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SATWRDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1939 Meet Mr. Lochinvar YESTERDAY: So Doug may take advantage of an offer which will enable him to continue at Medical School, Cecily pretends she is eager to go with Aunt Olivia. She rents the Cape Cod cottage and her New York apart- ment, Pe Chapter Four ’ Goodbys ‘Y dusted off her hands and, leaning wearily on the shelf that was level with her el- bows, studied the other girl while her brow furrowed. “Hilda, are you sure you mean it? I mean, wouldn’t you rather I sent this stuff to storage? It doesn’t seem right that you should put all your furniture away. I think you're do- ing this as a fine gesture of friend- ship to take this place off my hands.” “Don’t be ridic!” Hilda answered casually. “I'm delighted to live in mew surroundings. I had to move anyway, and it isn’t costing me anything to store my stuff in Ned’s warehouse. He has lots of room. Suppose you go and get tidied up and we'll have something to eat?” She had heard the footsteps she had been waiting for in the area way that led to ihe apartment. A moment later there was a great to-do as enthusiastic hands = on the door. Hilda might ave been completely deaf for all the attention she gave to the thun- der. Cecily opened the door and was greeted with shouts and song. “Well!” she said, and pretended to grumble when she saw her friends with their arms'filled with bulky packages as they pushed through the door, filling the small room. “What's the meaning of this?” “A party, darling!” Jean Tuthill, who was a young and very unim- portant assistant to the society ed- itor of a New York newspaper, explained; and then they were all talking at once. “I brought my camera along,” Ted Pryor said. Until a few weeks before Ted had been near the edge of starvation, as most of them in that group, with the exception of Cecily, had been during their two- year friendship. i “And I,” explained Paul Gorio, | who had been born Paul Jones and | dropped the Jones part—illustri- ous as the combination had been —when he embraced a singer's ca- reer, “wore my beret to lend a Bo- hemian atmosphere.” “Did you bring your guitar?”| Cecily asked. “That’s so much more important.” Paul didn’t need his beret to lend the right atmosphere. It be- gan when Lucius Fennelly’s bride | proudly produced a huge kettle of hot spaghetti and Lucius brought | forth the makings of a gargantuan een salad. Someone else had rought a rare old cheese and} Hilda dove under a lounge to drag out a case of beer. } “It's the first surprise party I’ve ever had,” Cecily id later and remembered that it was the first na that Doug hadn't shared joug had sailed with the Kendal!s the night before and the next day she was to leave by motor for Vickersport. “It’s practically my} début.” Her voice wasn’t as gay as she intended it should be. Patricia Fennelly said, “High life?” Cecily asked, laugh ing | “Of course it will be. Lucius says he bets you'll be having brea in bed every morning and caviar for dinner every night. Oh, we read our newspapers, we do, and we know how Madame Darrell ! You'll be yachting and...” “Oh, please let's not talk about it,” Cecily said before she realized what she was saying, or how much of her reluctante. and unhappi- ness was in her-voice.., Furious And Frustrated FTER the supper had been cleared away and_the lamps turned off until there was only a dim, golden light in the room, they sang to the accompaniment of Paul's guitar, as they had done so many happy times before. Cecily could not sing. Her throat ‘was tight. In the pleasant dimness, through the veils of smoke, over and over again her eyes traveled slowly about the room which she had made into a home. A home that she was leaving and did not know that she could ever have again. It had seemed so modest when she wrote the checks to pay for its maintenance. Now it seemed, since there were no more checks, to be the height of elegance and com- fort. She tried to think