The Key West Citizen Newspaper, September 12, 1941, Page 3

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had a gun,” Anne re-|s called. “Maybe his a4 the men are i they | remarked, Mind ‘air’ and wal ae 80 get a dri . cloning thet ating working nent wi le appe Powe 30 we es out and sat down “Presently he threw the pai down and turned towards ier bis “his tei usipeaBab le. you found oyt?” haye™ sel asked: and ‘felt he was de- bating whether to tell her or gor Emir: ey a ° Pe. from th e said at las' want it?” “DA wr = “Of course I do.” er eyes intently for it. . then he smiled that ioeckal Pale of his that always changed the thythm of her heartbeat. "We've faced death together before. ag ed Pei Anne?” # er hand groped for his and clung to it * “What i is his m Blaze?” a Hogg geek eyes turned foam ers to apets betw feet. “The ie ever | Wank. He acknowledges his debt to.me far saving his life. Had he ae his usual procedure, he ass me, Mackey and I would died at once and you would hie been sent to the slave ma it is, he gives me a taste o1 ats dise—this castle’ in the desert.— and you,—for the length of time if takes us to die from starva- ion.” mites “Sent We to saree I sa" t be- lieys it! “The Emis "is Suan bo ‘Was giy- ing me Mackey, too. A friend ¥p|® te He searched ps with pee, girl to lo what more could any ma: during the final age of h aay ate 8 Anne drew he: mand away from his” and ‘sat straight. “But you said he would take ng chances on the Nagaras se my death. “Not death — murder. Paid make’ a nice Aimee king life as an unsancti °, butcher does is murder. Lettin people die of hardships or hunge! is the will of God.” ‘How dreadful.” “The Emir warns me that me die of thirst in a very few days €n the desert while with aie after the initial pangs, 24 heard, the suffering <a aat ¥ere, and one lives mu Sherwood gave Anne a's ait oor Aad to see how she was take od went on hoped al q the alts prophecy—w can no longer—cla: Anne remembered her father’s last note. pull ine prophecy.” “ a is the prophecy?” she asked “T have been two yei ing it out. Youz father upon it accidentally, Recently Emir learned it—I don't nd how.” “Tell me, ” she urged. att move into the shade first. “Up under the rock,” she syg- BE Ls “T'm thirsty eee He caught and held her: eye. “Hungry?” “Not in. the least. Pm stirred up. Food and emot don't mix.” he smiled, and rose and the small rug. She” other from the tent preteen Png HEY stopped at the Bas put her oun $93 ol: of Water that by wn der of the rock. “Why. moss grow on this rock? “Tt must be that only a while in spl Another thought occurred to her. “Couldn't we fashion a water bag of tent cloth?” “Something to be grateful for.’ malted, ae bicked bi it out hi | “The tent is made poe. ative, woolen weave. di to yes) the. 6 tent'and ener | Bodden are our Ah Cae , apes ingot Ks otis = Preven week the ‘leas’ down her the said. and a teat rolled | tted, leadin; the ot ajdown her cheek. seaay ledge iindet the aie To be continued — SUBSCRIBE 70R THE €ITIZEN—26c WEEKLY. pla: end Wit of the the mater cuns | to exist a eh Po pists on which agence city of Saya! Nago™ - ae ity be hi on a “It can if auccounded by higher moun fierce nai CPLA > ae know! Blac Sseeret ap- “Witek hi comer she asked. “It all depends,” he said with th ES ; colonial nation, some continent one ti this .one intact nelle buried in | imggesiple.” she she does beg oy pyramid ble when y a think ny i it get ther there it sland . The goes that iin abitants ete of 2 ae vane the Haves to a $a’ FTepnant we has spr i ee wonderful it it proves to 2” murmured. “Anne with & ted : ine an not = pe kn ma iste Se ihe a tan hunter cat beg fy ‘this two- ae rae, ut ine i sohe han d “two fips ae Fig