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Outrageous Fortune Leliicia Wentworth beads,” L,” or perhaps aan” Nesta piddent goes to the hoa- sital in response toa query broad is taken cast by the authorities, a to the man’s bedside, The nurse is called away by, an accident; the man continues fo mumble, this time «about emeralds. Nesta, frigh demands to man, who is her husband, she says, and winged Pee Pipa iting car on 8 getting ne utside, what she Chapter Four DANGER AHEAD % er turned the color of a tallow candle, “The—the emeralds?” “He kept right on about them— how he’d hidden them, and no one else knew where they were. I tell you he kept right on. I’ve got to get him away before anyone tumbles to what he’s talking about.” Tom leaned back against the side of the car and fixed an alarmed gaze upon his sister's face. His eyes were of the same shape and color as he had the same straight nose and short dark brows, the same line of chegk nd chin. But the driv- - ISS LEIGH?” N nurse. “Oh yes,” said Caroline Leigh in that warm, dark voice of hers. Someone once said that Caroline’s voice was like damask roses. He was an infatuated young man who wrote poetry. Caroline laughed at him kindly but firmly, and all her friends chaffed her about her crimson voice. said the day All the same there was something | in it. “We're up to our eyes,” said the day nurse. But she did not say it as firmly as she might have done if Caroline had not been gazing at her With the sort of melting intensity which very few people had been known to resist. “I know,” said Caroline. “And I'm too sorry to bother you, but I’ve come about the message that was broadcast last night, because I think the man who was picked up may be my cousin, Jim Randal And oh, please may I see him?” The day nurse took the time to look at Miss Caroline Leigh. They were busy in the ward. but perhaps not quite so busy as she had said. ‘The six bus cases were none of them desperately serious, and they had | all been got to bed and had their in- juries dealt with. She could spare a moment to look at. Miss Leigh, who was + very easy + ¥ THE KeY WEST CITIZEN SPORTS PAGE THRet Seeesessoescvesosos eee CLASSIFIED COLUMN Seccccecesescooanseeeoe® will be inserted in The Citizen at ‘SENATORS BEAT ST. LOUIS AND | | | TROIT TIGERS i | (Special to ‘The Citizen) } Washington Senators downed the | St. Louis Browns | stuady fivelin pitching 02? Al Crowder, and crept up to within a jhair of the American League pen- ant by pounding out a 13 to win. Forcing the settlement of the to at least another day, the New NEAR PENNANT |NEW YORK YANKEES DEFEAT LETICS VICTORS OVER DE- behind the, American League pennant race in-| SPORT: (By Associated Press) | If you are among those under CHICAGO WHITE SOX; ATH. | the impression that Carl Hubbell thas been doing some pretty fair} country pitching of late for the! {Giants, give a look at what Mr. | Glenn Babb of The Associated Press staff at Tokyo has jehronicle about one Masao Yos-! Sehool at Nagoya: “On August 19 in the semi-finals ‘of the All-Japan middle ‘tournament, Chukyo, the defend-' ‘ing champion, and Akashi Middle | Chukyo gained a 1 to 0 decision,” | Babb relates. “Each team used only one pitch-| By WILLIAM GAINES Byrd’s ship base on his last expe-|the rate of le a word for each in- «ty Ansoelated Brews) dition, From there the ships will|sertion, but the minimum for the NEW YORK, Sept. 21.—Hav-| proceed south to the Bay of|first insertion in every instance is autogyro on his second expedition) reach Little America. ments charged, ‘into the antarctic regions. Its pe-| Soon the ships must turn back} Advertisers should give their ' {culiar construction enables, it to/ again to New Zealand, and the ice street address as well as their tele- ling flown over the South Pole in} Whales and land the ice party inj 25e. DIAMONDBALL GAME AT BAY.! make a more or less vertical land-| party will. in a sense, be stranded|Phone number if they desire re- i P } ‘LANDING AT SOUTH POLE ONE AIM OF ADMIRAL BYRD AS HE PROBES ANTARCTIC SECRETS : . | | | /1929, Rear Admiral Richard) Little America. Payment for classified adver- 'ZACHARIAS DOWN | Byrd now has the ambition to| The antarctic summer is our|tisements is invariably in advance, | jland on top of it. | winter, and there won’t be much | ut regular advertisers with ledger | COAST GUA RDSMEN For this reason he is taking an! of it left when the explorers} @¢counts may have their advertise- | j } { ing, whereas no orthodox airplane| until next fall. Through the long 4 | VIEW PARK RESULTS IN | couid be swooped down upon 7 ees night they will merely ons Shs I strato. | SCORE OF 10 TO ‘icy roughness of the polar area. | exist, waiting for their summer, tizen & x | But firguratively dropping out] which will come with our fall, when| A¥Costrop Razor Outfit, Ask for (By JOVE) Playing entirely a new game, the Coast Guard met defeat at the psiabeapien ' Guar tolhands of the Zacharias in a dia- mondball contest : hida, who hurls a little every now| Bayview Park grounds last nigh aT H GEO Sree Shee ean then for Chukyo Commercial ry. ginal score ee ee played at the reading: 7; Zacharias, 10. Coast G. Meyer, who pitched for) tists have labored long and | school | the sailor lads, appeared to be the |duously, preparing a program of| only one on the team having play- all po ed the game before, | School battled 25 innings before 'in. whole nine and during innings he was jot the air on to the point of the | pole is only an incidental design lof this most ambitious antarctic| Byrd’s scientifie pro-| gram is so elaborate that it prob: ably has not been approached by {any other expedition planners. | 30 Scientists Plan Program = | | More than 30 well known seien-| ar- ible fields of investigation | They are to! the admiral’s} in the frozen south, be recognized as kept busy giving his players in-| “honorary seientifie staff.” | struetions, | At least nine men of science they may get under way with their major endeavors. All of the time, if luck is with them, the ice party will be in com- {munication with this comfortable continent by short wave wireless, and newspaper readers will know what small or large excitements they may have. And perhaps a year from now the nation will learn that’ Byrd has dropped from the skies to score a direct hit on the south- ern pole, and science will be in- debted for the more important achievements of the second Byrd It can be seen that the boys! Will go to the bottom of the earth antarctic expedition. er, the winner being Yoshida, a®are good baseball players, but are| with Byrd. FOR RENT FURNISHED HOUSE with garage. Opposite City Park. All con- veniences, Frigidaire and radio, Apply 905 South street. Tele- phone 702. sept20-tf FURNISHED HOUSE FOR RENT, containing 12 rooms, on lot 50x198 feet, in select section of city, 1307 Whitehead street, op- posite beautiful Coral Park, and facing the sea. Garage in rear. Rent $50 monthly. Apply to L. P. Artman, 1309 Whitehead street or The Citizen Office. stocky, crafty righthander, who | all green in diamondball. How-| It is the purpose of science to cago White Sox, 5 to 3, in the final| allowed only eight hits over the | ever, they did exceptionally good|take from the realm of specula- game of the series. The Yanks|long route, struck out 19 and is-| foy the first time, committing only tion the largest portion of the! won the series, four games to one,| Sued ten bases on balls. The loser | five errors on the field and hitting earth left to our imagining and} ‘diay penacdasenthcea’ jand the season’s series, 15 to 7. | Was Jiro Nakada, who permitted/ safely seven times for as many|Teduce it to the commonplace. of} MEMPHIS, Tenn, Sept. 21.— The Athletics made it three|oMly seven hits and struck out 10.' scores, ; something exactly known, travel-! 4 Cantatg yer Peswieen exposition straight over the Detroit Tigers inj The contest lasted four hours and| Manolo Acevedo continued to| €d and mapped. I pttaia’ hs ounacg-tstae ae the closing series between the two} 50 minutes and set a record for| .ock the ball hard and willingly.|__ Very probably Byrd will outline| Mfoiroy, superintendent of the |elubs. Lefty Grove turned in his) baseball in Japan. |In last night’s contest he hit safe-|the boundaries of a continent a8! sunicipal 200 here, hopes it will twenty-third triumph of the sea- But, That's Nothing |ly three times of five trips to the large as the United States and! cero, gq market for two baby son with a 2 to 1 vietory in a} “But that was only one chapter; pan. | Mexico combined; perhaps two} ippos. | pitching duel. Although the A’s : ; York Yankees defeated the Chi- FOR SALE | SEEKING MARKET FOR | PAIR OF BABY HIPPOS BLANK SALES BUOOKS—Suit- able for every business, In duplicate with carbon paper. Only 5c each. The Artman Press, Citizen Building. Phone 51. juni4-tf - RADIO REPAIRING ’ oshida’: shi i A c ents, of Yoshida’s achievement. On) Deloziers, the Coast Guard’s| “ontinents. While attending the National “him away,” said the nuree. ing foree was lacking. He felt the steel teeth of the trap, and struggled “Look here, Nesta—" She mimicked him. “Look here, Tommy—" *Wien’t tate to. yo bringing me and ‘Min into this, You go off on your own dn@ marry @ man we've never #0 much as set eyes on, and then all where I ami you've dragged me into tals Van Berg affair, and there's « man shot and emeralds worth no one fot «googie hte: ime ft when ail I ever did was lend him my 2 