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APRIL 9, 1934. (By.0. L. MILIAN) * + Snapping out of an old ‘slump the Pirates eame back strong in old time fashion to defeat the Acevedo Stars, 9 to 2, in the first game_of yesterday’s doublehead- ers ¢ back with with er, and triple by Armando Acevedo and Mario Pena in the first in- nipg to put over a quartet of runs which was enough to sew up the ‘The Pirates, the ability of the +4 three months...) FP oncom boneonm 3 i Son comm odig wsornanmce ecoocecsoo™ uf aoe & so - - uty S| pr 7 cunan one naa® Si abi * i i ep eoooeraowr ecccoewoc~® a wl cecesoscenceon fit 33 P wo v0 f : H | If you do not receive your paper by 6:00 o’clock in the afternoon, use your telephone or your neighbor’s phone and 1 call 61 and a paper will be sent }/ } to your hot ge - Com give you 100 calling 53 if |. PARC ERE TE ITER I OP OS SFOSOSCHCOSOCCCLEESEOOOLCS DANISH PRINCE IS GIVEN PROMOTION (Ay Ansociated Press) COPENHAGEN, April 9.— Prince Axel of Denmark has been made a director of the East Asiatic compaitiy in which he has held an important post for sev- eral years, He is the younger brother of ‘Prince Aage, who re-| {nounced his rights to the throte| \to become a soldier in the French! foreign legion. 1833—First free library in country to be supported by taxa- tion at Peterborough, N. Y. me 1865—Lee’s surrender at pomattox—ending Civil War. ee ‘1917—Canadian Ap- victory at 3 | Vimy Ridge—Workd War. ° , on Angora! ghti$6'a pound} the London market. The rab- its are sheared every two or Although Kellogg, Tda., is nes- tled high ‘in the Coeur d’Alene| mountains, the lowest point of one of its mines, the Bunker Hill, is 77 feet below sea level, Sixty per cert of the men! students enrolled at Fresno State college, Cal., earn part or all of their living expenses. Bristow, Okla., no longer has a “white way.” The city officials ‘tutned off the lights to save mon- ey. Eastern Oklahoma this year ‘cooked down the biggest crop of “long sweetenin’ ” {sorghum mo- lasses) in its history. neal State Director of Finance. Rol-| land A. Vandergrift is advocating’ the finger printing of all persons handling California state funds. - Encouragement of game bitds and animals to help solve the land: usé problem arising from cut- tailed agricultural production is Penonwey es ow $13 000 10x— 8 Summary: Runs batted int Fru« to, Molina 2, °G. Acevedo, Griffin 3; three base hi : Al Acevede to stolen bases: Swain, Molina, Gonzalez; bases on balls: off Sanchez 2, off Cates | 2; struck out: by Cates 2, by Grif-; fin 4; wild pitches: Cates; passed | ball: Rodriguez 2; left on bases: Sluggers 5, Stars 6. HOW THEY STAND W. L. Pet.; & 2 214) 5 2 44 2 ¢ 250 Election, June &. 1936 OO WILLIAM V. ALBURY For State Senator 193 trial of. Hi Decatur, Al GOOD REASON FOR DIVORC! dith Lane JEANNE BOWMAN 81S: Slim Sanford avd uiard hate come to the Rio Diablo dam to tell Judith Dale that Morton Lampere's trickery ¢s temporarily checked. Lampere is si |. hae ih Lampere and the Bevins heirs. Guna and San- ford have done with Judith on an Gir tour of the dam site. Chapter 31 “MEXIVAN, PARTY i lode Swooped low to study the topography of the county and when they feturned that afternoon Cunard looked thoughtful. “It could be ofl land,” he mused, thoughtfully, “put we'll hope it isn’t.” Judith paid little attention to him. She had succeeded in reminding Slim of the package he had cached in the cabin of his ship and opening it had discovered a smart knitted beret and pull over sweater. “We'll celebrate its arrival with a trip across the border, tomorrow night,” Cunard tromised when Jud- ith had tried them. “I've never been in Mexieo and all I need is an ex- cuse to go.” Judith, ‘who had turned to a pile cf newspapers brought up during CLEVELAND—Because .