of the autumn and her return. But for her, Time had stopped still. There was only the summer and, after that, she could not foresee the future. She only knew that Doug must go on to medical college and that somehow she must find a way to earn her living. When she thought of her own imadequateness, she felt furious and frustrated. She was young, ambitious and intelligent. She | By Marie Blizard could drive a car, handle a boat in any dirty weather, cook reason- ably well, paint a-little, discuss history, politics, modern art and literary movements, strum a gui- tar, play bridge, swim and knit. But to save the life of her, she couldn’t find among those pleas- ant accomplishments one single thing that could be translated into a means of earning her living. Paul’ sang a Neapolitan love- song. It reminded her of a girl she had met in Venice two years be- fore. The girl had been a debutante and when the family fortune was lost in the depression, the girl had studied stenography and become a private secretary to a novelist who was traveling in Europe. Cecily thought about that. It would be interesting to be a pri- vate secretary. But you had’ to have money to pay for a course at business college and you had to have money to live on until you got a job. She could, of course, con- tinue to live in Olivia’s big brown- stone house in the East Seventies. But she had no money to pay for tuition and in the last two weeks since she had been living at her aunt’s, Olivia, for all that she knew Cecily’s financial status, had not offered to lend her any money or give her an allowance. Olivia, seeing her niece’s fine clothes, had undoubtedly assumed that Cacily still had some money. Cecily would have died rather than men- tion that she had nothing. She did have sixty dollars. This was Hilda’s rent for July, and that was all she had. Mr. Cronkite had paid for the rental of the cottage on the Cape in advance and she and Douglas had promptly paid their bills, which left the imposing sum of eight dollars and forty cents. “Something will turn up,” she murmured, If you willed it as hard as she did, it had to. Proposal “DUN’S fun but I refuse to ac- cept this as our last party with Cecily,” Jean Tuthill said, yawn- ing. “And I suggest that we call it a day and continue it in October. I've got to get the Chronicle on the newsstands at the usual hour to- morrow.” They all laughed. Jean’s job was a great joke to all of them but Jean. “You take me seriously, don’t you, Cecily?” Cecily said she did. “And when you get any news that I might use in the society page about the goings-on at Vickers- port, will sou send me every j item?” Cecily, unable to foresee what far-reaching consequences that promise lightly made was to bring about, agreed to it. Then she said, “Do you mind if I slip out without any fanfare? I guess I must be getting sentimen- tal but I hate goodbys.” Ted Pryor said he minded and when she stood in the door and waved to them gallantly, lifting her head a little as she was learn- ng to do too often now, he got his hat. The Pryor purse had been néar- ly depleted with his share of the party and so they rode up Fifth Avenue in the early morning on top of a Fifth Avenue bus. ney had been talking about Hilda’s new job with an advertis- ing agency when fed cleared his throat and said, “Cecily, I’m not getting much money yet but Ill get a raise as soon as business picks up and if you'd .. . that is . you might think it over. I mean I'd think it was swell if you'd marry me.” “Ted!” Cecily couldn’t think of much more to say. Ted wasn’t in | love with her, she knew, but “they got along.” she was deeply touched. No man had ever been in love with her. She hadn't known any men except those in their lit- romance, “Thanks, Ted,” she said. “Okay. But if youever need any mon ... that is, if you ever need any help you know the gangis...’ “I know,” she said softly. She thought: I’m not poor! It was difficult not to think that she was. Her pride was so closely intermingled with her other emo- tions during that time when her simple, protected world had col- lapsed about her. And she had thought that no one knew what she was feeling and thinking! Sensitiveness that she didn’t know she possessed made her aware immediately that Olivia's attitude toward her had changed as soon as she heard that Cecil: was entirely without funds to maintain herself. at once. And as quickly as it had been graciously accepted, she fit- ted Cecily not into her family, but into her staff. _ The only difference, Cecily thought, not ungratefully, was that Olivia's maid and Olivia's secre- tary were permitted to live their own lives, to have working hours within limits, and to receive wages. Sake Cecily had found within two days that she was to enjoy none of these privileges. Nevertheless, she put the thought from her as be- ing unworthy return for her aurt’s kindness and decidéd that her conclusions were colored by pride. roup which was marked with | t of camaraderie rather than | ‘have won over 20 games and lost FOLLOWING THROUGH. uw four. They have been sold By PEDRO AGUILAR Sanford Lookouts, champions of Stat the State r League, play an All-Star cl ub in Miami. td Washington Senators. Dizzy Dean, another member TAKE ON TROJANS IN CITY TOMORROW CONCHS VS. PIRATES IN IN- ITIAL CONTEST; DOUBLE- HEADER FOR LABOR DAY ACTIVITIES i | | By O. L. MILIAN Much interest centers in the ‘baseball games to pe played at Trumbo Field tomorrow and La- bor Day afternoons with double- headers scheduled for each day. | Sunday’s contests will bring to- gether Key West Conchs ‘and Pi- irates in tne first game and Holly- wood All-Stars vs. Trojans in the | nightcap. Trojans Confident Trojans will siart the same lineup, which last Sunday shelled | Robert Bethel from the mound, with exception of “Bubber” Wick- | ers, who will get the pitching; assignment instead of Navarro, | , who worked against the Conchs. Wickers and Ives hooked up in a mound battle in Hollywood three ‘weeks ago when the All- Stars won a 1 to 0 game from the Trojans. Wickers has not pitched a game since that tilt and there ould be plenty of hop on his speed ball Sunday. The team claims to be ready after a hard week’s practice. High chested because of their sensa- tional victory of Roy Hamlin’s! city champions last Sunday, the | Courtyard Park boys will trot out !with a winning spirit that to all indications will take more than the highly-touted Ives of Holly- wood to hold down Joe Navarro and Co. Stars To Use Ives Ingham’s All-Stars are fresh from several successive victories and are not overlooking what the locals might have been do- ing in and around this city since |the two clubs’ first meeting in! \ Hollywood, and will depend on) the soupbone of the great, little| Ives to bring home the bacon by letting down Key West’s second | best team as he did in his home city. But there’s no telling what may happen at the field tomor- row except that the visiting team is in for a big surprise. Bucs After Another Win The first game will find Ray | Bush’s Pirates trying to solve the slants of either Robert Bethel or Lucilo Gonzalez, whichever will be the Conchs’ selection. The} Pirates were unable to win from Hamlin’s gang all during the first-half schedule of the Monroe | ‘County League but that does not} mean that the Bucs, with their fighting spirit, will not give the 'Conchs a little trouble and may | come within, winning range. George Malgrat, Pirates’ youth- ful pitcher, will toss ’em in for the Bucs, with Specs Carbonell \behind the plate. When Malgrat lis right the big guns of William ‘Cates, Armando Acevedo, Es- mond Albury, Cyril Griffin, Ju- lius Villareal, Julee Barcelo and of money involved was not dis- | Foxx Red Sox 439 |Mario Pena do not boom so loud but the big question remains that given the Bears, who are now in Keller, Yanks .. 