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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1939 After A Man’s Heart by JEAN RANDALL YESTERDAY: Life goes smoothly for two months. In Jan- uary Iris DeMuth returns. Tim angrily accuses Buff of being philanthropic by buying his worthless land for what he paid, He won't listen to her denials. Chapter 18 Lightning Strikes Again “y* NOT especially anxious to » see you—ever again,” Buff told Tim when he telephoned. an don’t wonder, But honestly, “Hurry up!” she said, a crackle in her voice. “I’ve only another two minutes,” “Will you let me come some time today—any time? When I can see you alone?” “Sorry. I’m full up for today. To- morrow, too. In fact, my time is pretty well taken up for weeks. ‘Byel” ® Nevertheless he was waiting for her when she returned at lunch ie. “And you have to be polite to me because I’m a guest,” he said. Rlafaetd invited me to stay. She’s set a place for me.” Her expression of austerity did not soften. “I suppose,” she said, “you've discovered the smug philanthro- pist who paid the exact sum for your slice of mountain, and have come around to apologize.” “How you do pu your finger on the truth!” was his admiring com- ment. “I have; more than that, you zane the bell a second time. It was is” “Tris!” This startled her despite what she had said the day before. “You mean to say Iris DeMuth— the girl who tricked you into buy- ing up a lot of useless land—Iris bought it back? But why?” “She says...” “Says? Do you mean to tell me you've talked to her?” “For hours, last evening. At the hotel” Her knees gave way beneath her and she sank into a chair. “Has she experienced religion, or did her partner in crime discover there really is silver in that mine after all?” “Neither, She . . . I know it sounds screwy, Buff. It did to me. In fact, it was a long time before I could believe it! But it seems Iris was—well, it was really Latshaw who thought up the scheme and he had sort of a hold over her...” “Sort of? What sort of? Black- mail?” “You'd have to know Iris to un- derstand.” A softened note crept into his voice. “She’s a trusting, innocent sort of a girl; not inde- ces and self-reliant like you, uff. She . . . well, it’s almost made her ill all these months—knowing that she’d been the unconscious partner in a fraud, I mean. She. eee Tim had been called to the tele- ae soon after dinner the night fore, Buff, of course, he-thought, to say she was 6gorry for their quar- rel of the afternoon. Buff, thank heaven, never held to a resentful mood long. Her anger flared white and quick, and died almost before the beholder knew it had been kindled, save that he was apt, for days after and to his intense sur- prise, to discover he had received rather painful burns. Tim made his way to the hall where the telephone stood with a lightness of heart whith aston- ished him. He had not known how much he had suffered beneath the irl's displeasure until he believed it was to be lifted by this call. He was dazed when he heard a voice. which was not Buff’s but was still undeniably familiar, speak his name. “Tim!” “Yes? Who is it, please?” “Oh, Tim,” sighed the voice sor- | rowfully. ‘Tris? TT WAS then he knew. No one else in the world spoke with the the same wistful sweetness, the same little curling upward in- flection of his name. “Tris!” “Yes, it’s Iris, my dear! Come back to undo—so far as I can!l— the great wrong I did you last summer.” He stood dazed and silent, the receiver at his ear. For weeks after Iris had left Boulder, and before he himself had shown signs of col- lapse, he had dreamed, pleening and waking, of just this thing: o! Iris returning to say it was all a mistake; that she loved him, that there was a reason for her seem- ing treachery. Thee it was coming true, and in- stead of the wild ecstasy he had thought to feel he was merely numb with bewilderment. “Are you there, Tim? Why don’t you speak?” Surely, he thought impersonally, Iris had the sweetest voice in the world; not low like Buff’s, with little gruff and boyish notes in it, but musical, throbbing; the kind of voice which awakens emotion in the most practical of listeners. “T'm here,” he replied. “Will you come—at once? I'm at the hotel. And of course there are millions of things I must say to ou.” 7 He cleared his throat. “Iris, I