The Key West Citizen Newspaper, January 30, 1940, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR G2. iat YESTERDAY: Allen says he can’t afford a large house but pleads with Sue to remain with them. Sue has no life of her own since Patsy hes come. Chapter 11 Bob’s House “HE. Bob! | was rather tear- ing along, 1 suppose. I'm so darned glad,’ she said childishly, “to get outdoors for a while. Isn't this simply poisonous weather? A good snowstorm, or really cold clear days that make your blood tingle . . . but this! D’you think we're ever going to see the sun again?” “Tomorrow, prophesied. “It’s clearing, and there’s some color in the west. Where are you bound for, Sue? Any place in particular? If not, may I come along?” He added aggrievedly: “You might say you're glad to see me after my being gone a whole week!” “1 am; ever so glad!” She real- ized with a little start of surprise that this was true. Without know- ing, Bob’s absence had been part of the discontent of the last few days. She stopped suddenly, nar- rowly missing a collision with an old gentleman who carried an um- brella. “Bob, I’ve missed you ter- ribly! 1 thought it was just the rain, and being cooped up so long with Patsy, but I believe your be- ing away had a lot to do with it!” His downward glance was rue- ful. “You don’t add perceptibly to a man’s good opinion of himself, do you, sweet? Have to have it pointed out to you that you've missed him! Well—I suppose I’m making progress, but it seems blamed slow. Maybe by the time we're both gray-headed you'll de- cide you love me, and then a dec- ade later we can rush into mar- riage.” “You don’t have to w know, Bob! In f begged you keen on getting plenty of girls— “Yeah—plenty of girls. I've met | ‘em, I've even loved a few of ’em, —experimentally. But there’s only | one Sue Davenport, and it’s my bad luck to w her and nobody else. Listen, sweet! Let’s get my car and drive out to the house. I/ want to see how the work has gone while I’ve been East. I want to ask | you where you want all the roses} put I’ve ordered.” “You've really bought that lace then? I thought you were} Biufting.” “Telling the simple and un adorned truth is one of the n 1 ways of fooling the public there 1s | —ever know that? I've talked so much about buying that house that nobody believes me. They think the caretaker’s in old Wilming- ton’s employ “As a matter of fact,” he went on, striving to adapt his long strides to her shorter steps, “1 bought it just when I told you I did—less than a month after 1| came here. I thought then you and} I'd be mar: by Chris It’s not my fault that t @ sO} married, there are} on’t lose on it,” she said | It’s a good investment roperty is going up out there.” estment be hanged! I'm g out there, sweet! With or without you. This spring.” “You are!” The dark eyes came | swiftly up, their lashes beaded | with moisture beneath the thin scarlet brim of her hat. | “I am. I've always wanted a home.” | “But—surely you had one? In| New York?” i “Tt wasn’t what | called a home.” | he assured her. “It was a sort of| cross between a museum, a baro- | nial castle and an office building. | And at that, I didn't live in it very long at a time. School, and being | sent to England to help them sell | out the English branch, and estab- | lishing a few factories over here} it’s kept me on the jump.” | “Funny that you'd want to live here. I thought you Easterners | despised the Middle West.” “Not this one! I love this coun- | iry. A fellow can breathe with all | this land about him. I don’t care | for the plains, but your hills are beautiful. And,” he added sig- nificantly, “even if it was the Sa- hara, there are other attractions.” | Acute Distaste i es getting dark, Bob. We'd bet- | ter turn back.” | “You won't drive out to the| house? It’s warm, you know—the lights are on. We can be back be- fore dinner time.” She was about to refuse when suddenly an acute distaste for the room she had left swept over her: the stale air, the faint disorderly look where all had been dainty or- | der months before, Patsy's vague- | ly hostile gaze meeting her own. “If you'll surely have me back before Allen comes!” she stipu- lated. ned as he drove j limits; on even yoni ered houses of the Country Club district. It was the first time she had really inspected the Ted Wilmington house. tt had been an extravagant gesture on the part of a rich man’s son, an avi- UDC Meets } | Local chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy will hold a meeting next Thurs- day afternoon at 4:00 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Stephen R. Douglass on Division street. MARRIAGE LICENSE ISSUED Yesterday afternoon there was issued from the office of County Judge Raymond Lord. a marriage eloved BY LOUISE PLATT HAUCK ation enthusiast who had crashed less than a month before his in- tended marriage. The house was too rambling and a trifle too iso- lated for the average purchaser, so Sue had taken it for granted it had not been sold. “It’s a heavenly site for it, Bob,” she said as they entered the curv- ing drive. “All these magnificent trees, and so high up... I believe you'll be able to see the river on clear days!” “That's one of the reasons | bought it,” he said simply. “I re- member where I saw you first. | knew you'd want a glimpse of your beloved river. Wait till 1 unlo the door. There! Will you walk into your parlor, Sue? Or your hall, anyway?” He touched a button by the door and the square entrance with its fireplace and its beautiful stair- case, bloomed with soft light. “It’s furnished!” she gasped. “1 didn’t know Ted Wilmington had it all ready.” “Pretty nearly. There were gaps here and there which I’ve been fill- ing in. Not that 1 know anything about such things, but there’s a friend of mine in Kansas City who does. She’s been picking up odds and ends for me all winter. Like it. Sue? Here’s the living-room. Runs the length of the house, d’you see? These long windows open onto a formal garden—that is, it’s going to be formal when it’s finished. And you can see the river from here, too!” Hardly giving her time to take in the lovely room with its rugs like faintly gleaming jewels, its white marble fireplace, its deep, comfortable couches and big arm- chairs, he put a hand beneath her elbow and urged her along. “Across the hall, you see, is a jreception room. That's so you won't have to take strangers, or i bores into the intimacy of the other one. And here’s the dining- | room. Big enough to have al] our friends to dinegeh? You love flow- ers so, Sue, that I got the archi- tect to design this alcove affair. It can be shut off to be kept at the proper temperature or i: can stand open—look!” ‘It’s Perfect? HE FLUNG open the wide doors with a flourish and the girl gasped. The glassed-in nook was already sweet with blossoming plants and even as she looked. a tiny fountain rose under the pres- sure of his finger on a concealed button. “Pretty keen, Sue? About what | you'd have fixed yourself, if you'd been consulted?” “Bob, | never, never could have thought of such a lovely thing! It’s perfect! It’s a real winter garden. isn’t it, with gravel paths and flow- ers growing right out of the ground, and all! It’s magic. Bob!” “The flowers are frauds in a way,” he chuckled. “I mean— growing so casually in the ground They’re still in their pots, you know Mayoe they'd do all right if they were out, but I was taking no chances on having them at their best when you first saw them. Want to inspect the culinary re- gions?” Her heart was beating a little fast as she nodded. It touched her. his careful thought for what would or would not please her. Who but Bob would remember how she loved the river, how great a part in her life flowers had always played? “Oh, why can’t | just let myself go and marry him?” she asked herself despairingly. “I'll be twen- ty-five next month, and I like him —I come nearer loving him than any man I've known in my life, 1 can’t go on much longer with Allen and Patsy. | want a home— and this is such a beautiful one! | want children. Bob's everything that most girls dream of. Why can’t | get all thrilled and excited about him? Want him to kiss me— hold me in his arms? Maybe I’m not capable of feeling like that to- ward any man. Maybe I’m one of these fundamentally cold women you read about. If I could be sure of that—if I didn’t think there’d be danger of meeting the right man after I was married, I'd take a chance!” “What are you thinking, stand- ing there in the middle of the kitchen, and not hearing one word I say?” he demanded. “Is any- thingewrong, Sue? I mean—would you like any changes made? Make “em in a minute. vou know. You’ve only to say the word!” “It’s perfect!” she repeated. “It’s only—I was only—wishing I cared enough for you to—to share it with ate a aa His face fell like a grieved child’s. “And don’t you, Sue? Don't you, my