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Nar aa j i i iy ay Page 10 | THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Thursday, February 26, 1953 4 FLASig§ GORDON ETHE TME THE city. Y DUMP THIS JOKER SECUTOR GETS UP IN THE BACK SEAT E, WE'LL BE GONE! RIGHT, Boss! THE REEF (S FULLY EQUIPPED WITH A TRANSMITTER AND "AT MY COMMAND, THEY RAIDED Vi AND BROUGHT BACK RICHES AND MORE {j'T Theo THe Mysteny POWDERONAFEW| | SLAVES.INONE COULD STAND AGAINST NATIVES, 1T WORKED. THEY WERE ;JALL OBEDIENT TOMY WiLt=-" 5 q AGS, EXACTLY HOW I WANT IT! NOW GET 3 SOME SLEEP, DARLING..GUS WILL BE HERE AT ALL TIMES, SHOULD ‘THAT MAN MOUNTAIN ST WARM UP SHUX-1 KNow W YOU WILL TeCC zee gOS TERN Ue ZER |: SHEL RNG GREAT PLASTEUR FINGERS EVERY WHAT ON AIRTH EE? MORNING BEFORE | | EXERCISE ARE YE v_| ZEE STATUE, MAMZELL MAGGIE EVE? GOT HIM TO WEAR A HOMBURG _AN' GIT 20 CF THAT OLD PLUG For Filming By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (# — The embat- tled USS Caine has survived in- spection by the Navy and is ready to set sail on the Holiywood seas. That’s the report from Stanley |. Kramer, the producer who owns the film rights to ‘The Caine Mu- tiny.” The novel, which depicts a mutiny on an American ship dur- ing World War II, ranks with “Gone With the Wind” and “The Robe” among the best - selling books of modern times. The film version has been the picture. ° unstable captain Caine, Queeg, s depicted [ ‘They certainly aren’t Navy hasbeen very co- and we now have a! which ne been approved. r of Queeg re- ‘Nothing has-been al- Hy ? i ale ,. the Navy had cer- t to make; some to,. some we argued the outset, they didn’t ; to use ‘mutiny’ in the} we talked them out of! fe had to’make some chang- the character of Lt. Keefer, if A - i eEee ie i Se i g & E instance, we Couldn't use “The Navy is.a master geniuses and ex- ” But we could | that for the | we were al-| Ht fils producer added that the only | holding. up the start of the | decision of what di-' He not survive. I think the public will eventually become annoyed with having to wear the glasses. no chance for Guntighter's: HE thought that would end it; that his blunt rejection would convince Bonn so thoroughly that he’d leave him alone with Eve. Rimbaud went on eating for a moment. Then, observing how surprised and disappointed Bonn seemed to be, he said flatly, “I’m through siding underdogs. It’s a losing proposition.” Charley Boon sat there for a moment, absently tracing the steepled sweat stains on his hat} band with a big-knuckled finger. Finally he said, “I calculated Eke be a man who'd pay a jebt.” “What debt you talking about?” | he demanded. “You mean you don’t know?” } Bonn asked. “You ain't funning?” Rimbaud shook his head. “Well, according to what Doc Featherstone said two years ago, Sam Maiben saved your life.” “Saved my life?” Rimbaud echoed. Then abruptly he understood, and the knowledge shocked him. He hadn't seen Maiben since that eventful night when the home- steader had picked him out of the road and toted him to town in @ wagon. “I'd forgotten what his name} was,” Rimbaud admitted. Aware of Bonn’s intent gaze, he added,| ki “It’s my habit to pay a debt.” “Then you'll protect Sam's! place?” Bonn asked eagerly. Rimbaud nodded. He looked at! Eve and shrugged, and said, “So I take one more ride with the un- derdogs.” “Them Roman Four toughs won't be so brash when they hear Reds at Boxed M,” Bonn pre- icted_ smili: by Le L uietly, “I'm engaged to Sam) “Them Roman Four toughs Hiaiben” be - ——_ — hear ‘or a moment, while the ironic| you're at Boxed significance of tg words lanced| twice before tangling through him, Rimbaud stared at ik Going : . e Ting. Link. = A self-mocking