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* THE KEY WEST CITIZEN PAGE THREY INSTRUCTIONS IN AIR~ DEFENSE AT SCHOOLS _ISEES DOUBLE PROBLEM FACING - ~~~ {PARITY.IN PRICES, | “Today In History. By BYRON PRICE i BELL AT | IS BIG PROBLEM + | (Chief of Bureau, The Associated | ; ie one ek FORT PIERCE NOW DETERMINED EFFORT MADE ‘More and more do events at! ‘ Washington demonstrate how com- / REMAINS SILENT BY RECOVERY OFFICIALS eeecesee eaeceececooe SAT Se 1683—(250 years ago) A rep- (By Asneciated Presa) resentative Assembly first met in} BERLIN, Oct. 17.—A. plan | to New York, at the order of Gov./give: a thousand ‘unemployed Thomas Dongan. teachers jobs coaching pupils in ‘local schools how to meet attacks 1777—Burgoyne’s surrender at/from the air was announced at a Saratoga, N. Y. meeting of the Berlin unit of the Reich’s Air Defense League, Major Emil von Loeper, chief ef the organization, said that for Purposes of aerial defense, the capital had been divided into 20 1843—B’nai Brith, oldest a largest Jewish fraternal organiza- jtion in the United States, found- ed in New York. pletely the national destiny hinges | aes GET EXTRA. DO as on the economic views and theories | LLAI AND: CENTS of Mr. Roosevelt, and whether of} [Pent diminishes almost té ; est LAYTON STERLING,\ PITCH.| ““When.the New York Yankees i bit: f came back from Chicago a year atiegd eis: goa ago, after walloping the Chicago ING DIAMONDBALL GAME Cubs in four straight world series PLAYED AT BAYVIEW PARK! Etmes, Joseph Vincent MeCarhy was hailed as the ranking “master eae mind” of the big leagues, reward- (By OSCAR PITA) ed with a new three-year contract; The Pelicans defeated“ the ‘Cubs'‘at @ Yancy figure and his team 4 to 3 last night in tne most ‘ex-/trowned with the wreath of citing diamondball game of the vinéibiility. on. ‘ And so, my friends, exactly one ~ Clayton Sterling, Fenix star year later William Harold Terry her, broke all strike out rec-|trooped back to the Big Town lords and set one that will prob-|trom: witha band -of bly stand for some time untoueh- Howling, “triumphant * New.’ York d. Sterling pitched for the Cubs'Giants, received a eivie welcome and fanned 14 Pelican batters. [and ‘was ‘promptly ‘rewarded’ With: The contest ran pretty smooth, ® new five-year-contract as all through the sixth: -with. the} ¢ldiined (him. the. new ‘miracle chy ueding 3000 Ae inf bah enth, however, Sterling lost con- M l¢ theYankees “and J. fidence when* Park. mis-}V. McCarthy had been crowned, judged a caught fly in contertida at tall, with .a.cwreath of razz- that gave the opposition their first Legion nit? rhe all Pieri vo Scores by virtue of three suc. in the rush to board the new - abd ~tbidte balls: .:<fbell bdndwagon arfa proclaim the The “Divers” cinched the con- greatness, of an aggregation that test in the ninth when Ward got all but a few optimists regarded a-seratch, the third for - the @ a burich of. misfits, and fugi- night, went to second on an in-'tives from the earthquake zone d out. L. Baso singled just be- last spring, ‘ard stole third and both scored on a long fly to} . No baseball at right ‘center which the! yeats 4 der nabbed but tumbled: ‘twice before 's certain Choice turnover in twenty r so hugely enjoyable to ‘section of the popu- ‘Giants good game and! As“we suggested in advance, {ee Giants ‘were and . are. the ‘peoples’ choice.” They. boast. com. paratively few great names, iow. 1 as Terry, aoe s reir : ie af =f so ve ste Et fensive: work and timely enough hitting to keep us on top. Any man in the lineup, from Joe Moore in the Teadoff “position down to and including the pitcher, might drive in the winning run or pull f the Weeisive play in the field. This developed a rare feeling of team confidence and kept any- body from getting an exaggerated idea about his value or ability.” LEGALS SATION NOTICE a APPLIC. Centigrade, exceeded. by laboratory Leyden, Holland, where 272.92 was achieved. At 265 de- the Kharkov savants report, and helium gases liquefy then become solid, and the re- nce of metals to electric cur-} ,Noties is hereby. maa on, = zero, | 16th day of Nov =. undersigned petrator com amento anew 5 rno! BITES WIFE SEVERELY Sil, apply. to the Hohorabie. Hugh > unty Judge in and for Mon- ity, Fle