Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1939 After A Man’s Heart by JEAN RANDALL YESTERDAY: Without honor herself, but trusting in Buff’s honor, Iris “confides” that she tricked Tim and now intends to marry him. Shortly after, Tim tells Buff he is engaged, Chapter 22 Sacrifice Tms reproof was a tidal wave which carried away the final barrier of Buff’s self-control. “Tim! Tim! Listen to me! I know you'll hate me, I don’t expect— truly!—that you'll ever speak to me again. That doesn’t matter. in the deep armchair. “I just know she'll call him Timmy! And not even that will convince him of the kind of girl she is!” Webby looked in on her way to bed. “It’s. past eleven, Miss . Hadn’t you ought to be getting your sleep?” “Pretty soon,” she said absently. “Tl come pretty soon.” But the clock on the mantel chimed midnight, and one, and two before she stirred. She had work to do tonight, had Buff Car- roll. First of all, she must con- quer her emotions; anger, jealousy, love, outraged pride. How could THE KEY WEST CITIZEN | The following major universi- ; Marquette; Kansas vs. Nebraska; | ties and colleges have scheduled | Kansas State vs. Oklahoma; Laf- | | football games to be played to-layette vs. Rutgers; Lehigh vs. | | morrow afternoon: | : ei fig Alabama vs. Tulane; Arizona | MUbienberg; Louisiana vs. Missis- | vs. Texas Mines; - Arkansas vs. | S3PPi State; Maine vs. Bowdoin; 'Rice; Army vs. Harvard; Baylor | Manhattan vs. W. Virginia Uni-| |vs. Texas; Boston College vs. De- | versity; Michigan vs. Minnesota; | troit; Boston University vs. U. of | Michigan State vs. Santa Clara; | |Cincinnati; Brigham ‘Young’ vs. | Mississippi vs. Mississippi State | !Utah ‘State; Brown vs: Yale; ' Teachers; Mississippi State vs. | California vs. "Washington;'Car-|L.S.U.; Missouri vs. N.Y.U. i negie Tech vs. Pittsburgh;-'Chi-| No. Carolina University vs. Da-| cago vs. Ohio State; Clemson vs. | vidsén; Northwestern vs. Purdue; Wake Forest; Colgate vs. Cornell; ;Oklahoma A. & M. vs. Washing- Hl |Colorado State College vs. Den-jton (St. Louis); Oregon vs. Ore-| ver; Colorado School of Mines vs.!gon ‘State; Pennsylvania State Western State; Columbia vs Navy: }vs. Pennsylvania; Rhode Island 5 MIO ii tt Armistice Show Star. LOUISVILLE.—Although every |resource—radio, newspaper and | the police—was used to find their snow-white Eskimo spitz, who |disappeared from the home, the jfamily of Robert L. Hunter con- | cluded that the dog had been kill- ed or stolen. Two years later |Mrs. Hunter opened the kitchen |door to find the long-lost dog sit- ‘ting outside, waiting to be ad- jmitted. He was none the worse ‘for his long absence—except that he needed a bath. 200 | | PERSONAL seboseeTece POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS | For Mayor | WILLARD M. ALBURY | (For Re-Election) For Mayor WM, T. DOUGHTRY, JR. SAM B. PINDER For Tax Assessor-Collector For Police Justice What matters is that you must be|She think when her mind was Dartmouth vs. Princeton; Drake |State vs. Connecticut; So. Caro-| WESLEY P. ARCHER tossed. about by these forceful pas- OLD AT 40! GET PEP! protected against—against falling into the same trap twice. Oh, it’s dreadful of me, but my loyalty is due to you, my friend, rather than to—to her! “Tim, she told me in so many words, right here in this room and just the day before yesterday, that she knew perfectly well what Latshaw was doing; that she was 2 willing party to the fraud. She sSaid—said that a woman could al- ways make a nice profit if she was pretty and woald lend herself to a scheme that was not too scrupu- lously honorable.” He had risen and was gripping the back of his chair with rigid fingers. “You expect me to believe this? That, Iris would confess to you “Oh, don’t you see, Tim?” She bent forward, her tear-filled eyes on his. “She relied on my not re- vealing what had been said to me in confidence. She s-id she was re- lying on it! She told me it was a food thing I was scrupulously onorable, or I’d give hc: away to you!” “And now you have? Or think you have?” His voice was icily courteous. “And now I have. It’s the only sensible thing to do, don’t you see, Tim? All this talk of keeping a confidence when I hadn’t asked for it, agreed to make it one?