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wae ‘The Story So Far: Asey Mayo, Cape Cod detective, is investigating yester- day’s murder of Marina Lorne, whose husband's post office murat has aroused Quanomet. She was killed by a left handed blow from her sister's knife and Pam Frye is suspected. Pam dis- appears after hiding $50,000 worth of ambergris she found. Reddy Strutt's alibying plane crash looks deliberate, and the alibi of agreeable Tim Carr, boarder at the Frye's Octagon House, |or tail. I never could see why she is false. Asey overhears Tim’s grand- mother ask him, “Where did the girl put it?” Then Jack Lorne brings startling news. He has discovered he ‘was nener married to Marina, because she was alneady married to Tim Carr. Chapter 23 Incriminating Evidence “AND this other. This -note;” Asey picked it up. “Twenty- five thousand dollars, payable to Marina Carr. On demand. Signed by Timothy Carr, and witnessed by two people. Where, Lorne, in heayen’s name, did you find these two chunks of dynamite? “I found them this morning, in a tin box in the bottom drawer of a wardrobe trunk of hers. I never knew she had such a box. 1 was/is. hunting for a will and insurance policies—I told her to put ‘em in the bank box, but they weren't there. So I hunted, and I found this box. There were lots of other trophies there. Diaries. Everything. You—want me to tell you about er if “I burned fren said savagely. em, page igi “Was that Si id, gai “I see how you might have wanted to, but this note and thy i a4 rt 1 put~ Binge | aye “The diaries,” Lorne _ said, “would have hanged him. That’s »eone of the minor reasons I burned them. The rea] reason was me. Me, and Aaron, and Pam. I decided that the three of us had taken enough. We—" he gulped. “We took plenty, we did.” “'m inclined to think,” Ase: said, “that maybe perhaps you a have. Now, she married Tim be- fore she went through the motions of marryin’ you. That right?” Lorne closed his eyes and leaned on his elbows. “Today,” he spoke.as if he were woting, “today I hooked Tim ‘tn the same voice, he sketched the a “Hooked Tim Carr. Found to- day he’s all front. No money. Tight- Everything for that r. Vhate her. Today 1 swi his prize money and the old lady's 4 Going abroad . with yrne, the sap. He'll be famous ‘some day. Got Carr fixed. ‘The sample note he wrote for his math class, when they learned about + «malting “out checks and notes and accounts. Grabbed it from waste basket and ironed it out last week. “ftey'd sign anything it 1 ashed ey'd si i them, Let Cate id to divorce me—' whistled softly. “I get it. If ae tried to idbvarte her ahead raise hell with that note. But her witnesses—” **She thought of them,” Lorne said. “She thought of everythi: They witn it in the po 8 ment, while Carr was there, just after he'd wnitten something at the desk, She shifted the paper. The diary had all the details. She had him cold. For Carr to divorce her would have cost him $25,000, T guess it might as-well have been a million as far as he was ¢con- cerned. Marina hated the — mother. That's why she did it. The grandmother told her where she xo and she was going to make Carrs for it. She had them, don’t you see? If they tried to do aaything about her, or her and me, all she had to do was to Fear that note. She had the: ingestion now. Carr did it, not Roddy, as Peg thought. And I hope that you and Hanson can’t get him.” “Know anythin’ about amber- gris, Lorne?” Asey asked. “That's what Pam’s always talk- ing about,” Lorne said. “What she’s alw: hunting. I never under- ste much about it. It’s used for making perfumes, isn’t it, or some- thing like that? It’s. a whale’s chin, made such a fuss over it.” {t's a sort of greyish stuff,” Asey said, “that grows in the in- testines of a whale. Fatty an’ a little smelly, an’ sort of streaked like marble. You can probably get around: $35.an ounce <or it.” “An ounce,” Lorne said. “An ounce?’ “Yup. An’ yesterday, Pam found a lump about 100 pounds out on the point. And Marina found Pam. After a squabble, Marina brought it back am Roddy’s beath wagon, to your garage. And—” “Where is it now?” Asey shrugged. “Pam went over there later, and found Marina dead, and she removed it. 1 thought she brought it to Octagon House. It’ not in the-eellar, an’ the cops didn uncover it. I don’t know where it "Ss “t “That's swell for Pam, isn’t it?” Lorne said. “She—oh. But if some- ane found it and took it—gee, you've got to find it for her, haven't you?” Asey looked at him curiously. ‘There was no doubt that the fellow was perfectly sincere. “Yes, I got to find it before some pire ” the’a word of this, . Not to anyone. But can mt 6f'the house it Pr $s “No,” Lorne said. “You'd think from thi ide that the plage was rg isn’t, except ‘shape of some of the rooms, arran, nt. Pll get a pen- cil and see if I can think it out.” uu dot u got up, “while I investigate Broth- er Carr. You know, it’s just possi- ble that this marriage certificate an’ note was what he meant, an’ not the ambergris—come on.” “All right,” Lorne said. “You x. wondering what this is going to.do to my work.” “Huh?” “My « work,” Lorne said. “Of course ‘this dozens of 0! — but what will this do—to my work, you see?” Orgy In Quanomet A= nodded, and suppressed a smile. If bar er pom got A the point where geuge his re- actions to the murder in terms of is work, then there was little se in worrying about him, or feeling sorry for him. i “J see,” Asey As they walked up past the house, Asey paused by the ¢ellar window on which he: had {been et é “Might’s well take two seconds,” he said, “to finish up this pane here.” # Before he finished with the pane, ‘the barbed wire barrier, and strolled up the driveway; “Ah,” she said. “Mr. Fix-it, You get around, don't you?” “He's Asey Mayo, Peg,” Jack said. “I’ve told him everything.” t beg: in to suspect that he was,” she said, “after I left Nettie’s. Your eyes give you away, you know. Do you know where Pam is?” “I've got a lot of faith in her,” Asey said. “She can take care of herself.” ~ so—and have you heard about the town? Nettie has joined the midway, and between her and the fan dancers, it’s bedlam. There's a nickel-a-dance joint been set up— gy the whole place looks like a gold rush niners on a bust.” “ are the local boys taking ite” “ap asked. “The invasion? Oh, they’re try- the riot. So is Hanson, of his cops. But you as well turn back Sorenne it's with a bean blower. Ho. 2 ! Thaven’t i does,” Asey~said,: “an very, first inni meon@ else is huntin’ it. Now— egan to mow ‘em “Think hard,” Asey said as he ; ublicity has got me ; said. “es, Isee.”’ \.:\ut-they went down.in defeat .at Peegy Boone came up the ‘road,’ vaulted camp. Forty- | the like since | ‘THE KEY WEST CITIZEN _# SPORTS 6b i A] CARL HUBBELL FAILS 10 STOP as PINKY HIGGINS .SETS. NEW, | u succession vonx Ties ANSWER TONIGHT eae * FISTIC THLE (apecint to The Citizen) NEW YORK, June 22.—Even King Carl Hubbell and New York Giants failed to stop the onrush-! ing Cincinnati Reds yesterday afternoon in the first of a three- WwW. . 34 ~ 31 22 fand vo that cert LEGALS ‘Iemperatures* Highest Baa TY: Lowest Mean _ | Normal Mean oo ~ Rainfall* rday’s Precipitation .0 Ins. al Precipitation 11 Ins. record covers 2inheur periwd fat NS o'clock thix morning, Tomorrow's Almanac ‘Sun rises 5:39 a. }Sun sets 7:19 p. Moon rises . 1:42 a. Moon sets 3:02 p. Tomorrow’s Tides AM. 5:17 Low : 12:13 Barometer 7:30 a. m. today: Sea level, 30.03. Plaintife, Foreclosure of Mortgage ZARETH S. DU if dead, uh or other Elizabeth S. aint of Juan in- “the above styled m. m. mbeth S = dead, 3 m. deceased tragtof land, sit : °c: | High bat 6: 1: ef th ht (38) Bast t would in- eo} " j i —- 1 WEATHER FORECAST | (Till 7:30 p. m., Thursday) i Key West and Vicinity: Partly cloudy, probably thundershowers' tonight and Thursday; moderate southwest and west winds. : Florida: Partly cloudy, prob-} ably scattered thundershowers in | south portion tonight and Thurs-}{ day and in northeast portion this | . thirty eight 34 29 27 . 