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geous Fortune Patricia Wentworth 1 Peoee coccnseseccocvccasaneccscocconeecoseonceses | sraprars: fee identity of the (01 Seed of the Aloe more of a problem. Nesta Riddell }, heard him babiiing of emeralds ai "murder, ad taken him home as her hus- ey ee ee distant cousin, wntil she hears of Nesta. Then learns a scrap of a letter was found in the ed and Mal ehore tha maw hed bape gtoee if man Gaesiige's cover to honk Werte, one Nesta had dropped in leaving, Chapter Six $ THE AWAKENING Ts rising and falling—waves rocking—and a long dream that rocked with them—rocking—rock- ing. He was swinging like a pendu- lum between the dream and some vague waking state—swing, swing— out and back again—out and back again. When he swung out, there was a sense of ght and women’s voices; but when be swung back, there was the rise and fall of water, and black fog, and only ore voice, that never stopped. 3 There was sunlight in the room, else—an older woman with dark: bair and a high color. She came across the room, sat down on the edge of his bed, and smiled a ready- | made smile. f “Well, Jimmy—so you're awake?” she said. He felt an immediate Drickle of irritation. Her eyes were too close | together. Who was she? And what was she doing calling him Jimmy? He loathed being called Jimmy. “Well?” said Nesta Riddell in her better. You've slept round the clock, you know. Are you hungry? You ought to-be. Min’s getting you some- thing.” He said, speaking slowly and with 2 sort of frowning intensity, “Why did you cal! me Jimmy?” ‘Nesta Riddell stared. “Isn't it your name?” ‘HE frown became a sheer strain- ing effort to find an answer to that. And it beat him. He’ didn’t know—he didn’t know what his name was. He knew that he hated being called Jimmy. That stuck out like @ corner in his mind, but he couldn't get round it. “Look here,” said Nesta Riddell, “You wait till you’ve had something | you. And if I were you I shouldn’t go “Why did you call me dimmy 25” bothering my head about things at present.” The pillow was comfortable. He |relaxed against it, conscious of a : ey HE Hae : swimming head. Then Min<came in with a tray, and he found that he was faint with hunger. « Nesta watched him eat anc drink, When he had finished, she took away the tray and came back to her seat on the bed. “Well?” she said, “feeling better?” “Yes, thank you.” “Want to talk?” “Yes.” “All right—go ahead—” ‘That was easier said than done. Where were you to begin when you had no landmarks? He went back to the question he had asked before. “Do you mind telling me where Tam? “You're at Tom’s place—in Led. lington, He opened his eyes upon her very directly. “And who is Tom?” “My brother,” said Nesta Riddell. ied laughed a little. “Come, mod-jcrack on the head?” | ALL GOOD FASCISTS FOND OF MOVIES! MUST NOW EAT FRUIT (My Axsecinted Press) RIO DE JANEIRO, Sept. 23.— Provisional President Getulio Var- gas is a first-rate movie fan, The wood, in private showings at the sight of them. e Rraly agriculturally She nodded, watching him. “Do you mind telling me how 2 got here?” ~ “You really don’t remember? Well, Tl go back to a week ago. You know what had happened. You said you'd wot to get off the map for a bit. I was to come here, and you were go- ing to work up the coast to Glasgow, I don’t know what name you went under, but you were on the Alice Arden when she got driven ashore on the Elston sands. There was a gale first, and then an awful fog, and she broke up against the cliffs. ‘Very few people were saved. They took you into the Elston cottage hos- pital, and Tom and I fetched you away yesterday. Can't you really re- member anything about it?” His hand went up to his eyes and Pressed on them. He said, “Tom—" His voice choked on the ‘word. Then, a whisper, “I re- ~ Lippincott Co.) jonday, te re< {Ry Assoctated Prean) ROME, Sept. 23.