The Key West Citizen Newspaper, August 29, 1940, Page 3

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 1940 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ters Giants Tie Car Casual Slough ———By VIRGINIA HANSON" YESTERDAY: The only clues in the burnt car are a bor of paper currency reduced to ashes and a regimental insignia. Later, at a bridge party, Sandra men- tions knowing the new chaplain. and his cheeks mottled and dis- colored. Bandages swathed his hands, and he bore himself as if other parts of his anatomy stil! suffered. But he was in uniform, not too well fitting, and the silver crosses he wore left no doubt of his identity. Adam said, “Good evening, Chaplain. It is Chaplain Henry, isn’t it? You'll forgive me for not being sure, but your appearance Chapter 11 The Movies COULDN'T help noticing that I Mimi was lonely, with the) is considerably. altered.’ loneliness of one who is fighting a! The chaplain darted him a sus- losing battle alone. I didn't know Picious glance, but Adam seemed what the battle was about. || only gently concerned. thought it concerned Julia; and in; “Anh yes, Yes indeed. Quite so. a way I was right. And I did not|rm afraid I did not see you at consciously refuse her offer of first: Major Drew, I believe. And friendship. Rather. | did not rec-| —er—the young jady.” ognize it for more than a hospita-| Adam formally introduced us ble gesture. I'wish now that I had | and the little man so far regained gone to see her as she asked. I) his composure as to bob his head wonder if it. would have made at me. But he did not meet my any difference. eyes, and I knew that he was re- Chairs at the next table scraped membering the extreme infor- back and two women came to-*| mality of our last encounter, ward us. Felicia’s racy chatter} As° we emerged into the hot preceded her. I don’t remember | darkness of the summer evening what she was talking about. I was|he would have escaped us. but looking at Mimi, whose back was} Adam held him in conversation, turned to them, and | saw her|drew from him the admission stiffen. Only for an instant. As! that he had been released from they took their seats she was|the hospital that afternoon and again her normal. friendly self. {that he was going back now to I went to bed early that night | bachelor quarters. So, as we were to make. up lost sleep, and the | 8°ing there too, there was noth- next morning we rode again. | Ing for it but to fall into step Adam had not yielded to my weak | W#t4 us. plea that it really wasn’t safe. He| Inside the theater I had been again wore his service automatic | 2mused by the sound of pedantic’ in its holster, and of course noth- | Syllables falling from the swollen ing happened. Nothing except | ips of that Tuffian countenance. that my muscles, grateful for a| But as we strolled along in the day's rest, cooperated a little and! friendly darkness I began to real- 1 began to sense dimly why ize what it would mean to such a ple who ought to know better | Painfully serious man to be the climb on horses ae lumbering eal of a whole garrison’s about the countryside. wits * “There’s no hop tonight,” Adam | - The added fact that he was a e dieiga chaplain made it something of a See ee the net cite ane | SEABED A chaplain’s duties are : * broader in scope than those of odd deplete What would most men of the cloth. He con- cae, e cannot sigh heat ety —- Sees HS ser- “But you're going to tha’ vice for such of the garrison as the Dumbguards are giving for | care to attend, but his chief work Sandra. |is among the men. He Se “Oh no I'm not. Not without | like a social director. a Rotary you to brighten things up. I've Club and a Y-M.C.A. all in one, been to their parties.” |and Adam had told me that a Dit oe ame He aay jaa Gergen. aa ref ent, Adam. 1 don't want you! Tt would be too bad if this were not included. I'm not your guest | f° impair his Prelteer by mak- 1, in a sense I am, I wouldn't | "8 him only a figure of fun. have the privilege of staying at ‘A Ruined Man’ the club if you hadn’t secured it| HE WAS thawing a little