The Key West Citizen Newspaper, November 28, 1939, Page 3

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2g, 1989 YEST# DAY. Mrs. Murchison ts shock:4 when Tuck finds a pipe that was never out of her husband's hand. Bunny sleuths, and discovers that Mrs. ‘chison does not know where her husband is. That night, the study is broken into. Chapter Eight Michael! Tells All “COME in, Tuck,” Michael said. “Pretty smart guy, whoever he is. That clatter warned him.” He shut the door behind him, picked the key from the floor and turned the lock. The smaller of the two big rugs was hung over the glass doors that led to the dining room. The blinds on every window were drawn close and the Indian téanket from the couch was lying on the floor as if it had been hung over the panes of the long glass door which led to the sun porch.” “He certainly wasn’t taking any chances on being seen,” she de-¢ cided. Michael was surveying the room minutely. “Now what the devil do you sup- pose he was after?” he said won- deringly. “There isn’t anything in the place worth stealing.” “Hidden passages,” Tuck said lightly. A sudden thought had struck her, but she was not letting Michael know all she knew. “Se- cret rooms,” she repeated. At the moment another tap sounded sharply, and Tuck, for all her nonchalance, jumped. Mi- chael grinned at her. “It’s Bunny,” he said, and shot the bolt on the dining room door. Runny was rap- ping on the door to the kitchen, and saying “Let me in, you two! This door’s locked.” Michael turned the key and opened the door. Bunny, calm and unruffled, stood there with her hands in the pockets of her black silk dressing gown. “What’s up?” she asked coolly. “A party? Or are they charivari- ing us? I heard nots and pans bang- ing.” “Burglars,” Michae! said briefly. “Oh. Well, well. Where’s Tuck?” “Surveying the ruins.” With lifted eyebrows Bunny strolled through the dining room and looked into the disordered study. “What vas burgled?” she asked Tuck. “Do we keep the fam- ily diamonds in here?” “Its true, Bunny, honestly,” Tuck told her. “There was some- body in here. We heard them. Tap- ping on the wails.” “But whatever for, Michael?” Bunny's face expressed the sincer- est amazement. “I really didn’t inquire,” Mi- chael told her. “It certainly is be- “ep me. I don’t understand it at Tuck looked at him scornfully. “Isn't that fenny,” really ought to have things better arranged. Imagine not being able to understand it.” Bunny laughed suddenly. “You know what I think,” she said calm- ly. “I think it’s about time you stopped being mysterious, Michael. Tuck’s getting cross. And, if you really don’t understand this bur- glary, maybe you could use a little help in unraveling your little she said. “You | i roblem. The Problem of the issing Professor.” Michael swallowed. “How in the devil did you ferret out this business of a Missing Pro- fessor? Nobody knows he’s miss- ing. Not a soul, Not his most inti- mate friends.” ene does,” Bunny said quickly. “And Mrs. Murchison knows,” Tuck supplemented. Michael groaned. “You haven't been around asking them ques- tions, have you?” “It would have served you ° fectly well right if we had,” Tuck informed him. “Trying to keep us in the dark while you sneaked around finding out sorts of in- teresting things.” “Not very many,” Michael mut- tered. “Will you tell us all you know?” “Lam abiect,” he said. “I will.” ‘Think—Suspect—Wonder’ ‘UCK dropped into the big leather chair by the fireplace and hugged her knees excitedly “Go on, then,” she commanded “Start at the beginning. Is he miss- ing?” “He is.” “Did he disappear?” “He did.” Michael told her. “Can't they find him?” | “They cannot.” He explained in detail the very careful search made by the police. The two girls listened in silence, Bunny’s eyes on the toe of her ap pet: ick’s following Michael's ne as he spoke. There was a little silence. “So they think—they suspect— they wonder——” ctly,” Michael agreed. “You have it, honey. anes ink fey suspect ani ey wonder. But they cages know. And that’s why we're ere. “I knew it,” Tuck said. “Michael Forrester, why in the name of eoodoes acy egrog! tonal Buon right at inning’ We've lost“an awful lot of time. What we should Legion done at the beginning was to get acqui with the Devoes and Mrs. Murchi- son and have Duacan Murchison out here to lunch and start finding | 4; out.’ Michael tilted her chin with his finger. “You've answered ayoar own Question there, Tuck. is ex- actly what we shouldn't have done Dad expressly stated that we were to act as much like disinterested pec And we have, unless .. “Unless I created some suspicion snooping ‘around. AVell, I didn't.” “Then we've been here a’ week without a riop e of curiosity around the place we dropped into.” “What about Miss Lissey?” “There is that question. Unless your imagination .. .” Tuck pounded her-fist on the armé of her chair. “The next person who says that to me will get poison in his soup,” she said flatly. “It isn't imagination. It’s sense. 1 suppose next.you’l] say I imagined Mrs, Murchison was frightened stiff when I took over that pipe. Or that Bunny imagined what she said to her over the ‘phone.” - “What pipe?.Who said to Bunny over the ‘phone? Said what?” . Tuck and Bunny explained that together, in a sort of recitative duet, one taking up where the other left off. Michael listened with the deepest attention, but he was most interested in the story of the Pipe. “Can you repeat her exact words, Tuck?” he asked anxiously. He had lit a cigarette now, and was listening with brows squinted to keep out the smoke. “She said, ‘Where have you found it? It is never out of his hand.’ She has a French accent, you know, that’s what’s the matter with her tenses.” “Yes ...or...or she really wonders where hejis. .. . That thing will take a lot of figuring out, Tuck, She was very surprised to see it?” “She certainly was.” “Michael,” said Bunny suddenly, looking up at him keenly. “There’s one think I don’t quite get. From what you've said, there has been nothing found that would lead the police to es foul play. A man’s disappeared, but Jots of men dis- appear and turn up later. He isn’t anybody in particular. Is he? Just an ordinary person . . . it’s quite possible he'll turn up by himself. That's what his relatives say. There’s no reason why they’d want ae out of the way that you know of...” ‘One Finger Too Many’ “WELL. Bunny?” “Then, why have the police taken such a hold of this case? What makes them think it’s more than just one more temporarily in- explicable disappearance?” ‘ichael considered. “There’s one akan too many in this pie,” he said slowly after a minute “There's someone standing on the edge and watching . . . someone who isn’t sup) to know the Professor is missing, someone who sent an anonymous letter to the poe asking ‘WHERE ARE PRO- | ESSOR MURCHISON'’S DIA- | MONDS?’” | “Diamonds!” said Tuck incredu- | oun: “Diamonds? A I fessor with diamonds?” echoed. “Even so, my children. But his wife says.he hadn’t any. His | brother. doesn’t know anything , pro- ' junny about them. And yet... somebody | party in honor of Miss Elizabeth Sea level else hints about them. Is it because | ;. . does that other person mistrust | Professor Murchison’s relatives? | You see?” | Tuck caught her breath. There was a little silence. “Then, that’s what they might have been after here tonight,” she went on in a queer tone. “Dia- monds.” Michael looked abcut him. “Hardly, honey. Not in a prosaic house in the twentieth century. I doubt if there are any diamonds. Only Id like to know who wrote that letter.” “Well, Michae!... if they weren't after diamonds, what were they after?” Michael got up and went over to the big desk before he spoke. “Where did go8 find that pipe, Tuck?” he asked. , She went over beside him. The right hand side of the desk was a row of drawers. Above them. just | underneath the top of the desk, ! was a board resting in the groove i made for it. Tuck pulled it out a | little way, then pressed a little | catch and pushed it back again. Beneath it was disclosed a shallow drawer, little more than a pencil ! tray, perhaps an inch and a half deep. In it lay a ruler, half a dozen pencil stubs and some wads of torn Paper. “There,” she said, “lying in that drawer. You can see the mark where it burned the wood.” Michael bent and examined it. “Burned the wood." the said softly to himself. He stepped back, sat down in the big chair before the desk and reached out his hand to the drawer. It was just at a comfortable dis- tance. “It means it dropped in there while it was burning, doesn’t it. Michael?” Tuck said very quietly “Dr in there while it was burning . .. and then he never took it out again. Why? A pipe.that was never out of his hand, hat jour- ney did he £& on so suddenly that night that he didn't think to pick it up?” ‘There was silence. Michael pulled the little drawer out farther and looked in, as if the to his question might lie there. Nothing but those pencils and the ey Wo han zs, = oe oe sen’ picked up the of paper and spread it out between his fingers. * It was as if he had had his ques- on, at the moment. For on the paper, clear and distinct. was the print of a bloody hand. Continued tomorrow EPIDEMIC IN ASYLUM _ NORWICH, Conn.