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PAGE FOUR SOCIETY FUR FOR THIS, FUR FOR THAT, AND FOR YOUR POCKETBOOK, roo "= sagen, How will you have your fur this year? In big or little doses? | At a price or a P-r-i-c-e? Would you care for an albino mink coat at $9,000 (very rare)? Or will you spend $1.95 for a} hatpin tipped with a great fur) pompom? In any case, the be-furred look is yours if you want it. And you will want it if you aren’t deaf to style notes. At the New York fashion open- ings, fur in its many new guises just about stole the show. It isn’t surprising to find that | fur coats in all price ranges are both better looking and less ex- pensive than ever before. The trend has been in that direction for some time, what with im- proved breeding and manufactur- ing processes. Wide Range Of Uses What is surprising is the great originality displayed in the sty- ling of furs. Whoever heard of a sedate lit- tle cloth suit having cuffs of flam- boyant red fox? Whoever heard of big clumpy sports shoes in leopard skin? And how would you like a sil- ver fox head for a handbag? } Or a black Persian lamb cael | with box pleats, of all things, in | the skirt? Or ermine tails for earrings? Most all-fur coats have a little more collar and a little less shoul- der than they had last year. j Most of them have interesting sleeves. One sleeve is made to be pushed up, just like a sweater sleeve. Detached fur is the best new idea as trimming for cloth coats. Use It In Two Places arate Spanish shaw] of beaver, it’s {obvious the shawl will be end- lessly useful on its own account. For a quaint look, adopt one of those tiny little fur shoulder capes and repeat the fur in a muff or a bag. The one rule for smartness is to use fur in at least two places on your costume. If you wear a pompom pin in, your hat, stick another on your purse. Or match up a fur neck- lace with a fur belt, or fur ear- rings with fur bows on your shoes. It’s a great fur season, an invi-j tation to experiment in new ways ito gain the be-furred look. AP WRITER JOTS DOWN TALES OF Conczervationists Win Contests, Get Promoted, Save Life CCC: OF HEROES AND FADS AND FUN COURSE AT U. OFF. By JACK STINNETT, WASHINGTON, Sept. 25.— Notes from the CCC (the refer- ence herein to C-men is not my invention; the boys of the Civil- ian Conservation Corps refer to themselves that way) Powers, Ore.—From an unpre- tentious member of the local CCC company to an army air corps lieutenant in less than two yea is the record of former Enrollee Robert W. Fish. Fish progressed from “average enrollee” to pow- der man (in charge of blasting on! the Rogue river project), to camp photographer, to camp newspaper | editor, to Ohio State University freshman (working his way through), to graduate of the} Army air corps base training! school at Glenview, IIL, and the; advanced schools at Randolph and Kelly Fields in Te: He's now with the 90th Bombardment Squadron at March Field, Calif. Minersville, Calif—An_ epi-|} demic of Indian hair-do’s follow- ed the camp showing here of the mov “Geronimo”. The favorite} was the scalp-lock”, consisting of a shaved head except fer aj waving patch of hair at the top of the noggin. Instead of} scalping the fadists, Company Commander Stambaugh did a re- verse Indian on the old Redskin} torture method. Those whose hair has grown out can now emerge; from barracks. Bluffton, Ind.—Junior Stanley Thompson was awarded , a shiny new double-bitted axe for winning the chopping contest at the camp here. Teamed with; Keith Bostwick, he also won the sawing contes Westfield, Mass. — After city firemen had “put out” the same} forest fire three times in two WHY I'LL VOTE FOR— (Continued from Page One) which all Americans, regardless of party, demand and which alone will serve to safeguard the nation’s peace and security. Wendell Willkie can about a coordination of effort on the part of government, business and industry that will insure the marshalling of all our forces to- ward this end. He will, furthermore, by the restoration of business confidence. insure the revival and perpetua- tion of free enterprise and indi- vidual initiative which have made this