—is silly compared to saving you from marrying a woman like Iris.” He spoke in a flat tone. “I don’t believe you, Buff. Not 2 word of what you've said.” In her turn she rose, her small head thrown back proudly. Anger. threatened to put an abrupt stop to her efforts on his behalf But Buff was accustomed to control- ling her anger. Lance had taught her from her babyhood that her will should be stronger than her emotions. She drew several long, deep breaths. She consciously re- laxed her small clenched hands. When she spoke it was ina steady even a casual way, “Use your good sense, Tim,” she ureed: “What “nr doing tonight will erase me from your life. Whether you marry Iris or not, you'll always hate me for what T've to! ‘ou. Would I make such 2 sacrifice—for surely even you know it is a sacrifice, Tim!—un- less 1 believed it was for vour good?” Because he still entertained a rming doubj of Iris, be- realized he had been away last night by the tide on which had curled over his head from the minute he en- tered her warm, fragrant room and found her, infinitely lovely and desirable. waiting to slip into his arms, he resisted the patent frankness of this queer child. Iris needed defense. needed his help: she had told him so, weeping and clinging to him with desperate arms. Puff was a strong little thing who could always look after herself. Masculiue Pride BESIDES —his masculine pride was up in .rms at the idea of Buffs protecting him. Well he knew what George would think of his marrying Iris after—after last summer. That he could meet. man to man. But Buff’s wading into the fray on his behalf was too much. He wished in the depths of his un- happy heart) that he had never seen her: never seen Iris either, he thought, and the.. instantly re- buked himself for heresy. “The sooner we bring this pain- ful scene to a close the better,” he announced. “I'm sorry you feel as you do toward Iris. I'm sorry we can't all be friends. But in the cir- cumstances——” She let him go with his sentence unfinished. For once in her life, the fight had gone out of her. She curled herself into an anguished ball by the fire and tried to plan; to plan—for Tim. It was of no use. Tim was no longer hers to plan for! Not that he had ever been, but she had believed she had a friend’s right, the right of a woman’s wis- dom to rescue him from a difficulty into which his simnle masculinity had led him. She could picture the quiet tri- umph of the other girl; her slow curling smile, the upward sweep- ing lashes, the sweet humility of her voice as she discussed her en- gagement with Tim’s friends. Al- most she knew the exact words Iris would use. “The course of true love never did run smooth; you know, and Tim and I were no exception. It was just because I lo’ him so much, so terribly much, that all that misunderstanding came about last summer. It's all cleared up now and Timmy and I are too hat py, for words, aren't we, Timmy?” “She him Timmy,” mut- tered the woebegone little figure sions? Tt took a long time to overcome. them. Buff had recourse to many an aid which would have. asten- ished her parents, She thought of the mountains: the snow-capped peaks which had looked down on so much human misery and un- certainty. All the wild passion in the world could dash itself against their grim sides and move not so much as a small rose-colored boulder from its appointed place. The knowledge steadied her. Quite, literally she could tell her- self: will lift up mine eyes unto the hills from whence cometh my help.” Help did come