—all | Fascists must eat fruit. determined campaign to THE KKY WEST CITIZEN SPORTS cee ‘DOUBLEHEADER } ‘COAST GUARD TO MEET PI- NAVY FIELD ‘CRONIN CROWDED BOSTON BRAVES WITH HONORS BY | CALLED OFF ON AC- |MANAGER OF SENATORS WHO COUNT OF RAIN HAVE TAKEN AMERICAN. LEAGUE PENNANT OUT- STANDING LAD { {Special to The Citizen> PHILADELPHIA, Sept. By HERBERT PLUMMER (iby Asnocinted Brexny !tight spots, WASHINGTON, Sept. 23.— came through despite ‘Once more the capital city of the | Moore’s six-hit flinging. |United States has cast aside its! | cultivated dignity, stored up no’ for eight years, and has become a baseball crazed town. i ' {pitched unbeatable ball in ; itraeted only about 2,000 ‘even though it was ladies’ day. The victory was the |present in this city is not Presi-/second shutout in succession, {dent Roosevelt or Gen. Hugh The summaries: |Johnson, but a 26-year-old Irish National League tad by the name of Joseph Edward! At Philadelphia R. H. Cronin, who, as the youngest man Boston .... - 3:8 jever to manage a big league team, | Philadelphia 1 has led his Washington Senators! to the top of the American|Moore and Davis. League. ‘They call him the “boy wonder” and the “miracle kid” and liken his; feat to the accomplishments of. Washington’s greatest figures. For the capital, despite the fact that it is accustomed to the big- Pittsburgh at St. Louis, rain. American League No games scheduled, | BLANK PHILLIES | WASHINGTONIANS .. -csuncusr. LOUIS GAME) Gaur LAST NIGHT AT BAY- hard bright voice. “You look pounds | 23.— Phe Boston Braves shut out the | Phillies 3 to © when Huck Beets | the | ball team met defeat at the hands! and the Boston club . eAustin | P32? grounds last night by an 8)" = This was the only major league } w{game played yesterday which at- i fans| third to-eat. Here's another pillow for | e big spotlighted figure at straight for the Braves and their Batteries: Betts and Hogan; A.! | | | | | There will be a doubleheader FUNERAL HOMERS ternoon at the ‘Navy field with the | 1 gin at 1:30 o’elock. The batteries in this game will be Lopez and Griffin for the Pi VIEW PARK RESULTS IN SCORE OF 8 TO 5 | The second game wi \gether the Sluggers and Seamen, ; with Lucilo and A. Rodriguez ser- : (By JOVE) :ving as the battery for the Slug- Crippled by the absence of some gers and Edwards and Delozier | of its most important players, the for the mariners. Lopez Funeral Home diamond-! Angssanaateaatanenancnl game in a month, was in good con-j |dition, holding El Fenix to only! Beal ae hits. Clayton Sterling, TAKE BOTH GAMES OF TWIN allowed one more safe blow than | his opposing hurler, but worked! BILL OF DIAMONDBALL very hard in the pinches, and on} YESTERDAY , two occasions he managed to hold| jthe Funeral lads scoreless after é |the bases had been filled through ; “| errors. 0; 1 of the El Fenix in the Bayview jto 5 score. ' | Arthur Lunn, pitehing his first! The Pelicans defeated the Park | Tigers in both frames of a double \pill of diamondball played yester- uneral Home boys Was! day afternoon at Bayview Park. cerned : ‘The score in the first game was The Lopez clan tied the score!1; ¢o 1, and 5 to 4 in the second. at three all in the third inning qhe same teams will play again ee ae pe Rigi Hen all,/on Monday, beginning at 4:30 Jolin (Gunite) ‘Roberts, enap-|° °C eee | ped out of his hitting slump last! es jnight. He collected two hits out Only one of the five runs scor- jed by the Fy i RATES AND SLUGGERS AT j MARVELOUS i rates, and Moley and Delozier for;| ithe Coast Guardsmen. 