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i i : 3F i s t 5 E z i ii oF Eee z z f F i ef fir iE Z re Fx ea : elie He lit fm her eyes, beyond ‘trom knowing another disap- Affairs were obviously ‘being as he had hoped! Mr. had wo more than touched » lr ae his face wa; gray and “Has Mrs. Powers breakfasted?” questioned abruptly. sir; 1 presomed, Mr. Robert, “She had slept late and would th her room. 1 had hoped she was getting enough over hock, sir, She worked steadily bard these last, long months. on night up.” “But the nurses?” Bob prompted ‘sir. But your mother wanted Mr. Robert. And she knew it. Aad eb6 answered every want and S04 of your mother's without a ford of complaint and when Han- tte a or I would remonstrate, the always answered with, ‘But is te be with Mrs. Powers; | . ald benowhere else if she needed eet” “Him,” Bob murmured. TAn4 Mrs. Powers, it meant ing to her, Mr. Robert, if | may G0 vot” ‘Ge on,” Bob prompted heavily. “Mra, Powers said one day to me, sald, ‘We knew, didn't we, Bar. . that Mr. Robert would Someone like our dear child?” L agreed, as one must knowing four wife, sir. That was the day Powers gave your wife the Prarie.” “Gea!” Bartholomew stiffened; perhaps, te reasoned, be had go bit too fat. “i beg pardon, Mr. Robert?” he ai4 unsteadily. “H's Gothing, Bartholomew. Will ee ON my giass, please” filled the glass; Bob drank deeply trom it and rose. MEN he reached the upper hall be found Hannah, a disturbed Hannah, stepping from Marsha’s room. “Mr, Robert,” he heard. “Yes, Hannah.” “Mrs. Powers is not at all well thls moruiog, Mr. Robert. | just now tea her tub for her and as she ma wap to the bath room she was very eesteady. | toubued her skin as | Dut her negligée around her. She's a thought per- afte with feve id beat Gaba Doctor deck ~ a. beat fa Doctor Jackson arn call him, Hannah, thank you. Powers you say is bathing e 1 Mr. Robert.” turned into his own room; ehér return to her room from ‘Pathroom which adjoined it, he would bear her. Aud meantime, with @ view of understanding Mar she better and so, perhaps, giving bet More justice, he would open thi He stepped into his room, closed the door after himself; locked it. ‘The box opened readily. Bob took from it & miscellaneous assortment that ha@ had to do with him, in all we yee | boy-to-manhood eras, had ved, neatly ticketed and with Powers’ Spencerian writ- ing mypren tab. a 's Horoscope Peer nceweeceeeues The Gepiat indications for the first day’ of the month are for a Petron of free, generous spirit, With « liking for nature and a con- templative disposit: There is a Pautious and practical of Mind, with a decided financial | Mbility, which should provide a Mibfactory condition in the !at- Ter days of life, other aspects be- tng equal. turn Subscribe for The Citizen. a He had had a strangely apolo- etic feeling about opening the box #ad touching its contents. But the key had been sent him with the word that there were things in the box for which he would care. Well, he did care for them, and {t hurt to care, The younger, rounder writing of Lis boy-written letters gave him an- other, even deeper pang, He had dreamed then, with enchanting in- Rocence, of marrying some nice girl and of being very happy. He had never dreamed, he could ‘not have dreamed then, he realized, that he could marry, as he had, to be acutely unhappy and that he would (through the “nice girl”) lose Self control, go to pieces, hurt her and himself as he had the night be- fore. Quite as well that the future was shrouded, for to suffer before a trag- edy as well as after would be a bit more than any man could bear. Why had Marsha tried to pry the box open? Why'had she meddled with a thing that was, so obvious!y, not to be meddled with? How had she dared? As he looked at the collection he felt anger against-her rise again. Possibly, he thought hotly, she would have been amused at the col- lection . . .. amused, if she had suc- ceeded in picking the lock, He frowned as he wondered over her reason, and thenhe saw and Picked up ® little folded sheet of his mother’s stationery, She had ak ways clung to her mourning and a narrow black line edged her paper. He opened it with interest and the feeling of the imminent disclosure of a secret. It: was evident that his mother had