The Key West Citizen Newspaper, January 19, 1940, Page 3

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FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1940 YESTERDAY: Lovely, twenty- four year old Sue Davenport leads an enjoyable life with her brother, Allen. She is perfectly satisfied with things as they are, but Allen begins to wonder why she doesn’t get married. Chapter Two River Bluff “JT DOESN'T seem to me—well, normal, Sue, for you to be so indifferent to men at your age,” said Allen. “You're as emotionally immature as a child. You ought to be blushing and palpitating, ae when the doorbell or lephone rings, half out of your wits with joy one day, dissolved in tears the next—” “What on earth have you been reading Allen? The Development of the Emotions in Females Be- ‘tween Nineteen and Thirty? or some such idiocy? Out of my wits with joy one day, dissolving in tears the next! It sounds exactly like a Victorian female.” She half closed her eyes until the lon; black lashes tangled. “Old stu Buddy! Girls don’t behave like that in these days, I assure you. Not even Barbara — lately at Jeast.” “Doesn’t she?” He seemed re- lieved. “I remember she used to, and I suppose I’ve been subcon- sciously expecting you to do the sgame—like catching the measles. But,” he said, “I understand now it’s not necessary to have those kid diseases any more. Maybe it’s the same with sentimental at- tacks.” “Maybe it is,” she agreed, and both fell silent watching the leaping flames on the hearth, But when, two hours later, she laid aside her book and came to tell her brother goodnight, she said a trifle forlornly: “Are you disap- pointed in me, Allen? Do you think ['m a hard-hearted. little green 5 done that’s never going to ripen? I wouldn’t mind falling in love, you know,” she told him se- riously. “But—but one can’t, can one? By sheer will power, I mean? Just pick out an eligible man and say ‘I will now fall in love with this eminently desira- ble person!’” She seated herself on the arm of his chair and laid. her head somewhat wearily against his shoulder. He tightened his arm about her protectingly. “No, Sue dear, of course that isn’t how it comes. And I’ve made a fool of myself as usual, gettin; bs all stirred up like this. ingover from those first weeks after Dad died when you and I were left alone. I suppose I leaned over backward, trying to be a whole family to you. Now forget it, Sue, promise me! It would serve me right if I'd stirred you up so you fell for the first young Ri squeak who comes into your ife after tonight!” = "He fooked up" and sdeing” tears im her eyes, pulled out his own big handkerchief and dried them tenderly. “Forget it,” he said again. “Forest has nothing on me when it comes to talking rot, it appears.” “Well, but, Allen—but, Allen,” she answered unsteadily, “you don’t want to m me off, you don’t want to get rid of me right mow—do you?” “Darling goose, I do not! What I really want you to do is to trot off to bed and put this whole silly conversation right out of your mind! You're a grownup woman mow, and there’s genuine good FOUR TIE FOR FIRST IN BOGIE FEATURE EVENT AT COUN- TRY CLUB ATTRACTS MANY WOMEN The weekly Blind Bogie tourn- ament at the Country Club yes- terday found the largest number of players competing for the prizes that have played this sea-! son. There were four tied for first position—Miss Elizabeth Sharp- ley, Dr. William Kemp, R. Colt of the Casa Marina, and Robert Spottswood. The winning num- ber was 72. Three tied for second position, with the number 74. The trio was John Pinder, Melvin Russell, and R. M. Mahoney. Clem Price turned in the gross score of the day—a fine 78. Summaries: Elizabeth Sharpley, 112-4—72; Dr. Kemp, 84-12—72; R. Colt, 87- 15—72; R. Spottswood, 79-7—72; John Pinder, 84-10—74; Melvin Russell, 84-10—74; R. M. Ma- honey, 80-6—74; B. Grooms, 101- 22—79; C. B. Coke, 99-20—79; Pe- ter Schutt, 100-18—82; O. Mc- Aloon, 103-25—78; Curry Harris, | 89-6—83; Clem Price, 78-8—70; Alton Parks, 81-8—73; Mrs. R. Colt, 104-25—79; L. Plummer, 95-20—75. This year more than ever be- fore the women golfers have taken an interest in the tourna- ment and almost every week one of them carry off one of the top low very ca sense under that curly mop of yours. Remind me of it if I start maundering again!” Happy, Gay Years SUS" wing wakeful long after she had heard her brother seek his own bed, pondered this surprising talk. She went over it again and again: its first note of warning, the curious -persistence Adlen had