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SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1 sla i YESTERDAY: One minute Eileen Gardner had thought her life pretty well in hand, marriage with Jordan Estill in the offing. But ‘in the midst of her post- graduation party Bileen jumped literally into the arms of a man named Martin, and now she has tracked Martin to another party, ostensibly to return the little gold ski he lost. Martin’s group is just leaving. Chapter Four Desperate Cry ‘TH crowd surged forward. They were pressing close to the distinguished group as it crossed to the door. Eileen tried to force her way through, to get at least close enough to Martin to catch his eyes, to quickly ask his name and shove the ski into his hend. But the people who had already met the party, the very important university and society set, the various notabilities who had been bidden to meet Miss Willesdon and the other famous ones with her, were a solid mass around the parting company. Their voices rose loud. Eileen, despairing, still tried to foree herself through. But she was little and slender, and nota- bilities have a way of fattening in middle age. She merely got a ter- rible look from the two nearest dowagers. “This isn’t a bargain sale, ‘oung woman,” the wife of the iggest businessman in the city hissed at her. It was not until the others were halfway down the awninged pavement to their cars that Eileen got free, even to see them. s “Martin!” she called desperate- y. He was just helping the shiny- haired young secretary into the limousine. He turned at the voice; he. looked up and laughed and waved. Then he was jnside, the door slammed, and he was gone. The group inside the hall loosened, fell apart into chatter- ing smaller units with a thrilled : d gratified air. Eileen heard the scraps of talk: in’t she wonder- ~.. “The dear Senator is so simple and genuine.” .,. “’ y are doing a wonderful work.” And a couple of gruff dissentient male voices: “Futile.” ... “Lot of poppycock, these South American missions.” Not a word about Marcin, .. . Martin, who had flown two thou- gand miles to say good-bye to someone in the group. She had to know. She would know. She gripped the arm of the nearest girl. A girl would know. Annette Noyes, the daughter of a social leader; a cool, correct, rather old young woman in eye- Blasses and a red chiffon import. “Annette. Who was that blond boy "in flying clothes who''tame down, the stairs with the South American party?” She tried not to seem eager. Annette never was. Annette was, however—for her. “Nobody seems to know,” she answered with—for her—excite- ment. “He dashed in just as they all went up to the dressing rooms to get their wraps and ran up- stairs. The women poured out of the dressing rooms to make a fuss over him—everybody was acting as if he was Clark Gable. here wasn’t time to introduce him to the hostess, or they didn't ‘want to. Somebody said he'd flown from New York just to say good-bye to somebody in the party, and was just catching a Steamer from Californis to some- where. He might have been en- aged to any of those three girls, | @ way they acted.” | Annette looked annoyed. She Plainly felt it was discourteous. | “Then he was going to New Zealand!” | “Did you know him?” Annette @emanaea. “No—no.” Eileen slid away, un- heeding Annette’s avid question- ing. She tried the hostess, who was not too pleased at being stopped, ig trotted, to.a back Toom with ome cronies for an | after-party discussion. “I don’t know,” Mrs. Onder- donk said. “Really, the manners of the present day, my dear child. «.., He crashed the gate, as they call it, Ran upstairs, burst into the women’s dressing room. Came back without a word to me—to me, the hostess!” “Possibly some important secret message,” suggested another of the women; her prominent eyes widened at the idea. “You knew, after all, Ida, nothing is too wild to happen. It might have been one of the young Roosevelt's they are all blond—" know them. It wasn't,” snapped Mrs, Onderdonk. A layboy, that was what he was. hat he had all the marks of be- ing, Flying across the continent| that crazy way for two minutes with some chit in the group. Some | decadent young New York wast- er.” H No Luck | } ERR Jet the group of fussing | dowagers .drop past her./ Older people were such idiots. She walked to the back of the| rooms and found a telephone. The airport. | The airport did not know. It seemed that to her that they al-! most overdid not knowing. And/ then it occurred to her that there | e with private flying | d that pe! that was | r had off. But | You y.