300 |no singles pitcher lasts long enough to keep those guns quiet ‘all of the game. Field Events Labor Day Featured by distance 100-yard dash and base circling contest on Labor Day, which will be spon- sored by Social Club Marti, the doubleheader scheduled for Mon- | |day is expected to draw a large lerowd. Prizes, donated by local! merchants, will be presented to; | the victors of the field events. | | Key West Conchs will clash} j with Blue Sox in the first game, | and Trojans vs. Pirates in the} nightcap. All receipts of the con- tests will go towards defraying | cost of umpires’ complete equip- ;ment purchased by Roy Hamlin. | |Fans have been yelling for this | | outfit for some time and the fans | should show their appreciation by | She had repeated ner invitation making the gate receipts large | (2-9) vs. Harder (9-8). lenough to take care of this ex- | pense, Sox Ready For Conchs All fans know how well the} |Blue Sox have been keeping up| the good baseball name of Key | West by defeating everything that has been tossed up to them by {other cities during the past few | \weeks and how they kept the, ‘Conchs pretty well scared in their last encounter when pitcher Guillermo Diaz had the bombing lartillery of Cates and Company ' swinging at empty air. Although j weak in hitting, the Sox have a well-balanced fielding club and may make the champs step up a bit in order to win. Diaz may get the pitching assignment for the Sox, with Al. Rodriguez be- hind the bat. Conchs are expect- of the mound staff, has won 17'ed to give young Jack Cates an-| consecutive games, a league rec- other tryout. Jack hurled against will the other hurlers. Jeter and Joe Pinder are Key West will pick a_ strong Twe of the greatest pitchers in club to do them battle when they the minors today are on the San-' come here this month. ford club this year—Sid Hudson and James Henry Dean. Both Subscribe to The Citizen. the Trojans last week and held Adams’ boys pretty tight for eight innings. Fans’ To Be Satisfied It is desired to call to the fans’ | attention that the 100-yard dash \and base-circling contest spon-} THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ~ KEEP INBACK OF LOSE WITH CUBS MARINE P! LAYERS --s BLANK PHILS; TIGERS WIN ANOTHER BOWLERS LAST NIGHT IN TERRACE ALLEYS’ THREE- MAN TOURNAMENT (Special to The Citizen) NEW YORK, Sept. 2—Chicago |Cubs downed Brooklyn Dodgers : i |6 to 2 in the opening game of a Price Tours bowling team and | doublehader behind French’s the Southpaws won their respec- eight-hitter, but barely missed tive matches at Terrace Alleys | peing shutout in the nightcap at last night and the end of the 7amulis limited them to six safe- fifth week finds competition in! ,. the three-man tournament tight- | 4s: Home run by Gabby Hart- ening up. \nett, who set a record for catch- The teams stand thus: ling with one club, was the only Team— Pins |Bruin score. Game ended 3 to 1. Mari Hospital ee In a night contest, Boston Bees Rae seas ~vvvoe BMS blanked Philadelphia Phillies, 6 Cheely Lumber Co. No. 1 .. 5729 | to 0. La Concha Hotel 5721| New York Yankees walloped Telephone Co. _ 5545 | Cleveland Indians, 11 ot 8, aided Gas Co, ae _. 5419 | by two triples and a single off the White Star Cleaners _. 5380 |bat of Joe DiMaggio, who drove Key West-Havana Cigars . 5377|in six runs. Bowlers _. uw... 5339} Detroit Tigers Cheely Lumber Co. No. 2 Thompson Hardware . Palm Dairy Lucky Strikes — Conchs —- . Bojangles DeMolay Electric Co. Rotary’ Club — overwhelmed 5305 homers helped in the scoring. 5287| Results of the games: 5280 NATIONAL LEAGUE . 5275 First Game . 5247| At Brooklyn 5208 Chicago _ 5105 Brooklyn 153-8) 0 4866; French and Mancuso; Press- Aronovitz Store _ 4800 nell, Hayworth and Todd, Scores of last night follow: | Southpaws i __ 76 148 99— 323 | At Brooklyn 124 111 87— 322|Chicago 150 157 147— 454 | Brooklyn ee : | Lee and Hartnett; Tamulis Botal =. _...--- 1099 | Phelps. ronovitz Store | S 104 90 95— 289!) Night Game 124 130 135— 389|_ At Philadelphia _123 115 102— 340 Boston a —— |Philadelphia . 