showed; Allen, whose advice was usually ies in the fewest possible words! | Was he trying to prepare her, for some news of his own, or was he really worried about her wholeness of heart? She Scoget back on the last five years. They had been happy haa? ay years, with Maggie to k after the housekeeping and nothing for Sue to do but enter- tain her brother’s friends, sitting with demure dignity opapsite him at table, shop with Barbara in the mornings, drive her own small car about as she would, run down to Kansas City every week or so for a play or a party, keep up her French with old Madame Loiselle, her music with Scarletti ;..it had all been fun, fun! Sure- ly it was not going to end now? “Why should it, idiot?” she in- quired of herself as the clock in the living-room struck twelve. “What on earth are you getting yourself so worked up about? Allen has these attacks of con- science every so often, just as he said. There was that time he de- cided I was too thin, and made me drink raw eggs and cream twice a day—ugh! And there was the evening he caught Forest teaching me to smoke, and sim- ply raised old Ned about it! This tonight means nothing —abso- lutely nothing!” Nevertheless she tossed for an- | other hour before she finally fell asleep, her hand tucked under her cheek as usual but a faint frown knitting her black brows even in slumber. The next afternoon she went to the river bluff again, this time driving her car right up to the great stones which protected the edge against the thousand foot drop. The spot had always been a fa- vorite one with her. Her father had brought her here when she was a child, pointing out the changes the sullen river had made, showing her the flat coun- try on the other side where once the Indians had roved undisputed. She remembered one glorious day when a tall, gentle-voiced newspaper man from: Denver had pointed out the exact spot from which the Pony Express rider had boarded the ferry boat on the first lap of his picturesque journey. “Why do you always want to come up here?” Barbara demand- ed now and then. “It’s always the same old view.” But it was never the same view, Sue told herself; never were river: dbars ¢ hills ‘quite ‘the’-same. Born in one of the most: picturesquely interesting of all Middlewest towns, she had been steeped in its history and traditions. From wheré'she stood she could see the spot on which candy kettles had boiled for more than a century. She liked to think of the young Frenchman brought especially from St. Louis to cater to the bold fur-trader’s sweet tooth; of the unpretentious log cabin in which “molasses stew” was made for the ’49 emigrants, Sonar the long winter in camps about the village, “waiting for grass.” It thrilled her even yet to remember that spe- THE WEATHER Observation taken at 7:30 a. m., 75th Mer. Time ‘Temperatures Highest last 24 hours west last night ean - Normal ... Sincsente “Precipitation 24 hours endin; 73 Lo’ N 70 Rainfall, 7:30 a. mi inches __- Total rainfall since Jan. LE inches Deficiency inches - . Total rainfall since January inches Deficiency inches ef Tomorrow's Alma: Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset : Tomorrew‘s Tides (Naval Base) AM. 0:12 11:21 High . 6:50 6:00 Barometer at 7 30 a. m., today Sea level 29.95 Wind Direction and Velocity E—6 miles’ per hour Relative Humidity 100% ¢ N.B.—Comfortable in since Jan. since Jan. 1, 0.89 P.M. Low should be a few points low tnean temperature i FORECAST (Till 7:30 p.m., Saturday) Key West and Vicinity: Cloudy, preceded by rain this afternoon panddowsying? ‘ BY LOUISE PLATT HAUCK ‘cially made “sticks” of winter- een, clove, a dozen flavor- figs brought ail the way by train from Boston itself, had been essed by mothers and sweet- earts into the hard young hands of the boyish Express riders to lighten their dangerous journey. Violent Crash ‘HE trees had been cleared from this high point and a level parking place made for mo- torists who like herself loved the superb. view. It was deserted this | late October afternoon. Sue sat in ‘her car, her lip caught beneath her teeth, still puzzling over Al- len’s inexplicable words of the evening before. “Hi! Something crashed violently into her car from behind, sending it forward until its wheels were stopped by the great rocks; bump- ing her head smartly against the wheel and driving her téeth through the scarlet satin of her lip. As always when she was frightened, rage seized her. “Have you no sense at all?” she cried. She was out of the car in a flash and standing