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THURSDAY, JANUARY 7, 1943 TRIPLEHEADER | OF BASKETBALL | PLAYED ‘AT GYM i AIR STATION WON FIRST| “H es Fenner said. “He'll make a STUDENTS GRABBED SEC- | date, either to come for the en- OND AND N.OB, CLAIMED | velope or ask you to meet him ; somewhere.” He glanced at Delia, THIRD BY ONE POINT } still smiling. “Either way is | okay, You'll tell him you'll de- | liver and when you do I'll be Three of the most interesting! somewhere around. After that games of the season were run| we'll see what happens; maybe off in the High School Gymna-} xen an er nee sium last night in regular City| , “But you mustn’t take it away Basketball League contests . Dine Lena. oom oe peck In the first encounter striking ato bee lsat He could “Boat” boys from the Naval Air ete sate Station won a close one from! let’s not worry algut what we'll Fort Taylor, 18 to 14. | do until the tim: jfeomes. After I The Fort Taylor squad made its | find out who the gu sis and what initial appearance of the season, | RE does with tf efvelope we'll replacing another Fort Taylor| “ua, » : A wwe, team which was transferred. noe Telia ted oy oo B him jox score: “wer . ‘We'll find ay. What's Air Station (18) : st pam Fh | your address?” Player-Position— Delia gave it and Fenner wrote Fetterman, f - it down. “I'll be there at eleven Mo: f thirty in the morning. Okay?” Pusser, c Joyce gathered her things, ex- Kirkma changed glances with Delia, said, “Ripa. Md | “Well—” and started to rise. Key, g Fenner got up with them, Gagnar, sub reaching for the remainder of his Fort Taylor (14) Player-Position— { drink. | “Why don’t you finish it?” Joyce Mostapak, g Mirabella, f Chapter 20 Man In The Dark the ; { sti \ said. “But Points BMRS. MURDOCK TAKES A CASE | PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE | (Continued from Page One) changed their estimate of them- ae George Coxe ! selves, drink?” she asked. Thorndike said | ‘To that defeat were added oth- he didn’t think so and Delia | crs in the Coral Sea, in the Solo- oe re WY Baden pe) ae j mons and in New Guinea, and the} comes up? There’s something I | time has now arrived when Am-} ete dent ber. wndike said. | erica and her Allies will carry the; “‘Tll let you ‘out here.” | battle nearer and nearer to the Rocce intent ee | Shores of Japan herself, and fin-| off, and reached over to open the ally into Japan. i) OLD RED BARN BLOOMS INTO GOTHIC CATHEDRAL By JAY ALAN fwhite cross on the roof saves it Wide World Features from being recognized for what WOODSTOCK, N. Y., Jan. 7.—|it was—a barn. Even a_ horse- | Archbishop Francis’ cathedral is/shoe is nailed aver the door, an old red barn—and it is beau-|which is always unlocked, and tiful. It is Old Catholic and is} which swings wide open in mild called Saint Dunstan’s. weather. I-met Archbishop Francis, a; The Archbishop asked me in-| jside, past a carved wooden door. Joyce and Delia got out and | { hurried across the sidewalk. “Do you mind?? Delia asked. “I just had to talk to you a min- ute and Uncle Dean won’t care.” They went up the stairs silently to the second floor. Delia had her key out by the time they reached her door, and, unlocking | stepped across the threshold into darkness, Joyce was right’ behind her and light from the hall spilled past them and she saw Delia reach for the wall-switch just ahead. si There was no warning for what happened next, no sound, no intuitive suggestion, nothing. One moment Delia’s pand was reach- ing for the switch; the next the | hand had stopped in mid-air and a gruff, deep voice with a snap to it shattered the still blackness ahead of them. “Don’t touch scream!” The Envelope OYCE froze and for the next in- it «and don’t terminable second her mind was a detached and separate part of her, so that although her body was stiff and incapable of move- t,, her brain raced and her perceptions were sharp, clear, it, | Meanwhile, the President said,|S/¢@R-Shaven, gaunt man, sweat- ‘ing