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tl on the. wast reared himself up- 1 the sofa end ledned toward we about that!” de- fe, Lane confidently. peas aihe Was np | yes. You wanted to }} level as 4 restaurant and ft was a | tonight, and I can’t wait. that. Tell him it's the dope wery.| Colin, “Was that him?" ~,{{Re Aaensinted Preas) ‘GHANGCHUN, Manchuria, Sept. 1. Quarters for Japanese offi. with accommodations for! r wives and childten, are be- ing built in_variqus | Manchurian cities and officials admit they in- diehté) plans’ for an indefinite a4 protectors of Manchukuo. army headquarters here ~amnpunced that “the Man- incident,” as the late ore ‘are called hereabouts, he Page wig officially "Officers ‘families ‘then will be! lished. “Vill, he left reid room. h about. Harry!” seid morosely -#s'~ he dropped back on the sofa. “Colin sat down again. “It sure is,” he agreed; “but 1 guess from what this fellow Heimie said, it'll be fixed up without much trouble: And speaking of Harry, hes Detective Sergeant Mulvey been nosing around for you today?” Benny Malone permitted @ grin to drive away his morose expression. “Nothing doing!” he ‘answered. “So it's a Y ack he didn’t get my number last night.” “That's good,” said Colin heartily. He-paused for a drag on his cigar- ette; then ‘apologetically: “Look here, 1 guess there’s a lot I've got to be wised up on. Who's this Heimie—and what's his other name? You didn’t mention it.” “Schwarm,” said Benny Malone. “Heimie Schwarm. He’s a foam czar. Every bootlegger in town knows him. He runs the suds and hard-stuff Facket for the Mask.” Colin dragged again on his cigar- ette. His mind was probing swiftly, striving to bring order out of con- fudion. Last night at Spinelli's— Dolfaire and Heimie Schwarm to- gether—Heimie Schwarm one of the ‘Masks’ Big, shots—wh.+ was the Masi’s game? No answer—but not nice for Dollaire, whatever it was! “I sée,” be nodded. “And wh Buck? You said something about me traveling with him from now on.” “Buck O'Mara,” explained Benny Malone, “He's the big shot of our. “I hope that'll go double,” said Colin earnestly. “What's our mob’s ‘particular racket?” Lr WAS growing dark. Benny Ma- lone got ‘up.and switched on an dl light. veacitatia:ceisertuing” he re. plied with a short laugh. “Wherever we're needed. You'll see. And you'll get your first work-out tonight.” _ “Well, then,” asked Colin compla- dents. at ain't the ‘way he makes hig money.” “It sounds ell!” Colin ex- “Knew about it, I suppose, when it was running full blast back in the old days,” Benny Malone answered with a ehrag of his shoulders. “That's a long time ago—before the war, and before the booze law aking mobey for us. I guess there areh't many even around here pore remember the name ft went by ee the law came in against it, the people who were running the ‘place kept on selling booze just the same until they got pinched enough times to make them quit cold. Then somebody else tried to run it on the flop. It waan't good for anything the ‘way it was. It was put up for sale, and I guegs it went cheap—or else old Keppelstein wo never ha Dought it! “He made two houses ont of It, but he didn't spend any more on al- terations than be had to, so he left this part a good deal like it was, ex- cept that he put in a store front at ‘this end: He moved into the other part himse! “I saw an old bird sitting on the porch as I. came along,” observed (Copyright, 1958, Prank L. Packard) Colin tomorrow, mere abeut the Dotiaice, woeereeees Notice To Sal Sabscribers Please be prompt in paying the carrier whe delivers your paper. He pays The Cituzen 18 cents a week for the pa< per and sella it te you for 20 cents. His profit for deliver. ing is S cents weekly on each subseriber. If he is not paid HE loses. Not The Citizen. f ddiahatuddh permitted te come to the various posts and something like peace- time owe nage life will be Seal el , | jot Mrs |TWO ARRIVE AT: | WESLEY HOUSE. Miss L. L. Green, in charge -of the