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PAGE FOUR THE ARMY POST MURDERS jeneesnececesscenes Ré Virginia Hanson From a Friend to a Friend | COCCCCSHSSSOEOOHEOOOOOOE The Characters “Me too!” said Lou Orpington’s | geer a Ha Katherine Cornish, myself, vis- voice. “Wait for me!” | ; iting Elizabeth on a mid-western ‘Adam hurried me out of the | Wel yu ast fur it so hear goes? Army post. borrered ‘ THE KEY WEST CITIZEN FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1939 CLASSIFIED COLUMN eeccoccancenses Advertisements under this head | will be inserted in The Citizen at coe! e Dictators, Study in Psychology, Writes Dr. Carl G. Jung | | FOR SALE Sitaete ei ASS |i donnt rite gude so lea * joc Moore, air mussed an Elizabeth, Colonel Wright's |... tines in his face, stood in the door of the waiting room. “She’s got a wonderful constitu- | tion,” he said. “Wonderful. There’s @-—just a chance. ...” ; mother and father here?’ oe ih sn. here fer hours, wait- k ‘she finally opened her pee ealled them. I think she rec- ized them, but she kept whis- ‘pering, ‘Barney.’ There may be something she doesn’t want them to know, The old lady went to piecés—had to give her a sedative, put heg in one of the other beds.’ “Antie still conscious?” “Fitfully. She dozes, wakes, asks for Barney.” He turned, looked down the hall. “Here they come. I’ll see if she’s awake.” He was gone, with light, noise- less steps. Barney and Charlie came in, ig- noring me, fastening their gaze on Adam. They were hollow eyed, un- shaven, but they had taken time to don day uniforms. They were in olive-drab slacks, fresh khaki shirts, and they carried ‘their cam- paign hats. hat's happened?” asked Bar- ney evenly. Except for an un- healthy pallor he seemed to have recovered from his mysterious at- daughter. « Adam Drew, acting command- ing officer. Yesterday: Charlie’s gun 4s es taken from my suitcase. Chapter 32 Just A Chance Be Adam. I’ve been think- ing about that notebook and the two attacks on Barney and the possibility that the shot that killed Apne might have been intended for him. And the repeated theme off the family skeleton in what he wrote about everyone. And I can See only one exp! lanation that fits it all—and that’s blackmail.” In silence Adam digested that ; unpalatable word. Then he shook his head. “A blackmailer is a peculiarly _Nasfy vermin. I won't believe it of =a bgother officer. I have my own *euriosity about people, but I don’t trade on it. I prefer to think Bar- ney is that way.” “Then why the notebook?” I asked. “And what was he doing with it tonight?” “What do Elizabeth and Annie know about Anne that they aren’tptack telling?” he countered. “And-what ‘was that poor devil of a sentry try’ ing to tell me? And w -those stones? . °.” “THis voice ‘trailed off and. he stared straight through me, his eyes the unearthly, dazzling blue ofthe! sparks thrown’ eff'by an acetylene tore! What is it?” I cried, my pulses “begimning to pound. «e Ha shook his head as if 1 were a obuering fly. . . “I've got to think,” he muttered. — t him think. Presently he seized the brown notebook, leafed through it, found something and é more excited as he read. He Jeapad to his feet and raced around etheeemall room while I watched him in painful suspense. hat appt : “Anne is alive—she’s been ask- ing for you,” Adam said gently. Dazed Eyes | HEARD the faint whistle of Charlie's indrawn breath. I saw Barney’s sudden rigidity, the quiv- er of emotion on his face that for a poniene broke up his iron con- rol. _ “Where is she?” he asked in a high, unnatural voice. He turned, was on his way. “Just a minute—Doc will let you know. She may be asleep. You'd better wait here.” Barney stumbled back into the Toom, “Why wasn’t I told of this be- fore?” His dazed eyes were fixed on Adam. “The chance was too slim. I this typriter in order so thet yu wil be abel tu reed it beter and i know thet yu wil like thet; cuz i know thet yur a gentlemen and skoler and wil apreshyate it so; ; again hear goes? i lowded the car