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MO T e Cre YESTERDAY: Tuck has a lot to think about the day after the party. Higgins is expecting money, she learns from Charlotte Jean. He carts rocks for an un- necessary rockery. Miss Lissey expresses disapproval of Mrs. Murchison. Tuck drops her neck- lace down the register, and Michael fails to find it in the pipe. Chapter 13 A Janitor Talks “TuATs damn funny,” Michael conceded, when he had reached the final bend of the pipe. “They must have skidded all along here, and gone down into the jacket.” He went over to the tool ox, took out a flashlight and opened the jacket of the furnace, to peer about inside, at consider- able discomfort. But finally he emerged. “They’re not there, Tuck. Abso- lutely not a sign.” “Then it must be the wrong Pipe, Michael, and they’re in some other one. Because I most certainly dropped them into a pipe, and they’re not in the furnace so they must still be in a pipe.” “It’s the right pipe,” Michael said, but he looked again to make sure. ichael, it’s nearly two o'clock,” Tuck said suddenly. “I know. I have to go. But it’s damn queer, honey, if you really did drop it into the pipe. Was there anything fuzzy on it that a rough edge might catch?” “Of course not. Fuzzy, indeed, Michael! It was my carved corals that my grandmother left me.” “Well, then,” Michael said as he dashed up the stairs, “it's another mystery. The Mystery of the Miss- ing Necklace. I'll solve it for you when I come home.” “Don’t be so cocky, Michael For- rester,” Tuck called after him. “Maybe it isn’t the first missing necklace around here. Maybe all necklaces are doomed to disappear in this house for some strange reason. Maybe the house is haunt- ed, Michael.” “What are you talking about?” he stopped and surveyed her with a frown. “Diamonds,” she said darkly. It was something after five o’ciock that afternoon when Mi- chael stopped his roadster in front of the imposing facade of the Med- ical Building. He was out of the car with a leap and a bound, up the steps and through the big door in another second. The object of his interest at that particular mo- ™ment was a stout gentleman in a white coat, and Michael found him rubbing vigorously at the glass doors of a cabinet in the upper hall. He leoked~tp-quickly at Mi- chael’s approach. His red face beamed, and his eyes shone as he took in the identity of his visitor. “Well, if it ain’t Mr. Forrester him- self!” he said warmly. “It’s been many a day since you was around here, sir.” Michael shook hands. “I’ve been very busy,” he said seriously. “Very busy indeed.” “Indeed, and -have you now?” DAY, DECEMBER 4, 1939 SIT w Che Conchs Defeat by Frances Shelley Wees “you just let me know. It’s in real good shape, except for a tire my Jim would be glad to fix.” “I really couldn’t use it,” Mi- chael said. “Tell Jim to give it to some kid if he doesn’t want it. It’s a kid’s bike.” “Yep, that’s what I was thinkin’ of,” Jameson said. Michael took out his cigarette case, “I think you’d better have a cigarette, Bill. Calm you down.” ill accepted the proffered smoke. “Any time you want to start passing out the cigars I'll be around right handy,” he grinned again. He lit his own cigarette and put | the case back. They smoked for a moment in silence. Jameson turned suddenly to Michael. “Was there something you was wanting, Mr. Forrester? Something I can do for you?” “No thanks, Bill. Just onped in on my way home to say hello. We're living out on the campus now, you know.” “Oh, are you? No. I didn’t know, One of them houses on the Horse- | shoe?” “That's it.” Michael looked at Bill’s_necktje. “The Murchison house.” Jameson frowned. “I knew he was gone away. Good riddance, says I. It'd be a good thing for the