Wesley House, will leave over the East Coast this afternoon for points north. Miss Lula Kagey, of Norfolk, Va., who came to this city Thursday, will take over the duties of the school, Miss Fernandez has arrived] * from, Tampa to be the co-wanter of Miss Kagey. These two women are takings the! 5; PERSONAL MENTION Raymond Baker left - yesterday} Mrs. Dora Roberts has returned for Miami on receipt of a long dis-| to this city after an extended tance call advising that his sister,| stay with daughters in Parris Is- Mrs. Leon Sawyer was seriously|land S. C., and other points in the {south and east. Lillian Relman, who was in Key) Mrs. C. N. Elbertson left over for several weeks as’ guest|the East Coast yesterday _after- Yand Mrs. Joe Pearlman and|"00" for Miami and after a short isit there will go to Tampa and ith her son, Cornelius, motor to | Sparkville, Miss., to spend a while | with a daughter. Miss, Betty Louise-Navarro ar- rived O¥er the east coast yester-/ My. and Mrs. H. A. Pierce re-| place of Miss Green and Miss Pér. day from Coconut Grove, and will/turned to Key West yesterday jter who have been in charge of the her ‘grandmother, Mrs. W. H-! over the east coast from Coconut| Wesley House for some time past. Pierce. | Grove. They were accompanied by . Pierce’s sister, Mrs. J. B. 'GEKELERS BACK , who will visit here for a} few weeks. Rev. and Mrs, John C, Gekeler who have been away from the city on vacation . returned Thursday. evening. Enroute home from Dade City where they visited with Mrs. Louis Olson, formerly Miss! Mrs, Gekeler’s mother, Mrs, Mary | Louise Delaney of Key dete wife! L, Roberts, a short visit was made lot Commander Olson, U. in South Alappattah which is rap- Attorney J. Lancelot Lester, who| gua ard, and da" ghter, Mary, sei idly becoming the center of the who was in Miami on business | le ft yesterday for the home inj white potato industry of South with Judge H. H. Taylor, arrived: Fort Lauderdale after a stay of|Wjorida. yesterday on the Havana Special| several days with relatives in the] My, Gekeler and left in the afternoon. city. morning and evening at thi Presbyterian Church on’, White Street on the coming Sunday. the ehildren, returned. yesterday aftegfioon to her homein Miami. Mrs. Milagro Moreno and daug ter, Mrs. Manuel Perez who we spending some time in Key West with relatives, left yerterday aft-; ernoon for the home in Miami. Miss Mary Whitmarsh, ! secretary to Mayor Wm. lone, left over the East Coast yes- |terday afternoon for Jacksonville where she will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. C, Stallworth and her brother, H. Whitmarsh. private H. Ma- Mrs. Edna Mitchell and two sons Wallace and Glenn who have been spending six weeks with relatives in the Catskill mountains of New; York, were returning passengers over the East Coast today. NRA EFFECT ON DIXIE SCHOOLS SLIGHT; CHILD LABOR IS CUT (By Associated Press) ATLANTA, Sept. 1.—Com- school revenues in the several era-| States will be somewhat lower i: e | say they do not expect a les-| urday, Sunday and Monday, i bas- riod of several years have reduced! soning of school efficiency us ajed, has written the followifg ar- to a minimum any problems of in |result of the code. ticle on nudists in America: creased enrollment that might be! In Tennessee, where it is esti-] The nudists in America are caused by adoption of the national| mated 2,000 children will be|chiefly known to the public recovery program in the south. | thrown out of work under the| through a few sensational School officials in states where codes, a decline of 25 per cent in| paper notices that chronicled the textile mills, and other industria!) school revenues is anticipated, raids on two or three of their communities abound say they anti-) «ppic ill not lessen school ef-| Country Camps and city gynasiums. cipate no difficulty in caring for! siciency as much as it might ap-| This is not, however, a fair or those additional children who will jon, at first