The Key West Citizen Newspaper, May 14, 1941, Page 3

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 1941 Some day I'll Fin THE KEY WEST CITIZEN cd You THE CAREER OF A GIRL WHO FOLLOWED HER HEART In Which A 4 Chapter One Three Roads ILEEN Gardner, small, slim, arresting in spite of her conventionally plain organdy gradu- ating gown, took her third. bow for the “Shadow Song” from “Dinorah,” and slid demurely to her place in the Jong row of graduates on the uni- versity platform, The applause was longer than it had been for anyone else. It would be. She was her year’s lad graduate and naturally she new it. Most popular girl: Run- ner-up for prettiest girl. Most likely to succeed. And—though this was not in the yearbook— girl with more kinds of future spreading before her than any other man or girl in the long se- rious-faced young row. She had pushed everything but the moment out of ,sight, these last few hectic days. But now, raduation over, song done, in the lankness of relaxation, her prob- lems, those excellent choices, sat literally before her in the audi-| ence and demanded thinking about; unless she wanted to listen to Prexy’s booming reverent voice the commencement It must be ig, it was his special manner for donors and world- os Fitann noted Her eyes—so extravagantly and rb her small point- that the last thing people was a girl who'd inside of a college— in z in the audience. Large and and much in earnest, fresh her with propri- there they sat; faculty group; Bs seats ary cxamnaion fare: too now as he "caught her felt somehow cea than Aunt Lou, ai eagerness over this cause cause, her ion for her boo With Girl,Chases.A Boy. ::-% ResultsNeither Expecte iS i ae for her job of second- Btammar-grade teaching. Aunt Lou ‘had always been just a bit, in spite of her’bright intensities, seared about living. Or so it seemed to a girl who had at the moment an embarrassment of sil- ver platters on which life was be- ing handed her. Aunt Lou’s platter, perhaps, wasn’t exactly silver. A sound Sheffield plate, more. Jt was the choice of positions which a girl as high in her classes as Eileen can always command, a position Aunt Lou, as she said reverently, wouldn’t have dreamed of at the start, It might, said her. aunt prayer- fully, lead anywhere; a secretary- ship to the university’s head of publieity;.who wasn’t called ex- actly that, but actually was. Any amount of amazing contacts. A steppingstone to being a career woman here in’ Denver: one. of the city’s leading titizens’ by the time she was thivty+five. < Eileen could go. on Hi with her aunt, and her, aunt's friend Miss Helen Doran: jw taught kindergarten. They could take an apartment with one. mof€. room, 80 Eileen could see ‘friends all by herself, Aunt Lou oaxed, beaming. Nice, being a career woman, of course. And today you didn't have to sort of take vows of celibacy, |the way Aunt Lou’s generation hod You ead eo dancing. you could have small discreet cocktail parties, you could marry... . say 4 careering at all. he glanced at Jordan again, and again his sensitive color mounted. It had been hard to keep him away from the point till ‘aduation was over, And she ew she couldn't deflect things much longer. That way lay being the pretty young wife of one of tte clever- est of the English instructors. Do a little part-time secretarial work to make the home: fires a little larger till the first baby came. Settle in with the university set, push your‘husband, be charming at faculty teas—it sounded like a good enough life, and the girl next her, quiet Lucille Anders, who was exacly