written the few lines in haste. “I want you to ti with you,” he re Marsha back “It may not seem to you, as you read this, wise, but It is my wish, My disapproval of modern separation is entire and I have gleaned from the atmos- phere, that you and Marsha con- sider it. “Wor my sake, and because much wrong may be righted in the space of a year, | am going to ask you to take Marsha with you, wherever you may go for that spacr of time, and to give her what chance you can, and every opportunity, to show to you the affection that she bears you. “} think no woman could love you more.” HAT was'the end of the message which had, evidently, been writ- ten in haste and with some consid- erable emotion. So she had known, and Marsha had known that his mother’s appeal was in the painted box. He opened Marsha’s door. She sat up in her bed as he moved toward her. He saw fright in her eyes; did she think be was going to belabor her again? “Please, please!” he begged, “don't be afraid of me, Marsha!” “I'm not, truly!” she assured him, 4 trifle unsteadily, and che lay back. By the bed he stood looking down on her; he was alarmed by the flush on her cheeks and by the brightness ot her eyes which were raised to his. He ventuted to lay a hand on her forehead. As Hannah had said, she was “afire with fever.” She drew a little away; he moved to settle on a small chair that stood near, “Marsha—" “Yes?” “It's difficult for me to say all I feel. I've never been so deeply ashamed, if that’s anything in the way of apology. I don’t know that it is. Again she sat up. “It’s all right, really. It doesn't matter. As you said, a great many men have kissed me. | don’t know why it hurts me. But 1 didn’t expect you to when I didn’t want you to. But it doesn’t matter.” “It matters rather terribly to me, Marsha.” She looked at him vaguely. “I put the pearls and the bracelet on my dressing table top,” she said, “Marsha,” he stretched an ap- pealing hand toward her. “1 didn't mean that! I know my mother gave them to you. I want you to have them.” “No, 1 couldn't really. I'm so sor ry. | don’t want to hurt you, but I couldn't. And I khow that she gave them to me and that’s all that mat+ ters; I don’t care about having them . I] I need is the feeling that she ited to give them to me +. and she did!” She dropped back again, and turning a little from him she hid her face in the crook of her arm, He saw her shoulders shake. “Oh, Marsha, please!” he begged frantically, voice roughened. (Copyright, 1934, by K. Baviland-Taylor) Notice To Sabscribers Please be prompt in paying the carrier who delivers your paper. He pays The Citizen 15 cents a week for the pa- per sells it to you for 20 cents. His profit for deliver- ing is 5 cents weekly on each subscriber. if he is not paid HE loses. Not The Citizen. ‘TODO DM AM Ms ve ix game with the Trojans. ; “4 BASEBALL GAME IN ALASKA IS REALLY SOMEP'N 6p otc RR i | CROWDS POUR IN FROM ALL! SECTIONS OF ALASKA TO | | HALTED BY RAIN, SECOND CALLED | | Oe ere | STANOT GOODYEARS ‘BEAT cuBAN, _ “MERICAN LEAGUE | Club—. Ww. L. CLUB IN SIX-INNING FIRST) 1:4 és CONTEST; V¥LAREAL! New York 438 PITCHES ONE-HIT VICTORY Cleveland wes Boston ne 62 1 St. Louis ....... The Goodyear boys completely Washington routed the Cuban Club last night Philadelphia ‘by a score of 9-0 in a diamond- Chicago : ; ball game called at the end of the ‘sixth inning bevause of rain, J. Villareal pitched a one-hit, Club— Ww. LL. | game for the win, New York 46 In the second inning, with the Chicago | bases filled because, of allowed St. Louis z NATIONAL LEAGUE walks and}Cuban Cub ertofs, A. Boston {Machin canght! qne on and drove it gut for a Lied nose. Pittsburgh rhn.! Brooklyn The leading batters were d.!Na-! Philadelphia —.