The Key West Citizen Newspaper, June 12, 1936, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ~ CUBS DEFEAT By MARGARET BELL HOUSTON > Taylor, Cecil N : SS | DOWN . Barber, Harold - ' i Taylor, Cecil Newton SYNOPSIS: Dirk Joris has at “Aren't you going to tell me where ! | ' YANKS TRIUMPH OVER | DETROIT TIGERS { PAGE FOUR eccccceceesacesecesceses Society carps;| Cabreras To Leave On Trip Amount of State,/ County & Okeechobee | District Taxes! LOSE BALL GAME * ISTOWERS PARK CLUB WAS VICTORIOUS YESTER- NAME -— Birdsell, Edwin H 4 : Engle, Charles J last determined to sce his sistcr- | i+ saan PHILLIES Wi , Harry W. in-law Hope in her room, and try Dice, Meatello to discover her secret. Hope is the “Rupert has it,” he answered quietly. “Nora took it in to Rupert.” ie suddenly - chosen wife of Dirk’s ee eee older brother Rupert, now ill of “You mean Rupert has it with him -+.atcamp?” pneumonia in the ‘Adirondacks. ported’ to Dirk that ne heard Inan's voles x Hope's room, but | “I don't know yet. It hasn't been that when ke searei = f found in his room. I’ve ordered Nora Ton t that Dirk i more than @ |to make a thorough search. 1 have little interested in Hope himself. my own reasons for hoping he didn’t. see fit to go off with such a thing. You don’t hunt grouse with re volvers.” She had paused, and after a mo- ment: “I know,” she said, speaking as quietly as he. “It may be... he didn’t take it,” as if to reassure them both, “It may be he merely . . . didn’t want me to have it. If Nora finds it...” “If Nora finds it,” Dirk finished as she paused, “you shall have it back. Mr. and Mrs. Sebastian Ca- DAY, 17 TO 2 brera, Jr., children Sebastian, Ill, and Zetta Francis, and Miss} (Special ro The Citizen) a : if ; 12.—The| Lillian Lujan will leave tomorrow es . Boe.) ™marning over the highway en {Chicago Cubs defeated the Bos leolke to Quicksburg, ‘Va., where | Yesterday by the ‘ton Bees, while the Phillies went i ithey w Mrs. Ca-{It the M jto victory over the St. Louis Car. | PS will be guests of Mrs. Ca {2 ~ brér parents, Mr. and Mrs.! Gefeat in idinals. ‘These were the only con- : tests played in the National| Charles Dot. the | League. | They will remain at Vicksburg In the American circuit, the| Until tine: for’ procéeding to At- Ath-etics defeated the Cleveland; lantic City where | Mr. Cabrera jIndians, and the Senators shutout| Will attend the International Ro- lithe Ghisox. |tary conventiton to open June 2 The New York Yanktes won; 2nd continue until June from the Detroit Tigers, while Poinciana Co. Neff, Ida May Neff, Ida May . Poinciana Co. - Poinciana Co. . Ramey, W. H. ND, PLAT BOOK 1, ACEBL SH TROUBADOLR Matinee 5 20c. Night Stowers rk Pa new Social League NEW YORK, June 6 s< PAGE Chapter27~ CIGARET SMOKE OW is Rupert?” Hope asked. “Rupert was better this morn- Ing,” Dirk answered. “Doesn’t San- ford keep you advised? | asked him to.” “Yes, he telephones. But then .-” Her voice was lower than usual, was - Warner, Harry W. Ohlendof, D. : Poinciana Co. Poinciana Co. Ross, George Cotter, Helen - Anderson, Emil ©. > Anderson, Emil C. Poinciana_Co. Proctor, E. as joining J. Wa:ker less for ninth th runs of the game J. Villarea for five out « hele L.. ei, the Maxson, Ruben A ITM Remar 62 ———— POINCIANA, MAINLAN SEC F4-208 ~-« Maxson, Ruben A D, PLAT BOOK 1, 3, 4 & 9, TWP. 56, R. 31, SECTION 4 PAG Hembree, Arthur a Leighton, George E. Eaton, Elsa H. Curtis, Robert D. Curtis, Robert P. Kimmons, Kate as if she ‘eared disturbing some one. It