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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1 9: 3 9 After A Man’s Heart by JEAN RANDALL Chapter 29 Found! E SHOULD have reached the ranch before noon. Three o'clock found him still on the high- way, his windshield wiper click- ing with the regularity of a metro- nome, the snow whirling in great gusts before him. Occasionally he ran into a road almost dry where the wind had acted as a giant brush; but oftener he encountered drifts too great to venture into be- fore making use of the shovel with which he had provided himself. Steam from his. breath frosted the windows and had to be re- moved again and again. Several times he missed the road entirely and felt the crackle of drie* grass and sage brush be.eath his tires. But for the first time since F flight his spirits rose. He whistled as he got out.and shoved the smal} car back onto the road. Here was something he could wrestle with: overcome. His mind was clear of emotion, the vapors of bewilder- ment, remorse, grief, and loss blown away by the icy wind. Even his love for Buff was translated into a determination to conquer the elements. He would reach the ranch or die in the attempt, he told himself, almost gayly. And reach it he did, though not until the early darkness had fallen. He had dreaded that dangerous road which led to the house itself, had almost decided to leave his car and walk rather than risk hid- den boulders. To his surprise he found that although snow lay here and there upon the road, it was evident daily work had kept it open. The new foreman, he thought with gratitude, was proving him- self a worthy successor to Atkins. Tim's car sped gayly along, up to the very porch on which Bluff had found him sitting last October. How much had happened in that short space of time! How greatly he, Tim Corliss, had changed, thanks to Buff! He chuckled to see the house brightly lighted. Evidently Webby and her fellow servant were tak- ing full advantage of their isola tion. And who was to blame them ran his indulgent comment. Heaven knew it was dull enough for them alone out here through the winter. He hoped they had lighted as many fires, kept the radio on as many hours, eooked and eaten as many hearty meals as would help to lighten the months of their exile. The front door was unlocked and he went in without knocking or ringing. He forgot that the steadily increasing vind drowned the sound of his car. Webby was coming down the stairs as he entered: a Webby whose appearance strangely be- lied the jolly picture he had been building up it’ his mind: Hér face was drawn and anxious. She bare a hot water bag in her hands. Upset . “ME; TIM!” she exclaimed “You i did get the message then! But the line’s down . . . how did you know?” “Know what?” He was sliding out from his overcoat. shaking the snow from it before he tossed it onto the big chest in the hall. “What's the matter, Wcrby? You look upset.” “Upset? | should think so! It’s Miss Buff.” she went on gravely. “She's awful sick and I can’t get hold of Dr. Westland. Simons— that’s the new foreman —he's kept the road to the highway free but he can't go on further with his car. a Tim's painful grasp o. her arm cheeked her speech “Miss Buff—here? How tong— when did she come? What’s the matter with her?” “I ain't right certain.” Tears, caused nortly by anxiety and part- ly by Tim’s iron fingers. ro'led down her broad cheeks. “She caught cold and it settled in her chest——” “Pneumonia?” asked Tim, hor~ “TI don’t know. She's suffering a lot and she’s feverish, but it don’t ct just like pneumonia to me. She—” “T'm going up to see her,” Tim. said: and strode past her, taking the stairs three steps at a time. Buff’s door stood partly open. From the big bed came smothered little moans that wrung his heart. He tiptoed in and knelt beside her, gathered her hot hands in both his own. “Buff! Oh, Buif!” She attempted to smile, then caught her breath sharply. Tim, it hurts so!” “Does it, my darling? Where? Show me where?” her heart. She laid her hand on “Here—when I breathe.’ “Is sas right when you don't “Yes. If I could just get along without breathing ...” Pain caught her again and she bit her lip. g| making mustard plasters an rplying them faithfully. Tim’s head was down on her | breast, listening to its tortured rise and fall. He knew pleurisy when he saw it. The pneumonia? “Does it make you pant to turn on your side?” he asked anxiously. “No, Tim.” i 0 effusion then, thank | ve seen a “There’s God! Nov , Buft. lot of this kind of trauble—amon; the men in mines, you know, an: elsewhere. I don’t wait until I eould make it te Loveland or Boulder for a doctor. Will you let | me take eare of you?” “Anything — anything,” she murmured, breathing as lightly as she could. = Tim took immediate exarge of the situation. He set Webby to watched Buff’s temperature as i well as he eould Ly the throbbing of the little vein in her temple. the touch of her hands. When he judged it was growing too high. he ordered an alcohol rub for his | patient. Gradually the pain lessened. By morning it had disappeared and | Buff slept like a ti.ed child. With the coming of daylight the snow | stopped and Simons was sent in Tim’s car to find a doctor. “Not that she needs one, unt I want to make sure she’s alt right,” Tim said. He was sitting in the kitehen, drinking cup after cup of the strong coffee the housekeeper had made for him. “Now tell me, Webby, how long Miss Buff has been here? How did she catch this cold?” ‘S Actual Hatred Miss Iris to Chicago——” “To Chicago? Why?” Webby pursed her lips. “She'll tell you what she wants you to know, Mr. Tim—about Miss Iris, I mean.” “I’m sorry! course. But Miss Buff is my busi- ness!” The fat cook sent him a shrewd glance. “Mebby—mebby not; that’s for Miss Buff to say. But anyhow | that’s how we had it fixed. Miss Buff told me to stay on in: the apartment till the first of the month, then come out here and she'd join me And she done it!” “All this time—out here!* Tim was dumbfounded. He had thought | of her in Florida. in New York, leven abroad: it never entered his head that she might have sought refuge in-a ranch house within a seore of miles of him. “All this time, out here. We got along real well, too. mis Buff, she had some writing to do. I cooked for her aid Simon$ he’ kept the read clear of snow and done the Hoes If it hadn’t been for that letter——” “What letter?” Webby considered. “I guess better tell you. about it, after all. 1’ll save Miss: Buff talking. It was that DeMuth girl again,” she ex- plained. bitter accusation in her tone. “Miss Buff got aer a job in Chicago. Something to do with clothes, 1 don’t know just what. She wears her clothes real well, I'll say that for her. And you can bet Miss Buff didn’t stop there either. She leased a little apart- ment for her, she introduced her to some of her friends. You'd think.” she went on acrimonious- ly, “that was enough to satisfy anybody. But not that Iris De- | Muth! She wired she was tired of working and was coming back to Dengee Miss Buff drove in to meet er. “In this weather?” “In this weather. Of course it wasn't snowing so hard then, but it was plenty cold. She stayed two days and got that Iris girl talked into going back to Chicago. Then coming back here it begun to snow, and poor little Miss Buff had to fight her way to the house.” Tim shuddered, remembering | his own struggie of yesterday. A erent ear ald atts alone in oe storm, getting 0. scrape the frost from the windshield, | with drifts. chilled through an through. ... The papers were