before a road- ster in which a very white young man sat limply. “With practicall: an entire block of vacant groun must you choose the identical spot where one lonely car is parked? Or were ace trying to commit suicide and I got in your way?” To her mounting fury he made no answer; merely essayed a sick. ly smile at her and slumped a Ii tle further down on the sloping seat of the smart car. ‘ “{ believe you’re drunk!” she said with icy contempt. He sighed like some one emerg- ing from ether. “No—I’'m not. I damn well wish was though,” he assured her earnestly. “I thought—” he gulped and wet his dry lips with his tongue—“by George, I thought for one awful second that I’d pushed you right over rocks and every- thing.” He fumbled for his hand- kerchief; dabbled at his suddenly wet forehead. “I don’t dare get out just yet; ’fraid my knees would give way under me.” She was not in the least ap- peased by his obvious fright. Her eyes were enormous in her small pale face, and smouldered under- neath their inky brows. ‘I'm waiting for you to ex- plain!” “Brakes. Nothing held. 1 grabbed the emergency but—” “And do you usually drive on high hills without any brakes?” The color was beginning to creep back into his face, and he sat a little straighter. “Look here! Let me explain, won't you? I haven’t touched) this car for a month. Lent it to a friend who was touring the Ozarks. I picked it up about fif- teen minutes ago — downtown somewhere—and drove it up here to have a look at the river. Uphill all. the way; so. I. didn’t consider the brakes were all shot to h— Pieces until I tried to stop along- side of you and .. . didn’t. It’s the truth,” he insisted, seeing her sternness had not abated under this explanation. “You ought to have looked be- fore you started up here!” she stormed. “You ought not be al- lowed.to drive! You ought to have your license taken away from you! If you’d hit me just a little harder—or at just the right angle—I’d be down there this minute, struggling in the river. That is, if I were alive at all,” she added. Continued tomorrow r SIMI LI LI SS SS. PONCE DE LEON | DEFEATS CONCHS Telegrarn received this | morning at the High School related of the defeat suffered by the focal High ‘School's basketball team at the hands of Ponce De Leon school in Miami. The score of the game, played last night, ‘was 33 to 21. The local team plays Homestead High School to- night, before returning home. An exhibition game may be Played tomorrow night with some team in the Miami area. “;eolder, with cold wave in north “yand central portions, temperaturejone claps and whines and steps} 8° to 24° in north and around ‘5° to 32° in central portion to- night; Saturday fair, colder in south and east portions. CONDITIONS Pressure is moderately low this morning in Atlantic and Pa- cific coast districts; while the strong western high pressure area now overspreads most of the re- mainder of the country. Precipitation, mostly in the |form of light to moderate snow, ‘has, occurred since yesterday morning from Gulf coast districts ‘northeastward over the Atlantic | States) and there has also been! ‘light:to moderate snow in por- |tions of the Plateau, Rocky Moun- | tain, and Plains States, and up- per Mississippi Valley and Lake |as a professional with shoes up THE KEY WEST CITIZEN NATURE NOTES } By J. C. GALLOWAY Reprinted From Port Allegany (Penna.) Reporter and Argus J. C. Galloway again writes ‘Give me nickle’ he says; ‘I sing vividly of Key West and its at- five songs for five cents’. Failing tractions for the benefit of his | recognition for the moment, he northern friends in Port Alle-j.volunteers as guide, telling us of gany, Penn. Recently The Citi- the birds; and plucking a sprig zen reproduced in two parts\the from a ‘euphorbia...with. round description Mr, Galloway Ayrfte ‘forked twigs tells us, ‘This is a of the people, homes ‘and flowers “wish-bone tree’. ,‘Five songs are of Key West, ‘which was priritéd too. many’, says the Eden lady. in hig home town newspaper. ; TID give you a penny for one Mri and Mrs. Galloway plan to song’. Ignoring at first, at last he leave.this city next week follow- |flings belly on the ground and up ing an extended visit. ~-tagain and chants in Spanish, with The, following article appeared ‘one last line in English, ‘come to ‘in the Reporter and Argus :on /Key West for a day’. No melody, January 11: and no music in it. The lady “Well, friends, we are going to 'hands him his penny, but both invite“the whole bunch of you to eyes are on the man, to