we last met. For example—did you know your land—yours and George’s—had been bought back?” “Iris!” Light suddenly flooded the subject. “It was you! You were the only one who knew how much gee for it!” “Of course it was I, you sill boy!” Laughter and lendemieee combined in the lovely voice. “It took me some time to get enough money LS eran, but when I did, of course I bought it. Now will you come and see me?” ‘Tl come,” he promised, and hung up. In ten minutes he was being shown to the private sittin; room Miss DeMuth had: en; naeds She came toward him with out- stretched arms, They were white arms, bared by flame-colored dra- peries which fell away as she lifted them. He recognized the gown she wore. It had been one of his favorites. Perhaps too elabo- rate for a January evening in a quiet hotel, nevertheless it served the purpose for which its wearer had chosen it. It bridged the months of unhappiness since he had ‘last seen Iris as perhaps nothing else could have done; made him feel that he stood again in the presence of the only girl who had the power to make his heart beat quickly, his big frame tremble with happiness. Still, he retained. enough recollection of the past to take only one of those outflung nana and to give it a perfunctory clasp before dropping it. ‘To Kill Your Love’ ‘"TIM”—the word was almost a sob—“you aren’t angry with me—still? But I forgot you don’t know—the whole story. Come sit down beside me, dearest, and let me tell you.” She slid a soft hand into his and led him to the big couch. For nearly fifteen minutes she talked, her extraordinary voice pleading her cause as much if not more than her words did. In brief her story was that Latshaw, a man whom s| hood, had pretended to sympathize with her love for Tim Corliss and te want to help him financially. He had proposed the neat plan to fool the Eastern promoters, “for Cor- liss’s benefit.” She had not known until the deal had gone through that Latshaw owned the land he unloaded on the young partners. Then, horrified at his duplicity, she had left Boulder. Tim clutched at his vanishing common sense. “Bus that note you left for me, Tris!” She let her long lashes droop until they almost touched the pearly whiteness of her cheek; then swept them swiftly upward to, show him a mist of tears in her dark eyes. “That was to—to make you hate me, Tim,” she whispered. “I told myself that after you’d found out about Latshaw and all, you’d never want to see me again, so it would be—be kindest to complete the job +... to stab deeply enough to — to kill your love for me. You'll never know what courage it took to write you that note, Tim!” He reflected that he knew little Narrowly missed death yesterday | about girls, and that little gave | by drowning when the cars in; him small ability to analyze their which they were riding went off| DOUBLEHEADER OF “BASEBALL SUNDAY ER; SOX-TROJANS IN NIGHTCAP Two games of baseball will be | played in the Monroe County, League tomorrow at Trumbo}| Field, the first between Pirates | and Key West Conchs, and the} second game between Blue Sox |} and Trojans as scheduled. Standings in the league indi- / cate that the opener will prove quite interesting as the Bucs and | Conchs fight it out for full pos-| session of first place. Trojans, | pushing hard towards the top now | in third place with three wins and | a like number of losses, are in fine mettle to take the holders of last position into camp in order | to slide into second place tie with | the losers of the first fracas. | KEY WEST IN DAYS GONE BY Happenings Here Just Five, Ten and Fifteen Years Ago As Taken From The Files Of The Citizen | TRANSPORTATION Twenty Arrive From Cuba There were 31 passengers ar- riving from Havana on the NOVEMBER 4, 1934 J. W. Good, Jr., of the FERA, left over the East Coast. yester- day for: Matecumbe where he goes | in a supervisory position in con- nection with the bridge which is to be started at that point on Steamship Cuba yesterday after-|j the highway. Last’ week a force of quarters for the large force of men. Mrs. W. Sumner Covey, of Day- tona Beach, president of the Flor- ida Congress of Parents and Teachers, will be the principal speaker at the afternoon session of the district 13 meeting on Thursday, November 8, at Home- stead. There are a number of Key West folk going to attend the session. Circuit Court will meet in ad- journed session 10 o’clock tomor- row morning with Judge Jeffer- son B. Browne presiding. It is ex- pected that Attorney L. A. Har- Carr, Richard Goode, Ana V.