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Frin-. oct TOEER 7 7, pBy MAX SALIMARSH | Huge Stefan, handsonie author, Living on the French Riviera. Archit” Luitisdeii; ‘myself, ‘his* friend. Bent Geiss head of a’murder conspiracy. ‘Vestérday! The juge acqiits me” of complicity in the crimes, and learns that 1 suspect Geiss. Flen- riot asks to talk to me. Chapter 34 Mr. Noah More was waiting for’ me F itside the police station in his small, battered’ Renault. “May*1-return to: the-chalet,” asked tim, “after 1-pick up-my things at the hotel?” “Assuredly,” said he ‘politely: “Although, in view of the valyable’ evidence you can give, I trust you are not thinking ’bf leaving Cannes sidering only this lastone=if you Tine knowing what ‘more—wihom' inno ‘of ‘the murder oer would you of Monsieur Venner?” “I think,” I said slowly; “that P'a} At keep a pretty close eye on the house completely dark. ap = lle strode to ar a “[}over! was not og nine oelock. ve ie wish for a pares and ‘find: that ‘amour wh mariner Baron St? did more than lottite covered that she = cable wreak a8 job. Th T signed oh the ie paginer ie erase to kop ater zp, and th2 la? tells me the staterooms are all ready for occupation and there® are sulicient victuals for-a long? her: Ge ; is gectt of rt lanning’ a get-; awdy,'in case" things a ron I suggested»and'he n “Precise weé-nall get! warning. The boy” has maintained contact with his® friends at Geiss’s — or rather 'did until last night.” He-broke off'to chuckle. “What happened~ was partly” my “fault.” he-confessed.* “I sent’a*man® along? te- make a few inguiries at the’ villa” My. man raphevented him-* self te beva traveling salesmanefor! sewing-machines; but-untuckil { One period in ‘his career: hi been an agent of the Stret =pre¢idus pair’ recognized him. + They~fancied-the»police’were* oat thelr dttacks*again, andlast they folded’ their tents like Arabs and'silently stole raha deh our dear feng Hage now it ad ie pete ied! ah is, oat ving, lugo said, 1? w! you ate‘untilyo a. Torérrdw Tm to try * jatever it‘may be.” Ride In A Bus- iahls next day * followed‘Hugo’s* advice arid dozéa@ comfortably. ‘t suppertime, Hugo. telephoned. “No one seems to have of Amourié, said he, “and I've been’ coast with a. fine. too’ comb. [f you ‘take a bus’down a aine thirty, y rf roel Ao for a ci in the Allées de la etek aa By be ae the brass a Vv we swerve - ony and eortler after ink then, sud t, me rudely to’ ught the ‘doorelewee: and ee it over, and at the same it 1 felt an almighty ‘shove, like'the thrust of someone's knee, ss Why should, he “Pe [shodting 1 ask for one? He 5 mys seemed to hear the erat! would give as it hit the! as I fell, so! is mei iy tine a very nick mayan a ty at the same! moment the bus polled up with a’ ing of bral ‘driver thrust his head round | in- ages. ot paneer eon let out pretty flood eeony, } is the madman whe did’ | tated Ba into eternity, an travel ae ‘with a joy-| yisid! they were for Ae ie ind | see‘ the “indi. Vidua™ who et nearly tund epelt staringtiaey vacant, dust- “ T ‘tae eg Bh md ee i round to me. as if he It to focus them. : ioe me?" he-said: “That ..9f course. not mv is strange, all the Same, tha’ you should know ‘it.” ie ft it bike $e apt oaittha brou my*face with a fe emtare ‘Tam “4 joah ee am sorry has happened,” he said vaguely. “T as- sure you it was not intent‘bnal on rt—1 merely wished ‘to get out we Sag horente e = ae roads bin Zs fen wil is: queer shuffling tread up-a side-elzeet The'driver swung the door to and tapped his forehea ificantly. “Imbécile!