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ain ne SPE "PS as RIB jean wp epee = uebenheurer wer ANE e WHE KEY WEST CT! WwW Candidate Is Interviewed A new candidate for bandmas- ter of the schools here is in con ference today with Superintenc ent of Public Instruction Horace O'Bryant: z The ntial bandmaster is Harold T....Castertoén from Ft Pierce, Fla., who is high re- commended .by Ma'jor O'Neil of the Ft. Pierce county schdp]s of that terton has been assisting for five y His 22 years expe band work include Stuart, Fla, five vard, N. C. and ex professional bands. Casterton, an expert flutist as well as instructor types of woodwinds,, brass and stringed instruments, has played in Chicago Civic Oper B, and ience in two years at from thi A graduate in music Wisconsin College of Music, C terton also studied abroad in England, Denmark and Italy. JAIL, COURTHOUSE (Continued from Page One) Creedy Co7"which is acting as fiseal agent. for the C in the financing, was pr al yesterday’s meeting as County Legal Advisor, Paul Sawyer read the long resolution. All five com- missioners were presént, as was Earl Adams, County Clerk. Chairman Gerald Saunders called the special: meeting to o der at 2:30. Commissioners Clar- ence Higgs,.Joe Allen, Frank Bentley and Harry Harris were present. : Commissioners voted unani- mously to’ make the necessary transfers -of funds for yunty salary in¢rédses that were voted in this last » legis- lature. The increases were re-) troactive ‘to the date the s legislature passed them. | Land for a road on Big Pind Key offered, by the Island Hold- ing company was accepted by the Commission wyer eX plained that the land offered is a 25-foot strip on Big Pine Key. Discussion without vote took place on, method of payment of the $10,000 to James Gamble Ro- gers I, architect, on the jail and courthouse job. ‘The firm has. al- ready been paid $6,000 of the estimated $16,000 pr $17,000 in) architectugl sefviges. “At. the| last comfhissiorie meeting it | was voted to pay Rogers six pet-) their first fire bomb attack on|Oklahoma City ‘Door, Fender: For Bandmaster' | Dented In Crash | truck opened the left door of ‘his | TIZEN dat y. June 22 ‘8! The FBI Seiz > A damaged door and “dented! fender were the result of a’slight| 4 aceident at the corner of Caroline |} and Simonton streets yesterday, according to Police Chief Joseph Kemp. | Lt. Cdr. J. R. Sullivan, Jr.,| USN, Fleet Sonar School, report-} ed to police that he was about to} 7 enter the intersection at Caroline| and Simonton when Arthur Ar-} mayor, driving a Chevrolet Panel {i parked car. Lt. Sullivan, put‘on) his brakes but skidded two feet,i/ he said, and touched his ‘front | fender against the rear edge of|{ Armayor’s door. I Armayor’s car door incurred a| wrinkled rear edge about one foot high an@ one-half inch deep. Lt./ Sullivan’s car has a dent about} one foot high and one-half inch deep in the right front fender. Armayor lives at 746 Windsor Lane. CG Announces Boat Rescue Loeal builder Austin G. Taylor, | his wife and their 11-year-old nephew were rescued from Flem- ing Channel last Sunday when their small sailboat capsiz Three Navy men lifted them to safety and helped recover their boat and possessions. Seaman Edgar J. Keene of the Surface Anti-Submarine Develop- ment Detachment were sunbath- ing on the ramp at the seaplane base when he saw the sailboat tip over when Taylor tried to an- chor in the rapidly ebbing tidal current. Keene ran to a nearby barracks where a shipmate, Sea- man James D. Hannon joined him, as did Second Class Store- keeper Lawrence J. Fagan of the Operational Development Station. The Navy men raced to the Fleming Key Bridge by automo: le where Keene and Hannon mbled down on. the pilings and supported Mrs. Taylor until they were able to lift her into a p@ssing boat. Fagan meanwhile a jdrove out to the Orange State | Key.West Airport Pier to where Mr. Taylor and 11- year-old Carpenter were hanging onto some pilings. He hauled the youngster out onto the pier and then helped Mr. Taylor out. None of them were seriously hurt. SEER KOREAN ACTION IN ‘Continued From Page, Ones | HERE ARE 10 OF THE 17 PERSONS seized by the FBI Wednesday in a round-up of © leaders accused of plotting to o right: Alexander Trachtenberg. rach. Bottom, left to right: Vict Arnold Johnson. Sixteen were Four others are being sought. TEMPERATURE. | AT 7:30 A.M., EST | Atlanta | Augusta | Billings | Birmingham | Bismark | Boston | Buffalo Charleston Chicago | Corpus Christi Denver | Detroit | El Paso \ Ft. Worth Galveston Tacksonville | Kansas. City | KEY WEST 3 | Los Angeles Louisville | Meridian 4 | Miami 5| Minneapolis D | Memphis B | Néw. Orleans 7 |New, York 6 | Norfolk 3 Qaesay8easas]8 cent of the Sohtract cost |U. Ni troops. |.Omaha - What to do about the $6,027) For two hours, .two ” planes:} Pensacola 719 bill owed by Monroe General | dropped fire bombs and’ rockets | Pittsburgh 70 Hospital to the City Electric on allied positions near Chorwon | Roanoke 71 System With be taken up at the!on ‘the western front. An allied |St. Louis next meeting, Commissioners ae cided. ene | The Stranger’s Club in the Can-/reported except in the east | Tallahassee 78 | al Zone;"Panama, is world fam~-' where enemy troops pushed al-|Tampa 79 ous. pone \lied forces back in two attacks, ; Washington a) pats Set SEES I eae Sea REL ans SLE division commander called it a stunt to improve Chinese morale. On the ‘ground, little action {ean Adt os San’ Fran ae 54 deattle - 48 “Chapter 17 PROFESSOR emnly, dbsor hook. Jigger threshol n open > to the t , announe- ing himself, S ‘dup slow- ly, then closed the book and rub- bed his ey /How di you get.in here?” the Y fest demanded resentfully. ourstandlady admitted me. I fold your door dpen’ fust now.” Jigger TWoked ©* Phe resent ly. As once befo: a man farried by the pale of his ex: Jigger fray tie. olved slow- cott seemed e outside carefully’'n our carlier inter- view, I was groping in the dark; but since,then I've | ned much I know beyond a shadow of doubt that Sally Woods has been murdered!” There was a silent » e yment like something. _alis be them Scott removed his ) then ain “Go Ji stipu Scott's lips we A re- fusal. Jigg It's got to be in contic m working in. dependently police. If prove to your satisfaction that Sally Woods h I have aright to exy cretion. I have a righ that you do nothir my bringing the cas cessful termination.” Moist eyes searched J fa , then Jigger ri yen 1 ott nodded ‘slowly i Woc was an a i an hei ess born Sv r, Her home life was a ) 1ess of a tyrannical father her natural de plotted to queathed the mother, Ang into a fit jeal cous! sought to escape took up as Sally We New York.” Scott was lister raptly, be lievingly: He said, “It explains a great portion of her writing for who perverted who he be- and- That's why she ds here in me. There have been quite clear} allusiong.tg just such disturbances as you Bays. described. A father is strongly hinted, over and over again.” “Goodt was hoping to wring some clues, something of real help perhaps, from those writings.” i} xt speech | s,of the two y ~/ spent By JOHN ROEBURT |Jigger returned to his narrativ “With nis daughter fled, Matt! the father, circulated news of her death, carrying the hoax even to a trumped-up cer- tification of déath and cremation. From then on, he undoubtedly sought to find her and kill her, whenever and wherever he could | ‘The girl was deathly»afraid to ae nt hompy ito resume ‘her identity: /T kno igt She Was in telephone,’ commatinication with her father shortly before she was killed, and Talso know Matthew Huater knew his daughter w: living at 98 Charlton Street as Anne Brown.” said reflectively, “That another exercise of hers, : last. It was fraught with tor- tured indecision, and fear.” Jigger nodded. “You told me that our first time together, and I remembered it when her aunt described a recent telephone call from Susan to her father. The girl undoubtedly wanted to go home, wanted to expose the cruel hoax.” | Her father, then, mur was a urdered shiver in at's ‘ IGGER smiled wearily. ‘The conclusion was a tower in per- fect relationship to the founda-| tion, yet he must disavow it. Possibly, but I've got to reject it as a conclusion, until nothing ‘re- mains but to accept it.” “T don’t understand?” “I'm thinking of some, ah, bon- ers that hardly square with Mat- ew Hunter's considerable skill as a plotter. And.I'm also thinking ars Susan Hunter away from own. The big questi to me Did her murde® result from some- thing exclusively in those two years? Scott w silent, waiting for digger to resume. “Consider the er girl, Professor. A fugitive from a sick, grotesque marriage; a fu- gitive from a father scheming her murder, And living with a sense of frenzied moment, with the fear f sudden death; ‘living under Jigger paused." “Am I sense to you?” “Much. Much sense,” Scott said distantly. Jigger started to talk again, but stopped. There was nobody to talk to; Scott was sitting with his head from the things of life. ‘Later, Scott said, “Much. Much! ome, on her} .' sense,” as though unaware both of the repetition and the long break in continuity. said, “In her hysterical she