The Key West Citizen Newspaper, March 11, 1953, Page 10

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Page 10 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN FLASH GORDON YOU MAKE AN EXCELLENT AAUORARE. EYOUR HGH-TONED FRIENOS LO SEE YOU NOW. SHHH# 00 Nor move ZEE MUSCLE, MONSIEUR Wednesday, March 11, 1953 L HEAR yYou'rRE | KEEP your MONEY, PUNCH! UNHAPPY, MACK! HERE! | | IT’S BLOOD MONEY... MONEY w= TAKE THE WIFE OUT | | FROM THE SPACESHIP CARGOES THEARD THaT | OTTO MECANKK | SOTA LOT OF | MONEY LEFT TO enough -ammunition tall times, for the were some criti- eal shortages and there was no ” committee mem- indicated they will ignore a suggestion by Sen. Taft 'R-Ohio) for a broadened inquiry conduct of the Korean Taft said after a White House conference Monday he wasn’t Hushand-Wife Team In Police Department SYRACUSE, N. Y. — Acting Mrs. William H. first husband-wife team in the Syracuse police de- heads the force's miss- ons bureau. His wife ‘was sworn in last week as “ guard. NO, as Lew Stromberg rode northward with six men_at noon, he muttered sourly, “One shiftless homesteader making suckers of my whole headquarters crew. It’s enough to turn a man’s stomach. By God, i should fire the bunch of you and hire some ‘real hands.” Hugh Jubal, still smarting from his inglorious defeat of Satur- day night, said, “Maybe Maiben sneaked into Junction and hid out at Eve Odegarde’s.” Stromberg rejected that by an- nouncing, “Sol Robillarde and Ernie are keeping a day-and-night watch between them in town.” “Sam has just been down- right lucky,” Jubal complained. “Chances are he’d of got caught last night if Rimbaud hadn’t run Bill off the ridge at Boxed M. I'd bet a month’s pay that Maiben ate supper with Rimbaud at his own table while the rest of us was watchin’ them other places. It stands to reason Sam must of ate somewheres.” Booger Bill glared at him. “Rim- baud busted my thumb,” he said sullenly, and stuck out his band- aged left hand in evidence. “I had to git it fixed, didn’t I?” “But you could of let us know,” Hugh Jubal complained, “instead of spendin’ a whole evenin’ at the Shiloh bar lappin" up beer. If you'd. of just tipped us off, we'd of took a look at Maiben’s place last night.” Lew Stromberg made a derisive, chopping motion at Jubal. “Don’t b nery the blame to him. It was your ult for not sending another man down there to see how things were going. I told you to-keep the crew moving and cover all that country, hour in and hour out. I thought rou could understand plain Eng- ish, Instead of me going to West Camp, I should've sent you, and done my own ramroding. I'll know better next time, by God!” Hugh Jubal hung his head. Get- ting dressed down in front of the men was nothing new. But it wasn’t a nice thing to take, and there were times, like now, when he wondered if those few extra dollars he got for being foreman were worth it. He’d always want- ed to be ramrod of a big outfit. All his life he'd itched to be the boss of a rough crew, to give or- ders and have the fine feeling that he was a cut above the common bunch. Now he wasn’t so sure, Presently, as they rode into a dry wash some three miles west of Maiben’s place, Stromberg called a halt. In the fashion of a/ and Slade. Toundup boss sending out circle! riders, he split the crew, telli Jubal, Red Shafter, and Booger Hates — Boxed _ “Now lon’t go making ets of your- selves,” he warned. “I’m short one man already. Just be sure that Maiben doesn’t get his supper there tonight.” “You still want him took alive?” Jubal asked. Stromberg nodded. “That's how I prefer it,” he said. “Of course, it may not be possible, and I want him grabbed even if you have to fill him full of lead to do it. But Tll pay a hundred-dollar bonus if he’s taken alive.” t Faris STROMBERG’S word was law. This dark saturnine man was king here, and his commands weren't to be questioned. He sel- dom bothered to explain his deci- sions, having an aristocrat’s con- tempt for hired hands. But now, sensing the crew's curiosity, Stromberg said, “It would be worth a hundred dollars to see Maiben behind bars. A dead home- steader might look like a hero to some folks. Especially to women. But a jailbird is no hero to anyone, He's just a fool who got himself caught.” “I figgered that was it,” Jubal said, a self-satisfied smile rutting his sorrel-stubbed. cheeks, “By — I ake ee . tromberg eyed him arrogantly and demanded, “Anything odd about my opinion?” “No,” Hugh said meekly. “Not a thing, Boss. It was just that Thad it figgered out in advance.” “First time I ever heard of a doorknob