The Key West Citizen Newspaper, February 15, 1936, Page 3

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SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1986. & SYNOPSIS: So far as anybody ean determine, the man found dying at the foot of a cliff near the Marchbolt golf course fell acciden- tally. Frankie Derwent views the Occurrence with suspicion, but Bobby Jones, who found the man, ees nothing out of the way. He has arranged to help Badger Beadon ‘with a garage in London, and when @ mysterious offer to go to Bouth America at a high salary arrives, feels he must refuse. Now Frankie 4s asking Bobby to come to a party én London, and Bobby, feeling that he would ‘be out of place in her wealthy set, is refusing. Chapter Nine. PICNIC wo you're quite finished ex- pressing your inferiority com- plex,” said Frankie coldly, “perhaps you'll try getting out of the bunker with a niblick instead of a putter.” “Have I—oh, damn!” He replaced the putter in his bag and took out the niblick. Frankie watched with malicious satisfaction as he hacked at the ball five times in succession. Clouds of sand rose round them. “Your hole,” said Bobby, picking up the ball. “I think it is,” said Frankie. “And that gives me the match.” “Shall-we play the bye?” “No. I don’t think so. I've gota lot to do.” “Of course. I suppose you have.” They walked together in silence to the clubhouse. “Well,” said Frankie, holding out her hand. “Good-bye, my dear. It’s bee> too marvellous to have you to make use of while I've been down here. See something of you again, perhaps, when I've nothing better to do.” “Look here, Frankie—” “Perhaps you'll condescend to come to my coster party. I believe you can get pearl buttons quite cheaply at Woolworth’s.” “Frankie—" His words were drowned in the noise of the Bentley’s engine which Frankie had just started. She drove away with an airy wave of her hand. “Damn!” said Bobby in a heart- felt tone. Frankie, he considered, had be- haved outrageously. Perhaps he hadn't put things very tactfully, but dash it all, what he had said was true enough. Perhaps, though, he shouldn't have put it into words. The next three days seemed in- terminably long. The Vicar had a sore throat which necessitated his speaking in a whisper when he spoke at all. He spoke very little and was obviously bearing his fourth son’s presence as a Christian should. Once or twice he quoted Shakes- peare on how sharper than a ser- pent’s tooth, etc. On Saturday Bobby felt that he could bear the strain of home life no longer. He got Mrs. Roberts, who with her husband “ran” the Vicarage, to give him a packet of sandwiches, and supplementing this with a bottle of beer which he bought in Marchbolt he set off for a solitary picnic. He had missed Frankie abomin- ably these ‘ast few days. These older people were the limit. They harped on things so. Bobby stretched himself out on a brackeny bank and debated with himself whether he should eat his lunch first and go to sleep after- wards, or sleep first and eat after- wards. While he was cogitating, the matter was settled for him by his falling asleep without noticing it. When he awoke it was half-past three! Bobby grinned as he thought how his father wouid disapprove of this way of spending a day. A good walk ecross country—twelve miles or so—that was tne kird of thing that 2 healthy young man should do. It led inevitably to that famous remark, “And now, I think, I've earned my lunch.” “Idiotic,” thought Bobby. “Why earn lunch by doing a lot of walking you don’t particularly waft to do? What's the merit in it? If you en- joy it, then it’s pure self-indulgence, and if you don’t enjoy it you're a fool to do it.” Whereupon he fell to upon his un- earned lunch and ate it with gusto. With a sigh of satisfaction he opened the bottle of beer. Unusually bitter beer, but decidedly refreshing. .. . He lay back again, having tossed the empty beer-bottle into a clump of heather. He felt rather god-like lounging there. The world was at his feet. A phrase. But a good phrase. He could do anything—anything if he tried! Plans of great splendor and daring initiative flashed through his mind. ‘ } Y AGArna CHaistie — Frankie jumped out and, turning, extracted a large bunch of lilies. Then she rang the bell. A woman in nurse’s dress answered the door. “Can I