The Key West Citizen Newspaper, March 2, 1953, Page 10

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Page 10 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Monday, March 2, 1953 FLASH GORDON THADOEUS BOLT! DO YOU MEAN TO SIT THS ARTIST CREATURE IS HOLDING BEN A «NOT EXACTLY, MY DEAR MARTHA BOSS! He's EASY, BETTER SLUG HIM, HUH, BOSS? I JUNGLE TREETOPS. Wy ‘YOU GIVE THE MYSTERY POWDER-- IN FOOD? BETTA,IS THERE ANY IN THESE SANDWICHES ? A YES. THEY WERE INTENDED FOR YOU~-IF —\_necessany-- l= 1EN I START CREATING GREAT MASTERPIECE, © NOT TOLERATE = LOOK! = > MERE COME > OZARK IKE ae ANO BUBBER <> », BEAN! ANING/ I'D STUPIO.. Lote " THEY'RE GONE!... L GUESS THOSE COPS COULDN'T HEAR HIM WOVER THE ENGINE RO* 2 ‘YOU MUST TELLME! 1S THERE AN ANTIDOTE FOR THIS? NONE, IT WEARS OFF--EVENTUALLY- IF --PERMITTEOTO- KNOW WHO CAN OUT-TALK \) MAGGIE 16 HER MOTHER! T D BE AWFUL TO LISTEN «yon aag| West Germany Signs Promise To Pay Debts LONDON (# — West Germany | signed Friday an agreement prom- ising to pay off $3,270,000,000 in debts to 30 nations dating back to pre-Hitler days. The U. S. share, owed to the government and pri- vate investors, is about 1% billion. Warren Lee Pierson, U. S. del- egate to the American-British- French Commission which super- vised the negotiations, urged the nations signing the pact—18 all told Friday—to ratify it quickly. He praised J. A. Abs, the West Ger- man delegate, for ‘‘willingness at all times to work toward agree- ment.” “If this agreement is executed in ' the same spirit as it was negoti- ated,” he continued, “it will be an important contribution to the re- covery of the world economy.” | Abs replied that West Germany’s signature demonstrated “‘its sin-' cere desire toward still greater integration in the world economy and toward resumption of coopera- tion with other countries in the financial field.” Nations which signed Friday, in| addition to West Germany, the} United States, Britain and France, were Belgium, Canada, Crelon, Denmark, Greece, Ireland, Liech. tenstein, Luxembourg, Norwa: Pakistan, Spain, Sweden, Switz | land, South Africa and Yugoslavia. i The U. S. Securities and Ex-_ change Commission in Washington | estimated that by mid-summer it! should be possible to permit re-j sumption in trading in German securities, frozen in the U. S. since ' Pearl Harbor. { The new pacts cover German bonds in default since the rise of | Adolf Hitler 20 years ago, large: claims resulting from German sab- ; otage in World War I and loans! floated for German recovery after that war. RENT FORUM (These questions were selected from those often asked of the local rent office. If you have a question about the rent stabiliza- tion program address it to: Area Rent Office, 216 Federal Buiiding, Key West, Florida.) QUESTION: My landlord is at- tempting to force me to give up my garage so that his son can use it. What protection do I have under the Rent Regulations? ANSWER: Your landlord cannot deprive you of the use of your garage since it is a service that} is connected with the housing ac- comodation. If you wish to give it up voluntarily, your landlord must file a form for Decease in Services, so that your rent can be adjasted to reflect the de- crease in services. QUESTION: Can there be a mutually agreed upon increase in rent between landlord and tenant without official approval by the Area Rent Office? ANSWER: No. Any increase in the instance must first be ap- proved by the Area Rent Office be- fore any increase in rent can legally be paid. QUESTION: My landlord re- quires payment of rent by the week and it is necessary for me to mail him money orders. Can I deduct the cost of the money orders and postage from the rent id. paid. ANSWER: The Federal rent re- gulations do not prescribe