from con- templation of the unchangeable, the immutable, she knew.. Iris’s puny deceit, Tim’s foolish chival- ry, even her own yearning love for the big mistaken man, seemed small and unimportant, measured against the mighty range. Lesson Of Patience ‘HEN there was time. She was young to have learned the les- son of patience, but somehow she had learned it. “Give it a few weeks, or days, Buff; or even a few hours. It’s wonderful how time brings out the true value of things.” Thus Eleanor, restrain- ing her impetuous child. The rest- less cartoonist and his gentle wife had not done so badly for their daughter, after all, even though her formal education had been fre- quently interrupted. “Tris will try to hurry the mar- riage. Why? There’s a reason back of all this,” thought Buff, her alert brain once more at work on the problem. “I know she isn’t marry- ing because she cares for him or because she wants to be safe from anything or anybody. It’s all tied up, this buying back that useless land, Iris returning, her. deter- mination to be engaged to Tim.” Her small face was haggard with fatigue. The fire had burned itself to ashes and the room was cold. But slowly into Buff’s eyes the light of hope dawned. Hope and Bae ges a meteor “T’ng, going ,to, find owt what a this i Bonk Tim, theold foolish, ' may go on being noble and waving his eyebrows at me all he likes, ll drop my lecture ccurse—darn! did I ever try to get educated that something didn’t interfere?—and haunt Miss DeMuth until 1 dis- cover what she’s up to!” She made a childish face, moved her foot and found it asleep, stamped on it to restore the circulation. “So there, Tim Corliss! You may be just like that young man they used as an example to teach me gram- mar years ago. ‘I will drown and no one shall help me!’ And so he drowned because he couldn’t get his auxiliary verbs right. But you aren’t to drown, my darling idiotic Tim, though heaven knows you've got all your verbs, nouns and ad- jectives—especially your adjec- tives, Tim!—about as wrong as they car be.” She moved her stiff body cau- tiously. “I wonder if I'd wake Webby if I took a hot bath? [’lj risk it, any- how. I'll never get thawed out ex- cept in a tub of boiling water.” The announcement of the en- gagement duly. appeared in» the next day’s paper. Buff had a‘ bad. time —— ete aE i print. Uphel if her conviction that there we still time to save Tim, and accustomed by. years of Lance’s work te view newspaper stories and ce~ ments with little of the awe ac- corded them by most people, those black let! set her to trem- bling, gave her a sinking feeling at the pit of her stomach. Not for long, however, George, rushing up while she was still at dinner, did much to restore her composure. George \.as in a fine roaring rage. Tim was a fool and he, George Weekes, didn’t care who heard him say so. For a Canadian dime, he’d bust up the partnership and let Tim go to— well, wherever his soft heart and soft head led him! And thus and so, and double it and treble it, and then some! “Sit down and have a turnover and a cup of coffee,” Buff soothed him. “You'll feel heaps better afterwards. George, do as I say!” she added sharply. “You and. I must talk, and I want you to be calm, not upset, during our con- ference.” He brightened at that. “Then you think there’s still some hope——* “You bet your sweet life there’s hope,” the girl answered, inele- gantly but firmly. “You wait till you hear, George!” 3 Greatly cheered, he ate ‘two 3 drank three | turnovers and 4 of coffee; then followed her the living room where she poured a the story of her last talk with ris. Continued tomorrow. |vs. Miami; Duke vs. V.M.I.; Du-jlina''vs. Furman; Southern Cali- | | quesne vs. No. Carolina State;|fornia vs. Stanford; South Da- | Florida vs. Georgia; Fordham vs. |kota vs. Iowa Teachers; Southern | Indiana. |Methodist vs. Texas A. & M.; St. | | Georgetown vs. Maryignd; (lds University vs. Wyoming; | | Georgia Tech, vs, Kentucky; Gon- ;Tennessee vs. Citadel; Texas; |zaga vs. Montana; Grinnell vs. |Christian vs. Tulsa; Utah Univer- | Washburn; Holy Cross vs. Tem-!sity vs. Hawaii; Vanderbilt vs.:} |ple; Idaho vs. Washington State; !Sewanee; Villanova vs. Auburn; |Illinois vs. Wisconsin; Iowa vs.