fitted for it, wanted jt, as brought by Jordan Estill, very much indeed. More than Eileen did. ’ And the Weigands. Scouts F she hadn’t pretty nearly promised Aunt Lou.to take the secretaryship she'd be inclined to hard-working en-! take a chance on the Weigands, Aritas 6 o Rodriguez 44) ja | Ulric Sweeting 2 CHAMP PLAYOFF |(Newlan sank five out of ten |free throws for a 50.0 average) THIS AFTERNOON a | | Player— Points Guerro mi 12 | A. Lastres m 5 ARNOLDS AND CORDOVAS, | K. Sweeting 2 March 2 VICTORS IN SPLIT SCHED-|\0)) aot ULE, CLASH FOR SCHOOL) Score by quarters: Cordova 5 10 16 23 CHAMPIONSHIP Hamlin 6 i) 17% ketbalt’ ‘Ghampidnship of Junior High School got way this afternoon at the insti- |! tution’s gymnasium, corner Seminary and Grinnell streets. Vieing for the midget cage Sparked by, sharpsheoting Del Valle, who almost: equalled the A three*ganie playoff for bas-! tournament's individual. Oring the | record, the Hot Shots shook off under | a bad» start to pile. up a 3l-point lead in the afternoen’s~ twin of | bill afterpiece. Sinking 29 points, Del. Valle fell two short of tying the 31 title are the Hornets. of Ralph | Point mark set by teammate Arnold and the Blanks of Or-|Arthur Thompson. Thom mond Cordova. The clubs won| 12, and Pritchard, 11, ably assist- ed the Cuban forward in th the right to compete for the crown by clinching leadership in |t the first- and second-half of a $6-game split schedule, respec- tively. Hornets swept through the Opening portion of the divided schedule with a seven-game win- ning streak but internal strife @ropped them into the cellar in, for the for Cash, four ens, balance of the 25 points racked up by the Bab: runaway Costar shouldered the burden , Tinging the H and followed. Rob ate and Stev mtributed — the hoop 10 . ma ick , three, -R. Ci two each, the half that ended yesterday Score by quarters afternoon, Two regulars, Pierce Colzate 2 17 40 56 McMahon 6 9 18 2 and Schoneck, deserted the team early in the closing portion Cordovas _ established = them- gelves as champs of the second half by nosifg the Hamlin Garlic Snappers 23-22 in the opening afternoon game yesterday, while the Hot Shots of Harry Colgate eliminated e McMahon. ¥xby Conché © 56*! in ‘thé scrap. Blanks and Conchs w tied for first’ place before twin bill yesterday, outcome of which created a knot for runner up spot between the Shots and Babies. : the tured by tween the Arno Rolie int the Hor the blank NIGH The double eader an overtime’ fight d Hor Ba Following an all-even first | 4, guarter,,the Snappers led the «p Cordovas in the next two, founds By one point. A see- gach saw fourth period was climaxed by the failure of Walker to sink a last-second crip shot ting would have meant victory for Next the Hamilins. Pier Scoring ve ' Player— Points) Sch deserter early Newlan - — ii nd-half, returned. to Or you vould marry without | Her eyes'moved to them, They had their heads together. They were’ whispering. And Eileen thought ‘she knew what about. They didn’t often come scouting together for that little radio sta- tion of theirs a hundred-odd miles away. But they had, yesterday. They had telephoned. her about an audition, And they had heard her, today, on the early part of the program, heard her sing the “Shadow Song” from “Dinorah,” and applauded like mad. They actually had been whis- pering about her. Lucille Anders, | beside her, pinched her hand. “Look!” she muttered. “Did you |see the Weigands? They’ve been whispering ever since you sang, and nodding like mad. Aren't you the lucky girl?” “Born lucky,” Eileen whispered