The Key West Citizen Newspaper, June 7, 1952, Page 8

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Saturdey, June 7, 1952 BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH THE KEY WEST C?TIZEN NOW WE'LL FIND OUT WHOS TH NEW MAYOR OF HOOTIN' HOLLER, SUT- ME OR YOU! (T WON'T SWAY YORE VARDICT NONE SES’ BECAUSE RIDDLES HAPPENS TO BE YORE NEPHEW ——$—— THEATRE—Starring Popeye HAVE I GOT THE MOST UTTERLY FABULOUS NEWS.” DUKE HAS ASKED ME TO WEAR HIS FRATERNITY WHERE You Gor LOST! 4 2 PICTURE'S ) COULONT GRR © Te FIND THE CARY MY DEAR YOUNG LADY THAT ONE PILL BS Sane WOULD MERELY HAVE INDUCED MILD MBER. IT WOULD TAKE THREE TO RENDER HIM UNCONSCIOUS ! NY _UH--GUESS WHUT. OZARK. FER T : y GAME w AN’ SQUARE, Soren cera nce YE MiSTOOK ME FER A WITH ETTA DELIRIOUS WITH JOY, WHO HAS THE HEART TOTELL HER : THE | BAD NEWS THAT DUKE 1S ONLY KIDDING?’ GOOD GRIEF! YOU THREE YOUNG LADIES HAVE UNWITTINGLY PUT ENOUGH DOPE INTO CISCO TO KNOCK OUT A HORSE! NOW HE'S HELPLESS... AND IN THE HANDS OF ENEMIES! the Nice Long Vacatinn Chapter 12 | DIDN'T mean to spy on you,” che said guietly. He Fragen twigs eracklin; nea’ is ste He smiled faintly. “I'm. Bruce Hall, Dr. Bruce Hall. I have a practice in Tuttleton and I’m the official camp doctor.” “I see. I'm Jane Bancroft, rec- reation director of Mr. Forsythe’s establishment: Oh, do sit down. I don’t own this view.” Her eyes danced as he did so. “Would it do any good to say that the wind blew a great deal of dust into my eyes?” “Yes," he said gravely, his voice rich and resonant. “There is a great deal of dust up here, isn’t there?” He picked up a twig and drew a little line before his feet. He was about thirty-five and seemed to have complete contro! of him- self and his destiny. Maturity was’ in the firm cast of his lips and self-confidence was in the soft leaming of his alert gray eyes. le was not handsome in the usual sénse of the word His cheeks were a bit too hollow for that: his eyebrows, sandv like his hair, were too scraggly. But he had that indefinable som: charm. rugged. m2 It was in his smile. in of his glance. in the r Teady way he ned 2 “Forsythe and ! M Banereft. 1 thi! st man alive 4 enough to think | things about ne-"'2 S> » he: comes unon a > 2 WO terests m ~ or an- opher...me. ditturce $o0t nen with m2. 1 * had qu You have it difficult to u person with - should be so c able to them es he c NOTES By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD #—It seems that we overlooked a few famous movie | scenes. Recently I stuck my neck out | and named what I thought were the 10 most memorable film scenes. It appears that I have left out some nifties. Or so I have been informed by such readers as Byron Bateman, San Francisco; | Pearl K. Zacharias, Long Beach, | Calif.; Jack Barry of the Boston | Globe, and others. Here are some of their ‘sugges- tions: | 1. Bela Lugosi about to drain blood from the heroine's neck in “Dracula.” Also, the final scene | of driving the stake through his | heart. Some chiller! 2. Charles Laughton being cast | adrift in a small boat after he “Mutiny on the Bounty.” That scene is still being repeated by | night club imitators. 3. Margo’s turning 100 years old in the “Lost Horizon” scene after | she had induced Ronald Colman | and John Howard to leave Shangri- | La. | 4. Lon Chaney unmasked by the heroine as be played the organ in| “The Phantom of the Opera.” 5. The spiral staircase number in “The Great Ziegfeld” with love- | ly Virginia Bruce on the top. Sing- fag the son “A Pretty Girl is Like Melody” was a toy named Stan. Morner. He calls himself Den- Morgan these days. 6. Fredric March’s transforma: ' scene in “Dr. Jekyll and Mr 2.” It was enough to win him a} Academy Award — and did 7. The parting scene of Celia Johnson and Trevor Howard in | “Brief Encounter.” That was the most subtle piece of tea: -jerking | I can remember. | 8 Helen Hayes’ silent encounter | with her son in “The Sin of Mad jelon Claudet.” She had lived a | life of sin to send him through | medical school and never revealed . identity 9. The scene in “Beau Geste with the soldiers still at their battle positions in the desert fortress. All |were dead. | 10. Gary Cooper's explaining to a courtroom in “Mr. Deeds Goes jto Town” what it means to be | “pixilated.” { 11. James Cagney’s singing “Ov er There” before the car head lights at an Army camp in Doodle Dandy.” 