filled with stories of travelers who hid died under such circumstances, Buff, his-little Buff! And. all. to help Iris DeMuth! A dislike for her which was akin to actual hatred took possession of him. A hundred Irises would not | be worth the risk of one Buff Car- roll. Nor did he believe Iris needed help. She would always land, cat- like, on her feet no what the cireumstanees, How like her to abandon the comfortable apart- ment, the pleasant work had secured for her, to come back to | Denver, her unshakable egotism directing a new appeal to Buff, perhaps even to Tim himself. Webby was watching his face, Continued tomorrow. AT BRABY’S MARKET Brady's Poultry Market, 1214/ Page advertisement try only is handled. This is due to the fact that the meat of pack- ing heuse birds have the objec-/ tionable taste of intestines and} bile, in that they are shipped not! drawn, with only feathers re+}' moved. i ; Another feature Brady’s stress} is that their poultry is sold com-) pletely dressed, ready | or broiler. The most fastidious customers are regular patrons at} this establishment. A trial of the! advertisement on page one. ; MONROE THEATRE Monroe Theatre announces ‘to-|should be. a White street, emphasizes a front day a special midnight show to! i today in‘be held tomorrow night follow-| which they state that live poul-/ ing showing of the feature pic-/ tures, which will feature ten | cloudy, jluestion was: could | it be checked before it went into | Fe | HE come the day after I left | Boulder,” was. the surprising | answer. “She fixed it all up with | me beforehand. She was taking | I shouldn’t have | asked. It’s none of my business, of | THE KEY WEST CITIZEN 'TOURISTS VIEW. I: ISLAND CITY (Continued frora Page One) }see an exhibition of waterway ‘marks used. Yow will see model (of principal lighthouses near here, and Spanish-American war |and Maine explosion relics. At ; the rear you will look out on Key West’s famed harbor and in ithe distance you will see the “is- jlands to the west”. On your left Pass Snagger At Miami U. eoccee| 'stroyers tied up at the Naval Sta- | tion. On your right perhaps a lighthouse tender. } ththouse View Speeding up Whitehead, you \gleaming white. . ._You may be itaken through colored sections of {the town, descendants diveetly fof African slaves brought here. |. . .Yow will stop at Superin. |tendent of Lighthouse Bill De- imeritt’s reservation. There you will see the only inland light- house in the world rising out of beautiful grounds with tropical airplants, coconuts and am aviary of doves, chattering parakeets ‘and rainbow tropical birds. Yow * will elimb interminable steps but ‘the view above will be amazing. On a panorama you will see the ocean on all sides of Key West and a bird’s eye view of part of the Keys spread out below. You will see the little fisher cottages of Key West in all directions. The La Concha juts out and the Convent of Mary Immaculate. ‘ . The sand bank and big guns of George Pittard is one of the outstanding pass snagging ends on Fort Taylor you will see spread the University of Miami football team and will be a dangerous Out in a half moon at Whitehead | threat to the University of Florida Saturday night when the Hurri- Point. Also the National Guard | | cames and Gators clash for the State championshio in Miami. . and C.C.C. Hospital buildings. | }The old Fort, named in honor of | Zachary Taylor who fought with |distinction in the wars of 1812, Seminole and Indians Wars, was begun in 1845 completed in 1876. During the Civil War period the Ga armament consisted of colum- Major colleges and universities ; Grinnell vs. Coe; Illinois VS.