under for me. But if we were staying.at | Adam’s sympathetic atten- the same resort you wouldn't feel | tion. I kept out of the conversa- called upon to drag me every-/tion because I thought he would where- a 9 | Prefer not to be reminded of my “How do you know I wouldn’t? | existence, and presently he was I'm a simple, direct man. I do/ doing all the talking, recapitulat- what 1 like to do, as far as pos- ing, in a rather plaintive way, the sible. Bee a oe ae it is pos: | circumstances of ae arrival on sible. lon’ ave to accep at/ the post. lam put in a quiet old hatchet’s invitations for the | question now and. then, but the entirely delightful reason that Ijchaplain seemed unable to add Tai we bens date ae jennie to what he had already hat does mean? | told. “It means that, barring some| “They've given me back my vey per ogee ee him, } an Lae in comcinsions Nak when he m} won ap- | ura ave en unable to panes a brigadier soe hile |drive it as yo asus bate languish in the ranks of ie | expect to find it has been abused. mere colon eT. barre that I Think me ne hardly doubt almost impossible future event.| that a ruffian of that t would he will never have an opportunity | have no compunction fe ae a to write an unfavorable opinion | new car at a high rate of speed.” of me on my annual efficiency re- | “Probably not,” Adam agreed port—an opinion that I am a fel-| cheerfully, “And if; as seems like- low lacking the social graces. If | ly, the same man stole Mrs. Bride- you must know, she’s got an old- | well’s car he sped hims:If to his maid sister living with her, and| own ishment. A punishment it would be so nice to keep her | coneideseity more drastic than right in the regiment—I'm a man | the law would impose.” of mature years, you understand,| “That is so,” the chap- old enough to evaluate at their| lain. “The ways of providence are true worth the froth and frivolity | strange.” of mere youth——” | Did I imagine if, or- was he a Our laughter soared off across little impressed that providence the flat landscape. The horses| had taken a hand in his revenge? tossed their heads, and looked| We entered the club by the back at us, eyes rolling, _ door of the guest wing. My rooms AAG went to the movies that were boost ees a ata asked night. ;them both in, the illumina- I liked us Una teat af pe ard Repl baa nat pave Te- was new and clean ani vd- | mi e lain of his em- ed, with the friendly informality | barrassing plight, for he declined of a small club where all the| and pattefed stiffly toward the members kngw one’ another. To-| rear of the building. We watch night the block of. seats reserved | him i] hé reached a door for officers was nearly empty.) thea r requested—then.-I probably because of the party for | roomsrhe: Sandra. Felicia was there with a| preceded’ Adam into my sitting | room, woman Adam told me was an army nurse. There were a few) “Thdt’s a ruined man,” he said other officers and their wives) somewhat compassionately. with whom I had a bowing ac-} t do you mean?” I asked quaintance. | taeeieh T thought AREA eae was right. Adam’s thoughts nai Gray And Tired been Paeaiating mine. . of the corridor—the quiet had sen. EXPECT Gerald Beaufort} would have been glad to} come with us,” | said while we) waited for the lights to go down. “Wonder how he spends his eve- nings?” | “L mean that soldiers are like children in one ect, at least. Once let them get the idea that a thing, or in this case a person, is funny, and they will never take it serious}; i ly eae “Curling his eyelashes,” Adam| Julia had taken me at my word growled. “Oh! So that’s why you | and put in an appearance shortly wanted me to go to the party!” | after that morning. I “Having no secrets from you| had-stopped work long enough to makes life a little dull,” I com-|make her welcome, then turned plained. “Don’t you think you| back to my writer. might learn to dissemble? How| She ent ie morning prowl- would you like me to X-ray your| ing bi and forth in my two mental processes?” |Tooms, as noiseless and as pas- To my surprise he looked