1018, Posedel and Lopez; | Kersieck and Davis. © | 610 0 Second Game Hampton Watkins Saunders Sawyer Geldie Knight Total -.. Price Tours 101 125 158— 384 136 126 104— 366 —_—— 141 144 154— 439 AMERICAN LEAGU! —|_ At Detroit RHE. iliicniinstata _ 1189 | Boston Bowlers Detroit -. O63 140 112— 415 | Dickman. Auker, Heving and 135 114 137— 386 | Peacock; Rowe, Thomas, McKain 83 137 111— 331|and Tebbetts. Glisch Only games scheduled. H. Dion .. F. J. Dion Total ... Howard At Cleveland New York ..... Cleveland ae Pearson, Chandler, Russo and Dickey; Dobson, Broaca, Eisen- stat, Milnar and Hemsley. Total - 1132 GIANTS PURCHASE | 5315 | Boston Red Sox, 14 to 10. Three} Lovering Writes About ee ee | ; 1 1 | (Continued from Page One) matical Rock of Ages. . . eees A Windly Island and Whale \Harbor some scenes of devastation {and rehabilitation mingle to oblit- graphy of that other day. An |arching bridge rises on creosote pilings alongside where once the Extension ran; fragments of rail- road trestle appear toward the Gulf; many stout braces are yet in position. |the rails attached as one holds the sky. . .the rails like slender |brown bands stretched sidewise in the sun. eee For a long while, from where the string of ties was canted, a single piece of rail extended in a perfect curve with no ties attach- ed, to join another section of the storm-warped track resting part- ly above the gaily colored wa- ter. . .there the sun’s bright flash- light etched a hundred feet of gale-blown railroad “iron” over which the splendid Havana Spe-' cial used to steam, its oil burn- ing locomotive’ smudging fare- well to Winter against South Florida Summer skies in wind- | blown autograph. . .track flat on ; the bed of the bay. Tiny ripples play around it; gay-tinted fish dart hither and yon. . . eee Yes, you realize now. . this | track was torn from the naked | | |arm’s length ‘where they ‘had been dropped on the rcoxs at the; west of the vanished right-of- jgue scene. Th | Coast $10,000. ie job cost the East For half a mile where the train jerate every memory of the geo-/was swept from the roadbed the ocean side of the original grade remains pretty well in place like a narrow wall. . .a slice of marl seamed into blocks by tropical |rains since the great disaster, ‘much as if (in miniature) you In the Gulf waters|were to set a cake of pale yel-| |railroad ties stand on end with 'low soap on edge.and press a hot /°f mortgage and other relief, -Stretches the fingers of his hands toward |of cross-ties stand up-ended like | sel! at public auction, for cash in |grid against one side. . |tree trunks in an old-time In- jdian stockade. There are two Places where the narow wall is vanished except for a flat-topped pinnacle big as a hogshead. One fis remined of pictures of rock |formations in Colorado's Garden | |of the Gods. seer Fine new bridges carry the | Overseas Highway _southwest- | ward over Indian Key to Lower Matecumbe. aloosa Indian name for “the place of sorrow” | + . .and motor traffic sweeps on from the monument erected |there to honor the hurricane dead, The first bridge in the project to build highway bridges jout of railroad spans across the deep water gaps, is visible half a mile further on. On the via- ducts spanning channels, 22-foot I-beams were let into the cement tops of the original bridges built by Flagler. These I-beams canti: lever the new highway out ove! of the horrors of the Keys, . .the! sides of the cars bashed in to! ‘|where are the barnacles and sea trestle above your head. But | the ocean and Gulf four feet ei- vegetation; the familiar water |ther side beyond the width of the marks on the piles? And some| jd railway bridges and stout, re of the stone-exposed is granite in |inforced ‘concrete _balustrades the spaces between the yawning | guard the motorist. Everything timbers. . .granite didn’t grow on |is safe and solid, and the .motor- the Florida Keys. The hurri-|ist feels—should feel no timidity cane revealed a secret of railroad | _ jn making crossing of the construction known to few except pridges, even that great span at the courageous Flagler engineers. | Bahia