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PAGE FOUR Meet Mr. By Marie Bliza YESTERDAY: Tony, a girl friend of Gloria’s, thinks it’s fun- ny that Cecily is engaged to Philip, because Philip looks like a phoney. Meanwhile, Cecily sud- denly wonders if Locke is mar- ried. Chapter 22 In Love With A Shadow 'Y couldn’t it be? What right had you to assume that things were gong to be the way you wanted them just because you wanted them to be? Did the man Pursue you or did you pursue him? Oh, Cecily Stuart, bow your proud head, and remember how deliberately you set about to bring Locke back into your life. Remem- ber how you planned a party hop- ing he'd come. Remember how shameless you were about inviting him to supper. Remember that it was always he who left you. Cecily, in an agony of embar- rassment and no little shame, dug her toes into the hooked rug, but she couldn’t stop the flow of her thoughts, or change their brutal honesty. You practically forced him into inviting you to that first picnic. Yes, but I didn’t force him into taking me to the circus. I didn’t ask him to drop into the shop that night and talk and talk. Didn't you? Isn’t it an invitation to have little suppers ready for him, to show him how aed sone are to have him? Isn’t that an in- vitation for the next time? You can’t get away from the fact that he doesn’t act enamored of you. Yes, I can. I can remember things that can’t be put into words. You can’t describe the way that a man looks at you and makes you feel as though he thought you were something precious and rare. Locke has made me feel that way, Locke? What's the rest of his name? Why doesn’t he tell you? Why does he turn off your ques- tions with nonsensical answers? Have you asked him that one? He might have a good reason for not wanting you to know who he is. He might have a wife. “And I might as well forget him right now,” Cecily said aloud. In though she hadn’t suddenly gone completely flat inside, she hung up the yellow dress, unpacked her brown satin slippers from the drawer in her trunk, rummaged around for a piece of brown velvet ribbon. She did all of these things as though she were really looking forward to the Brewster dinner- party. as though instead of being right and gay and to be antici- pated, tomorrow was now to be different from the enchanted mor- rows she had known since Locke had first walked into her shop. This Locke.business had gone far enough. It was like being in love with a shadow on a silver screen, like trying to make an impression on a piece of India rubber. It was, in a word, unsatisfactory. If the man was married... No Future YEN if he was not, what kind of a man was he? No ambition. No future. Just content to sell mushrooms, make a book-shelf, sell a mess of fish, a bucket of ber- ties. He might as well be a beach- comber. Undoubtedly he was at one time. That was the only réle he hadn’t claimed. Was a Cecily Stuart, of the Boston Stuarts, to lose her head over the first man that came along with a drawl in his voice and a cavalier manner? Mr. Lochinvar, indeed! Suppose he hasn’t a wife? Didn’t he say once that he would make a very bad husband? Had he said then that he had been a bad hus- band? Cecily knit her brow with the effort to remember. He was right. How could people live in a shack and subsist on the proceeds from the sale of fish, or shelves or mushrooms? Try as she would, Cecily couldn’t convince herself that fish and mushrooms and_ berries were Locke's metier. It meant some- thing, but what? For a moment, her thoughts darting over the com- plete picture of him, halted briefly, and had she not gone on she would have had the solution. What kind of a future would I have? She said the words in her mind with cold condemnation but the pictures that rose with them were warm and bright, blinding in their beauty. What kind of a life with Locke? Would it matter if their lunch wi bit of bread and cheese if they were together on an Eng- lish hillside watching the change- able greens of the grasses blowing in the breeze? Would it matter that he was not a successful stock- AUTOS ARE HOTTER!” THAN FIRECRACKER At least—that’s what Dodge | and Plymouth are featuring in| their 1940 slogans describing the new models now on display at Navarro, Inc. “Hotter Than A Firecracker’— Suggests that the new Dodges and Plymouths are the “hottest” news | of the day in the automobile/| field—and those who have seen| both of these “luxury palaces on| wheels” are agreeable to that| translation. Demonstration rides | are now in order—and the staff; at Navarro's is prepared to handle } 8. 