12. The locust scene in “The Good Earth.” And who can forget ; Louise Rainer cooking up a bow! jaf mud? | 13. The final scene of “M iver” with the planes fi formation, as seen thr [bomb hole im the ceilin, chureb. 44. Harold Russell's poking his artificial hands through the win dow im “Best Years of Our Lives This could get to be 2 game. I |think my next project will he @ worst scenes in movie bi I . svpp.cion, T feel I know Yankee © By William Neubauer to concern himself about is whether or not 1 do a good job as his camp director.” _ “True. We have the right to live our lives without interfer- ence from others. Nice lake, don’t you agree?” “Very nice.” She hesitated, then, not wishing to seem rude, shrugged matter-of-factly.- “It’s fatigue in a sense, I daresay.” _ “I can understand it.” He jerked his thumb over his shoul- der. “I feel that way sometimes. During the war I was the only doctor in Tuttieton. I wanted to go overseas. but I couldn't very | well leave the people around here with no doctor, could I? There were times when | wanted to get some fishing tackle together, get into my car and go off for several months of outdoor life. But I didn’t. 1 didn’t because I felt it | was up to those who were able to do the work to stand up to the needs of the ea I still feel that | way. You should feel that way, | really.” “It's ap to the others, she said ; Sharply. “I've more than justified jmy reason for being. Now it is {time that someone else’ carried In her way Evelyn nd in—” talked to you!” was a pause. Then, her eyes, he nodded. quite upset. She liked ously the first time she ou. And so she was. natu- astounded when you be- aved in a manner she didn’t ap- prove. But not knowing about the s‘tractiin George Poppleton had vou overseas— 7d I for him!" ery of a woman in f a woman justify- Recognizing it as was very gentle with rere gentle than he would 2 tcen, perhaps, under other : might be right,” he said “rersonsily, I have the t you misunderstood the! thing know George AP Newstectures| If quite well. He is perhaps a bit on the weak side, but he has in- tegrity, and a deep loyalty. If he had been in love with you he would never have married Leslie. I think, though I hate to put it this way, that you were simply a means of whiling away a cer- tain amount of time.” “How dare you.” Quivering with intense rage, she sprang te her feet and glared down at him. “How dare you say that!” “You are a nurse,” he said, speaking more crisply, more bluntly. “You know as well as I do that only an honest diagnosis is of any value. We are members of the same profession; what bet- ter way to learn the truth than from a person who is able and willing to help you.” “You talk as though I were a clinical case. I won't have it, I tell you. “You prefer to go on being miserable? Rubbish. You have too much common sense for that.” 3 would prefer,” she said frigidly, “to have people mind their own business.” He accepted it philosophically. In the beginning people always resisted “treatment.” “... Sorry,” murmured Evelyn Moore from her cot across the tent. “I didn’t know you and George were in love overseas.” “Skip it.” _The nurse sat up, lovely in her nightgown, very feminine for a egg change. “T’'ll help you, ane, We'll all help you. I dare- say that's the least we can do for a woman who gave so generous); and bravely of herself overseas. “I'm doing quite all right, thank you.” “Just the same, we'll hell you—all of us. You'll have it al decently, and honorably. You’! See... And gradually the moon waxed fuller and fuller and silence des- cended upon Camp Joy, while the lake gurgled on the shore and a fm hae