Honda where the railway Across the original low-lying is- | bridge was too narrow and the lands filling was more economical | cost so great as to make use of than viaducts or bridge work. ‘So | the arching top of the original piling was driven along the line |pridge trussess necessary for the of the survey, and braced and pyilding of the highway. There andaigua, New York, was brought | ther viaducts and bridges. to the Extension and lightered to, eee the “grade” to mingle with Flor-) at the north end of the first ida coral rock and marl. The jabutment of the first marl was heaped on the outside; Fjagler bridge to be made over cane disclosed the timbered| past Coast Railway milepost, its skeleton which held compact the | top finished like a gravestone. On filling of the ocean-going road-| jt appear two sets of black-paint- bed across the low, flat islands oq figures, one above the other . . and, too, it revealed the weak-/|_ | 449 and 95. One is the mile- capped; and stone filling from the same cantilever principle is | near Flagler’s birthplace at Can- ysed as down on the tops of the! great | | the water made it slick, the waves! into a highway bridge, there stood | slid over it like oil. . the hurri- for years a white cement Florida SECOND BASEMAN Only games scheduled. JIMMY DYKES SUSPENDED DiMAGGIO LEADING FOR THREE DAYS FORIN- | BIG LEAGUE HITTERS. TERFERING WITH UMPS (Special to The Citizen) (Special to The Citizen) NEW YORK, Sept. 2.—Joe Di-| NEW YORK, Sept. 2——New Maggio, the clouting outfielder of York Giants have purchaser Nich- 'the New York Yankees, continues olas Joseph (Mickey) Witek, sec-' to lead the major leagues’ Big Six ond basman of the Newark Bears | Hitters, with an average of .408. of the International League. Standings follow: This announcement had been! Player— AB RH Ave. released last night. The amount/DiMa’gio Yanks 358 87 146 .408 jness of Flagler’s engineers. . dlosed. Two players are to be fifth place. 126 160 .364 80 157.360 71 :106 = .353 58 145 337 81 162 °334 Mize, Cards _ 436 |Arnovich, Phils 431 , Witek will report to the Giants McCo’ick, Reds 485 at the close of the International season. Dykes Suspended Jimmy Foxx, Red Sox, leads in hom runs, with 34. Standings: Railroad © “grade” thus built formed a dam which kept hurri- cane waters out of their natural course into the Gulf and back again. Flagler’s generals learned it to their sorrow and at tre- mendous cost further down the line in 1909. That storm tore out many miles of rock-filled trestle . . threw siv and {en-ton boulders about like marbjes; the sea-going array to build 18 miles of bridges spanning ‘reefs, instead of six. eee low | In the vicinity of Whale Har-| bor the .braced4pile, rock-filled | roadbed was allowed to stand. . and the hurricane of 1935’s Labor | |Day heaved the work away in PAGE THREF SSeS et ey se LEGAL NOTICE OF MASTER'S SALE Notice is hereby given that under jand by virtue of a certain order |and decree of foreclosure and sale move any more than the emble- way. Seven miles of temporary | made and entered on the 24th day track were built to reach the res- | of July, A. D. 1939, by the Honor- jable Arthur Gomez, one of the ; Judges of the Circuit Court of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit of the }State of Florida; in and for Mon- jroe County, in Chancery, in a cause j therein pending wherein Paul Boy- |sen is the Complainant and Rex }ford Roberts and Hilda Roberts, h wife; Robert Roberts and Mau | Roberts; his wife; Riva Lusk and |W. B. Lusk, her husband; Roberta } O'Brien and Vincent O'Brien,. her jhusband; Fannie Cash and Ira Cash, her h dez, a wido all unknown claimants having or claiming an in- terest in the real estate herein. in- volved, are defendants, foreclosure h undersigned Special Master in Chan- cery will offer for sale and will jhand, to the highest biddeg, at the jfront door of the County Court House in the Cit’ of Key West, {Monroe County, Florida, during the jlegal hours of ‘sale, on ‘Monday the 4th day