for bis final | CHICAGO—Mrs. Ela Galvin of | Sisoharee Administrator cum is city obtained a divorce when | S*Amsnto annex of the Eatate of ae i pec ving T™ the Matter of the Estate of AL WL A deceased. fame of Hubbell and Ott, |. testified that her husband was/ the same time be will the habit of biting her severely,| Sinistrator cum testamento Sadi of said estate. and ask for Miss Anne Mullon recently won Republican nomination for elerk of North Hempstead the present Town Clerk hmidt, who six years ago defeat- her. father, William Mallon for office. ier approv Dated September 12, we. i Administrator com tam, nexo of the Batate Arnold, HARRIS & ALBURY, Attorneys for Administrater cum testamento annero, eg SY lage O6tS-20-1T-24-33; now 1933. MIAMI FIREMEN TO MEET LOCAL FIRE LADS AT BAYVIEW PARK i i | | ' The Miami Firemen’s diamoud- ball team left that city this morn- ing over the highway enroute to |Key West, and will arrive here ge evening, Tonight at 8 o’clock at Bayview Park they will meet the local firemen in the first of A two-game series, the other to ‘be yplayed tomorrow night. The visiting team is said to be good shape for the ~ proposed ‘tonight; while the local boys|_ have also been getting themselves im shape for the fracas, anda good ition of the sport is promised all’ who, attend.! The: public’ is' itivited: to come opt sand yensepal Right and tomorrow night and help contribute ‘toward the sucedss 0f both events. _In the event there is any surp!us fund after payifif ‘expensés, ‘this ‘will be turned over to the -fire- “men, % _ Key West Ingraham, catcher: G. Garcia; first’ ‘base. ~ C. Castillo, second base. M. Acevedo, third base. A. Acevedo, ss. % - Pie ‘Traynor, right ‘short. Machin, left field: A. ‘Perez, center field, H. Molina, right field. E. Hernahdeéz, pitcher. Ward, n Sterling, pitcher, )not they work in practice. Take a roster of the outstand- ing news subjects treated today lin your daily’ newspaper. ,.-There jare the war debt discussions, the buy-now campaign, the renewed pressure to expand credit and. re- open closed banks, the struggle to maintain industrial. peace—you could name ai dozen others, all coinciding to eniphasize the domi- nant place of; economics in the daily life of the administration. Economics Everywhere In most of fits details economics is rated a very complicated and moderately dul} subject. Yet some ( of the fundamentals must be un-| derstood today by everyone who triés to understand what is taking plage about him. } or three things about: the President and his econ- ;omic proble and policies are j understood, ill miake the news from Washi! mn much clearer. Tt. will expl why. certain steps ize! the games to-|4"¢ being takep and how they fit) yj). B, H. Middlebrooks, Dr. E. into the genera# picture. One. point to be remembered is that the administration faces a double problem and must do its thinking accordingly. First there is the emergency problem of getting the wheels started again. "Anyone can under- stand the economics of that. More men at work ‘at better wages means more baying by the public, which in turn gives more work to more. men at: better wages. It-is on. that principle that the NRA is operating. But beyond, that.is a second objective. Mr, Roosevelt has to consider that his term of office runs unti] 1937, His administra- tion will have failed to attain its | PLACED, OUT OF COMMISSION] AS RESULT OF SEPTEMBER STORM; BELFRY BADLY! TWISTED DURING WINDS | (iby Associated Press) '“ FORT PIERCE,: Fla.; Oct. 17. —The memorial bell that called the faithful to worship in the First Christian church here for a quar-j ter of a century now lays silent! on the church lawn—a casualty of the September storm. j When the howling winds of the, twisted the church | belfry, the bell was left suspended lin such a way that it was danger-| ous to churchgoers. The bell was ipushed out on a scaffolding and}, jdropped to the ground, partly} limbedding itself and breaking the ‘eross-bar from which it swung. | The ‘bell, estimated to weigh}. |3,000 pounds, was :given to the church by! Mrs. Ws C. Dittman, ) | hurricane ‘Van Hood:and Dr. Alter Hood in {memory of their father, Rabun G, | Hood, who organized the Baptist church here injthe latter part of ‘the nineteenth century. When the Baptist church con- gregation erected a new building, the building housing the bell was! jsold to the Christian chureh con- igregation, and the bell went with |the building. | EXHIBITS PIGS | LONDON—Thomas Cain of this city was fined for exhibiting pigs ; whose skin had been colored with | rouge. | —— Wilfred Brann, 16, of Gardi- * Substitutes: C. Griffin and’ A.