Why, I saw of him person to look at—shining eyes and pretty hair, and a way with her. She was sorry to havé'to disappoint. the eager creature. She didn’t look @s if she was used to disappoint- ment; she was more like a child that puts out its hands and expects to have them filled with flowers.or sweets. “Life isn’t like that—well, she'll soon, find out,” said the day nurse to herself. “]/M.sorry;” she said aloud, “but I’m afraid it wasn’t your cousin who was here.” “Was?” Caroline was the picture of dismay. “Has he gone?” “The name was Riddell,” said the nurse. “And his wife came and took, him away.” “Oh, his wife?” “We let him go because she seemed so keen on it., and there was @ bus smash we had to take in. Mrs. Riddell’s one of those people who | Will have it thei: own way—at least when he’s asleep he talks all the time, and the sort of thing he talks about is the sort of thing that'll land you and me in jail. Now you've got it straight—and now you know why I'm not leaving him here to: talk. I want my share of those emer- alds, and I bet you want yours. You can go straight afterwards as much as you like, bet you've got to help me now. “Nesta.” She gave hig arm a squeeze. “Buck up, boy! We'll pull it off. Tl get you safely beck to Min— don’t you worry. Now drive right in—and remember we come from Marley, and all you've got to do is to hold that whee] and keep your tongue between your teeth.” DIAMONDBALL game played tomorrow night at Bayview Park, deginnmg at 8) al Home team and E! Fenix. ed there will be a large crowd in! attendance, - i that's how she struck me. I’m sorry at wasn’tiyour cousin.” ° “Oti"t said Caroline—“so am 1.” }f'M¢ was on the Alice Ardent” “I don't know, Oh, I hope he wasn’t!” “If you don't know, I should go on hoping,” said the day nurse. Carbline looked at her with ‘shin- ing eyes. “Yes, I can—can’t I? You see, I haven't seen him for a long.time— oh, not since I was about fifteen— and he’s been all over the world— he’s an engineer—and he came home in July, and I was in Scotland. Then he wrote from London, and I wrote jc back and sald why not come and join us. And he said he would. And he was going to come by coastal steamer because he liked the sea.” “Then you don’t know that he | ‘was on the Alice Ardent” “No, But I'm afraid, because he | hasn't written. You're sure it wasn’t dim?” The nurse nodded. (Copyright. 1923, J. B. Lippincott Co.) eon Pern ney ne atts. were outhit, 8 to 5, Grove was ef- fective in the pinches, | The Pittsburgh Pirates closed their home season at Pittsburgh 1with a vietory, defeating the Brooklyn Dodgers, 3 to 0, to strengthen their hold on second place in the National League. With Bill Swift holding the Dodgers to four hits, the Pirates increased their lead over the idle Chicago Cubs to one and one-half games. The summaries: American League At New York RW. Chieago ... - 3.12 4 New York -510 0 Nf |. Batteries: Faber, Wyatt, Heving | and Berry; MacFayden and Rensa, At Philadelphia Detroit . Philadelphia pte Nae § Batteries: Fischer and Hay- worth, Pasek; Grove and Coch- rane. R. H. FE. 180 At Washington St. Louis es me Washington 13 11 0 Batteries: Wells, Stiles, Brax- ton, McDonald and Hemsley; Crowder and Sewell. R. H. E. No others scheduled. Nattonal League At Pittsburgh Brooklyn Pittsburgh Batteries: Beck, Shau' Outen; Swift and Grace, 40 13 0 e and Spe No others scheduled. | AMERICAN LEAGUE Chib— w. 1. | Washington . 96 49 'New York 87 55 | Philadelphia 7 67 | Cleveland 74 72 | Detroit 69 79 63 «82 59 84 55 90 -662 613 -528 507 466 434 NATIONAL LEAGUE W.. 1. . 87 55 -. 88 65 . 82 66 80 67 . 76 68 59 84 56 85 57 90 Pet. -613 561 554 544 528 413 397 388 sburgh | Chicago St. Louis Boston Brooklyn Philadelphia Cincinnati BRAZIL STARTS COUNT (My Associated Press) federal and state warehouses determine just how many 000 sacks have since 1931, te million o'clock, between the Lopez Funer-| sacks it has on hand. Settling the) i definite figure will help determine Much interest centers in the the extent of the government's de- proposed contest, and it is expect-| struction policy. Nearly 20,000,-/ been destroyed ~~ ON SUPPLY OF COFFEE AY FRIDAY NIGHT ; RIO DE JANEIRO, Sept. 21.—° The government coffee depart-! There will be a diamondball/ ment has started an inventory of| AMERICAN LEAGUE St. Louis at Washington. Detroit at Philadelphia. Only games scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn at New York. Cincinnati st Chicago. Only games scheduled. “fof Washington, born at Frederick- 413! 