darling? I thought —it seems perfectly incomprehensible to me that I can love you so—so utterly, and you not fee! as I do. Perhaps you're not the passion- ately loving kind, Sue. Perhaps you love me now as much as you can. You said—you did say you'd missed me this week!” He sound- ed very young and touching as he spoke; very far removed from the arrogant. man who had light- heartedly proposed to her the first time they had danced together. She looked at him with troubled eyes. Continued tomorrow YOUNG WEBSTER Gloria Hostess | Ice-Skating Star At State Fair At Birthday Party In celebration of her fourth birthday anniversary, Gloria Paul Hyre, daughter of Mr. and |Mrs. Paul Hyre of Seminary street, played host to a large |number of her young friends with ja party at the Armory on Friday, | January 26. Novelty party games, delicious | refreshments, prizes and sur- | prises made up an enjoyable eve- ning for all attending. Little Jennie Mae Russell was jthe lucky winner of the girl’s |prize, while Marius Cruz, Jr., | claimed honors in the boy’s con- | | test. Those who came to make Glo- | ria’s birthday party a happy one were: os | Daffney Ann and Clinton War- ren, Harry and Sharron Rose | Pritchard, Barbara Irene Pritch- ,ard, Bobby and Sonny Sawyer, Glendora Sawyer, Marius Cruz, dr., Jack McMahon, Shirley Papy, |Donald E. Thrower, Lillian Ann Thrower, Judith Pellicier, Peggy | {Lou Gwynn, Edna Louise El- wood, Mary Theodora Sweeting, Priscila Ann Cruz, Mary Ann ;Matchett Jimmy Cooper, Lillian |Russell, Billy Daniels, Charles Roberts, Sylvia Smith, Wayne and | Linda Brantley, Sandra and Randall Warren, Carolyn, Billie and Ralph DuBreuil, Anita Chris- tine Cates, Mary Lou Knight, Jerry and Eddie Pita, Myrna Rae Lewis, Esther Curry, Bernard Waite, Jr., Audrey Ann Richard- son, Freda Mae Weech, Ernestine Medd, Doris Medd. Ann Marcelle Richardson, Shir- ley Fay Bradley, Peter and Diane Knight, Diane and Charles Aux- ier, Bobby Roberts, Carl Ed Graham, Jr., Phyllis Elizabeth Cruz, Nancy Ann Dillon, Frank Vincent Bervaldi, Miriam, Lois and Elizabeth Roberts John Dona- van Cruz, Lawrence Roy Claxton, Jeanne Canova, Ramirez, Carbonell, Glynn, Ray and Dean na Archer, Viola Felton, Joseph Lopez, Jr., Barbara Ann Pinder, | Jacqueline Delaney, Martha Ann Gandolfo, Eleanor Anne Gato, \Celeste Cuervo, Kenneth Arnold, Patricia Brady. Paul Newhouse, Patricia Joyce , Cassidy, Paul and Yvonne Evon Moore, Bruce Wayne Richardson, John Leigh McKillip, Jimmie Ra- ‘new, Gail and Roger Wayne | Sweeting, Carolyn Joan Phelps, Kenneth Brady, Jo» Ann Valen- zuela, Deanne Deprimo, Pene Johnson, Martha Mora, Nancy Lee Pellicier, Patricia Ann John- ‘son, Sandra Johnson, Joyce Val- enzuela, Katherine Brady, Fausto and Marie Renduelez, Betty and Ray Filer, Jennie Mae Russell, Sam B. Curry, Il, W. H. Brady, \Jr., Raul Perez Jr., Mildred Lynn Archer, Perey Curry, Jr., John ‘Kenneth Curry, Joan Ayala, Gus |Ayala, Jr., Gloria Suckman, Al- bert Pita, Rose Marie Bradley, Lauriette Russell, Betty Russell and others, Many Guests At Ocerseas Hotel Recent registrations at the Overseas Hotel include the fol- lowing: Judge and Mrs. H. E. Sackett, of Gary, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. U. Hallingworth and party of eight from Wash- ington, D. C. Postmaster J. L. Host of Con- roe, Texas, with his daughter, Mrs. W. C: Miller. Mr. Host is a Spanish-American War Veteran and was extended an invitation by the Cuban Government to visit that country. He and his , daughter left Sunday for Ha- vana. Others who left for Havana from this hostelry were: | Mr. and Mrs. Guangi of Chi- |cago, Tl, Mr. and Mrs. E. H. 'Nemack of .Florence, S. C., Mr. |and Mrs. H. Kluck and family of Cleveland, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Brightman and Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Bright- nan and Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Pen- nie, all of Green Bay, Wis.. re- curned from Cuba recently, fol- owing a short vacation there and a ten days stay at theOver- seas, Old-Time Actors Visit Here Mr. and Mrs. Thaddeus Breton _cf Keansburg, N.J., are in the THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Barbara Louise | Dorothy and Loretta; TAMPA, Jan. 30.