10. all comers. i ochinverr PERSONAL MENTION | Miss Aileen Bethel left over rs — \the highway Saturday evening e |to spend a week at Rock Harbor few Landini that thee cong | with her father J. M. Bethel and share? | other relatives. All of life would be an adven- | ture with Locke to share it. There | coat pe rae sealant touche yon |Peen visiting with her children if you were a woman and had a |2nd other relatives, left over the man like Locke for your partner. |highway Saturday evening ac- His my sed would melt the snows |companied by members: of the as baron ae forget os biog al |family, returning to her home in She put on her beige knitted dress, | cecal mechanically tying the belt, knot- | ting a kerchief about her throat, | Donue oe ae to stem the Beach, arrived on the afternoon bus yesterday and is a guest at Thi i nage Reams more: The pirate | foe nome of Mr. and Mee. Hubert weeks, it would be October and | Trout on Petronia street. Cecily would be returning to New —_— York, and Vickersport—the book- shop, Locke, a part of a summer dream that was past. A fleecy cloud in a summer sky. Vanished into Time. A girl would be a fool to let it mark a change in her life. Cecily stuck her arms in the sleeves of her polo coat and went | downstairs. She was going to the movies with Philip. Chin Up SCRUNCH, scrunch. Sturdy boots Ps oes peiblen roads: Match pose the late afternoon bus for their ‘ootsteps to Philip’s in the beam i ison, Wisc. of your flashlight. Don’t look up at | bore an) Madison ass the stars. They’re only stars, after | all. What's that new pungency in the air? It’s the strong scent of summer’s last flowers. Why do growing things smell stronger at night? Is it because the sun ab- sorbs the perfume in the daytime? Loak it up in your botany book when you get back to New York. You'll have lots of time for im- proving, your mind when you get ack to New York. You won't have your eyes and ears attuned to idee | for someone then. Keep your chin up, it won't be so bad. ‘There, now, don’t keep your chin up, you nearly stumbled that time and Philip had to take your arm and, of course, he has to get a death grip on it. ‘Please, Philip, I hate to be held 1 onto.’ He shrugged his shouJders. “It’s a good picture, Cecily, and you wouldn’t enjoy it if you had to sit through it with a sprained ankle.” L broker, an author, a lawyer, could‘stand at his side in the of a ship, watchin; Mrs. Emilio Lounders, who had Miss Lillie Bolden, of Daytona Mr. and Mrs. home in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Mooney, Mrs. Jim Lilly, pastor of the mother. | Mr. | who were in the ci Sherman, Texas. | Miami on a brief business trip. Can’t you say something? Must | the most matter-of-fact way, as | YoU beso ungracious? Philip’s try- | ing to be amusing. And he did stay home when the others went off in the cruiser pee so that you wouldn’t be alone. Cecily, you've got a bad disposition. Think of something nice to say to him, be a reasonable sort of girl. How would you like it if some girl treated Doug this way? “Philip, you haven’t told me about your new book. What’s it going to be about?” Philip recaptured her elbow and held it in a firm grasp. “It’s going to be a love-story this George W. Albury, who had been visiting in the city for two days with relatives and friends, left on the afternoon bus yester- |day for his home at Plantation | Key. Mrs. Oliver Haskins, in the public schools of Monroe {county, who had been visiting briefly with her husband, an en- gineer with the P. and O. S. S. Co., out of Port Everglades, re- |turned on the 5:30 d’clock bus time. It's going to be about you.” Cecily sighed through her teeth. She thought: I’ve given him a chance and, as usual, he muffs it. Is there anything I can talk about and get him going onto that is not Personal? They had come onto the main street of the village and she gave up the effort. She was glad that nek would soon be sitting in the darkened theater and she would be free of her efforts. She would also —by