glance,” said James accurate commentary on the nudist enter or return to school this year 1A. Roberts, a: ‘ant- state com-}|™movement as it has taken reot in because, under provisions of the missioner of education, “because| this country. NRA, they will not be allowed to} jreduction in costs will offset a work, fark of the loss.” School Attendance Compulsory State laws make it compulsory; that all children attend school un- til they have ‘reached the age of 13, and those between the ages of 14) ow, and 16 are not allowed to work ex-| e are enforcing strictly the cept by permit, issued upon labor laws of this state with ref-| proval of local school sunerinten: jie to children and women, Jan Gay, author of “On Going Naked,” from which the picture, “Back To Nature,” scheduled to there are some three hundred small organized clubs ranging fggm a dozen to two hundred members, which meet regularly for the pur- pose of exercising without eloth- ing. Men, women and children |} mingle freely together. The basis of most of these clubs is. family groups, and it is not uncommon to see children with their fathers and mothers and sometimes with their elderly relatives enjoying vacations and recreation together without a shirt to bless any of them. oy. a .| Nudist clubs are fairly rigorous inn 4000 pines are! in their requirements for member- ed in industry in Aisbaria) Ship: Applicants are required to the ages of 14 and 16. These are * ent ee 70,0001 state their purpose and aims in ueatthted over-wore than: «dozer | jenrollment is well over 600,000 joining, and those persons who ad- communities and will be absorbed | they will have little effect on the) nittedly come solely out of | curi- by their respective schools without |*chools should they enter. _| deity are refused entrance to the increasing the: burden of attend-/ Opportunity For Pickers | clubs. People become nudists for ance. In the eastern and centra¥) various reasons—love of the sun, North Carolina authorities re- parts of the south where the cot-| delight in exercise and sports, re- port that only 950 children in that|ton crops usually are tended by} bellion against tight, hot, uncom- state were affected by the code ;the small farmer and his family,| fortable clothes, and as part of a and that no problem in caring for| there is a prospect that child cot-; general revolution against conven- them isjanticipated. Ample school; ton pickers will have more school-| tional shackles, facilities are, provided in all in-jing as the result of the cotton; dustrial comminities and coopera-| acreage reduction program. Often} tion of employers with school au-|in the past many of them have thorities in enforcement of the! been kept out of school a month | for water in boilers, and the direct compulsory attendance law has! or so to finish the harvest. That’s! generation of electricity from coal reduced child labor to a low|the view of Cully A.’ Cobb, cotton! without the use of engines, are figure, ' production administrator the some of the developments and pro- agricultural adjustment adminis-) jected advancements in the field high tration. jot generating electricity by heat. Labor Commissioner "W. Ey Jacobs of Tennessee says _ there re no children under 14 working in the state. e Si He pointed out that be- ‘A check of records of the Geor-| fore a child umder 16 can obtain gia department of industrial rela-/# permit to work he must estab-| tions, shows: that between Janu-|!ish that his earnings are neces- ary 1, 1983, and July 17, 1933,|5# ntain either himself or when the textile code became ef-} fective, only 502 permits to work! were issued to children between’ ¢™Plo: and since Greatly increased steam pres- sure, the substitution of mercury for No Letdown Seen While elementary and Lucky Dog at Chicago’s World’s Fair | “These days are certainly “dog days’ when like this!” says the Victor Talk- {| Dog in the RCA-Victor exhibit in the Radio ‘Communications Building at the Chicago World's Fair—A Century