—Just an innovation for orange-picking Flor- | idians, the Florida State Fair this year includes a big ice-skating | show among its attractions, and petite Dorothy Fenner of Detroit. who won acclaim as the Northwestern Athletic Association Cham. pior. fancy skater, has been booked to head the show. Here she is as she glides out on the ice to introduce a company of fifteen ice | chorines and five other trick and fancy skaters, at the Fair which opened ioday and continues until February 10. ART.. 0% A ec Notes and happenings in connection with growing Art activities in Key West will be published weekly in this column in The Citizen, sponsored by the WPA Key West Art Center. A SOCIAL EVENING for art- ists every Thursday at the Art ;Cénter is Townsend Morgan, director, to enable members of the Key West Society of Artists to get acquaint- ed with newly-arrived artists and renew contact with each oth- er. A pot of good coffee “a la Pepe” will be kept bubbling to istimulate artistic converse. Such weekly get-togethers should be a valuable stimulus to all the art- ists and will serve to spike such irumors as the current one that the Dudeys have left town—caus- jed entirely by their voluntary hibernation in the new home in the suburbs. So rally around, artists, and meet your brothers of the palette! CARL MILLES, whose name is, |a contemporary by-word for great | sculpture, is in town. The pres- ‘ence of such a man as Mr. Milles is an honor to the city and to the artist colony. We hope your visit with.us will be long and pleasant, Mr. Milles. OTHER NEW ARRIVALS: to the colony are Oscar Howard, ,il- lustrator, and Franklin Jaminson, printer, both of whom expect to remain on the island several months. A SURPRISE for Key West is lurking up the sleeves of the Key |West Artists’ smocks. Just what it is will be revealed later, but it promises to be good. TWENTY-TWO THOUSAND visitors plus 472, is the, attend- ance figure at the Art Center for the -past year-and-a-half! The Center can be proud of that “gate”, especially since Art was more or less a dead issue as far jas the townspeople were concern- ed before the Federal Art Proj- ect took over. It proves that Key West Art is interesting and vital and can be made a self-support- ing tourist-attracting industry— provided the local people give it the support it deserves. —— THE NEW FACE at the head vf this column is a contribution from the versatile talent of Cyril Marshall. The column will hence- forth appear on Tuesday instead of Monday, thereby giving its new authors more time to recover from the weekend. Thursda | “Do you know the difference /city for an extended stay. For- | 4 !between a hot dog and a_live/rerly known as Ted and Corinne dog?” {Breton, they were a famous “A hot dog wears tights, and a|\vaudeville team of thirty years live dog pants”. president of Harvard in 1640. license authorizing the wedding of Edwin E. Poor and Mildred E. Patrick. It was not stated by the parties who secured the certificate who was to perform the ceremony, jego. ‘this is their first visit to Key West. * The Bretons are now’ engaged in the real estate business in Eeansburg, New Jersey, where Mr. Breton is also police magis- trate. They are at “The Trees” on White street, | 9. | Below are the Answers to Today's Daily Quiz printed on Page 2 They claim to have played| wa jevery town and hamlet in the} Nathaniel Eaton was the first')States, Mexico and Canada, yet! Strait of Magellan. 212° F. Krone. Oliver Stanley. Carat. The Volga Football. Kilogram. Gal’-ak-si; not ga-lak’-si. Yes. 1. 2. 3. } 4. 5. 6. Ese 8. 10. «| CASA MARINA NOTES) MR: AND MRS. WARNER ‘MOORE, JR., have returned to the Casa Marina for several days. i | They were here earlier in the! | season but left for a trip to Cuba | ;and then on to Panama. How- lever, they found it extremely hot | ‘in Panama, every day, they said, | |the temperature being around 96) degrees. They had planned on} being gone three weeks but were being planned by ‘back sooner, staying only a week | two LOTS las they found they had enjoyed | jtheir stay in Key West much} jmore than any place they have! ; been, ' TWO-STORY HOUSE AND LOT. | YESTERDAY was a wonderful day for the sports enthusiasts and | ‘many went to the Country Club for a round of golf, whfle ‘others \took advantage of the tennis courts. Among those touring the links were Mr. and Mrs. Robert | ‘Colt, Mr. and Mrs. DeWitt Balch, | Mr. and Mrs, Herbert Hoffman, | jand R. D. Patterson. Those play-| ing tennis were Miss Katherine Ordway, Mrs. S. S.. Durfee and} Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Gross. | | THERE WERE NO BOATS) |out from the Casa Marina docks