smile formed| Sttee he hurried - toward on Rimbaud’s whisker-shagged anton Seon Lew would face as he reached for his hat.) Youig t. Ri Perhaps ‘A shiftless saddle tramp thanks| Wont ow tonishe You for a fine supper,” he ac- eg he gt sol knowledged, remembering what! irae aeh ould = ae told Laney — ia in| Self @ Fep in one fight. ‘Jim, I'm sorry,” Eve sai r a sincere, subdued voice that was ee ae scarcely above a whisper. , “That also is a losing proposi- tion,” Rimbaud told her, and went on into the dining room. EBNIE LINK had been assigned came out of Bon the chore of watching the} linery wi huge hatbox rear entrance to Eve Odegarde’s| arms. a rs ad fing Lungry," Lew " Stromberg we had predicted. “He might just be fool enough to sneak in for a late supper.” It was a loco ‘idea, to Ernie's way of thinking. A useless waste] of time. But there was no use trying to reason with Lew Strom- berg. = ae in a lather ocr: losing that Mex graze in ora.} goods at the Standing in the shadow of Gab-| “But I'm in a big rush,” Ernie bert’s wagon shed, Link watched! objected. “Got somethin’ zeal im- | the resaaurant’s lamplit doorway] portant to tell the boss.” ‘ and caught a brief glimpse of] Della laughed at him. “Tt can't | Jim Rimbaud moving across the] be that important,” she and} lutchen. Ernie grinned, recalling] left him standing there ‘with the! OW Spool young Bui ubrey} hatbox. ie had been when he found out who} it was he’d mistaken for Sam Maiben, Buck wasn’t much ac- count with a gun, nor with his fists either, for that matter; and Rimbaud was supposed to be a broom, ‘Bven Lew " Stromberg m. ven ae no part of him in a gun een ly. “They'll think] fig! twice before ory eee yu.” But Rimbaud paid him no He was looking at Eve's com- posed unsmiling face, wondering at her gravity and want to kiss the soberness from her : When Bonn had left, Rimbaud! told her, “This deal will dela; my plans a trifle, but, they still just like I said. That seemed to embarass Eve.| and “Il didn’t think you'd ever change,” she murmured, as much to herself as to him. “I thought you'd go on being what you were’ as long as you lived.” Then she held up her left hand, and as Rimbaud peered at the. small diamond ring, Eve said NOTAS CUBANAS Por RAOUL ALPIZAR POYO NUESTRA COLONIA Muchas personas, entre ellas, intimate ‘scenes. I be-|amigos cordiales, se -han acercado regular-size screen will|a mi a pedirme que escriba acer- interiors ;, then the big|ca del actual estado de auestra open up for the out-|Colonia cubana. door spectacle scenes.” No he querido complacerles. En estos pueblos pequefios, es natu- ; ral, que por algunos se cultive la rencilla y hasta el cuento '.4|malvado, pero como Ia mayoria de los que integran nuestra colo- , nia de cubanos y descendientes, | esta integrada por personas bue- | nas y decentes, he pensado que} nuestra labor ha de ser siempre’ _ide estrecha unjon entre todos los _ }'que tenemos el propio idioma y ‘las mismas costumbres. Ejercer | el papel de critico, seria a nues- ‘tro modo de ver las cosas, unaj labor contraproducente, que nos llevaria a una desunién, que no a debe de existir entre nosotros. Los cubanos de este Cayo siem- pre dieron nuestra de fraternal afecto. Aqui, desde el afo 1850, |), jvivieron cubanos y su lema fue! = siempre amarse los unos a los totros, practicando asi la erjstiana |. , Je obtener en est: mundo, dando maxima. Y si eso fué lo que hi-j jcieron nuestros padres y abuelos,| ,,,. ingratos y olvidadizos seriamos, Si} do - este querido Cayo, del cual ahora, en vez de cultivar la -reli- gion del afecto, nos fuéramos a yentretener en buscar querellas Y' todo corazon, que si alguna malquerencias entre los que aqui rencia existiera alg-na vez entre! j tenemos nuestros hogares. NAVY'S SPACE SUIT.