of September, 1939, the fol- lowing described real estate, situat lying and being in the County o! Monroe, State of Florida, described as follows: An undivided one half inter- est in Lot 1, Section 19, Town- ship 65, Range 34 East, con- taining 93% Acres more or less and situated in Monroe County, Florida. Together with all and singular the tenements, heredi- taments and appurtenances thereto belonging or in any- wise appertaining. THOMAS S. CARO, Special Master in Chancery. AQUILINO LOPEZ, JR. Solicitor for Complainant. augs-12-19-26; sept2,1939 NOTICE OF MASTER’S SALE Notice is hereby given that under |and by authority of the Final Do- | cree of Foreclosure rendered by the ‘Honorable Arthur Gomez, Judge of the Circuit Court of the Eleventh | Judicial Circuit of Florida, in and for Monroe ‘County, in that certain ‘cause in said Court pending in | which Ellen L. Gribb, a widow is Complainant and First Trust Com- ipany, et al, are Defendants, being ‘hancery File No. 7-117, 1, as Spe- cial Master in Chancery appointed jby the Court in said decree, under jand by virtue of the term™ there- | of, will offer for sale and sell at | public outery to the highest and |best bidder for cash, at the front |door of the Court House of Mon- roe County, in the City of Key | West, Florida, on Monday, the 7th |day of August, A. D. 1939, between the hours of eleven o'clock A. M. and two o'clock P. M., the same be- ing a legal sales day, and the hours | the legal hours of sale, the follow- ng described property, situate in Monroe County, Florida, to-wit: All of Model Land Company’ Lots Two (2), Three (3), Five (5), Six (6) and Seven (7), Sec- tion Thirty Two (32), Township ixty One (61) South of Range Thirty Nine (39) East, lying North of the right-of-way of the Florida East Coast Rail- road, as per plat on file in the office of the Clerk of the Cir- cuit Court in and for the said County, containing Eighteen and Thirty One Hundredths (18.31) acres more or less; less the right-of-way of the County Road as shown by recorded plat, and less Lot Five (5), Block Four (4) and Lot Eight (8), Block One (1) of Sunset Cove, a subdivision in Monroe County, Florida, as per plat thereof recorded in Plat Book 1, Page 145 of the Public Rec- ords of Monroe County, Florida. The said property as aforesaid, together With all the tenements, | | over the shallows of Florida Bay _ compelled | age back to Jacksonville by rail; |hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging, or in anywise the other on down to Key "West soo rtaining, being’ sold to antiaty . figures the locomotive engi-! saia decree. neers will never read again—nor | ,, Dated this 1st day of August, A. Havana Special tourists, either. . .|“~ “HENRY _H. TAYLOR, 'JR., involuntary marker on the route Wisma tek aster in Chapoecy. ,of railway enterprise and tragedy | solicitors for reer wise supplanted now by the modern! convenience of gasoline driven ‘vehicles, end to set the miles for} | | NOTICE TO CREDITORS travelers over the new highway. |’, dmes* OUMONROE county, eee FLORIDA. IN PROBATE. re Estate of EDNA MARIE ADELMEYER, Dec To all creditors and all peraons The bridges built at unbeliev- |!*, able toil and cost by Flagler’s men and his millions, have never | suffered hurricane loss. What, we | | wonder, may happen when those| magnificent structures, no longer sheer-sided, but flanged out four :\feet with cantilevered steel and concrete on either side, are swept by the breath of Satan swirling isey (9-8) vs. Gumbert (12-9) and | (6-11) vsy. Davis (1812). ‘column of The .Citizen for Labor | | who are in doubt as to which of Chicago _ For interferring with umpires, | American League William Harridge president of the Foxx, Red Sox American League, has suspended | DiMaggio, Yankees Managér Jimmy Dykes of the De-|Gordon, Yankees _. troit Tigers for three days. |Trosky, Indians __.. The ‘suspension began Thursday | ational League and was accompanied by a stern | Ott, Giants warning. Mize, Cardinals | Camilli, Dodgers