concentrating on the screen— | Elmore, left on the morning bus| miro Diaz, |for a visit with relatives and/Caridad Toledo, Rachel Sanchez, be free of her own thoughts. Locke and Philip. spe ee and Locke. Where was Cecily between? She sat on the small of her back, hands thrust deep in her pocket staring at the screen with physic: intent. There was the usual news- reel. A hog-calling contest. A J: ap- anese baseball game. Calisthenics in Budapest. The Notre Dame foot ball team warming up for the sea- son. Hitler. The launching of a battleship. Cecily wriggled. Every time I go to a news-reel and see these ne over and over again I'll think o! have never come to the movies. I'm glad we haven't, because then I'd never be able to go to another movie without thinking of him. I suppose movies are beneath him. hilip was laughing uproarious- ly over an animated cartoon. Ce- cily found herself laughing and, in the midst of her laughter, felt herself impelled to turn in seat. She was sure she hadn’t heard Locke laugh out loud. She had never heard him laugh out loud so she wouldn’t have recognized his laugh if she had. But there she was turning around to see him staring straight ahead at the Screen, not at her, and only three rows back. It was as though he had called to her, and suddenly she | was angry. She hadn't seen him since the day he kissed her. Yet with the very power of his thoughts—or his nearness—he had been able to command her to look at him. Continued tomorrow. ANSWERS TO TODAY’S DAILY QUIZ Below are the Answers to Today's Daily Quiz printed on Page 2 ee 1, South Atlantic. 2. The surrender of a fugitive from justice by one gov- ernment to another. ‘=". Lord Hugh P. MacMillan. Arabian Sea, One-tenth of one cent. No; they are mammals. Forty yard line on the de- fensive side. Lithuania. MCMXL. f this theater. Locke and I | her | yesterday afternoon. | Gilbert Lord, who had _ been | visiting briefly with relatives, | was a passenger on the early bus |this morning going to his home!Richard Anti, |in Tampa where he is employed | Roland Grasand. as an apprentice electric’\welder | | in the shipyards. |friends in Miami. Mrs. Mary E. Gardner, |Philadelphia for a number of lyears, has been visiting in this} BACKGROUND |city_with relatives, and left yes- | terday for Miami where she is |now living, making her home with’ Mr. and Mrs. A. L. John: | pointed diresly at son, her son-in-law and daug ter. Judge Arthur Gomez," Eleventh Judicial Citeuit,’ who |had been enjoying a respite’ from his judicial labors at Perky ‘and in Key West last week, left over the highway today for Miamiand | will return Wednesday. Municipal Judge T. S. Caro afternoon for points on the east coast and then continued on to Tallahassee to attend a meeting with officials and will return later in the week. James W. Crowley was a visi- |tor in Key West Saturday and lenjoyed his visit at the Coast Guard headquarters viewing the |many specimens which are on jdisplay in the museum of the | lighthouse service. | Garcia-Esquinaldo | Nuptials Yesterday Miss Anita Garcia and Villiers |Esquinaldo were united in wed- | lock last evening at the home of Enrique Esquinaldo, Jr.; justice of | the peace, 326 Division street. | The ceremony was performed by the peace justice in the pres- | ence of members of the families | /@w- |of the contracting parties. Wit- | | Charles Wirtz,;made an earnest bid for tourist, |who had been visiting in the city entertainment with this sort of \for two days, after a visit to the amusement available |World’s Fair, left over the high- | Experience way yesterday morning for their tourists to a large extent take jwho are on an extended tour of/@ number of planes assigned to jthe United States arrived yester-|the destroyer contingent now in; day on a sightseeing tour and_|the city. jafter an interesting visit left on! wife of the ders are making the trip to; Fleming Street | Tampa from, this city attempting . | Methodist church, left on the 11 | to find work..,Construction and | ‘o'clock bus for a visit to her ship building in, Tampa is boom- mother in Greenwood, S. C., fiom: ing. One of the, cheapest places | where she recently returned, 'andjin Florida to live is Tampa, but, ‘Saturday received’a telegram’ ad-ion the other hand ¢he relief roll _vising of the serious illness’ of