“her| husband séleéted the ponies tha’ “algo ran’ and she was forced to get a job to provide for their five children, Mrs. Susan Rhein of this city, sued for divorce. ti The hydra, a small fresh-water polyp, is one of nature’s strangest creatures, It is capable of not only swall ig an ainmal © 50 times its size, but of functioning normally when turned inside out. Subscribe for The Citizen. CLASSIFIED COLUMN SCOOSOSOOCSSOOBaZEC0R0R8 Advertisements ander tis head will be inserted in The Citizen at the rate of le @ word for each in- » but thé minimum for the insertion in ¢ve:y instance is ce. Payment for classified adver- Ask for RADIO REPATRING. We repah all: makes, Guaranteed service, _ J. L, Stowers Music Co. = mar-1, { ‘hi, it he-managed to keep shaved Molina, Grit., WANTED You to xftow that we have the fight prices on letter- heads, business eatds. statements and any form of printing. Satisfaction guacen-/ teed. Call 61. The Artman Press. jan? service. Singer Machine Agency, J. Le Stowers Music =, mar- their absence, opened the one Clia called her-“enemys’ clarion.” She thumbed through it 1 ntil she came to the rotogravure section, th.1 quietly she laid the paper uside with. a reckless laugh satd, “Let's go.tonight. I'd Ike to get away from here now.” She saw Slim Sanford look over her shoulder and quickly she shield- ed what she had seen, a picture of Mathile Bev'ns and Norman Dale, with the caption: “Bereaved daugh- ter of Tom. Bevins, in seclusion of her Galveston beach cottage, con- fers with family attorney, husband of the Millionaire stenographer,” She'd. seen vorder towns, visited the heated cafes with their .nilling crowds, the quick warm tempo of the guifars. She sang one of their songs as she dressed in a tailored suit of pale tan twill, boots »f doe- skin, light of sole and dull of leath er—she could dance in those. She pulled Clie’s gift sweater over her short dark hair. ran a damp comb through the disarr yed strands, then pulled the new beret | for ata rakish angle abore one straight bleck brow. A dash of warm raspberry-toned Touge on her too white cheeks, a full curved line for her lips, aad she | wheeled from the house and darted up the ship rock. To the west the sky was a deep apricot, toning gent. | 1. to a luminous green, and mid-} center hung a single star. Ry mid- night there would be a full moon. ACK at the house she found Stim ing. Cunard; would join them be eae Slim was,immaculately ed “AS Us wondered, vaguely, as they strode doWp the and pressed when he was guest-by- totce toi the Chinese war lord. She sat beside him in the dual contro! seat, and watched him as a woman might watch a man, not as Judy Dale had “eretofore watched Clia Sanford’s brother. The reflec tion ‘trom the {illuminated dial board threw high lights on the severe line of his profile. Occasionally, as tiough conscious | of the new element in her scrutiny. | 4@ would look at her, the rare smile} which bad first attracted her flash- img across for its brief moment. The moon came up behind them and flooded the world. it turned the Rio Grande moving below them to molten silver, and then they were) banking about, circling iow, skim-) ming gently and whirring to a stop./ but thé moonlight turned the adobe snow white, the lighted windows golden yellow, the shadaws of the frame buildings blue-black and put pie It.lay a glamor over the scene which reached Judith and height- ened her excitement. The cafe was small, it was crowd- ed with a- queer mass of humanity, Mexicans, Americans, of every stratum. Judith found herself admir- ing a dark-eyed Spanish girl, intent upon charming a man whose face she couldn't see. They found a table and ordered, tren Judith