| ris will enter a motion for a new trial in the case of Juan del Pino, who was convicted at the pre- vious session of the First National Bank and George Parks, Newton street grocer, and his grandson, Robert, second degree | murder, | i i. Th William R. Porter, president of |S2¢ks ..pf mail. STE WAS. NOY THE KEY WEST WAR..DRUMS BEAT; | ATHLETES BEAT IT (By. Associated Press) LINCOLN. Nov. 4.—When war drums begin to beat European athletes begin to beat a path home. Ed Weir, Nebraska university track coach, can tell you what hap- pens to sports events when war comes. Weir took a team of Ameri- ‘am athletes to Europe for a of meets there. Things ‘went smoothly until the open- ing of the student games in ‘Monte Carle, Sept. 1. The war opened on the same day as the meet, which had attracted atHletes from all over Europe. The first day was pretty confused but some of the events were run as scheduled. Little competi- tion could be staged on the second day—most of the teams had left after urgent orders to get home while the getting was good. On the fourth day the Americans had it all to them- selves—there was nobody left to compete with. Sc, the Americans came home too. SII III TSI 4 jnoon and of this number there ie had known from child- of 50 men sarted the construction were 19 first cabin and one sec- ond cabin passengers for Key West, and for Tampa there were }11 first cabin passengers. Arrivals at Key West were: John Parker, Florence Morasky, Joseph Morasky, Alma _ Eche- mendia, Juan Villarnovo, Eva de la Vega, Eugenio Villarnovo, Mil- jdred Hassell, Karl Hassell, Grace Tibbett, Henry Tibbett, Donald Scott,. Leila Scott, Ramon N, 'San Miguel, William Moren, Ruth |Moren, Thelma McCay, Flora Castellano, Listed on the ship’s manifest were the following items: For Key West, one automobile, four freight for this port. For Tam- pa there were seven tons of | freight and 29 sacks of mail. The ship sailed on schedule at 5 o’clock with the 11 passengers who arrived from Havana en- motives. Dimly he felt that there the Stock Island bridge during a|Toute to Tampa. were discrepancies in Iris’s story; yet her presence here, the un- doubted fact that she had bought up the land she had tricked him into—well, perhaps tricked was not the word for what she had done—she had persuaded him to buy, bore out the truth of what she was saying. “Where,” he demanded, “did you get the money to buy all the land?” She said evasively that she had saved some of it, and some had been left her by a great-aunt. “What does it matter, anyway? I bought.it only to show you that I ... realized what a horrible per- son I must have seemed to you, Tim, and perhaps this — this tan- gible thing might help to convince you I—I wasn’t so bad as you thought.” “It was good of you, but un- necessary,” he told her. “If the land was Latshaw’s...” “If? She pressed her hands to her heart in a gesture of anguish. “Tim, does that mean you still doubt me? After I’ve come back to you? After I've done all I could to make reparation? Tim, don’t you love me at all?” It surprised him that he could: not answer this question. Certainly: the old allure was there, Iris’s: voice, the satin black hair which: (Baked from a widow’s peak on her. orehead, the grace with which she moved, the way she used her, hands, even the faint perfume with) which he associated so many hap- py hours, all combined to work: their spell upon him, But dimly he. realized that his reaction was' purely emotional; that some part of his mind sat coldly and clearly in judgment, and found Iris’s story lacking in truth; not all the truth, perhaps, He tried to believe that she was holding back only some girlish deception, some pretty fem- inine guile which she knew instine- tively he would disapprove. “Honestly, Iris, I don’t know,” he said after a silence. “It was won- derful of mi to buy back that land; but I hate the feeling that Latshaw still benefits. And it’s been nearly five months that I’ve don’t think... “No, dearest, I'd rather you didn’t—not until after I've seen ou, at any rate. All sorts of things we taken place since I since ee pe ° prudent and full