with a galon of gas put the wife in the car and the kids and webt out to key west park wear | the firmen hav a lot of ridees a hole lot of shos and a lot of uther | things) wat i pade a lot of aten- shun two was the way thay had | the entrence fixct up wen yu | wak in the little entrence is fixct ‘up so nice thet yu reely no yu are going someplace’ the furst ting i liked wuz the dinnnig rume | wear 1 of hour locel boys is run- ing it and he is runing it nice its cleen an dthe fude is swell. the wife and kids had tu hev sum soda pope and a hot dawg so ij bowt them each wun and bowt | sumthing for myselfe. frum thare we walked doun the line to wear a feller has sum lettle mice in a game. i plaid the game and b 4 i new it he gav me} | a pac of cigerets and it only cost} me a nicel. | glorya my yungest girl saw a} little ride with a lot of ortumo-| bles on it and she just hed to {ride it and did she hev a big! | time and wen tre ride was over} | she embareshed me almost todeth ; she wanted to ride agen so i ast} | the wif and she sed alrite so} |glorya hed another ride? frum | thare we went down two a show | wich is advatised as ahipadrome ‘and wilde west show wear thay | hev dogs and ponys and cowboys |and cowgirls and traned mules and it zux reely swel the kids laffed and i laffed and the wife} laffed til we thot hour sides wud | bust, it shure wuz a swel show and them cowboys and cowgirls} WwW Few inquiries could surpass i HAT manner of men are these European dictators, who, with lightning speed are changing the history of mankind? in importance the question which the rate of one-cent (Ic) a word | for each insertion, but the mini- mum for the first insertion in| Dr. Carl G. Jung, the world’s foremost analytical psychologist, an- swers in the January issue of Cosmopolitan, for dictatorship’s tri- umvirate—Stalin, Hitler, Mussolini—not only direct the destinies of 300,000,000 people but are af-0————————— fecting the future of us all. H. R. Knickerbocker, foreign correspondent for the Internation- al News Service, in his interview with Dr. Jung for Cosmopolitan asked this question: “What would happen if you were to lock Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin in a room to- gether and give them one loaf of bread and one pitcher of water to last them a week? Who would get all the food and water, or would they divide it?” “I doubt if they would divide it,” Dr. Jung answered. “Hitler, being a medicine man, would prob- ably hold himself aloof and have nothing to do with the quarrel. He would be helpless because he would be without his German people, Mussolini and Stalin, be- ing both chiefs or strong men in their own right, would probably dispute possession of the food and drink, and Stalin, being the rough- er and tougher, would probably get all of it.” The law to remember about dic- tators, according to Dr. Jung, is that “It is the persecuted one who persecutes.” The dictators must have suffered from circumstances calculated to bring about dictator- ship. Mussolini came at the mo- ment when the country was in chaos. Hitler came when the economic crisis had reduced the standard of living in Germany and increased unemployment to an in- | tolerable level. Stalin came when the death of Lenin, unique creator of Bolsheyism, had left the party and the people leaderless and the country uncertain of its future. “Thus,” says Dr. Jung, ‘‘the dicta- tors are made from human ma- terial which suffers from over- whelming needs. The three dicta- _ Mussolini tors in Europe differ from one another tremendously, but it is not so much they who differ as it is their peoples.” The famous psychologist com- pares the way the German people think and feel about Hitler. with the way the Italians think»and feel about Mussolini. The Germans are highly impressionable; they go to extremes and are always a bit un- balanced. The Italians, he’ points out, are more stable. Their minds do not roll and wallow and leap through all the extravagant ecsta- sies which are the daily exercise of