|Virginia Poly. vs. Richmond; |Notre Dame; Iowa State vs.|Washington & Lee vs. Virginia. | 1 TROJANS AND SOX ALIA. OFFICIAL SEES PLAY TOMORROW) BRIGHT FUTURE FOR HOME BUILDING jeece eeveccacncsoees| LOOK FOR INTERESTING BAT-| «an immediate renewed activ-| TLE; PROCEEDS GO TO _ ity is likely in the building of | j}homes throughout the United pa eahcaaaa States” is stated in a report by | William Orr Ludlow, chairman of | With prospective pennant the Committee on Public Infor- | chances in view, Earl Adams’|Mation of the American Institute | Trojans will take the field in a|0f Architects. | great effort to override Cara-| Mr. Ludlow gives the follow-| |ballo’s Blue Sox when the teams | ing reasons for this: | |meet at Trumbo Field tomorrow! One—For seven years the | afternoon in a regular Monroe | building of residential units was} County Baseball League game. based 25% of normal, with a re- | Although the Sox have won Sulting shortage of apartments only one game in the second-half | #94 individual homes. so far, Manager Adams is taking) TWo—Never before has there no chances and will send the|been the possibility of such large Navarro, to the mound. Dickey’s | ng as has been provided by gov~ delivery has been dominating the |€t™ment guarantees, which en- ieague lesatng labs ak oe we lable pine Wine wee to ba re ; : |their own homes to obtain loans and it’s possible that his slow,/in some cases as high as 90% of underhand curves will have the| the cost. Sox batters swinging at empty| Three—For the home builder air. the interest payments on thd On the other hand, Manager/|loans are little, if any, greater Caraballo, with Peter Castro, Joe|than the amounts he would have’ Garcia, Gabriel Garcia and Oscar | to pay for renting some one else's Molina hitting the ball at a .300 | property, and when he makes his or better clip, has confidence in interest payments, he feels that his team and will attempt to! his money is being invested in his spring the surprise he turned on own-home instead of merely go- Hamlin’s Conchs several weeks| ing into a landlord’s pocket. ago. | Four—In a time of economic All in all the contest will be! uncertainty like the present most worth witnessing.. A victory for|men’ feel that in owning a tan; the Trojans will put the Reds just gible piece of land and a house, a half-game from the league-lead-| they are more content than if ing Pirates. their.-investment purchases se- Net proceeds will go to the |curities, the value of which School Patrol for uniforms, in- | subject to daily changing condi-+ cluding advance and gate ticket tions, or than if he put his money sales, away ,in bonds or bank deposits, ——ooo ; which, as far as resulting income B ASKETBALI LOOP goes, are little better than the proverbial stocking. FINAL GET-TOGETHER BE- Five—Then, too, most every- body knows that prices are on _ FORE FULL MEMBERSHIP IS ANNOUNCED the way up, that the cost of lum- ber, steel, copper, paint,, has ad- vanced some already and is like- ly to advance more, later on. Six—Winter building is no longer a bug-a-boo, in fact con- | \tracts taken in the fall are apt to «Meeting of the City Basketball | League will be held tonight at the High School gymnasium, be- | ginning at 6:45 o’clock,~ - This will be the last meeting at which teams.may enter the league, which will get underway | just as in the former war, no one shortly. | will be allowed to do any priv- Those teams already entered ate construction during the pe- are: Key West Lions Club, Army, | riod that the war continues, and Coast Guard, Seafood Grill and therefore contemplated building made in the spring. Seyen—Then there is the feel- |possibility of our getting into war ourselves eventually. If that La Concha Hotel. | better be done now. —— Mr. Ludlow concludes: “Re- i 7 {ports show that business has in- | SHE WASN'T = {creased considerably, that there BUSY ENOUGH jis more employment and that ——— |this was true even before war {By Aanociated Prean) jexisted in Europe. Most of us CLAREMORE, Okla., Nov. 10.