back, No use going into anything here, with Prexy liable .to.step. any moment voice audible ai simple, © as thought it was. Lucille .who would never have to worry about money 98 long as she-lived. *“Prexy’s voice slowed,’ boomed. ‘Miss Edith (Willesdon. Whom you know, I need not sayy rep- utation,” he ended, as a tall blond woman crossed the stage with a near-dramatic verve and dash. Eileen did not. know her, at least could not place her, at all. Middle-aged, more or less, course—she wouldn't be haunting as a princi- —but slim, string af g | thi about suggested the | hunting tom English novel; countr: ff, diamonds and imports after how The name had a vague familiarity, at that. ; Somebody Aunt Lou believed in. |” Miss Willesdon was speaking, jnow. She had a trained voice, tear and dynamicaliy charming. | ‘You think, you young people of today—” Eileen had missed something — “That because we won you equal suffrage, because we freed your youth, boys and girls both, half nine uck a out Tribe clinched the » homer in the Sox Chicago W the Arnold-lineup forthe eltampionship the Cordovas this by quarters 19 m Fast-stepping Haskin tied for Ors, Six each. 1 K. Roberts were Men McCown i of | a generation ago, | jworrying about | could vote or not. “You think of the sexes, ringing voice | pier toge’ | marry me? feet.’ Not until...” Bt waving her js i Doomed” Navy tonight will 8 make another bid for its first Marines n of the season in the seeond Result ung: MC eae a OK Conk against the Army. “Sol- NATIONAL, LEAGUE < “registered their lone. vic-| Ay Chicag % RHE AMERICAN LEAGUE fory in the’ first meeting of the Peston a Sa aad RHE ms,and were fought te am 31- Be Chicas 3. 7. 1 tiie im, the next serap. rie hi 2 Boston 2.4 1 ,dallors aay they are “due” to- Early, Bobit.s:xkthimsenss cand ae mies We és night het the “headsup” | brand 0 aes Mc See oe ee sects sare of ball the; Deughboys have -been whether among you dares to say to the girl he loves, ‘I cannot earn for two. Marry me, and carry the fi- |nancial burden till ‘I'am on my Summons From Prexy T sounded to Eileen like non- sense, She felt like rising and h d ‘and “saying; !tron ofthe university, for the Eileen was led to tall smiling Miss Willesdon - they you have equalit; y ”” Miss Willesdon’s | was crashing out. The speech w: went on, “You have} over. The college orchestra was} nothing of the sort. Not so long as| Playing Victor Herbert in a re-}a quiet little affair of their own. jone girl among you feels that| lieved way. -Then she must use trickery, pretense, | Plomas; and the cla by-ends to win one man among| With the audience. Eileen skirted| paper napkins and a dance floor you, instead of saying frankly to| the president and his guests him, ‘I love you, We can be hap- er than apart; will you And not till any man} By the time her mind had re- turned from her own problem jthe applause for- Miss Willesdon [little quiet evening party—if you were asked, Eileen had not intended to go at all. Some of the group she be- longed to—and led—were pulling ame. the di-| At least, it would start by being was mixing | quiet. Jerry’s had little tables and t are-/ and a small but keen jive band fully. She was about to _ and very good beer. | hooky. 2 | And Jordy—Eileen smiled a lit- | _ There was a quiet, almost fur-} tle, on the steps as she strayed | tive small party invariably given | down to where her aunt stood— commencement night. Those in| could choose between the flesh- the secret knew. Those who] pots of Egypt—old Onderdonk, | weren’t asked were left wryly to} the head trustees, the elegant or- suspect. It" was for the year’s|chestra and the caterers’ ices— speaker, and a selected group of| and dancing with her at Jerry's university and city celebrities. | to the thump and wail and wiggle The pick of the graduating class | of the three-piece Negro band. | were invited, as a crowning honor.