the German mind. When the Fascists took power in Italy, Mus- solini worked not with ecstasy of spirit, but with a hammer in his hand, beating Italy into the shape he wanted it, much as his black- smith father used to make horse- shoes. As a physician, Dr. Jung has not only to analyze and diagnose, but levery instance is twenty-five Advertisers should give their) street address as wellbas their, ‘telephone number if they, desire | | results. a Payment for itisements is invariably in ad-! ‘vance, but (Above) Adolph Hitler (Below) Stalin, Russia’s Strong FOR SALE OR RENT—C. bin |: | APARTMENT FOR RENT. advertisers ints may have ‘charged. Cruiser with living quarters to, accommodate 4. All modern conveniences. Good for party fishing. 1014 Varela street. octl0-s | | 1014 jan2-s FOR RENT Grinnell street. |FURNISHED HOUSES—all mod- | { — FOR RENT—7-Room Furnished, TWO LOTS to recommend treatment. There- fore he says, “Studying Germany { as I would a patient, and Europe as I would a patient's family, I | say, let her go into Russia. There is plenty of land there. It would- n't matter to Russia if somebody took a bite. Your democratic U.S.A., of course, must be saved, else we all go under. You must keep away from the craze and the infection. Keep your army and navy large, but save them. If war comes, wait.” 1114 Grin- nov3-tt | ern conveniences. nell Street. Apartment on Duval street. Modern conveniences. Apply at) Mendell’s Men Shop. | dec20-s FURNISHED APARTMENT—Ap- | ply 1404 White Street. dec31-s| FURNISHED APARTMENT, 555 Sap iim acres Pia centrally located, all modern: conveniences. Apply 519 Duval} street. decl6-s | ROOMS j | | |NEW VALDEZ INN, 521 United. | FOR SALE—One lot 50x100, Sei- denberg avenue. 5.00 cash. Apply 1317 Petronia street jan6-s HOUSE, modern convenienc Near Casa Ma- rina, lot 163°x98’. Apply 1125 Von Phister street. oct31-s TWO-STORY TYPEWRITING PAPER — 500 sheets, 75c. The Artman Press. mayi9-tf FOR SALE— tello Towers, $3,500. P. L. Wil- son, 1722 Jefferson Ave., Mi- ami Beach, Fla. decl0-1mo SECOND SHEETS—500 for 50c The Artman Press. nov19-tf FOR SALE—Cabin Cruiser, fully equipped, engine and hull, in very good condition. Newly renovated. Reasonable for cash Apply 506 South street. decl0s FOR SALE—Lot on Stock Is- land, waterfront. Also, lot cor- ner 5th and Patterson Avenues near Boulevard. Apply Bex RC, The Citizen. aug3l-s Washington 112 feet Apply 1219 novll-s on street, 90 ft. front. deep. Reasonable. Pear! street. CORNER LOT, 50x100 feet. Cor- ner 5th and Staple Avenue. Apply Box D, The Citizen. nov2-tt inta- tion Key, 3% acres on ocean, 8% acres on Bay, on Highway, all high land, beach front on both sides. P. O. Box 23, Key West. sept7-s —SNBit how can I prove it?” he de- | thought yon’d rather not be kept Sixteen beautiful new rooms. | FOR SALE—2 lots, each 50x100’. manded of me suddenly; ~-~#errtched at the chance to vacant stare, “T’m only trying to help you,” I cried at last in exasperation. “Eh? Oh, yes, yes! Thank you very ‘much... .” He was the soul of courtesy, but he was gone from me. I retired into a sulky silence and tricd to figure it gut.for myself: I was getting exactly nowhere when the telephone rang. It star- Tr He@*'Adam out of his somnam- ~. bulism, but he was so long coming back to reality that,jt rang a sec- *send tite before rhé ‘remembered é y ~ - woe 7 A long pause. t’s all she said? All right, Doc, Pll be right over.” {He listened a moment longer, ttle the instrument carefully. “Is there an sion teleph in this house? sei “I nodded. “Where?” “Upstairs hall. Not far from my room. Why?” “Someone was listening in on that conversation. I heard the click...” ‘Touch And Go’ HE RELEASED thé telephone again, quietly, and asked for the Officers’ Club. “Charlie? Adam _ speaking. Is Barney asleep? ... You’re sure he’s all right then? ; . . Very: well, [ want you two to meet me at the hospital in ten minutes. . . . I don't. but when i ply him questions his only answer in suspense.” Charlie broke in eagerly. “Then —then she’s