University if he’d never come ay but of course thefe is no such luck.” “You don’t like him, Bill?” Jameson considered, eyeing the cabinet beside him full of grue- some relics and strange models. “He’s not so bad if you just meet him around the halls. Not so bad at all. Kind of short, always has his nose up in the air, but there’s a good many worse around here. But it’s when he gets inside the lab that he turns into a regular devil.” He shook his head. “We had an awful.fracas around here last summer,” he concluded. ‘Shrieks And Yells’ HEARD something about it,” Michael murmured. He in- spected the glowing end of his cigarette critically. “Something about vivisection, wasn’t it? Some- body started a fuss?” “And good reason they had too.” Jameson took out a tremendous white handkerchief and mopped his face. “The shrieks and yells comin’ out from the lab was some- thin’ fierce, Mr. Forrester. And mostly always it was in the dead of night, and people was scared to go past the Building. I come up here myself once just to listen, ‘ and it was awful, the row goin’ on inside.” 2 “What was going on, Bill?” Jameson shook his head. “No- body ever saw the inside, Mr. For- rester. The door was locked and there was somethin’ hung over the keyhole. I make no bones about it—I tried to see inside. I never ' heard the like of it since I come here twenty years ago. It was fierce.” “But they put a stop to it, you say. Who did? What did they put | . Stop to? How did they go about | it? “Well, I guess it was the Coun- cil it was took up with, or the President maybe. He didn’t know THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Blue Sox ~ In Wild Game, 19 To 12 By OSCAR L. MILIAN Key West Conchs came from jthe Sox, Molina was the on behind yesterday afternoon in the! man that went hitless. ‘ first game of a doubleheader to; BO ina game: score 16 runs in the last three Player— ABR HPOAE! on 5 onpeeeed j te rare otcasions the “boss”, if not easier, to try and dash off innings of play’ t overtake an! Ay Atevedo, 23 2 1 2 3 1igets himself “behind the eight] coliman mysult od explain the eight-run lead and defeat the | Molina, ef 5 1 @ 2 © ‘1’ han” and leaves it up to me (his| situation. Blue Sox 19-12 in one of the | J. Garcia, H..8 1°34 O tig Friday) to write the col-| The Doe says a day or two in _most ragged games of baseball | G. Garcia, c 5 23 3 0 ®\umn. In the past I’ve always| bed ought to fix the boss up OK. Played at Trumbo Field. This) Castellanc, 1b 5 1 3 8 0 0) fei that it was just. laziness on|and sd I'm counting on his being was the only Monroe County | Gates, p-4t SOR! 28 his part with maybe a_ slight|back in circulation soon enough League contest played yester- | Diaz, rf-p -4 2 1 1 0 O/touch of indigesion, or some-|to fix you up'a real column for day. Pirates forfeited their | E. Albury, 3b 4 12 3 1 1 thing, but this week I find my-| Text week. scheduled game to Trojans. | Arnold, ss ...5 1 1 0 3 1) geif in the position of under-| Now Pve said all I really had Sox eee caniert pea eS aca ee Pp. 0 0 0 0 0 0 study and with good reason. to say and stil) have a lot of inning exhibition jeep ch GR AE a ape Pre ore = aeoae Last Saturday afternoon Rus-} space to fill and I’m beginning was called at the end of the sixth | Totals— 41 12 16 2413 6 soy and Mrs. Kay were driving | to really eppreciate why the boss frame because of darkness, with | Key West Conchs jto Dade City on a business trip) has to sit at his old typewriter the league-leading Trojans on Baker, 2b-3b-p 4 2 1 2 6 1 and had a smash-up that put!chewing his finger nails and top, 5 to 2. |Villareal, rf 5 2 0 0 1 0 Russell to bed with a lot of nico! scratching his head for hours Lyn Larry. shortstop for (Offitt, cf-2b 5 3 2 1 0 1 | cuts and