her | there is the highest in the state. and Mrs. L. J. Collings,| VISOR WALLACE THOMAS is ity for a sight-| running the W.P.A. in a highly \seeing trip which they enjoyed commendable wa: immensely, left on the afternoon | engineer, he is injecting efficient bus yesterday for their home in|ideas Cuban Vice Consul Jose Perez’ on W.P.A. jobs. was a passenger on the 5 o'clock | time, bus yesterday afternoon going to} point is being stressed. Many of teacher | Mrs. Hilburn Pinder and son} Arango, Caridad Arango, who Gilbert Ogden, jhas been making her home in and Antonio Arango. of the Germany had nothing but respect | left over the highway Saturday | . THE KEY WEST CITIZEN THE ISLAND CITY PLANS HAVE BEEN INI-;those on relief cannot do as TIATED tentatively in the city heavy work as ordinary construc- for a Recreation Center to be ‘tion workers. Besides this, the placed in Bayview Park. In this heat must be. taken into con- building there will be such in- | sideration. So there will be no stallations as checker and chess | unjust pushing of the men. But boards and tables, card tables,'a sterner attitude and elimina- perhaps even shuffleboard courts. tion of out-and-out loafing will Outside in the Park the tennis'be emphasized. And Supervisor | courts will probably be in first; Thomas means business. Added j¢lass shape and bowling on the, to’this is his engineering pride in |green may be enjoyed. The always showing something for |whole is centered on. entertain- |'the|work-expended. If real busi- ment for tourists when: they ar-j/ness methods had come to the rive here next winter. The in-|Key West W.P.A. before the $7,- | tention ‘is to place the whole un- | 000,000 expended here was _ ail} |der the W.P.A. project. Plans are! gone, Key West would indeed \still very much in the rough.! have been a proud product of the | |Sarasota, St. Petersburg and other New Deal. But as it is we're on | west coast tourist | cities have|our way now. | THIS COLUMN UNDER.| STANDS that a large number of | those who inquire concerning trips to Havana do not take the} trip because there is a schedule! of only two trips a week going over. The number of those who} inquire and then turn away is as | high as those who are sold. to shown them. has that advantage of these facilities. THERE WILL PROBABLY be | jthan one hundred million dollars ‘has bene spent to rehabilitate MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1939 to stay in their former locations, and hundreds of lesser industries | have spent thousands of dollars! in rehabilitating themselves. In- dustrial losses are figured at ten millions; about 75% of it has been replaced. | No one who has not seen the; marks of the tragedy that swept} like a blight across New England, | can comprehend it. The vast loss| was occasioned by the fact that LOVERING REVIEWS NORTHERN HURRICANE (Continued from Page One) Red Cross, and re-stocking of the farms has been general. In barns alone, 2,369 were absolutely de- stroyed, and this does not include the great number of tobacco drying barns or sheds along the lower Connecticut valley. In most | the density of population in the cases these were sucked to pieces entire area is so great that cities by the hurricane and leveled if|and towns metaphorically clasp not scattered for miles about the jhands, so closely are they grown countryside. together. Away from the cities and towns, where open forest In Massachusetts alone more larids lay eXpdsed to the full rush of the great gale, the ever- green trees, and the yet green September foliage, on the an. nuals not thus early touched by | the fiery fingers of Autumn, made a veritable umbrella to catch the full drive of the 125- miles-an-hour blast. Seashore communities were wiped from the map, and the coastline entire- ly changed, by two tdial waves. Cities, such as Providence, R. L, and others built around the mouths of rivers opening into Long Island Sound or the open property damaged, and the job is yet far from done. The state has expended $15,000,000; cities and} towns ten millions; the public utilities, exclusive of the rail- roads, fifteen millions, this latter to put back’ power and telephone and telegraph lines. Including logs delivered to the mills under the guidance of the northeastern timber salvage administration, for