sud- | Sionately restrained as a caged denly gray and tired. And then I|cat. Or she would lie stiff and decided it was only a trick of the/ silent on the studio couch, smok- fading light. The theater was/ ing cigatettes, lighting one from growing dusky. The newsreel had | another. with, quiet ferocity. already begun. ies she muttered a hur- Shortly after the feature pic-| ried iby. ¢natched her hat and ture started someone came in and | left. 1 called after her to ask her sat down near us. I was not suf-| to stay to lunch, but she did not ficiently curious to spare a glance | Seem. to hear me. from the screen, and it was not! ! 3 until the picture pee GS and} breathlessly, out in the corridor. the lights went on that I saw it| a z - was ne chaplain. . His voice, like himself, expres- He looked as if he had sat next | Sionless., x to a snake when he recognized ye 3 footsteps, an instant us. He ducked toward the side en- | of charged: silence. Then— trance, but was halted there by| , “Be seeing you,” in Julia's sud- the congestion of leisurely depar-| 4 Epes voice. tures and had to let us overtake Foo! aguin: diminishi him. in Py ae I doubt if I would have known| tapidly within the building. An him by his face alone which, as| from, ry window I had seen Mimi had implied, looked as if it} J eparting back, too had been the target of profes- in compensation for the sional fists. His eyes were swollen | ¥! of her defeat. nearly shut, his lips were ‘Te be contihued JBSCRIBE FOR THE CITIZEN— ‘Hello, Jeff,” she was saying ! GERMS, occa al For Third Position; Pirates Took Doubl + a BOSTON BEES a POUNDED CUBS FOR 8-3 WIN; HOME RUNS AIDED NEw! YORKERS IN SUBDUING st. LOUIS: DODGER-RED GAME | POSTPONED (Special to The Citizen) NEW YORK, Aug. 29.—Two} two-run rallies three innings apart and a single marker in the ‘first-half of the ninth were too much for the St. Louis Cardinals and so the New York Giants took the game, 5-2, and rose to a tie with the Redbirds for third’ place in the National League. Circuit clouts by Moore and Cuccinello were deciding factors in Giants’ victory. The third-position clubs are twelve and a half games behind the leading Cincinnati Reds, !whose contest . with runners-up hotly-contested affairs as results; Rookie Bill Fleming, Brooklyn Dodgers was rained out. Cards and Giants, there- fore. are practically out of the: race. Dodgers are seven and a half games in back of the Red- legs. A trio of Chicago Cub mounds- men were unable to stop a bar- rage laid down by the Boston Bees that resulted in the latter club obtaining 15 safe blows and an 8-3 triumph. Bruins got to Errcikson for two runs in_ the very first inning but he limited them td six hits the rest of the way. It was his tenth victory of the season. in which he helped his own cause by blasting out a pair of doubles. Pittsburgh Pirates took both jends of a doubleheader with the Philadelphia Phillies. 5-0 and 5-2: Sewell pitched masterful ball in the opener, giving up only three safeties. Bowman scattered eight hits in the afterpiece. Hitting of ,rookie Van Robays featured the nightcap. "i Results of the games: NATIONAL LEAGUE At St. Louis |New York St. Louis = Melton. W. Brown and ning: Warnecke, Cooper Owen. R. HE 5°9 0 210 1 Dan- and At Chicago Boston 815 1) Chicagq 3 Errickson and Berres; French, Root, Bryant and Collins, Todd. ; First Game At Pittsburgh Philadelphia ___ , Pittsburgh és 1 ; Muleahy and Warren; Sewell, and Davis. f . HE. 3 Second Game At Pittsburgh Philadelphia Pittsburgh Atwood and Higbe; Bowman and Fernandez. OCALA TEN WON ‘TITLE OF STA 6-1; BARKER WINNING MOUNDSMAN R. H. 28 5 6 By PEDRO AGUILAR Ocala’s softball ten copped the! state’s softball championship last week by defeating the St. Peters- burg All-Stars, 6-1. ' Barker pitched for the new| lorida champs and Hindu Bow-' en-was behind the plate-~ 1 Local fans _ well West when softball was at its height here. Ocala will travel to Detroit to ‘compete for the national title. All-State Ten Selected Players selected on the Al- State Ten follow: Hindu Bowen, Ocala, catcher; Allie Barker, Ocala, pitcher; Ray McDonald, St. Petersburg, pitch- er; Jug Gordan, Coral Gables, first base; Tick Thompson, St. ‘Petersburg, second base; Toby Stansill, St. Petersburg, short- Elwood Stafford, Ocala, third base; Bo Young, Ocala, left- -field; Jack Wilkes, Ocala, center- ‘field; Viv Nelson, St. Peters-| PLUMBER LOST A € | CHISOX. GRAB: header ONLY JUNIOR LOOP FRACAS ‘TWO FIVE-HIT PERFORM. ANCES FEATURED GAME; ALL OTHER CONTESTS RAINED OUT (Special to The Citizen) NEW YORK, Aug. 29.