the/ method of rent payments. Such matters are determined by the | rental agreement between the | Gunfighter’s Return] ¢ 5) by Leslie Ernenwein Chapter Nine en Eve saw Charley Bonn come out of the Shiloh she maneuvered to meet him midway across the street. The old home- steader appeared worried. He said, “That shows what Stromberg will do to grab a piece of Strip graze. Link made it look like a personal grudge betwixt him and Rimbaud, but it was meant to be a chop- down, pure and simple.” “Ts Jim still at the saloon?” Eve asked. Bonn nodded. “I tried to talk him into leaving town with me, but Rimbaud said he had to help Limpy Smith finish off a quart of | bourbon, Some darn foolishness about how important it was to drink twenty toasts.” “So Limpy has taken up with Jim,” murmured Eve. And then she said something that didn’t make sense to Charley Bonn: ee isn’t a drinking man, thank Bonn was wondering about that as he drove out of town with his wife. When he repeated Eve's words to Maria she said, “The poor | girl had a drunkard for a father, and is set on having a sober man for a husband. Anyone with a lick | of sense would understand her feeling the way she does.” “But what's Rimbaud being drunk got to do with it?” Bonn asked. “He could’ve been an old flame of Eve's for all we know,” Maria suggested with feminine intui- tion. “Seems like I remember hearing Faith Shumway mention something about him sparkin’ Eve Odegarde when he was here be- fore.” “I wouldn’t put no store in what Faith Shumway says, one way or the other,” Charley muttered. “She’s got a waggy tongue.” po PEAL had replaced the smashed lamp above his bar and now helped serve a crowd of customers attracted by the fight. “It’s an ill wind that doesn’t blow some good,” he confined to Finu- cane. Buck Aubrey came into the Shiloh and joined Lew Stromberg at the bar. “Ernie’s right arm is broke,” he reported. “Doc says it'll take upwards of an hour to fix a cast.” “Serves the wild hellion right for bustin’ up a poker game just when I was winnin’,” Joe Gabbert complained. “Whatever got into him, Lew?” Stromberg shrugged, maintain- ing the attitude of a mildly inter- ested observer. “Some grudge,” he suggested. Farther along the bar Jim Rim- baud stood listening to Limpy Smith’s recital of Doc Odegarde’s downfall. Limpy endéavored to sift to- missing. He gave up and put the sack back in his pocket, i gwaying, and announced, “But legarde was a crackerjack sur- geon, regardless. Look how he carved this knee of mine.” As Rimbaud turned to look at the stump Smith raised for inspec- tion, he saw Hugh Jubal and Red Shafter come through the bat- wings. Remembering that Jubal was Stromberg’s foreman, Rim- baud thought: That makes five of them in town.,He decided he'd had enough bourbon. “Doc cut right through the joint,” Limpy -bragged, and lifted the leg so high he lost his balance. Rimbaud attempted to grab him, but Limpy staggered sideways, colliding with Hugh Jubal, who swore irritably. Smith caught at Jubal’s vest to right himself. “Don’t use me for no leanin’ post!” Jubal protested. Presently, as Della Stromberg’s rig went past in dust-swirling haste, Mrs. Bonn said, “You should’ve seen how she snubbed Eve right in front of folks, tonight. It was downright brazen. You'd of thought Eve was some Burro Alley trollop the way Della treated her.” “Maybe it’s the other way around,” Charley said. “What do you mean by that?” “Nothing,” Charley muttered. “Nothin’ at all.” . He gave Smith a shove that sent him sprawling into the spittle- stained sawdust, whereupon Red Shafter cackled, “Behold the face on the barroom floor!” Jim Rimbaud endeavored to convince himself that this was none of his affair; that Limpy Smith was just a drunken dish- washer who'd always be shoved