- {varro and ‘this ‘same hometur” , Cincinnati Machin. As foi picking "em wp}in rt the field, A. Macbiti and Espinoza {featured for the winners, Esquin- | | aldo and Tynes for thé losers. This win put the Goodyears in a tie with the Acevedo Stars for} TODAY’S GAMES AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington at New York, Boston‘at Philadelphia. i H : Chicago at St. Louis, | third plaee and though the Cuban | aie eal ; Club now has three straight losses | . rae }and no wins they moved up al NATIONAL LEAGUE (notch to fourth place. There was) | : ae !no fifth place because of the| St. Lowig at Chicago. | Goodyear-Acevedo tie. Pittsburgh at Cincinnati. | ‘The second game was called} New York at Brooklyn. | off because of the rain. The Ace-| Philadephia at Boston. SEE U. S$. S. WRIGHT NINE PLAY \ A baseball game in Key West, south in the United MAJOR LEAGUES ©", 3. ' States, is just another ball game. |in Alaska, farthest north of the | | | —— i | | “DIZZY” DEAN TIES “GOOFY” ! GOMEZ FOR HURLING, #0 event. HONORS; CHICAGO SHARES! The U- S. nine, which has played SECOND RUNG WITH CARDS} : : ! West against local nines, was tak- North American continent—it’s | Wright’s baseball | in Key len as ‘@ matter of course in this; (Speciat te The Citizen) | But in An-| NEW YORK, Sept. 1.—‘Goofy’} Gomez day yesterday ’ Dean yesterday. So s itching racket in the Pet.} leagues. The loose-in-the- | dome hurlers have started a mer- 'y swing in the little most-southern city. chorage, Alaska,twhere the sailor- before 4 : ;men played on Aug. 16, thousands of Alaskans came on foot, by spe- bi ‘cial train and gas boat to see the | battleship team play. ‘A special excursion train arrived | from Seward bringing some 500 | visitors. including the mayor, the} two matter of .592| the major Jeague pitching crown. the Senators, who Tately haven’t Jet g' out a peep, awti beat them to gain g;lirst place. among pitchers, Yes- Dean whipped’ 'Chicago’s with Ik, equal percentages with the Chicagoes, who are in second place. The New York Giants and Fitz- simmons beat the Flatbush bunch 2 to 1. Detroit’s Tigers were idle and! | the Yanks proceeded to win from Washington 3 to 1, gaining a half .516, Thursday Gemez picked .on 48 naval ball team and rooter - they, Just, te shew how ed {are for baseball up there, the An- | chovage shortstop walked 28 miles ; 1 for a chance to play. Although’ the Alaskamen were deféated 3-2, everybody was ha py. even the shortstop. who had toi walk the 28 miles back home. and wentimée, a — tie | Gomez for the same honor. also enabled St. Louis to Today” Anniversaries waencancesese: | game in the race for first pla 1—Lydia H. Gigourney. rae white sre team couldn't! noted poetess of her day. born at make e grade against the St. Norwich, Conn. Died Hart- vedo Stars and Young Boys So-! ial Club, fighting for first and | “LEGALS Louis Browns who won a 3-2 de- The Browns are up and ford, Conn., June 10, 186 | second place respectively, were to have played this. Here’s what the boys did: Seore by innings: R. H. E. IN TH CULT COURT OF 7 JUDICIAL « « IDA, IN COUNTY. | Goodyear Shoe Shop— lanene aor | 041 001 9 8 3 ; Cuban Club 000 000— 0 1 6, ¥S Batteries Villareal and 0. nzalez; H. Garcia, Tynes, M.} quinalde and L, Bazo. Is EDITH <N Summary: Errors: L. Bazo 4.|HERNERT THOMAS, Hernandez, C.- Hernandez, J and alt unknown pi |.Navarro, A, Espinoza, L. Alonzo;| Having or claiming an int | rans batted in: A, Machin 5, A.1in,,{he lands involved I Alonzo, A. Espinoza, J. Navarro; ORDER OF PUBLICATION home run: A. Machin; three base! ,..'' ting hy the sworn ove stated cause, j hits R. Valdes; two base hi x | Navarro; stolen bases: Zocal, Ra=! ! | mirez 2, Espinoza; struck out: by | Garcia 6, by Villareal 5, by Tyne known » Building, 33 bases on balls; off Garcia 9. off | ¢ Thomas Tynes 3, off Villareal 2; left on |-— Thom: = wite, it mar ee ‘nh 5-{i8 unknown and ne | bases: Goodyear 9, Cuban Club 53} cnown aduress, | losing pitcher: H. Garcia; time of i game: 1:15; umpires: Griffin and Hise The standings: Junior League . Newark, h of said defendants ions s Four (4), Seeti TROJANS | SLUGGERS IN 1 {thd Klorida’ Records. 1 ft is therefore @rdered that Jersey; coming. | See for yourself: i NATIONAL LEAGUE At Brooklyn 2. HE 1795—James Gordon Bennett, | ted New York Herald pub-| Scot- THE | tH- i celeb: ‘lisher and editor, born in Died in New York, June 1, and. New York pee a Brooklyn CEA aks aie a | pbatcriess Pitaniaemnan a iaoie enna: [eee ae MS Rie Ose ACE| snd humanitacian, director | ea of the New York Institute for the { at aan, , ' Edueation of the Blind, ol¢est! ‘ Nar Cen 4 i E-| <chool of its kind in country, horn soe, oe ’ leat E s. Died at Pompton. | ‘ Chicago ; ee 1881 | Batter . Dean and De- 4 : pm] rey? seats pcrae Weaver! 