in his grey tunic as he work- i that Japan would be bombed, ‘as} i |Germany has been bombed. With /C4, #M0ng the flowers in front of air superiority having passed to the Allies, he stated that the j bombing of Japan, once it has been started, will be continue ‘day after day till her great muni- jtion plants and her - industvi | plants have been destroyed. Al- iready, he’ declared, American n. {val and air forces are sinking , War. more Japanese ships and destroy-; In commenting on those fig- ing more Japanese planes than her plants are able to replace. Some people thought pulled big figures out of our hats | mocracy”. to frighten the Axis powers”, The President said he wonder- the President said, in regard to,ed what Hitler, Mussolini and the production figures he an- nounced at the beginning of the I might have met him chasing his geese from the church, or in overalls working in the , vegetable patch. But this cathedral—only a large ap jis no misnomer to refer to this “we country as “The Arsenal of De- | States, which they had referred war in the turning out of planes, to as “decadent and inefficient”, tanks and other implements - of} What they think now will be war during 1942. jmild with what they will think | “But what has happened?” the! when the weapons our “Arensal |President demanded. The figures of . Democracy” . makes |show that some of the things) Selves felt in ever greater volume that) were produced have ,been! 8s the war progresses. his ‘strange cathedral near here. | large} ‘More than in the first World| jurges, the President asserted, it! | Togo now thought of the United | asked. “We'll run along but there’s no need for you to come if you’d like to stay.” Murphy, c Dint, g Stender, g Moyer, sub Todd, sub The second game scheduled be- ! tween Air Station No. 4 and the Army Barracks was forfeited by , the Barracks, but an exhibition , affair between the Marracks and the Varsity High School was played. The Varsity chalked up_ its eleventh victory of the season as the Students exhibited flaw- | less ball at times and at other | times played very poorly. Box score: | Hiah School (33) | Player-Position— Points | G. Barber, g Guerra, sub Morgan, sub Alonzo, sub Sweeting, sub R. Barber, sub Barracks (22) Player-Position— Anderson, f Faucett, f | Isensmith, ¢ Almeda, g Adamezyk, & Mulford, sub The third game between the Athletic Department of NOB and the Naval Commissary saw the league leaders almost fall before | the “Store Boys” of the Navy in a fracas marked by freqoent fouls. The ending saw the NOB with a| three-man team. Final score was} 43-42. | The game was nip-and-tuck } throughout with «the leading changing often and 30 seconds be- | fore the final whistle the score read 42-42. | Bruwick, who was fouled, made the free shot to put his team out front by one point before the Commissary lads had an unity to attempt a field goal | Box score: Commissary (42) | Player-Position— Points Saunders, f 2 Barton, f Paul, c Dierlam, g 4 Jacobson, g 7 Denton, sub 5} NOB (43) | Player-Position— Points ; Bruwick, f 17, Richwalker, f 2 Long, c 12) Collins, g 4) Bogart, g 8) CAGE GAMES SET FOR FRIDAY NIGHT | Island City Basketball League games scheduled for Friday night at the High School Gymnasium have been announced by Coach Stone, director of the circuit. Mr. Stone also revealed that tomorrow has been designated as Ladies’ Night and all ladies will be admitted free. H Games scheduled follow: | 7:00—Air Station No.'I vs Fort Taylor. 8:00—Air Station No. 2 vs Navy Athletic Department. ! 9:00—Elks\Club vs Air Station} No. 3. NOCOCONWORAON Points | 11 18 ry Office Economy A Glasgow merchant, famous in his wav, came into his office one morning and found a young | things: he’d want to know. oppor- | 5 Fenner gave her a grin of ap- preciation. “All right. I can do my thinking here as well as any place.” “Thanks, Jack,” Joyce said. | “Good night.” “Good night. See you at eleven thirty.” They left the room and turned | down the long corridor. “Now what do you think?” Joyce asked, “Tm. glad we came,” Delia said. ou were right. He will know what to do. He’s so—well, I hard- ly know what to say. ’'ve never known anyone quite like him. There’s something about him— something compelling that makes me feel like shivering inside when he looks at you a certan way, and yet I think I like him. I—I’m not uite so worried as I was. . . 