23 23 14 25 23 24 30 33 36 game series between these two} teams. And, as a result, the red-| hot Reds are now only one and a half games behind leading Giants. Staked to a one-to-nothing lead the early frames. Then ho: }Began to “get” him and ‘three-run blast in the séventh frame, the mighty Hubbell gave way to Brown. The Reds nicked King Carl for seven of their eight hits. Meanwhile, Weaver and Wal- ters held the league-leaders to four safeties. Walters went in aft- er Weaver had loaded the bases in a late inning and quelled what might have been an uprising. ‘ This marks the third attempt Hubbell has ade to win his 200th game of his major league career, and has failed the trio of times. Chicago Cubs kept on a heels of the Reds by edging out Phila- ‘delphia Phillies, 4 to 3. Excellent relief hurling by Charlie Root ‘saved the game for the Cubs. Both teams committed three er- NATIONAL LEAGUE ringer (9-5) vs. Gumbert (6-4). Chicago at Philadelphia— French (4-9) vs. Hollingsworth (2-3). ine! Soocccveoveccesses CLASSIFIED ors. Brooklyn Dodgers’ second night | ‘game was a success as far as ‘drawing the fans was concerned, (Baseball) Clib— Pe New York 31 Philadelphia 24 TLE OF YOUTH VS. AGE:, retrargR SIGHT ‘New York _.. Pittsburgh __. (Speetat to The Citizen) Bomber, retain his title tonight, Philadelphia . the title? That ig the question | will be forthcoming tonight at the g2mes--Gomez (4-7) and Pearson the fight that has created more| Washington at Chicago—Ferrell in that famous “long-count” bat- | Caster (6-7) or Nelson (7-1) vs. dollar gate will be realized. ‘vs. Kennedy (9-3). Former World’s Heavyweight | ex-champ. Braddock classes the The fight fever has hit the big| (4-2) vs. Hutchinson (3-2). York. the limit, with a few bets that, 9 toi3ry The Bues garnered14 hits ‘js in fine form. Joe Jacobs says! Seecesoasvseseseseesesees ‘ning, all of which were unearned, ' manager of Henry Armstrong, the | ri 3 MIAMI, FLORIDA. Convenient, “Turner turned in a five-hit per-|/corner, with Manager Julian | By splitting a twin bill with, ‘The Brown Bomber claims he} HOTELS Indians, Boston Red Sox climbed Both fight are v. confi- | ene cat OVERSEAS HOTEL. Clean | the Tribe. v il enter the ring ap-| ey ak wer oT | Meming Bt June 7-26 |Red Sox pitchers held the Tigers ¢je tonight will be: } | your plumbing needs at prices’ top, 5 to 4. chest nor., 38 3-4; chest ex., 42: PER’S SUPPLIES, 512 Flem- Cleveland 34 Boston __. eae: Washington 31 Detroit 29 Chicago _. _ 19 ALL IN READINESS FOR BAT- ¢ Louis __ 18 Nationa! MILLION-DOLLAR GATE IN| Club— Cincinnati Chieago _. NEW YORK, June 22—Will gt. Louis the youthful Joe Louis, the Brown Brooklyn or will the veterary Max Sehmel- | fea e3 ing, German white hope, regain | TODAY’S GAMES uppermost in the minds of sport- } iaatenican LEAGUE ing fans today. Aind the answer; — “York at Cleveland—Two Yankee Stadium. | @-4) vs. Allen (8-1) and Harder Everything is in readiness for (3-5). linterest than any other since | (9-4) vs. Stratton (4-3). ; Jack Dempsey met Gene Tunney| Philadelphia at St. Louis— ;tle in 1927. Mills (2-1). : It is estimated that a million-| Boston at Detroit—Grove (11-1) Both fighters are in the best of condition. Champion James J. Braddock} says Louis will beat Schmeling, | Negro as the best fighter he has, ever met. i city and the bets are 8 to 5 on| Pittsburgh-Brooklyn, not sched- | Louis, who is the favorite in New | We It is the general belief in big town that the fight will go} e there will be a knockout. | the hands of Pittsburgh Pirates, ax finished his workouts and C 0 LU M N \off four Dodger moundsmén. __ that he will knockout Louis again, |... Seoring three runs.in One in-| [Louis will have Eddie Mead, ROOMS {Boston Bees were able to defeat featherweight and welterweight |THE MUNRO, 128 N. E. 4th St., St. Louis Cardinals, 3 to 1, as champion, as the third man in his t t homely. Hot and Cold Show- jformance. The Redbirds miscued Black and Trainer Jack Black-! ers. Low Rates. may21-tf | four times. burne to help out. |Detroit Tigers, while New York! wij) finish Schmeling inside of |— Si ME ES | Yankees were losing to Cleveland two rounds. |BRING YOUR VISITING friends ¢ in need of a good night's rest to into second place in the Ameri- gent and both know that this go! 5: { lcan League, two games behind means much to them. j rooms, innerspring mattresses. it Under new management. 