yesterday. However, the guests at the hotel received quite a thrill when Clifford D. Mallory, of Greenwich, Conn., in his priv- ate cruiser, stopped by the dock in the afternoon after a day’s fishing in the Stream. In addi- tion to boating a sailfish measur- | ing five feet one inch, he also} caught 18 mackerel, a tuna. and} several bonita. Mr. Mallory is in| Key West aboard the schooner | “Bonnie Dundee” to enjoy the| excellent fishing that abounds off the shores of the Island City. | THERE ARE SEVERAL| BOATS out today from the hotel ,dock and now that the bad seige of weather is a thing of the past! the anglers should start bringing in the catches that have made ‘Key West one of the most’popular | spots in the fishing world. IT HAS BEEN ANNOUNCED by tennis professional Eddie Cas- sity at La Casa that there will be a mixed doubles tournament the middle of February. One of these tournaments was held a few weeks ago and proved very | successful. There should be! some very good tennis on display as several fine players play regu- |! ‘arly on the courts. | Rev. Wing Confirms | Class Tonight Right Reverend John“D. Wing, Bishop of South Florida, will ad- minister the Sacrament of j firmation to a class of candidates | at Saint Paul's, Chutch tonight at | 8:00 o'clock!” | | cnet Our sincere thariks is extended }to our friends and neighbors for |their many acts of kindness and | sympathy extended us during our recent bereavement, the death of our beloved one, Mrs. Nellie} Hicks. We are indeed grateful ; |to those who gave the use of} their cars, the donors of the; beautiful floral tributes and mes-! sages of sympathy. VERNON HICKS, MR. AND, MRS. RALPH HIGGS AND FAMILY. jan30-1t COMPLETELY FURNISHED | CLASSIFIED COLUMN RED AND PINK RADIANCE ROSES at all times. FREE-| jan23-27-30; feb3-6-10-13-17-20-24-27 | FOR RENT | | | \ { i] | home. ton St. Bath. LOST | LOST — Yesterday somewhere | between sunrise and sunset, | two golden hours, each set with sixty diamond minutes. No re- | ward is offered for they are gone forever.—Horace Mann. | FOR SALE |CENTRALLY LOCATED LOT with access from two streets. 50x200’. Ideal site for apart- ment. Will sell really cheap for cash. Apply Box C, clo The Citizen. jan27-4t | FINE 50°x100’ LOT on United street near Simonton. Very cheap for cash. Apply Box B, clo The Citizen. jan29-2t | | FOURTEEN-FT. V-BOTTOM CYPRESS BOAT; Four Horse Johnson Outboard Motor; Four Life Preservers, One Fire Ex- tinguisher; Pair of Oars and Row Locks; Anchor with Rope —all for $150.00. Apply 1217 Petronia street. jun27-s TYPEWRITING PAPER — 500 sheets, 75c. The Artman Press, may19-t# | FOR SALE—2 lots, each 50x100. Run from Washington to Von Phister street. $850. Apply rear 1217 Petronia street. apr14-s | being observed in every state and jmore than five thousand com- | SIGNS—“For Rent”, “Rooms For; munities on February 1. It it Rent”, “Apartment For Rent”, | “Private Property, No Tres- | passing”, 15c each. THE ART-, MAN PRESS. nov25-tf | on Washington ; street near White. $750 for| quick sale. Apply 1219 Pearl street. jani-s | | 616 Francis Street. $2500.00— $500.00 down, balance $25.00 monthly, 6% interest. Price re- | duced for cash. Apply Box) R.L., The Citizen. jan22-s | PERSONAL CARDS, $1.25 per | 100, THE ARTMAN PRESS. jun25-t2 | HOTEL AND _ APARTMENT | HOUSE, 1104 Division ‘Street. Everything new, iences, 13 rooms, 4 baths. all - conven- $60.00 monthly 6% Price reduced for cash. Apply Box R.L., The Citizen. jan22-s COMPLETELY FURNISHED HOUSE AND THREE LOTS at} corner of Patterson Avenue and 5th Street, facing north side boulevard. $7,000.00—$1, 500.00 down and balance $40.00 monthly, 6% interest. Price reduced for cash. Ideal loca- tion for Cabin Camp. Also, | several vacant lots—low prices, terms. Apply Box R.L., The Citizen. jan22-s THREE PFLEUGER TEMPLAR REELS. In good working con- dition. Will sell cheap. Also, have Redwing 28-36 horsepow- MAN’S, 1121 Catherine street. | ROOM and.BOARD in private cording to. Dr. Hoag ° . ie barat fquaint the public with the prob-| t TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1940 OBSERVE HYGIENE | DAY FEBRUARY 1. \STATE HEALTH OFFICER GIVES PURPOSE OF OBSERVANCE { “The principal object of the 1940 observance of Social Hy- giene Day on February 1”, ac B: ‘McCreary, tate healthy sStissto .. ae- Jems of medical quackery and self-treatment in relation to ‘syphilis and gonorrhea. “The seriousness of this men- ace to individual