was sheer weakness, no doubt. “1 understand,” Dirk said. “You feel I've just come from him. He’s going to pull through. He's got every chance. ... Please sit down, Hope. Or I'll get you another. If you are afraid, and won't leave the room...” “I’m not afraid,” she broke in firm- | ly. “The gun is not new.” “Well, at any rate. you won’t leave the room.” “I see no need to.” the Boston Red Sox were vie-| torious over the St. Louis Browns. | The summaries: j { NATIONAL LEAGUE At Chicago Rw Ee} | Boston ae ae a Key Westers Retarn Home Mrs. Peter H. Williams and sister Mrs. Minnie Otto, who were er Kerr and Me tor the winn the jout of five for th knocked McCarthy, Aceved starred in f LOS Chicego wessee-geee 6 10 1) Spending a vacation with relatives Batteries: Benge, Chaplin and|in Miami. returned over the high- Lopez; Lee and Hartnett. way last night accompanied by |Captain George T. Rice. R. IL F.|_ Mrs. Williams was visiting with 12 13 | her son-in-law and daughter, Cap- Take tain and Mrs. Rice; Mrs. Otto was O. Pita his third Score b. “All right. Hope. But admit you are nervous, and not very well.” He had approached her on his way to the door, was holding out his hand as if in good-by. She seemed not to see the gesture, but he continued to stand there, and presently she laid Mitchell, Poinciana Co. 36) Ull only stay a minute.” Dent, W. H. Mrs. | After a moment she moved with Dent, W. H. Mrs. 36, @ twinkle of beaded, padded slippers, - Boherte . ae sel and sank in the big chair. She did che! i 36 ae : m3 not look at him now, but sat clutch- wae * TWE. tan sts saa ‘ ing the shawl, staring before her. ee her face pale in the dusk. CLINKER BUILT LAYMAN SKIFF S68 - monet saboame base inn Stowers Park— 407 00 Musicians— 000 006 At St. Lows Ph lade!phia St. Loui: Ge June 3 at = ff ach, Joseph 36 tte oy moat SSeniznanactesenne errs) terete J L SECS. 3, 4 & 0, TWP. can Seren ares oe & PIANA, M SECS. 3, 4, & 9, LAND, 16, TW Sec. Twp. S% of NE4 W of NEY SE\ of SE4 W% of Lot 4.4 4 of Gov. 3 61 a1 61 640 640 8 46% . Johnson, . Ayers, Thomas V. . Cline, Marie N - Cate, John 36 Miller, John F. Flach, Joseph ; Joseph ach, Joseph Sampson, Grant Sampson, Grant Muller, Bernard O'Brian, J.J. Mrs... Mr. & Mrs. Wilso Poine PLAT BOOK 1, PAGE 174 56, R. 31, SECTION 6 Ayers, Thomas V. & Wm. B. Asling, George E. - Paknick, Edward Paknick, Edward - Poinciana Co. ottke, A. H ckhouse, Wm. F. & Mary . Eugene & E mpf, W. A.” rk, George A. ‘John F. Zagg, Joseph Herman, Martin L. Herman Martin L. Ner, John ‘annie Dok, PLAT BOOK 1, PAG Chi 56, R. 31, SECTION Her, John F. Paknick, Edward ..... Whidden, Bennett _.... Hilliard, Emma Myrtle Roberts, Loren S.. Gary-Baltimore Realty Corp. Loudon, Louis W McClanahan, 8. L. Gary-Baltimore Realty Corp. Hall, Edward F. Straight, Ethel Knowle: Adams, (2) Fo. Hamilton, Leow Rasmussin, Neils .... F. H. LADD, 21.40 Tax Collector, Monroe County. MANY USED CARS AT NAVARRO’S One of the largest selections of usec cars in the city can be found at Navarro’s, Inc., iocal Dodge- Plymouth dealers, These cars lave recently been traded in on nevw- automopiles and have been thororgkly recon- ditioned, new paint jobs and new tires. In fact, all are in A-1 con- ition. Dan Navarro, manager of the “auto ageney, states that every car is priced to sell and can be hed on very casy terms. TODAY’S GAMES AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago at Washington. St. Louis at Boston. Detroit at New York. Cleveland at