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TUESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1926. .THE KEY WEST CITIZEN PAGE SEVEN. . , ‘VEGIONNAIRE FIRE ESTABLISHMENT OF RAILROAD brane | : ew | DEPT. PLANNED | : | LONDON—Sydney Marks, who | | TRAINING SCHOOL FOR COOKS xr from Pentonville Prison : jtwo years ago, has returned be cause he “prefers prison life.” ~ ° Graduation from its own “Col-jexact reproduction of the latest) piece "abso . Read lege of Cookery” will shortly be a| Pennsylvania dining, car kitchen, kor Wear thneeve Company a requirement of every dining car|with the dining room reduced to} (By Associated Press) | FROST PROOF, Fla., Aug. 10. | | The city of Frost, Proof has just | | purchased a 750-gallon capacity t fire engine with all equipment and | |Robert J. Williams Post No. 95, eeee MONROE eeeccees TONIGHT Dorothy Mackhaill Plays Title Role Dorothy Mackaill appears on the sereen of the Monroe Theatre tonight in the title role of Mi- chael Arlen’s first picture, “The Dancer of Paris,” presented through First National by Robert T. Kane. It is a somewhat new Dorothy Mackaill who graces the various seenes in “The Dancer ox Paris.” In many of the sequences she ap- pears with her hair slicked straight back, a la patent leather, -with only a few undulations interrupt- ing its shihy surface. And she not only presents a new appearance. Her work is said to be more vivid, more dramatic and possessed of more depth than it has ever had before. Miss Mackaill was selected to fill the important role in the first Arlen picture ever screened over several dozen actresses who were considered. Not only did the suc- i actress have to conform with the distinct requirements as laid down by the author, but she also had to know how to dance. Miss Mackaill was the only actress who could fill the bil] from every angle. Conway Tearle is starred “The Dancer of Paris” with Miss Mackaill. Robert Cain appears in the role of the heavy. The work of the two men is reported to be as distinctive as that of the femi- nine star. Cain, it is said, handles an exceedingly difficult role cleverly. Alfred A. Santell, who directed Kane’s “Bluebeard’s Seven Wives,” acted in the same capacity in “The Dancer of Paris.” TODAY’S ANNIVERSARIES 1679—The Griffin, with. La Salle and his party, passed through the Detroit river. a ' 17583—Edmund Randolph, first attorney-general of the United States, born at Williamsburg, Va. Died Sept. 13, 1813. 1777—Burgoyne sent a British detachment to seize the military stores at Bennington, Vt. 1790—George McDuffie, gov- ernor of South Carolina and Un-/| qo, ited States senator, born in Col- umbia county, Ga. Died at Cher- ry Hill, 8. C., March 11, 1851. 1854—A violent tornado swept | over the lines of the Pittsburgh and Cleveland railroad, causing great destruction of property. 1898—Gardner Q. Colton, the famous dental scientist who was the first justice of the peace’ in| the California gold fields, died in| Switzerland. Born in Vermont in 1814, | 1915—Turkish army of 90,900 defeated and driven back into Ar- menia by the Rossians. 1924—~Fire destroyed 45,000,- 000 pounds of powder at the U. S. Government storage yards near Nashville, Tenn. 1925—Ernest Calwagon, Swed- ish scientist, and Lieut. Arntz! killed in airplane fall near Oslo. | t in} | MY PAL IS GONE FOREVER It is golden August now, And I am lonesome and sad; ’Cause my poor dog is dead and | gone, Shot without a chance, \I had a noble comrade, Beautiful and wise; Challenge in his lifted ear, Pardon in his eye. We were more than boy and dog, Rangers of the plain, Pioneers who dreaded not Thunder cloud and rain. Under burning summer skies, Fields lay shorn of clover,, In the hedge rows sumac blazed Dim wings drifted over: At the dusk we’d seamper home, Mother waited there, | Like an angel in the light Glory on her hair. | . I loved my dog and he loved me, We were more than pals; He went with me everywhere ; And he’s stick until the last. | | And I will never forget When my dog and I were playing In the dew and grass. \I heard the report of a gun And an awful thud, I saw my dog fall on his side And a spot red with blood. |I ran to him, tried to lift him up, Then he whined and mourned As if he tried to tell me That he was too far gone. | Then I ran home to my daddy, Told him that Gyp was dying fast, |Shot by the cruel hand of a man While playing in the grass. My childish heart is full of sor- row, ’Cause I am only seven; But any way I'll find my dog When I go to heaven. —Master Jack Roberts. NOTHING TOUCHED IT! “Nothing touched that aching spot until I took Foley ‘Pills, a diuretic stimulant for the kidneys. Iam so glad I ean recommend them to others.” Eased of her pain, Mrs. Ellen -Reighard of South Fork, Penna., writes this thankfully. Foley ills have help- ed many people—a reliable valu- able medicine guaranteed to give satisfaction, Constantly in use over 25 years. Ask your druggist for Foley Pills. Key West Drug 5 augl-im SMOTHERED BY RUG CHICAGO — Eighteen-months- old Alice Beirne rolled herself up in a heavy rug on the floor and was smothered to death. James Spencer of Eastbourne, Eng., has fished from a certain pier 36 hours q week for 21 years. Mis Hind epea a} pon. stress of the season's activities, White Flesh-Rachel. 4 Send 10¢ for Trial Size FERD. T. HOPKINS & SON, New York Gouraud’'s Oriental Cream THE HOUSEWIFE READ THE FOLLOWING LIST OF ARTICLES: ALUMINUM WARE, WH TE ENAMEL WARE, GREY AND BLUE ENAMEL WARE, TIN WARE, GLASS WARE, EARTHEN WARE, DINNER SETS, CHINA WARE, NESCO OIL STOVES (OVENS), NEW PERFECTION OIL STOVES (SUPERFEX), REFRIGERATORS (ALL KINDS AND SIZES), SCREEN WIRE, FLOOR MOPS AND POLISHES. We also have dusters, brushes, floor mats, floom brooms, clothes baskets, clothe ines, water coolers, ice cream freezers, kitchen knives, forks and spoons, table ware, electric pumps. In fact, if it’s anything else for the home, we have it. Wm. Curry’s Sons Co. The morning of Saturday past, | i } | | | Ford, will go to the winner of the airplane reliability tour, which starts | at Detroit Aug. 7.. The tour ts-ex- | pected to develop commercial avia- tion. Pay only. $1.00 down. Read Key West Electric: Company’s ad. aug. 4-ti | This silver trophy, the gift of Basel | PUMP GIVES MINNE, HER “HA-HA” ACAIN | MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., {202 enmehene Falls merrily today as the pump in- |stalled by the city to provide Minne with materia] for a real |\“haha” went into action once jmore. -Minnehaha’s merry mo- \ment came after a second long dry |spell during which the pump re- }fused to function. The pump was working full blast today and, if it weren’t for the fact that the humor of the Minnehaha creek bed is so dry that it absorbs a good deal of the water, Minnehaha Falls _ would have laughed as joyously as in the past. As the water trickled over the ‘edge, Minnehaha giggled gently, |with every indication of changing {to a deep chuckle and bursting |forth into a hearty roar after the jereek bed has had a thorough soaking. Aug. | In a tortoise race held at Bick- Lington, Eng.,-with two entries, one | traveled 70 feet in 10 minutes; the ‘other did not make a move. | giggled | of the American Legion, has of- fered its service as a fire com- pany. If the offer is accepted Frost Proof will be the second town in the Scenic Highlands with a Le- gionnaire fire department, ‘the Avon Park Legion post being in charge of the department there. TORTURED WITH SLEEPLESS.- NESS | “Impossible to sleep at night, misery when I walked. My: back ached so that I could not sit in |comfort”—so D. McMillen of Hud- son, N. Y. describes his plight. “I tried Foley Pills, a diuretic stimu- lant for the kidneys, and now I feel so good over my recovery that I want to recommend them to lothers.” A reliable valuable | medicine—eonstantly in use over 25 years, and guaranteed to give satisfaction. Ask for Foley Pills. Key West Drug Co. augl-1m Linen wrappings found on some ancient ' Egyptian mummies is much finer than any linen pro- duced today. Out of 6,500 textile workers in Knoxville, Tenn., only two. are | foreign born. OUT OUR WAY SAY )T OWE Mou’ SONS some ENE DONT. t. 2) MIRAGE OR MIRACLE 2? + Saker By Williams steward, chef and waiter on the} Pennsylvania Railroad, according | to plans announced today for es-' tablishment of the railroad’s. first ltraining schools for cooks in Co- lumbus, 0. The Pennsylvania Railroad has decided that while undoubtedly dining car cooks are born, never- \theless they must also be educated. |The management has_ therefore created a School for Cooks and has under construction a new com- missary building in Columbus, the Pennsylvania's principal western dining car headquarters. Plans are under way for similar construction schools in the com- pany’s commissaries at New York and Chicago. given a thorough schooling in the fine art of cooking, but older em- ployes will occasionally he given short courses at the school to re- tain a uniformly high standard of food preparations and services in Pennsylvania diners. The schools. will consist of an | Not only will new employes he fresh their training and thus main- | the space oecupied by two sebles One side of the kitchen will be left: exposed to view of the as-/ sembled classes. An expert ii \structor, competent as cook and! {also authority on correct serving | practices, will put the men through | ancintensive training before they are assigned to active work on | Pennsylvania trains. Experimental laboratory work, lincluding bacteriological resparch, | jfood values, scientific menu bal-| ancing and the perfection of old| andthe origination of new dishes, | lcomprehend some of the activities jof the schools, whieh are fo be| opened: principally to eater to the | exactions of the epicure, who must} |need eat while while he travels. Stewards, chefs and waiters who complete the Pennsylvania training | jcourse will be furnished with dip- lomas, certifying their qualifica,| j tions. SUNDAY MOVIES BANNED HOVE, Eng.—The council by | jone vote rejected a. petition to license Sunday moving pictures. ‘ ay : - Po fli like 5” aug. 4-tf = LUMBER & BETTER LUMBER: Original growth extra dense * Long Leaf Yellow Pine. . Complete house bills our” specialty — freight charges » fully prepaid on 6,000 feet or more. Send us your list today and . let us write you just exact- ° ly what it will cost with freight charges fully pre- ~ paid to your station. of satisfied eus- © tomers, Hundreds Tallahassee Lumber : Company : Manufacturers TALLAHASSEE, Florida EMEMBER, flies are more Fiit on your garments. Flit kills mothe than troublesome. They come from filth to food. Get rid of them with Fiit. Fit spray clears your home in a few minutes of disease-bearing flies and mos- quitoes, It is clean, safe and easy to use. Kills All Household Insects also destroys bed bugs, roaches It searches out the cracks and and their larvae which eat holes. Exten- sive tests showed that Flitepray did not stain the most delicate fi brite. A Scientific Insecticide Fit is the result of exhaustive research by expert entomologists and chemists, It is harmless to mankind. Flit has re- placed the old methods because it kills ali the insects—and does it quickly. Fiit spray and ante. Jeatene sieane Uoay Dis Sieh tee, Sie . (/Mestroys insects and their eggs. Spray Get a Flit can and sprayer today, For sale everywhere, STANDARD OIL CO. (NEW JERSEY) AE FEI ( ne, \ — aasyeonn, Flies Mosquitoes Moths Ants Bed Bugs Roaches MOM’N POP YT'S AN IDEAL HONEY MOON FOR THE KIOS= INEXPENSIVE AND, BESIDES, DOT WiLL. GET SOME IDEA OF WHAT HODSEKEEPING WP If the Shoe Fits SHENEVER CARED i{ WELL, KEN'S BEEN ¢ AT HOME Seinen WHAT | EATING IN RES~— ACCUSTOMED To TALRANTS, SO HE ALONG REAL WELL TOGETHER THEY'RE GOING To GET poe x WELL, 1L DON'T Know HUNCH 15, HE'S GOING TO PITCH RIGHT ABOUT THAT HE May BE AN EXCEPTION