of resource. There appear to be surrounding — conditions that may lead to trouble, and they are so hidden that it will require all the natural prudence to overcome them. The danger lies in bringing out traits that‘ lived through hades, trying to put you out of my mind. I. :. you must give me time to get used to having, you here again.” Continued Monday. Account Overdrawn Doctor—“This is a very sad case, very sad indeed. I much re- heavy downpour of rain. NOVEMBER 4, 1929 Fall term of Federal Court for Key West, which opened yester- day with Judge Halsted Ritter presiding, disposed of a number of cases and assessed fines to- talling $1,100. There were four applications for citizenship, which were granted, and several con-| tinued until the next term. This issue of The Citizen con- tains the name of Karl O. Thomp- son as a candidate for re-election to the city council. Mr, Thomp- son is at the present time a mem- ber of the board and his friends feel that his work there during the past two years will insure his ‘re-election. Ira Thompson, who shipped on board the ‘Mary Pinchot last April when the vessel was in this port, writes interestingly of his travels’ to his mother, Mrs. Her- | bert Saunders, -of this city. His letter was dated at Pepeepe, Ta- | hiti, October 13, and it has just reached the city. Members of a party of U. S. Court officers, which left | this morning for a trip to Havana on a pleasure trip, were Judge Hal- sted Ritter, District Hughes, Clerk Williams, Assist- ant clerk Mrs. Catherine Brady | and Mrs. Hooks, secretary to the, judge. NOVEMBER 4, 1924 With the discussion being con- tinued regarding Lieut. Sandlin’s| proposition offered for a prize of $1,000 for the most feasible plan | submitted to acquire five im- provements to Key West, the out- | look becomes daily more prom- ising for the taking of favorable action on the suggestion. The cigar factory formerly oc- cupied by the Thompson Broth- ers’ organization at Duval and | streets. was practically Louisa destroyed by fire this morning about 5 o'clock. The burned building was;owned by Stephen F. Lowe and was unoccupied at the time. : Brigadier and Mrs. Roberts, commanding the Southern Divi- Attorney | evcceccs ve @Oesoooees. | Today’s Birthdays eocccccccecveesecoeccove Dr. Rolla E. Dyer of the Na- tional Institute of Health, Wash ington, born in Delaware | Ohio, 53 years ago. | Lt.-Com. Thomas G. W. Settle, U.S.N., balloonist, born in Wash- ington, D. C., 44 years ago. | Charles Hackett, operatic ten- or, born at Worcester, Mass., 51 years ago. James E. Fraser of Westport, |Conn., noted sculptdr, ‘born at | Winona, Minn., 63 years ago. Sewell L. Avery, president of |Montgomery Ward, Chicago, born at Saginaw, Mich., 65 years ago. Mary S. Watts of Cincinnati, |novelist, born at Delaware Co., |Ohio, 71 years ago. Gena Branscombe of New York City, composef and conductor, born at Picton, Canada, 58 years ago. Dr. Chevalier Jackson of Phil- adelphia, noted _laryngologist, orn in Pittsburgh, 74 years ago. Sunday’s Horoscope strong and independent nature that will carry it through life ;with the practical assurance of success, The mind may be taci- |turn and reserved, in which case there is danger that the nature |may never be understood; but it will generally command respect, jthough not admitted to close companionship. At the request of Senators Charles 0. Andrews and Claude Pepper, and Representative Mil- lard Caldwell, the Farm Securi- ties Administration has agreed to \finance ;seed and fertilizer loans |for farmers in the seven western- most Florida counties, which suf- fered severe crop damage by gret to teil you that your wife’s sion of the Salvation Army, will/ summer rains. ;mind is gone—completely gone”. arrive here tomorrow for an in-} Mr. Peck—‘“I'm not at all sur-|spection of the Key West. post.