|biads, flanking howitzers, and jof the nation are scheduled po ee ae - field howitzers. The fortifica- |play sectional and inter-section- ae pele an taaeey en ie tions of Key West and the Dry |al football games. Opponents are| ys. Ganson State: . Karsan vile ee —_ Sip gt Cae |listed as follows: | George Washington; Kentucky Mexico. To your right the radio ; Alabama vs. Georgia Tech.;/ vs. West Virginia; Lafayette vs. towers of Key West Naval Sta- | Arizona vs. Col. of the Pacific;|W. & J.; Lehigh vs. Delaware;'tion loom, Here pirates once Army vs. Pennsylvania State; | Louisiana vs. Auburn; Marquette’ beached their galleons and scrap- Baylor vs. Centenary; Bostoniy yt; } ¥ -jed and painted their bottoms. |College vs. Boston University;/vania; Missouri vs. Oklahoma;!modore David Porter, who drove | Brigham Young vs. Colorado Uni-| Nebraska vs. Pittsburgh; North’ out the Pirates, occupied in 1822. versity; Brown vs. Connecticut; Carolina State vs. Furman; It is an important base for all Bucknell vs. ‘Muhlenberg; Cali-| Northwestern vs. Notre Dame; wars. At present the Navy De- fornia vs. Oregon State; Carnegie|Oklahoma A. & M. vs. Wichita; partment is establishing a neu- | Tech. vs. Holy Cross; Chicago vs. Princeton vs. Yale; Purdue vs. /trality patrol out of it. The Oberlin; Clemson vs. South West-} Wisconsin; Rice vs. Texas A. &! lighthouse you are in throws a ern; Colgate vs. Syracuse; Colo-!M.; Santa Clara vs. USC.L.A.; beam which can be seen 15 miles. fe Oa Se SE RS | §aturday’s Football Games rado State College vs, Utah; Co-| South Dakota vs. Cincinnati; St. It was built in 1846, is 91 feet). lumbia vs. Tulane; Cornell vs.! Louis University vs. Tulsa; St: high. Prior to the establish- Dartmouth; Creighton vs. Wash-|Mary’s College vs. Fordham;!' ment of this light losses of ves- |burn; Denver vs, Idaho; Detroit! Stanford vs. Washington State; sels wrecked on the surrounding vs. Manhattan; Drake vs. Wash-; Temple vs. Villanova; Tennessee shoals rank into millions of dol- ington University; Duke vs.! vs. Vanderbilt; Texas vs. T.C.U.:! lars. |North Carolina; Fordham’ vs. St. Virginia vs. Virginia Poly; Wash- | |Mary’s; Georgetown vs. N.Y.U.;! ington and L. vs. William and) Georgia vs. South Carolina; | Mary. Civil War Forts Sticking in your mind among hundreds of interesting facts ____| which will be explained to you throughout the city will be. . . East Martello Tower, one of the finest old fortifications in country, begun in the Civil War TONIGHT AT GYM Sin its noteworthy brickwork, its granite gun bases, its design |which permits engaging the TO ADOPT FULL SEASON'S cnemy from outer tower if they gained access to central tower. . . SCHEDULE; PLAY BE- the beautiful Roosevelt Boule- vard and the ships passing the Site MONE. Gulf Stream quite close in going to romantic destinations. . .The 2 Mollie Parker Gardens where @ Final pre-tournament meeting pleasant former Kentuckian lady of .the City Basketball League}shows you wonders. she has’.ac- p | will be held this evening, starting Larrea re peering at 7:30 o'clock at High School’ including such things as the Um- 0.07! gymnasium. Chief matter pe b= eoeies haigp/ eprom BASKETBALL MEET THE WEATHER Key West, Fia.,} Nov. 17, 1939. | Observation. taken at 7:30 a.m. | | 75th Mer. Time | Temperatures | Highest last 24 hours _. | Lowest last night - {Meant |Normal -. | | | | i | | {| | Precipitation | Rainfall, 24 ‘sending | 7:30 a. m. | Total rainfaly inches 3 | Deficieney since Novem- ber 1, inches - aa Total rainfall since January 1 nt 1, inches . i eS | ortebee’ heen th: bout. Excess since Jan. 1, inthes 266, Competition opens next Mon-j largest blue plumbago our Tomorrow's Almanac day night at the ot Ste gett deftly twist | Sunrise 6:46 a. m.,| when the Army and Sea Food| trong Havana tobacco leaves’ in- | Sunset - 5:39 p. m.| Grillen | Moonrise -12:31 p. m.; lowing that game, the Key West | boxes. | Moonset Lion§ and Coast Guard will meet. | “ Bahama Houses |First quarter, 18th _ 6:21 p. m.