4 i ill bring to-4 of three trips to the pan. ‘Today s Birthdays: (CLASSIFIED - COLUMN eoccaccccese SALESMEN WANTED ———. INVENTION, New, Match gives million lights. Fast! seller. ing Match Co,, 443 South Dear-| born, Chicago. sept, 23.1tx HELP WANTED, MALE Coast Guard team meeting the Pi-} a LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE rates in the opener, which will be~i | 2 wanted. Exclusive line—popu- lar-priced highgrade shoes for entire family. No investment, steady customers, permanent: income. Tanners Shoe, 496 C Street, Boston, Mass. sept. 23-1tx, | ais es peceia es Pata }MAN WANTED. Supply custom- ers with famous Watkins Pro- ducts in Key West, Business established, earnings average $25 weekly, pay starts imme- diately, Write J, R. Watkins Company, 70-88 W. Towa Ave- nue, Memphis, Tennessee. sept23-1tx. CHICKS “SOUTHERN HATCHED, | blood tested, Missouri Reds, Barred Rocks, White Rocks, Wyandot- tes, Orpingtons, 100—$6.45; Heavy Assorted $5.95. Pre- paid; live delivery. ‘Southern Hatcheries, Jacksonville, Fla.” sept23-30;0ct7x AGENTS WANTED AGENTS—Eighty Million people in United States have been waiting for years to buy San- asoles. The medicated insole —Instant relief for tired, ach- ing, burning and perspiring feet. Sells for 50c, lasts for months. Your commission large. Ortho- pedic Laboratories, Drawer 293, ? PAGS SHRED LONDON ZOO 1S NOW- GIVING AWAY LIONS (ily Ausvelated Presa) LONDON, © Sept. 23.—Lions ‘have ‘become so ‘plentiful that ‘the | London Zoo is giving them away. Last year the zoo took over 11 lions from a menagerie, Six were given away, but there still are 20 Big profits. Everlast-|in London and five at Whipsnade. The pigmy hippopotamus is another beast that has multiplied in the goo. im enccttmemanyestenanation Fifty acres has been set aside in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, for the growing of as many differ- vent kinds of trees as possible. | PEPER 76. SHER | eeeereencevscecoocosvee Today’s Anniversaries 1745—John Sevier, pioneer, In- dian fighter, Revolutionary sol- dier, governor of the short-lived State of Franklin, Tennessee gov- ernor, born in Virginia. Died in Alabama, Sept. 24, 1815. 1786—John England, famed Charleston, S .C,, Roman Catholic bishop, born in Ireland, Died in Charleston, S. C., April 11, 1842. 1800—William Holmes MeGuf- fey, Ohio and Virginia professor, author of the school readers in use for 50 years and more, born in Washington Co. Pa. Died at Charlottesville, Va., May 4, 1873. 1838—Victoria C. W. Martin, New York banker, editor and suf- fragest, Equal Rights Party nomi- nee for the Presidency, English editor of the Humanitarian Maga- zine, author and Jecturer, born at Homer, Ohio. Died in England, June 9, 1927, 1852—James C. Beckwith, not- jed New York painter, born at good Tt has become a party battle cry in the! make/all it can get. self-support- | sistent gest events of the country and the world, gets terribly “steamed up” over its baseball team when it is a winner. They’re All Fans Everyone from the occupant of the White House to the lowliest man in the street seems to share in the enthusiasm. For, after all, it is the only celebration Washing- ton can really eall its own. Tt was nine years ago that the| Washington Senators won their first baseball championship and the city celebrated the event with about as much.noise and racket as it greeted the news of the end of the world war. That was in ¢he days when the great Walter Johnson was . the 87 55 pitching idol of the nation. “Old 83 65 Barney” had waited 18 years for $2 66 the chance to play in a world se- Ch xz " ; “9 St. Lodi 80 67 ties and it had finally come. 47, ‘: 77 68 Twice he was shelled from the! poo tne mound in that series by the heavy ohilaits hte artillery of the New York Giants piacines AMERICAN LEAGUE Club— we. 1. Washington - 97 49 New York 87 55 Philadelphia 5 68 Cleveland 72 Detroit Chicago Boston St. Louis ' NATIONAL LEAGUE Clu We: Ta: Pet: New York -613 ow oe 561 ieage 554 544 +531 413 -394 59 84 388 only to come back in the final 86 90 game and pitch his team to a world’s championship, It’s Cronin Now Johnson is not with the Sena- tors any more, but the imagina- tion of the fans has been captur- ed by the wizardry of their boy} manager. They'll be