|- She greeted her aurit, excited The house of a millionaire pa-} and tearful in-the crowded aisles, ed to Jordan, bolted back to First Game esd re if the Marines have their way. ying recently does not of- there much encouragement faiser will get under 0 o'clock on the field Park (High School Gym, 4:00 pm.) Junior High Championship Series THIS AFTERNOON Ralph Arnold's Hornets vs. Or- nord Cordova’s Blanks. TOMORROW Ralph Arnold's Hornets va. Or- ma Cordeva's Blanks. FRIDAY Ralph Arnold's Hornets vs. Or- mond Cordowa's Blanka Benton and Tet Hudsen and Early, . |DeLand Red Hats. AGE THREE LEGALS IN THE COURT OF THE COUNTY JUDGE, MONROE — COUNTY, STATE OF FLORIDA, IN BATE. In re the Bstate of JOSHUA B. SMITH, Deceased. NOTICE OF INTENTION TO: MAKE APPLICATION FOR FINAL DISCHARGE (Probate Law 1933) To All Whom It May Coneern: j Notice is hereby given that JANE 1. SMITH has filed her final report as administratrix of the estate of Joshua B. Smith, deceased; that she Managers and officials of the) Gharge and that ane a a ‘Lord, HIsland City Softball 1 last |the Honorable Raymond R. | y on [County Judge of Monroe County, jnight at city hall voted to per-| Florida, on the 19th day of May. imit teams to play out the final 124}; fer approval of same and for jinning, when the time limit! final discharge as administratrix of the estate of Joshua B. Smith, de- ; would permit only one team to! | get. in its time at bat, ceased, on this 22nd day of April, ie JANE L. SMITH, 2 jAdministratrix of the estate of | Previously, rules had been in-| Joshua B. Smith, deceased. terpreted to make the score re-, ipeibegeah ise ck toe vert to that of the last full in-| j ning played. The new rule was FX THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE lmade in fairness to the “home”| ELEVENTH JUDICIAL crrourt | OF ‘THE STATE OF FLORIDA, IN |team, or the team that bats last.) AND FOR MONROE COUNTY. AT If the time limit ended an in-; LAW. VA . MONROE COUNTY, litical | ning before the last batting team |supdivicion of the "Sate ot ‘had come up, it was considered | Florida, (only fair in the past to cancel the | vs. ‘runs scored by the “visiting” | WILLIAM G. MILLER, at al, |team in its half of the last inning | iy DOMAIN a NOTICE IN EMINENT DOMAIN |and count only runs recorded in| PROCEEDINGS leven innings. fs % {eae Sto OP THE STATE OF | Members of the group also de- | TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN, AND | cided tovenforce strictly the rule} T°: a . y | Joseph F, Brooks who is over the | requiring a piteher to wear a jane of fwenty one years and whoen | solid, dark colored” sweater~-or piace of residence is amknown, John } ; _ OF | Wallace ax Trustee for Frederick B. ‘shirt, ‘without lettering or trim+ | Wallace, ‘who “ts Sveldne ae oF ponies tiie jor res}dence is unkwown, MC. Jor eet lof: residents , M. C. Jor- je, League, officials, to prevent dan as Trustee for A. C. Kay, Who is | stalling by a team which is ahead jover the age of twenty-one years tig ‘ and whosé place of idenee is un- fi the final minutes of play, |iown Oscar Secwald who is over worked out ja ssystem of penal- the age of twenty-one years and et 5 " js- | Whose place of residence is un- paetey be applied at their dis- jknown, the unknown heirs, devisee: e > | Nlegutees, grantees-or