—Bill Dietrich’s five-hit pitching per- formance that handcuffed the Dropped Game 6-4; Mer- ‘Boston Red Sox except for the chants Whipped Conchs- In Afterpiece, 9 To 5 For the first time since their seventh inning featured the Chi- cago White Sox’ victory yester- day in the only game played by American League teams. Chisox jumped into the lead in the second frame with a_ two- run rally but saw the score knot- the | establishment early in July. the ted in the seventh when the Ti- Se = Softban 2°°S shoved over all their mark- ers. A lone run in the first-half League races are really becoming of the eighth settled the issue in cf play this week show. favor of the Bostonians. on the mound for the losers, also gave up but five safe blows. All hits Since Blue Sox dropped out of }of the contest were singles. the National circuit, leaving just. The win enabled the -Chisox the Pepper’s Plumbers and Saw- yer’s Barbers, these two teams, All to climb up to within a game of the fourth-place Red Sox. other contests in this have met twice and Barbers won league were rained out. each time. Last night in the open- er of a doubleheader at Bayview Park, they took their second con- test of the week against Plumbers and are now game ship. Key West their Conchs lost first game last night. Merchants, year. Cleveland Indians hold a three- game lead over the Detroit Ti- gers and a five-and-a-half-game_ margin over the New York Yan- the kees. Baseball experts are of only one the opinion that if Bob Feller’s away from a tie for leader- arm can continue to hold up as in the past few weeks, the Tribe stands a good chance of annexing the junior circuit's pennant this The outcome of the race, in second place, were the victors. therefore, depends on the ability Duplicating the situation in the of Feller not only to start regu- stronger loop, just separates these clubs. Jasper Walker held the Plumb- ers to four hits and four runs. Hancock started for the losers but gave way to Clarence Gates in the sixth after allowing a half Chicago dozen safeties and five markers. Walker issued but three bases one game larly on the mound but to be able to step in at any time to relieve a wavering fellow mounds- man and save the game. Results of the games: AMERICAN LEAGUE At Boston Boston —- Dietrich and Tresh; on balls and struck out four. Han-: Heying and Foxx. cock walked two and fanned one, as did Gates. St. Louis at New York, post- A five-run fourth inning put‘ poned, rain. the game on ice for the Barbers. Navarro’s single, scoring two ing for three, blows of that frame. Cleveland at Philadelphia, post- R. H. E. suns, and Lopez’ homer, account- poned, rain. were the heavy’ Detroit at Washington, post- Navarro and Lopez each secur- poned, Tajn. ed two safe blows. Score by innings: Barbers 000 501 0O— 6 Plumbers 010 210 0— 4 4 J. Walker and Hopkins; Han- cock, C. Gates and Ingraham. BAD SUPPORT AND WILDNESS IN SECOND Poor support and wildness cost Early to lose the nightcap to the Merchants, 9 to 5, despite the fact he gave up only six hits. Eight errors and 10 bases on balls paved the way for an easy Merchant victory. A. Lastres, of the losers, was the leading hitter. He poled a two runs and scoring one him- self. Early poled a double and single. ~ Score by innings: B. H. E. Merchants 111 012 3-@ 6 3 Conchs 020 201 02-5 5 8 J .Ogden and J. Soldano; Early and D. Roberts. SOFTBALL SCHEDULE (Bayview Park Field) TOMORROW NIGHT First Game—U.S. Marines vs. Key West Conchs League). ee enemas tional League). burg, rightfield; Jack Puryear, shortfield. The writer believes thatif Key ‘triple and single, driving home| | i —— ‘st MAJOR LEAGUE GAMES TODAY AMERICAN LEAGUE St. Louis at New York. Cleveland at Philadelphia. Chicago at Boston. Detroit at Washington. NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston at Chicago. New York at St. Louis. Brooklyn at Cincinnati. Philadelphia at Pittsburgh. YY. Plaintiffs. GEQRGE E. MERRICK and EUNICE MERRICK, his wife, Defendants. NOTICE OF MASTER’S SALE Notice is hereby given that un- der and by virtue of the Final De- cree of Foreclosure heretofore en- tered in that certain cause pending in the Circuit Court of the Eleventh dicial Cireuit of Florida, in and ‘for Monroe County, in Chancery, being Chancery Case No. 6315, in which Agnes Van Slyck Johnson, joined by her husband and next friend, Leo 3. Johnson, are plain- tiffs, and George E. Merrick and Eunice Merrick, his wife. are de- fendants, 1, as Special Master in Chancery appointed by the Court of the terms thereof, will offer for sale and sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash at the front door of the Court House , of Monroe County, in the city of Key West. Florida, on the 7th day of October, A. D. 1940, between the hours of eleven jock A. M. and two o'clock P. the same being a legal sales day and the hours the legal hours of sale, the following described property situate in Mon- roe County, Florida, to-wit: A part of the William H Parker Homestead consisting of Lots 1,2 and 3 of Section 6, Township 64 South, Range 37 East, on the lower end of upper Matecumbie Key, and being the Northern end of a nine acre lot, described on a plat of said lands prepared by R. L. Stevens June, 1910. Said parcel commences at a point at low water mark. on the line dividing said nine acre lot from a two acre lot now owned by Jos. S. Brady, and running thence in a N. W.'ly direction three hundred and fifty (250) feet_to the right of way of th FP. EC. R.; thence in a S. W-'ly direction; along the line ef said right of way, six hun- dred and three (603) feet; thence at right angles in a S E-ly direction, three hundred and fifty (350) feet, more or less, to the waters of the Ocean; thence along the line of the Ocean, in a N. Evly direction. six hundred, and three (603) feet to the place of beginning; witb riparian rights and priv- ileges. Also A part of the William H. Parker homestead consisting of lots 1, 2 and 3 of Section 6, Township 64 South, Range 37 East, on the lower end of upper Matecumbie Key, and being the Southern end, or one half, of a nine acre lot, described on a plat of said lands prepared by R. L. Stevens, June, 1910. Said pareel commences at a it distant six hundred and three (603) feet from the divid- ing line between said nine acre lot and a two acre lot now owned by Jos. S. Brady (On the line of the F. E. R. R. a running thence in a w ai rection six hundred and three (603) feet to the line dividin: said nine acre lot and a fi and one-half acre lot; thence at right angles in a S. Ely direc- tion three hundred and ten (316) feet to the waters of the Ocean: thence along the line of the Ocean ina N. Elly 4i- rection, six hundred and three (603) ‘feet: thence at right angles in a N. W ly direction three hundred and ten (310) feet, more or less, to the point of beginning: with riparian rights and privileges. The said property as aforesaid together with all the tenements. hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging, in any wise appertaining, being sold to satisfy said decree. Dated this 28th day of August, D., 1949. W. CURRY HARRIS, As Special Master in Chancery. HENRY K. GIBSON, Solicitor for Plaintiffs. a 3 Sept5-12-19-26,1940 A IN If COURT, STATE OF FL A, ELEVENTH JUDI- CIAL CIRCUIT, MONROE COUN- TX. IN CHANCERY. GEORGE HOLBORGW, Plaintiff, vs. AVASOLA HOLBOROW, Det. It_appeari by the swo filed in the above-stated cause that Ayasola Holborow, the defendant therein named, is a non-resident of the’ State of Florida and reside: Upham, Canal P. O. Box 192; \that said defendant is over the age of twenty-one years; that there is no person in the State of Florida the service