| Two\.games will be played each!" yoy wlil be taken to the Ba- { . Tomorrow's Tides Monday and Friday nights during hama houses built of cypress by | the schedule. |ship carpenters with partitions AM. PM! I 60 “KIDS COMPETIN ane in Bahamas and shipped 8:53 9:04, lover on schooners. oe < 2:05 3:35 F jbarrel poured conerete founda- Barometer af 7:00 a.m. today OR VALUABLE PRIZES) sions, ota style doors. and. win- Sea level — 30.09 ‘ | dows, beautiful mortising, differ- Wind Direction and Velocity And it looks’ ent widths of ceiling board. ENE—20 milesper hour Relative Humidity Sogn ROE | vie fe B.—Comfortable hamidity for winners. | produce commereial salt. . .Turtle jats below, G: rs Pharmacy is the | Crawls, where old fellows as old pera’ \sponsor of this big Christmas con- 2S 400 years swim about. They FORECAST! > |test—and tabulation today shows 2%€ brought here by schooners (Till_7:30 p. m., Saturday) that ninety kiddies have entered, 2nd are fascinating subjects. Tur- Key West and Vicinity: Mostly ‘forty boys and fifty-one girls. tle steak and soup are made here probably occasional light | Entries close tomorrow . in the Nov. 1, gymnasium | | (Naval Base) Tigirace is on! like ‘are gz to be in that race tq|Panes. . Salt ponds where salted | | mean reels of news and authentic rain or mist tonight and Satur-‘contest—and then from then on the country with the green- pictures of war scenes. This program will meet with | Ure: moderate easterly winds. popular approval in that some de- } betwee: ‘ hour mand has come to. the manage-| oe aoe ment for this type of show. Asjably occasional light rain or shown in the advertisement on/mist in extreme south portion | a for the panj| page one today, the show will get/and on east central coast to- ing night anti Saturday, and in ex- special |treme northwest _portion Satur- t admission price is scheduled.|day; little change in tempera- service rendered is solicited. See|Late news reels only will be/ ture, underway immediately follow: the feature pictures and a shown, |day; little change in tempera: its simply a matter of posting! Colored fruit, each weighing five the standings each week 2s the Pounds. Where this fruit bears N.B.—Forecast indicates winds purchases made at the store. house, where there is not a piece Florida: Mostly cloudy, prob- | - | moderate easterly winds; teast weather — tonight} y with light scattered rain over south portion. | Johnny Mack Brown i East Gulf: Moderate easterly| DESPERATE TRAILS winds, and overcast weather to- 4 ‘ also ‘night and Saturday with scat-7~ ) Ape Jacksonville to Florida Straits. | tered showers. “ i COMEDY — SERIAL i Hreighter and before you a sturdy Michigan vs. Pennsyl-'It was the base where Com-| ‘ing up for attention is the adop-|¢a) fruits, only star apple tree. in | 1.39 | tion of the full, two section sched-!U, §,, amazing network of cac-|4 mammoth __ bougainvillea, | Meet at 7:30 o'clock. Fol-| to cigars and place them in cedar | Yer one hundred children | quaint bay, attie window with 24/ ¢ sixteen valuable prizes Water was once evaporated to) . . A breadfruit tree, only one in} |votes*come in from merchandise the true tropics are. . .The rock HAS: DRAUGHT BEER | | Fred Maprvil’s Cabana an- |nounees om the front page of this | issue the installation of equip- jment for dispensing Pabst Blue | Ribbon Draught Beer. ' | This cocktail lounge boasts of | the fact that it is the only place, |of its Kind in town, to serve this, ipremium beer on draught. | | J ©. Riley,” “of” Wilmington, | | will be three sleek naval de- Delaware, arrived in Key West | As gfctialjavotrs | yesterday to assume the position | ‘of assistant manager of the Ca-| | bana. i | Marvil’s home town and before; | coming to. Key