going to get well?” He was trembling uncontroll- ably, and he did not seem to know ae mae ers: ; ’s still in the lap of the ‘a said Adam. R ie Suddenly they were all there— Annie with her hair in wisps under the belligerent black affair, Lou Orpington with excited eyes darting from face to face, Bliza- beth calm, contained, radiating strength. She went at once to Barney, put her hand on his arm, murmured that she was glad; but I thought he scarcely heard her, And then my eyes leaped to the doorway again and I wondered if the strain had been too much for me. Was I imagining things, or did Treally see Mrs. Flower? She came at once to me and I say that her husband was behind er. “It's Anne, isn’t it?” she asked brightly, cheerfully, in that nerve- shattered room. “I just told Flower that’s what it was. You see, there weren't any lights at the Carewes’, and the doctor being gone all eve- ning and all, and cars coming and foing all the time—you can see the hospital from our quarters. So I just told Flower, ‘Anne’s alive,’ and we came to see if I was right— and to see if we can do anything, of course.” She smiled confidingly. “You see, Gilly woke up when we came in, and it’s so near morning of and all the uther things i told | you about shure did thayre stuff, | {espeshuly a girl huze name wuz} |mabel mack. next we went two} }a place they called funy facis} | wear yu go in and luk in mirors| | and se sum of. the funist facis yu lever saw it-wuz recl funy, the} \ kids startid tu git restlus and | wanted tu go.en sum of the rides} so we (that’s hte wife and miself) | | put them on the flining hawses, |and do you.no a H a? thay had |the best time and i think that freddie ‘wuz out two be a cow-| will exchange information on/ Was spent for relief of the vie:!en. Beat yolks and sugar togeth- | boy becuz he rode that hawse lik no buddies. bizniss, wen we got off the hawses (the misses and myself went on two) sum feller with a mikerfone sed that® the} americen eegels wuz going tu du sumthing on a hi wire and they did say thay went way up in} the aire and did sum of the darn- est things yu ever saw won feller thats the little wun almost fel off the darn thing, eut they culdnot fool me i thing he wuz supposed |tu do thet in order two give us folks a thril and he shure did it?? the anuther feller excus me i mean tu fellers got on byclcels | with a bar acros there showlders and the other feller the first 1 i menthuned got on the bar and put a chare on the bar and sat on the chare and then they wawked NEWS 4 SIGN NAVAL TREATY | NOTES ; William H. (Big Bill) Thompson | WEEKLY SCRAPBOOK | 4 egg yolks; 1 WEEK'S BEST RECIPE Fruit Sticks: LONDON.—Four more powers} recently turned over $72,749.79 to| cup light brown sugar; 1 teaspoon | —Sweden, Norway, Denmark an Finland—signed an | with Great Britain, binding them- selves to accept the limitations o! > size of cruisers den Naval Treaty of 1938. Un: | der the agreement, these nation: their building plans with Great Britain, the United States and | France, and with Italy, which ad- hered to the agreement early in December. BANS BOOK | former President of Czecho-Slo- vakia, recently obtained a tem- porary injunction against pub- lication of the book, “They Gave | Us A Country”, written by Pres- |ton Hayter, which attributes to |Dr. Benes unauthorized _ state- ments about European. statesmen and the world situation. agreement LONDON.—Dr. Eduard Benes,! . |Bruce, Eddie Cantor and Edward} able, wholesome and digestible. | jthe Red Cross, thus ending a 7-| cinnamon; 1-4 teaspoon salt; 1 1-2 | year legal battle over the money | cyps chopped figs; 1-2 cup chop- e collected in 1927 for the relief} ped dates; 1-2 cup coconut; 1-2| f sufferers in the Mississippi, ciyp nutmeats; 1 teaspoon vanilla; | lood. While $139,779 was col-'j 1-3 cups flour; 2 teaspoon bak- lected in the drive, only $35,854 ing powder; 4 egg whites, beat-| | tims. \er until creamy. Add rest of in-| _ | gredients. Mix lightly, pour into} FETE. CHILDREN one-inch layer ‘in