The Key West Citizen Newspaper, July 2, 1936, Page 3

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Gypsy Chapter 44 BOY IN HIDING ol TOLD Pipolo everything,” Hope went on, “and asked him to take Roddie and me to Finland with him. I told him about Torrobin, and how Roddie wasn’t to blame, and how he had kept straight as long as I was near him—sober, too, And he knew how Roddie and I could ride. I said we would bring Bowie, too: that Bowie was being boarded at 8 stable in Jersey; and he would go} over and get hint, “Pipolo said he would talk it over with Olga. But Torrobin had sold Bowie, didn’t | know? He had sold Bowie to the people in Jersey. I cried. Funny I should cry over Bowie, when worried as I had been over Roddie, I had not cried. “Then some one knocked on the door. It was a telegraph-boy with a message. It was not for Pipolo or any one in the house. Pipolo asked me if I could have been followed, and wanted to go home with me. But I wouldn't }-t him leave Olga, who was not well. He told me to put ir an application for passports. He . could see difficulty there for Rod- die, and so could I. “Roddie stayed close by me, for he saw I was ill. Sometimes I'd lock Weather By MARGARET BELL HOUSTON abused the sacrament of marriage, and placed a respected family in danger of disgrace. He said that Roddie should come home where he belonged; and, since I had not sent for him, he went away. “Roddie came in when everything was quiet. Fortunately, Mary had left her door shut that night—Ru- pert’s door. Roddie said that Father was right, that we must go away, that we had no right to bring this into your house, that he had never wanted to. He would find a place for ‘8, and we would change our names Oh, Dirk, that changing of names If you knew what it does to you! i» - I had a little money left. I told him to go ahead. An then next day... . You re- member? When I was showing you the yellow gown... you came into the room, and talked with me, | and ‘ saw that you loved me. I saw that you had been trying to protect | me from you didn’t know what, even though I wouldn’t confide in you; that you wanted to help me, no mat- ter what I was. “Do you think it was harder to go when I knew that? When I knew that I loved you, too? It was easier. I could kiss you and go, happy— actually happy—that I hadn't harmed you, and wasn’t going to harm you.” “Father looked so hard,” Hope said. the door, and he’d come into the room, and stretch out in one of the chairs, or take a bath, or smoke. You remember about that? How you asked Mary about the cigarets I smoked ... and I had to smoke one? “rTSHIS didn’t last long, for Father came. You sent for Father— why, ' didn’t know. It might have been because I was ill, but always the thought of Roddie was upper- most in my mind. T had kept in touch with Mother. She knew I was with Roddie in New York, knew about the circus. She wrote me al- ways the same thing—if I loved them, to come back and bring Rod- die. She knew the influence I had over Roddie when I was with him. She couldn’t understand why 1 didn’t use it. Finally Father wrote a sort of ultimatum. I was to come home, or else... “In my next letter I told them I had married. Mother wrote once more, and that was all. I knew Fa- ther wouldn't have come unless you had wired him. I knew you had talked with him downstairs. I thought you knew what Roddie had done, and had told Father. “Roddie wag in the passage right then. When Mary left the room I told him to stay there, no matter what he heard. “Father knew -othing . . . except that I was ill, and that it was not I, but you, who had sent for him. If 1 had only known this! But I didn’t. 1 began to say that Roddie would never go back, would never be taken; that it was not Roddie’s fault, and a lot of other things, for I was frightened and unstrung, and Father looked so hard. “He didn’t get the whole story out of me, but he got enough. He knew before he left the room that Roddie was wanted for something at home. He knew why I had mar- ried Rupert. He told me things 1 had not thought of—that I had Dirk’s arm tightened about her. “But if you loved me, and knew [loved you... why wouldn't you confide in me, even