West was associat- | ;will pass the county courthouse, ed with the owner of the Cabana | HARRIET COLE MAPHIS; |for many years. . . | |of wood except the doors and | frames. It has gone through three major hurricanes. . .The Convent lat Mary Immaculate was found- | ed and constructed in 1879 by Ca- |nadian Catholic nuns. In 1904 it was enlarged to its present .size. |In 1898 it was turned over to} |naval authorities for use as hos- |pital in, Spanish-American war. ‘In its cupola museum are rare| shells and war relics. | | Heme |The Southernmost Home in the | U.S, is built on a breakwater, | | double thick, and originally cost} | about $200,000... The grounds of _ the castle-like structure has many beautiful coconut palms and Aus- | ‘tralian pines. . .Your guide will take you out on the rocks at | Whitehead: and colored boys will exhibit their wares of beautiful | sunset-pink Conch shells. . .You | will see the traveler’s palm, a) | fan-shaped palm always pointing | {north and south. Its trunk con- | jtains a large amount of drink- | | able water... .Down to the fish} markets and a harbor full of) | quaint island craft and old wa-| terfront characters will take up! as many interesting days as may | | be desired. Fish are placed cars and are thus kept alive. . . Oldest house in Key West was built in 1825. Note the cedar) |railing, three sizes of dormer | windows, slaye quartefs, dutch | oven, brass fittings, cedar furni-| ture, latticed doors, cedar lining, | old style lock and chain placed | on one window by a visiting | naval officer. } . Trained Fish In the winter you may go through the only pineapple can-| nery in the United States. . Raul’s. trained fish, where lust; grouper and shark eat out | trainer’s ‘hands for the most amaz- | jing true fish story ever known | . ‘You may take a modern liner | Havana, the old world city, | | after a time spent at Key West, . . Down at the sport fishin, docks, there is one at the south! end of Duval, one at Gulf Dock| in} | | & O.-docks: You may see trop-| ical monsters of the deep land-| led by. tourists brought in. . . Maine Memorial and Cuban war veterans plot. in the. cemetery | the’ contains the bodies of their re- » Art Center, | Art Society has a. han; of bright Key West | | tropical S. You may rest in the peace a Key West, ' talk churmmingly to mapy well-known . writers | | business figures who come | Key West in the winter, you may | | boat to. your.’ heatt’s. content in| | well-protected waters, live in the, | best. climate im’ the United States. You may go ‘Key~ West and you will. livela: | spective. | where Key |the Hono! LEGALS IN THR COUNTY JUDGE'S COURT IN AND FOR MONROE COUNTY, FLORIDA. In re: Estate of ANNIE C. DUFFY, Deceased. NOTICE OF INPENTION TO MAKE APPLICATION FOR FINAL DISCHAT Notice is hereby n that the undersigned will, on the 20th day of December, A. D. 1939, present to bie Raymond RB. County Judge, in and for Monroe County, ida, her final report and vouchers and ask for the ap- proval of same. and.apply for final discharge Duffy, dedeased. SABEL M x of t ‘Annie IN CIRCUIT COURT, STATE OF: FLORIDA, BLEV ri . CHANCERY Plaintiff, vs. EDWARD CONWAY MAPHIS, Defendant. ORDER OF PUBLICAT It appearing by the filed in the above-stat asi Edward Conway Maph the de- fendant therein named, is a non- resident of the State of Florida and resides at Mardela Springs, County of Wieomico, and State of Mary- land; that said defendant the age of twenty-one year: there is no person in the Stat Florida the service of a summons bil in chancery upon whom would bind | said defendant. It is therefore ordered that defendant be and he is hereby r quired to appear to the bill of com- plaint filed in said cause on or be- fore Monday, the 4th day of De- cember, A. D. 1939, otherwise the allegations of