| st telephone lever, cap- SUBSCRIBE FOR THE CITIZEN— a ours of reer ts res married assistant smal jokes hich able little Eileen * had been planning her life so can- nily and carefully till now? She looked around the room, Jordan had lost her. He was up at the other end of the farthest par- lor, He was talking agreeably to one of the older professors; one of a black-coated group who were standing round a mantelpie ce, | gossiping and relaxed. The sight of him, so usual, so kind, so san so ambitious, should have ‘pull her back to, herself as she, had, been, She took orie‘step’ toward' ‘him: Then she halted. There was-an- other group, near them. Not so: important; the women’s dresses were brighter and more trimmed and less expensive, the men laughed louder—a couple of voices with a foreign accent echoed toward her. The musical and artistic group, drawn together in secret boredom with the others, clustered in chairs and on a stool r 80. One man had a leg thrown over his chair arm, one of the younger women was on a floor cushion— even here in the sacred Onder- donk mansion. The group’s center was a middle-aged woman with a tanned, plump, intense face and long banged hair, filleted with un- becoming gold ribbon that had probably by its creases come off a candy box. Her dress was artis- tic but badly made, and her shoes were wrong for it. But her vitality made up for all that. She was Jansing and gestieulating with one hand; the other, as usual, imprisoned in that of the dark man with crumpled shirt front who sat close by-her, his spectacled eyes doglike on hers. The Weigands. Eileen came close to them. She stood above them, and waited till Martha Weigand’s last staccato sentenced came to its close. Then she spoke, deliberately. “I wanted to talk to you. That audition you wrote me about, | Mrs. Weigand.” Retrospect “[T ISN'T like her,” her aunt said. She looked up from the pile of exercises she was cor- recting. The neat, little old mission desk, in a corner of the square, trim, inexpensively pretty living room, wes what Eileen always remem. bered as her aunt’s natural back- ground. She belonged there, much more than at any of her other oc- cupations. Miss Gardner had a life which, she said brightly, was a very sate isfactory one. A broad life, she called it, with innocent pride. She and Helen Doran were popular with the other teachers in their school. There was their up—two tables of bridge—which met fo: nightly on Friday evenings, wit chers, @ his wife. It had had become more generation; partners, who knew each others’ ways; it had a final once a winter when men took the ladies to a real show, with a two-dollar tab d@hote dinner b ingrown for it had Dredestineg ala night e gentle. fon hand. When Louise Gardner's brother and sister-in-law had died, close together, of flu in a bad flu winter in the late twenties, Miss Lou had taken over sixteen-year-old Eileen as a matter of course, Everybody had always had high Lopes about Eileen. Even Hel Doran, who had been pretty an popular in a tall, dark, serious way, and had lost her lover in the World War. The two women felt that it was a sort of carrying on the torch when the boys began to flood the little apartment; they smiled reminiscently over tele- phone c by shy gruff young voices, and high-school girls gig- gling with Eileen in little groups after school. Miss Louise didn’t know it. but in her ate at Ejleen’s decision