see Mr. Jones?” inquired Frankie. The nurse’s eyes took in the Bent- ley, the lilies and Frankie with in- tense interest. “What name shajl I say?” “Lady Frances Derwent.” The nurse was thrifled, and her patient went up in her estimation. She guided Frankie upstairs into a room on the first floor. | “You've a visitor to.see.you, Mr. Jones. Now who do you think it is? Such a nice surprise for you.” All this in the “bright” manner usual with nursing homes. “Gosh!” said Bobby, very much surprised. “If it isn’t Frankie!” “Hullo, Bobby. I've brought the usual flowers. Rather a graveyard suggestion about them, but the choice was limited.” “Oh, Lady Frances,” said the nurse, “they're lovely. I'll put them into water.” She left the room. Frankie sat down in an obvious “visitor’s” chair. “Well, Bobby,” she said. “What's all this?” “You may well ask,” said Bobby. ‘I'm the complete sensation of the place. Eight grains of morphia, no less. They're going to write about me in the Lancet and the B.M.J.” “What's the B.M.J.?” interrupted Frankie. “The British Medical Journal” “All right. Go ahead. Rattle off some more initials.” “Do you know, my girl, that half a grain is a fatal dose?-I ought to be dead about sixteen times over. It’s true that recovery has been known after sixteen grains—still, eight is pretty good, don’t you think? I’m the hero of this place. They’ve never had a case like me before.” “How nice for them!” “Isn't it? Gives them something to talk about to all the other pa- tients.” HE nurse re-entered, lilies in vases. “It’s true, isn’t it, nurse?” de- manded Bobby. “You've never had a case like mine?” “Oh, you oughtn’t to be here at all,” said the nurse. “In the church- yard, you ought to be. But it’s only the good die young, they say.” She giggled at her own wit and went out. “There you are,” said Bobby. “You'll see, I shall be famous all over England.” He continued to talk. Any signs of inferiority complex that he had dis- played at his last meeting with Frankie had now quite disappeared. He took a firm and egotistical pleas- ure in recounting every detail of his case. “That's enough,” said Frankie, quelling him. “I don’t really care terribly for stomach pumps. To lis- ten to you one would think nobody had ever been poisoned before.” “Jolly few have been poisoned with eight grains of morphia and got over it,” Bobby pointed out. “Dash it all, you're not sufficiently impressed.” “Pretty sickening for the people who poisoned you,” said Frankie. “I know. Waste of perfectly good morphia.” “It was in the beer, wasn’t it?” “Yes. You see, someone found me sleeping like the dead, tried to wake me and couldn’t. Then they got alarmed, carried me to a farmhouse, and sent for a doctor—" “I know all the next part,” sald Frankie hastily. “At first they had the idea that I'd taken the stuff deliberately. Then when they heard my story, they went off and looked for the beer-bottle and found it where I'd thrown it and had it analyzed—the dregs of it were quite enough for that apparently.” “No clue as to how the morphia got in the bottle?” “None whatever. They’ve inter- viewed the pub where I bought it, and opened other bottles, and everything’s been quite all right.” “Someone must have put the stuff in the beer while you were asleep?” “That’s it. I remember that the top wasn’t still sticking properly.” Frankie nodded thoughtfully. “Well,” she said, “it shows that what I said in the train that day was quite right.” “What did you say?” “That that man—Pritchard—had been pushed over the cliff.” “That wasn’t in the train. You bearing ‘Then he grew sleepy again. Leth- argy stole over him. ! He slept... | Heavy, numbing sleep... | ‘FYRIVING her largo green Bentley, Frankie drew up to the curb outside a large old-fashioned houge ‘over the doorway of which was in- jecribed “St. Asaph’s.” PHONES MUZZLED BY YUGOSLAVIANS —Telephone subscribers here have °-| In addition, scolding, said that at the station,” said | Bobby feebly. H “Same thing.” | “But why—” : “Darling — it's obvious. Why should anyone want to put you out of the way?” ; (Copyright 1933-35-36, Agathe Christie) Two amateur detectives work, Monday. — j those directed against the state,| ;Yeligion or morals, and against} public, personal or economic e| | curity. cursing 115-15 tie game. | second victory over out-of-town