said taken as confessed fendant. It is further ordered that thi order, be, published once each week for four’ consecutive weeks in The Key West,, Citizen, a newspaper published in said county and state. Done and ordered this October 26th, A. D. 1939. (SEAL) Dill by will said be de- Ross C Sawyer c (Sa.) ALLAN B. CLEAR Solicitor for Complainant oct27; nov3-10- IN THE CIRCUIT COURT IN AND FOR MONROE COUN- TY. FLORIDA. IN CHAN- CERY. No. 7-198 DIEGO MAFFEZZOLI, Plaintiff, vs. MARY MAFFEZZOLI, Defendant. ORDER FOR PUBLICATION TO: Mary Maffezzoli 67 Hudson Street Trenton, New Jersey You are hereby notified and required to appear to the Bill of Complaint for divorce filed in the above-styled cause on or be- fore the Rule Day in January, | being the Ist day of January, 1940, otherwise the allegations Y of said bill will be taken as con-| | fessed by you. This order shall be published once a week for four consecutive weeks in the Key West Citizen, Monroe County, Florida. Dated this 17th day of Novem- ber, A. D. 1939. (C.C.SEAL) Ross C Sawyer on Caroline street, one at the P-| Clerk of the Circuit Court of! Monroe County, Florida. By (Sd.) Florence E. Sawyer, Deputy Clerk. A. C. FRANKS ‘Attorney for Plaintiff 630 Seybold Bldg. Miami, Fla. nov17-24; deel-8-15,1939 Lopez Funeral Service Lord, | n the estate of Annie C.} i t | park. Abundant water. PAGE THRE® - haat te (CLASSIFIED COLUMN ' PERSONAL OLD AT 40! GET PEP! New OSTREX Tonic Tab- lets contain invigorators, stimu- lants. 73-year-old doctor says, “I take Ostrex myself”. $1.09 size, special today 89c. If not delighted, maker refunds this price. Call, write. Gardner's Pharmacy. POULTRY up to 150 per e off Dixie lam Road. hel, Box 152. nov16-3tx FRYERS, REDS, week. Second r Highway on IL Mrs. M. A. Bett South’ Miami. WANTED | WANTED—Electric Water Pump, condition no object. State price. Box L, The Citizen. oct31-tf FOR RENT ; UNFURNISHED APARTMENT, two bedrooms. Modern con- veniences. Apply Smith’s Gro- cery, corner Georgia and :Vir- ginia streets. oct20-tf FURNISHED APARTMENTS, electric refrigerators. Apply Valdes Bakery. sept30-3mo FURNISHED DOWNSTAIRS APARTMENT, two bedrooms. All modern conveniences. 1500 | oct9-tf Seminary street. FOR SALE with 528 Simonton nov15-3tx Cheap. | SIGNS—“For Rent”, “Rooms For | Rent”, “Apartment For Rent”, | “Private Property, No Tres- ! passing”, 15¢ each, THE ART- | MAN PRESS. nov25-tf 'FOR SALE AT A SACRIFICE— New ultra-modern home with upstairs Apartment, private pa- tio entrance, beautifully furn- ished; 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, close-in, overlooking ocean and Low Apply Henry cost, easy terms. | Pinder, Rear 619 William street. } nov9-1mox 'FOURTEEN-FT. V-BOTTOM | CYPRESS BOAT; Four Horse ! Johnson Outboard Motor; Four Life Preservers, Orie Fire Ex- tinguisher; Pair of Oars and Row Locks; Anchor with Rope; Umbrella—all for $85.00. Apply | 1217 Petronia Street. jun27-s |FOR SALE—2 lots. each 50x100. Run from Washington to Von Phister street. $850. Apply rear 1217 Petronia street. aprl4-s HOTELS | BRING YOUR VISITING friends in need of a good night’s rest to THE OVERSEAS HOTEL. Clean rooms, enjoy the homey atmosphere. Satisfactory rates. 917 Fleming St. may17-tf | | | { i ! Subscribe to The Citizen. { For Fifty Years a NAMEI in Coffee in Key West STRONG ARM BRAND COFFEE THAT'S A REPUTATION Overseas Transportation Company, Inc. Fast, Dependable Freight and Express Service —between— MIAMI AND KEY WEST ALSO SERVING ALL POINTS ON FLORIDA KEYS —between— MIAMI and KEY WEST Express Schedule: LEAVES KEY WEST DAILY (Ex- CEPT SUNDAYS) AT 1:00 o'clock A, M. and arriving at Miami at 7:00 o’clock A, M. LEAVES and o'clock A. M.. Local Schedule: at Key West at 7:00 FREE PICK-UP and DELIVERY SERVICE FULL CARGO INSURANCE Office: 813 Caroline St.