to go a hundred miles away and take a job that did not pay a living ~wage, there was not only an unsel! concern for her nigesiss ‘are, but dismay at 1 2 greatest pride and most valuable possession, “But-darling, any moron. can go sing love so! down a radio,” she mourned. at about your intellectual life? And you had such a high I. Q.!" “Black mark for brains,’” Eileen quoted to herself, She re- membered every word Martin had said in that brief ten min- utes, it seemed. She paused in her work, She was sorting a pile of sheet music, on the long, narrow, and mahog- any-stained table that served for a living-room piece and a dining table, Its makeshift el ce was all of a piece, she suddenly real- with all of Aunt Louise ys. She wanted, impatiently, either to eat sitting on a packing box or in a room especially for dining. Her usually deft hands blundered, and ‘the laster- bronzed book end in the shape of Rodin’s “Thinker” went over and was just saved. “But any moron can bea sec- retary to a professor, tgo,”, she ughed. “Who wants to be safe?” t 4? “It probably wouldn't be for long. I'd like to see you in a little home of your own, “They have them in lets of places besides here,” Eileen said demurely; “or perhaps, if you married some kinds of men, you might prefer just alighting for a while and going on again.” ck in New Zealand. A casual hut in Hawaii, ‘To be continued (Copyright, 1939-48, Margaret Widdemer} nent tent nett anes who | ie WEEKLY. chance of getting a HORNETS CLINCH “TITLE OF JUNIOR BASKET TOURNEY |SCORED SECOND STRAIGHT » PLAYOFF VICTORY YES- TERDAY: ’ EJECTED IN FOURTH ! Scoring freely in a_ heetic fourth; quarter, the Hornets of varsity forward Ralph Arnold yesterday afternoon walked off Gym as champions of the junior \high basketball tournament. | Ormond Cordova’s PIRATES HAL CORDOVA ACE; TED KRY Wist.cITIzBN ALT GATES TAMED DODGERS, 3:2 MARINES WITH “McCARTHY CHANGES enete| TWO-HITTER AND YANKS NOSE WHITE SOX | FANNED SEVEN; ROBBED OF SHUTOUT WHEN SOL- ENBARGER STOLE HOME (Speeial to The Citizen) | NEW YORK, May-17.—A home} run in the eleventh inning dewn- | {ed the Brooklyn Dodgers 3-2 for| jthe Pittsburgh Pirates and-halted! Clarence “Cigarette Willie” ithe latest winning streak of the | Gates, Key West’s ace softball | Flatbush nine. | pitcher, last night twirled | St. Louis Cardinals chopped @ hit ball against the Marines but | ‘the floor of the High School|game off the Brooklyn lead when} was robbed a shutout when Jesse | Cates, 3b | they blanked the Boston Braves, Sollenbarger, shortfielder, stole |4-0, behind six-hit pitching byjhome after reaching third on Blanks, |Gumbert, who jumped from the/two walks and an error in the throwing caution to the wind, | Giants to the Cards just two days| fourth inning. |fouled themselves out of a pos-|ago. Dodgers now hold a slim! Fanhing seven and walking i sible chance of claiming the title and practically handed the clinch- | the youthful Redbirds. . New York defeated the Chi-'to Charlie Spakes for nine hits} |cago Cubs again yesterday, romp-/ and seven runs. - (2 |ing to a 4-2 triumph despite be-| ing game to the Arnolds, 36-23. They had fought uphill to tie the {score 21-21 in the third quarter jbut became desperate when the |Hornéts shot out in front early in the closing round. | one-and-a-hali- game margin over | five, Gates mastered the Leath- ernecks while his teammates got i e | Peppers opened the game, bot- ing outhit 8-9. ‘ | tom end of a twin bill at Bayview | Joe McCarthy, disgusted with! Park, with two runs. They add- a lineup that dropped five games ed another in the next frame and two-| Committing personal and tech-| in a row, benched a couple of! scored lone markers in the fifth nieal errors with abandon, they | Tookies, ‘juggled the batting order | and sixth. A two-run rally cli- | watched the champs pile up a jcommanding lead, Blinded with rage they did little scoring but \lots ef mauling. When the quar- |ter ended Hornets ‘had racked jand snapped the losing streak. {Chicago