breeze passed across the him! (To be continued) aw Newsprint Mth Divorce; Tesied Again NEW YORK #—The Joarnal of Commerce printed a sheet of its regular press run Friday on news- print made som _ bagasse—the waste of Sugar cane. The New York business daily ran the bagasse paper sheet through 2,000 copies of its Friday edition. The paper was made at the Herty Laboratories at Savannah, Ga., under a pre-hydrolysis process invented by Joaquin de la Roza, Cutan-born New York engineer. De la Roza was pleased with the results of the run, the second in three weeks. The first under full-scale press | conditions in any quantity was on | the presses of the Savannah (Ga.) | Morning News May 19. E. D. Manning, mechanical su- | perintendent of the Journal of | Commerce, commented “This is | good paper.” | It was the first time he had | worked with bagasse paper and | he said it was “stronger than | (standard wood pulp) newsprint.’ The readability is good, Manning | said, and it makes a bright page that stands out. An independent New York engi- eering firm estimated bagasse | paper can be made under the De | is Roza process at a cost of $65.92 | @ ton, based on production in a} mill of 215 tons daily capacity. | This figure is admittedly con-! servative. De la Roza has esti-{ mated he can produce bagasse paper for $55.92 a ton. The current price of wood pulp \e rint to the consumer is $126 a ton, New York basis. De la Roza said there is more han enough bagasse available to | a mumber of large news- mi added the cost of a mili with | daily capacity would be 15 million dollars. asse for theh sheet in Fri nal of Commerce came | The pulp was made Forest Products Labora’ Wi and the paper was Herty Laboratories, Sa write a treaty on freedom tmation and instead make annual survey of cen- world. chnig. deputy U. § to the U. N. Econ Social council, said the harder the U a trea n Of the p tions appeared has been tryin treaty for years, but been able to recon 8 of countries such and Britain, where mation is tradi se of nations where restricted | nettes, No More Marriage SEATTLE (# — The man whose lawyer thinks he is the most un- married gent in the United States said “never again’ after getting his 14th divorce, but he didn’t sound too positive. He is James E. Daniels, hand- some 39-year-old West Coast truck- ing operator, who was divorced from his latest spouse, Mrs. Helen Anne Daniels, 29, here this week. Daniels testified Helen Anne, to whom he had been married four years, went out with other men while he was away on his truck- driving runs out of town. “I doubt if I ever again will be married,” she told a reporter. And then he hedged. “Maybe I better not comment.” Nine of his 14 wives were bru- Daniels recalled, two blondes and three redheads. His first marriage was at 18. Daniels said he is on friendly terms with all his ex-wives who still live. He doesn’t pay alimony to any- one. Red Cross Drive Exceeds Quota Merit Certificates were awarded to over fifty people Thursday night in the auditorium of the County Health Clinic Building. It was disclosed that during the period between March 3 and May 30, the local quota had been ex- ceeded by $2,477.19. The drive for funds commenced in an attempt to raise $9,250. The final amount se- cured amounted to $11,727.19. This figures out on a percentage basis to being 29 percent more than was expected. Major Earl Dillon is the outgo- ing director of the organization. Rev. Ralph Rogers of the First Presbyterian Church, the incoming director. War Maneuvers KUSHIRO. Japan #— war ships and planes are reported con- off the northerna- <yodo News agency said the report hed the Kush National Re- Police from Nemuro, on the me eastern tip of the istang two miles from the Rus- Kurile Is . The report said shell vibrations 4 be felt at Nosappu Point, tip of Nemuro Peninsdlg, et craft of about 150 tons ere taking part in the maneuvers, & STRONG ARM BRAND COPFES Triumph Coffee Mill ” aLL GROCERS

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