of a summons in chan- | cery upon whom would bind said defendant. It is therefore ordered that said defendant be and she is hereby re- | quired to appear to the bill «f com- in said decree, under and by virtue! CHILDREN: _ Paint filed im said cause on or be- SAVES TWO \fore Monday, the 7th day of Oc- tober, A. D. 1940, otherwise the al- legation of said bill will be taken GERGENFIELD, N. ee an by { defendant. smatl children owe their lives to gateman Harvey L: See-| der be published once each It is farther ordered that this or- week for |; Langham. ing them on the track just before the arrival of a train the watch- man sped toward them, snatch- ing them off the track just in front of the train. LEGALS IN. THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE No. 7- (American DOROTHY LEE KELL ELEVESTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT. OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR MONROE COUNTY. CERY. STS es Plaintiff, remember; Second Game—Sawyer’s- Bar- MICHEAL D. KELLY, played-several-gamessbers: vs. Pepper's Plumbers<Na- Defendant. ORDER OF PUBLICATION TO: MICHEAL D. KELLY, 6512 Ellis Avenue, Chieago, Illinois. You are hereby notified and re- quired to appear to the Bill of Com- plaint for divorce filed in the above styled cause on or before the ith West had entered the final, five day of October, A. D. 1940, other- local players would have placed of said bill you as con- wise the allegations will be taken against on the All-State club. Cates, sec-} fessed. ond base; Navarro, shortstop; Mc- ~ Carthy, Villareal and Kerr, out- fielders; Ingraham, catcher—all ™“ would have stood a change to A.D. 1940. gain state-wide recognition. Bak- ‘94%? er, A. Acevedo, Albury and-Ster- ling are also excellent rond- en upstaters a tough battle for honors: jball players and would have giv- ee Ghvie “Bui This order shail be published omee a week for four consecutive weeks in The Key West Citizen, jomtee County, Florida. Dated this Ross C aw yer As Clerk of the Circuit art. By: (Sd.) Florence B. Sawyer Deputy Clerk. jing, ntite. 3 Septs-12-19-26,1940 Miami, Flori Attorney for Doni 27th day of August, | 1; 1940. SEab) Legtsiature 1939, under the Constitution of the State of Florida, did iis Joint Resolutions proposing ments to the Constitution State of Florida, and the agreed to by a vote of three- of all the members house, that the votes on Resolutions were entered upon respective Journals, and nays thereon, and ther termine and direct that sae Joint Resolutions be submitted to the electors of the State at the Gen- eral Election in November, 1340. NOW, THEREFORE, rk |'GRAY, Secretary of State’ of State of Florida, do notice that a GENERAL ELECTION will be held in each county in Fior- | ida on Tuesday next succeeding the first Monday in November, A. D. | 1940, the said Tuesday being the | FIFTH DAY OF \OVEMEER for the ratification or rejection of {the said Joint Resolutions propes- ing amendments to the Constitution ‘ of the State of Florida. viz A JOINT RESOLUTION Proposing the Amendment of Section 2 of Ar- ticle IX of the Constitution, Aboligh- ing Ad Valorem Taxation for State Purposes. f fy i fit & t FLORIDA: amendment to Section 2 ef Article IX of the Constitutio: of Florida, relating to taxation and abolishing ad_valorem taxes State purposes, be, and the is hereby, agreed to, submitted to the electors State at the General Election Representatives in 19 for proval or rejection " Sev The Legislature shall provide for raising revenve suffi- cient to defray the expenses of the State, including State appropris- tions for the benefit of the uniform system of free public schools pro- vided in accor@ance with Article XIi_of the Constitution, an@ of the State institutions of higher learn- ing, for each fiscal year, and also! a sufficient sum to pay the prim- cipal and interest of the existing | indebtedness of the State: but after December 3ist, A. D. 1840, me levy of ad vale taxes upof real or personal property except intangible property, shall be ma@e for any State purpose whatscever, and See- tien 6 