nation industrially great and prosperous and which step alone can bring about the re-employ- ment of both labor and capital. oss We shall be assured of an administration responsible to the people, one in which the three branches of government, legisla- tive, judicial and executive, shall each perform the functions allotted to it under the Constitu- | tion and in which the executive will not seek to usurp the pre- rogatives of the other co-equal branches. With Wendell Willkie in the White House the nation will once more be united in spirit and in purpose to carry out the destiny of a free people. AP F Leader j bring! ture Service Writer da: C-men, armed with camp | fire-fighting equipment, gave the blaze the once-over. P. S It's still out. Boulder City, Nev.—Our No. 1 inominee for the little man who had a busy day: Estel “Shorty” :Fout. Sitting on a float, about 500 feet off-shore in the choppy i blue waters of Lake Mead, a few ! miles above Boulder Dam, Shorty iheard the help-help cry of cramp- stricken Robert Bullman of Los Angeles. Shorty rescued Bull- ‘man, using break-holds and a chest-cross carry he had been | taught at camp. A few minutes later, Shorty rescued Miss Vida iWhite, 23 years old, Santa Monica, Calif., and an hour later |Miss Helen McCoy of Oklahoma |City, Okla. Lifeguard Paul Gust- jlin gave C-man Fout high praise ess his day’s work. Mill Creek. Calif—Among | wild visitors” to the camp here |are a flock of bears who walk | through (never around) the camp to the garbage pits. Just before dark, the C-men climb into trees to watch the evening parade. So ‘far not a bear has been hugged. | Meade, Kas——C-men here are ) gunning for the hit-and-run driver who killed “Minnie-the- | Moocher,” the camp's pet doe | who was so tame she would enter |the mess hall at meal times look- ing for her hand-out. The camp poets are working on an epic eulogy to Minnie, into which the further tragic note is being in- troduced that an autopsy dis- |closed Minnie was about to pre- jsent the camp herd with a new ee Outing, Mian.—Jim companion, pitching a double-header for the local camp’s baseball team, de- feated the Effie and Side Lake camps for the sub-district cham- pionship. He fanned 33 men. Long Islander Visiting Relatives of Whitestone, Long Island, N. Y., arrived in Key West last Saturday for a vis- it with his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Pinder, 1107 Southard street. MARRIAGE LICENSE Imer Wiggins, 42. and Alene Fine, 43, both of this city, were married yesterday by Rev. Floyd Bowery, according to records on file in county judge Raymond R. Lord’s office this morning. Passengers can go from Miami to Rio de Janeiro in two days and seven hours on a projected flight. ! Edith Fellows in Out West With The Peppers Also, Comedy and Serial PRIZE NITE — TONIGHT If your coat comes with a sep- | “the! THE KEY WEST CITIZEN BUSES CONTINUE | -— SAFETY RECORD SURVEY AND RELEASES STATISTICS | TAMPA, Sept. 24 (FNS).—Com- | pleting the statewide safety sur- vey of bus operations in Florida, ‘Asher Frank, director of the Florida Safety Council, had this to say of the survey: During the past 18 months, Florida buses have operated more than 20,000,000 miles, carried 3,- 000,000 passengers, without one Passenger getting killed or a bus driver charged with a fatality. The survey reveals that four drivers covered over 6,500,000 miles together, without one traf- fic fatality, during a period of 20 years. Bus drivers are given a thor- | Florida's Fish Film ‘Stage’ Hollywood movie makers may soon go “on location” at Marineland, Fla., to make full-length feature “starring” denizens of deep in huge Oceanariums, world’s only specially-designed underwater studios. C. V. Whitney (inset) was principal sponsor in construction of fish- ough schooling: first, in the shop; dom’s Mollywood, a magnet for scientists and laymen. second, in bus operations; third, in public relationship. The bus operators invest about $2,000.00 on every driver in his preliminary training, and public} relationship and the creation of jsood will is the biggest essential lof bus operations. oe! Buses are inspected when they restaurant {come in from trips