— | believe that there will be more A tall, gray-haired woman who! money available to supply the found herself lonely after thejincreasing demand for more |death of her husband operates ajhousing. We also realize that as jfree employment agency in her |there are no unusual number of | brick home here. |good reasons which seem to in- cian. Afteryhe died in 1985, -his;now, it is altogether probable wife “missed the constant ay that we are about to see a great and night: ringing of Hinerease in construction. Per- phone”. Their two’ soi fehaps this will include industrial away in ki “a2 | Sem! Geei~/ buildings, industrial housing, low “The businesses my hr |rent apartments and quite surely |left. me didn’t take up «all jthe building of _ individual | time, so I started this employ- | homes”. |ment agency”, she related. | SSA wR REO | She manages two dairy farms, | BELIEVE IT OR NOT | For Chief of Police New OSTREX Tonic Tab- ! club’s side arm hurler, Dickey }@"4 secure loans and home builds is | be considerably less than those | ing that there is that dreadful} should happen it is pronene Dr. M. H. Gordon was a physi-|dicate that the time to build is. MISS RUBY TUCKER, blues singer direct from New York, is shown with Bill Knipper, comedy dancer from, Jacksonville, as they posed this week in Miami shortly before their scheduled departure for Key West to appear in the Armistice Day floor show being staged at Key West Country Club tomorrow night by Arthur Saw- | yer Post No. 28 of the American Legion. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY By RUSSELL KAY One by one the gubernatorial, he doesn’t like “cold” water and laspirants are beginning to stick} probably will stay out. | their little pink necks out and} Jess Parrish and. Spessard Hol- probably will continue to do S0ljand have been sittin’ near-by for the next month or so, First to dive into the murky | suckin’ oranges; and» tryin’ to} waters of the political pool was|make up their minds. Both have Hans Welker of Ocala, who evi-jdone a bit of plain and fancy | dently wag influenced by the swimmin’ in the old senatorial | jfable of the Early Bird and the! ., A j { i tank but they’re a little afraid of | Worm. But the splash he made | wong ps” and they hen | was hardly noticable and_ the ith r |ripple nothing to speak of. enough political experience to} ; Next came a_ chap named | know that in a free-for-all dash ;Rodgers from St. “Petersburg,|across the treacherous guberna- | whose dive was even less SPeC-.| torial poot it is ev man’ for | tacular than Walker’s—and the! peter ana a Gu bed better be | |two of them have been floating | pienty fit before he tries it. about practically unnoticed for!” the oid diving platform is al some time. ‘long way from completion as the | |. Then came Burton Schoepf,)poys have been stealin’ planks | |who put a little. bit more show- from each other. They've been | |manship in his performance by: jerkin’ and pullin’ at the Town- climbing clear up to Chicago ©n ‘send plank, tryin’ to get it away | j the high platform to stand poised from Schoepf, while the Labor | jfor a moment with a glass of’ bank is so heavy that none of | orange juice in one hand and a/ inom have been able to lift it yet, | Townsend banner in the other. ‘and those who have succeeded in | He hit the water with a splash | pettin’ foundation posts down are \that could be heard all over the) 