The Key West Citizen Newspaper, October 11, 1950, Page 3

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ii = WEDNESDAY, Ocronne 11, 1950 DIANA — You SURE HAVE A WonDpER’ COLLECTION OF cooks F YOU HEARD NO S.0.S FROM CARLO /! SO,’ MY PILOT IS ADRIFT IN MY SWAN SONG SIXTY 7 MILES SOUTH... MAY 1. MAKE A SUEGESTISCON I OON*T CARE To PLAY | TAS WITH ANY OF GOSH, DR. BUGWAYS. I'D ALMOST ABOUT YOU IN ALL THIS EXCITEMENT ! VERY FUNNY Jt RESCUE) YON Bc uP cargos s.as. / BUT I NEVER COLLD GET UP THE NERVE To RY To BORROW SHELVES, TOO/ WHY CON'T YOu Fun: THEM ON SHELVES Doiible Vision RIGHT NOW, EM EM NOTA SA | j | | was with a large party. If | had any intention of leaving } as the headwaiter was DOUBLE WEDDING } S THEY stood in the doorway 44 waiting to see the head-} waiter couid find a vacant space! for them, Sandy Stephanie stiffen at his } see what en fol- ving to mewhat | was wrong. His glance lowed hers and. without be told who the dar young man it could -be no As if he felt their concentrated attention and focused look, or a if attracted by some did not give himsel . hange of expression. His nod and mile were the same as he would) have given any acquaintance. He e had there would not have been gnaling that there was ‘y on the opposite side of the crowded room. The vacant table was almost on top of the orches if there were any h ddjng | hat although he had come pre- ared to enjoy the mus: e did not care to be deafened by it. The headwaiter assured Monsieur po-} litely, yet as if it were of no con- sequence to him whether this par- | ticular customer were pleased -or} not. that. this was the only va- cancy and that Monsieur was very | fortunate to have that one offered. | forming had su! “I suppose if I were a Hai management would have moved} heaven and earth to find another | table-So that’s the Ex over there, | eh? Don’t ask me how I guessed; | I'm psychic. Wouldn't you like to} | invite him to join us, Stevie?” | | | j j | | 40 years ago. He thought. as Mavo had. if see-i By Adelaide Humphries ing him meant nothing to Stevie, Mu she would not have become so or it ruffled. | “Sandy “Certainly not!” Stephanie re- | neve: turned, too emphatically. She tone w knew her face had turned crim- | ried. son. She wished it did not disturb|. Sandy -fi. her so to run into Grant. She sup- | murmuire posed they were bound “te meet, got up.a occasionally. lend-and Was Gran, think: meant just for a drin! “Tt isn't necessary,’ ends. ‘Surely he'd leaye them! Aren't 4 friefid, too? He—* “Really, Sandy. if you're trying to be funny—” “I like that! I'm trying to be ‘5 polite.” “No one would guess it. Shout- ing at me—” i “I have to shout, my love, to be heard.” Sandy tossed her a bright smile. He knew he was behaving badly. He could not help it: Steph- anie’s cheeks were pink, making | ™é? her even lovelier in the white |} dress that turned her into a veri- | * table Ice Queen. But he was burn- | ing up. A hot rage filled him}, whenever he thought of that). “guy” she had married, let alone | US seeing the fellow. Yet Sandy was nd he glad—for reasons of his own—that | That is, if we he had seen him. } \chagr trom « The orchestra was playing ong)gdi of Stephanie's favorite pieces, 0: to which she and Grant had often danced. Oh, she, wished she and | Mr. ye ing. sturmed over a story. And no télling what he | gtinning at Stephanie might say if Grant. were to cone What did J tell yqut Jp tikes a— to their table. ‘Never shind “Sandy.” She @id Which was exactly what Grant |20t Kick him under the table but was doing, as Sandy now in-|she hoped the look she sent agress jformed her. “He's getting up,” |it5 top would prove as effetive. Sandy said. “Coming our way. (Te be continued) Israelis Leave |Red Labor Group TEL AVIV, Israel —4)—A na-} tional convention of adrut—} j the Jewish general confederati of labor—has approved its execu-| tive committee’s action withdraw- | ing the organization from the Communist -.controlled World} Federation of Trade Unions. | Histadrut has decided that for! the “moment .it would not be a member of world organizations, backed by either eastern or west-} ern powers. iiistaarut said it had} no desire to play any role in the| “cold war” between rival World Federations of Trade Unions. | Today's Birthdays Mrs. Franklin D. (Anne Elea- nor) Roosevelt born in New! York, 61 years ago. | Joseph W. Aisop, , column- | ist-author, born in Avon, Conn.,/ Alexander: Fraser, president of | Shell Oil, New York. barn in Scotland, 61 years ago. Lieut. Gen. Nathan F. Twin- ing, born Monroe, Wis., 53 years ago. Norman P. Case of Washington, | D. C., lawyer, onetime governor of Rhode Island, born in Provi- j dence, 62 years ago. Joseph Auslander, famed poet and man of lezters, born in Phil- adelphia, 53 years ago. Frank Purnell, president of Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co., born in Youngstown, 64 years ago. The U. S. Bureau of Standards! gives asphalt tile top ranking as/ a safe floor for industrial use,! with its surface least conducive | lowa to U.S. | jects Government's } Communist ; ficent to rev injuries re-| 19445 Today In History 1779—Died: from ceived in battle, Gen. pend Pulaski, Polish leader in the! American Revolution. | 1871—First -team ferry in the world, between New York City} and. Hoboken, N. J., begins—the/} work of John Stevens. | 1842—Sae and Fox India cede their remaining lands in| butter, jor papr: hurricane. off! 1846—A_ great |Havana wrecks some 60 mer-| “0324 chant ships, 14 Spanish and 37 French warships. | 1853—Country’s first clearing houre, 52 banks, .opéns_in New York City. 1890—The Daughters of the) Ameritan Revolution founded. | 1911—MeNamara brothers dyn- amite trial opens in Los Angeles. 1939—The slow-down replaces the sit-down in auto factories. 1943—U. S. Supreme Court re- request for! its. decision that rehearing ee i! . t fold oil » « ae an “tt hd a

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