then?” “Because you would have made me stay. You would have insisted on sharing it. This was all I could do to repay your love and trust, You may not understand, Dirk, dear. Never mind. “The trouble with passports wasn't going to be so bad. I had my own, and I could swear to Roddie’s citizenship. Surely they weren't af- ter Roddie—not yet—or Father would have known. Perhaps Torro- bin had learned that it was Chow who told. I hoped for the best, but I was certain of nothing. S “Roddie found us that little place, and we waited for the passports. Pipolo and Olga sailed, to expect us later. I went over to Jersey and tried to buy Bowie, but the man wanted more than I had. I was hop- ing he’d come down, and just wait- ing with Roddie, when you came and found me, and told me about Rupert's wanting to see me. “Rupert, it seems, had had a sort of revelation while he was ill—a realization, you might say, that I was in trouble, had been in trouble when I married him. He wanted to come home, and do what he could for me. When he told me this I ex- plained that I had needed money and shelter, that was all; but now I was actually thinking of telling him, and asking him to help Rod- die and me—asking him to have the marriage annulled, and help us get away—when this—this other hap- pened. “Often I say to myself, if I hadn’t listened to you when you told me Rupert was asking for me! But of- tener I say, ‘If only Roddie hadn’t come that night!’” (Copyright, 1935, Margaret Belt Houston) Dirk and Hope see, tomorrow, a happy New Year come in, ' ident of the Ma: Institute of SPORTS BY JOVE Tod thdays| “CLASSIFIED COLUMN Advertise will ay’s Bir Cardinal George W. Mundelein} jof Chicago, born in New York) = 64 years ago. e be inse | Michael J. McDermott, Chief of \the Division of Current’ Informa- {tion, U. S. Dept. of State, born = e rate o sertic ] BOSTON BEES | DOWN GIANTS MARIO SANTANA .rrssurcn PIRATES DE- i | i | FEAT CARDS; NATS TAKE FIGUEREDO WON DECISION OVER | LOSER WAS MAKING HIS DE- TWO FROM SENATORS H BUT AS LIGHTWEIGHT; MA-: JORITY OF FANS BSGED) (Speciad to The O.tizen) | VERDICT | NEW YORK, July 2.—The Bos-' i ton Bees went to victory over. the | New York Giants, while the Pitts burgh Pirates downed the St.j Lou's Cardinals, which brought the idle Cubs to within a half- (By OSCAR PITA) | i Young Figueredo, 133 pounds, | won a c.ose decision over Mario: : jSantana, 126, in the main bout /&2me of the Redbirds. i ‘of an all-star card staged at the, The Phillies split a doublehead-; ; Navy Field Arena last n'ght. | o" with the Brooklyn Dodgers.) | Mario Santana, a little more} The game scheduled between Ch than a featherweight, making his! C#8° and Cincinnati was rained j debut ightweight, fought a| Ut : ' good battle agai iiacheasier In the American League, the \ opponent. A majority of the fans|Detreit Tigers defeated the Chi- {booed the decision but in the|S°X, While the New York Yan-. conta aon cee jo | Kees shutout the Boston Red Sox. marked up sufficient points: St- Louis took the first game lin the last two rounds to earn/°f 4 doubleheader from the Cleve- ihe averdict. ‘and Indians, the second game teerthes clas being called on account of dark- i eacuanethencouts with» the score tie. The jerally do, and then they’ banged eee ee ees eee oe jeach other with telling blows. In. £2™es of doubleheader from jthe second round, Figueredo con- Meee nected with a short left uppercut EU aIanS: jto the chin as Santana rushed in? 4, NaONAL LEAGUE with a wild swing and Mario hitio. yp oig the mat for the only knockdown 42 0/0U! of the scrap, but the Spanish bat-} Pittsburgh itlr was up with a spring before |Referee Licata had a chance to! count. Figueredo used a short jand right hook to the body < j head, which had Santana baffled} i n extent, but the Pride} of Division Street at times over- came this tactic and displayed a }one-two swing at long range that‘ {landed squarely on the butcher's }chin. The crowd who expected jto see Santana down for the count before the end of the bout were well pleased with the fight andi would gladly weleome a return| bout betw the two. | In the semi-wind up of the eve-: AMERICAN LEAGUE ! jnine’s program, Young