1349—Flizabeth Harrison, pio- in Beene, Tee neer in kindergarten work in the United States, born at Athens, Ky. Died at San Antonio, Te: Oct, 31, 1927. | Boston at Pittsburgh. not sched- a uled, Philadelphia at Cincinnati, not) 1868—Frank McKinney Hub-{ tied. scheduled. bard (“Kin Hubbard”), Indianap-} olis, Ind., humorist and caricatur- AMERICAN LEAGUE ist, horn at Bellefontaine, Ohio. At New York R. H. E.) Died Dee. 26. 1930. Washington A i One eo ee New Yo 3.6 0 eholder, Andrews, Coffman | are Russell, Thomas and! and Grube. Batteries: Club— W. t. Pet. of A eran in the| Bolton; Rufting and Jorgens. — |Gates Stars 2 0 1.000 viee of a — Detroit at Cleveland, not sched : 000; summons in Chance whom x a 2 : )¥. B.S. C. . Se Ue waulagnind eat, det That} At St. Louis R. uled. | Acevedo Stars 101,500; ms having | Chicago 2 ——— Goodyear 4.8.3... 1-1 5500 ; aa st in and e St. Louis 3 14 Boston at Philadelphia, not ICaban Club... 0 3 .000/hif “oe complaint, ‘coswit: Suns Batteries: ‘Tietje and Shea;' scheduled. NOTICE Notice is hereby giver rollowing deseribed lands, i j defendants be, and they are he { 7 es bathe to appear ey t much thereof as will be ne y the amount due for tix Comma iat. tiled: in ‘ 1933 herein set opposite ether with the MT such su { g@tions of said bill ill be ke ef OQetober 1), 1924, at the Mm, ut the € | MILD. “GRUDGEY-ARISING 'BE-|f,\dintessed by sald defendants.“ |anor, the Gounte of a pe aae | tis further Ordered that this : { TWEEN TWO BASEBALL| Order be published once each week = | for four consecutive Weeks in ‘The | NAMT | TEAMS; HAMLIN SIGNS Key West Citi wspaper pul Gt. Ps Roselle, Mary Te f August, A JACKSONVILLE PITCHER ‘Bernard Waite’s Trojans Deputy Cle on the spot and in the time! ‘tomorrow afternoon, {ALLAN B. 3, . it] Solicitor nplainant 1-11-18-25 | er at Navy Field beginning at 1: promptly. le For the nightcap a special “hot! ; number” is prepared for the fays. made The youngster nine will clash with ‘the Sluggers again. Two weeks! J ihack these two teams fought al’ the way in a splendid game which the Sluggers won by last-minute hittin These two teams are getting up a mild “grudge” against each other. Especially is this so i with the youngsters. who are an- xious to make good in a big way The Trojans realize they have a; fine hitting team, but mehow the early leads they al pro. : vide is wiped out in late innings. | Tomorrow they’re going to hold tight all the way, according to | Manager Bernard Waite. Roy Hamlin, Slugger mentor, ! ‘has signed up a “lefty” to hl jagainst the Trojans. His name is { Williams and he has been prom- sivyn that ertait ree of Toreclosur und entered on th August cause mer Wes ne and ure aintifts and Diana M his wife defendants, of lien of tax deed, the { General Master in Chance a will sel | William wi in th duriy m Mo D. sale legal hours of Ist day of October, A following described land lying and being in the Ci Monroe and State of Florida wit I Five G) (6) of Sect Th in uth of Ray st, conta i {bates Septemh at public} urt House of [ Township ISLAN eo. Twp. R rk. | bet TH-246 (anne. wie in and by the Sar. tieth} "y 1 e of] ¢ 1 4 4 Wof-| 4 i 4 4 they front} POINCIANA, SUB, OF hook 1 Pwr. . a. ck 9, SECTION 1 Six ion | | | nge | n- | | | | FRANK H. LADD, linent in league play at Jackson- SYMOND R._ LORD ville this year, | cgvpGeneral Master in Chancery The J. Fred Talbott will play] “CURRY HARRIS. | | Tax Collector, Monroe County. . sepl-8-15-: arey yo : : PAGE THRED a Popular Firms ene IN -o- aa eS Cocoanut Plants, each Hibiseus Plants, each ple 50c to $1.00 Poinsettia Plants, SOc te $1.00 Just Call 818 and Have a rotons, each 2S< READY-TO-SERVE Turks Cap, each 25e PASTRY DESSERT Roses, dozen, $1.20 Delivered to You South Florida N Maloney & Peacock $ Phone 507 Catherine St. : PLUMBING DURO PUMPS PLUMBING SUPPLIES Coccvccccccesscsossscs INSURANCE Office: 319 Duval Street TELEPHONE NO. 1 PHONE 348 JOHN C. 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TURNS BY WIRE Come in and get the results from Major League Games CIGARS CIGARETTES SOFT DRINKS, Fte 611 Duval Street AARON McCONNELL 536 Fleming Street Our Reputation is Wrap- ped in every package f : PRINTING = ARTMAN PRESS of WATCHMAKER, JEWELER AND ENGRAVER See Him For Your Next Work ALL PRIC REDUCED Hours: 9 to 12—1 to 6 Open Saturday Nights Citizen Bidg. PHONE 51