—An epidem- | ic of dysentery has of more than a dozen women in- imates of the Women’s Infirmary at the Norwich State Hospital. caused the The victims were women be-|few left for death during the past three — 65 and 98 years of age. but they are le as possible. if not more so. | | third straight game of the tourna-} Lions Five Growls And Wins Game #rom Grills Featured by a well-nigh per-, fect pass offensive, the Key West{ Lions’ basketball team took the} strong’Seafood Grill five into} camp last night in a regular! league game to the tune of 49 to! 42. In the second game, the Coast! Guards had an easy time of it) with the Army, who dropped the! ment. Score was 43 to 26. | Games Tomorrow High school champion teams of | the Intra-mural tournament will, meet tomorrow night at 7:30! o’clock in the gymnasium. ~10A’s! and 10B’s will meet, these teams; having come out on top in a tie’ following a schedule of twenty-! eight games. i At 8:30 o'clock, the Key West | Lions will play the Coast Guard | in a postponed game, put off) from November 20, when the! Guards were out on patrol. Box scores of last night’s con- tests follow: FIRST GAME | Lions | Player— FG FT FOULS PTS} Knowles, f 3 1 6) Pinder, f —.10 Saunders, c 5 Y Car’nell,g 3 Ketchings, g 3 Rosam, sub 0 3 1 1 3 0 KEY WEST IN DAYS GONE BY | SEE | Happenings Here Just Five, Ten) and Fifteen Years Ago As Taken From The Files i Of The Citizen | ' i FIVE YEARS AGO | Members of the Sodality of St.; ; Mary’s Star. of the Sea Church, ' accompanied by Rev. Wm. Rea-| jgan, S.J., will leave this evening | | to attend the fourth annual con- | vention of the St. Augustine} Union in Tampa. There will be 16 boys from St. Joseph’s school | and 14 girls from the Convent of! Mary Immaculate in the group. | Preparations have been com-i pleted for the sightseeing tour which is to be given the mem-; bers of the Order of the Eastern} Star, who will return on SS.' Florida from Cuba this after- ; noon. There are about 400 pas- | sengers on the ship and 123 of them are booked for Key West. | entertained last evening with a) Rosam at her home on Southard ; street. Beautiful decorations fea-! turing the clubs colors miade the, home a scene. of beauty and dur- ing the evening games were played and refreshments served. | Wrecking Tug Warbler left port early this morning in re-, | sponse to a call from the wreck- jing tug Killerig, which is towing, |the Collier Schilles to Baltimore and it is thought possible that the collier is too unwieldly to be The Monstera Deliciosa Club |High: .. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ‘TORTUGAS NIN LOSE TO ZINNIAS GAME PLAYED LAST WEEK AT FORT JEFFER- SON ° Zacal, sub — ‘otals— 2 0 | | | | i { | Rye Ss © i 8! case gy B1° er— J. Carb’eill, £ Lewin, ¢° .. F. Carb’ell, g Albury, g —. Totals— SECON! Coast Player— FG JV Wo’son, f 5 a & i ak In the Thanksgiving Day game lat the Conch Bowl on Tortugas, ithe baseball team of the U. S. /Coast Guard Zinnia whipped the \Fort Jefferson club to the tune ‘of 16 to 8. Manager Willie “Jew- fish” Adams of the Fort Defend- jers could not understand how this so-ealled “All Star” team could be beaten so badly, supposition being that the losers |bad too much turkey. Line-ups of the were. as follows: Zinnia—Harry Pritchard, c; |Victor Russell, p; Sven Koller, jb; Marius Cruz, 2b; Eta Lopez, | 8b; Joe Alvarez, lss; Wilbur John ison, rss; Hiram Kline, If; Dexter | Dorgan, cf; Tom Demeritt, rf. 43 Fort Jefferson—Tony Heat o | Jack Dillon, p; Henry Pinder, 1b; LS PTS/Manola Casternera, 2b; Willie | Adams, 3b; Andrew Saunders, l1ss; Bobby Waugh, rss; Norman 12 | Johnson, lf; _Manola Cervantes, ief; Troy Harmon, rf. | Umpire, Gene Knowles; score- ‘keeper, Kay-Kay. * ——————$—$—— | 7 THE WEATHER _ Key West, Fla; ORCHIDS to the public-going Nov. 28, 1939. | baseball