™ said he, put do’ yed| his foot on the gas. but as he di - | 80. a Voice spoke from behind me, :! mouthfuls. The Belgian Yacht wate Sh Pappened 4o° both of apres “Nothing-trom my Coe Seine seeing that Seles z, & = broken such 2 !ot of ice either.” said Dunning “Be« Seal on three tove- Stahl, and Rakovsky ort. tricks. 've as spent nis drinking on the Carlton ter- race; Rakovsky hasn't stirred a foot oe his vilis garden. ‘and Geiss "this" mornin he nas!” and “She. ai moved over him. Apart ; be: your valuable efforts. any recent sleuthing ‘goes to friend Jean- 1s he has located ‘"M- STILL waiting to hear} behind .” 1 ‘at that’ “The deuce he. COQUILLE, cua int bib Sontyahiod chacse! “Not an imbecile!” it said, speak- ing’ in English, but with the gen- tle singsong of the Levant. I turned and saw. standing just me, one of the innumer- able Arab carpet-sellers: of the Riviera. a dark-skinned. gentie- eye: creature, in crimson fez and flowing draperies, his gaudy mer- chandise piled on one arm “Was it you who pulled me back?” I asked. conscienee- Stfieken because, in the furry of the ‘moment, | had forgotten to look for the man my ites had un- doubtedly saved He nodded slowly and raised nis lips to my ear “Monsieur Dunning will he ee to hear it.” he whis- ith the ghost of s smile. and next moment. with a fine’ flourish we pulled up at the termé nus bv the —— hall. As t seram- dled out. — to look for’ } bim, coral saw was e-Gutter of ‘white draperies «disappearin, anaes the lime trees. ai turned my steps rather ag gm ce towarts the Allées dela Lib- e (Copyright 193% Maz Sattmarsk? Tomerrew: More conspirators. fered a choice by the judge of pouring ‘twenty quarts of whis- ,key.down a sink or going.to jail in of drunkenness in twelve years, for thitty days Smith went to Walter Smith of this city was of- jail. t = | ee 4 ee Bc Popularity Every: Year; | Fans- Know: Pros Are Bettér Players i NEW YORK, Oci. 7 (FNS).— Will pro football kill the inter-} | edlegiate variety? The question looms large in the minds of college officials who have spent millions for. huge, sta-| dims and where football; carries ‘rest of the collegiate sports. | Bill Cun-; ningham, sports writer and com-' :|mentator; analyzes the pro’ foot- ; ball situation. “Back before my time’ and} Fear College Faces Greatest Crisis © In the November issue'of Cos-/ the:|Mopolitan Magazine, i i q | boys N. J.,,in the heavyweight di- , ‘of the team THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ok ootball | | | | i eocvcccctoces ti Pro Football G Gaining In: FOLLOWING THROUGH | By AGUILAR Cedebseerdecocoscodeccce. | SIX AMERICAN weight-lifters | | sailed Wednesday on the United | ‘States liner Manhattan’ for the} | world championships at Vienna i jon’ October 21, 22 and 23, bring: | i | t WOMEN CHAMPS ‘ing ‘up to’ 135 the number of ath- | Ps iletes who have competed in for- leign soil under’ A.A.U. sponsor- | ship this year. Unless new trips | \develop in the immediate future | ‘this team will be the last delega- {tion to go abroad this season. Two of’ the mémbets ' of the! team will defend, world titls they | /won a year ago, Tony Terlazzo of | York, Pa., in the lightweight class ; jand John Terpak of York in the} middleweight division. Both of | ithem are also” national cham-} »pions as are’ John Terry of New| York inthe featherweight class; and Steve Stanko of Perth Am-| } | } i { | The other two members| are light heavy- ‘weights, John Davis of Brooklyn ‘and John Grimek of York. Following the Vienna meet the American team will engage in two f