see if come-down to Key West for today another is forthcoming. and 106k around. Lots of folks! do come for a day only, and no matter’ where you come from you , will be weleome; we saw a car with }'Alaska license the other day, ‘and another with one from Hawaii, the latter driven by a young lady with a _ faultless cream-in-the-coffee complexion. So come on down and we will |show you around a bit. Not that 'we have seen half of it ourselves, but nobody sees it all in a day, either. “But here is the tower. Inside, ja spiral iron stairway goes to the top, landing after landing, small- er and smaller. Let us go up and see what Key West amounts to. Here at the top is the lamp; a ;cluster of electric bulbs inside a cylinder made of prism rings. A ,reflector above returns light that might be wasted straight up. Out- ‘side, a railed walk circles the tower; it’s safe, but a dizzy height and you will feel like holding on od to the rail. And below us is the “If you drive, you will come island city; with its blue-green down the ‘Overseas Highway’, it seas around it: About half the being the only one there is, which ‘island is covered, by the city; to crosses a narrow channel (not the southeast is a partly vacant much, if any, wider than Port’s corner of wild scrub land, almost Mill Street Bridge), where there sea-level with the salt-ponds of is an arch reading ‘Welcome to;two hundred years ago, still laid Key West’. Right or left, it is,off in squares by rock fences. three miles to the city on curved j Sa boulevards; the left or south one: “These are still shallow tidal with the Atlantic at its sea-wall, ponds today. But in those days {the north one along the island they were cleaned to the flat shoals of the Gulf. We take the jrock floor, and sea-water let in, \north one, with a row of young , Sealed and evaporated for com- coconut palms along the sea-wall |mercial production. Near them is jand pink and green sea beyond, |an old red brick fort, abandoned; set.with dark green islands; while | we should investigate that; there there are shallow lakes and man- is another or two on this shore. grove tangles inside; come to a Beyond the ponds and almost out charming picture of the yacht /of sight is the south boulevard, a \basin with shaded homes along ;narrow wall apparently out at |the waterside, enter Division sea. To the east is the claim of \Street, with the park on the left keys over which we came, and and richly foliaged colorful lawns then the city, all around and be- on the right; run through a small,neath our feet. Then the Army |business section; pass the big reservation and the military air- \graded school building; and soon port. Northeast is the harbor, after the park-like grounds of the natural and forty feet deep, and |Convent of Mary Immaculate, beyond, where the big Havana jand by and by turn right on Du- steamer comes in on Thursday. \val, the ‘Main Street’ of the city. On the city side, in a curved bay |Old and narrow, it is a one-way.,that.cuts.out the corner of the istreet. Sce that’ little cottage island are the fishermen’s store on the right, with the odd Wharves, the sponge and turtle Caribbean flasks and bottles and docks, and the retail fish mar- strange looking antique stuff kets. Then comes the govern- there? We ought to walk by ment area we have just come some time and investigate that; | through: alongside on the west is or maybe Bertha Helmer will vacant land belonging to the anyway today while we are look- Navy grounds, filled in from the ing at something else. Here Sea. running to. we believe, the about the mammoth five-and-ten, New submarine base”. \Key West’s only chain store, i the main business district; La Concha Hotel and the Cham- ber of Commerce are here; but we go on and turn at the Madrid |Club, close to the water-front and one of the ship docks. Now we are getting somewhere. Here is the Art Center, and next it, in its green lawn is the Aquarium. But this time we will go on. This is a_general section; here is the pp ay LIONS CLUB IN EXHI- building devoted to lighthouse | matters; and the Navy grounds BITION FOLLOWING MA- and buildings, walled in from the -NAVY TUSSEL street. We turn down Whitehead escoieeiee Li \street past them, and a block to, the tight is the Weather Bureau. | is Visitors are ‘weltome to these | By ULRIC GWYNN, JR., places or some of them, but we, Tonight at the High School |will go down Whitehead to the|/GY™, local basketball enthusiasts | Lighthouse, in the middle of the will witness what is promised to