shallow pan, SHAFTER, Calif. — Approxi- | which has been lined with waxed pantely 78000 ccr fuged! Cchinaneay RODE = SRNR Sopwith 1-Bieup | sibs eee ,,, Sugar, teaspoon cinnamon, 1-3 from the Midwest’s “Dust Bowl”) cup nuts. Bake in moderate , were guests at a Christmas Party | oven. Cut into bars. ; sponsored and arranged by mo- ;tion picture celebrities. Five, hours of entertainment were ar-| HOUSEWIVES ranged by Melvyn Douglas and To spend wisely as well as to! those appearing on the program save. | were his wife, Helen Gahagan,| To choose and buy food which | , Jackie Cooper and his “Clambake! those who eat will enjoy and is| 'Cats”, Edith Fellows, the Mauch/ suited to their needs. ‘twins, Gene Autry, Virginia} To cook this food so it is agree- COMMANDMENTS FOR | GETS TWO YEARS le: Hepingan: j LOS ANGELES. — Following | ——— | | conviction for having stolen blue-' CHEESE TO CHILDREN i | prints of a new naval bombing: MARSHFIELD, Wis.—In an ef-| To serve meals punctually and) in order. | To keep a clean house. | To keep those for whom she is| Across South Beach. dec9-1mo | ROOMS with or without board.| Sunny and cool. 419 Southard | street. jan4-1mo! HOTELS BRING YOUR VISITING friends ; in need of a good night’s rest tc | OVERSEAS HOTEL. Clear rooms, innerspring mattresses Under new management, 91% Fleming St. novl18-tf | i | LOST | LOST — Yesterday somewhere | between sunrise .and sunset, two golden hours, each set with | sixty diamond minutes. No re-| ward is offered for they are: gone forever.—Horace Mann. nov30; WANTED WANTED—A chance to bid on your next printing order. The Artman Press. may19-tf Subscribe to The Citizen—20c weekly. LA CONCHA HOTEL In the Center of the Business Run from Washirgton to Von Phister street. $1,000. Ap- ply Rear 1217 Petronia street. aug9-tfs FOR SALE-—Lot, 48’x50’, corner Duval and Louisa streets; two lots, corner Bertha street and Roosevelt Boulevard; two lots on Pine Key, 100°x100’, good location. Apply 1212 Olivia street. decl4-s ‘OURTEEN-FOOT SAILBOAT, with well. $35. 1217 Petronia street, rear. jan4-s ae FOURTE FOOT BOAT, with four-horse outboard Johnson motor, fully equipped, $150. 1217 Petronia street, rear. jan4-s SIGNS—“For Rent”, “Rooms For Rent”, “Apartment For Rent”, “Private Property, No Tres- passing”, 15¢ each. THE ART- MAN PRESS. nov25-tf OLD PAPERS FOR SALE— Three bundles for 5c. The Citi- zen Office. nov25-tf£ BENJAMIN LOPE; FUNERAL HOME Established 1885 Licensed Funeral Directors care whose car you take, but your | course he wouldr’t be able to sleep to the midle of th bar and the | feller on the chare did a hand stand wile they wuz holding the bar on there showlders wile he plane and attempting to sell them to the Japanese, Karl Allen! Drummond, 2l-yar-old former! | aircraft worker, was sentenced to! fort to do his part in reducnig huge | responsible comfortably clad by} surplus of cheese. Louis A. Harti,! care ahd repair. } banker and brewer, sent two-| To make all who come under pound boxes of cheese to each of | her roof happy. sod Thanteer Diao and Embalmers Open The Year Around 24 Hour Ambulance Service Garage——Elevator——Fireproot |} Phone 135 Night 696 orders are the same as before—]any more, so Flower and'I didn’t minute. I don’t want any more of} Gilly’s alw: very «vod with these mysterious attacks. I'm hold- | Nurse, esieteatsieey full of him. ... Ten minutes then.” He put the jinstrument is “What has happened?” Rae “Anne is conscious, asking’ for . _.