1 there’s Uncle Dean...” They were in the main lobby now and Dean Thorndike was coming towards them from the di- rection of the elevators. An in- stant Jater he spotted them and waved. “Well,” he said, as he removed his hat, “what brings you here? ; Out for a drink all by your- selves?” . Joyce hesitated, feeling Delia’s sidelong glance and deciding not to mention Jack Fenner. The name would mean nothing to Thorndike and if he found -out they’d been. meeting a private detective there would be oe I Delia wanted to explain well and good. if not— “We had just one,” she said ; when she could ignore the awk- ward silence no longer. “I had to drop by and see a fellow,” Thorndike said. “Thinks he might want to buy the ketch. Pll buy another drink.” “Thanks, no,” Joyce said. “If you want to drive us home,” Delia said, “I might be able to find something for you.” “You came in a cab?” Thorn- dike said.~“All right, I’ run you over.” “Don’t Scream” 6 opted stood under the lighted marquee while he went for his car. It was drizzling now and the massive doorman stood by with his umbrella until Thorndike drove up. Although they rode three in the front seat there was little said until Thorndike slowed down and looked for a parking space in front of Delia’s apartment house, and detailed. | below the figures, some. above | The President’s, message was | a lovely old gothic church. Points of light splashed’ over thé huge, hand-hewn rafters and onto: the soft, rich browns of the mellow wood of the seats and altar. The light came from holes in the high roof. ' i Breathtaking The carvings are breathtaking —the altar setting, a small balco- ny, and numerous objects. Most of this carving was done by the Archbishop and monks out of jtimbers in the barn. Today the interior seems to be all one piece lof wood. The parish, an artistic com- munity, takes great pride in the jchurch and contributes - to __ its furnishings. There are paintings and hand-loomed tapestries. But there are also precious |Felics: a 13th century and a 14th them-| Century woodcarving, the jorig- | inal seal of Saint Dunstan under the altar, the working part of the pipe organ which Queen Anne-sent to, one of the colonies; ) Screen, and suddenly we were in| PAGE THREE RETURNED TO MIAMI | QUICK RELIEF FROM | Symptoms of Distress Arising from ono recent setuned to key, STOMACH ULCERS st., who recently returned to Key | West from Miami, where he had DUETO EXCESS ACID been undergoing treatment in & FreeBookTellsofliomeTreatmentthat | hospital there, was taken back to! Must Heip or it Will Cost You Nothing that city yesterday in an ambu-| | lance. i | | treatment of his ailment. | He was accompanied on -the| |trip by Mrs. Thompson and their} son, Charles Thompson. } ERECTED SWIFTLY | DETROIT — Prefabricated | wooden “suitcase” homes for mi- | |gratory workers have been erect- | |ed in ten minutes. | pden, the chickens and geese go! Frank a long way toward making them The collection | | self-sustaining. jPlate is never passed at Saint! 