and when they | your elbo\ go out. Bus drivers are not per-' ten people mitted to operate their buses counter at more than eight hours. Their Grandmaw’s home life is investigated: they! have cannot operate buses unless they was on are physically fit when they re-| howev port for duty. He ‘NEW GEOGRAPHY Jones runs a little you keep many maw where, if down, as rved at the tribute to food, you usually to w her “You 1 want me Grand- | PLANNED TO PRESENT INTI- MATE PICTURE OF ALL AMERICAS . tnick-waisted, white rinkles around her the res- 15c worth niled down ler her order pviously, As she passed n customer whis- quite treated The moth- d and your GAINESVILLE, Sept. 24. (FNS) “Human Geography of the Western Hemisphere” is the a name of a new course to be of- ferei by the University of Flor- ida this term. Its purpose is to present panorama the picture, problems, and possibilities of the Americas. Proposing to develop intelli- gent understanding and sym- pathetic appreciation of the lands and peoples of the Americas, the new course will bring up to date the student’s knowledge of those countries in this hemisphere whose destinies have been linked so closely with those of the United States. Dean Walter J. Matherly of the College of Business .Administra- tion, which is introducing the new course, said Dr. Rollin S. Atwood, Director of the Univer- sity’s Institute of Inter-American , Affairs, has been selected as the |, man best qualified to teach the *' course. |Perpall Engaged To Jacksonville Girl ¥ Dr. and Mrs. Cecil E. Foster of Jacksonville, Florida, announce the engagement of their daugh- ter, Lillian Elizabeth, to Everett Perpall of Jacksonville, son of is Mr. and Mrs. George V. Perpall oes that make of this city. The wedding will stationary engineer? be an event of late autumn. i 7 ee in erly looked dog lon she run th said WwW plain? ill some You bu physicist please ex- our a cup of tea and the sles that rise to the top € the opposite side of the cup, away from you. Super- that if you can sip before they break cup, the tea stationary remain away neuvering your side. ains y wagon, it’s the Tampatrib. the owner a of those discussions where you come to no definite conclusion but have a fine time conjecturing and matching wits | with the other fellc tion under dis: n “How would you describe water to a person who had been born blind?” The an: rs covered a wide range of ideas One would give a practical demonstration We take this means of express- ping the blind person’s fin- ing to our friends and neighbors to a saucer of water drawn our sincere thanks for the many the tap. then successively acts of kindness tendered us dur- i= bok water <0 | the = ing our recent sorrow, the loss of would know tepid, our beloved one, Lawrence Higgs. We are grateful to those who gave the use of their cars, the jdonors of the beautiful floral tributes and messages of sym- pathy. sept24-1tx MONROE THEATER Jane Withers and Gene Autry SHOOTING HIGH and GAMBLING ON THE HIGH SEAS Matinee—Balcony 10c, Or- | chestra 15-20c; Night—15-25¢ | z ._ ,| It was one Governors of New Mexico lived in the Palace of the Governors, built in 1610, until 1910. Texas declared its independ- ence of Mexico March 2, 1936, at Washington-on-the-Brazos. CARD OF THANKS THE FAMILY. , | TRY IT TODAY— The Favorite in Key West STAR >* BRAND CUBAN COFFEE ON SALE AT ALL GROCERS , ter asa . (clean, that it is reflective » when you see one ”;dash for it. blind ; hot i PENETRATOR PENS and very hot water and would be warned by steam when it was too hot or boiling . Also they would demonstrate cold water from cool through to the ice cube ' stage. Another person described wa- liquid, transparent if when still, showing & picture of the or trees, that when the wind crossed it, it rippled; that ocean , Water is salty and the tides mov- ed it back and forth, forming Another suggested rain is water, which the could feel dropping on them and © could identify by sound a: drips and trickles in amounts, or if in a large amou' land flowing over a cliff, it roare One person suggested quite ply, that the blind should take a drink of water. The idea of attempting to de- scribe the color