“Yes! You think she may tell him something?” delirious—she may lapse and nev- er come out of it. It’s touch and go. gen tent.” He motioned me to silence, and you're to stay with Barney every| bother to go to bed. For while ing you personally responsible for shoved it away from him, Barney. Want to come along?” Adam shrugged. “She may be Doc says they have her in an oxy- pogetnen we tiptoed out into the The upper landing was lighted and Elizabeth was standing there, . fully dressed, gazing down at us. “It's Anne!” she said accusingly. “Why wasn’t I told?” Adam said, “Sorry, explain lat- ex” “Annie and I are coming,” she stated and was answered by a wail trom the shadows. spirits in oe gnarl: » and even if one cou! lon’ lieve in sup= pressing a child.” q vi T said, “Oh!” rather-inadequate- ly. Then, to my surprise, Adam took her off my hands. He drew her into a corner, spoke a few words unobtrusively and drifted away. I was just beginning to feel that he had withdrawn his confidence paused beside me. “Keep your eye on Annie,” he said in a voice that was little more than a breath. T must have shown that I was startled, for before I could frame a question he answered it. “Nothing . going to happen if I if me when he can prevent it, can’t take any chances, If—if Anne knows any- t there may be an attempt to silence her—the murderer may show a hand. ...” (Copyright, Virginia Hanson) ANSWERS TO “Below are the Centime, The Himalaya mountains. Hachiro Arita. can lizard. Chromosphere. To restrain flood waters. Fraulein Irma Weygand. Chronology. Columbia. Centigrade scale. SPIO M Beppe ~ 10. GETS DISEASE FROM RATS MELBOURNE, Australia — A fish cleaner died here of Weil’s edisease, the first case on record Singhis city. The rare malady is contracted “from rats. TEN} TEST QUESTIONS | questions petted oo PSUS ee A genus of tropical Ameri-} tional monuments. NOW "MONUMENTS SANTA P ! { i terior, to be established as na- their numerous fossils. FISH FOR GARNER UVALDE, Texas — For Vice President John Garner and the many other residents and sports- {men of this part of Texas, the fishing should be good. The fed- \eral fish hatchery near here this ,year distributed approximately | 1,200,000 young fish in streams "BARBARA, Calif— Anacapa and Santa Barbara is- |from the Bureay of Lighthouses }to the Department of the In-| The islands wuz on the chare and it maid the| two years’ imprisonment. After a! Yarshfield’s 2,683 school chil-| hare run up and down yure bac] lecture on patriotism by the pre-! siding judge, Drummond declar- ed, “I would rather lose my life} }than lose my citizenship as an! | to watch them. Thay did a dot of other things also a trick wear two fellers ride bycycels (wuz the same two, thay culdnot fool us) ; and two othurs go with them on | the same wire and the same bar them the too fellers who wuz | walking got on the bar and got on | top uv eech uthers showlders and ‘wild (so did we). | American”. —— ROUND THE WORLD PLEA WASHINGTON.—A plea for! jine exploded, injuring two men. aid from a trawler, carrying Washington recently. | about giving away sum money | free so you no we wuzznot going {to mis that so we went over to a ' place wear you write down yure name and wear yu live and you | Stand their till some feller gets } a litel girl tu get a tiket and then | the feller cals out a name and if) yore name is caled you get sum) | money and the way he fold it if! | yu put yure name down mor then} NEW YORK.—An accounting 1st or if you put down sumbody/of the estate of Laurids Peter- Gore name yu cant get the money|| sen, of this city, who was fatally last nite they caled W. A. Ditt-j| injured in an automobile acci-!-Roosevelt has been appointed by Jands, off the coast of Southern | more of the Ranger Boat and he dent on March 25, showed ead oe yaraistes , ecKenzie California, have been transferred | wuznot there so tonite they r go-| while he was on the relief rolls} King to study the feasibility of | at the time of his death, he left; constructing a motor ing tu give away ($40.00). the same feller also said thet) | on tomorrer afternoon starting at) | 1 pM thay wuz going two have a} | childrens matinee and the kids) | Henry E. Lackey, commander of! ing planes recently were shipped | served With roast beef. . Squadron 40-T, operating in Med- | from here to Liverpool, England, | ers are conveni iterranean waters, who was to! and was the largest consignment) pin feathers. . | transmit the message to a French: to date in the steadily increasing| con, sprinkle a little dry mus- |radio station on the assumption! export of Los Angeles-built fight- | tard in pan. that the ship was of French reg-' ing planes to England under the | appetizing. . French vessel! recent 400-plane contracts made istry and that a would go to the rescue. ON RELIEF; HAS $103,923 an estate valued at- $103,923. PLAN MIDGET SHIPS LONDON.