bruises and Mrs. Kay sometirhes when he’s working the St. Louis Cardinals, was |C. Albury, ss .0 0 0 0 ® 0 in the hospital with a wrenched | out a column. seen among the spectators in (A. Acevedo, 42252 9 | back and a bone splinter. | Of course I suppose I COULD the grandstands. He was (C. Griffin, c-cf 6 3 2 9 0 7 It seems that some fellow with) take up the subject of politics. seated alongside Amado (Albury, 3b-c-p 5 3 3 1 8 11a joad of wood piled high on an/I imagine I know as much about Chino” Hernandez, ocal Barcelo, ib-p .4 1 1 4 3 0/ antiquated truck decided to make it as anybody at this time, which ball player, who will be | Torres, If 2500 Va left turn just as the Kay car|is mighty near nothing at all. farmed out by the Cardinals | M. Griffin, p-lb 1 0 1 2 1 0/was attempting to pass. “Mama” | But from looking over the papers this year. on | Vargas, Pp - 0 0 0 0 0 Ol Kay was at the wheel and to I see where a preacher named ner syed eee len for Casa, cfp 3. 1 0 3 0 © avoid the truck she took to the|Barbee has jumped into the| the first five innings of | ceri POO Ea ends laene Ore y eae | ditch, managed to get by the! Governor's race and is fixing to itial fracas, during which How-| Totals— _—43 19 16 27 21 3 truck by a hair’s breadth, and/set the woods on fire, confident ard Gates:, slants dominated) Score by innings: (then struck a culvert in at-| that “Virtue will be rewarded”. Hamlin’s bombarding artillery./Blue Sox 422 030 010—12 | tempting to get back on the| Then there is a fellow named Gates allowed. only three hits,/Conchs _ 030 006 46x—19 while his teammates were ham-| Runs-batted-in: mering the delivery of six Conch | Castellano, Gates 2, M. Griffin 2, hurlers for 16 safeties and 11/E, Albury, Av Acevedo, J. Gar- runs. Then Howard got a little; cia 2, Villareal, C. Griffin 2, Ar- careless and before the team;mando Acévedo 3, Esmond Al- realized it the Conchs had sent ! bury, Offutt 2, Torres; two-base across a half-dozen markers on hits: Torres, G. Garcia; three- five singies and three bases onjbase hits: Esmond Albury, Of-| balls in the sixth, four in the /futt, J. Garcia; sacrifice hits: Av seventh and another half-dozen Acevedo 2, Arnold, Barcelo; stol- jin the eighth. jen bases: Baker, Villareal, Ar- This was one of the loosest; mando Acevedo, M. Griffin; dou-| games played in the entire sec-|ble play: Armando Acevedo to ond-half. Ten pitchers were! Barcelo; passed balls: G. Garcia used, nine errors committed, 14/2; bases on balls: off Gates 5, bases on balls issued, three pass-| off Diaz 2, off Malgrat 2, off M. ed balls, five wild pitches chalk-| Griffin 1, off Vargas 2, off Bar- ed up against the moundsmen, | celo 1; struck out: by Gates 3, 32 hits credited to batters andj by Barcelo 2, by Esmond Albury | 31 runs scored. It was also the|5; batter hit: Armando Acevedo! longest game of the season—two | (by Gates); wild pitches: Gates)! hours and 50 seconds, 'Diaz, Barcelo, Baker; left on With the exception of Julius|base¢: Blue Sox 9, Key’ West! Villareal and: Joe Casa every |Conchs 10; time of game: 2:50; | | Conch player got a hit, while for| umpires: Griffin and Vidal. | H SOG LL LS TALIM, BASKETBALLERS | PLAY TONIGHT, Pro HERE Acam LIONS VS. GRILLS AT 7:30; GUARDS AND ARMY LATER Eddie Bush, Key West golf pro during the winter sea- | son, likes Key West so much that he spent his vacation this year in Key West and | Rearby. points. i Bush, who will return to G. Garcia 3,! | so I figured it would be as easy, ; TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY By RUSSELL KAY highway. |Clancey up in Panama City who | 1 didn’t see the smash-up, but|séems to think that he’s import- | they tell me the car did a beauti-| ant enough to be our Chief Ex- ful somersault