beds > . ee of ut his hare ad been ie auch for him, Be ies in aaire im a “An iy Anne prompted. On The Horizon HERWOOD walked back and forth while he talbed. and, happening to lift Sia ea kes horizo: iffen ¢ Napa Sugdende, Suter Anne sprang to her knees and then to her feet. She saw the same bee ose ie fies it some one moving?” she cannot tell. Let's climb to the top Par cliff." For the Saket | cd to a Stas ‘Or clay 1 as! of clay like a jones mayving with ror his fea visible. From the crown of the rock when they arrived there. climb- ing swiftly, they could see no sign of movement. Anne felt sick with sisanporal ent. The y that spread out before them w: revealing in its desolation. An eg | endless expanse of a low clay es, dunes encroaching on the = Teached to hazy distances ; that had no background save sky | except in the direction of the | Bekkan Bula mountains which rose, afar off, to glistening snow | heights and merely seryed to show the helplessness of man. “This will be a furnace in an- other month,” said Sherwood. ‘He | looked at Anne, who had dropped *idown panting. “We shouldn’t race like this and use up on strength for so little erent wet reached out a hand to pull ih NE te het feet. “Let's go bai “Phere’s no object," she said “We'll have: something softer | tae ene to zest on.” am feeling bruised,” \é ts | indent ee Ceope en nd on the heel of Sor bare hand. They looked once mote at the | caste tor across uy pied Slowly ee | rs So that’s what it was! At | heigh- fast py ala et Anne fortis est made no aie ee teat Tageed as they a0; | roa sows, wi ‘wi tab Bi felt buffeted ene char? ing. bs told | nerteit venementiy. “relied to mer eey saying the tent and Shcewo and re- ee in feet in = he thick we Bet felt | a aes ules bexin fo race despite an Pa at abot our felationsti fates notcthink about it,” shi oa ive? WeMlarbe be ee be rescued.” laybe!” et LD "4 sai Free Be | {yo in the second: fh im. Qut-of- the tcould retire a single bai r WD D ELEVENTH Important Game. Featur- | ed By Arguments; Lef-! sixth clinched the game. the second, three in the eighth. Fitzsimmons A four-hit (Cincinnati Reds. (Special to The Citizen) NEW YORK, Sept. 12—The o¢ked:| re hey Four! }runners crossed the plate in that / {stanza and another went home in / ‘the third. "A two-run rally in the | performance Carpenter swept the New York Giants to a 6-0 shutout of the Despite fact New York got only six safe- games. ties, six Turners crossed home Earley’s nine-hit pitching ithe afterpiece completely mas- | \tered the Bucs, while the Braves }combined 10 safe blows and aj half-dozen Pirate errors to score at will They counted four in; the fifth, | ty White Outpitched |one in the seventh and two in} the BASEBALL | (Major Leagues) TODAY Cleveland at Washington. Chicago at Philadelphia. Detroit at New York. St. Louis at Boston. National Brooklyn at St. Louis. New York at Cincinnati, Boston at Pittsburgh, in by | Phi 2Iphi % |Bums of Brooklyn threw off | plate. Double No-Hit Johnny iter pitta ah: CARE? their. ‘rags” yesterday afternoon | Vander Meer,.who started for | saree jand walked into the “throne!the Reds, vacated the hill in the SUNDAY froom” of the National League | five-nun uprising in the fifth. Cop Pair A 12-hit attack and five opposi- tion miscues carried the Cleve- | defeat the day before, Brooktyn’s'jang Indians to.an 85 triumph! jas kings+gt leastfor‘the-day: | Bounding back from a double Price Field (Trumbo Island) First Game—Key West Stars vs. South Dade All-Stars. Second Game—Key d d Hike N.L. Lead two All- West ‘beloved Dodgers ‘battled the of the Washington Senators in|Conchs vs.. South Dade. Al- ever-threatening St. Louis Cards the top end of a bargain bill. | stars. eleven innings