of water was given up as too complex for the blind from birth, as the conception of color. the discussion had turned to ci or; what color, how would you describe pink to the blind, etc. waves. In Tampa you drive around a square block time after time hunting a parking space, and you make a I dashed for one, in a squeeze play, and didn’t make _it, at least not without putting a dent in the fender of the car next to mine. I got out to survey the damage_ It wasn't a very big dent but it did have the paint off my fender on it. I stepped up to the car and spoke to the lady oc- cupant. “Did you feel a bump?” ", and she smiled sweetly. “I dented your fender” “I don’t care”, she said wouldn’t care if you dented all four of them. They've been dent- ed before and nobody ever paid for it, why should you I had no answer to that and shrugged. She asked me a lot of questions, how long had I been in Tampa, did I like it, was I from the country and things like that Then she said: “You'd better pull out of here 66 O° Liquid-Tablets- Salve-Nese Drops ALAR in 7 days RIA relieves COLDS symptoms first day :\Try “Rub-My-Tism”—a Wonderful Liniment Lopez Funeral Service Established 1885 Licensed Funeral Directors and Embalmers 24-Hour Ambulance Service Phone 135 Night 696 Take a tip—take your trip by ever you travel by Florida's Zephyr Bus, you will arrive refreshed, rested, ready for anything—and with =e leit over! Sample One Way Faroe JACKSONVILLE -$ 7.55 TAMPA 6.85 GAINESVILLE __ .7.85 TALLAHASSEE 9.65 ATLANTA 1145 NEW YORK 18.90 CINCINNATI 17.05 BUS STATION Southard and Bahama Streets PHONE 242 Go by FTORTDAMoror|ines §f Poiitical | Quiz Answers , loday’s Birthdays (Questions on P on Page Two) 1. Henry F. 2. Luren D. Dickinson, 81 years old, of Michigan. 3. Fiorello H. LaGuardia, is mayor of New York and chairman of the American s ofthe joint defense board of United States and Canada. 4. The Internationa Team- sters Union. 5. Coffeyville, Ashurst of who liso cuien the a Kas. before my husband comes. Per- haps he won't notice it, but if and you're gone I can tell him I don't know anything about what happened”. “Well”, I said, “if that's way you feel, I'll just go in store and do my errand now, if you are still here when I come out, I'll face him with it”. “No”, she insisted, “wait we are gone. And beat it quick, because here he and she nodded in the direction of an approaching man. + I passed him and went the store. He was quite an odd look- does the this until now, comes”, ing man, thin drawn lips turning’ it down at the corners, a long. thin s nose. His suit was black and his straw hat sat on his head with- out the slightest trace of a tilt to it. The word that came to my! mind was “Scrooge”. I stood in the store and watched them drive have been plagued ever with the thought she care what damage to her husband's car?” doorway 5 away. I since he T, Wash. Schenectady. Federal Reserve Bank of mond Edith E. Wood « tion S born ig. ex., 48 years ago. Franklin W. Hobbs of Times, book ed but | y, ork, 49 years ag Judson T. Jer noted libr: N.Y. Hugh Leach, presider FROM MIA‘ Va, born im Rich= 6 years ago. World produ 1859 wo: started ir pace a m! miles hig! Strong Arm Brand Coffee Imported C r and Mocha. Orde day from your = A sect Loew a SMS ISAS SAA AAA OD AD ABIL ALA DLDDL li you pay to printers cities bids a farewel bank account. perienced other town. Phone 51 If Key West printing were be- low standard, if the printers of Key West were not expert, ex- craftsmen, might be some justification in sending of your printing toe an- ca YOU BUY OUT-OF-TOWN PRINTING READ THIS ADVERTISEMENT! The Money You Pay For Printing In Key West Comes Back To You, But, On the other hand, the money Lut the truth = thal omer in other l to your people whe knew ane appreciate goed printinme. Acs West pret Tr ers are rated fer technical abilit nee — teed emt at ut derstanding of the areca of be - ers of printing there As te the price—The Arte Pres~ can meet Iie~ of 2m ied grade establishment = am: ct KEEP KEY WEST MONEY IN KEY WEST The Artman Press The ( izes Boasietese iL JAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAM AAA AAA AAA AA AA AAA Add Al Liisa