enthusiast who display- EeSie4 | ©| Feenws | | rom ete? Lae owe CEC aeae “gee Chest Byers, a Stevens, sub 1 Hewitt, sub 1 Moll’ax, sub 2 Dead@’lar; sub 0 Woodson, sub 2 20 Arm; Player— FG Newby, f _. Summers, f Mavis, ¢ Ethridge, g onme two teams coon of soliton set woosooreo ih co | 5° COoMSCCOCKOHAG Fad nH Totals— ase ao FO eeeccoon SHoOSoNHe wloormwon f 3 1 6 1 0 0 12 SI con THE BLEACHERS By O. L. MILIAN | ‘Observation taken at 7:30 a. m../ed such a marvelous act of kind- ness at Trumbo Field last Sun- day afternoon by so_ willingly 9, and freely contributing with do- 8 nations to help the injured um- | pi Jose “Sevilla” Gonzalez, 76th Mer. Time Temperatures Highest last 24 hours . Lowest last night Mean Normal - Precipitation Rainfall, 24 hours ending 7:30 a. m., inches _. ae Total rainfall since Nov. 1, inches Deficient ber 1, inches 1.94 ; mi | BES EST | THERE WERE MANY spectac- | ‘ular plays in the Pirate-Key West |Conch contest but the outstand-| |ing one was the catch made by |shortstop Armando Acevedo of} | Fidel Lopez’ high fly to right- 30.21 | field. Imagine a shortstop man | Wind Direction and Velocity | going to right field to make a N—16 miles per hour ' putout. Relative Humidity } —— 18% | ANOTHER PROBLEM for | N. B.—Comfortable humidity | baseball promoter Roy Hamlin. should be a few points below | Mr. Hamlin had sighted the park mean temperature ‘in the rear of the Armour Pack- ¥ FORECAST jing Company on Grinnell street (THI 7:30 p. m., Wednesday) {as the proper site for a playing Key West and Vicinity: Fair|field but news has reached the and continued cool tonight; Wed- | basball magnet hat the Housing nesday fair and warmer; moder-j Authority has taken that section ate northerly winds. ‘of Trumbo also. So the active! N.B.—Forecast indicates winds | sports enthusiast is working on Low, as Barom OBSERVATIONS FROM | jmedal play where each player's, ‘called for assistance. jnight to allow members an op- ; Supreme chief of the order. The \fore the meeting was called to handled by the Killerig and she & Ps ¥ Florida: Fair tonight, not quite so cold on the east coast, light to |heavy:frost in extreme north |portion end scattered frost in central portion; Wednesday fair ‘and slightly warmer. Jacksonville to Florida Straits |and East Gulf: Moderate north- ‘erly winds, and fair weather to- K.G.E. drum corps honored the /Dight and Wednesday. visitor with a street parade be-| : \IF HE FOLLOWS WITH ‘DIXIE’ i omaha TEN YEARS AGO Local Knights of the Golden Eagle held a special meeting last portunity of meeting William M. Hooven, of Wilmington, N. C. order. a | Proud Father—“The first word Miss Blanche Fogarty Curry;our baby learned to say was will arrive in the city Synday, |‘mamma’.” accompanied by her uncle and, Bored Visitor—Sounds like he aunt, Doctor and Mrs. J. N. Fog-| was going to be a popular song arty of Daytona Beach. Miss writer”. Curry will be married Wednes- | day morning to James W. Bicker- |} was expected and the attendance staff, of Meadsville, Pa. in St. is expected to be larger than at Paul’s Episcopal church. | any of the previous offerings. Car owners are being arrested| “Key West ha’ the best fishing in Key West today for not buying | grounds in the country”, declar- Hlicenses for their cars for the|ed Charles J. Rust, president of year 1930. Last Saturday closed|the Bay State Milling Co., who the period for buying the tags! was out fishing yesterday with and there were a goodly number Captain Warren J. Watrous and who had not done so. Several|Sergeant Pete Taylor on the were tried yesterday and it is be-| launch Jessie R. Porter, and re- lieved that the clerk’s office wally pimnedt with a 200-pound catch. | be busy tomorrow. 