and ue ant The Tribe swept the double-| {hands down, 6-4. In the end, it!header by taking the nightcap | si was the Redbirds who defeated py the close score of 2-3. Smith | SOFTBALL themselves. went all the way for the In- (Bayview Park, 8:00 p. m.) It all started in the fourth in-/|dians in the first and Al Milnar . ning. Until then Ernie (Lefty)/did the same in the ~ second. TONIGHT White had the Bums eating out) Milnar’s fiye-hit job in the aft- three |ermath highlighted the twin bill. A 2-1 ball game ended in vic- swing-‘tory for the Philadelphia Ath- same jletics and defeat for the Chicago The opposing hurl- and forcing ers, Rigney for the Chisox and each performances. once second that | nings to put the game on stanza, got the first hit off White Chicago was held runless until | of his hands. The first men to face him—Reese, Herman and Reiser—went down ing. He started out the way in the second, fanning Lava- White Sox. getto and Camilli, ithe third to ground out. In the rookie Besse for the third round he retired the side (turned in six-hit in order. But it was a different|The Athletics scored tale in the fourth. each the first and Reese, first man up in —a sharp single to right. Un- the very last round. nerved, the Cardinal southpaw Detroit Tigers, going jhit Reiser on the arm and he nings, lwent to first gratis. {just before Reiser, runners and filling the A’s, 12 nosed the 1941 American Herrhan,;League Champion New York was thrown Yankees, 5-4 A unique feature out at the initial sack. Medwick|of the battle was the identical‘'MAJOR BASEBALL LEAGUES’ !hit-to short and was safe when} scoring of both teams. Detroit? American |Marion errored, advancing both broke the ice with a lone run in bages, ithe second and the Yanks came New York | Lavagetto lifted a fly to the out- right back tq tie the count ‘stands to clear the bags. |runs—and all were unearned. From then until the junder control. St. Louis opened its \Four singles, with Padgett | Crespi sending a mate jan error, accounted for fhe j ninth. | markers. Benton, the Detroit | The score was all-even after!man, held the Yanks t {the Cardinals had their turn at/hits over the lopened the round by pasting McCarthymen, |Brown, but the Redbird runner safe blows. was forced at second by Hopp. ed for the Bengals. | Padgett singled, sending ‘Flash’, Results of the games: | Hopp to third. Mize hit into! |what should haye been an easy jdouble play but shortstop Reese! At Pittsburgh | dropped the ball, allowing Hopp Boston 'to score and all other runners to | Pittsburgh jreach a be safely. Crabtree’ lined for a. si fog Heneeleas and. Smith. | scoring Sears a close play” OE ee at the plate... Crabtree’s drive? Second Game | was felgyed to the plate ahead) At Pittsburgh lof Padgett but catcher Owen | Boston |dropped the ball as the runner Pittsburgh - Nees into him on the slide. ; Club— in © 47 in | Boston 66 69 69 72. 486 6 . 78 19 National Club— w. b by Brooklyn ______-_ 89 49 St. Louis z 50 Cincinnati 62 | Pittsburgh 63 mounds- |New York 0 eight Chicago NATIONAL LEAGUE First Game R. H. E. Destroyers .5 8 3/|Naval Air Station 710 2)|Naval Station — osP ost and| game into oyertime periods apiece ;tying the score with a pair of | across home plate, combined with|markers in their half of the The fatal eleventh was marked livan, Clemenson and Baker. by the collapse of Cardinal de- fense. Former teammate 1 oa At Cincinnati |wick started the downfall when}New York lhe shot a sizzling liner to third | Cincinnati - sacker Brown, who dropped the? is] nere and then threw wild t Fae firs Lavagetto walked, his | Lombardi. a base on balls of the game. | ear | Camilli, he of the fourth inning At St: Louis | three-run homer, laid down @ | Brooklyn \bunt and Mize fell to the ground St Louis — fin an attempt to field it. The? ai “Innings) \bases were drunk. Walker, hit-{. Fitzsimmons, Casey and Owen; less until now, slapped a single 18 SONG ang i tan ea (0) ie leauge to allow two instead yet scheduled ene cross home: } | The game was marked by num-} lerous violent arguments and/ {sloppy defense. The clubs com: }mitted four errors apiece,- twoz iby each of the shortstops. | | Bucs And Braves Split The Pirates of Pittsburgh scor-} ‘ed early to defeat the Boston | Braves, 7-5, in a twin bill open-» ter but took a terrible beating i ithe nightcap, 10-0. Heintzel-; iman, who struck oft just two? | and issued six bases on balls, Sa ’ - }the first e with effectiy: jhurling in in the pinches, exce] At Philadelobio lor the fifth and sixth innings|Chicago - when the Braves tallied all their (Phi runs. Pittsburgh jumped on Sal=p = tye and ae Washi tite ee Washington Smith and Is; Calrasquel and ng ery ingto ne se oan nn eld, scoring Reese, and Camillijtheir half of the same inning. \Chicago __ slammed ene into right pavilion’ Again in the third, Detroit tal- | Cleveland i Four’ lied once and again New York! Detroit _ duplicated." From then until the'St Louis wild ‘ninth both sides were blanked. ! philadelphia |eleventh, White kept the Bums In the final round of the regula- } Washington tion affair, the Tigers mustered scoring ;|two runs and victory seemed as- | lin the third with a pair of runs.isured. But the Yanks sent the 12-inning route. jbat in tne seventh. Fat Freddy Russo went all the way for the dishing out Rudy York homer- SERVICE SOFTBALL Salvo, Hutchings and Berres; Earley and Berres; Gee, Sul- in-}morial i ers. vs. Thurston. TOMORROW NIGHT First Game—Red Raiders vs. Stanton Star Tourney Champs). Second Game—Stanton vs. Pepper's - City Champs). in} in-| STANDINGS Boston __ Philadelphia li Club— Army —. Marines - Submarines - /Subshasers. aa Guard | Hayes. Vb oamoos | (42 Innings) Benton and Tebbetts; R. . E jand Dickey, Sylvestri. 6 1 pci nh 0 : 1, St Louis and Boston, not . . 6 co Carpenter and “Hartnett: Van- jder Meer, L. Moore, Turner and zm 1 on | scheduled. E. 4) 4) First Game—NavSta vs, Plumb- Second Game—Red Raiders day scrimm Memorial (Miami Gold Me- Plumbers ; | s | beer ol i “500 j 1ate. sessions. “478 | was a 457 | Charles © 415 ‘telling them the on -2B4 cancelled because Petitioner, late was dark—the game acty- | |srare "OF FLORIDA, ally had been called off. LEGALS NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR er than some Fy edponceet: drive es $10 on low hole ae Those four dubs strolled along, thooking, slicing, topping, miss- | jing, with $5 or so riding ‘on every } istroke. And with carryovers. on} 1 pevery bet, One day, going to the, 18th hole, two of these “golfers me up with a flock “of* carry~ ‘overs—$40 worth—for the long- est drive. The. first took a pair of sweet practice swings. Then he drew back his club, swung hard and} —swish!—missed the ball en-| tirely. The other stepped up to] the tee, sure of his $40. Why, | anyone could outdrive a wind! stroke. He took no practice swings, just swung, and. . -yep, missed it too. But, the ball rolled forward— the wind from the whistling} clubhead had blown it off the tee. That’s how this duffer’s | js shortest drive won $40 for the/ : Ross C Sawyer | gat longest drive bet. Clerk of Circuit’ Court ‘of Monroe tto @ County, Florida. aug?9; PHILADELPHIA.