917 irae orpielesng beets Ahad Unc reewenginee agian pene {% und seven~ y The way they will measure up | ——_—_——_—— ;and Ostermueller. Although four when they enter the squared cir-! PLUMBING SUPPLIES H |to seven hits again in the night-' Schemling—Age, 32; weight,| WE HAVE ‘THE ANSWER to all jcap, Cochrane's men came out on 195; height, 6 ft. 1 in.; reach, 75; : to suit your purse. See us be- Outstanding in this doublehead- | nek, 17 1-2; waist, 33; thigh, 23;| fore shopping elsewhere. PEP- -er was the new record set by 15; Je, 9 1-2; bi 15; oe i oe ote ing St. jun6-1mo ; Pinky Higgins, who passed an 18-| forearm, 12; wrist, 8; fist, 10 1-2.! jyear mark by Tris Speaker when! Louis—Age, 24; weight, 202;} the hit safely eight times in eight | neight, 6 ft. 2 in.; reach, 76; chest , official trips to the plate to run/nor., 41; chest ex., 44 1-25 k, | ‘his total of successive hits to 12./1¢ 3.4: ‘waist, 34; thigh, * INTERNATIONAL TRUCK — 2- 2: | And he still has a chance =| “2: y i Ton, with 3 eu. yard dump body EEUBM call. 15 1-2; ankle, 14 double lift hydraulic. Re-paint- St. Louis at Boston—Warneke | \ afternoon or tonight. Jacksonville to Florida Straits’ and East Gulf: Moderate south- west and west winds except west to northwest over extreme north ! portion; partly overcast:weather ; with scattered showers) stonight ) and over south »:portion «*Thurs- day. i 1 4 ie point of jning: fitty ed and se x or in anywise ap- NEWARK, N. »(J=+Adewander McDonald of this city suffered a paralytic stroke when arrested for | bigamy and had to be carried to the court room for trial. FINED FOR ACT a Lot Bight (8) eevil , Lot Six (6) of and Lot One (1)-of her husband; | pier | _ Dover, O.—J. J. Rocco of} this husband, wi ne is, city was fined $10 for dancing to unknown, Cincinnati at New York—Der-} jar vstament of Mamie 1 : ROOMS 1. ci, Parking — "mcwsitaae® name a; Charles | ing, and, if dead, all “x mterests under hompson, deceased, | the land | dead, all parties under said Josephine ceased, or other jand above descri| her h is unknown, Agnes B. Wha‘ {Whaten, her husban j borough, if living, parties claiming said D. W, Rosbore us i ¢, in and to the lL ribed, and 2 , whose ¢ wn, if he by Blackshaw and Winifred D. shaw, his wife, If livir dead, all parties clain under said John D. 1 Winifred D. Blacksha deceased, or otherwi land above de Kemp Properties, Inc Florida corporation, a claiming interests, uw said N. 8. Kemp Properti or otherwise, in and to above described: W. M Eva A. Moore, his wife, and, if dead, all parties interests under said W. My n@} Hyn A. Moore, his w when you can buy Electric oscillating of fan $9.95. Fred- \, with yg eaATH A. B. Vance, Mgr. PAGE FIVE COP COPPING dezreesis j Patrolman Edwin Fland- Boston Ed ers whose recent B.A. gives him three: B.A. from Portia law school: bachelor of oratory, Em- rson: LL.B. at Boston. Secretary Roperts urges world economic conference to further distribution of raw materials. eommeresenecinernernmnctie sn Boston, New York, Miami Jacksonville, Galveston New Orleans atid Beyond From Key West May 13, June 6, and alternate Mondays, From New York every ‘Thursday. From Boston May 5, 12,19, 21 and every Tuenday thereatter. From Jacksonville, Miami New Orleans every two weeks and CLYDE-MALLGRY Am Key West, Pia. Senate Hotel MIAM | ‘FIREPROOF—139 N. E. 2nd Ave. DOWN TOWN CAPACITY 128 225, 1.50 = Keep Cool-- With This General Electric Ten-Inch Oscillating Fan Why suffer from hot weather a ten-inch General fan for only 95c down and $1.00 per month. Total cost OF THIS FAN 15 LESS THAN ‘ ‘ their ‘ter his Yecord this -|14 1-2; forearm, 12. 1-2; iti ‘ ee ‘on the clam ped. del ‘ a4 ss ed and re-conditioned through- ert aid And youl abe wet hi hang, even thi in! _ killed your witel™ te Played For A Sucker Te Oe Boe and Aare and Care and I,” Lorne said, I don’t tsand blasted out tw , 12. ea prider | it ithe Maat trater mae erot ding. something to crowd's got ‘to the a ar e here it thinks it’s fun to start fires.” “You're makin’ it up,” Asey said, “as Foe go along!” “I'm not!’ Peg protested. “I'm not, I tell you it’s an orgy! There were three brush when I was up there, and a.small tent went up | in flames. And they've tipped the its side. Of fire ine set's a silly old engine, and Denny, d that si sounds funny | ut still aes we well. I's co Han- e problem some- how. ... Where are you going?” looked worried a when he “I can't even get the office,” he said. “The line sounds dead.” (Copyright, 1958, Phoebe Atwoed Taylor) fru iiamy Foxx ‘ht saci ok eae out. dyal rear and over- for | JUST IMPOSSIBLE Wad) Springs. At Paul’s Tire reid Be tis defeated Phils! ey Shop—Sam Kennard. letics as St. Louis) CLEVELAND.—‘I agree with a \ ae you; your wife is impossible”, t Bob Feller issued nine bases on} said Judge Harris of this city in balls, but held New York Yankees / granting Henry Florey a divorce. to seven safeties, while his team- mates piled up 14 off Ruffing and | Andrews—and so the Tribe won, | house and Phelps. }10 to 5, to shove the Yanks into ee third place. American League | Kelley won his first game of} First Game the 1938 season and in doing so,; At Detroit \shutout Chicago White Sox, 7 to|Boston : }0, with five hits. Kelley was se- | Detroit ;cured by Washington Senators) Wilson, Ostermueller and De- } ja month or so ago from the Ath-'sautels; Bridges and York. leties. | | Results of games follow: | j National League | At Philadelphia Chicago Philadelphia - |HENS—Battery raised FRYERS, two to three pounds. We de- liver. Phone 540-W. jun4-lmox CORNER LOT, 50x100 feet. Cor- ner Sth and Staple Avenue. Apply Box D, The Citizen. | Tamulis, Butcher, Mungo, Frank- . H. E.| FRESH LAID EGGS every day 12 from nest to you, and baby 7 chicks. 1609 Flagler Ave. juni-Imo OLD PAPERS FOR SALE— Three bundles for 5c. The Citi- zen eayid-tt nov2-tf | « otherw ine, described, band, whe known, if she be married Crichton, if hwing, parties claiming | in said Anne R. Crichtor € otherwise, im and to the la deseribed, and —— va whose Christian k if whe be marri K k, if living. and. + parties Caiming said Agnes K. Klink se, in and to t dl, and hose Christi if she be married, 10 Bask '¥ nd know the defendants im and they are hereby appear to the Bill ¢ said cause on Mot of August, A the allegations « Compl fensed t ix Order be Your cupsecutive weeks hss Citizen, a 5 a One Week’s Fi ree FANS DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME a IT ONE WEEK WITHOUT OBLIGATION 95c DOWN Epperly, Reyer, abi | Tomorrow: Arsen! Passeua, LaMuster and FORCE OF HABIT At Bostortl ~~ Ej. At Cleveland St. Louis 4 34. New York na Boston . 6, © Cleveland may12-tf | s. LEEDS, Eng.—Rev. R. G. Shel- Lee hal rend te Andrews and Dickey; ; : ton of this city who resigned as Turner @ jue eller and Hemsley | REFRIGERATION { Pp . magistrate to enter the ministry, noe EARS a to The Citizea—20e in his first wedding ceremony ad-| At New York FOR QUICK REFRIGERATION wi ee bridegroom thus: panies: Repairs and Service, Call EB. « “What have you to say in your New Martinez, 1212 Varela street. 24- ‘avorite defense?” | Weaver, Walters and Lombardi; Hour Service. junl0-imo hier ses Tuy pen Ai ol Hubbell, Brown and Mancuso. —_—————_—- At Brooklyn Pittsburgh Brooklyn Klinger, y Harrie Heiter for tals June 16 rT’ P| : At Chicago R 8 2 Washington 7 2 4 © Chicago iy Kelley and R. Ferrell; Lee. ney, Knott and Schuelter. a 10 5 . Rig- The Key West Electric Company —_— PHONE 16 SLE I Le Chief Ivan Elwood, of the po- lice department, resumed his du- ties yesterday following his re- turn to the city after a vacation spent in Miami with his daugh- ters, and his host of friends. With the return of the chief, ~ a Ceptain Alberto Camero of the been acting as chief, resumed his might police department, whe had regular work. New Deal presses purge of Court Bill foes, despite setback in the Towa primary. At St. Louis . iladeiphia RH. 25 su , Ross, Smith and Hayes; Hilde-; quire 407 brandt and Hesth. : R. 9 3 ng Todd; Bauers and mayZS-f secceseseceascssccsecese