and Slim danced. Slim cartied hér in a dance measure across the floor, as he seemed to carry his ship through the air, with gentle touch that belied its firm- ness. eveceres al ‘HE evening wore on as they in terspersed the many-coursed din- ter with turns about the floor. The salad brought « quick, laugh provok- ing border song; frijoles came with a sedate waltz, enchiladas, the tor- tilla filled to bursting with its queer concoction and freighted with bit- ing cheese, was followed by a swift- moving folk dance. And then in slow, senstious meas: ure the song which had been on her lips all evening, “Crlito L'ndo.” The floor was packed with swaying cou- fles, at the tables the natives took up the theme and sang with the or chestra and Jndith and Slim sang with them as they danced. Verses innumerable, the floor fill- ing until Judith and Slim returned tc the table. Cunard had gore to the gaming room and there in the pri vaey “of the impersona: mob, Slim spoke. Judith watched him cap his hands & he“ lighted a cigarette, watched the yellow flame burnish the bronze of his face, then saw the quick flash of his smile. “Jude, will you hate me if f ask you a question?” “I—Id find it a bit difficult to hate you, Slim.” “What are you going tu: do about Norman?” _ “I don’t Know, Slim.” SE day) Be going to da@abagt, “I don’t know that either. It’s aD 80 indefinite. We couldn't seem to things "hen we were to d-30~w—" ‘Now? he prompted. “Now we're as far from each other physically as “e were in under standing. I guess we'll just let time make whatever adjustments must bs made.” “I suppose it Isn't necessary for me to tell you I love you; you know it. Sometimes I fee! like a sandwich man running around all sides, saying ‘I love 1 do, I do’” Judith looked up to smile and her breath caught in a gasp. A Span ish girl was dancing in the arms of | the man she had been beguiling. The | man was J. C. Scathborne, the one | whom Lampere had tried to plant in ‘The town lay, a huddle of adobe and wooden buildings, on 1 barren strip of desert. Sunlight would bave Picked out each detail of squalor, P& her board of directors. (Copyright, 1934, by Jeanne Bowman) Tomorrow, Judith alarming situation on the ol. able. STEAMSHIP Co. UNITED STATES FAST MAIL ROUTES FOR PORT TAMPA—HAVANA—WEST INDIES Effective April 27, 1933 Leave Key West for Havana Tuesdays and Fridays 12:15 Leave Havana for Key West Wednesday. and Saturdays 9:45 A. M. Leave days 6:30 P. West for Port Tampa Wednesdays and Satur- Tichets, Reservations and Infermation at Ticket Office om the Deek, 7 4. H. COSTAR, Agest. IF YOUR BUYING PROBLEMS PUZZLE YOU Lect Tilted MERCHANTS Help SOLVE Them BAKERY PASTRIES Try our pie for dessert to- night. Our pastries are posi- tively delicious. MALONEY & PEACOCK PHONE 818 BEER HAPPY DAYS ARE HERE Try Your Meals At Delmonico Restaurant Cuban Beer, served with BEER ANHEUSER-BUSCH BUDWEISER DRAUGHT A THE CAVE INN OLD OAKEN BUCKET DEPRESSION CAFE BLUE HEAVEN CAFE HAPPY DAYS BEER GARDEN SLOPPY JOE'S PLACE Smith, Richardson and Conroy A. LOPEZ, Agent.“ SELECT SEA FOODS 18¢ 15 18 10 LOWE FISH COMPANY PLUMBING ‘Street’ DURO PUMPS S45 alll 90PLUMBING SUPPLIES TELEPHONE NO. ae Sere Office: 319 Duval be ——THE—— PORTER-ALLEN } JOHNC. PARK COMPANY 328 SIMONTON ST. |_NOTARY _| SHOE REPAIRING J.B, DE BOER ara SHOE REPAIRING Men's Half Soles - 60c and 75¢ Men's Rubber Heels NOTARY PUBLIC Ladies’ Half Soles . $0c tnd 60¢ Ladies’ Leather or Compost- FULL LINE OF ALL KINDS OF WHITE SHOE POLISH Goodyear Shoe Shop 612 DUVAL STREET SOUVENIRS A“FOR RENT” ADI‘ SOUVENIRS On the Classified Page IS SURE TO REACH THE PERSON | YOU SEEK PHONE 51 saint lien KEY WEST CITIZEN CITIZEN OFFICE Cor. 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