|economic goals if the present up-'ner, Me., recently launched a home Parks. CLASSIFIED head at of 1c @ word for each in- but the minimum for the ‘every instance is Give their address as well as their tele- tage, 1803 Petrotia Street. Ap- ply 225 Simhonton Street, All grammar and ‘ high — school grades.. Graduate _ teacher; Yates reasonable. Wm. J. Eddy, 1506 South street. oct14-3tx PIANO — Beginners! | Special Courses. Progressive, interest- ing. 4 weeks—8 lessons—$1.75. 8 weeks—16 lessons—$3.50. Rates void after Saturday. Chas. Roberts Stadio, 613 Margaret st. J. L. Stowers Music Co. FOR SALE pS Sere Penns ie ap ) FOR SALE VERY CHEA ‘om- ‘plete set of golf elubs consisti of 8 pieces with bag. Apply Jée Peariman’s, Inc. Oct.17-2-4x oct LOST—Walking stick with crook- ed handle of amber colored polished horn. Reward. Phone 75 or 890-W. oct l4-4ex, | ’ turn is not bolstered by.more per- manent measures to keep the _ Ee a ae Pogeeseveweseseoeeeooses | wheels turning months hence. He | build. must be, and is, thinking mueh of that. Sometimes the emergency and permanent features of the pro- gram overlap, but in many cases there is a sharp line of distinc- tion, very Farm Problem Temporary There is a temporary farm problem, which the administra- tion has tried to solve by plowing and there is a larger farm prob- lem which it’ is trying to solve by building up’ gradually a sure future control over production. Secretary Wallace is talking about little ‘else these days. Mr. Roosevelt has shied away from outtight: inffation because his advisers see in it only a tem- porary remedy, with dire results harder part still lies ahead.” i |made eabin cruiser, which took! him three years of spare time to i : |two or three years hence. He is |thinking of an “index dollar,” or a “commodity dollar,” which can | be stabilized according to current values over an indefinite period. That is why the debt discussions are ptoceeding so slowly; nobody ‘knows yet ih what kind of dollars the debts are to be paid. The public works program is an ;emergehcy program. So is the jbuy now program. They are in: tended to help make the coming winter less cheerless, less danger- ous. Beyond, far beyond, is the |larger concern of the administra- ; tion, That is what the president ;meant when he said in his New {York speech that “the longer, 4. I, Any good Electric Refrigerator Saves Kitchen Time and Effort... but a. GENERAL @B E More than Pays ea) ; LECTRIC EROS Itself LJ HAT, you saye oN food cos ake household expenses will cheet the easy bapa Tay mentson a G-E. od General Electric build long dependabil to every G-E refrig- erator—giving you many extra years of uninterrupted per- formance. Only a General Electric gives you all these features: © All-Steel Cabrmet. Porcelain inside and out. @ Stainless Steel Freezing Chamber. Cannot chip ry oe Freezes more ice faster. @ Sliding Shelves. Adjustable in pas, ©@ Temperature Control Defre: Foot Pedal Door Opener @ Automatic Interior i @ Monstor Top Seated- n-Steel, Usestesscur- rent with 's life- ity in- le reserve ‘it be proud ef your G-F atter it hak paid for tt- <2. See ower complete @is- Play of General Electrion. We they again. available. “land are going up steadily because By HERBERT PLUMMER (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, October 17.