and public health cannot be over-estimated”, Dr. McCreary says. Dr. McCreary stated that de- spite educational efforts of the State Board of Health and other organizations, many persons still |do not appreciate that only a ‘competent physician can proper- ly diagnose and treat spyhilis and gonorrhea. “The result”, he pointed out, “is that many un- informed men and women are victimized every day by medical quacks, unscrupulous vendors of PERSONAL MENTION Miss Josephine Struck, school teacher of Pensacola, who had been visiting for several days with friends in the city. was a passenger on the early bus this morning going back to resume her duties. Mrs. Arthur Close, who had been visiting as a guest at the Casa Marina, left on the 7 o’cloek bus this morning for a visit in Miami, and will go back to her home in New York. Arthur Mulberg: and Joseph Knight left on the early bus this morning for Miami to secure new cars which are to be added to the stock of the Chevrolet sales } department. who arrived Sunday on the afternoon bus for a short viisit in the city and was a guest at the Hotel La Concha, left on the morning bus for his home in Albany, N. Y. Edward Jones, Horace C. Stebbins, of New | York, who arrived last week ‘on |the Yacht Marley-O, which is }berthed at the P. and O. dock, has taken reservations at the Hotel La Concha, awaiting the !worthless remedies and home ‘nostrums, and some unethical druggists who prescribe for those serious diseases without being properly qualified to do so. The jattention upon ‘our families and our children”, $9,- | 500.00—$2,000.00 down, balance | interest. | druggist is not qualified to pre- | eee you even if he has had the e disease himself. . His business is to fill prescriptions, |not to write them. | “By meetings, motion pictures jand other means, Fourth Social | Hygiene Day in Florida will seek \to clarify many of the half-truths jconcerning syphilis and gonorr- hea and once again focus public their prepetual threat to young men and women, |he said. National Social Hygiene Day is being sponsored by the Ameri- can Social Hygiene Association in cooperation with state and local health departments, social hygiene societies and other or-{ ganizations. CARD OF THANKS We wish to sincerely thank everyone who helped in any way during the sickness and death of our loved one, Mary Thompson} Bazo. Especially do we thank those who’ contributed towards making the trip to Cleveland hospital possible. Also we thank everyone for the many beautiful floral offerings and use of their | cars. The kind service of Dr. J. Y. Porter is remembered too with gratefulness. ¥ ‘ | MIGUEL BAZO.AND FAMILY | AND MR. AND MRS. ‘JOHN F. | THOMPSON AND FAMILY. jan30-1tx arrival of Mrs. Stebbins. Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Dewey and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mulholland, of Toledo, Ohio, are visiting in the city on a sightseeing tour, and are pleased with the many inter- esting things seen. EVEN IN ADAM'S TIME Instructor (in geography lesson) —Now, can anyone tell me where |we find mangoes? Gob—Yes; wherever goes. woman [ Soeest of v7) cKs with VaroRus “™ Palace Chas. Bickford—Doris Day THOU SHALT NOT KILL Also—Comedy, Serial PRIZE NITE TONIGHT TRY IT TODAY— The Favorite in Key West STAR * BRAND \CUBAN COFFEE ON bene AT. ALL GROCERS y WS Kats | | i er motor with many new parts. Will sell entirely or by parts. Apply Box P, The Citizen. jan19-tf | | HOUSE and TWO LOTS, nine! rooms, all modern conven- iences, beautiful lawn, double garage. All taxes paid, furn- ished, radio, piano, typewriter, ete. $4500 cash or $2500 down, balance in 1% years. Robt. J. Lewis, 1611 Von Phister street. decll-s MISCELLANEOUS OWL TAXI CO.—24-hour serv- ice. Phone 9126. jani-mc 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- WANTED MONROE THEATER Ginger Rogers — David Niven nue = MOTHER BLIND ALLEY | | 2 The every month! is absolutely IF you’re a butcher, stick maker or any of illustrations, ideas, copy and layouts for the use of ? s SOCOOCOOSLEDOOCOOEOSOROOSOEEOSEOOOOOSSE® advertisers This service a baker, a candle- of dozens of other kinds of merchants, you can profit by advertising in The Citizen. Stanton Super Service illustrations and layouts will fit your ads to aT... and make ron them doubly effective! SSSR SSS Is EXCLUSIVE with THE KEY WEST CITIZEN! Phone 51 For Further Information!

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