matches against German contin- probably before yours, college; baseball played to crowds of twenty or twenty-five thousand. | All that is over, especially in the vincity of the major-league | cities. Professional baseball is credited with killing college base- ball, which ‘is ‘amateur’ baseball”, says Cunningham. “College people are now re- garding the rising tide of pro- fessional football with varying {| degrees of apprehension, for if college football goes, all the rest of the intercollegiate athletic set-! up will go with it. There’s noth- ing but bankruptcy ahead of the: ‘|eollege athletic plants if football crowds dwindle, for that great autumnal frenzy: carries the>en-; tire financial burden”, he'adds. For years arguments waxed warm among football men as to whether a representative college team, such as Minnesota, Notre ! Dame or Nebraska, could hold its: own with one of these big outfits {that play football for keeps. For- jmerly it might have, but now it’s pretty doubtful. jthing to a test are the all-star games for charity staged in Chi- cago, New York and some lesser centers around September first, and these aren’t conclusive be- cause the “collegiate” entry is all-' star. A, truer test, perhaps, was an e-record oceurrnce last au- t in Washington, D. C., when! Coach Ray Flaherty sent his pro-, féssional Redskins into a practice | strimmage against the George- town University eleven. Two or three plays by the pros and the- affair was ‘hurfiedly called off. Georgetown’s star back had been lifted from the’ field with a broken leg’ and another man had *been knocked cold. The pros} weren't playing dirty. They were jsimply too big and they hit too (hard. “This nation being what it is, {andthe football season being so intense, there’s probably room for! both sorts of game. And if the! }colleges are worried lest the pro- |fessionals mash them fiat, they {may be relieved to learn that the ‘professional entrepeneurs are | ‘concerned over the same matter. If such should come to pass, the pros’ might have to fold up, too,’ for where woyld they get their [plavers? ludes. “TIME CAPSULE” i eneironasins | New York—A seven-foot tor- pedo-shaped “time capsule” con- taining a compressed storehouse jof information about man’s cur- jrent activities, habits, clothes, ‘ food and pleasures, was sunk in- | ito the earth at the World's Fair | grounds, not to be opened for the! — 5,000 years. Contained in “capsule” were more than a ae separate items, includ- ing a Bible and seven reels of film which were reproductions of newspapers, novels, works of non-fiction, sections from the Encyclopedia Britannica, the pods Almanac, a mail order cata! and modern paintings’ a ical The nearest } ‘gents at Munich and Essen. The Munich meet will be a return en- | gagement between Germany and ithe United States. Last June a picket German squad visited this’ country and defeated the Ameri )eans by the slender margin of 38 {points, 3932 pounds to 3894. The: | visitors took only two of five jmatches but scored so heavily in the unlimited division that the} |total poundage swung in their fa- | ‘vor. THIS PIGSKIN Soserdodseccdescccevscsece | | Following are football games| jfor Saturday with last year’s! | scores: EAST Amherst vs Tufts; Army vs Co- lumbia (21-18); Boston U. vs St. , Lawrence; Brown vs Lafayette; ! *Bucknell vs Penn State (14-20); | ;Carnegie Tech vs Wittenburg; ! Colgate vs Duke (0-13); Duquesne | ivs Pittsburgh (0-6); Fordham vs / Waynesbiirg (48-0); Georgetown vs Roanoke! Harvard vs Cornell; | Holy Cross vs Manhattan; Navy