other claimants There were some discussion °f Laura F. Geiger, deceased, i : on | Manuel Yudarte of N. Merrick Ave- jon playing out tie games but in | nue, Long Island, New York, and all. the end it was decided to adhere /other parties, natural of corporate, 4 . “limit | Who may have some right, je ame strictly to the present time limit. | jntcrest in and to the following. de- Leese UENSES TES ‘scribed lands, situate, lying and be- ling on the Istand of Roca Chica in iMonroe County, Florida and de~ lecrited as follows, to-wit! | Paroel 1, Fart of Lots Five Gi) and Six ‘SOFTBALL HEADS ‘ADOPT NEW RULES a | naeiNes UNCOMPLETED AT) ' TIME-LIMIT WILL BE 45 PLAYED OUT Petitioner, STERLING, CATES AND THE HATTERS | (8) of Section Twenty-eight | QS). Township Sixty-seven (67) | South, y~six (26) Fast, containing 15 acres, more | ., i tor | Here’s how Key West's two parcel 2 nial n + * " } Fi of Le ‘ive |reptesentetives in organized [\" Oy ‘Auction rwentycelaht (28), ‘Township Sixty-seven (67) th, Rance Twenty-six (26) t, contaluing 1h acres, more baseball, Clayton Sterling and | William “Butch” Cates, came out | | at the plate in recent perform-} ,,, ‘ances, ‘The loeal players are put- | ting in their first season with the f Lots Five (5) and Six Section Twenty-eight 28), Township Sixty-seven. (67) South, Range Twenty-six (26) Their performances: | Bast, containing 98 acres, more everything is won. . . “Don't be sill university was fortunate in its| the cloakrobm and was off SUNDAY, tnt ae ‘ F PAS toe “2 am id : . MAY varcel 4, 10h yes, That was why Aunt| Heaven knew you didn’t have s, would be lighted up.| Or nearly. Just as she had al- (ran Gea vatot Three (8) of Bectiun Thirty Lou, had worked for suffrage | to use trickery or what have you | There was to. be an orchestra in} most gained the door, one of the | three. Gia), Township Sixty. herself.in her girlhood,..was so | on Jordan."In Eilcen’s experience the ballroom, there would be re-| faculty wives put a Hand on’ her’? | Leo" ABR HPOAESH} seven (67) Howth, Runge Twen- rapt. Itj;came back dimly to|so far, the trouble to keep|freshments, there would be ajarm, and said, “Just a’ minute: (Sterling, 1b 3.0 2 9 01 0 | ty-Kix (26) Want. contaming 13 Zileen, who was not especially in-|them from getting to the point/chosen group of the city’s impor-| Eileen; the president wants you." _| Cates, 3b _. 4 91530 0 pe terested, that Edith Willesdon had| where they asked you; for then | taht people moving in and out. | That was that. She smiled ~'| Runs° batted Bh: Sterling 3,/ Part/of Lot One (1) of Section been the young beauty of the| vou hadn't tNem as friends'any| And it was an understood thing | brightly and let herself be led ta. ~ }Cates: twovbase Wits: Sterling 2° 1 TMF-two | (32), Township suffrage movement. That she had | longer, And as for a man asking|that it was, in an elegant and {where the president stood beside Ss ig varices ang: >. Sixty-seven (67) South, Range ridden a white horse down Fifth | you to marry him and support| superior way, a species of hiring| tall, bright-smiling Miss Willes- The score: R jtetie) yas a aint jn Avenue a year or two before|him—well, today if anybody had | fair. Tf you wanted a contact with | don. ; Oca 003 000 000—3 i parcel 6. Eileen was born, at the head of aja job you did what you could|somebody who might get you a| (Copyright, 193040, Margartt Widdemer) | DeLand ‘ 310 100 30x—8| Part of Lot Four (4) of Bection procession of women who were| and didn’t make speeches, . . . job. you went to the Onderdon*:’ To be continyed (Second Game) RRP aora ag ane Pidgeon | xty-#even ath, eet ee PS WASPS Galle ‘ ‘ es sealer rete eee ABR HPOAESH.) Twenty-six (26) Bast, contain- ’ ’ 1 . t | | ing 1 Rerex, more or Jews. | into second place by edging the === —e Sterling, 1b 3 0 010 00 0 AND BACH OF YOU, are | | ib B. ARB Cates, 3b 3 11 0 y commanded (o be and appear | } Boston. Red Sox, 4-3. John SPORTS CALENDAR The score: Rin the Cireutt Courl fe ! tor . | Rigney, a possible .draftee, set Ocala... 