0 OWS Dunstan’s. | The Archbishop was born in |Nottingham, England, and came (WEST CLOTHES SHOPS, Inc.) |to America as a child. He was) jelected to his rank in Chicago, | Duval and Southard Sts. kay PHONE 249 1917. | Key West, Florida — ; Saint Dunstan’s came to Wood- | |stock about three years ago and | THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY {occupied a small, mountainside | chapel. It proved inconvenient! in winter, and parishioners cast! jabout for a more suitable loca- | tion. The Archbishop, a student | jof architecture, said a barn} ; would be just the thing. A year ilater he had his barn. - Construc- | tion began in May, 1940. | | Sometimes the Archbishop's | {Irish terrier curls up there—and | |he ‘thinks it not sacrilegious. Archbishop Francis is a man/ Talk-of-the-Town “Will you come yp for that SB DIL SS SS & PLAN EXPERIMENTING GAMES ON SATURDAY The Key West High School has announced that an experi- ment to determine the popu- larity of weekend basketball games among the public will be conducted Saturday night et the school’s gymnasium, corner of Seminary and Grinnell streets. Students, due to their stud- ies, and working men and women have been unable to attend games during the week end have requested that contests be played on weekends, As en experiment. a dou- bleheeder has been scheduled for Saturday night. In the first game, at 7:30 o’clock, the Varsity B team will en- gege Fort Taylor. and at 8:30 o’clock a second game will bring together the Vars- ity squad and the Air Station No. 3 team. MARRIAGE MART Rovelia Pere7, 24. of Kev West, and Audrey Little, of Fort Myers, Aside from the immediate shock: she felt no great fear but only incredulity. Delia had re- coiled with the command; now she was like a statue, poised but motionless, her hand fixed in mid- air. Beyond there was nothing but blackness. From it came the next command. “Put your hand down!” Slowly, as though with an in- tense muscular effort, Delia low- ered her hand. “Good. Now come forward. Slowly. Leave the door open so I can see you.” The voice was still low. pausing brigfly and then snapping out at them. “Move.” For the first time, Joyce felt real fear. She had to obey quickly: Delia too. She closed up behind the girl and put both hands above her hips, guiding her, for- ward as she moved. “Do as he says, darling.” “Stop there!” the voice com- manded. “Good, I’m going down the hall and out the back door, Just remember I can see you all the way. Stand still and stay qui® and you'll be all right.” _ Joyce could hear the man mov- ing now, the soft slide of his feet across the rug. Try as she might she could not penetrate the dark- ness and presently even the sound of him was_gone. The next minute was"like: an’ | hour. She could hear her own breathing; she could hear Delia. There was even time for her thoughts to slide off on a tangent and wonder what might have happened had Dean Thorndike come up with them for that drink, The sound of a door closing was loud and startling and even when the silence came again and she knew the man had gone it took her a second or two to force herself to move. . “He’s gone,” Delia breathed. “Yes.” on. The light was momentarily | blindin, 1 and she stood blinking at it. elia was lookin; Joyce said, and turned | to the wall switch and snapped it | at her, | ithe figures, and sonte figures have been changed due to the jexigencies of the war. | The... production of military |planes in. 1942, he explained, to- taled 48,000, which exceed the do-| tal of Germany, Italy and Japan | combined. And the of planes are continuing to in-| crease in number as well as in| quality. Last month, for. in-) stance, the number of military} planes built in this country. to-/ taled 5,500, which, if the month-| \ly figure remains at that point, | will amount to 66,000 planes: in| a year. But, instead of remaining | \stable, the figure will increase | month after month in 1943. i During the first year of the; war other figures of production ; jof military implements in the; | United States were: j | Fifty-six thousand combat ve-| |hicles,” which included tanks and; |self-operating guns; 670,000 ma-j chine guns, which were six times |greater than the number pro- } duced in the preceding year, and} ‘three times greater than the to-/ tal by this country in the first | | World War;.21,000. anti-tank guns, six times more than. the 1941} production; 10,500,000,000 rounds | of small arms ammunition, five times more than in 1941 and | three times more than in the first | World War; 181,000,000 rounds of | artillery ammunition, 12 times as} much as in 1941 and 10 times; production ; | AT FIRST aD CO%. 