and from the! ecutive, and he’s tossed his little |looks of the wreck I don’t see/hat into the ring. |how anyone got out alive. It! Spessard Holland was suppos- sure is amazing how some folks |ed to have announced last Satur- |escape, but you bet we girls in;day but if he did I haven't the office are certainly thankful that our ‘Pop’ and ‘Mama’ are | still with us—even if they are | battered up a bit. jheard about it. There’s been a lot of talk, too, about Pierce | Wood and Arthur Hale coming out for Governor, but I guess hey are still just “thinkin’’ about it. Personally, I think the “boss” ‘ought to run, but he just laughs ‘it off and says “What the heck, \I ain’t got no relatives, so why should I work myself into a lather just for the chance to give a flock of jobs to a lot of strang- | The boss says it’s a good thin, jhe got hit on the head for it’s pretty hard to dent solid IVORY. | | We went to see ‘Mama’ at the hospital and found she was get ting along all right, but it looks as if she’d have to stay there a week or so. But everybody, in- cluding the victims, are mighty thankful and are now in the/| ers?” proper frame of mind to really| Well, maybe he hasn’t got any appreciate TWO THANKSGIV-!kin folks, but I’ve got ’em scat- INGS. tered all over three counties and Russell said to just let the| this little Cracker gal could sure column go this week, but if I/ give him a swell list to start did that I know I'd have to spend | with and I imagine a‘lot of other all next week answering phone folks would be.glad to help him calls and telegrams and letters) with suggestions. from publishers and cuStomers| Well, here’s the end of the wanting to know, “how come”—/ page, folks—and AM I GLAD! i Russell’s GAL FRIDAY. L THE WEATHER The stout gentleman frowned. nouee sndrrpeeseeee eee ae : Ket Wink Observation taken at 7:30 a. m. jinterior of north and central “Let me see, wasn't you law, Mr.| and bc ath Me F Schedule of games in the City gf Course December | 75th Mer. Time portions tonight; slightly warmer Forrester? You wasn’t one of these | Building, Pennie complained a ignt, 2& §s just back from his Temperatures Tuesday. Bore a vi at wasisodt” Building. ie es Basketball League for tonight; Gans Valley, Conn. er | Highest last 24 hours eirions Rint "ieloee hed A th ° ation i i ie > oe Con! “Right the first time, Bill.” caaveotee pace cele wae taht |finds the Seafood Grill and ud job. Immediately he made | Lowest last night A modetately stréag. high T thought so. I ought to remem- | here in the hall when they come. | West Lions Club fives engaging! for the Island City. Mean .. pressare atea is crested this ois Ld os pee record They knocked on the door—-it was in the first game at 7:30 o'clock! He has made a few rounds Normal - 72) morning over the Plateau region time does fly, it does that.” Prey carly one, morning—and | in the High School Gym. eee =e Precipitation and overspreads most sections beagle ey + Bill? Young am his Tone white coat withrubber , Following that contest, the} pr nts er Caton. x“ _ cee 24 eo ending wee ean ba oe ‘ pan gloves on his hands.” ; 5 |_ 7:30 a. m., inches ..._ 0.00 | southeas lorida; Mr. Jameson smiled more ex- “Was he in‘the middle of one Cast Guard ald. gemny teams | a nice” game he shot recently |Total rainfall since Dee. 1, while the northern low pressure pansively. “Now fancy you re-| of his—experiments?” Michael | will play. | was'a 33 going out and a 37 | inches 0.19| area of considerable intensity is fine, Fine fi is, Mr Forrester: ana | 2864; a8 Bull paused with a grim- Friday's Games | coming in—a very, very neat ‘peficiency since December | centered over the north Atlantic that’s true. I'm proud of them| ““swo, “At lesst, not in the middle | BOX scores