liocals were minus their star play- LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL( FIVE DEFEATED IDA FISHER TEAM, 38-33 CAPTURED SECOND VICTORY OVER OUT-OF-TOWN QUIN- TETS AT GYMNASIUM LAST NIGHT Two cf the bes: basketball games played this season in Key West was witnessed by local fans at the High School gymnasium | lest night. In the opening contest of the evening, the Convent girls’ team and the All-Star outfit played a The action was fast and excit- ing from start to finish. In the nighteap, the Monroe County High School Conchs de- feated the strong Ida M. Fisher High School five from Miami} Beach, 38 to 33, making it their) teams in as many games. The er, J. V. Woodson, but the other members of the club made up for his loss, , The first game was so close, | that never during the four quar- ters could it be taken for grant-/ ed which team would win. The high scorer of the game was Ber- nice Brantley, with 11 _points./ Edna Gomez rung up nine. L.; Acevedo made the other four; points for the Convent girls. Clara Yates and Norma Yates made three points each for the Stars. Miss Hernandez played a great game for the Convent outfit, as did Misses Ramos and Banche and; Beulah Brantley. For the Stars, Fay Adams, Ida Kerr and Miss Niles were outstanding. Seore by quarters: Total All-Stars 26 2 6—15 Convent . 4 6 0 5—15 In the main contest of the eve- ning, the Typhoons from Miami) Beach started out like they meant business but their quick passing system was just as quickly solved by the local boys. As I said in the artice yesterday, the Conchs are hard to crack and it takes more than a typhoon to do it. In the first and second quar- ters, the visitors had the lead over the Monroes but in the “third part of the game, the locals scor- ed 13 points to the Fisher boys’ three. In the final quarter they scored 10 to the visitors’ 11 points. At one stage of the contest the score stood: 28 for the Conchs, and 22 for the invaders. Three straight fouls and a field| goal gave the visitors 27 points as a total at that time. Then Key/ West scored another basket and the tally was 30 to 27. At this junction, local rooters were given| a scare. The visitors made two field goals, bringing the score 32; to 31 in Key West’s favor. The} Conchs then crawled out of their shells and rung up a field goal and from then on with four min- utes to play they scored five more! points while the Typhoons mark-; ed up two more. The leading scorers were: J. Pinder gnd C. Knowles with 12] points each for the locals, and| Baida and B. Drury for the visi- tors with nine each. Powell, of the Typhoons, made seven points. ; The playing of Strother, captain | of the Ida M. Fisher five, pleas-| ed the local fans. for his passing and dribbling were excellent. All the Conchs deserve equal credit, for Wickers, Saunders and Lopez played their position like} masters and with Woodson help-} ing them to victory from the side- lines, they fought like trojans for} their Alma Mater. Score by quarters: Total Key West ...... 4 11 13 10—38 Miami Beach .11 8 3 11—33 Free throws missed: Knowles 2, Wickers 3, Saunders 1, Baida 1, Strother 3, Powell 1; technical foul: Strother 1. iToday’s Birthdays; Secccccscccccscccecosece j Savings Rnkic in thin .city “and j began chewing the ; Elihu Root of New York, one- thme secretary of state, ex-sena- tor, Nobel Peace prizewinner, bern at Clinton, N. Y., 91 years ago. Joseph Hergesheimer of Phila-} delphia, noted author, born there, 56 years ago. Stephen F. Voorhees of New } York, architect, president of the! 15: received a declaration which each! #t or arguing with the telephone/ 4 vorican Institute of Architects, must sign if he wishes a renewal of service. The de the teleph aration pledges e will not be used for of forbidden conver-; either the subscriber or anyone c! Forbidden conversations are that! , Operators are banned. Many subscribers are refusing! to sign. j ee Fuel in the form of coal, nat- ural gas and wood is plentiful in Oklahoma, with many communi- ties having a supply of all three. born at Rocky Hill, N. 56 years ago. ¥., John Barrymore, actor, born in Philadelphia, 54 years ago. Dr. Thornwell Jacobs, founder- president of Oglethorpe Univer- | ‘TWO BASEBALL jed again tonight at the | Fleming and Duval streets, begin- RESEARCHERS WON! ANOTHER CONTEST: DEFEATED EAYVIEW PARK TEN YESTERDAY 6 TO3 The Research Department ten, the team that finished last in the first-half of the Social League, remains in first place in the sec- ond-half. They defeated the Bay- view Park outfit yesterday after- noon, 6 to 3. Joe Hale, who was on mound for the Researchers for seven innings, allowed but five hits. Albio Acevedo pitched the last two frames and although wild, gave up no hits and no one scored off him. With two safeties in three times at bat, Hale and Knowles were the leading hitters. Kelly and Albio connected for two hits in four tries at the plate. D. Lopez, Sanchez and Kelly for the winners, and Gonzalez and Thompson for the losers, were outstanding in the field. Special mention must be made of the shoe-string catch by P. Varela in left field for the Re- searchers. He kept the Park boys from scoring at least two runs by the catch. Score by innings: Bayview Park— 000 100 200-3 5 4 Research Department— 201 002 10x—6 11. Batteries: Hale, Albio and Acevedo; Elwood and A. Smith. the R. H. E. A, Standing of the league: Club— W. L. Pet. Research Department 2 Sanitary Department 1 Administration oe | Stowers Park 8 Bayview Park 0 -000 Monday afternoon, the Admin-} istration ten will cross bats with} the Stowers Park team at Bay view Park, beginning at 5 o’clock. GAMES SUNDAY MONROES MEET ACEVEDO STARS IN FIRST AND CATES STARS IN SECOND FRACAS At the Naty Field Sunday aft- ernoon there will be a double- header of baseball played. In the first game, the Monroes will meet the Acevedo Stars. This contest will get under way at-1 o'clock. In the nightcap, the Monroes will play the Cates Stars. Rather than split their club to help form two teams, the Mon- roes decided to play in both games. Wickers and I. Rodriguez will be the battery in the first game for the Monroes, and the Stars will use Elpidio and G. Acevedo. In the nightcap, the Monroes will have Salinero an@ Rueda, and the Cates Stars will use Casa and Griffin. STREET SERVICE HERE TONIGHT Street services will be ‘tofiduct- ier of ning at 8:15 o’clock - by | Hoffert. He asks all to attend and hear how spiritual forces may be made to operate for success, health and happiness. Henry sity, Atlanta, Ga., born at Clin- ton, S. ©. 59 years ago. Shelby M. Harrison of New York, director of the Russell Sage | Foundation, born at Leaf River, Tl, 55 years ago. SQUIRREL EATS MONEY WEBSTER, Mass.—A_ squirrel seampered into the Five Cents corners _ off $20 bills. Policeman William Prout’s hand was bitten before the squirrel was overpow ws | a COMING EVENTS The following events cover the week of February 9 to February SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15 Rest Beach—Swimming and sun bathing. Sail boat rides. Duval Street—7:30 P. M. until 9:30 P. M., Promenade. Raul’s Club on the Boulevard— Dancing tonight. F kkddeckdedd) | | | LEY MEMORIAL M. E. CHURCH, SOUTH Rev. M. L. Smith, Pastor Cor. Georgia and Division Sts. Church school at 9:45 a. m., with Albert H. Carey, superinten- dent. Morning worship at 11 o’clock. Subject: “A Preacher of Right- eousness.” Young People’s Department has its morning session in the Division street school building with Miss Alice Jenks as president. Junior boys and girls at 4 p. m., with Mrs. Mary Thompson in} charge. Young People’s evening session at 6:30 p. m. Fi Evening preaching at 7:30 p. m.! Subject: “Why It Is Good Busi- ness to Attend and Support Churches of Key West.” Prayer and praise service each | Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. i} Young people’s choir practice} on fourth Friday, 7:30 p. m. Church choir practice each Fri-! day at 8 p.m. Mrs. J. Roland! Adams, pianist. CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH »t! 627 Wiliiam Street . Richard Evans, Pastor Siinday’ school, 9:45 a. m. Morning worship at 11 o’clock. “God’s Care.” | Ejdeavor, 6:30 p. m. Orship 7:30 o'clock. “Bittér Waters Made} x 3 evening at 7:30 o’clock. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH J. C. Gekeler, Pastor Corner of White and Washington Streets Sunday school meets at 1¢ a. m. Oscar Norman, superintendent. The Adult Bibie Class is taught by the minister. Members please read Luke chapter five. Morning worship at 11 o’clock. Topic: “Help For Him Who Needs i” Evening worship, 7:30 o’clock. The sermon is the fifth in the series of Rainbow Virtues. Blue is the color of Loyalty. Are you Blue? At the mid-week Bible Study the studies in the parables of Jesus will be completed. Please read Matthew 25:14-30, the Par- able of the Ten Talents, or How to Use an Opportunity. You will be welcomed «xt any or all these services. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Corner Simonton and Eaton Sts John B. Culpepper, Jr., Pastor Church Sunday school opens at 10:00 a. m., under leadership of Gerald Saunders, general super- intendent. Each department meets in its own assembly room. Worship service at 11 a. m. Subject: “A Prophet of Israel.” Epworth Leugue meeting at 6:30 p. m. Miss Ida Kerr, presi- dent. Evening service at 7:30 o’clock. Subject: “The Characters in One Life.” Special singing by the Glee Club jof the High School will be heard ‘at ‘the' évérling service. Mill-week ‘prayer “and praise servi¢e’ bn'‘Wednesday at 8:00 p. Chbit'‘¥éhearsal on Friday eve- ning lat 745’ o’clock: Mrs. Joseph Sawyer, organist; Gerald~ Saund- ers, choit director. : CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY 327 Elizabeth Street Sunday school, 9:30 a. m. Sunday morning service at 11 e’clock. Wednesday evening service ai 8 o'clock. | Reading room in Society build- ing open Fridays only. PENTECOSI AL MISSION 909 Olivia Street Wm. Skondeen, Pastor Sunday morning worship, o'clock. Sunday school for all, 3:30 p. 11 m. Sunday night evangelistic serv- ice 7:15 o’clock. Tuesday, 7:15 p. m., prayer and praise service, Friday, 7:15 p. m., fellowship meeting. Saturday, 2:30 p. m., boys’ and girls’ church, GOSPEL HALL 720 Southard Street Meetings at 7:30 o’clock on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday nights. Subject for tomorrow night,} “The Son’s Portrait of the Fath-| er” by’George MacKenzie. An invitation is extended to all, and especially Christians are urg-! ed to attend these meetings. | . _ pewure=P 5 SG _ eB it | Clie —+-8@268 « FLEMING STREET METHODIST CHURCH Cor. Fleming and William Streets Shuler Peele, Pastor | Church school meets at 9:45) a.m. William N. Knowles, sup- erintendent. The Wesley Fellow- ship Bible Class meets in the pat tor’s study. Morning worship at 11 o’clock. Subject: “The Rejected Stone.” Intermediate Epworth League meets at 3:30 p.m. Miss Venda- line Watkins, superintendent. Hi-League meets at 6:30 p. m. Miss Marie Knowles, superinten- dent. Young People’s League meets at 6:30 p. m. Norman J. Lowe, president. Worship service at 7:30 p. m. Subject: “The Sunday Sleeper.” Mid-week prayer and Bible study, Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. Choir rehearsal Wednesday im- mediately following the mid-week service. Mrs, P. B. Roberts, di- rector. Young People’s choir rehearsa! on Thursday at 7 P. M. Misses Susan LaKin and Jeunje Mae Johnson, dircetors. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Eaton Street, Between Duval and Simonton Streets James S. Day, Pastor Bible School at 9:45 a. m. Allan Robinson, superintendent. Morning worship at 11 o'clock. Baptist Training Union at 6:30 . m. Evening worship at 7:30 o’clock. Prayer service, Wednesday evening, 7:30 o’clock. Thursday evening, 7:30 o’clock, choir rehearsal. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH, SOUTH “EL SALVADOR” Grinnell and Virginia Streets Rev. Guillermo Perez, Pastor (Services in Spanish) Sunday school, 10 a. m. Preaching, 8 p. m. Mothers’ Club meets Monday, Corner p. m Bible study and prayer service, Wednesday, 8 p. m. “LA TRINIDAD” Duval and Angela Streets Sunday afternoon services Dr. DeBarritt. Friday night services conductel by Rev. Perez. CHURCH OF GOD J. M. Gresham, Pastor 1106 Olivia Street Services Sunday morning serv- ices, 11 o’clock. Sunday school, 3 p. m. Evangelistic services, 7:15 p» m. Special singing. SAINT PAUL’S CHURCH Corner Duval and Eaton Streets Sundays Morning Prayer, 6:45 a, m. Mass (Communions), 7 a. m. Mass for the Church School, 9:30 a. m. Mass of Thanksgiving, 11 a. m. Evensong Prayer, Sermon, Benediction, 8 p. m. Week Days Morning Prayer, 6:45 a. m. Mass, 7 a. m. Evening Prayer, 5:30 p. m. A second Mass on Wednesdays, 9a. m CATHOLIC CHURCH St. Mary’s Star of the Sea Rev. Wm. Reagan, S. J., in charge Order of services for this church: Sunday morning Masses will be said at 7 and 9:30 