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Tuesday, March 18, 1952 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Page 3 BARNEY Goocit AND SNUFFY SMITH By Fred Laswell ‘Dr. Morehead ey AL, SHUK- i [I'VE TRIED wy LEVEL WHY BON'T 7 1 ‘SWOWH ID. Hip ave EVER SINCE. we AN’ (4 Ee a BEST BuT ft CANT HE. pti al ENNY THING IN THIS HITCHED, N Obd, FER TH LifE OF ME COOK SUPPER -| FE-\ widE WORLD IE T HE'S DONE NOTHIN’ BUTN CG CKET Git ‘EM TO COME OUT aS SMART AS 400, RAVE ABOUT YORE LIGHT AN’ FLUFFY oA jz 2 BARLOW , SIOUS ie , —¥ iz RAROW, { yoge! Berore 2E THE COMPaNy VAL NES | ay Pe T WANT YOLI IN AND Teli THE -'LL HAVE TO USE one TEN-BEDELIA~ | xe Nort tou — renee TACT-I DON'T WANT GOOD rath IT WOULD. ae sag t. TO OFFEND HER-- ji) | EVENIN'- |} WIGE IF YOU DIDN'T F I'S 60 VULGAR Wj} BOL a1 NA He AROUNTONIGHT } | TOLD “IM TO. FIND SOME “QE SCALES AN! GET HISSELF t ey ic YAP jE 4 la WEIGHED !! ; - © A FIGHTER WILL MAKE A LUWMOX 1 Y mONE LOOK ATA PRETTY PIGEON, AND HE - PRACTICALLY THE ONLY WAY ILL HOLD THAT BIRD- DOG I DATED WILL RE TO PUT HIM ON | basaw: ba ‘ ayes od if EE yo yaaa Rati HIS HANDS ARE FREE -- 87 =O/2 WEAPONS ST4*'D CISCO AND ANY E¥/7. soiteul We TLL PIN YOU TO THF | WALL; YOU WILPCAT. alg p Pa fore ~a ¥ 5, ll . i ¥ Seo | ae if aire i WRATA SWAG, BUBBUHS.. 7 r PLUYA OVUH pn, THEM PALMS ey ) > iN DAID : CENTUH- *y FIELDS | THIS CLUBS \Ts F ound UP) Wirepnou: | DR. BARBARA MOREHEAD, South Dakota State College English proféssor who disap- peared last December, poses at the home of friends in Rotk Hill, S. C., where, according to: her brother, C. W. Morehéad, she has been since March 4, He said she is in good health. _ HOLLYWOOD NOTES By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (#—Cheerio, Lon- ion, there’s good news tonight! Sultry, feggy - voiced Lizabeth Seott has returned from a Euro- pean jaunt and. blimey if, she doesn't think British men are top- notch, romantically speaking. The actress didn’t have time to | indulge in anything serious, but i she was subject to some interna- tional wooing while touring Eu- rope. She was escorted by English, French, Nalian and Swiss men, and she decided that the English are the roost adept in matte?s of the heart. “English men are so youthful in their manner,’ she enthused. “they dress in young - looking ! suit@ and many of. them wear | ¢ ew culs. I'm crazy for crew cuts. “It's not true that English mon are sober and unemotional all time. They have delightful senses of humor. That’s all the meve amazing when you consider what | they have gone through during the war and after. It’s remarkable ; that they can find so much*to laugh about. “And they can be very endear- | ing, too. They can become quite poetic. That's only natural, since they have a splendid poetic tradi- fic) in Englard.” 1 asked if she implied that Amer- ican men don’t get poetic, “Not as readily,”’ she admittéd, “But American men are able to | Set poetic over a girl if they really get seriuos about her. I have let ters to prove it.’ Miss Scott was in London sev- | eral weeks making a picture with Paul Henreid, so she had a lot ¢ time for dating. She didn't cate as much for the usual kind «< date, which meant dancing. at the exclusive clu's. The bands don't ; have much of a beat, she said. “The most fun I had was = fo thé pubs,”’ she remarked. “ are a wonderful institution, quite unlike anything we have in fg country. The pubs are more neighborhc.d clubs; the | meet there for congenialty. Thete | aren’t any juke boxes, but each pub has a piano. If someone feels | like playing, he'll sit down at it | and the others will join in and sing.”* The blonde actress also did some touring on the Ccutinent, but her romantic findings were not quite so satisfactory. “The Frenchman is wonderful in his suavity and charm,” she re- marked, ‘‘and is very quick with | the compliments. But sometimes you wonder if perhaps this isn’t a veneer. It wasn’t encouraging to see how the French treat their wives, The women are held in very low regard; the man is king. 1 saw nothing in France like the beautiful ‘relationships between husbands and wives in England. ‘The Italian is also full offehat like the Frenchman, th Italy has been through. “As for the Swiss, he is very | impressive. He is strong and | and can say more with a few than mcst nationalities. can sentences.” Despite her impressions of Eu- ropean men, Miss Scott admitted that she'll probably end up marry- ing an American. “They are the only men in world who will help 4 wae ae wash the dishes,’ a yo Be CHRYSLER PRODUCTS $ BILL TYLER, Ozer 707 Whitehead St., Corner Angele. sc ge SEI TSR