for league games; 70 for the 18 holes. i | States. Light to moderate snow both. Katie's got a good job with | of one of the fierce ones where he | Played last Friday night are m, has occurred during the last 24 rosriggie “ape eyes res icencess tortured poor innocent dumb follows: | hours. ia: tone ct the. Lake pace Figg pes net work real) beasts. Not so dumb at that, if you FIRST GAME Conn. The pair journeyed to Excess since Jan. 1, inches 2.00|region and upper Ohio Valley, Eouniant now down at Smith and | COWwd hear them yowling.”’Jame- Coast Guard Cuba to play the “unbeat- — Tomorrow's Almanat jand there has been rain on the oomstart now down at Smith and | son paused, then. went on. “Of Player— FG FT F PTS: pro” Rufi | Seni | t of | Washi i Rr bertson's. He gets real good | course, he was always in the mid- 3 ; Ss 6 et able bed there, iysino Sunrise _ g . | Coas' fashington; while pay. and he's gettin’ along splen- | dle of some experiment, Fair daft Stevens, f ——— Gonzalez, recnetly whip- Sunset .| elsewhere generally fair weather did. I always tells him as how he’s | he was, about experiments. I don’t |E. Woodson, f.5 1 0. 11! ped both ‘Denny Shute and | Moonrise .|has prevailed. ‘Temperatures got ms aa ae job.’ know what about, although I Ivester,c ...2 1 1 5; Ratwh Guldahl the same | yoonset | have fallen somewhat in the Flor- a pipe dream, Bill Your fav. | ROW he made new medicines | Mullinax,c 1 0 0 2j| day Bush and Labutis Tomorrow's Tides jida peninsula with light frost polish must have gone to| of Pt eanie eiee cme m Bottle JV Woodson, g 2 0 1 4} couldn't turn the tick, ei- (Naval Base) this morning in the forth por- your head.” pain in my shoulder like nothin’. |Hewit, g 0 0 0 | ther, losing by one hole each » i AM. P.M. | tion; while elsewhere changes Family History and half a dozen doctors couldn't | Busky. g : : : : - : se eae been generally unimport- d thin’ with it before that.” | Bowen, g i 3 5:12} ant. JAMBION put his hand up mé- Bil stroked his shoulder tenderly. 'Deadwiler, g 1 0 0 2 | OOM Tia DIM Ss & in, today chanically to his bald hea ‘ou couldn’t get me ake pss SEE) Sea level __ eis _ 30.10 took it down and looked at it, as| nothin’ he makes now, though, ‘F | took #8 Gown ual tobe at 25) weeeiy eee: | Total cot ct ° | OBSERVATIONS FROM Wi! Ditection and Volocsry MONROE THEATER “ | Seafood Grill } N—6 miles per hour ji you remember that bicycle you} “I si he was pretty sore G Fi F. Pra! Sonja Henie—Tyrone Power ive Jim when you first come to| at the delegation? Salat a THE BLEACHERS | stgeunier > aSaENk Rudy Vallee niversity, and he was just a strip ag oo came eto the aube |Domenech,f..2 0 1 4 oe. 74% SECOND FIDDLE , uu could see that. | pj . L. MILIAN ar a ine time Welk he went rigm| Hoey tole Mim wast wanthe me! "Carbon, c 401 209 ( [should be. afew polnts, below out and got him a job with that| ter, that it was gettin’ too thick, +. % 1 oer eae ek | Matitiee—Baleony 10, Or- there bike, a job as messenger boy bein’ against all the laws | Wickers, ¢ j | mean_temperature chestra 15-20e: Night—15-25c cae Sarith end Robertson's, And |-of human ‘and go on, and Cates, g - 0 0 10 |DID HE ENJOY THE GAME? FORECAST he worked his way up slow 4 = Br one nem “oe yay —--—- | Lyn Larry, the St. Louis Car- (Till 7:30 p. m.; niu é never a word: 6 inals’ | inity: Fell Job. with them, youd | And then be, asked ther what Score'by quarters: ~ Total gumne’ Sinday’ end he toemed ta tonight “and Tuesday, silent Fr fp ie onigitar otis gig ern dumb animals, or torturing Coast Guard 7 16 28 32— 32jenjoy the Blue Sox-Key West|warmer Tuesday; gentle to mod- ra get hime a messenger’s job.” ing.” Seafood Grill 7 16 22 30—30;Conch contest immensely al-|erate northerly to westerly = hed hi . “Well, of course they told him Rey Wees Lions | Cahlsltion iar the ish as N.B.