666 TABLETS. SALVE, NOSE DROPS |Nation is good, the spirit of our wholly belligerent. He, made no | : : reference to domestic issues, as/® DeLyra Latin Bible (1477); many editors and radio commen-|Part of the ‘first English Bible tators’ had predicted he, would. | ‘Coverdale, 1534); part of the He concluded his message by) fitst edition of the King James asserting that “The state of our{Version, and the Henry VIII Nation is good, the heart of our | Bible. Se Nation is good, the spirit of our) In the Archbishop's study, one Sees several masterpieces, includ- ing a large painting by Perugino \and a small Albani. ! It should be explained that ithe Archbishop’s Old Catholic prea ifaith is different doctrinally from Our deepest appreciation is ex-|the Latin church. The rites are tended to our relatives and friends | similar, but Old Catholic serv- for their kindness shown us in our jices are conducted in English— recent sorrow in the loss of our/or the language of the parish loved one, Mary. Elizabeth ob | TUETE: are 68 such parishes inson. ‘We are also very grateful | America. zs for the beautiful floral offerings; _ Almost Self-Supporting and cards of sympathy, and those} The Archbishop and the three who furnished cars. Also to the|monks occupy quarters in the Red Cross for their assistance in’| lower part of the barn. The gar- sending ‘nessages. Nation is high, and the faith of our Nation is eternal.” CARD OF THANKS | of strong thoughts, as_ well as | strong hands. He took but two) years to build a cathedral! 1GHT COUGHS | YOUR CHILD'S ing at night | " or ir- ritation, mouth breathing, or a cold—can often be — rubbing throat and chest 4 Vicks VapoRub at bedtime. ‘ Pants Values $3.95 $4.95 $5.95 Our Spacious VAPORUB’S poultice-and-va; action loosens phiegm, relieves a invite restful | sleep. Try it! ' zener reas We feel greatly. indebted to all for their many kindnesses, which will never be forgotten. JOHN P. ROBINSON AND CHILDREN. | ROLAND RICHARDSON jan7-1tx AND FAMILY. MUUUSUTALEUATASAETUAAGRSOUAAEUTOA ASLAN, I ANNOUNCEMENT H. E, CANFIELD, M. D. | Specialist in Diseases of the EYES. | EARS, NOSE and THROAT t | Will See Patients Each Evening | at Dr. Galey’s Office. 417 i Eaton Street | | | HOURS 7:00 to 8:00 TTT TLL al | her face white and strained, her | eyes more startled than afraid. Seconds went by before either of | them moved again and then Joyce noticed the secretary. The draw- | ers were pulled part-way out; so was one in the table. “The envelope!” Delia said. Abruptly she turned and start- ed for the hall. To be continued RETURNS TO CITY | { | the holidays with her |N. J. | Robinson and | Terry, N. Y. family -at Estimate of Winter wheat crop | jin 1943 is 624,504,000 bushels. Miss Sarah Ann Birs has just PUBLIC REACTION TQ returned home after spending father, | |Anthony C. Birs,*of Union City, While away, Miss Birs was the jweek-end guest of Lt. John W. Fort | TABU OUR SIDESHOW . : it ! elerk writing a letter in rather @ were married yesterjav afterno™ mum of calcium! flourishing hand. “My man,” he observed, “din- na mak’ the tails o’yer g’s and y’s sae long. I want the ink tae last the quarter oot.” by County Judge Raymond R. Lord. PREE: Use Rumiord‘s Time- ly Recipe Material. Write today—Rumford Baking Powder, | other sizes of both. January Special Sale on Ladies’ COATS. and. DRESSES Headquarters <d. : “PorkiLLe.” Perheme Smouldering TABU— heady, sultry fragrance—even more disturbing when worn on gowns Or furs where it remains for days— even weeks. And now you no longer have to wait for someone to bring your pre- cious TABU from Mexico, Cuba or Spain—we have it here. The Parfum $35.00 ~ Cologne $6.00 — also a ing Vanilla Ice Cream. TABU Products GOWNS & MILLINERY ORANGE SHERBET ROYALE See Cream And what a treat it is—this Sealtest Ice Cream for January! 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