—} That expression familiar when the| question of naval armaments is to the fore—“parity”—has cropped{ up again in Washington. Another race for parity is on, ’ 1910—Julia Ward Howe, poet and reformer, died aged 91. — 1931—Al Capone found guilty ‘in Chicago by a Federal Court jury and later sentenced to 11 years ih prison, a $50,000 fine and costs of prosecution. but this time it has nothing to do! with ships. Parity in prices for farmers is the big goal now. } A determined effort is being} made by recovery officials to get ‘the extra dollars ad cents con- sumers are being asked to pay for} their food supplies back to the! farmers at a faster rate than in- creases occur in. prices the farm- ers pay for commodities. It has been estimated that the extra pennies now being spent by Housewives and other consumers for their food supplies at the cor- ner grocery store will add more! than a billion dollars this year to} farmers’ incomes. : Consumers’ prices have been farm prices have improved. Aiming At Pre-War In February 15 of this year, for example, farm prices were 49 per-|{ cent of their pre-war level. On} August 15 they had increased to 72-percent. It is estimated that if the farmers coritinue to fare as! well they should have an added) income this year of around §$1,- 200,000,000 greater than their! gross income last year. | Two farm products alone— wheat and potatoes—account for} a sixth of this large sum, and both | of them have shown the largest} advance in retail prices. The bushel of potatees that the consumer paid 90 cents for in February cost him $2.10 in August | because of the short crop this year. That’s an advance of 133 percent to the consumers, which is expected to put $176,000,000 more | in the farmers’ pockets. | +.The advance to the consumer in| flour and flour products, due to} the shortage in the wheat crop this year and the wheat control _pro- fram, may mean $127,000,000 ad.| ditional income ‘to the ‘farmers, | On The Other Hand— | ~ But what the farmer gains this| year is only: half the story. The —_—__.. MOSQUITOES ARE Front Sereen Doors with , grork, bronze screen: . Front Screen"Doors with at bottom: Galvanized Bronze 5. Plain Screen Doors, 1 1-8” thick: Special Price $1.90 2.50 Frames, Galvanized Bronze Door and Window Se: to width: Bronze, 30” wide, per yard One Ply Bullseye Roofing, Mica Kote Medium Weight, WE STOCK ABOUT 20 Lot of 2,000 feet of 2x3, very high grade stock, but slightly stained, otherwise O. K., to go $30 00 Wesesene e RAIN MEANS THAT THE Regular Price $7.15 7.50 Regular Price $4.90 30 Regular Price $2.50 3.10 Window Screen Frames, each ........... Sereen Wire, Bronze or Galvanized, 24” wide to 48” wide, price varies according price Red Standard Slate Surfaced Roofing, per other half is the addition to the jcost of things he must buy. It is here that the race for parity in prices comes in. Keeping in mind that - farm prices were 49 percent of their; pre-war levela in February, the prices of things the farmer had to. buy at that time were 101 per-, cent, On August 15 they had ris- en to 112 percent as compared to 72 pereent which he got for his products. The gap between these prices has been reduced but still parity is a long way off. districts and 173 groups. Another speaker said that the national sotialists’ teachers union had appointed a teacher at ‘each school to supervise defense activity among the pupils, but hoped for the appointment of unemployed teachers for the work, Actording to Major von Loeper, a schoo! to train teachers of aerial defense is to be. éstablished in Berlin, CNS eRe Cen Miss Mary Ward, a former Dem- ‘ocratic committeewoman for Mas- sachusetts as Boston’s immigration commisgioner. creo BENJAMIN LOPEZ FUNERAL HOME ENGRAVED GREETING. CARDS Place Your Order Early Over 500 Different Sam- ples To Choose From PRICED LOW 40 Styles of Engraving CHRISTMAS CARDS ARE MORE FASHION. ABLE THAN EVER THIS YEAR. WISH YOUR. FRIENDS A MERRY CHRIST- MAS BY GREETING ‘CARDS. FOR DISTINCTIVE CARDS, SELECT THEM HERE. Cards To Suit Every Taste At All Prices THE ARTMAN PRESS CITIZEN BLDG. vai RAIN CQMING fancy grille Special Price $5.00 6.25 © cypress panels Special Price $3.90 4.30 that so many reen knocked Gown. Use your spare time now -. 85e 40c Galvanized, 30” wide, per yard ._. still held -- $1.25 per roll $2.60 poy, and -- $2.50 DIFFERENT WEIGHTS AND QUALITIES OF ROOF- ING MATERIALS. YOU ARE ABLE TO BUY ANYTHING IN ROOFINGS YOU ELECTRIC COMPANY A. F.-AYALA, Sales Manager a BE ROOFING MATERIALS DIXIE GALVANIZED SHINGLES with nails, still at all time low price of ‘Coal miners are starting to get “Your home is worthy of the best” COLL MMPI IA PAL CLAALAAA EAE PHONE 51 \ A few hundred Com. Aluminum’ Flooring, $70.00 M. goat M. ALSO MEANS THAT TIME TO PLANT 15 HERE VIGORO, the remarkable Key, Westers usp: 8 $0.50 N . . . : : . : . : : :