—Forecast indicates winds Id given him a monkey he'd have -stomigh “ (exhibitions of the season. | N.B—Fo! i es w! gone inte the organ grinding busl-| night, end tat they oeen fo |,,Fuve— FG FT F PTs between 8-18 miles per hour neo” Bill said seriously, “I| the pound and found out about Pinder, f 5 2 1 12 |TO GIVE EXHIBITION Florida: Fair tonight and Tues- don’t really believe as how he} the Santing order he had there | Knowles, f =3 tT 2 7 (NEXT WEEK— jday; scattered light frost in the would. He always had his heart for big thy dogs and cats to Saunders, 'c 1 0 $31] Planning on a two-week stay | Pa Se eee Te Po SE. peslpoled ap sue surat ning, and < pag moh sce: Ketchings) ¢) 0 1 8 jon little island, the fisher- | 7a Michael's on. caugh' |Rosam, g 4: oF 2 |man's” paradise, Mr. Larry may | # didn’t give in to the end. He made z ' a \ you, cr, Norrgter” fo aiwaye them show him the order, all ,¥: Carbonell, 32 3 2 {be asked to don a uniform next) his head on one side. PtIhear | Signed with his own hand, ani Gn ee. joueday, to show local shortstop- you was married, Mr. Forrester?” | then he kind of slumped. But all Totals— 4 5 34 'men Armando Acevedo, John “You probably did, Bill. I am.” | he said was ‘Very well, gentle- |Navarro, Fidel Lopez and Ralph “Well, that ought to make you | men, ed cy 3 Ang be went in| Player— FT F PTS/Amold a few pointers on field settle down,” pondered. He “e: aaa loor. Moly ty Svhat Newby, f 0 1 0 {ing grounders and covering sec- | Sint like thar & yoo Sunk cane White, f 0 2 10 jond and third bases for double y x ter,” he said soberly, Maris, ¢ 2 0 4 jplays. The fi a : Starr, ¢ 0 0 of —— ist RAY CUR oe. as ey pte = \Nodine, g 0 0 2 |WATCH OUT, MGR. ADAMS— RRY complete arrangements for ship- Ross, g ® 1 2 Big leaguer Lyn Larry seemed HAVE NEW DEVICE U8 SE 8 NEw Tee Be Copping | Eetwidge, 3 3 . 7 jinterested in third An- Muaiber of the Federal. Deposit tasurenes Cocpertiion + machine to his establishment. Sommers,g 0 1° 0 1 jthony Kelly of the Trojans. Larry Curry, proprietor or Patfons sre-asked to beon the] 1 86 gy gag inten he oes auicg ees of | : Paul's Auto Supply and Tire | !okout for a full announcement Score by quarters: ‘Total|Kelly and whether the iocal t hem Serving Key West and Monroe County Since 1891 Store, White and Fleming streets, )of this device in The Citizen Lions 5 10 24 34— 34}has ever played ball in better ¢ leaves for Miami tomorrow to | soon. jAmy —.. 4 13 1% 26— 26iclass.league. j PAGE THREE Advertisements undet this head | will be inserted in The Citizen ai! } dhs adil ok caecéent, Cheba: 3|U- S. SUGAR CORPORATION far each insertion, but the mini-| ANNOUNCES NEW EMPLOYE mum for the first insertion in| © PARTICIPATION PLAN ‘every instance is fwenty-five| cents (25c). | Advertisers should give aa CLEWISTON, Dec 4 (FNS).— j Street address as well as ? |The management of the United telephone number if they desire’ <,.... Sugar Corporation has an- Payment for ciassified ediver- | nounced to the members of the tisements is invariably in ad- | Organization that with the start vance, but regular advertisers of the 1939-1940 cane harvest a jwith ledger accounts may have revised “Employe’s Participa- } aus tion (bonus) Plan” becomes ef- oe The new plan, which | supersedes the “Wage Dividend” | SHIP ORANGES AND GRAPE- | plan, heretofore in operation, ex- plaka, special = a roe | tends to all employes of the com- zen or more Oranges, $2.95, " delivered to Northern address. | P2"¥* err sias SA Variety of Citrus Gift Boxes. | S°Fvice. THE LITTLE SHOP, 210 Du-| The plan is effeciive as of Oc- val Street. dec4-7x| tober 23, 1939. 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