|the basketball game tonight at prised, doctor. She’s been giving Ensign Gearing, young peoples’|the Athletic Club between the me a piece of it every day for secretary, will at the same time Mysterious Five and the High} fifteen years”. will not tend to the higher facul- ties. inspect the work of the young people of Key West. One of the largest crowds of jthe season .is expected to attend |School Quintet.. The game will |start at 7 o'clock. Captain. Mar- |kovitz of the Mysterious Five is banking on victory. | Harris School Lunch Room now Ca, | evccecococeroooooocoooees | The native of today has a ‘CITIZEN | feeds 250 children daily. Two! ‘hundred: of these are underpriv-/ jileged children. The lunchroom \is managed by one cook, five imaids, and two N.Y.A. girls. eo /menu is changed daily. It con- -sists usually of one meat or fish,} itwo vegetables, bread and butter jor biscuits, fruit juice or milk: j ; These menus are designed to con- |tain the proper amount of cal- Hories, vitamins and proteins! |Mrs. Sybil Dexter is supervisor | jof the lunchroom project.'. Mrs, | Margaret Conor is clerk, | |. Harris Schol- will have an es- |say contest on “Why I Am Glad} [I Live in the U.S.A.”. Fourth, | | fifth and sixth grades will partici- pate. Two best essays of each; igrade will be judged by Mrs.j |Thelma Watkins. One dollar is | reward. | A Tree Police has been et lized to protect beautiful trees of |Key West. Following are in the |group: 6A, Sherwood Cruz, Ker-| ‘mit Sweeting; 6B, Larry De Lozier, Jose Alonzo; 5A, Charles |R. Brandt, Ray Galotte; 5B, Le- jland Archer, Allen Carey, Cleve- |land Knowles; 4A, Eugene Rus- jsell, Clifford Hayes; 4B, Leo ‘Hicks, Thomas Swicegood, Rob- ert Archer, Thomas Key, Joseph |Gartenmayer, Maynard Daniels, | Willard Johnson, Henry Hall, Ben Saunders, Daniel Salgado, | |Charles Perez. | There are five hundred new |library books in-Harris School this year. . .Last year marbles was the fad, this year it is tops. . .Mrs. Gloriana Bayly, chairman of the} Educational Department of Wom- an’s Club and Garden Club, in chapel asked the boys to help ikeep Key West trees growing! and not to kill birds. . .Rev.| Hutchinson spoke on importance of work, and Rey. Howard told of | | blessing of our eyes and ears. sai ore recently. away fishiness. Then they ate- Pérsonals: Juanita recently went to Jackson Clayton. Papy visited i 1 Arthur Boza. visited: two weeks; says many school friends him folléwing ‘a tonsi and. then his: to Key. West; Emelia: Boza. have and have written classes several post aldine Alfongo..invited friends to celebrate r) By = i 3 z E 2 ae a! Mrs. Minnie: Robinson, visor of He i ment of W.P:A, gave a. stration in’ making: fisl-svale flowers. Scales are soaked in clorox for a few, houts, to. take H dyed various colors with crepe paper. Mrs. Robinsoni zed how to separate the wire atid: how SELL 3 LOVELY. getty 50c. Also Li , hosiery Xmas Gifts. Free outfiti cago, Tl. ROSE BUSHES=} hints on. care and ci illustrated _ catalog. Bros. Rose Nursery, as. route. tion: lent weekly income. Nut Co; St. Paul, Miriny _ nova Sveeecccevccvcesecooes: POLITICAL {Sty ELECTION, NOV. 14, 1939 | | For (Mayor |, WILLARD M. ALBURY (For Re-Election) |) WM. T. DOUGHTRY, JR. | For Tax Aésessor-Collector ! SAM B. PINDER | | For Police Justice | WESLEY P. ARCHER: | For Chief of Police | IVAN ELWOOD | (For Re-Election) | For Chief of Police | C. (Floney) PELLICIER i | Bake Nis tited i are A | For Captain Night Police | | ALBERTO CAMERO | (For Re-Election) | For Captain Night Police | . MYRTLAND CATES | For Captain Night Police | ROBERT J. LEWIS | (Better known as Bobby) | For City Councilman | RALPH B. BOYDEN | For City Councilman | COL. L. C. BRINTON For City Councilman JOHN CARBONELL, JR. For City Councilman GUY CARLETON For City Councilman OSWALDO CARRERO { For City Councilman | JONATHAN CATES | For City Councilman - | WILLIAM A. FREEMAN | | For City Councilman | LEONARD B. GRILLON | (Better known as ‘Lennie”):'! | For City Councilman ERNEST A. RAMSEY For City Councilman: JIM ROBERTS (For Re-Election) | For City Councilman. | @ARL L. SOULE JOHN GLENWOOD SWEETING For City Councilman EVERETT P. WINTER: M j | MERRIE Ede Re ae REAL ESTATE WANTED: WANTED by responsible large House and Lot’ in: repairs. Small down 4 balance monthly, give. location: and details. Box S, The ‘Citi- zen. nov3-3t: WANTED: WANTED—Electrie Water Pump, | State | condition no. object: price. Box L, The be | C kitchen and. living room: Ie ileges; couples preferred: 7 White. street, plex Apartment, conveniences;, F tric ice box andy Apply’ 1502 South FOURTEEN-FT. V-BOTTOM CYPRESS: Carlton, 179 N. ae ee 2 party); ster Final in that “ the Ch | Program of the W.P.A. Band a little girl| Concert to be given tomorrow Florida, | afternoon at Art Center Park, March, American