14.4, findin’ thatethe termites are | jstate, developing waves rather} gettin’ into them. | than ripples. But the fun is really gettin’ a ee oe Ce arte at the “Old Swimmin | Augustine, a more or less | ex-' ole” and gives every indication | perienced swimmer, after taking o¢ becoming gay and boisterous | the nrectudion: tpeeey, iy admis | 5 time goes on. The older boys, | sion fee, did a running broad | who are experienced, are keepin’ jump, to land in the middle of , watchful eye on their clothes | the pond where three opponents| 244 ~ are worryin’ about some already were cavorting. i heard | With the political pool begin- | TOUGH GUY nobody ever : lick- ning to fill, a lot of other boys are H of betote eamning ere: S10. ck in’ Hl of * Then, now eyeing it as they hurriedly |/” pga cheng . . -. |too, there is always the danger | [Sirip, Preparatory to getting in of DROWNING, and the mortal- This week in Jacksonville Ful-| 07 ehooaity Hiehi ee ee Mer Warren is expected to® take/ a : the plunge. He can be depended! upon to do plenty of thrashing | SURORS READ THE FUNNIES jand splashing about, and he'll (Ry Associated {constantly entertain both thosei Press) ROANOKE, Va., Nov. 10.—A in the pool and those on the | bank as he clowns about in an ef- ‘fort to “duck” his playmates, |juror’s love for the funnies al- blow like a whale and stand on|most broke up an_ important his head. jcriminal trial here. j | Over in DeLand, Francis! Defense Attorney S. R. Price| Whitehair is reported to be on! asked Judge Benjamin Haden to} |the verge of making a flying!declare a mistrial because the leap. He is no slouch as an juror took a copy of a Roanoke aquatic star, and whether it is aj paper, containing testimony the case of swim, dive or float, he’ll!jury had not been allowed to. give a good account of himself.|hear, into the jury room. His financial “wind” is better} The judge agreed that reading | than that of most of his playfel-|the story might prejudice the lows, and he’s not afraid of “deep! jurors, but suggested that per- haps they hadn't read that part ,of the paper. i water”. Up in Tallahassee Jerry Carter and Bill Hodges are tryin’ to; Sure enough, one of the jurors! make up their minds. Both of|told the. judge he took the paper | them have played around in that! in just to let a colleague keep up| pool before. They know it like | with’ the doings:of a comic strip a book, and can avoid the rocks, | character... The trial went on.. whirlpools and quick-sand. If oOo. A PRACTICAL TEST either or both should decide to L The New Yorker tells this story join the frolic, they will lead the rest a merry chase that only the | of a well brought-up young wom- jan who was taking a lesson in |best swimmers can hope to join jin. auto driving. The instructor lean- ed towards her and whispered | | Fred Touchton of Avon Park lets contain invigorators, stimu- | lants. 73-year-old doctor says, | “I take*Ostrex myself”. $1.00 | size, special today 89c. If not, delighted, maker refunds this | price. Call, write Gardner’s Pharmacy. WANTED IVAN ELWOOD {For Re-Election) For Chief of Police C. (Floney) PELLICIER For Captain Night Police i ALBERTO CAMERO H (For Re-Election) | WANTED—Electric Water Pump, condition no object. tate; For Captain Night Police Price. Box L, The Citizen | MYRTLAND CATES oct31-tt For Captain Night Police ROBERT J. LEWIS (Better known as Bobby) For City Councilman RALPH B. BOYDEN For City Councilman COL, L. C. BRINTON | SuED HOUSE | Fer City Councilman FURNISHED HOUSE, 5 rooms) sory CARBONELL, JR. | and bath; G. E. Refrigerator. | 517 Bahama street. nov7-10tx/ “ > | ——— | Per City Concise ‘UNFURNISHED APARTMENT, GUY CARLETON | two bedrooms. Modern con- | - veniences. Apply Smith’s Gro-| For City Councilman cery, corner Georgia and Vir-}| FOR RENT | FURNISHED APARTMENTS for | rent. Modern Conveniences. ; ,808 Ashe street. nov4-Iwk | | FOR "RENT—Furnished rooms, | kitchen and living room priv- | ileges; couples preferred. 