watching him in the world series this year just as they watched and prayed for “Old Barney” in 1924. From the capitol up Pennsyl-; While an Atlanta drug store clerk slept in the building as night watchman, burglars entered, stole his trousers, watch and $34 cash, played at the Polo Grounds in Ne York it will mount. For Washington wants its ball team to win as it seldom wants anything. Back in 1924 they said that Washington had lived to vania avenue to the White House] see its first world pennant, but the baseball fever is felt. And) for a while many thought it would from now until the first game is/ not live through it. eeosececceccces (ity Associated Press) NEW YORK, Sept. . 23.—Roy ) (Tarzan) Parmelee and his “slide” ball will give the Washing- ‘ton Senators something to think {about in the approaching world | series. | The big 26-year-old Giant right- hander didn’t get that nickname | for nothing. He got it because, ifor the first four years he spent trying to make good under John | McGraw, he was so wild they had to clip his wings to keep him from flying. McGraw was just about ready to! jzive up on the pride ef Lambert-| ville, .. last year. Decided he} ould never add control to his oth-| erwise magnificent pitching equip-} ment. This season, under Bill Ter-} ry, Parmelee suddenly developed} inte a whizbang. It was a godsend | to Terry. | Parmelee’s “slider” is an ex-/ tremely fast ball that breaks out about five inches and at the same; time dips an inch or two. The Sen- ators will find it plenty trouble- some. Batters usually hit it into the dirt. “Tarzan” also adds punch to the Giants’ line-up, which needs) He is a hard, con-/because he has any ROY PARMELEE more Says Manager Terry: “ is a winning pitcher this year not'to do with it.” B\| Sterling and Medina. in} stuff hitter and surprisingly |than in the years when he couldn't Guanabara palace, Some of them ing. Mussolini has made rules de} {ast on his feet for a 195-pounder.|make the grade, but because he he sees before the public gets a signed to expand fruit distribu-} jt and consumption, IPPI AIA A222 ALL LLL LL LAMELLAE eA A a aaa hb bd lee | has better control and knows what The score by innings: eoccess~--=--~ncnccccces | | R. H. E.| } \L. F. FH: 003 010 001 5 9 | Walter Lippman of New York, - ; ae “|| noted political journalist, born {El Fenix 300 140 00x— 8 8 4| there, 44 years ago. Batteries: Lunn and Ingraham; Michael J. Cleary of Milwaukee, | president of the Northwestern Mu-} TODAY'S GAMES I tual Life Insurance Co., born in} v Sah rgy Towa Co., Wis., 57 years ago. j AMERICAN LEAGUE } Chicago at Cleveland. Heartley W. Anderson, Notre! St. Louis at Detroit, two games. | Dame football coach, born at Cal-| Philadelphia at Washington, lumet, Mich., 35 years ago. } New York at Boston. | NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston at Philadelphia, games. Brooklyn at New York, | games. Pittsburgh at St. games. Cincinnati at Chicago. Wayman A'dams of New York, ; Portrait painter, born at Muncie,! Ind., 50 years ago, Maj. J. MacIntosh Bell, Cana-} dian geologist and mining engin- eer, born 56 years ago. two two Louis, two Subscribe for The Citizen. | 1 | ROSE BUSH Red or Pink Radiance, special lot at ...............: Red or Pink special lot 10 for 15¢ 10 for Red Francis Red Francis Scott Key, own! stots special. lot’ at ..........i.. 50c 10 for Palmer Flat or Gloss Sherwin Wil White, gallon $1.50 Four Hour Enamel, two sizes 10¢ AND 30c $3.50 $2.70 per gallon Sherwin W at 5 gallons at at Green Metallic Roof Paint, per gallon - Paint, per $4.3 South Florida Contracting & Phone 598 “Your home is worthy of the se eaiages $17.00 25 pounds at ‘ i Flat White, Auto Polish, 4 oz. Red Metallic Roof ZILO.--PURE LEAD AND ZINC PASTE White and Eliza Streets Wilkesbarre, Pa. sept23-1tx Hannimbal, Mo. Di im New York, Oct. 24, 1917. 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