Philadelphia, NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston at Chicago. Brooklyn at Cincinnati. New York at Pittsburgh. Philadelphia at St. Louis. [BASEBALL GAME | HEREONSUNDAY The Acevedo Stars will play |the Coconuts in the second game jof their series at the Navy Field, Sunday afternoon, 2 o’clock. The first contest between these {two clubs ended with the score ‘tied at 5-all. Battery for the Coconuts will be Suarez and MelIntosh. The Stars will use Bethel and Gabriel. Dr. Fran: M. Chapman, famed naturalist, ornithologist and ex- plorer, born at Englewood, N. J., 72 years ago. noted artist and author, born at Today's Birthdays) 36 spol) Dirk sat down, too, permitting his anxiety to creep into his voice. “Martin tells me you had some thing of a scare the other night.” “Yes,” she said, still in the low- ered, rather husky voice, as if she were afraid of disturbing some one. Suddenly Dirk was aware of an odor in the room, the faint, not alto- gether stale, odor of cigarets. He thought of Timothy who held that 43) ghosts have their “scent.” He ; thought of Nora who had said that | Mrs. Joris did not smoke. Nora, he recalled, did not look after Mrs. ; ous people sometimes took up smok- | ing, Dirk was aware. He said: “L understand that Martin him- self was worse than the burglar, or whatever it was.” “Mary,” she answered, “says that it was a ghost.” “Yes, I know. I didn’t know wheth- er you'd heard of the tower-ghost or not. ... Whatever it was, Hope, I want you to move your room.” “But I like this room.” “Even though it’s haunted?” Dirk smiled as he said the word, but he was serious enough in want- ing her out of here, in wanting to ex- amine this room as he had never ex- amined it. The smell of cigarets dis- turbed him, even though, to his mind, Hope might have good reason to take up smoking. She answered now in the low voice: “I don’t think the room’s haunt- ed.” “And you're not afraid?” he asked. After the barest possible moment her face turned to him. He thought he could have seen her face, star- white with the tragic eyes, even in | the dark. “No,” she said. “1 am not afraid.” Defiance, faint but unmistakable, was in her voice. Dirk spoke impulsively. “1 know you're afraid, Hope. Let me help you.” = She looked at him. “You think I'm afraid?” “I’m sure of it. Won’t you trust me?’ “But why should you think I'm afraid?” “What else? Why-else should you have the revolver?” Her eyes lit darkly. “I knew it was you. Where fs it?” “The revolver?” he said. “I knew nothing about it .. . nothing about your baving it .. . till Nora told me. She found it in the safe.” BN oe: ++. the safe.” She repeated the words auto- matically, as if they had stunned her. Then suddenly: “Nora opened a safe!” she said. “She took what was not hers. It’s common thievery.” So thai was her opinion of the transaction. And she had assumed that the thief was he. “Nora didn’t know that the re volver belonged to you.” he ex- plained. “She dusts in the safe oc casionally. When she found a gun in it she took it out for fear you might run across it, ané hurt your self. Was it loaded?” She said that it was. She had risen now, and was moving about the room, quietly at first, then blindly. distractedly, like a moth. The paint- ed shaw! had fallen on the floor, and Dirk picked it up. Dirk lit the lamp. and she whirled about, facing him, Daler than ever in the light. her hand in his, “And cold,” he added, “Your hand is like ice.” “I know,” she admitted. “I can’t get used to your winter.” “T’ll