i vs Virginia (40-13); New York U. jvs Rutgeés;' Pent’ U:’ vs Yale’ | (7-27); Princeton’ vs Dartmouth | + (9-33); Syreause vs Maryland { (0-13); Villnaova vs Muhlerherg. Chicago U. vs Michigan (12-13); Creighton vs Oklahoma (13-6); }Drake vs Northwestern; Illinois 'U. vs Indiana (6-13); Iowa vs Wis- consin (6-13); Iowa State vs; Ne- ibraska (7-20); Kansag“¥p. Wash- burn (25-2); Kansas State vs Mis- isouri (7-14); Michigan State vs Mlindis Wesleyan; Minnesota U. tvs Purdué; Notre Dame vs Geor- i gia Tech} Ohio State vs Southern California (12-13); Oklahoma vs | Tevas; Tulsa U. vs Washington (82-7). SOUTH | Alabama’ vs N. C. State; Ala- bama Poly vs Tennessee (20-7); Clemson vs V.M.I.; Davidson vs Etskine (21 & FLORIDA vs WAN ;. Kentucky U Ae aor 12); LSU. vs Rice ississippi vs Miss. $s! P Rahs: Miss. vs Louisi- a tech North Carolina vs Tu- Ighe (13-0); Richmond vs Hamp- ton Syaney (19-0); South Carolina vs e Forest;"Tennessee vs a (7-2), “¥-PI. vs WM 0-12}; Waishington and Lee vs West Virginia (0-6). SOUTHWEST Arkansas vs Baylor (14-20); . Texas A“M. vs Santa Clara; Cen- tenary vs »S.W.; Texas Tech vs ‘Oklahoma City. ROCKY MOUNTAINS Brighan’ "Young vs Wyoming (19-0); Colqgado vs Utah State {33-0}; Co! jo Miners vs Chad- ron; Mont State vs Omaha: Western State vs Idaho (9-6). FAR WEST California vs Pennsylvania (20-0); Gonzaga vs North Dakota: }Qregon State vs Portland; Stan- ford vs Washington State (23-0); UCLA. vs Washington (0-26). ‘ } » Allen says. | 13 months, tricia Baker is a “darts widow”. | -— = (Wide Worle TO AMERICA’S a weet went the national championships this year as Patty Berg, flam- ing thatched Minneapolis girl, captured National Links title at Chicago’’and blonde Alice Marble’ of Los Angeles (in- set) regained the net diadem at Forest Hills she“held two years ago: | ASSOCIATED: PRESS SPORTLIGHT By GARDNER SOULE AP Feature Service Writer PHOG ALLEN’S CAGERS TOLD TO START TRAINING | LAWRENCE, Kas.—Dr. F. C. Allen, basketball coach at the University. of Kansas, has recom- mended daily exercise by “push- up” on finger tips and toes to can- ' didates for his next quintet. He’s written his sqvadmen tell- ing them to keep “pooshing up”. | “Athletes are in the best con- dition if they begin their train- ing six months-in advance”, Dr. “Diet needs to be watched, and regular exercise taken. I want those basketball players to develop their fingers’ and wrists”. JUST TO CELEBRATE _ OPERATING TABLE. eae OPERATIONS CRED-' ITED TO YOUTH IN INDIANA © vousens if (Ry. Ansoctated Press) WASHINGTON, Ind., Oct. 7—| | The physician stepped back from! L)hhis patient's bed. }¥ “went, son,” he began, “i | is the land of the hard name and | Sprini ELDORADO, IIl.—Alec D. Han- | cock, a Baptist preacher, cele- brated his 75th birthday by run- ning the 100-yard dash down the main street. A stop watch timed him at 18.2 seconds. Traffic was stopped for the event. MAY BE INCOMPATIBILITY NEW YORK. — The leading pass-catcher and the leading pass- er of the National Football league can’t get together. They have not been on the same team four of the Baiigh of the Redskins ‘led past six years. In 1937 Sammy passers while Gaynell Tinsley of the Cards caught the most aerials. _—--— HE DARTS AWAY CUXTON,, England.—Married 22-year-old Mrs. Pa- She’ said her husband’s enthusi- asm far playing. the game every | night had broken up their mar- | 'N THE ¢4 riage. ONE IN 375 CHICAGO. scouts travel more than 30,000 miles to watch 7,500 minor-league ball players every summer. Of this number, about 20 minor-lea- guers with marked major-league ability are spotted. FOOTBALL FARM NEW YORK.