which $6,782,000 has been spent, the administration has t { Many of those who come here on vacation cannot afford to wait over the two or three days necessary to get a boat in Key MORE who have been on re- jlief rolls and were laid off in connection with nation-wide or-;West. It was pinted out, too, / that it is far cheaper for the! traveling public to go by motor) convéyiitice to Key West: and! then take the boat’ here than to} take it'out of Miami. Also’pres- | ent disproportionate rates reveal | that round trip to Hayana from | Key West is $20; from Havana to | — {Tampa it is only $30. The Key} KEY WEST’S AREA SUPER- | West-Havana round trip is 180 miles. The Havana-Tampa trip is 420 miles, much more than} double the difference and yet the Key West-Havana fare is not one | half the Havana-Tampa fare. It is believed that 80 per cent of the travel going to Havana will go through Key West when the Pan American Link Company starts its daily service. A former regarding road building jand other work. Foremen have |received orders to stop “loafing” At the same the humanitarian view- “KEY WEST IN | DAYS GONE BY Happenings Here Just 10 Years, Ago Today As Taken From The Files of The Citizen Pythian Sisters of this city held | itheir first district meetifig of the Pythian year at the K. of P. hall j on Fleming street last night. The meeting was largely attended. Mrs. Cora Russell, district dep-| uty grand chief of the Key West} Temple 20, presided for the dem- onstration of the various parts of | the work, ritualistic, of both} temples. | Birthday Party |Honored Leona Arias Miss Leona Arias celebrated her fourteenth birthday yester- jday at her home on Duval street. | Games were played and light jrefreshments served. Present | were: Misses Oty Marquez, Rosa Arango, Emma Vildostigue, Rosa | Toledo, Ofelia Toledo, Alice Ogden, Elsie Toledo, Rachel |Sanchez, Violet Arias, Margarita Alvarez, Teresita Arias, Jennie Arango, Martha Arango, Raquel | Diaz, Isabel Martinez, and “An- |tonio Toledo, Ernest Ogden, |Henry Ogden, Norberg Diaz, Jr., Charles Ogden, The following also ‘were pres- Mesdames Wm. H. Ogden, Aguilar, America Edel- Asuncion , Aguilar, |ent: Editorial Comment: Now that | | Armando the school millage election is over everyone should abide by the re-! sults, the voice of the people, ; ‘Honger; while railroads, particu- laid out another $4,968,000 for salvage work, such as topping lout, clearing, etc., making a total |of $11,750,000 expended by the Federal Government in this line alone. Private utilities exclusive of railroads have spent nearly ten million dollars for rehabilitation, and farmers and owners of resi- dential properties about seven and one-half million dollars in putting their holdings back in shape. There remain 100,000,000 board feet of timber-to be salvaged, and many hundreds of thousands of dollars must yet be laid out to restore bridges and highways. This is going to require possibly years of labor at an unestimated cost. The telephone company alone is likely to be handling repairs for yet another year, maybe sea, were buffeted by two tidal waves. Pine trees grow in rich loam, with surface roots, and these were, torn from the yielding soil and deposited veritably in layers un- dulating uphill and down like blankets throwh over persons in bed. baie Elm trees have a very deep ta: root, and when’ these trees, used largely for shade im city and town and village streets, were blown over they fell slowly like tired old men lying down for an aft- ernoon nap. The maples and birches snapped brittly or top- pled with half their roots still in the soil. And all through this summer the bottom halves of each of such trees as had part of their root system intact, have grown from Spring into Fall just pathetic shadows of their former selves, ghosts, half tree, half skeleton. i , | southeasterly | $3,386,000, according to the re- Jarly those along the coast, have much yet to do. The recovery has been phenomenal. Much of it never can be restored. More than 300,000 telephones were put out of business and the cost has been $15,000,000 to date, while the railroads have spent a rising ports and roadbeds_ representing hundreds of-miles. Massachusetts has put out for bridges alone five and a_ half million dollars, and 30% of the bridge work is yet to