Fernande At Chace R. IL El jeame back strong in the closing hetroit 2119 0! {round to win a referee's decision, Chicago 611 {over Bobby Waugh. The i = Jalso disagreed With the verdict | ‘rendered but there was no doubt! |that it was Cuso’s fight after’ B es {he landed a repetition of lefts New York ‘ and rights to the face as the gong | FintiGsne. | opened the sixth and last round. | At St. Louis Up to and through the fifth round | Gieveland | Bobby was holding his own, fight-! st. Louis jing shoulder to shoulder and j banging away at each other with | | everything but the water buckets. } | There were no knockdowns. The} Cleveland _.... }going was exciting enough tolst Louis ... cause the ringsiders to rise on the | 5 tip of their toes from the first! Finst Game |to the final bell. Waugh flung} at philadelphia a challenge at Fernandez for 2| Washington 15 three-minute round fight for | philadelphia |the featherweight championship; ‘of the city, but Fernandez paid | jno attention to the challenge. ! At Philadelphia ; K. O. Brass and Rogelio Var-| Washington _... gas, a pair of lightweights, went) philadelphia through a six-round comedy to aj | standstill. ther one of | no tme in feeling s boxers gen- At Boston 2 Het New York Boston Al left steeeeee : 1 d ioe i } First Game | At Brooklyn Pe. | Philadelphia 2... r 3 1 i Brooklyn ee eae 1 Second Game At Brooklyn Philadelphia Brooklyn 3 £ Chicago-Cincinnati, rain. al 4 At New York Be (ee Boston Second Game At St. Louis Second Game R. 14 19 =~ at ' out. land they punched at each other with blows that carried no steam [behind them. 5 | However, they displayed action} Club— Ww. in the last round when they mix- {|New York . 48 led it up quite a bit. In this heat, ! Detroit 37 Vv: as accidently connected with! Boston ja wild blow to the chin that had! Washington Bradley on the verge of a knock- | Cleveland tout but he failed to follow up his! Chicago b. advantage and allowed his oppon-j; Philadelphia jent to recover strong enough to! St. Louis . {hold the fight to a draw. They | j were both weak and exhausted at; NATIONAL LEAGUE ithe end of the centes | _ Club— a | In the opening bout of the eve-/ St. Louis jning’s program, Young Sharkey | Chicago j lost a decision to the Tampa Ti-j Pittsburgh lger. Sharkey was the aggressor | Cincinnati ‘throughout the four-rounder. This: New York jset-to could have been declared; Boston : ja draw. } Philadelphia {Brooklyn .. AMERICAN LEAGUE L. 22 jat Peabody, Mass., 42 years ago. { ; Hubert D. Stephens of Miss., {former member of the Reconstruc- tion Corp. and onetime U. S. Sen- lator, born at New Albany, Miss., (61 years ago. Payment tisements ONE CONTEST OF CHAMPION HONO DEFEATED SANITARY OUTFIT) ; dent of the Carnegie Corporation, YESTERDAY TO MAKE IT/born in New York, 61 years ago SECOND © STRAIGHT TORY but regular Dr. Frederick P. Keppel, presi-| Shonen sults. | With each vic- | ment The Citiz | Lewis W. Douglas of Arizona,’ Autostrop Raz |former Director of the Budget. iborn at Bisbee, Ariz., 42 years Stowers Park won again yes- sai? terday afternoon in the third! game of the Social League cham-} pionship seri It was their ond straight victory over the itary Department and now only one more win to cinch the| honors, : 3 It was a very good game the! Scientist and Nobel teams played yesterday, the final born 74 years ago. score being 8 to 7. | as It was also the second straight} Crown Prince Olaf of Norway, Ralph H. Isham o7 Princeton, N. J., noted book collector, born n-/in New York City, 46 years ago. need PES ND i Sir William H. Bragg, British; prizewinner, ROOMS THE MUNRO str sin, victory for Pitcher Johnny Walk-} porn 3 er, With three safeties, two being eecceece i good for dopbles, to-his credit, ' » ., 2 a Sininy ‘was the eutstanaing pay. LOday’S Horoscope cr at bat. Villareal hit two out!» aS of three and Joe Russell collected ; a singte and a double inf his three: trips to the plate double, Toda native strong and steady and by industry and square In. the Geld. ‘Albu peace kere dealing becomes comfortably sit- for the Parkers and Molina and| 200d i= the dectming years Gatti for the “Health gi < life. More than this, he the Stans, furnish