—The New Fork Chan: Giants became the first’ N: Football league team to buy a farm team outright. They wit operate the Jersey City tion this fall, the! ‘it looks like another operation—!” A sigh from the bed, and then: “Okay, Doc, if you say so.” Twenty - two-year-old Joseph | Floerke had reason to sigh. He ‘had reason even to go into a! (rage, throw. pillows and bewail | jhis fate. But he did’ none of | these. Despite’ his 30 operations in a ‘half-dozen hospitals within 11 years, the youth ‘still has hopes | for recovery from a knee in- jJury Joe’s knee was hurt one night | in 1927 when, in the excitement | of watching Washington's biggest fire—the burning of the county ‘courthouse—he fell against a piece of conerete, | Since then, he has spent many tiresome months''in bed. Doctors | have examined, tapped, grafted, experimented—and they’re _ still ‘at a loss to explain why the in- jury fails to respond to treat- Between days in bed, Floerke ua sandwiched into his life a | high school education and several ‘months of business training. Long months of illness, doctors, {nurses and hospitals have never diminished his greatest ambition —to become a physician. “AROUND AND’ ABOUT. (By ©. G, FLINT) esceee The operation is over. The surgeons, all four of them, have | removed the endangering area dled out of the way. The doctors smile, wipe their unclean hands on their uniforms, slap one an- other on the back. Only a few \days ago they were ready to | operate on each other, but they | found a sicker victim and this operation is successful. Only, the | patient will not get about or be heard from much in future. Who is this prostrate figure of speech we call the “patient”. It hard fate, Czechoslovakia, as you’sneeze it. The four able; “surgeons” are, of’ course, the} representatives of the four great nations who got together, just in | time: But stay; another’ great surgéon has had’ something to say. He wears’ the brightest smile of all. He is skilled in operating’ on ‘the Constitution of the United States “and he would like it generally understood that his written opinion saved a great loss‘of blood.’ His*supporters are saying that this fifth consultant saved the day-and that the credit for the peace of the world be- longs solely to him. It was this non-present “doctor” who made the “cure.” My friends, try to) draw your own conclusions 0! this point before the next elec-) tion time, lest the slogan of Am- erica’s candidate ‘for President in 1940 be “He kept the world out | of war.” — Chicago Cub} CHAS. G. BRAND, “ERM ©; Giants” jn the American assecia- door of the o~ THIS HOLE-IN-ONE YARN LOOKS UNCANNY TO US BARRE, Vt.—When E. C. Sell- berg scored « hole-in-one at the Barre country club, it was a dis- tinctive feat because: In the history of the club, only four aces have been made at the No. 4, 175-yard hole, Sellberg’s being the fourth. The othér three wete made by the other three players who made up the foursome with Sell- berg and witnessed the feat. LADY BALDWIN WINS CEE ar ae eae Open a Budget Account at Paul’s LEGALS CURE COURT OF THE ELEVENTA JUDICIAL CIRCUIT | OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR MON- ROP COUNTY, FLORIDA: IN CHANCERY, io. 7-38 Plaintiff, FRANK R. SHALLCROSS, Defe: NOTICE OF MASTER'S SA NOTICE 13 MEREBY GIVEN that under and by authority of the Final Decree rendered on the ist day ef October, A. D. 1938, in that certain cause pending in the Circuit Court of the Eleventh Judicial Cir- cult of Florida, in and for Monroe in’ Chancery, in| which} Brand is Piaintife and Frank R. Shalici oss is Defendant, I, as Special Master appointed by ¢ Court in gaid decree, will of- Wher forsale and sell at public out- ry to the highest and best bidder, j or bidders, for cash at the front County Court Hoase of | the County of, Monfoe and State of Floridy, at Key West. File widat, the 7th day } | | the following oa in Mouree County, Florida, wits Lot One (1), Section Thirty- one (31), Township Sixty (60) South, of Range Forty (60) East. cotitaining Firty-three (53) aéres, more or less, and inctuding: Lot Two (2), Block Thirteen Od), as shown on Piat No. 3, f, recorded im Piat Book 1, P 171 of the Public Records Monroe County, Florida. The sald property as aforesaid, together with all the tenements, hereditaments, and apvartenances ; thereunto belonging. or in anywise pertaining. being sold to sativfy said decree. Dated this 7th d4y of October, & ASTLEY, England. — Lady np tss5. Baidwin, wife of Britain's former ALLAN &. CLEARE, JR, Y oduster in Chaacery. Specie: prime wnipister, won the women’s! pewzamix AXLEROAD. darts championship at Astley hor- ‘See Paul about new Budget Plan Easy to pay.on Paul's Budget Plan ticultural show held here. Attorney for Plaintiff. i, Florida. OGtT-14-21-28; novet938 | ia the State of Florida. ececccsen M. | solved by je CLASSIFIED COLUMN eroccedsosccddcodive LEGALS NOTICE OF "ELBeri08 To the Sheriff of Monroe County, of, the State of Bsn Be it Known, 1, R.A. Gray, | Seeretary of Siate of the State of Florida, do hereby give notice | @, that a GENERAL ELECTION | vertisemests ‘uniger ‘this! héad will be held in” Monroe” County; State of Pe te ORR ye lnevirearics ei Giiee a succeeding” thé” firs' ie ca for eac! = November, A. 938, sald Tuesday. being she eke tnt | séFtion, but the minimum for the SIGHTH DAY OF NOVEMB p For United “States Senator oR fret inderfler in jevery‘Instance te the State of Florida, for six years | ee i aaa as from Jan. 3, 1939. yment four ¢! ie ver- congrensiSnal Diatict at Pod state | tietrapi everebs in a * Florid in e venty-six! ‘regul advertisers with ledger Congress of thé United States. { For Attorney General of the State) #ccounts may have their advertise- | Of por Thee Justices of the Su rome mR caren ‘or Three Justices of the court of the State of Florida. Advertisers should give their For Two Railroad Commissioners | street address as well as their tele- ‘tor’ Tireity=} Phone number if they desire re- of the! sults. TRANSPORTATION WANTED (WANTED — Transportation to any ‘pofmt’ in getieral direction of Colorado. Will help’ with driving and pay personal: ex- penses. Jerome Berkowitz, Phone 765. oct6-tf For State Senator {fourth Senatorial District State of Florida. ‘or One Member of the House ot | Représentatives of the State se | Florida: For Five’ County Commissioners. | { For Three Members of the County | Board of Public Instruction. | In Testimony Whereof, mat have hereunto set hand. and affixed _ the} Great Seal of the State. of Florida, at Tallahassee, the Capital, this the tirat) LS.) aay ot September, A. "| ROOMS with ‘or without board. Sunny and cool. 419 Southard street. oct3-lwk GRAY, secretary of State: To HON. KARL O..T! Sheriff Monroe County. sept9-16-23-30; oct7-14=21-28; EREUENTH. JUDICIAL. snot OF FLORIDA, IN AN MONROE COUNTY, rio) IN CHANCERY, MILO CORPORATION, a cor- poration organized under the laws of Plorida, Ftsintits, ro Raha nové } IND THE: CIRCOIT. pours Lost (LOST Silver Wrist” Watch on aang Kee inside Catholic Church. Red leather hand. Reward if returned to Rear Rarhorin’s Restaurant. oct3-4tx { vs certifies: _ REDDEN, MARTIN HAN ANDREW ANDERSON, als, ‘endants. \OOMS ORDER FOR’ PUEICATION R It appearing by affidavit ap-) pended to Bill of Complaint, thed | THE MUNRO, 128 'N. E. 4th St., in the above entitled cause, 3 us Miami, Fla. Enjoy’ living, hot 1) a defendants, to-wit: C. F. MARTIN HANSEN, ANDREM water, pleasant surroundings. DERSON, | THEOD ORE ic i e 1 | { PALLARD, ‘a singte ‘woman, BARNHART, a _ single womal | ERANKLIN C. BUSH, LELAND SHEPARD, OSCAR ’SABIN ANNA L. 