around by someone. It was in the cards. But even as that reasoning ran through his mind, Rimbaud NOTAS CUBANAS Por RAOUL ALPIZAR POYO LA PERLA DEL SUR Para el viajero avido de con-| templar bellos panoramas, que pongan en su espiritu esa sereni- dad que proporcionan las obras de | la Naturaleza, la “Perla del Sur," es decir, la ciudad de Cienfuegos, ha de ser siempre interesante mo- tivo de observacion y de encanto. , Esta populosa ciudad, fundada! en la costa del Mar Caribe, en el) aho de 1819, ocupa_ precisamente el lugar que se conocia por la Vi- lla India de Jagua, donde el fa- moso Castillo que lleva ese nom- bre, se conserva intacto a la vista del viajero. Esta ciudad es progresista y su aspecto moderno y la cultura y/| hospitalidad de sus habitantes, ha cen de ella el lugar mas impor- tante despues que se deja atras la capital de la Republica. Posee lindos parques y jardines muy bien cuidados, asi como un amplio boulevard y un pe }malecon, digno de ser admirado por los visitantes. Actuaimente su poblacion aleanza la suma_ apro- ximada de noventa y cuatro jochocientos diez. Tiene un ma }fico aeropuerto, — recien inaugurado, con amplia para recibir en sus i clase de aviones. Su bahia es hermosisima landlord and tenant. As far as the {0° !@5 mas bellas y grandes rent regulations are concerned, the landlord has the right to de- mand, and the tenant is obligated | to pay, the,legal maximum rent without any deductions. HAS!’T LOST HIS AMBITION YET | CANTON, Mil. w—Young David | Lee Scalf is in Graham Hospital |te club, como en el Liceo, famoso | again the 3ist time he's been hospitalized since he was bern 1! years age. The boy. who is recovering from | Atlantico, que por su mo en cargar azucares, siempre surcada por barcos de todas na cionalidades. Se cultivan alli los deportes de la pesca, remo, natacion, caza yachting. En una de las peque isletas que existen a la vera de la amplia bahia, esta situado el mag-| nifico Club de Pesca. Tanto en es por su cultura y el Casino Es pafol, son recibidos cordiaknente todos los visitantes tandoles a participar de las grar fiestas his fifth major operation, was hos. | que esas ins: jones celebran va pitalized six months after he was! born without an abdominal wall. | His fifth major operation was {ro | ci Jesse. said his son ‘has never lost his ambition to some day be a doctor himself’ rias veces di te e} aho El bello Yacht Club de esta d siempre rto para que visi el Club ie Cazadores y elles situacdos ber | Sante bahia. Desde cualquiera de estos clubes puede admirarse al fondo, un bello panorama natural. y las lomas de Trinidad, ofrecen a la camara fotografica del viajero, motives bastantes, para llevar a su hogar, cuando retorne, bellas fotografias de h.gares interesan- tes y muy dignos de ser admira- Cienfuegos posee amplios y bien | atentidos hoteles y la estancia del | |turista en tan bella ciudad, resulta \inolvidable, por las gratas emo- {ciones recibidas y por la cortesia |con que los habitantes de esa gran }ciudad reciben y atienden a los {que la visitan, Despues de la linda capital, es a jnuestro juicio, Cienfuegos, la mas |interesante de todas las_poblacio- jnes de la isla. Bien es verdad que en Santiago de Cuba, hay rincones historicos, de un interés inmenso, Ss montafas de la famosa Sierra Maestra, que parecen rodear la ciudad, le dan fantastico aspecto, pero en bellezas naturales, en aris-! tocracia y buen gusto, es la Perla del Sur, la primera de todas las que estan situadas a los largo del territorio nacional cubano En esta ciudad de Cienfuegos, al} ninar de celebrarse solemne ite la Semana Mayor. se efec- n unos lindos carnavales, aca-| o$ mejores y mas interesan- del pais, en cuyos festejos to parte las mejores y mas cul- tas instituciones de Ia localidad, dando