—This |°* ¢! espiritu fraternal entre to-'bramas el Centenario del nacij- dos los hombres. Y sj estos tienen | lel mismo idioma, si tienen la pro-/los cubanos, se olviden esas pe- pressure suit can protect a jet | or rocket pilot at altitudes up | to 100,000 feet—nearly 19 miles Nada hay tan hermoso, como! jPia descendencia, estamos mas! quefieces y unidos todos, nos dis- ‘ obligados aun a respetar el pasa-|pongamos a luchar por mantener | —in case he is forced to bail out ja y procurar mantener siempre | aqui el crédito de Cuba, por vivir in thin atmosphere bordering ‘enhiesto, el estandarte del afecto,|en paz con los americanos, que on outer space. It was develop- \de la comprension y, sebre todo. tan genc:osamente nos direcieran ed for the U.S. Navy by B. F. |¢! de la tolerancia, que es la que/sie~ore su hospitalidad y su ca- Goodrich Co,, in Ak O. As |une mas estrechamente a los hom-| i esa |. |bres, por distintas que sean sus) ed for pressure measurements. The flexible suit carries its own supply of oxygen and air under creencias y sus acciones. Los que aqui nacimos de pa-! tdres cubanes, tenemos que recor- dar que todos elles, sin excep pressure. it inflates automati- | ciones de clase a una, pi raron j cally —4#) Wirephoto, Hhacoer de la sociedad cubana déi Link up a and eed, hag ould ‘be to have| man! | grada herencia, que no podemos af el Rimbaud’s reputation. A like that could draw top wages anywhere, and have his pick of pretty girls. _Ernie observed Charley Bonn sitting at the kitchen table with Rimbaud. Mildly curious, Link eased across the moonlit alley was standing close to the doorway when he heard Bonn ee you'll, protect Sam's place? There was a brief silence be- fore Rimbaud said, “So I take one more ride with the underdogs.” Ernie wasn't sure what that meant, until he heard Bonn say, if Fs if 5g Be AE s i a 3 Pe ; 4 Ht HE Cayo, um niicleo de Hermanos, prestos siempre a ofrecer la ayu- , cuando esta fuera solicitada. Por algo nuestro genial Apostol Marti, en carta dirigida al Sr. José Dolores Poyo en el afio 1891, decia: “quiero que el cubano de Cuba sea come le es el cubano de| Cayo Huese.” Es decir, nuestro Maestro reconocia en los cubanos residentes en el Cayo, disciplina, patrjotismo, espiritu de sacrificio y un profundo respeto a las le- yes. Estas virtudes resultan para nosotros, @ manera de una sa- i I i : atiea|t iii chin olvidar en ninguno de los actos que aqui realicemos. Por otra parte, nada’ hay mas bello y elocuente que la mitua compren- sion entre los seres humanos. Ella es la base principal de la felici- dad. Las farnilias forman Jos pue- hos y estos las naciones y cuan- do todos tienen el propio anhelo de luchar correctamente, de no ha- cer dafo al projimo, de tolerar rEetiee ple uit Hie fafieis to if z YF g & as faltas <eciprocomente, 8 ceros, porg: cuando las naciones Hegan a dis-| del Apostol fru'-r de la breve felicidad que Cayo y sus glorioso i 2 3 & = 3 F — eso nosotros, que nos senti- ubanos, que habiendo naci- i nuc “> s padres fueron pioneros, solo Geseamos sinceramente, dei en oF i ri 8 i H i los ecubanos residentes, que apro- vec. fo este afio en que cele-| raz, e <3 sii ife- F] if ie mierto del mas grande y puro de Ta. i | i i i its : i Tiho. Solo asi, nuestra Colonia serd grande y respetada por propjos y da, la extrafios. No se comprende que en | mundo su progreso y su un nocleo relativamente pequefio|que con amor a nuestros de hombres, que son amigos. exis- | jantes, olvidamos sus pequefias tan diferencias de criterio tan tas y slo aicanzamoseaver y § grandes, que les separen y les ha- | admirer sus virtodes. 7 i g li E a3 I