Triumph, Mil- Ter. Waltz, Estudiantinor, Waldetar- | ful. Serenade, mance, King. | Characteristic, On Tiptoe, Hos- mer. Grand Selection, Rose Marie, Frenl.and Stothart (Special Re- An Autumn Ro- March, Empire State, Collins. Star Spangled Banner, Key. LEGALS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE ELEVENTH JUDICIAL © 1T OF THE STATE OF FLO! IN AND FOR MONROE COUNTY. IN CHANCERY. BERNICE M. GOETZ, joinea erein, by her husband and next friend, LEON M. GOETZ, Complainants, ys.. SUIT TO QU! TITLE. WILLIAM PATTON, et al, Defendants. ORDER OF PUBLICATION It appearing by the sworn. bill of complaint filed in the above stated cause that the complainant erein does not know and has not een able to ascertain after diligent search and inquiry whether the defendants, William Patton and =, Patton, his wife, if married, M. C. Mordecai and —— Mot 1, >| his wife, if married, Edward H. Crain and —— Crain, his wife, if married, believed by the com- plainant to be interested in the property on which the complaining seeks to quiet the title to in said bill and which is hereinafter fully describe, or if dead to have. been interested therein, are dead or alive, and if dead his, or her or | their heirs, devisees, legatees or | erante: re unknown; that the place of residence of the defend- ants, William Patton and —— Pat- ton, his wife, and M. C. Mordecai and —— Mordecai, his wife, if alive, is unknown; that the place of residence of Edward H. Crain and —— Crain, his wife, if mar- ried, if alive, ‘as is particularly - | known, to, the complainant is Broad- way, North Carolina. And it further appearing after | diligent search and inquiry that the defendants, Joe Thorn Jackson | and —— Jackson, his wife, if mar- | rfed, are non-residents of the State of Florida and their place of resi- | dence as is particularly known to thej complainant is 1011 North Grande | Avenue, Sherman, Texas; that t defendant, Janie C. Holmes, is non-resident of the State of F ida; and her place of residence rticularly known to the cam- nant is 60 Baird Street, Ashe- “sald Cort ; th | is nL. ae S ‘widow is! pia’ ‘and Trust Com- | ville, North Carolina; that the Boe Ate a RR oer) ng fendants, Hagar M. | Lasarus ite. 117, 1,88: Spe-| Fannie H. Lazarus, vife, th Chkkcers abpointed! Henvtenigents of the State of’ Flo tn sald ddores;, under 4 2 their place of residence as is particularly known to the com- |plainant is 2141 N. W. Davis Street, Apartment 14, Portland, that the defendants, Alan m and Elizabeth D. Cohen, . are non-residents of the of Florida and age. pipes st residence as is particularly to complainant is 3012 Ferndale Avenue, Baltimore, Maryland. That the complainant verily believes that all of the above named de- fendants are over the age of twenty-oné years and that there is no person in the State of Flor! the service of a summons in chi cery pon whom would bind ndapts. ood i further appearing after (iligent. search and inquiry | for their naines that the complainant verily believes that there are ote ribed. in. th scribed in the hereinafter described. qr 18 THERE! that the defendants, Ma ve and if their unknown he! devisees, legatees or grantees, M. C. Mordecai and 7 Mordecai, his wife, if married, alive and if dead, ‘their, unknown heirs, Seyinees, lena Se or gran- t ees, Award Crain — Cra! ife, if married, if ty BS wt eir unknown he ‘Alan M. Cohen and ‘Cohen, his wife, and raons, ‘ings Or Seitiam, Pat: his wife, if dead, (je i 0 bal iaign in Piorsda, per plat “recorded i: it id rope aforesaid, Praag lewatees oe gran’ hi Government Lot One (1), Sec- tion: Nine (9), Township Sixty- five (65) South of Range Thirty-four (34) East, contain= ing Six (6) acres more or less, and Government Lot One (1), Section Sixteen (16), Township four . Be vie ‘and one-half (5%) or less, 20 ent Lot One (1), Sec- tot Seventeen (17), Township rat ith of fe Sixty-six (66) South of Range righ! jonenna or in anywise apper- taining. be 7) they are hereb’ appear to said bill -< rm or before ae B “egations of said bill ‘as confessed by sal nts and with ex. 18 . this order be 1 week for four consecut! ‘5 name Rereattainente = The Ket awa ta Moord ‘County, rida. ‘DON! ORD! this 3r@ OE TO eA De 1ba8. a os ot eBid aR. gruont s tae oo bag Hr for * nov4-11-18-25;, belie - required to ‘complaint on oP day of ise 121), in it 29 ‘dec? 1939