figuring,” Stromberg said sourly. Red Shafter laughed, Poking a finger at Jubal and saying, “A doorknob with ears.” he asked, “How about Rimbaud, Boss?” Stromberg thought about it for a moment before saying, “We'll run him off, when the sign is right. But. if Rimbaud got shot ag Mai ben’s place now, it would put Sol Robillarde in a bad spot, with the territorial elections coming up.” ” it difference does that make?” Shafter asked. “The difference between having the law with Roman Four or against it,” Stromberg explained. Stromberg at his fore- man and demanded, “Do you un- derstand your instructions?” “Well, you want Maiben ketched, alive or otherwise, and no shooting with Rimbaud until later on.” Stromberg nodded and rode off, followed by Aubrey, Flanagan, Even With Many Beauty Aids By DOROTHY ROE AP Women’s Editor Even if he calls you “‘modom,” says a nationally known beauty expert, don’t let a smooth-talking hairdresser talk you into having | your hair cut unless you want to. | Don’t fall for the blandishments jof a smart salesgirl and com with chartreuse eye shadow and |purple lipstick unless you plan to stare your husband into divorce ' court. And if you're 40, don’t think any blandishments of the beauty shops can make you look 20 again. All this is the advice of a tough young man with an Irish mug jnamed Frank “Westmore, whose {business is beautifying the Holly jwood stars and selling his family’s cosmetics line on the side Frank is the youngest of six i: famous Westmore brothers of Hol Iywood, who between them have had the movie mskeup busin in most of the major stu-io {sewed up for the last 30 years | Brother Pere had charge {makeup at Warner Brothers 29 years, brother Ern i ithe same job at 20th Cent {and RKO for 30 . been at Paramow 0 [Mont headed the makeup tee for Selznick untii his death, an the two youngsters. |Frank, now are cz Woman Of 40 Won't Look 20 to teach you makeup.’ So we jlearned.” Frank now is in the middle of a tour, telling women how to make the most of their looks. He is most interested in the beauty problema of the women of 40 and over, be- eause, as he says, “any young girl 5 pretty, no matter what she does to herself.” ‘ The chief mistakes of the middle- aged woman, he says, lie in over- doing makeup and trying too hard to look young. He explains: “Some women believe gray hair | is a disgrace, and rush to have it dyed at the first hint of silver. Actually, most of them would look better if they left it alone, Gray hair can be very beautiful, and it more softening to the face than # harsh dye, which looks phony. “They pile on too much makeup, too bright rouge, too much eye-} hadow and mascera, in the fond belief they're fooling the publie, vhen such is far from the ease n should learn to grow | cfully. 1's no sin fo Be} y ed. The middie years can } ¢ the most beautifal of all. That | is the period when a woman bas| mature beauty and poise, and when} E552 B z > gu aoa jsat_all the boys down around the |seph M. J itable and said, ‘Sous, I'm -going be written to { he should make the most of it, |¢™ Wilson for istead of running around fran. |‘etting the Scouts colly trying to look like a 16-|Company window OS - 7 { family tradition at ear-cld.” | ANO SHe's GONE —~l c 7 ’ . CNERBOARD SOMARD ) : | They inherited the mantle from’ Frank advises women to ‘culti ‘ } ene Ben I House. " itheir dad, who was a wigmaker, vate beauty “from the inside out,” | SENATORS ) , BALL PLaveR. _-” i lin England and won bis place in| saying SHIPMENT TO m™ woerep2/— You To . a \ |Holiywood after restoring half of; “Real beauty has te come from | bis peng i my mrustache that Adolphe Menjou | within—it's the reflection of hap-' WASHINGTON @ a thad shaved off in a hilarious mo-ipiness and character and inner vi-(Case and Musét, ment, half way through filming of taidy. AU the creams and pow “The Three Musketeers’ © ty the world can't fake it Mj that the Douglas Fairbanks Sr. Fairhonks, i isn't there” ° bithen jwho also was producing the pic ec erennenienteea item, grains, dairy, . jture, was so grateful tg the wig In the history of the United meat predecta for jmaker he decreed the elder West- States 12 federal officials have South Korea, jmore should do ail the hair and been tried is impeachment pro-| Theat warters wig work in his pictures from then ceedings, of whom four were deposit ip 6 on. Says Frank found guilty om one or more Korean currency to pay. ms i “That was the time whee Dad, counts. f sips Sars HELLO, ETTA. [> LIKE TO HAVE A TALK prog a 2), WITH YOU.’ COME ON--

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