of Progress. Raleigh (left) is whistling into the phone to make him talk to her, Bredin (left} and Dorothy will preach , both} By news- {late of “Bf Throughout the United States] p, rar LIOPITOIOOT OTA IS, | eterna cite neerncrame FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1933. STEALS WINDMILL CHICAGO—Miss Eleanor Kear-| MILLS, Calif—While I. Fran- y, a chorus girl of this city who} ‘is, of this city, was away from MONDAY MORNING home, thieves carried away his landed 1p yindmll and. towes. KICKS OFF COP’S CAP _ ne had imbibed too much, a cell for kicking off a policeman’s! cap. The cntesinat Alliance meet Monday morning _in regular monthly sesion at Stone Church at 10:30. Dr. Alfred De Barritt will con- duct the devotionals, PALACE will their the Darline Smith, aged 2 years 4 months, was chosen as the perfect bened, at a Los Angeles baby 666 ased. | LIQUID - TABLETS - SALVE er eters peematees. ing | Checks Malaria in 3 days, Colds . Ce ee said/ first day, Headaches or Neuralgia a Rex Bell .in rao,end s each ot ee are nee in 30 minutes, RAINBOW RANCH any claims and ve =i NIC jemands which you,|FINE LAXATIVE AND TO! Matinee 5-10c; Night 10-18¢ or either of you, may have against] Most Remedies Known, the estate of Joseph B. Johnson, de- Speedy ceased, ite of gag County, Florida, to the Hi ugh Gunn, County’ Judge of acta ‘ounty, his office in the County Courtho! in Key West, Florida, within twelve months from the date of the first Publication of this notice. Dated July 7, A. D. 1938. IDA LOUISE JOHNSON, the Estate _+ee ‘TO CREDITORS SHE ‘COUNTY en COUNTY, ee ~ Pike a eo vite Actin forward, willingly with proposed codes, and in these codes they accept the principles leading to mass re- employment; But, important ss is this heartening demonstration, the richest Seld for results is among the smafl employers, those whose contribution will URE A IRS : aug4-11-18-2! septl bags Sr court OF THE COUNTY DGE, MONROE COUNTY, STATE OF eo ad In re the Estate ANTONIA B, DE ‘PLEITAS, | Decease In Probate. INAL NOTICE Novice Is 1s BBY GIVEN that the undersigned will, on the 6th day of October, A, D. 1933, present to the Honorable County sade of Monroe County, Florida, my — final) rétufn, account and vouchers as Executor of the Estate of Antonia Fleitas, ‘late of Monroe Gousty, deceased, ane at said time, then and there, «make application to the said Judge for Winat settle- ment of my administration of said estate, and for a a discharging me as such E; Dated Phe the" ri “aay of August A. D, 1983, F. FLEITAS, As Executor of the Haters of An- tonia ‘Bde Fleitas: Deore atg4-11-18-25; sept er oct VEL xg ' 4 You can ame us iN, Mr. President! Here's one small employer who is going the limit with you to help spread employment! With the co- capretion sf sie auneme cast, we Sire soy Ment new menzwithont iocrewsing the prives of ox pons rice ay IN THE COUNTY jes COURT, JON! vag COUNTY, | MIRIAM “AUBURY, iiipheassa: To all Creditorsi« Legatees, Dis- tributees ané: all’ persons having: emands claima. oF against sai nd each of you, are hereb: notified and:required to present ail be aca or Ln paaiig 9 which you, or either of you may have aga’ Estate of Miriam, m, Aibursis a ; a {the County ‘ned nity ie ‘Goi = 6 “8 ty, Florida, at. Stfige of in the gout House of said County, at Re erat Monroe County, Flori twelve mcnths ia 2%. ‘ira tion ‘of thi must Be duly si orn to” = Sented to the’ sal County oree aforesaid or same will be barred by limitations. paved this <th 7 of August, A. } BROOKS, Mot the witaiee “be deceai 8-25; pti-8-15-22-29 ] ‘ako. 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Sherwin Williams’ best wall paint, variety of nd colors, per gallon $2.65 Decotint—cold water wall finish, all popular shades, 516 pkg. 60 South Farida Contacting & Exgineerig Co. White and Eliza Streets Key West, Florida LLM NES IBGE ME MED GP BE PRE ELE LS MEP BE Family Paint, interior white gloss, our best seller, per gallon _.. $2.55 Werte tI IIIT IODIIII DS