be done: $1,000,000 To Clear Streams Up to now a million dollars has been put, into the single ob- jective of. clearing streams and waterways of debris, and 75% of the stream beds must yet “be cleared. se Private industry has , done nobly—how miuch has. been ex- pended it is practically , impos- sible to estimate. Through the efforts of public and semi-public and cooperate with the teachers in rounding out an excellent year | in educational work. \ {Blanca Toledo, Concha Fiallo, and Pedro Aguilar, Jose Torres, | Tomas Aguilar, TN Arrangements for the dance to |be given at Coral Isle Casnio Fri. day night are going ahead rapid- ly and the committee anticipates | a large attendance. The dance is! sponsored by the Woman’s Club, jthe finances to be given to the American Citizenship Depart- ment. | OF THE WAR aes ae, (Continued from Page One) the United | States. The announcer proclaimed ‘that | | Miss Mary Olivieri, -of+941 | | Elizabeth ‘street, and Peter Fornes | will: be married’ here this‘ after- noon ‘at 5 o’clock. A_ reception | will bélheld this evening 8 .o'elock at the’ hibme of the bride, at which timé ‘the ‘many friends. of the ‘contracting parties will assemble ito enjoy an evening of pleasure. i The tropical disturbance, which , is reported to have reached hur- ricane intensity, and sweeping its ‘way westward from the Bahama ‘Islands, where it centered at noon today, is expected to strike the Florida coast near Miami late tonight or early tomorrow morn- ing, according to information re- ceived late today from Meteoro- logist H. B. Boyer, who said that hurricane force means 65 miles an hour or over. Chief of Police Ivan. Elwood : will be a candidate for reelection for the land, sea and air forces of England, but that disgust and contempt was felt for that “un- derhand” part of the British war- machine, “misnapned the Ministry of Information”. The broadcaster revealed that the British had claimed that the German submarine which sunk \the English aircraft-carrier “Cou- rageous” had been destroyed on the spot. The submarine was “now in a German port and its |crew is very much alive”, the announcer revealed and added that the officers and men aboard ‘that U-boat were receiving the |congratulations of the German sea commander. The announcer said England |charged Germany with assasin- ating the Roumanian premier, ‘but declared that Germany had | nothing to gain and everything to \lose by so doing. He said the jpremier was pro-Nazi in _ policy ‘ice in the approachi and that the Roumanian otfieiel| crises ceadaies and ae | was a “great obstacle” to the lishing his announcement in this English, pete gs anne brand }issue of The ‘Citizen’. With his jas causing assasination. eight years of experience on the Hitler has proclaimed, the Ber- Fpetioe’ Sees, where he Started as lin broadcaster .went;, on} that! patrolman ‘a is‘ now the chi jpuncdinu wasters aullhecocanite na ie Psi lout according to international ‘equipped to continue *adminis- 5 : |tering the affairs of the office To American listeners, the Ber-}to the enti |nesses were Sergio Esquinaldo lin announcer told them not to jand Helios Esquinaldo. | val street. | Junior W. C. ‘Social Thursday A social meeting of the Junior mont Huddleston and Miss Club will be held |Hawks. | Woman's , | believe everything they read. The newlyweds will be at home | England is striving “to drag” the |to their many! friends at 708 Du-|United States into the war to [term of two years as patrolman i the night force. Two, years ago |help the Allies, he stated, and'when Chief Niles resigned to be- added that the British would ‘come sheriff, Chief Elwood was | “stoop to any method” to do so. |Thursday at 5 o'clock at the, was later elected by | Woman’s Clubhouse. majority. - Mr. El Entertaining will be Mrs. Du-|entering Louise | merits as : record. ‘appointed to the position |Howne Patterson, deceased, late of the was twice elected captain of |" agencies more than 20 important industries have been persuaded LEGALS N THE COURT OF THE COUNTY JUDGE, MONROE COUNTY, STATE OF FLORIDA. In re Estate of G. BOWNE PATTERSON, Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS TO ALL CREDITORS, LEGATEES, DISTRIBUTEES, AND ALL PER- SONS HAVING CLAIMS OR DE. MANDS AGAINST SAID ESTATE: ‘You, and each of you, are hereby tified