jcity. Here the grounds are small; |but park-like, heavily shaded; |palms outside the sidewalk, stone |fence within. is i Kime the Second Installment of “Nature Notes” will appear in an early issue of The Citizen MIAMI QUINTET — games ever played on a_ local court, when the Key West Lions Club, local league champions, clash with the Westminster Pres- byterian Church five of Mia This game will get underway at |8:30 o'clock. “Here come two small negro |boys, ‘Fo’ a penny apiece we dance fo’ you’’, they say in mixed Spanish-English. Cheap enough; iand they go to it. The smaller ‘he age-old traditional . S. Marines and Navy, rivals, \lightly; the older does a_ step-| dance, slapping his bare feet on the concrete with as loud a clack ™atched and an interesting game ‘should result from their playing. north. Inside the gate a pome- granate, a slender twigged bush | eight feet tall. carries a few crim- | |son fruits. At the house corner} 'a Stephanotis vine holds double | milkweed pods. There is a gold- ‘ish pool in dark shade; beyond is an immense spreading banyan tree, under whose dense top |stands ‘the desk ‘with the register | |for visitors. Beside it is the) ‘lighthouse towér; but ‘first let us |go on to see the birds. _ : GR ENBES ag | “Here in the back corner of the | jyard are numerous cages, open-| lair screened sheds with doves, or tonight; much colder tonight; region, and light rain in extreme parrakeets, African finches, Java Saturday fair and colder; fresh|southern Florida and on the |sparrows and others; unfortunate-, to strong northwest winds. Small eraft warnings displayed Key jnorth Pacific coast. ' Decidedly colder weather has lly not labeled, but all happy and imany full of song. And here al PLAYS TONIGHT be one of the most exciting cage | 1 | e AI 2, Your Wedding An- As a forerunner to this event! will | meet each other on the floor. | Both of these quintets are well- | | POPC OCSCOSVEDE® 2229299 9999999999; 3; PAGE THREE SPEAK OUT NOW, GARNER URGES CLASSIFIED COLUMN se eee cee Announce Regardless Of Roossevelt Desires, He Taunts. se eee eee ‘ALL STUNG BY PRESIDENTIAL BEE By PRESTON GROVER, AP Feature Service Writer WASHINGTON, Jan. 19.—Vice-,are in the picture. Utah has President Garner is putting the'adopted a general primary since bee on fellow candidates to fol- King was nominated last, so it low his example by announcing poses a new strategy, both for for the presidential nomination himself and his opposition. { regardless of whether President; A constellation of minorities Roosevelt seeks a third term. might stop King in a convention, | He has suggested to Postmas./|but in a primary it simply would ter General Farley and Senator {divide the opposition and virtual- | Wheeler of Montana that if they |ly assure his nomination. That is wish to court the favors of Dame the picture Eccles sees. Hl Democracy they ought to give, Our information is that he has | her an opportunity to “cuddle jauthorized certain prominent up” without fear they will run Democrats in Utah to determine if Roosevelt comes into the pic. | whether he can have the field to ture. himself against King. If he can, Report has it that only a few and further research indicates he minutes before the Jackson day |has a fair chance to uproot King, dinner in Washington, Garner he will enter the race, so our in- twitted Farley about his half and formant has it. He won’t enter half candidacy and suggested the field just to divide the op- that he address the assembly as position to King, who has proved “Fellow Candidates”. himself a formidable candidate in Farley did exactly that and got times past. ja great burst out of the hundred- | Defense Attacked | |dollar-a-plate guests. However, Reactions in Congress indicate Garner people do not accept this ; that President Roosevelt, the | \little pleasantry on the part of army and the navy have not Farley as any indications that he worked the best possible strategy jis “all out” for the nomination. in seeking more money for naval Nor has Wheeler made an i ind army upbuilding. There is statement which even approxi- far more unannounced opposition mately rivals the 48-word state- |to the increased defense program ment by which Garner put him-'than finds its way into print. self on the dotted line. Strategic fumble number one! Of course, it.is not dumb poli-| appears to have been the scheme tics for Mr. Garner to try to get for saddling the defense program more candidates in his corner.; with the burden of a special de- Several candidates, taken in