile and to thank one who served, even though humbly. | Doctor James rose as Marsha | tapped on his door. “Come in!” he boomed. He marked his mystery story with a Lenten-purple book- marker that had been made for him by one of the Infant School. “Before you begin on it,” he sug- gested, with a pat of her hands, “suppose you smoke a cigaret, They. soothe.” She iaughed. He waved her to. 9 chair, She settled and he tried a cigaret lighter that would not light and then, muttering a little, he held a flaring match to the cigaret which trembled with her hand. “Not so bad as that, child!” he said. “When you get to my age you realize that nothing is so bad as you thought and that everything {s bet- ter than you ever dreamed, young, it could be. fam not, T hope, of the Pollyana school, but if one’s diges- tion is good, life does grow easier and easier and more alluring. Now what's the matter, dear child?” laughed after the chair that faced hers. “Everything —” she She told her story. (Copyright, 1934, by K. Haviland-Taylor) Tomorrow, Dr. James comfort to Marsha. brings HOTEL LEAMINGTON “MIAMI’S MOST POPULAR HOTEL” NE 1st Street at Biscayne Boulevard Overlooking Bayfront Park and Biscayne Bay Opposite Union Bus Station LOWEST RATES EVER QUOTED , Single Room with Bath .. Double Room with Bath ALFRED SIMONS, Manager. SoeCesorecosesoceoscoscoeoosenaces Aa eecsecseceves 4 something you won't like,” he con- { ‘bus’ operations in the United} | States. i es He settled on the edge of a deep | answered, | STORY OF EVENT. APPEARS IN CURRENT ISSUE OF NEWSDOM Policemen in Sao Paulo, Brazil, |wear long-tailed coats, leather}! belts with short swords and white! spats over black boots. PALACE Aileen Pringle-fheodore Von Eltz in LOVE PAST THIRTY Also Serial and Comedy Matinee, 10-15¢; Night, 10-20c STANDARD ICE CREAM AND ICES Chocolate Coconut 15 cents a week for the pa- j per and sells it to you for 20 | cents. His profit for deliver- ing is 5 conts weekly on each subscriber. -If he is not paid HE loses, Not The Citizen. Under the saption,, “Floris Ta I I a | Editor Goes To Ireland For! —————__________| Bride,” the current “issue of The, P. 0 DEPOSITORS Newsdom, of Florida, carries, a!" ° “* j story of Rev. Holmes Logan, who! REACH NEW HI } was, two years wgofpastor of Ley) ~ GH Memorial Methodist. Church , of | i Key West, ~ | fA story is ¥eproduced here-} The greatest number of deposi- with: | tors in the histoty of the postal | “Rev. Holmes Logan, editor of| Savings department in Key West the Orphans Firénd at Benson| was recorded at the end of July Springs, has gone to Ireland to} this year. The number was 807. marry and bring back to this state; In an article yesterday in The the lady who he has long waited | Citizen a total of 929 was report- | to marry, Miss Annie Storey of} ¢d recorded at the end of the; Belfast. | fiseal year of 1933 in June. This “Miss Storey is the daughter of Was incorrect and should have! Rev. Enoch Storey, who was aj Tead 629. } graduate of Cambridge Univer-; sity. England, and for years was )an Episcopal minister’ in Northern Ireland. Sinée his death. Miss Storey has devoted her life to the, care of an invalid mother and} sister and not until the death of| the! former has she felt free to Py. up her new role as wife. “Then, also, there has. been other hindrances to the culmina-! tiod of the wedding as far years Rev, Logan has tried without suc- ces$ to gain issi i ‘the United States ea 5. now he is forced to assume the} triple expense of making the! ‘voyage for his bride in order that she may enter the country as his wife.” More than 2,500,000 persons are’ employed in’ the industry growing out of motor track and| Vanilla Strawberry ‘ Sour Sop Sapodilla Mango Neapolitan Tropical Fruits a Specialty A. LUCIGNANI Licensed Ice Cream Maker LICENSED MILK AND CREAM DEALER i 522 Duval Street LIQUID, TABLETS, SALVE, ; NOSE DROPS Checks Malaria in 3 days, Colds first day, Headaches or Neu- ralgia in 30 minutes ine Laxative and Tonic lost Speedy Remedies Known FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1984. MANY BARGAINS AT HUB STORE In the advertisement of Hub Store in the columns today’s paper, there may be foun: some rare bargains in ladies’ am misses ready-to-wear clothing the of shoes specially priced for 7] day and ek. Especi: . tanding is a lot) of ladies’ dresses usually sold for| twice price offered for these; two days A number of house! dresses we to be practically given away, the*manager states. | There are numerous other ite listed including ladies hats which are to be closed out, ladies’ shoes, bathing suits and party froc! SPECIALS ——FOR—— Saturday and Monday THE HUB STORE LADIES DEPARTMENT Tide es ate ||.Cotton. and Sheer DRESSES, }. ‘beautifully made, all sizes, Y One, lot’ “bf” -$3.95 DRESS: *.spegially priced... SPORT SURTS, “made; in + $5.00 vailuds, | a 3 | 16 Party Frocks, formerly sold at $5.95, (These Dresses are not perfect), to close at - . LADIES’ SHOES, a large as- sortment of Whites, Cham- panes and Blacks, reduced for Sat. and Mon. _ $1.98 LADIES’ HOSE, full-Fashion- ed, Chiffon "and — Service } Weights, specially priced 75¢ LADIES’ HATS, to close out at only .... $1.00 BATHING SUITS, only a few |} priced at . - $1.00} SANDALS, not all sizes—not | all colors; reg. $1.00 at . 75 | WASH DRESSES, fast colors, } nicely trimmed, only ... 50¢ | The Old Stove Round-up is here again! Trade-in-allowances range up to $13.15. Terms are as low as $1.50 down, with balance in 24 monthly payments. Never has any Round-up equaled this year's in the values offered. Don't miss the oppor- tunity it presents to change your old stove for a new up-to-date gas range. Here are some of the important features you get in a modern gas range: Oven Heat Control .. . Insula- tion... Self-Lighting . . . Full Enamel . . . Pull-Out Broiler . .. Simmer-Speed Burners . . . ALL improve- ments that mean so much in labor-saving conven- ‘fence and real cooking pleasure. Add the economy, speed and dependability of Gas ~—and you have modern cooking at its best. Don't wait! install a new late model gas range—NOW, while Let us move out your old stove and you have the advantage of the Round-up trade-in- allowance. FLORIDA PUBLIC UTILITIES CO. ROBERT ROBERTS, Mgr. a} dl d : a 4 ENCHANTING Nw PERFUMES f . t [ i r fr ¢ i l i i} i | lit f i i if t ' f i all fj 1 Enclosed find 1 mauing ond for wice posse seed ZZ ‘mls of each af che 5 Neme =