un aspecto artistico y de lia cultura, que mo se en: tran muy facilmente en fies de esta clase, en diferentes res de la Republica A la entrada de la bahia de | Clenfuegos, hay un rincon enean tador, que parece desprendido de uno de los lindes cuentos de LAS MIL. Y UNA NOCHES. Nos referi nas a! lugar denominado “Pase “sHhes. Alli enes a el via rtables cabafias y un elegante club, dotade de todos les modernos adelantos en jos esta blecimientos de esa clase. Este el centro de o que alli pernocta said sharply, “That's no fit way te treat a cripple.” “And who are you?” Jubal de- manded. It occurred to Rimbaud that the Roman Four ramrod was like Lew Stromberg in the way he looked at a man. Like he was the main Be ing Jubal’: ignoring Jubal’s q baud helped Lim; bacco into the paper, most of it Ji cheeks as he observed the Roman Four line-up. It was an old estab- lished trick, he reflected; a ‘tradi- tional use of excess power to smother opposition. He had seen it in Lincoln County and on count less occasions across the border. Yet now, as he came on, Lew Stromberg said, “If my foreman waylaid you he made a mi and is willing to admit it.” Wholly surprised at this unex- pected admission, Rimbaud at Stromberg and knew something that he hadn’t even guessed be- fore. But the puzzli ition of alee “2 im. De- spite rom] 'S arrogance a Slsey aes the man was jominat a calculating cau- tion that seevied in direct contrast to his nature. Not cowardice, sure- ly, or fear of physical harm, but a caution spawned by his greed for graze. Rimbaud halted directly in front of Jubal and said, “I'm listening.” (To be continued) siente que esté en eStrecha co- munion con la Naturaleza y su espiritu sacude todas las crven- tas asperezas del camino, para s0- lazarse tranquilamente, con el lindo espectaculo que contemplan ; SUS Ojos. | En este rincén de Pasacaba- llos, se dan facilidades para la natacion, se realizan lindas ex- ‘La desembocadura del rio Damujijcursiones a diversos lugares y los que gustan de la equitacién, alli encuentran magnificos ejemplares, que les transportan por vericue- tos y lomas, todas ellas de una inefable atraccién. Todos los afios, el tercer do- mingo del mes de Julio se llevan a cabo en la bahia de Cienfuegos grandes regatas de remos, er los que toman parte todos los clubes importante del pais, Hevando a esa ciudad un gran nimero de viajeros de todas partes de la Republica, Hay abundante pesca, sobre to- do, en el Rio Cenuco,, cerca de la ciudad, asi como en la desombo- cadura del Damuji. Alli hay nu- merosas lanchas de pesea, se \alquilan al viajero que de ‘este interesante deporte. |. La Perla del Sur, es uno de los lugares de verdadera belleza, que todos los visitantes a tierra cuba- na, debieran tratar de codocer. |En la seguridad de que habria de vivir en ellos el recuerdo amable ide las horas alli pasadas en la |contemplacion de sus panoramas ly sus valles y rios, que le dan un aspecto tan interesante, que resulta dificil de ser olaidado. La cascada de Habanilla, es una (de las mas bellas de Cuba y es j facil de visitar, por ester inme- |diata a la ciudad de Cienfuegos. | En una gran sintesis: visitar estos lugares, es recibir una in- yeccion de paz y de serenidad en el espiritu, en estos tiempos de angustias y de proyectiles atémi- j cos, Luce Appointment Confirmation Slowed WASHINGTON W — Senate eon- firmation of Mrs. Clare Beothe Luce as ambassader to Maly bas been held up temporarily at the request of Sen. Johnstes (D-8C). Johnston said that he hag received protests ecncerning Mrs, Luce, the wife of magazine editor Henry RB. Luce, “su 1 intend check into the matier carefully.” He would sot say what the pre tests were. By lose Sclinas and Red Reed

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