the fense tax. Members who were not mass, would constitute a solid |.bold enough to come out in the “stop Roosevelt” bloc. |open and fight a defense program That would be more soup injof itself are finding the tax |Garner’s bowl, because at present scheme a platform from which to he is, willy nilly, a “stop Roose- jhit at both. |velt” movement all by himself. | Further, there were samples of Eccles To Senate? wrath at what some members felt A litle sister to the third term)was an effort to hide a $4,000,- ;mystery is whether Marriner S. 000 appropriation to begin a de- Eccles, Federal Reserve Board; velopment of Guam as a more ‘chairman and inventor of part of ,useful military base. It didn’t the New Deal, will run for the |show up in the budget. Not until Senate in Utah. | Admiral Stark, chief of naval op- | Senator King, a foe of much of erations, was testifying before the the New Deal, is u» for re-elec-; House Naval Affairs Committee tion. Several possible candidates jdid it pop out. | —— | sengers booking at Key West: | TRANSPORTATION Mrs. H. M. Lay, Mrs. Ofelia Go- | | mez, Aguelio Gomez, John G. | Seer (Sawyer, Gloria Sawyer and W.} S.S. Cuba Brings 59 Passengers! A Solador. } | Steamship Cuba, of the P. and | O. S..S. Co. arrived yesterday afternoon 4 o'clock from Havana with 128 pasengers, 66 first cabin |} and three second cabin passengers | for Key West; 55 first cabin and j four second cabin pasengers for | THE ADVENTURES OF ‘Tampa. | SHERLOCK HOLMES On the manifest of the ship||and UNEXPECTED FATHER was listed the following items: | Matinee—Balcony 10c, Or- For Key West, seven tons of|{ Chestra 15-20c: freight, one automobile and three | sacks of mail; for Tampa, 76 tons | Subscribe to The Citizen. MONROE THEATER Basil Rathbone—Ida Lupino Night—15-25c LOST LOST—Bank book yesterday aft- ernoon. Mrs. A. E. Sharpley. 418 William street. jan19-1tx FOR RENT UNFURNISHED FIVE - ROOM APARTMENT, first floor. Ap- ply 1004 Southard street. jan18-2tx LARGE AIRY ROOM, suitable for couple, kitchen privileges, garage. 617 Ashe street. jan18-3tx MISCELLANEOUS OWL TAXI CO.—24-hour | serv- ice. Phone 9126. janl-mc FOR SALE FOR SALE—1938 Ford Coupe: low mileage; radio; excellent condition. Apply, 323 Elizabeth street. jan17-3tx Phone BOCA CHICA, 90 acres. 8: jani9-3t 26-R. SUGAR LOAF WATERFRONT. 98 acres near Pirates Cove: Phone 826-R. jan19-3t OLD PAPERS FOR SALE~ Three bundles for 5c. The Citi- zen Office. nov25-tf THREE PFLEUGER TEMPLAR REELS. In good working con- dition. Will sell cheap. Also, have Redwing 28-36 horsepow- er motor with many new parts. Will sell entirely or by parts. Apply Box P, The Citizen. jan19-tf LOT, Cor. streets. street. Duval Apply and Louisa 1212 Olivia nov23-mon-fri HOUSE and TWO LOTS, nine rooms, all modern conven- iences, beautiful lawn, double garage. All taxes paid, furn- ished, radio, piano, typewriter, etc. $4500 cash or $2500 down, balance in 1% years. Robt. J. Lewis, 1611 Von Phister street. decli-s TWO LOTS on _ Washington street near White. $750 for quick sale. Apply 1219 Pearl street. jan5-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. mayl7-tf of freight, one automobile and 29) | sacks of mail. The vessel sailed for Tampa at 5 o'clock with the following pas- [8 felock with | Ce | | Things To | Remember! deliver your copy of IAA AAA Ad Ad The letter your | wife gave you to | mail. “* — niversary. 3. The printers who are best equipped to do your work. The first two items are up to you alone. . .As to the third— IF YOU ARE ALREADY AMONG THE FOLKS ACQUAINTED WITH US, YOU WILL NOT NEED TO BE REMINDED OF OUR QUALIFICATIONS DAILY SEOOIOOMT IIT IIIS SO COMPLAINT SERVICE. ... If you do not Receive Your Copy of The CITIZEN By 6 P. M. PHONE—WESTERN UNION Between 6 and 7 P. M. and a Western Union Messenger Boy will OLE hhh hed Ld dd The Citizen. : & iN | yearn, DELIVERED EVERYWHERE Thompson Enterprises ~ INCORPORATED ICE DIVISION PHONE NO. 8 \spread southward and eastward, |voung Spaniard joins us, about | with subfreezing temperatures in five years old, wearing, after the the middle Gulf coast, and read-|fashion of Spanish or rather ‘Cu-| ings below zero southeastward pan’ small boys, long pants that | much | into’ Tennessee. ‘yest and wrinkle on the ground. | prizes. So far three of the win- West district. ners have been Elizabeth Sharp-' Florida: Cloudy, preceded by ley, Mrs. E. B. Caulkins and Mrs. rain in south and east portions A. C. Graves. | this afternoon or tonight;

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