White Sox were the vic- |tims, 6-5. Joe DiMaggio, who jhas been wading through an ex- |tended slump,’ slapped his first |up' 15 poirits, while limiting the |homer since late in April and Blanks to a lone field goal. “Lefty” Aritas, stat performer of the Cordovas, forced himself from the game when in anger he kicked 4he: ball and: left the court without >permiission. Previously ‘three personal fouls had been \charged against him. The red-headed seoring ace of the Arnolds, “Lolly” Wells, set a record for the most points in a single playoff battle. He | wrinkled the net with eight field |goals and two out of four free |shots. Aritas, who sank 17 points the day before, led his team- mates yesterday with three bas- | kets and a like number of char- lity tosses. Hornets claimed the laverage in foul-shooting in a |single game, converting 10 of their 15 free throws into points. P. Colgate, three out of were the leaders. Details of trophy and medal {awards for the champs, All-Star team and outstanding players may be found elsewhere in this issue. The tifde-winning game. brought ta a elose one of the most active basketball seasons in recent years, beginning with the senior high tournament shortly after school opened last year. A city league, varsity schedule, and '@lashes between girl sextettes |and grammar school fives were sandwiched between the senior and junior high tourneys. All activities were under direction of \John R, Offutt, athletic director, Box score: Arnold (36) a Ft “e 7 18 6 Player— Pierce | Wells Schoneck |P. Colgate i. 2- 4- 3- | Barber 0- | om cwes Totals— Cordova Player— | Aritas |U. Sweeting | Newlan Ogden Radriguez Ba 4 TP 9 2 7 0 -) ©} Se Totals— Score by quarters: | Arnold $ | Cordova 3 JENKINS MAULED BY MONTGOMER PROMISING NEGRO LIGHT. WEIGHT LEFT LOU BLEED- ING IN TENTH ROUND 15 2) 36 9 21 23 (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, May 17.—Bob Montgomery, lanky negro light- weight who was hailed as a other Henry Armstrong bef his defeat by Lew Jenkins last [night lifted himself head and {shoulders above the field by anding Jenkins a savage pasting 9 a i0-round non-title, bout. Jenkins, who won his title @ surprise knockout of Lou / bers ‘and defended it successfully with another equally surprising kayo, never found the range against Montgomery last nig! Some 14,000 fans saw the P' adelphia negro batter the cham- pion about the ring for 10 rounds, spill him with a solid right the ninth, and leave him bieed- ing and tired at the final bill Montgomery's impressive tri- umph insures him a title shot at Jenkins and gives him a good crack at Fritzie Zivie's welter crow in in poled a triple in sparking’ Mur- derers’ Row to victory. Cleveland Indians registered their second torisecutive win over \the Bostor’Red Sdx, 9-3; Wash- ington Senators edged the St. |Louis Browns, 7-6, and Detroit's |Tigers nosed the Philadelphia Athletics, 5-4. Results: |maxed the one-sided affair. Tebeau, heavy-hitting Marine, | singled in the third for the first safe blow off Gates. Chambers’ |infidld hit in the fifth was the second and last Sea Soldier hit. Spakes, who has been on the |mound in all games won by’ his /teammates, allowed four’ infield to the outfield. The only long by Villareal over the centerfield- \er’s head that scored two earned {runs. Spakes struck out only one |hits and a like number of’ singles} |smash of the game was a homer} highest |New York three, | and Schoneck, four out of five, | NATIONAL LEAGUE: At Pittsburgh Brooklyn Pittsburgh | batter and walked seven. Villareal, first sacker of the Plumbers, putout 10 runners and |Earl “Wrinkley Bill” Ingraham, |eatcher, was credited with eight. in-| Gates made five assists. Mickey Ubieta, Pepper second baseman, |robbed a Marine of a hit when R. H. E./he executed a difficult catch in Chicago is ; H aioe eat ki Lal fe Lohrman, Hubbell _ and Dan-| puteuts io i Ltn: fir hg : | 3 . ning; Lee and McCullough, ‘eight putouts and two assists, eos |and Spakes, a putout and three R. H. E. | assists, paced