827; | White street. nov4-lwkx ginia streets. oct20-tf 1 FURNISHED APARTMENTS, electric refrigerators. Apply Valdes Bakery. FURNISHED DOWNSTAIRS APARTMENT, two bedrooms. | All modern conveniences. 1500 Seminary street. oct9-t COMPLETELY FURNISHED BUNGALOW and Apartment. | Frigidaire, hot water, etc. 1321 Newton street. sept29-tf FOR SALE FOR SALE—At a sacrifice. A wooden two-family house and garage. Wonderfully -furnish- ed, abundant water. Three baths, overlooking ocean, close in. Easy terms. Apply Henry Pinder, Rear 619 William St. nov9-imox FOR SALE AT A SACRIFICE— New ultra-modern home with upstairs Apartment, private pa- | tio entrance, beautifully furn- ished; 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, close-in, overlooking ocean. and park. Abundant water. Low cost, easy terms. Apply Henry Pinder, Rear 619 William street. nov9-1mox 1939 PHILCO RADIO: Man’s Bicycle and Cedar Chest. Apply 1504 South street. noy?-3tx FOR SALE CHEAP—Used_mat- tresses and springs; 1 Phileo ‘a milk bottling plant and several |business properties here. At a recent election a return- has been sittin’ by the side of the ing officer was questioning a/ pool, playin’ in the sand for some} |softly in her ear. “Did I hear you call me | | } OSWALDO CARRERO For City Councilman | JONATHAN CATES For City Councilman WILLIAM A. FREEMAN For City Councilman | LEONARD B. GRILLON For City Councilman i; ERNEST A. RAMSEY — For City Councilman JIM ROBERTS {Por Re-Election) Fer City Councilman CARL L. SOULE For City Councilman JOHN GLENWOOD SWEETING For City Councilman EVERETT P. WINTER LEGALS IN THE COUNTY JUDGE'S COURT AND FOR MONROE COUNTY, IDA, In re: Estate of - ANNIE C. DUFFY, OTICE OF INTENTION TO MAKE ” APPLICATION FOR FINAL DISCHARGE Notice is hereby given that the undersigned will, on the 20th iy of December, A. 939, present to Honorabi |AREL M. DUPFY, peapentatetraen of the Estate of Pad Abe rraee “deck-B> court, EVENTH HARRIET COLE MAPHIG site, vs. ‘WAY MAP) mpWAltD CONWAY MAP HIE ag ORDER OF PUBLICATION It appearing by the sworn Wy filed in the above-stated cause G Edward Conway Maphis, the - fendant therein named, is a non- it of State of Florida and la Springs, County State of ° 3 that said ndant ia over je age of twen' ne years; t ig no prom i the Se od Floriaa of a summon! a upon whom would bind | “But they don’t keep me bysy | Chinaman who had been natural-|time and will probably get his }enough”, she laughed, “so I be-/ ized. ‘“What’s your name?” ask-' feet wet before it is over, while EAT AND HAVE. TOO came a clearing house for peopl the. officer. “Sneeze”, said |B. F. Paty of West Palm Beach /|d boat)—Bet I can scare you. “What's this honey?” said’ Mrs." needing jobs and ii \the Chinaman. “Is that your has been blowing on a pair of | drit and turning to glare at Modern Girl (calmly)—Once;| Youngbride’s husband as he|someone to work. Most of those I/Chinese name?” “No’, was the) waterwings and may wade in/|him. before a boy tried that and the speared a slab from the dish. |have placed—and they run into reply. “I had to translate it into later. boat upset. | “Lucifer cake, dear”. the hundreds—have been in English”. “Then what is your) Pat Whitaker of Tampa _has/he said sternly. S. ¥.—And what did you do? | “I thought you said you were ‘housework and similar positions”. | name?” demanded the officer, been playin’ leap-frog on the No matter what anybody M. G.—I swam ashore and no-|going to make angel cake”. | And, she added, she’s “never getting angry. “Ah Chew”, said bank for quite some time and is tified the coroner. “I was, but it fell”. ‘charged a cent for the services”.' the Oriental. sexpected to join the party, but ‘darling’?” “Sir!” cried the young lady in-| lignantly, forgetting about her) ving THAT STOPPED HIM |THE KIND You CAN Smart Youth (rocking the |