—It is ‘ 48! one seriously, and hurling anoth-} | persons aboard, which had be-;er man from the deck into the | did wat thay caled 3 high and it| come stranded in the South In-| water. | was sensashunel the croud went} dian Ocean, was relayed through | The mes-| after that thay sed sumthing} sage was relayed to Rear Admiral; understood To respect rights of others in | their home. To protect those in her home FLAMING OIL BURNS 10 from injustice, and unkindness." NORFOLK, Va.—As_ technici-! To extend her influence beyond | ‘ans prepared to test a seaplane | the ‘four walls of the home. catapult on the aircraft real | dren. | KITCHEN KINKS One-third cup of fruit juice added to each two cups of pre- pared mincemeat enriches its flavor. . .A teaspoon of freshly | | grated horse-radish added to PLANES TO ENGLAND | cooked, buttered beets will give LOS ANGELES.—Seven train-| a pleasing flavor, especially when -Tweez- ent for removing -When frying ba-| | Ehterptise, a ‘high pressure oi! | Makes bacon more; -Thrust fork into; cube of butter before putting marshmallows on it to toast them. | Butter prevents sticking. OTTAWA, Canada—A com- JUICE-APPETIZERS mission to cooperate. with the} Try these combinations: Toma-| commission named by President) to and clam. . tomato and pine- apple. . .grapefruit and orange |. . .grapefruit and grape juice. . | lemon and cherry. . apple and pineapple. . .prune and orange. . . raspberry and lemon. . .grape- fruit and cherry with a bit of | chopped mint. | by the British Government here. ALASKAN HIGHWAY highway; i from ‘the United States, through British Columbia, to Alaska. OVERSEAS TRANSPORTATION CO, INC. Fast, Dependable Freig' ht and Express Service —between— MIAMI and KEY WEST Also Serving All Points on Florida Keys between MIAMI AND TWO ROUND (Except KEY WEST TRIPS DAILY Sunday) varect Between Miami and Key West. DIRECT EXPRESS: Leaves Miami 2:00 o’ West 7:00 o’clock A. M. clock A. M., arriving Key Leaves Key West 9:00 o'clock A. M., arriving Miami:2:000’clock P. M. LOCAL: (serving all intermediate points) Leaves Miami 9:00 0’ West 4:00 o'clock P. M. clock A. M., arriviag Key Leaves Key West 8:00 o’clock A. M., arriving are considered of special interest 1 be abel tu ride fur fi because of their geology ond | eo al lu ride fur five | that next year’s naval estimates | eents| wel palsey walsey guess | for the British Admiralty pro- | ive told you enuf for now, except | vide for one and possibly two flo- | im going bak agen tonite. 7'll rite|tillas of midget destroyers of | you agan tonite. so“long and as| World War tonnage to guard | the feenchman sed “cheri oh”. i British shipping in the event of yure frend elmer / hostilities. The midget ships | would be equipped with up-to- Early Telephone the-minute engines and also anti- Schoolmaster—You don’t know | craft and anti-submarine equip- when William the Conqueror: ment. landed? Hastings 1066. Pupil—Oh, I though. that was GIVES UP BALANCE his telephone number. | (CHICAGO. — Former Mayor Mrs. De Style (at modistes, a: mannequins display gowns) — Which do you like best, Robert? Husband—I prefer the tall bru- nette—er—that is, I mean the pink chiffon, my dear. She Could Lay To That Prospective passenger (to avia- tor)—You'll bring me back safe- ly, won't you? Word-Gathering __. BAT PERCE elit i Joining the Army Chicago paper — “Before the verdict was rendered she told in-| terviewers that if the jury freed} her she would become a nut” FRONTIER SCOUT Aviator—Haye no fear, madam; T’ve never left anybody up there | yet. —also— COMEDY — SERIAL Miami 3:00 o’clock P. M. Free Pick-Up and Delivery Service Full Cargo Insurance Office: 813 Caroline St. Telephones 92 and 68 Warehouse—Corner Eaton and Francis Streets