4a _ Prospects now loom bright for In a gridiron tussle today the | five-team basketball league in Trevor and Morris Midgets de-|Key West this winter. A. meet- | feated the Army team by a score | ing will be held Sunday at which of 12 to 8. The game was ze-| the matter will be decided. Ther: plete with feature plays and are now four teams in the | there was a large crowd to wit-| league, and it may be that the ness the defeat of the Army. The | National Guard, the fifth, will losing team immediately after-| join. ward challenged. the winners to! a game tomorrow at 10 o'clock.) Scout Troop 2 delightfully en- serene | tertained the pupils of the Convent FIFTEEN YEARS AGO at a masquerade party and sup- Although most of the good|per, the guests being chaperoned seats for the Rotary Minstrel! by Mrs.. Pauline Pinder, Mrs. J. tonight at the Garden Theater have been sold, there are still a than dela. Sawyer also in Committeemen William and J. G. Piodela were attendance. | between 13-18 miles per hour {a different plan ang it may mean | the get-together of Mr. Thomas | and the WPA for construction of | a ball field out om the County; Road, near the incinerator. iemepcaleien THE BIG BASEBALL QUES- TION today is which of the two decisions rendered by acting um- pire-in-chief George Acevedo in the Key. West Conch-Pirate con- test last ‘Sunday will be rec- ognized? When illegal tactics were first employed in the tenth inning the ump decided to call the game on account of darkness with the teams tied at 1-1 all. This decision brought a big howl from the Bucs as well as the Conchs. who had scored twice in their} half of he frame and in order to avoid further friction between players, “play ball” was again called but the Pirates then re- fused to play and a second de- cision by George Acevedo called the game a forfeit by the Bucs anda 9-0 victory for the Conchs. |. THE OUTCOME will probably be that Roy Hamlin, manager of the Key Westers and winners lof the first-half schedule, will agree to let the game stand a tie, and play it over at some later date. If the management of the for the. benefit of WE NOTICE with great in- terest a lady fan, her age some- where in the neighborhood of 70 years, who, rain or shine follows pressed Conchs agrees to this it will be | Sli baseball. ‘EBIE ALBURY WINS) ‘AGAIN AT BOWLING : |MEMBER OF FLORIDA CHAM-| | | | | | | i | (Special to The Citixen) | MIAMI, Noy. 28.—Ebie Al- bury, wife of Charles J. Albury, | | formerly of Key West, member of | [the all-Florida bowling team, | starred in a game here last Fri- (day evening played against the) | champions of Georgia. She turn- ed in a high score of 173 with an average of 127 for the set of, | three games to help the Florida | girl champions defeat the “Geor- gia Peaches” by 1673 to 1587. The match.was in the nature of }@ warm-up for the Miami Open | Bowling Tournament, which | |opened Saturday to continue, this | week, and which has brought to- | ; gether the leading men and wom- /en bowlers of the state. | Competition will be especially | |keen in the women’s division, with Mrs. Albury appearing for | |the first time against such stars as Roslyn Love, Southeastern champion, | | GOLFING NEWS By CLUB REPORTER | | | i GOLDSMITH LEADS ARTMAN CUP PLAY} The first round of play for the} Artman Cup has ended with Sam first place due to a neat 78,| | which, with his handicap of 11, gives him a net 67 for the record. | Another net 67 should give him | the cup—but the knowledge that jhe HAS to shoot it to win may | cause him to falter. | bone as the result of a tip foul) from the bat of Rene Machin, | | Pirate outfielder, in the last-half of the ninth inning. LIONEL PLUMMER AND EN- RIQUE ESQUINALDO, true} Total rainfall since January | baseball fans, assisted by Robert} 1, inches _.... 38:42) Bethel, former Conch pitcher, | Excess since Jan. 1, inches 2.11/'were responsible for the collec-} Tomorrow's Almanac ‘|tion made and a thousand thanks Sunrise to them and all those fans who| Sunsef* . mithelped with their coins. Such Moonrise “m:faction is appreciated. Moonset . mM. | Tomorrow's Tides iS @Naval Base) | ae | In second place, Price, Salas and Watkins all have net 69’s, so! Sam knows by now that he will have to work to keep the lead. | Two strokes separating the first | four players is not a very wide | margin. Kirschenbaum comes -in_next| with a net 70, followed by Spotts- wood with 71. Tied for next} place are O’Bryant and Plummer} with net 72’s. Curry Harris,| present holder of the cup, prac- tically eliminated himself with a net of 75. Lopez, Fripp and} Pinder all blew up (in varying degrees) and all came in with net 76’s. Schutt with 77 and) Grooms with a net 78 complete} the list of first round players. j Competition for this cup is by| handicap is subtracted from his gross score to produce his net score for the round. Low net! score for 36 holes wins the cup.) Play continues through ‘Thurs- | day, November 30, when all} scores must be in. oo ©} Today’s Birthdays | 2° U. S. Senator Edward R. Burke of Nebraska, born at Run- ningwater, S. D., 59 years ago. Henry Hazlitt of New York, editor and author, born in Phila- delphia, 45 years ago. Dr. Ernest S. Griffith, dean of the Graduate School, University of America, born at Utica, N. Y., 43 years ago. Helen Jepson of New York City, singer, born at Titusville, Pa., 32 years ago. Genevieve Taggard, poet, born at Waitsburg, Wash, 45 years ago. Ginzberg, noted Dr. Louis Jewish Theological Seminary, New York City, professor, born in Russia, 66 years ago. Frank Phillips of New York, oil company board chairman, born at Greeley, Nebr., 66 years CLASSIFIED COLUMN LOST |LOST—Black Onyx Eastern Star Ring. Small star and diamond. Reward if returned to 925 Whitehead street. nov27-2tx WANTED | | PAGE THREE LEGALS NOTICE OF MASTER’S SALE Notice is hereby given that under and by virtue of a certain Order and Decree of Foreclosure and Sale made and entered on the 18th day of October, A. D. 1939, im and by the Circuit Court of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit of the State of Florida, in and for Monroe County, in Chancery, in a cause therein pending wherein Hubert C. Nichols is plaintiff and Beatrix McCleary, widow of Minor F. McCleary, de- ——— | ceased, Marguerite McCleary, Mar- WANTED—Sea Beans, all colors; also, Sand Box Hulls (Dyna- mite Seed), any quantity. Mail samples and quote prices. Box|Chancery will offer for sale Box 325, Coconut Grove, Fla. nov25-5tx FOR RENT FURNISHED APARTMENTS, electric refrigerators. Apply Valdes Bakery. sept30-3mo FURNISHED APARTMENT, private -bath, garage. 906 Grin- FURNISHED HOUSE, 2 bed- rooms. Modern conveniences. Season rental preferred. 1418 Cathérine street. nov201mo 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 park. Abundant water. Low cost, easy terms. Apply Henry | pear to t Pinder, Rear 619 William street. ; nov9-1mox Goldsmith nicely entrenched in|PERSONAL CARDS, $1.25 per| 100. THE AR’ jun25- NEW PROCESS GAS STOVE, four burners, oven and broiler. White enamel. Price $15.00. 607 Elizabeth St. rear 1217 Petronia street. apri4-s BRING YOUR VISITING friends in need of a good night’s rest atmosphere. 917 Fleming St. For Fifty Years a NAME! in Coffee in Key West nov27-1t i j | i jin hand to the highest {County Court | County, Florida, in the City of Key i aret McCleary Cleary, a minor, Foreclosure of cause being numbered undersigned Special and Betty Me- are defendants, Mortgage, said 7-19, the Master in and will sell at public outery for cash and best of the Monroe bidder at the front House door ot West, Florida, during the legal hours of sale, to-wit, between the hours of 11 o’clock A. M. and 2 o'clock P. M. on Monday, the 4th day of December, A. D. 1939, the following described land situate, lying and being in Monroe County, State of Florida, to-wit: Lot Thirty-six (36) of Square Four (4), Tracts 28-29 as re- corded in Book “V", Page 484, Monroe County Records. ALSO: Lot Thirty-seven (37) of Square Four (4), Tracts 28-29, as recorded in Book “V", Page 484, Monroe County Records. Dated this 3ist day of October, . D. 1939. A.D. 1838S LLIAM V. ALBURY, Special Master in Chancery. | W. CURRY HARRIS, Solicitor for Plaintiff. oct31; nov7-14-21-28,1939 IRCUIT COURT OF THR NTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, COUNTY, FLORIDA. IN CHANCERY. LOUIS KLEINMAN, Plaintiff, vs. RACHAEL CLAMAN KLEINMAN, efendant. LICATION TO: RACHAEL CLAMAN KLEINMAN Stara Uschitza in the Province of Kaminitz Podolsk, Russia You are hereby required to ap- Bill of Comfplaint in the above styled and entitled cause on January Ist, 1940 otherwise the al- legations therein contained will be taken as confessed. This order to be published once a week for four consecutive weeks in the Key West Citizen, a news- paper published in Key West, Flor- ida. Done and ordered this 27th day of Novemb A. D. (c. € Ross C Sawyer Clerk Circuit Court, Monroe County, Florida. By: (Sd.) Florence E. Sawyer, Deputy Clerk, 5-12-19-26,1939 nov28; dec — THY IT TODAY — } The Favorite In Key West STAR > BRAND CUBAN COFFEE ON SALE AT ALL GROCERS Let Us Estimate on YOUR Printing POSTERS BOOKLETS STATIONERY OFFICE FORMS . at Reasonable Prices PHONE 51 THE ARTMAN PRESS THE CITIZEN BLDC. Thompson Enterprises - INCORPORATED ICE DIVISION PHONE NO. 8

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