TODAY’S GAMES IN MAJOR LEAGUES total of 119. He is followed close- lly by Joe DiMaggio, with 11. Williams, Red Sox, tops the list in runs-batted-in, driving home a 23|the first bridge passing Jewfish’ the tidal waves. The same con-_| struction is visible in a different | way at Lower Matecumbe. There when the Overseas Highway was building, a huge, wide fill led to the Atlantic’s waters across this Garden of Daphne 125 miles an hour?. . .will the “tableland high- lopple into the Gulf, strip- ped from its new reinforcing? Or. . .and may we hope so. . to Long Key. The brunt of the y pe blow struck there. wiping out! Veterans’ Camp ‘No. 1 complete- ly. But this wave washed only the top from the fill, exposing as in a bird's eye view the upper timber work around which the fill was originally made. ease sometime cauldron of hurricane serenely) stand as the viaducts have stood since Flagler’s dream became real? | As the highway builders work- j AMERICAN LEAGUE | Stands: New York at Boston—Ruffing | American League (20-4) vs. Ostermueller (10-3). | Williams, Red Sox . St. Louis at Cleveland—Mills | DiMaggio, Yankees | Foxx, Red Sox — Detroit. at Chicago—Newsom National League (15-10) vs. Rigney. (12-6). | McCormick, Reds Philadelphia at Washington— Camilli, Dodgers - Beckman (5-8) vs. Chase (9-16). | Medwick, Cardinals NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago at Cincinnati—Passeau (12-10) vs. Walters (20-9). Brooklyn at New York—Two} games—Hamlin (15-10) and Ca-/ - 119 111 «teh - 102 + 86 MAJOR BASEBALL LEAGUES’ STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE Meltor, (10-11). | Club— Pittsburgh at St. Louis—Brown | Cincinnati — St. Louis | Chicago |New York sored by the Marti Club has no |pittsburgh connection with a field day pre- Boston - viously announced in the sports | Philadelphia Boston at Philadelphia—Fette (10-9) vs. Muleahy (9-14). Brooklyn Hs Day. | AMERICAN LEAGUE The four-player contest is being! Club— Ww. put on for the sole purpose of |New York satisfying a great number of fans Boston — is ty s the following boys is the fastest Cleveland a runner: Evelio Rueda and Joseph | Detroit _ Domenech, Trojans; Rene Ma- | Washi geeeE 84 fect of tidal water that in past | ed to replace the railroad a gaso- line shovel spewed the earlier fill in heaps at either side of the embankment, then tore out the | stringers, cross-beams, braces and | piles. Some of the timber at that | point showed decay from the ef- years had worked into the base of the railroad causeway. When | the lumber—10-inch pilings, 8x10 | and 10x12 beams with 4x10 plank | braces—was finally removed, | foundations for the new highway | were put back from the’marl and | rock piles, temporarly in discard, | but when used’ originally were| held in shape as railroad “fill” | by the great ‘hard wood timbers. problem you may , | first publication hereof. will the new construction in that} terror (where Winter smiles so} having claims or demands against said estate: You, and each of you, are hereby notified and required ‘to present any claims and demands which you, lor either of you, may the estate of Edna M: meyer, deceased, a non-resident of the State of Florida, being domi- eiled in the State of New . York at the time of her death, and be- ing possessed of certain reak prop- erty in Monroe County, Florida, to the Hon. Raymond R. Lord, County Judge of Monroe County, at his of- fice in the County Courthouse in Monroe County, Florida, within eight months from the date of the All, claims jand demands not presented within the time and in the manner scribed herein shall be barri | provided by law, é? Dated August i8th, A. D. 1939. | LOUISE ADELMEYER, As Administratrix- of thé Estate of Edna Marie Adelmeyer, Deceased. augl9-26; sept2-9,1939 | | —whether it’s a board or a carload you'll find our service equal to any have. CONSULT US FREELY WHENEVER YOU WANT C hi chin, Conchs; Jesus Garcia, Blue {; Philadelphia _ Sox. St. Louis 8 ADVICE ON BUILDING “Everything In Building Material”