and required to present ail claims, which you, or either of you, thay have against the Estate of G. Monroe County, Florida, Honorable Raymond R. Lord, Coun- ty Judge of Monroe County, Flor- ida, at his office in the County Court House in Key West, Monroe County, Florida, within twelve (12) months from the date of the first publication of this Notice. Dated September 15th, A. D. 1939, ETTA PATTERSON, As Executrix of the Last Will and Testament of G. Bowne Patter- son, deceas evetis-38; oct2-9-16-23-30; nov6-13, to. the NOTICE OF MASTER'S SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, \that under and by virtue of and pursuant to that certain decree made on the 19th day of August, A. D. 1939,-and entered on the 2ist day of August, A. D. 1939, by the | Honorable Arthur Gomez, ‘one of |the Judges of the Circuit Court of |the Eleventh Judiciai Circuit of the State of Florida, in and for Mon- roe County, Florida, in Chancer in that certain cause therein pend- ing wherein K. O. Thompson is plaintiff and Edward G. Vaill, and Mrs. Edward.G. Vaill, if married, if alive, if dead, all unknown per- sons claiming by, through or un- der them, are defendants, the un- dersigned Special Master in Chan- cery, appointed by said decree, will offer for sale at public outcry to the highest bidder, for cash, before , the front door of the County Court House in Key West, Monroe Coun- ty Florida, on ja legal sales day) during the legal |hours of sale, to-wit, between 11 jo'elock in the forenoon and 2 o'clock in the afternoon of said |day, the following described _prop- erty to satisfy said decree of pay. ment of the amount therein speci- hed: ISLAND OF KEY LARGO, Government Lot Three (3), Sec- tion Thirty-five (25), Town- ship Fifty-nine (53), e Forty (40) Twenty-nine (29) Acres, (Book « RR, 257, as_ rei in ‘Monroe County Records) in the County of Monroe, State of Florida. Specie’ Mooney, HARRIS, jal Master in Chancery. WILLIAM V. ALBURY. es Attorney for Plainti: septas:; Extent Of Tragedy So great was the tragedy, so extensive the loss of communica- tions systems, so futile the work of short wave radio sets without the service of power from elec- THE WEATHER WEATHER FORECAST (Till 7:30 p. m., Tuesday) Key West and Vicinity: Partly cloudy. tonight and Tuesday, with occasional showers Tuesday; moderate southerly winds, pos; sibly fresh at times. Florida: Partly cloudy, sional showers Tuesday and northwest portion tonight. Jacksonville to Florida Straits: Moderate winds, mostly souther- ly, overcast weather tonight and occas in {Tuesday with scattered showers, Moderate to fresh winds, overcast weather tonight and Tuesday with scatiered showers. . East Gulf: tric plants, and so insistent was the hourly news of the “Peace of Munich”, which came just then, that the story of the New England hurricane never was but partly old. It is little more than a tradition now, preserved. in hastily gotten-up books, which consist much more of illustra- tions than text, books put out by the private and public utilities companies, by newspapers in their own areas, by the WPA writers’ project. As the Munich situation de- veloped, the story of the big blow was given back pages in the newspapers very quickly, and much of it is purely local and only by word of mouth—a trag- edy so big, and so swiftly over- shadowed by the news from Eu- rope, that it was lost in the rec- ords of the day, a striking testi- monial to the fickleness of that srangely perishable commodity called news. Subscribe to The Citizen—20c weekly. Lopez Funeral Service Established 1885 Licensed Funeral Directors and Embalmers 24 Hour Ambulance Service Phone 135 Night 696 A MODERN BANKING SERVICE The First National Bank of Key West Member ‘of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation of ‘illustrations, ideas, copy and layouts for the use of The every month! is absolutely IF you’re a butcher, stick maker or any Citizen’s advertisers This service a baker, a candle- of dozens of other kinds of merchants, you can profit by advertising in The Citizen. Stanton Super Service illustrations and layouts will fit your ads to aT... and make them doubly effective! SSS Is EXCLUSIVE with THE KEY WEST CITIZEN! Phone 51 For Further Information! ft. ry + 0Ct2-9-16-23,1959 | pqgeccccesooocosscecococcoceoeseeeooeeeeoeeeoece