The Key West Citizen Newspaper, July 25, 1952, Page 6

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Page & Friday, July 25, 1952 BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH SHE'LL BE BACH ANY MINUTE, AL-- DAT TRAILER LIFE {S TOO RUGGED THE KEY WEST CITIZEN By. Fred Lasswell a FOR DE OL! TIGER-- TOO MUCH WOIKK!! WHERE % GOIN’ WIT! THE uit 7 sorry MARGIE, T OIONT MEAN To LISTEN IN’— BUT THE DOOR AMMER 2¢ YEAH I HEARD Your ‘OAD SOUND- ING OFF ABOUT ME — J AND HE'S RIGHT! , YOu MEAN You DONT NO!—iT's BETTER THIS WAY! A NICE, ‘ IF THE KIO'S Goop, T MAy GIVE HIM A FIF THOUSAND-DOLLAR BONUS TO SIGN A CONTRACT! YES, I UVE THERE. IM THE ONLY ONE IN THE FAMILY WHO'S GOT | least I think I'll be covered. The | ly As the trembling ceased and the terror of near-death evaporated into the disturbed it marched down the her mind the | iG fae fe el After twenty . eee _ ore. ere, she sat u] a tock and cleaned out he and brushed the sand feet, for she knew there great distance to walk. boat still ied at if ribly depressing, now, that she was glad of time for walking, time for organizing the new emergency. She estimated that in the after- noon it had taken them travel. After two hours of strug- gling, her knees and there was a sharp pain were ra’ her left side, Her ang bleed: ats breat out in pain: Basps. Melisande was about to quit find some kind of forest for the night when the sound man coug) HOLLYWOOD NOTES By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (#-—-Riddle: What is better than a elamor girl in a bathtub? Answer: Two of ‘em. Is it any wonder that I hastened to Paramount, where Rhonda Fleming and Jan Sterling were reported double dipping for an epic, called “‘Pony Express”? Its mak- ers apparently believe that movies have to be bigger than ever, and that accounts for the twin take. When I arrived on the set, the/ tubs were emptier than a poli- tician’s promise. My guide disgust- edly threw his cake of soap in the air and headed for a tele- phone. He discovered the film company was still out on a West- ern street. We loped over there. I called on red-haired Rhonda, but she—dash it all—was fully clothed. She explained how the big scene would be filmed. “T'll be covered by a strapless bathing suit that has been dyed flesh color,” she reported. “At suit has shrunk since the dye job. See?” It resembled a pocket-size magazine. Jan Sterling told me that she would also wear a flesh-colored swim suit. She said she was will- ; seetee ve “Yes. Hi 't ‘3 ‘es. ave: a : nt you walked on “It's after two o'clock.” “What an absurd ion.” She sprang from th eae HA] i Hen i ap i Hi a i i came and just ahead, caused| the verandah. er Back In Prison MIAMI ®— William Baxley, 23- year-old escaped convict, was back in prison today because a police- man stopped him for speeding. North Miami Beach Policema: Today’s Business Mirror By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK ® -—That tax squawk you hear may seem muf- fled by the Chicago convention hooplas this month. But it gets more painful every day as business reports on its financial health for the first half of the year. Just how much better Uncle Sam is doing than the sharehold- ers shows up in the new earn- ings statements which reflect the full load of,the higher taxes en- acted by the Congress last Octo- ber, as compared with lower pay- ments a year ago. Gwilym A. Price, president of Westinghouse Electric, says that two years ago, if it paid the gov- ernmcnt 40 cents, the company could set aside one dollar for divi- dends, debt retirement, expansion of plant and reserves. Today to keep one dollar, Westinghouse must earn two dollars more for the government. 3 bales holders that in 1940 a share in di collector MAIN OPVICE end WAREHOUSE: Cor. Zaten and Prencis Om. PHOWES: $8 and &

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