000 200 O—2 | Mee for- the cisck of tia Cashin ; 3 (down the Gold Sox with four we cn em DeLand naenne~ 200 020 Seok | the CM iE Kina Went fore the. aad hits. Home runs by Jimmy Foxx | BASEBALI The standings: ‘day qf May, A. D, 141, to show 3 a , “ | ASE BE 4 ra ora Club— W. L. Pet, | hat right, title, interest or len and Ted Williams accounted for (Major L ) VICTORYLESS SAILORS TAC-|; DeLand 19.6 .760/ 20% OF Any of you, Latah y Fone og ere Ses lajor Leagues: " hon 100 any of the above dere: 8 "Florida's Sid Hudson turned in TODAY KLE SOLDIERS mw arr. |% & Suess it f 00 ce shoals be taken ae ts RAPID ROBERT SCORES 6TH three-hit performance for the American ERPIECE LEGALS |that certain petition In eminent aoe TRIUMPH: CHISOX NOSE/ Washington Senators against the , Cleveland at New York. i OTS ee Page ag od BOSOX: CARDINALS SPANK Detroit Tigers. The victory, 5-4,' St. Louis at Philadelphia. Sawyer’s Barbers tonight meet "Subam x4 MONROn COUNTY, of a County Airport onthe above de: 5 was the third in a row for the! | Chicago at Boston. the team they knocked oyt of), ¥AVeoe. Jn Seeenrey \scfibed Khds, which petition wax GIANTS Nat twirler. Detroit at Washington, first place Jast.week to:gain: for) “9° o/ tagwicK, youn be MONROE COUNTY, & polltts | Philadelphia's ‘Athletics down National themselves leadership. of “the 18-1117 gg ueriennee | Sh sae ee ee ee the St. I Brown 2-4, bed New Yor al BE Lou land... City ,., Softball. League. | «sqag weghate Act. Nem tim abe) laccingt youn ee ees (Special to The Citizen) ed the:t suis Browns, 7-3, be~ a 2 igshte rs oe They'it be Rying fot" their itd | AN Creditors and Peraous Hav. | WITNESS my hand a¥ Clerk of 2 hind the seven-hi 5 rook E: incinnati. in all a >| ~ hie Sime: of Demany tit Cirenit Court 4 tor Monroe NEW YORK, May 14—Bob hind the n-hit pitching of 00) v5 at ee unati. n all and errs sectind eet sid Ft is Againw ie Create Seer ia ane ee ates (Rapid Robert) Feller. scored his Jack Knott. Rad homer | ¢-Boston at Chicago. story aver iS. pMarines,, WHOM); Yim and each of you are hereby | Court, thin the tind day of April, A. ixth triumph ofthe ees »g- {Scored all the Brown markes Philadelphia at Pittsburgh they dropped from the top to Retified and required to present |). 1941, at Key Went, in Monroe six ph of the season yes . ird, position. The lone "Devit | 2° Ferd nena jemanda which you, |County, Florida, Ss terday afternoon in nosing the) The .mighly,. Bucky Walter Sp EEE Dee tritiioph Oi the ‘trio! Sot thd Stdot TL b. Penick, demeoes, (lek ot the Wea Geace te Néw York Yankees, 2+.) Errors | failed: to-halh; the onrush pf the SOFTBALL ciathes between the-clutis -is the | Tig. ‘sl sheanon Gtaaty the Covaty:| for Moarod Cousty, Piorida, of om on allowed the ‘lene Brooklyn Dot, bowing! 3-4 (Bayview Park, 7:30 p.m.) y loss suffered the Hair-| his office in the court house of said RAYMOND BR. LORD, Yankee run in the sixth, After although t eight safe : , Cutters to date. eggs Saget 3 Pe ger sie a ap parody ~ Sher ony 44-21,0941 Rizzuto doubled, Red Rolfe laid 4, feik 4s “gute TONIGHT Idle since the Barbers knocked |time of the first publication af_thix (ee down a bunt that Feller fielded s wes First Game—Sawyer’s Bart them out ef the leadership, the} ice. Bach claim or demand shall IN THE CIMCUST COURT OF THE > ‘ of the is iding t " jbe in writing, and shall stat ELEVENTH Jt Cour, perfectly but found the first sack it as iting the) UR Marines. Marines will be presented with | piace ot residence and post orice | MONMOm County, PuOMIDA. 1 empty when he attempted to toss | C# : gles. Second Game—U.S. Navy a chance to gain sweet revenge. | address of the claimant, and shall! | UMANCERY. Ne, 7-564, the runner out. Second baseman} Chicago ved from U.S. Army. A rigged a = Preagpy ems yeahs aor ite pt tle yon ho Ee ROLOMOn o eoue De: Mack ran over to cover the bag! sixth to fourth nosing FRIDAY NIGHT tonight will, pul he wyers im or demand not so filed shall be | fondant. J it taki a te | void. \TO: SOLOMON ©. COHEN, 16T Bilis but stepped aside to allow first’ the Boston Bra Pitts-| First Game—US. Navy vs vit into a tie for second place ROY HAMLIN, Street. Ban Franciseo, California, baseman Hal Trosky to take the ina Pir +: egies i ind establish the Plumbers a [Ae Adeoiniatraton of the Estate ‘of pony ws PUBLICATION oureh's ates a ve pac o * circui » Penick, dece: " are hereby re pear throw. In that brief moment) an phil 4 P Game—Pepper’s Plumb- | Pacesetters of the circuit. i ‘may? -14-25-28,1941 |to the Bill of Complaint for TA- Feller threw the ball and nobody delphia Phillies, 6-3, despite de va, SL Matis Standings — reggae’ un- PERE SOE Ppt oo ica Bagh yg beet = = igh . “ ~ ur hits, including inle, off pall: anged should , the e } sii es ‘ore May 19, . otherwine ale caught it, allowing Rizzuto to r g a triple, of MONDAY NIGHT zat — ‘ ih re > re i rbers | 18 THE CIRCUTE COURT o Cire ikations thereof will be taken ae ‘ore. Rapid Robert held Mur- tstop Bragan Sawver's Barbers ‘M™PH but the clubs will shi Cee er Oe PRIME EIT contented, Thin Order to be - pub. i ished once a week for tour (6) com Wheat ASD FOR MONKOE COUNTY. | ceourive weeks in the Key | CHANCERY 4 . | Citdeen. [BOY ALONZO SMITH, 1" PONE AND ORDERED thin 16th beau eye we. | 18y, OF Atertt igat ve : : * JULIA DOROTHY SMITH, | Were thay? sono ged Defendant, Florida ORDER OF PUBLICATION Ry. (84.) Florence BE. Sawyer, | It appearing by the swarm bit of)” Depary complaint filed in the above stated (aume, that Jali Dorothy Smith, che defendant therein named is a non- {resident of the Btate of Florida and her place of residence am in par- ticularly known Is 2573 - S6th Mtreet, [New York, NY. That maid. de- fentant Iw aver the age of twenty. | one years and There js 00 pereon in he Htate of Florida the nervice of @ Summons in Chancery vpon whom would bind maid detendant It ix heretry Ordered that sald de vient, Jetia Derothy Sexith, he And phe ia hereby required to appear to the Bill of Complaint filed ip maid ease on of before the léth day of Jann. A. D. Y54i. otherwise the ai- legations of aid biti will be taken as confessed by said defendant and be prepreded with «x parte. it = farther Crdered that this or- ter be published once each week for foer consecutive weeks jn The Key Weat Citizen, 2 mewebaper pul. Habed in Key West, Monroe Counts Florida, Tume end Ordere’ at Key West, Monroe Coapty, Pieridae, thin May ith. A. D. 14h $ (MEAL) (ie? Rom C Rawrer Oerk Chremit Court RAYMOND BR. torn. Raticitay tor Compisinant. ‘ may lt-2h-34, joowt-2iiger! aprit-33-30; mayt-14, i968 First Time in Key West ene ee HORSESHOE CAFE 602 Duval Street Schultz & Riggs Returns Direct From the

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