o'clock. Week-day Mass at 7 o’clock. Evening service at 7:30 o’clock, Sundays and Fridays. MIXED BIBLE CLASS Sam B. Pinder and W. P: Monti- cino, Teachers This class meets every Sunday morning at the Harris School au- ditorium at 10 o’clock. Men and women not connected with any other Bible Class and regardless of denomniations are invited t» attend. by TRINITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH (Colored) Nev. Alfred DeBarritt, Pastor 717 Simonton Street Morning worship at 11 o’clock. Glee Club SING AT FIRST M. E. CHURCH Sunday Night 7:30 o’Clock SPECIAL SERMON BAPTIST CHURCH In the opinion expressed by Rev. James S. Day, much of the present conditions existing in Key West—financial, moral and re- ligious—is because somebody has “been asleep at the switch.” Rev. Day will explain what he means by this stataement, in his sermon at the First Baptist Church tomorrow evening, it is stated. Anyhow, it’s time for Key West folks to wake up, the Pastor says. At the morning service Rev. Day will speak on the “Value of Pray- er.” Subject: ant.” Church school, 3:30 p. m. Bible class by the minister. Lessons from Luke. Evening service, 7:30 o’clock Stbject: “The Life and Work of General Booth.” Special music by the choir. Weeknight service, Tuesday, at 7:30 o’clock. The Parables of Jesus. Friday at 7:30 p. m., choir re- “The Unmerciful Serv- hearsal. SAINT PETER’S CHURCH (Coloreds Center Street, Between Petconia and Olivia Mass, 8 a. m. Solemn Evensong and Benedic- tion of the Most Blessed Sacra- ment, 7 p. m. Church school, 8 a. m. Sermons at 8 a. m. and 7 p. m. Week-Day Services Mass on Tuesday and Thurs day at 7 a. m. Litany and Sermon on Wednes- day at 7:30 p. m. Confessions: After the Wednes- day evening service. SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH (Colored) Southard Street Between Thomas and Emma Streets William Perkins, Pastor G. Williams, Missionary Leader Sabbath School (Saturday), 1¢ o'clock. Church services, 11 o'clock im the morning. Prayer meeting every Wednes day night at 7:30 p. m. Y. P. M. V. S. meeting, 5:30 o’clock p. m. BETHEL A. M. E. CHURCH (Colored) Corner Division and Thomas Sts. H. R. Hill, pastor Sunday school, 9:30 a. m. Freaching, 11 a. m. Junior A. C. E. League meets at 5:39 p. m. Senior A. C. E. League meets at 6:15 p. m. Evening service, 8 p. m. Weekly Services Tuesday, 7:30 p. m., Class. Friday, 7:30 p. m., choir re hearsal. {OPISIIIIIIIIL III III DONT BUY-TRY FREE FOR THREE MONTHS (Z part. the rate, SES ILE LE LE EE LM ME Oh hh headh dh dbadke de doadiudd, <” The Company will install a three or four bur- ner ELECTROMASTER range on a free trial for Be modern and cook by wire. It’s clean, fast, and economical, for the more you use the cheaper After trial, when you have found out that an electric range will do everything that you expect of it, you can then start paying at the rate of AS LOW AS $1.25 PER MONTH with a liberal allowance for your old equipment SEE US REGARDING THIS PLAN The Key West Electric Company Chk dk de dididkckdchadatataddde PAGE THREE SUNDAY EVENING There will be a special service at Fleming Street Methodist Church tomorrow evening, ac- cording to announcement made by the pastor, Rev. Shuler Peele. This service will be in the form ‘of 2 dedication service, ‘dedicat- ing to the use of the church 200 new Methodist hymnals. be songs from the new hymnal, some old familiar hymns and some of Mrs. P. B. Roberts, will pro- vide special music. All members and friends of the church are in- vited to attend this service, states the pastor. Cecccccccceccceesesesees CLASSIFIED COLUMN ee ecesccecce REPRESENTATIVE WANTED TO SBCURE COPYRIGHTED CONTRACTS Individual or Family Groups 1 to 80. Every claim paid. Address Suite 325 Comeau Building, West Palm Beach, Fla. febl4-3t WHY SEND YOUR UNITS OUT —if I guarantee my service? When you want a guarantee service on your refrigerator, call 268 or 685-J. E. Martinez feb10-imo HOUSE, 6-ROOMS, HALL AND BATH, large lot, shade and garden. Price: $750.00, some terms. For appointment write ply 514 Margaret street, phone 152M. } TWO FURNISHED HOUSES. Ap- ply $ CHARLES ROBERTS STUDIO. 613 Margaret Street. feb11-13-15-17-19-21-24-26-28 ; x ce | C hhdkadihadhetidhadadh dh deaduki ddd ddd dadididi da dididdudud wr,

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