tell Bernard to send up more heat,” he said. She had felt about her shoulders for the little shawl. lt was still in Dirk’s hand, and he laid it around her. She was close to him now. Her tumbled hair brushed his face. “Hope, dear! ... Hope, please....” He felt her stiffen beneath the shawl, teneath his hands. She with- drew, moving slowly now standing beside the chair, facing him, wait- ing for him to go. T WAS no use. She wouldn’t con- fide in him, wouldn’t admit even that there was anything to confide. She had no faith in bim, had even thought him capable of stealing her revolver, And he had estranged him- self still further by accusing her of fear. “After all,” he said, “it takes a pretty brave girl to owr a forty-five gun. I take back what J said about your being afraid. But I do say you aren’t well, and I don’t want you to have any more shocks, Martin or otherwise. If you do hear anything. 1 hope you'll call me.” The little smile he had seen that first night touched the corners of her mou‘h. “I suppose,” she said, “that you're a tower of bravery, yourself.” “Well, at any. rate” hc answered, “I could fight anything you were mad at.” “So can I,” she said. “Then the two of us could lay any thing. } want you to call me, and if you don't get better right away, 1! want you to see a doctor. Prom ise?” She nodded, faintly smiling, stand ing in the aura of the lamp {n the hall Dirk met Mary ap proaching with a tray. Earlier in the evening he had wondered about Mary, about the freedom of her ac cess to Hope’s room when the other servants were excluded. He had dis missed the question with its aromz of distrust. Mary had from the start appro priated Hope with a respectfully ma ternal hand. She was slightly deaf, and very ne~r-sighted, and complete ly lacking in suspicion. Always she had evinced a discon certing gift for accepting any ac count as true. Dirk remembered how she had said to him tha‘ first Sunday morning, the morning that Hope had disappeared, and he had ridden out to find her: “Mrs. Joris has been to church, sir.” He had doubted this with a vague and unhappy doubt, but Mary had believed it. This quality in Mary—a credulity that no doubt had its root in loyalty —Hope had po doubt divined. And who, when il! or troubled, would not have preferred Mary’s precise and gentle ministrations? Dirk replied now to her inquiries concerning Rupert, and said to her: “I'm worried about Mrs. Joris, 1 think we should call a doctor.” Mary answered that Mrs. Joris didn’t seem fl! enough for that. “She'll be all right.” Mary added. “What do you think it is?” Dirk asked. “Worry, sir... that’s all.” (Copyright, 1935 Margaret Bell Houston) Dirk, tomorrow, gets disturbi: information from Mary. oven LEGALS NOTICE ' || THOMASINE M. MILLER | —BEAUTICIAN— if] Latest Air Cooled Method COUNTY JUDGE'S COURT, AND FOR MONROE COUNTY,| FLORIDA. IN PROBATE, ate of . MILLINGTON, Deceased. | Notice is hereby given to all} whom it may concern that Clara L. Millington, the undersigned Ad-| ministratrix of the Estate of Wm.| V. Millington, deceased, has filed Rockwell Kent of New York,| With the Honorable Rogelio Gomez, | County Judge of Monroe County, Florida, her final report and has} Tarrytown, N. Y., 54 years ago.