comfort to friends the fourth frame, Acevedo, Kindred. Honor and a wonderful catch of a line| follow his path in life Meee nen ciate. | World will be better for The Sanitary outfit opened the |i? lived. game by scor three runs in the very first inning and they added is RUSSELL’S 'Cigar Store ATARTMENT will and eem will | nd = the his hav- were In made dr A over s pele ti, a) | Griffin recocvered the ball and threw home but A. Acevedo had Peal more sin: the courte . icrossed the plate with what prov- hee yareovseecome near) to be the winning run. the first, another one inf the third /""C0,.0 ge innings : and five more in the seventh to!) nitary Devartment— Bee i 300 200 020—7 In the eighth frame, the Health Stowers Peay Department scored two and tied!” 101 000 51x—8 14 the count. In their hzlf, with one] patteries: C. Gates and out and runners on and sec-/) <1 ees ead gud Kerr WU topthicaltociaiiessy (°°) eee eee double play to put the Park gs Hale threw to Caraballo| Subscribe to The Citizen—20c | and Caraballo threv wide to first. | weekly. FOR SALE FOR SALE et and a Apr room. Come m and g-t sult f the MAJOR BASEBALL LEAGUES OR Cigars, Cigarettes Drinks, Etc FIRMS , Who Rush To Give You Service~Patronize Them ee — yi 7 WZ TIFT’S CASH GROCERY 1101 Division Street —For Expert— TYPEWRITER —and— RADIO REPAIRING ROSES FLORAL PIECES A SPECIALTY CORSAGES, ETC. PLANTS and VINES SOUTH FLORIDA NURSERY PHONE 597 INSURANCE [rue ey west eT SUNDAY STAR Subscription $2 Per ¥ car Key West's Only Sunday Pape: Busmess Office Citizen JOHN C. PARK PLUMBING DURO PUMPS PLUMBING SUPPLIES PHONE 293 Staple and Fancy Groceries E. C. MALLORY & SON 520 Simonton St. Complete Lime Fresh PHONE 348 Fruits and Vegetabics AARON McCONNELL Our Reputation is Wrap- 536 Fleming Street ped in every package of PRINTING DONE BY US ——THE——. ARTMAN PRESS Citizen Bldg. PHONE 51 TELEPHONE NO. 1 WATCHMAKER, JEWELER AND ENGRAVER See Him For Your Next Work ALL PRICES REDUCED Hours: 9 to 12—1 to 6 Open Saturday Nights PORTER-ALLEN COMPANY Buiding PHONE $1 | Technology, son of a famed polit- ical economist. born | Died Jan, 55,1897, in Boston. Star American Coffee NOW OFFERED IN THREE GRADES: STAR, Ib., 25¢ LARGO, !b., 18¢ V. & S., Ib., 15¢ ROASTED IN KEY WEST CHAMP SERIES TO | xonavs canes CONTINUE FRIDAY AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit at Chicago. | Cleveland at St. Louis. The fourth. and what may be} of the So- Anniversaries 1714—Christopker Gluck, Ger-! —George E. Foss, Illinois operatic composer, born. Died | congressman,’ “Father of the 15, 1787. j American Navy,” from his inter-!the deciding contest. | fest in naval affairs, born at Berk-| cial League championship series; ee ee ee i i821--Sin Charles TuppecjCan-|o. Lil boi passa ates jshire, Vt. Died in Chicago, Mat. | to adian-statesman, born. Died Oct.) }noon at 5:15 o’clock. | : = _ 115, 1936. ‘ : } connection with the 30, 1915, | id : The ironmen of the league, J. 5.1, celebration. j Walker, Jr. and C. Gates, will|_"* ae 1825-—Richard Henry | 1864—Walter Williams, Mis-; again be the opposing pitchers. | derd, noted New York poet, edi-|souri newspaper editor, Univ. of} Each has pitched the three tor, critic and journalist, born at‘ yii.couri dean of journalism and | games played so far by their re-. B —— ae E Hingham, Mass. Died May 12. eneets echibe! FUNERAL HOM ca: 2 oe STAR COFFEE MILL 1903. ce Should the Stowers Park win! et Ga aaa ae |himself, never went to college,; from the Sanitary Department to-} \ 512 Greene Street IDEAL DOG FOOD Died at} morrow, the series will be over.| eee Phone 256 prey Beep aaa Phone 548 1840—Francis Amasa Walker,/born at Boonville, Mo. Union ‘officer, teacher, noted| Columbia, Mo. Died at Columbia,| Otherwise, the deciding game will! SNR OES 5 economist, Yale professor, presi-! Mo., July 29, 1935. “be held Saturday afternoon in Phone 435 ight 696 Washington at Philadelphia. NATIONAL LEAGUE | | \ i j | Courtesy Fourth Inspected and passed by De] UCENSED EMBALMER partment of Agriculture of United States as fit for human Ambulance Service Stod-| - IN LOPEZ university's president, who,| LADY ATTENDANT

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