—The Phil- lies may have set at least one | baseball record this year— In a game with the Cardin- als, 52 baseballs were used, 44 of which wete “fouled into the TAXPAYERS “AND CITt. THE COUNTY OF THE COUNTY OF ‘Ne. 163) ¢ BU D NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN; ICE SBY GIVEN that Dorothy Alice Henriquez, holder 28 an pray hier duly made and entered Tax, Certificate No. 89, issued thes ip. ee ve entitled be as the oth day of August, A.D. 1935, has | lotions fe Arthur Gomez, ge of filed ‘same in’ my oftice and has | the’ Clrewit Court of the Eleventh made application for a tax déed te | Judicial Cirenit of the State of he issued’ thereon. ‘Said certificate | Elorids, which comprises the County embraces the following described | of Monroe and the County of Dade, |property’ in the County of Monroe, ! on 19th of Sentember, 1941, against | State of Plorida, to-wit: ithe State of Florida, requiring it, Lot 64 Sqr. 2 Tr. 28 %-427, Ba ‘tnrough the State Attorney of said West ‘Land Buyers Assn.,” Plat. | to Show ‘catise off. the 20th Book f Page 22 as recoréed’in | cay of Sey 1941, at the hour Monroe County Records. of ip ‘clo M. of said day, at The assessment of the said prop- ithe Circuit Court Room in the Court- erty under the said certificate is- | house in the City of Key West: in sued was in the name of Johnson | the County of Monroe, why § Realty Company. 000 Floriéa Keys © Aquedyet Com- Untess said certificate shall be re- mission’ Water Revenue Bonds pro- | deemed according to law, the prop- | po: to be issued by said Florida ferty described therein will be sold ys Aqueduct Commission, shipuld o the highest bidder at the court / nut be wail ted anc confirmed. house’ door on the first Monday in|. And ¥ taxpayer or vitigen of the month of October, 1941, which is | sai Cabute of Monroe or of said the 6th day of October, 194}. | County of. ‘alte Ras ‘any cause to Dated this 28th day of August,|.show why said Water Revenue Bane eed Bet be issued and. vali- firmed, he is Ss en rece gause hefore said Court at tye anid thie and. place. wir: my signatare and offi- SS iat Seal at Key West in aennros ‘ounty; Florida, this 10th’ day o! LIN = wanker Beis OF | Sextemb , 94t. reed (SE. Ross ¢ Sawyer oF ve the Cireult Court of “the At AND FOR ieventh Judicial Circuit of Flor- : | bn | | sSeptS-12-19, 1941 in at it Monroe County, CHAN. 6 tor gayi ea stands. Don Padgett of the wie isanagaba Sante eH os the fam ROGALIE TUBN scm bss j | THE i) } | } } i | e oo NEW ORLEANS. — When GEORGE W. SCRIBNER, JR., Claude (Monk) Simons, Jr., was} Defendant. \playing with Tulane a few years} ORDER OF PUBLICATION — ‘ago he got no Special care from} lt appearing by the sworn bill the football trainer, Claude filed in the above stated cause (Monk) Simons, ‘Sr. \that George W: Scribner, Jr., the} During his freshman year, Lit- |defendant therein named, is 4 tle Monk was knocked out one ‘non-resident. of the State of of Flor-| the above stated cau aging the varsity. ida and resides at 164 ; Hine, the, dot The coach told him to go home /Avenue, Summit, in the “County | wae asa Om and he left without receiving of Union, in the Steg of rar oe ae any attention from the trainer. \dersey; that said d thot a PES eee an, es Louse” te gyno KING, It a ene i That night Big Monk was over the age of twenty-one Years: ia greeted sternly at home by Mrs. that there is no person in the State rr Simons: “I hear one of the play- of Florida the service of a sum-! ers was ‘hurt today”. mens in chancery. upon whom “Oh, just one of the freshmen”, | said defendant ‘her husband replied. “I didn’t! dered that said i ‘gefend e is hereby fe- e | quired x fe the bil |pay any attention to him”. ji | oO CITY.—The day may be near at hand when a man | PRIS Gth day. sah can watch a baseball game at) olka idnight withopt worrying about | at oe Ba he gets Lag ee iat cards Ser oat a would stamp the 540) At a town near Lafayette there ; "# from Joe

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