took up with an Eric a painter and a cynic, and precisely the sort of fellow a but- terfly can:crack a wing against.” Scott said, “You make it im- | pressively clear that violence was i ges ie -Tookeed eYou're “quite: M " i"Moran. “You can then see why I've got to know more about th years of hysterical escape, I dare conclusions.” Jigger sought Scott's. “Does this Arents recall something to you? Did she get him into her writ- ings?” Scott nodded readily, as if he'd already submitted the query to | his own thinking. “There was a piece suggesting such a person. A person of artistic bent, with whom she felt a sharp, emotional incompatibility, But not in the vi- olent mood you might suppose, 1s I recall the piece. It had disil- lusionment and dislike, yes, but the tone was quite as critical as itewas subjective.” ‘May I see the writing?” “Yes.” Scott’s agreement was | wholehearted, The writing had now come into their common do- main. He went to a cabinet and | began fussing with papers |. digger looked the room over. was spacious, generally neat, 3 disorganized a bachelor’s - tuary must None of the flat | surfaces were free; books and pa- | pers were everywhere. He read | a-few book titles: Irish Literature, | | The Pickwick Papers, The Politi- | cal and Cultural History of Eu- rope. Books by Lafeadio Hearn |and Huysman. A group of books, flanking a plaster bust of Shake- speare, marked the deeply vicari- ous living of a sedentary man. These titles: The Oregon Trail, | Tom Sawyer, Two Years Before the Mast, Kim, Moby Dick, Trav- els. with a Donkey, Jigger ‘smiled . They were the read- liases in New York’s Bohemia,” | {ngs of his youth. making | y | Scott came back with a large | |bundle of papers secured by a / rubber band. He said, “The top | jexercise is the one T identified | with the painter.” There was a quiver of excitement in Scott now, He was plainly out of his | bowed, lost in the universe, aloof | element, but constrained to forge | (Te be continued) = | | tir each phage ofsher-liv- | Jigger soberly, «| ie DsvchBlogist ‘ unist left to Bach- n Gerson. urgh. verthrow the United States government by violence. Alexander Bittleman, Claudia Jones, Israel Amter, lor Jerome, Williem Weinstone, Elizabeth Flynn, Simi seized in New York. Arnold Johnson was arrested in H dehivei y Collision Caused This @®) Wirephoto, A TRUCK LOADED WITH 3,195 GALLONS OF GASOLINE and fuel oil burns fiercely after colliding with an autothoBile near Ashland City, Tenn. Herchel Spears, Sr., 63, of Nashville, a passenger in the truck, suffered buy and other injuries. Black Baritain Lei enth avenue. in Miami, | Chief Joseph Kemp said. Police | Karns Applies For Dredging Permit Herbert R. Karns. has applied to the gineer IS. # 7 District, for a perm and fill in Boot Ke near Marathon, it was announc- ed today by Col. R. W. Pearson District Engineer. It is proposed, said Col son, to dredge a channel 70 fee wide and 12 feet deep below mean low water, leading from an existing chanhel at the front of property qwned by mer Aldacosta, ,and leading {the foot of Bay . Street | dredged material would be t.t Pear- | posited in shoal water alongsid }'the proposed channel in froat of | applicant’s: erty. tt 'Today-In History 1793—Alexander Scottish fur-trader, r Pacific after crossing irephoto | first known white man to com- | plete the overland journey across | the continent, | 1870—The Department of Jus tice formally organized. 1884—Historic rescue of, Lieut Adolphus W. Greely and 6 others from death in the Arctic by U.S. expedition under Capt. Schley. 1904—Historic cablegram, want Perdicaria alive or R: dead!” sent by Secretary of State iw Hay'to, the Sultan of Moroe- ico icaris released in. two days. Fathi: is, and American citizen _ ki ed by Marocco bandit Raisulis:', ces 1932—-Before World Disarma- imenti@ohfetence, President Hoov- er lays plan to limit men under arms, abolish tanks and the like 194]—-Nazis begin the invasion Of Russia. 1942—Argentine ship sunk in | daylight 120 miles off New York by Nazi sub. 1945—Jap planes attack U.S. |fleet as Americans on Okinawa celebrate conquest of the island | 1$48—Russians halt railroad traffic, competing blockade of Berlin. 1949—Justices Frankfurter and Reed of the U.S. Supreme Court testify in court to the “excellent reputation of A | | | LOOK AT THE Police are looking for a black| Bantam Kodak in a brown leath-| er case which was reported stolen | |from the car of Charles Henry| Dr. k A. Valdes | Allen on Stock Island yesterday | . : afternoon between 3 and 5:30 p. m. 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