|made application for her discharge| as U. S. Senator Charles L. Me- Nary of Oregon, dorn near Salem, | As Administra Oreg., 62 years ago. s Administratrix of the Estate of Wm. V. Millington, deceased. Dated May 2Ist, 1936. CLARA L. MILLINGTON, trix of the Estate of Wm. V. Millington, deceased. may22-29; jun5-12 Permanents: $2.50 to $10.00 | Hair Dyeing a Specialty 407 South St. Phone 574-J MONROE THEATER } Boris Karloff-Bela Lugosi in THE INVISIBLE RAY Paul Kelly-Arline Judge in HERE COMES TROUBLE Matinee: Balcony, 10c; Orches- tra 15-20c; Night 15-25¢ Batteries: Jo rgens and Wilson; i Winford and Davis. oe ‘ New York-Pitisburgh, rained fout. AMERICAN LEAGUE At Philadelphia RW. E | Cleveland 25 0 Phi-adelphia .......... > SE 6 Batteries: Harder asd Sullivan; Kelly and Hayes, an | ; At Washington Chicago ... Washington r Batterie: Cain and j Deshong and Millies. i 1 Sewell; | At New York | Detroit .... |New York R. I, EF. 910 1 ee ey... 20/8) 2 Batteries: Rowe and Cochrane; ; Pearson and Jorgens. At Boston R. I. E. sap, | 1 pea een Me OR Boston . peace a Batterie: Thomas and Hems- ley; Henry and Ferrell. LEAGUE STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE Club— W. L. Pet. New York .. 35 17 .673 Boston 34 21 .618 Detroit -- 29 26 .527 Cleveland . 26 24 .520 Washington 27 26 .509 Chicago - 23 26 .469 Philadelphia 17 32 .347 St. Louis 16 35 = «.314 NATIONAL LEAGU® Club— Ww. St. Louis ... 32 New York . 28 Chicago +. 27 Pittsburgh - 28 Cincinnati . 24 Boston... 24 Philadelphia 20 377 | Brooklyn - 19 -358 off wed- | several Three dynamite blasts set in a charivari for a newly ded couple shattered windows in Portland, Ore. .KEY WEST COLONIAL HOTEL | In the Center of the Business and Theater District First Class—Fireproof— Sensible Rates Garage Elevator Popular Prices BERMUDA MARKET MILK FED VEAL Veal Stew, tb ... SPRING LARM Loin Lamb Chops, tb .... 28¢ Shoulder Lamb Chops, Ib 25¢ Lamb Shoulder, Tb . 20e Lamb Stew, I - - 15¢ Pork Chops, center cut, Tb 25¢ Armour’s Star Ham, half, tb .... 5 ALL INGREDIENT: FOR SOUSE Heavy Western Steer Meat, 1 all cuts SELECT POULTRY Also, Nice FRYERS, 2 to 2% Ibs, Awerage Each Fryer Phone 52 Open and Deliver Sunday Mornings 15¢ 33e Free Delivery {fami ‘Meet Tonight enjoying a visit with her chil dren, Atorney Joseph Otto family, Dr. Osgood Otto and ly. and Dr. and Mrs. Michael P. DeBoe. | Fern C hapter To Fern Chapter No. 21, Order of | Eastern Star. will hold its regular business meeting tonight at 8:00 jo’clock in Scottish Rite Hall, cor- ner Simonton and Eaton streets. A large attendance is expected. Announcement has been made ‘SQ MANY OF OUR FRIENDS SAID so WE sai Ae JUST THINK! A TINY GAS BURNER DOES All THE and‘, structress, which Batteries the chapte J Mr postponed unt Long Kes Walk i ' “ Therteer treet omg +areceed | deck, painted white wath grece bottom Iron pipe im center of =<nt te anion Werk: Sandusky $35 Reward ! weturace ERNEST HEMINGWAY Key Wet, Fle — Gms | water will be ELECTROLUX” WORK IN ELECTROLUX! NO WONDER IT'S MORE EFFICIENT ... AND THE ONLY REFRIGERATOR THAT CAN OFFER LOW OPERATING COST . . . PERMANENT SILENCE ...NO MOVING PARTS TO WEAR! For Electroiux is the anby reimerrater that has no moving parts 4 umy gas flame creulate: the ampe reimeer- ant, wiech is cooled by ordinary ax. The utter ammphety of Eiecruies permits an amazing? bow cost torum, keeps Electrolux alwars aieot (iee* parts that do mot move camnet came Peeme’ sures fallen: feud prc—— oe and chmmates depeeaatue dur te moving parts that wear. See the mew Electrolux made We believe you agree there's cory rea~on im the world for makume tour wax le Conld ELECTROLUX REPRULArA FLORIDA PUBLIC UTILITIES CO. “‘Your Gas Company” ROY E. LADE, Mgr.

Other pages from this issue: