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SATURDAY, APRIL 1, 1 933, Jovet but the fellow was strong— and agile as a cat; slippery as ap eel. Free again. Otho drove 4 straight left. Raisul ducked beneath it, and flung his arms about Otho’s waist. Down together, A cry from Margaret. “The knife, Otho! The knife!” * By: Jove, he'd got it. Raizal leapt to his feet, and stabbed, fe Otho, rising, struck with his right, "| ‘The blow sent nim staggering back- ward. As he brought up against the wall beside the balcony, bis arm shot forward as he flung his knife—too hurriedly. Again Otho struck, and as Raisul sidestepped to his left, Otho smashed homy a crashing right that drove Raisu) heavily against the low balcony ‘wall. With a loud cry he threw out his arms, clutched wildly at the rope, and before Otho could seize him, fell backward across the ¢oping, tarning and turning in mid-air, to | strike the jackal-haunted tocks be | side the shattered body of his tim, Joles Maligni. After a hasty Instinctive glance over the balcony at the still falling body, Otho whirled about, to find Margaret running to him with ont- eee arms, “ "Pho Gariing. Oh, *Tho,* “Are you hit? Are ‘you hart?” “nee 6, o f lye) “Oly darling, T thought 1 was, and fm not. : thought 1 was dena, and T did want to live tong enough to see; you kill him.” Her arms were round his neck. He was holding her tightly to him and stroking her hair. Neither over Knew how. the next minutes passed, At length, “Otho, it’s incredible, It’s too wonderful, Oh, ’Tho,. why did you go and loaye me? Why did you join this awful Foreign Legion?” “Didn't you know? Why, 0 as ta come down that rope at the psycho logical moment. Obvious, isn’t it?” Again they kissed. “Oh, Margaret, I love you so utter: ly. Dé you know f have never lain down to sleep without thinking of you—sini ‘was a boy.” ‘They clung together, thet sprang apart as-heavy blows sounded on the door. Drawing the Wolts, Otho saw thé Aged slave who had guided them té the battlements, Seizing Otho's arm, -Vic- jaughéd Margate hai. »| Hassan el Miskeen dragged him i fig evaded the swift blade, turn, seized Otho’s right’ to breast. Stale-mate. rl threw the whole ntly forward and, ‘at Raisul’s throat. equai swiftness, Raisul beneath the lean sharp and simultaneously slashed with the terrible disem- stroke, which will lay « mn open from thigh to breast-bone. Well for Otho Belléme that, albeit, he was one of the with lightning speed and his strength, his left fist encoun- Raisul’s wrist with such force, aa he whirled sideways, the fel} from his hand, and clat- ‘on the stone floor. Raieul backed away the gleaming bayonet that in Rope Would be through his bis you to pick that up,” he Rot qitite the fool I was, upon the knife, ‘the flung plato! struck him, and his (Mads closed about Raisul’s throat. THE ARTMAN across hastens and out 0 ye >, Wooking 4 npwards,... Ot ae on heads silhouetted sky, as their owners embrasures. “Ohé, Belléme, was that Raisul?” called Le Sag sir, He'e+er-on the :” Le Sage laughed grimly. “Come up,” he called. “I’ve sent ‘the guide for you.” Motioning to Has#an to lead on, Otho kissed Margaret oncé again. “Wait for me, Margaret,” he said. “Wait tor me.” Yes, she would wait for him. Bhe would wait @ lifetime for him.” oe In the absence of the Kald, t Mahommed Ali el Amin. and every other leader or executive authority, the organization’ of the Citadel of Mekazzeh went to pieces; what shouli have been the garrison of Moorish soldiers became an armed rabble (quickly disarmed); an the castle fell of itself. The loosely knit native life of the cita witthy dis- integrated, and the work begun the yetrayal of Daseword was completed by the issuance of orders a~* instructions in. the Kaid’s Laren flor by the Kald’s vister, the’ Pozo Maligal, . " » “ati the tricdlor flew’at the mast- head on the Sultan Tower, and Col- ‘onel Le Sage was in fact Governor ‘of the Castle, the orders of the Vizier were accepted and obeyed, for want of better. “The longer we tan conceal the fact of the deaths of the Kaid and Raisul, the longer we can use your authority as Vizier,” said Le Saga “Not that we shall need that for long, Sefior Maligni.” “And the other half of the re ward, promised me after the con- summation of your work here?” ally, at Tangier, as soon as possible after I receive a letter from your daughterin-law—in her ow hand writing —from Yelverbury. The sooner she gets there the sooner you will get the other Afteen pieces,” “Fifteen pieces, Colonel?’ “Oh, I beg your pardon, Sefior Maligni, I was thinking of ‘thirty pieces of silver.” Weprright, 1932, FA. Stone Co.) Monday, re Napoleon Riccolt faces a new. and terrible test. PRESS PRINTING PHONE 6&1 IN THE CITIZEN BLDG. KEY WEST TEAM WILL MEET PIRATES AND SLUGGERS AT NAVY FIELD i {The Key West team will open .'the second-half of the series’ of the ‘City League temorrow eaters ‘noon with a doubleheader against the Young Sluggers and Pirates, | The Key West. team, with the ‘addition of a few more players, are looked on as. a dangerous ‘threat to take the second-half ‘pennant, it is shown, Arthur Griffin, who held the {Pirates at his mercy last Sunday with his fast out shoots, will prob+ ably start out to do mound duty ifor the Aceyedos in the second !game against Mendosa’s first-half champions. Quintan Lopez with- out a doubt will be the choice of the Pirates for the firing line, in accordance with plans. j, Robert Bethel will pitch the ifirst game for the Sluggers and if hé comes out in form the Ace+ Been will be facing a bad start. There will be no new faces in ithe Sluggers’ end Pirates” line up. {Rumors that Armando Perez, stat joutfielder, would leave the Pirate club, ‘are, false, it is stated. i LEAVE NEXT WEEK TO MEET BILTMORE TEAM IN CORAL GABLES Loeal golfers will go to Miami Friday to engage the Miami Bilt- more golf team in Coral Gables on Saturday and Sunday, according to Clem C, Price, captain of the local team, who received a tele- gram from T. E, Price, president of the Miami Biltmore Country Club, and captain of the. team, yesterday, setting the dates for *jthe. tournament. * Those expected to make the trip are: Karl Thompson, Lionel Plummer, Chas, Ketchum, Eddie Strunk, Bob Spottswood, Wm, De- THREE CENTURY RISE OF ENGLISH PRESS (Oontinued from Page One) | private hands, belongs to the Lon- don Press club and begins with an/were passengers leaving on the! G¥an issue that antedates the famousjafternoon train yesterday for Pi-| American -cirways sale of Manhattan island by the|rates Cove to spend the week-end. |was: the guest of Indians by several years. Associated Press Cooperating Exhibition in the United States, the first outside of London, was arranged by Carl W. Ackerman, dean of the Columbia University 'FSchool of Journalism. Al | | | The Associated | Press is ¢o- Operating with My. Ackerman and ‘the uriiversity, and the first show- ing Will be April 24, the day of the annual meeting of the press association members. University students and invited guests in at- tendance:at the American: News- paper Publishers’ Association meeting will have opportunity to! study the rare collection April 25 and 26. The exhibit has been formed during the fast five years by An- drew Stewart, honorary librarian of the London Press Club. It begins with the embryonic stages of the English press in the treign of James I, when the only semblance of a newspaper pub- lished in London. ‘was a_ small | quarto entirely consisting of news translated from the Corantos is- sued .on the continent. One of these, “The, Continua- ‘tion Of Our Weekly _Newes,” Eight minutes is par in reassembling these jumbled pieces. If you're right, your solution will show a modern philosopher, whose barbs have been hitting this side the Atlantic for some time, and who himself only recently fol- lowed them to these shores. The answer's on page 4. CLASSIFIED COLUMN dated .1626, opens the panorama, which then proceeds to an un- broken sequence of the news pamphlets which informed Eng- land of. the progress of ‘its civil ‘war. One of the outstanding exhibits is a complete contemporary record of trial of Charles I and. of the seene on the scaffold when he was executed January 30, 1649. The Day’s. “Hot News” It was hunger for news hot from the battlefields of England] and of the doings of patliament that led to the establishment. of the regular newspaper, and the pamphlets of the time mirror the times in foreeful English. Weeklies and tri-weeklies grad- ually developed until 1702, in the reign of Queen Anne, the first daily: newspaper appeared: This was The Daily Courant, a two- column paper. Other important newspapers and journals of a little later in the . Mrs. Richard (Sawyer and son J. F. Morrison, . enginehouse foreman at the F. E. C. terminals, j who was attending a power meet- ling in St. Augustine, returned on tthe Havana Special yesterday, James Duane, of Long Key, was an arrival yesterday fora short ivisit in Key West with his family, t -_— j Mrs. Mellie Fulford, who was ispending several months in Miami {with her son, Arthur, and, other lrelatives, returned over the East ‘Coast yesterday. | Saas Mrs. Addie Thompson returned jon the Havana Special yesterday latter spending five months with! relatives and friends in Miami. Mrs. Clara Lewis. who has been | ispending several months in Fort! Lauderdale with her son-in-law} and daughter. Mr, and Mrs. Earl! Baumgardt, will\ artive over the East Coast tomorrow for a stay with her daughter, Mrs. William | Arnold. | eoccecece: | TODAY'S WEATHER) Highest Lowest Mean ' Normal Mean Rainfall* Yesterday’s Precipitation } | ,0 Ins, .06 Ins, Sun rises Sun sets ... {Moon rises ‘Moon sets .. : | ‘Tomorrow's Tides | A, M, High 3:27 ‘Low .. 6:33 ; Barometer at & a. m, voday. Sea level, 30.10. GUINEAS AS WATCHDOGS COFFMAN, Ark.—William. Bal- | _Mrs,. Mason, head im Cubs, who Mr. and Mrs, Ernest} Hemingway, several days, of fishing, "-Teft “yesterday where} she_ ¥ plane’ to Havana. § 7; tee) Mrs. H.R. Demeritt, grand. res gent, and Mrs. H. 0. Russell, vice grand regent of the local court,-Catholie Daughters of Amer- ica, left today for Mianii where they will attend the state: eonven- tion of -< Catholic Daughters” of America to be opened in that city. tomorrow. | ‘1 ‘ Mrs. Henry Thompson and son were arrivals from Miami yester- day aecompanied by Mrs, r Smith, mother of Mrs. Thompson, who ‘was spending’ some time in Miami. — A. E. Bascow was an arrival from Havana - yesterday noon from to 6 purpose of | purchasing flamingoes; peacocks ,and , spoonbills and brought one crate ‘of each which were sent} to Miami by express es T 1871—Reign of terror,in Paris city in hands ‘of ‘Cominunists. 1873—White Star steamer “At- Mille” “History’s mest famous confla- repeated recently when a man turned on: a =gas Before the fascinated eyes of tundreds of workmen, burst out among a group of build- ings, great billows of smoke rolled skyward, and a multitude of men, women and children ran scream- ing through streets. ee Rome was burning again, 2000 years after the famous blaze dur- ing which Nero fiddled. ms ; This time the fire was created {for the exclusive use of Cecil B. ‘DeMilte’s cameras, filming the le, “The Sign «of the €ross;” which comes to the Strand Thenter tonight, with a cast head- ed by Fredric Marth, Elissa Lan- di, Claudette Colbert and Charles Laughton, PR The setting was thirty miles from: Hollywood, at Paramount’s ch in the foothills of the San- ta Monica mountains. * Everything was ready for . the made-to-order conflagration -be- ightfall on the evening dn. takes” were scheduled. As ‘soon as the sun had set, De- fave the order for ‘the be- ne of the scene, A man at jot gas. vaive gave it a-twist, in every building on ;the: lot incendiary blaze was started. less than a minute the flimsy < were a roaring inferno. And ‘for the next five minutes they continued to blaze. ‘Then DeMille catied out “Cut!” No*retakes were necessary—or | ei t lantie” wretked off Nova Scotia |. over 600 lost. — 1932—World Olymple ‘contract bridge played by about 50,000 the world over. iis nan —sanonsneinecnetentsitiion Subscribe for The Citizen, AT 7:30.0°CLOCK Subscribe for The Citizen—20c ‘weekly, J. C. SANCHEZ, 0. D. OPTOMETRIST Bldg., Fleming St, meritt, Jr, Sam Goldsmith, Wm.| ® H. Malone, J. R. Stowers, Melvin Russell and Clem G. Price. The Biltmore team played in Key West last and nosed the local Advertisements under this head will be inserted in The Citizen at the rate of 1c » word for each. in- ¢ollection are ones to which} Steele, Addison, DeFoe, Goldsmith} lard, farmer of this city, has kept and, still later, Johnson contri-j@ flock of guineas 15 years ar b ited, “watchdogs.” sertion;-but the minimum for the|'+ team out by one point in the! last |firut.insertion-in-every inatance is] | ,,day’s matches, and the locals feel | 25c. é they can give the strong Biltmore team some opposition, inasmuch as ithey are more familiar with the tough Biltmore layout, having played same severai months past ;in a similar encounter, it is shown. { The team regrets that it’s most jenthusiastic member, Wm. Watk- ing, will be unable to accompany thent due to business, it is stated. OBSERVE ANNUAL CONCH DAY EVENT ment T Autostrop Razor Outfit. Ask for it. ; FOR ®RENT—Furnishes MANY STUDENTS*TAKE PART IN PROGRAM STAGED YESTERDAY (By SCHOOL REPORTER) As an annual event every year, the outgoing Seniors of K. W, H. i$. had the pleasure of calling the Pgnior: into the auditorium yes- terday morning for the long-long- ed-for privilege of making “fish” jot: the Juniors. The Seniors had jwhat they thought a “secret” jabout the. program. } The program was supposedly kept within the bounds of their elass, but it was impossible keep the news from curious Jun- ‘iors, They even knew what type jot program was to be “pulled loff.” As was supposed, no one tknew about their plans. The Juniors went to their class just as though they knew nothing jot the plans of their “big brother class.” The teacher broke the | they ran into the auditorium. | ‘The curtain being pulled, a “happy throng of faces met the ta song appropriate to the occasion, ;The rest of the program was in ‘the form of “The Big Broadcast.” in whieh various members of the Junior class were called to the ‘stage and made to take the part of the various radio stars. William Cates. the second num- ber on the program, was to im- personate Bing Crosby. William Hfavored the audience with “Please,” The custom is to hand a trophy, @ conch shell, to each succeeding class. When President Kathryn jLightbourn went to get the cus[ tomary trophy to present it to ;President Paul Sawyer of the Junior class, it was missing. The jstick work of William Cates had lebtained the trophy escaped with jit. As is uncustemary, the Sen- fore were made the “fish” of yes- terday instead of the Juniors. The Seniors will learg better!! to} WHAT udience. The Seniors sang &/~~ WA) Payment for ‘classified adver-|}i Advertisers should give their street dddress as well as their tele- phone. number if they desire re- sults. With. each classified advertise- The Citizen will give free an FOR RENT apart merft8, $15.00 to $25,00 per month. Trevor and Moffis, op- posite new Post Office. H febl FURNISHED HOUSE FOR RENT, containing 12 rooms, on lot 50x98 fect, in select section of city, :1307 Whitehead street, op- posite beautiful Coral Park, and facivg the sea. Garage in r | Rent $50. monthly. Apply to La P; Artman, 1809 Whitehead street or The Citizen Office, janii | meebifeeen GRAMMAR IS GRAMMATICALLY wrofig with this text from the! Bible: “Whom do men say that | I the Son of man am?” Gram mar taught by Dr. Rogers, cor- ner Grinnell and Washington Streets. apri-itx FOR SALE “ft Shall be paid to you person- news to the eager Juniors, and OLD PAPERS—Large bundle for Se. Good to pack furniture or for wrapping purposes, The} Citizen Office. jan7) RADIO REPAIRING | RADIO REPAIRING, We repair! all makes. Guaranteed service,! J. L. Stowers Musie Co. jan24} 1 WANTED i TED—You to know that wel have the right prices on letter-/ heads, envelopes, business cards, | statements and any form of; printing. Satisfaction guaren~/ teed. Call 51. The Artman Press. janT} MISCELLANEOUS PERSONAL STATIONERY—Let us furnish you with personal stationery; 100 sheets of sta- tionary $1.00; 100 envelopes $1.00; both, with your name and address printel in attrac- tive ‘type. The Artman Pres, Phone 61. jan? tisements is invariably in advance, || ‘but regular advertisers with ledger accounts may have their advertise- ments charged. ASME NEW RODER RIVALS NA EFFICIENCY-- rURe: Correct, scientifically measured heat insures uni- form baking results. Thoroughly insulated oven walls retain the heat in the oven, conserving gas and making a cooler kitchen. Fresh air, ventilated Oven produces tasty food, and retains the food values. Automatic Oven Heat Control hours away from home during the cooking period allows care-free Baked enamel finish, inside and out, presents a beautiful appearance, ease of cleaning, ing. PRICES LOWEST IN YEARS AVOID THE MANANA HABIT— COME IN TODAY r on =etis avoids rust- ae: FLORIDA PUBLIC UTILITIES COMPANY fe i ; f r E f i E f HE it if ih Kl Li i, li i { i t t i at H