the Devil. Dogs [Borne i i . : on the defense. eres tea . Louis —.... In the fourth, after a Posedel, Sullivan and Masi;jgtole home, ‘Gane sat ee Gumbert and Mancuso. | batter to fill the bases but Spakes ended the inning by. grounding out, third to first. The: vietory shoved the Pep- (11 Innings) Higbe, Brown and Owen; ning, Bowman and Davis. At Chicago At St. Louis Cincinnati - Philadelphia, _not| scheduled. | AMERICAN LEAGUE At Boston RE, Cleveland 914 1) Boston weirs WE Bagby and Desautels; Harris, Judd and Pytlak. At Washington St. Louis an Washington = Auker and Grace; Leonard, Carrasquel, Anderson and Early, R. H. E. {of leading Sawyer’s Barbers and | gave them a margin of two games over the third-place Marines. Score by innings: R. HE. |Plumbers .. 210 011 2—7 9 1 | Marines 000 100 0-1 2 7 C. Gates and Ingraham; C. Spakes and Thompson, NavSta, strengthened by return of several of its best per- formers, nosed Navy 10-9 in nip-and-tuck opener. Sailors, first-up, tallied thrice |in the second inning and the Sta- tion boys followed suit. The civ- At New York | Chicago ey a |New York FoR Se, el Lee and Tresh; Breur, Murphy 5 0 | Dest 3 6 | Philadelphia ok Pee: lin front with single runs in the At Philadelphia (third and fourth and two mark- | Detroit fers in the fifth, leading 7-3. _. 4 9 | Undismayed and in no wise Rowe, Trout and Sullivan; | Beckman, Ferrick and Hayes. ber te pull | vm = wm | However, NavSta |NEWS Of BIG’ LEAGUES) (By Assectated Pregs) ahead, 8-7. came right the game in the sevefith with a Hone score after blanking the { | Sailors in the upper portion of the CARDS SELL, TRADE, OPTION | last frame. Consecutive singles ST. LOUIS, May 17.—Getting| by leftfielder ‘Francis ‘Delaney | '* {under the 25-man limit, ‘the St. {and third baseman Gutierrez set- |Louis Cardinals this week sold/tled the issue. : outfielder Ernie Koy to the Cin-| Gabriel “Rubberman” Garcia, cinnati Reds, traded Fiddler Bill | McGee to the New York Giantg) 4d thet he would.join an old for Harry Gumbert and shipped’ teammate, Pepper Martin, on the outfielder Harry Walker to Columbus farm team of the Red-| Coast league. birds maa wer BUCS OPTION THREE MEN PITTSBURGH, May. 17.—Re- YANKS REDUCE NEW YORK, May u : I ri | York’s Yankees, meeting the re-| Pirates this week optioned pitch- | sufrendering to defeat, Navy! |blasted the ball all over the field | { representatives |PLUMBER PITCHING , ACE/Daseball, William “Butch” Cates, came out) | | | | 1 pers up to within a_ half-game!)y pup circvrr COURT OF THR the | therein named, is a non-resident of allsland, N. ¥.; that said defendant is back in its half of the same: in-{) ‘ning to knot the count ‘and ‘win’ 17.:—New | ducing to 25 players, Pittsburgh's | the Honora | ‘that there is no person in the State STERLING, CATES AND THE HATTERS Here’s how Key West’s two! in organized | at the plate in recent Perform: | ances. The local players ate put-| ting in their first season with the) jDeLand Red Hats. | Their performances: | Wednesday, May 14 ABR HPOAE lb 502710 ee ee So ee Two-base nit: Sterling. The score: St. Augustine _.. 100 300 0004) DeLand 100 032 02x—8 | The standings: | Club— W. L. Pet.) 1. DeLand 20 8 .714! St. Augustine 18 10 643 | SH Sterling, o 0 | } | Lino Castro, Anthony Kelly and | Delaney tied for Station hitting honors with two each. One of Delaney’s blows was good for a triple. | Kiems topped Navy, three for; four. Catcher Johnson slapped a triple that scored three runs in the big sixth. Score by innings: R. HE! Navy . 030 006 0 — 9 7 7) NavSta -.. 