379) 2, Commercial | against Naniwa ses, his most generous perform- ance of the tournament. August 118 he had been in the box again for dear old Chukyo, another full 9-inning _, performance. Score: chukyo 2, Taisho Middle School of| Hiroshima 0. The losers gathered four hits and one base on balls. “The tournament finals were} played August 20 before a crowd! estimated at 80,000, capacity for |the big..Koshien stadium near ! Osaka, where the meet was held. Chukyo,"yielded two hits. in the! nine innings and won, 2 to 1. The only evidence of strain was a let-} down in his usual excellent control. He walked nine and hit one batter. Net Bad, Not Bad “Incidentally, Yoshida pitched 42 consecutive seoreless innings, counting the last four of the first] game and the first four of the last. | ‘Summary: Innings pitched in four days, 52; rans, 3; hits, 21; on balls, 22; hit batsman, 1; s outs, 32, “There is no professional base-} ball in Japan and therefore no} seouts but the universities, which; present the highest standard of baseball in the country, do a lot of | “recruiting” and Yoshida is getting H share of attention. “Baseball, which came to Japan! from the United States, probably now commands more universal in- terest here than in the land of its} birth. During the nine days of this middle school tournament crowds averaged over 60,000.” |ptnegeerocenonnccneeees Today’s Birthdays Seeenee=---_..ccdesewes. U. S. Senator Clarenc& €/ Ditl4] | town, Ohio, 49 years ago. jformer Secretary of State, born in| { ry } Henry L. Stimson of New York, | |New York City, 66 years ago. } | Maj. Gen. Frank Parker, U. S.| A., who is to command the Philip-| ;pine Department, born in George- town, Co., S. C., 61 years ago. Dr. Timothy W. Stanton, Chief | Geologist of the U. S. Geological) Survey, born in Monroe Co., IIL,! 73 years ago. } Clark Howell, noted ;Ga., newspaper editor, {Barnwell Co., S. € Atlanta. born in years ¢ Dr. David Moore Robinson of the Johns Hopkins University, famed classicist, archaeoogist and Greek seholar, born at Auburn, N.' Y., 53 years ago. FIPIPAIA~LZLALA LALLA Lee LEE eee dada h hha hha hhh Herman Bernstein, of New York City, Jewish editor, author, Minis- ter to Albania, born in Russia, 57 ro age. | H. G. (Herbert George) Wells famed English author, A new type of motor truck re- teently marketed in England pro- jvides upholstered seats in a wa- iterctight cabin for the driver. ‘ | August 17 he had pitched and) backstop and great hitter To Sound Sea Depths n base- | | Zoological convention at Chicago won a full 9-inning contest, 3 to/ ball, found the difference in soak- The admiral and his followers! ing a diamondball and a baseball, ; Will attempt to sound the depths! was to lift pop ups to the pitcher| caps and record the influence of lor first base. | School, yielding 7 hits and 2 pas-/The best he could do last night! of the Score by innings: | Guards Batteries R. H.E yk f 5 010 202 110— | Zacharias— 3 300 10x—10 11 : G. Meyer and Delo- ziers; Ward and Rodriguez, QUINCY, Mass. QUICK THOUGHT, John Cullinane this city. wrote the license num- ber in a nearby pile of dirt, re- sulting in the arrest of George They will go through the Panama Puopolos. FS © hdeuide ude ue hdl N of ismal polar seas, ihe ice! | the area’s magnetic factors, They | j may gather meteorological data of inestimable value to the whole ; world, i | And what a price they will pay! 2|—this venturesome admiral and| eeeececceees |his 70 men. Perhaps two good | lyears of their lives away from; | civilized living, and the ice party} ;—about 30—will spend at least} (one bleak, dark antarctic night of | The group will leave Boston late this month in the rugged} barkentine The Bear, an ice break-} ‘er, and the supply ship Pacific ie ‘Canal to Dunedin, New Zealand,{ | Adonis, the he hopes to interest some other zoo in the offspring of Venus and “first family” of the Memphis Overton Park zoo. Another visit of the stork is ex- pected during the Christmas holi- days, and feeding hippos is a problem. Today’s Horoscope The person born t! day will have a rich, generous disposition, ‘As he watched) inaction on the frozen wastes of| with good intelligence and indus- Yoshida again went the xente forjan automobile speed away afters the. Bay_of Whales shoxe: line, \ striking. Michael Flaherty, a fel-! low worker, trious habits. The nature will be rather reserved, however, and the inner mind seldom exposed. Many friends are indicated and probably a large family, although this will depend on the hour of birth. Good fortune is probable. ROSE BUSH SALE Get Soil Ready--Then Watch For A Good Rainy Spell Red or Pink Radiance, special lot at ........... 10 for Red Francis Scott Key, special lot at . 10 for SPECIAL PAINT OFFERINGS Palmer Flat or Gloss White, gallon ........ Four Hour Enamel, 10¢€ ax» 30¢ Black Roof Paint, per gallon . 5 gallons at Green Metallic Roof Paint, per gallon .... 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