'SABIN, his’ wite, residents of the State of Flori and that their residences are wu: known. That to-wit: property. lots‘ 50x100" adjoining,’ or” will sell.» Address Box P, The Citi- zen. aug23-s the following detendants, | CHAS. D. SNIDER,” E.~ E- DRURY, EMMA P. CLARK, a ain- | gle woman, COLON W. WASARS, MARION G. TRACY, a_ singh TMB and the patient has been trun- {1A% P, 4 SPRLERING.” woman, SILRERS vis PRANCI are non- venduata of the Beate Florida, and that their residences; kine That the following’ acrdudints;) Fleming St. hat | torweits sERO! Di ib SRO DENA: EST. BL EVANS, TRU: GAL and ELLA his wite, are non-residents of the State of Florida, any toi | Room that reridences, are, af | £41108 JEROME E. DUMME! West Build! , cgloraas: JON! 8-A West BROWN: Eeiade rend 7 cas ssingto: e FOREST BLY STON NS «Eh New York: EB. A. BVA! No Muskingen’ weeks . A. pA FLBGAL, nie wife 3 B mite, County, Zanesville, Ohio. That’ the Stembler Agency, Inc. an | Company, Inc. are domestic porations whose charter has - i dixsolv~d by the Secretary. of State | pursuant to statute in such madé and provided, but that Aree genes to wit: fms bler Insurance en dissol wag ‘serv wht procees by se: G. C. Stembler, ite, forme! As to there are no ns in the eos of Florida, service of sub) j on whom would bind th and | that they ‘are all over the agé of twenty-one years. That the rity Water oat! any, Inc. is & rota the Beers and has failed to dent agent fof odrvice tor It is therefore ordered non-resident defendants, e asx Purity Water Company,” a Stembler Insurance and they are hereb ply to the Bill of "Somplthe {tn said cause, on or betore Sieben the 7th day of November, | FOR * i9as, ie of thot: FOR SALE—Completely rebuilt Cuban-type house; double bed- pi It Jef of order be pul lished for tour secutive weeks (five times), ip Key West published State ‘This 17th day of Sept. 1938. (Circuit Court Seat) Toss Cc Sawyer Clerk ‘of Circuit Court (34) Florence E TT, | c Citizen, a newspaper in said County and By BENJAMIN AXLEROAD, Solicitor for Plat oct? -14-21-28; nO¥4,19 NOTICE oF MASTER'S 6 NOTICE 18 HEREBY that under and by. vi pursuant to the et | made and er ve Sas vans Eleventh Judicial Ciretut roe County, Florida, 5 in that certain cause i wheretn Leonar Transter [inc a Corporation | existing under the State of Florida is the phaintitt Lawes ron |_| Walter T. Porter, e¢ al are the de- | fondants," the wn Master in | Maia dedree” wit ortee ‘ema eh nes public outery to the highest bi ; ‘The Citizen. for cash, before the front daor 2 Seeman t maid Court and nef’ 5th and Staple Avenue. Gay) during the legal hours of sale. Apply Box D, The Citizen. to-wit; betwees 11 ¢ clock ip forenven and 2 o'clock in the noon of maid day. the acrpbed property to satiety sa| cree by ere of the amount ‘S| 50m SALE—2 lous, each SoxiOw Ruh from Washington to Von Thirty-three 31% Townshi ty-siz cent ated € South, Range Rast. Dated this 6th day of October. AD. 19%. Lr Man ay ee a ALLAN 6. eae ate. Solicitor tor eett- ie =a: nove,1938