031 122 1x—10 11 1 Martin and Johnson; L. Castro) and Allshouse. (xNone out when winning run scored.) LEGALS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF TH ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR MONROE COUNTY, STATE OF FLORIDA. IN CHAN. CERY. | Cane No. 7-546 LEONARD GUBRRQ, Plaintiff, | vs. FRANCES BEASLEY GUBRRO, Defendant. TO: Frances Beasley Guerro, Residence—unknown, ORDER FOR PUBLICATION | You are hereby required to ap-| pear to the Bill of Complaint for Di- | vorce in the above styled and en- | titled cause on or before June 2nd, 1941, otherwise the allegations | therein will be taken as confessed. | This order to be published once | each week for four consecutive weeks in The Key West Citizen, a| newspaper published in Key West, | Florida. i Done and ordere@ this 18th day of | April, 1941. (SBAL) Ross C Sawyer Clerk of the Circuit Court, Monroe County, Florida. By (Sd.) Florence E. Sawyer, Deputy Clerk. aprl9-26; may3+10-17,1941 ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIE OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR MONROB COUNTY, IN CHANCER PHILIP RUDINSKY, Complainant, . DIVORCE, | UDINSKY, Defendant. ORDER OF PUBLICATION It appearing by the sworn bill filed In the above stated cauge that) Shirley Rudins' the defendant vs. SHIRLEY the State of Florida and resides at 107-80, 169th Street, Jamaica, Loi ever the age of twenty-one years; of Florida the service of a sum-| mons in chancery wpon wham would | bind said defendant. i It is, therefore, ordered that said | jilian federal employes shot out /defendant be and she is hereby re- | bill of com- ne on or be- day of June, a to appear to it filed in said for jonday, the A. D. 1941, Otherwise the allega- tions of said bill will be taken as confessed by said defendant. cr ordered that this or- each week for sin The Key en, @ newspaper published ir said County and red qui pla! State | this firet: day of | Ross (Sawyer may3-10 “a or THE COUNTY) JUDGE, WONROE COUNTY, STATE OF FLORIDA. IN PRO<, BATE. K T. MeNULTY, Deceased. j INTENTION TO MAKR! TION FOR FINAL SCHARGE bate Law 198%) In re the Estate of FR the| Sacramento club of “the Pacific/r. a1 Whom It May Concern: Notice is hereby given that Kart 0. Thompson has filed his final re~) port as executor of the estate of Frank T. ceased; that he has fil discharge, a 4 Lord; County, of May.) Ray Judge of Monroe on the 26th day County Florida. quirement of the 25-man roster,|¢fs Dick Lanahan and Bill Clem- | 1541. for approval of same and for this week returned pitcher Geo,|ensen to St. Paul in the Ameri- final discharge as executor of the estate of Frank T. McNulty, de- Washburn to the Newark Beers,|oan Association and catcher Joe ceased, on whip Ind day of May. 1941. farm club-in the International | Schultz to Portland of the Pacific league. Washburn lost his only Coast league. appearance on the mound this season. VAUGHAN LEADS HITTERS NEW YORK, May 17.—Aver-| BROWNS SELL RADCLIPP aging 395 in 19 games, Vaughan, ST. LOUIS, May 1%—The St.jof the Pittsburgh Pirates is lead- Louis Browns announced Thurs-/ ing hitters of the major leagues. | day the sale of heavy hitting out-| He produced 30 safeties in 76 ap- fielder Rip Radcliff to. the De-' pearances at the plate. Travis, troit Tigers for an undisclosed/ Washington Senator, is second price. Radcliff, lefthand hitter.) with 334, and Enos Slaughter. averaged .343 last year but notch-}St Louis Cardinal, third, 388, ed only .262 so far this season. one point ahead of Cronin, Bos- At the same time the Browns! ten Red Sox. make known they had traded; Johnson, Philadei Ath- Vernon Kennedy, a | letics; Camilli, Brooklyn Dodgers. moundsman, to the Washington! and Ott, New York Giants, are Senators for catcher Rick Fer- ‘tied for home run honors with rell, brother of Wes the pitcher. | seven each. PAUL DEAN TO MINORS NEW YORK, May 17.—The producing New York Giants’ fromt office announced that Paul Dean had been returned to the minors ARL ©. THOMPSON, of the estate of Frank T. decraned mayd-10-17-24,1948 Executor MeNuity Hot Off the Wire! Service Inning By Inning, First Time in Key West HORSESHOE CAFE Clayton Sterling and| HAVE CREATED an immediate I R/FOR SALE—MISCELLANEOUS | FOR RENT Classified Colum seerececcce: eecce eccconeet INSTRUCTION WAR _ ORDERS | NOTICE AM NO LONGER operating: at 518 Fleming St. My new place of BUSINESS is located at 915 Grinnell ‘street. Friends and patrons are cordially invited to drop in. JACK HARRIS PHOTOS. may! Tsat-mon-wed-sat HOUSE MOVING --——-+sngioinininntanieeamenaesia |HOUSES. MOVED. Estimates given; good equipment. A. OQ ~ Taylor, phone 165, mayl6-lwig PaaS Senin ONIN Uy FSS demand for thousands of Air-! craft workers on wing assem-! bly and metal parts. You can; earn from $30 to $40 weekly if, you are trained. Must be} American born, mechanically | inclined, 18 to 40, willing: to take short, intensive tattory | training.’ Reasonable part ‘cost | to start, balance payable after you are working. Write Box JL, The Citizen. _ may6-4tx , | BELLAMAR DeLUXE APART- MENTS, 316 Elizabeth street. Apply 517 mayl2-tt FOR SALE or Exchange—Cabin Cruiser, 28-it. 6-ft. beam; 40) hyp. Gray Marine Engine. Will; exchange for lot, full or part! payment. Box B.R, The Citi- | zen, mar6-tf: ROOM WITH PRIVATE BATH; =_— - |__ use of Kitchen if desired, 986 JOHNSON OUTBOARD MOTOR, | Grinnell, off Division, near Bell 16-h.p. A-1 shape. $95.00. Ap-! Tower. may16-3tx BEAUTIFUL ROOMS, by dayy week or month. Reasonable, Hot water always, shower and Vacancy now. Elizabeth street. ply 523 Eaton street. may16-3tx | JAEGER two-inch Centrifugal | Pump. ~ 10,000 gals. per hr. | Complete with suction hose.; tub. WHITE HOUSE, 227 Du- Mounted on pheumatic tires.| yal street, may16-2tx Thoroughly re-conditioned. ; _ ovnwenavertiondipn? Price $100. East Coast Equip-| NEW CONCRETE FURNISHED ment Company, 1228 S.W. First) HOUSE, everything up to date. street, Miami, Florida. Hot and cold running water; apr2l-Imoi garage. 1216 Margaret street. | Tammi 919 Elizabeth FOURTEEN FT. SAILBOAT.) eset Oe teat equi, . $100. James H.} Fully Pinder. 1217 Petronia eter EFFICIENCY COTTAGES, el tricity and gas furnished. Ap- ply Albury’s Service, 800 Si- (00 CASH for quick sale, lot 12, Sti ates maylt-tt square 4, tract 20. Washington street. A. L. Murray, Columbia! Laundry. aprl5-s FURNISHED APARTMENT, Art- ——— craft Studio, cor. Charles and TYPEWRITING PAPER — 500 New streets. Tel. 422-J. Sheets, 75c. The Artman Press, | may15-6tx may19-tf FOR RENT — To couple, new, Apartment. Two bedrooms. whert you-don’t save PENNIES : bat dave DOLLARS. You wilt; Martello Towers subsists ‘ may15- save 10c per pound on your ‘Telephone £30 aed 5 is i 1 STEAK. This is not le or yh LY FURNISHED . saving, and not a weekend in- @ it, but an eve day MENT; all modern convens mer epape = iences; hot running Water. saving from Monday to Mon- day. *pelieve it or not. Our) Ideal for couple. No children service is always with a smile. or pets allowed. Apply 1100 Packer street. may13-tf may17-1t FURNISHED or = children, no pets, Olivia street. mayd-tf HOTELS BRING YOUR pee Ape oe in need of a good ni to THE OVERSEAS HOTEL, Clean rooms, enjoy the homey atmosphere. Sat rates, And, try THE CO! ‘SHOP, | it’s economical and has “that? tasty food and atmosphere. 9 Fleming street. april. WANTED WILL SACRIFICE $50 equity in $135 6-ft. Frigidaire for $20 to anyone taking over payments. In perfect condition. 1421 Ash- street. may17-3t FOURTEEN FT, OUTBOARD MOTOR BOAT. Fully equipped and one Johnson Outboard mo- tor, 4 h, $150. James H Pinder, fir Petronia Street. jan3-s STORE with living quarters. Olivia and Windsor Lane. Lot 100°; 1%-story house . on! livia street; lot corner Von. Phister and George Sts.; 3 lots Pine Key. Apply 1614, WANTED—Second-Hand Furni- Grinnell street. apr25-s, ture and Carpenter's Tools, apr25-12tx a FOR SALS-tom Cleaning sed | ooo Laem ae 0. ' -tt| Maillard, cor. Louisa and Em- bie al ma Streets. ayl2-lwkx PICTURE FRAMING Sie SAE A HELP WANTED PICTURE FRAMING, Diplomas; | antique frames refinished. Pic-|\ GROCERY CLERK, full or matted. Paul DiNegro,| time. Apply Box RX, 614 Francis street. apri8-tf' Citizen. P.O. Box 363. E ME NEW FU VITA-VAR K DRYING ENAME QT. weed and metal furniture, wood work, ovtomobiles. You can spill hot fiquide or aleahol, even serub it. . it ‘won't turn white, chip or mar. For Ail surfeces: wood, metal or concrete. OUTDOORS AND IM. Ne brushmarks. Phone 270