of ticle 3 be. an@ the same is hereby repealed. A JOINT RESOLUTION Propes- to Article XVI stitution of Plerida Adé- eto an Additional Section Vermitting the Creation ef a Supervisi BE IT ISLATL FLORIDA Section amendment SOLVED OF BY THE THE sTaT relating to Mis by adding th creation of 2 Com- ized to grant paroles or conditional releases or probation of prisoners under supervision, is ¥ agreed to and shall be sub- to the electors of the State ; of Florida iextion or rejec- tien at the 1 Election te ‘ant paroles or con@i- tional releases or probation unéer official supervision to prisoners ot persons charged with criminal of- fensex, and may provide for the qualification and method of select- ing the Commission members ané for their term of office the length of which shall be wholly within the discretion of the Legisiature.” A JOINT RESOLUTION ing an Amendment to Article IX of the Constitution of the State Florida, Relating to Taxation and Finance, by Adding Thereto an Aé- ditional Section Authorizing the Legislature of the State of aa to Allocate and Distribute to che Several Counties of the State, Cer- tain Excise Taxes Now Levied and Collected and to Be Hereafter Levied and Collected by the State of Florida. BE IT RESOLVED BY THE LEG- ISLATURE OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA: That amendment to Constitution of the State of Florida, | relating to taxation and.finance. by adding thereto an additional sec- tion to be known as Settion 35 of said Article TX, It Legislature of the State of Pioriés }to allecate an@ distribute to the several counties of the State, cer- ‘tain excise taxes now levied an@ collected and to be hereafter levied |rejection at the next general elee- tion of Representatives to be held in 1940, as follows: ' Section 15. The Legislature shall have the power to allocate and @is- tribute to the several counties of the State, in equal amounta, and at such times as the Legislature shall éetermine. any «< all excise taxes now levied and osl- ‘lected, or hereafter levied or cul- lected. by the State of Florida trom the operation of pari-mutac! pele A JOINT RESOLUTION Prages-/ four consecutive weeks in The Key | West Citizen, a newspaper lished in said county and state. Do; 4 ordered 14th day me an this of August, A. D. 1940. | SEAL) Ross C Sawyer ' Clerk Circuit Court | By (Sd) Florence E. Sawyer, | Deputy Clerk. | GSa) Attan B. Cleare, Jr, |. Solicitor for Plaintit?. @Ug1$-22-29; septs-12,1940 IN? THE EI t InN" . Fi nN CERY. | LOUIS A N, Piaintif?, vs. CELIA GOLDSTEIN BRESLERMAN, Defendant. i Tone oguDstES | BREs! AN, 518. Bedford Avenne, Bropklyn, New York. You are hereby required to ap- pear to the Bil of Complaint im the | above styled and entitled cause on September 2nd, 1940, otherwise the allegations therein will be as This order to be published once &@ week for four consecutive weeks jin The Key West Citizen, a news- ine published in Key West, Flor- ¢ and ordered this August » Ross C Clerk of the Cireuit Court. | By (S@) Florence E. Sawyer, augl-8-15-22-29,1940 the next general ei {on the first Tuesday aft Monday in November, 1948. fication or rejection. Section 2 (a) The Court shall consist of ‘eral election next piration of each term of ice tion of this ernor to a Justice of the jbe shall hold office of his after 1943. iy Uf | $ 5 i! aT division shal ers of me Chief Just capt po coms itutiens! shall be brought: the constitutiona. or Mate stature mene oe a dosment * rus meclete or Justice panying stateme=: amt ac apn law so stated snd Ge ume anc applicaatien te sus event of an -qus ¢ thos members pri - 2 cause be shal -sam= and participate ther~ justices In the « Justice be unabic — aeresanas a curd Plerda Reisime mumnomers agree al elect numbered dost shall be © Come errited bs A 28NT ing to Am IX of the ot F ISLaTUE FLORIDA: The 1X of the Constita of Fierids rein jon. of certain pr tim be and zamen@ed. and z= = rectors the mex on the fare Monday in SX. -me fleation of re jet oe amended. sha wit a ~ aust SENIAMIN EK

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