found: Gracia Alonso, Francisco. El tesoro del "Vita", 2013:title page ("Vita") page 4 of cover (a yacht in which, in early 1939, was transported in the direction of Mexico part of the war chest of the Spanish Republic)
found: Bolloton, B. The Spanish Civil War, via Google Books, July 26, 2014(The Spanish treasure shipped from Spain to Mexico consisted of gold, precious stones, foreign currency, stocks, bonds, and art objects seized during the war from safe deposit boxes and the homes of opponents of the regime; The treasure was shipped to Veracruz in the luxury yacht, the Vita, formerly the property of Alfonso XIII, and was used for the financial support of Spanish refugees.)
found: Spanish Wikipedia, July 26, 2014:Vita (El Vita, a yacht, built in 1931 in Kiel (Germany) with the name Argosy. In 1934 changed its name to Vita, being acquired during the Spanish Civil War; acquired by the U.S. Navy in 1942 and renamed USS Cythera (PY-31), using it as a patrol vessel during WWII; renamed many times since [no access points in OCLC])
found: Without permission, 2021:CIP galley (a 753-ton, 200-feet-long private yacht, 73 was built by the Krupp company in Keil, Germany, in 1930, and initially was named Argosy; It was subsequently renamed Vita, and then was bought by a Cuban and sold to the US Navy, where it became the USS Cythera (PY-31); The US Navy sold the PY-31 as surplus to the Tyre Shipping Company, in 1946)