The Key West Citizen Newspaper, July 17, 1947, Page 8

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U.S. FASHION CHANGES PACE FOR FALL TINAQLESER JOSEPW WHITEHEAD JOSET WALKER | Sra a oc ee a ARE POTTER By DOROTHY ROE Associated Press Fashion Editor es 5 the fall fashion picture shapes up, hysteria comes to a slow Special Czech 1 ; TODAY s 3 boll im the average American homes, women’s clubs shelve 7 h ANNIVERSARIES t eqular programs to discuss the baitle of the hemline, and | oa (Know America) cwabonla hold tight dat checkbooks. Courts OU i r4—Enbriage Gerry, mer- | New York designers, previewing the new silhouetie, explain! PRAGUE.—(AP).—In a year aie ae pare deena het-ité time for a change, and that the new clothes appear and ‘a half. tne extraordinary fig Vice President, born at | starting only because the American eye has become accus- peoples cqurts which Czechosiav- ! Marblehead, Mass. Died in office, | |Nov. 23, 1814. 1745 - aboration during the Nazi oc- | Revolution tomed t@ peneilelim lines and short skirts for the five wer years akia set up to geal in hard- og which these were required by law. handed retribution for crimes of Be thet as it may, the gale are going to have to do a lot of “ll Timothy ry Pickering, us . hav roved their |three Cabinet positions under shopping Olle fall, if they intend to be in step with fashion. eee PS. PREV NM | President Washington, who pér- ’ toughness, formed great services for his Whether Mrs. U.S.A. is going to accept longer skirts and bulging 1° cuted by order of the 24 | ount te at Salem, Mass. iplines without a battle is a question which has department 3,.ci21 courts in Bohemia and | n. 29, 1929. etore buyers in @ state bordering on nervous collapse at the Moravia were 713 persons: and | “John Jacob. Agtor. ime eoment, @8 they traipse from showroom to showroom in New ms se en soy ‘ 41. Of | migrant fur’ trader, New York ¥ nese UWO: Classes slieutly more | founder { the family fortune, ork «,@arment center and try to decide just how far their cus. {cn two Classes sliglttly: more lacveloner Ot Mactan eee a ‘orers @@m be pushed. of German nation: ality. The rest {Ger > of pure Czech nationality. 17 William Cranch, s these, jail _ sentences | District of Columbi: totaling 206,334 years—averaging | y. Died March 29, 1848. Pictured herewith are typical examples of the new sil- we vette, selected from the fall collections of New York's cou- yroup, which sets the styles for the nation. Major trends slightl tirat, the longer skirt, mid-calf for street wear, ankle cach jth for afternoon or cocktail wear; second, the rounded cis yeider line, prevalent but not universal; third, the padded or A In sora akia s ee igures have y een compile ted oy F i mere so A. ea all collec- the courts continue in operation ! fourth, the nip ine, achie' in me CaSES until the end of this year. omer corselet belts; fifth, the flared skirt, which in some mee is completely circular. NETTIE ROSENTEIN’S black slipper satin dinner suit is typ- noted a circuit judge 3, born at Weymouth, pt. 1, 1855. w {missiona over 50 y bishop in Japan for from which no born at Pittsfield, rs, Mass. Died April 4, 1936. | | Natural resources of Korea in- ‘clude gold, iron and coal, but | er z three-quarters of the 25 million | HOME LE | of the mew look in dress-up clothes, with its full skirt, short inhabitants are farmers, { het with flaring peplum and general 1880 air. ane anes 1a | LEAMINGTON he largest non-polar ice fields | “LAIRE, MeCARDELL, who has shunned shoulder pads for in the world are in Aliska and | MIAMI, FLORIDA | several gea@sons, does it again this year, puts wide collars on ithe ¥ wits and coats, clings to her waistiength jackets, puts new: wee im her longer skirts, most of which are almost ballet ene | G SELLS That Good | teogth, even for casual street or campus wear. pall Gace S nt 10 COPELAND, all-American designer, presents some slim-! | STAR * BRAND | o@ deeases. goes for sumptuous new materials and a rounded! AMERICAN COFFEE | bipline. Typical of the SAMUEL KASS collection is his taffeta; and CUBAN é / \——Try A Yound Today——— “SS ukon, *Low Summer Rates x Air Conditioned Dining Room and Cocktail Lounge *100 Rooms and 100° Baths— Air-Cooled Radio in Every Room *Parking Lot Adjoining Opposite Greyhound and Trailway Bus Station *Se Habla Espanol ; 5 evening gown with billowing sleeves, ten-yard hemline. - Such important new points as the minute waistline, rounded | hipline and upstanding collar are combined in ADELE SIMP-! SON'S Mave one-piece crepe dress with skirt length just above! New fullness in suit skirts is illustrated by PAULINE TRIG-| CRES dressmaker suit in feather-weight broadcloth, with inter-, eeting side closing. CLARE POTTER does a dramatic one-| eeowed digner gown in white and silver lame, with « graceful! scort. Mustrating the new mode of elegance is JOSEPH WHITE-, NEAD'S white and gray brocaded satin evening gown, with full boultamt skirt. The empire waistline is typified by JOSET| WALKER'S casual wool street dress with surplice closing and/| tener cash. TINA LESER revives odey's Lady Book styles with; «@ eapeback suit in oxford gray men’s wear flannel, with ballet! P ngth skirt concentrating fullness at the back. ede ‘Gppetite? Feel drag- When due to simple or Had na cnemia, Vinelond [ Tonic can aslo you “fgel likee GARDNER'S PHARMACY 1114 Division St. Cor. Varela | hone 177 Free Delivery STO NTT RA RI? Se HE BY WEST CITIZEN [AP Newsteatures soldier, holder of | ” 1852—John McKim, Episcopal | TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS (Know America) Dr. Warren Weaver, director of the Natural Sciences, Rockefeller Foundation, mathematician, born at Reedsburg, Wis., 53 years ago. Erle Stanley Gardner of Teme- cula, Cal., novelist, born in i den, Mass., 58 years ago. Sanford Bates, commissioner of the New Jersey State Department of: Institutions, ex-U. S. prisons|* head, born in Boston, 63 years 2,744,823 OWN HOMES IN THE US. [ASHINGTON. — (AP). — . There ‘are now 41,744,823 owner-occupied-Homes in the United Stotes for which the ag owners paid a total of $66,821,- 841,079, the House Ways and! 1947 the average owher-occu Means Committee was told by| Pied home is 27 years old. : gon, “We assume an average o: Horbect Gee Ne sherutive | 33 years remaining economic vice-president of the National life to make 2 total of 60 years Association of Real Estate! allowed by the Treasury. Beards, “The annual write-off per- Nelson was testifying in sup- ,Missible to 21,740,000 families 4 ill’s would be three per cent of 66 ia i. ee ha ex se i billion ,dollars or about two bil- ision, to allow home owners to deduct. depreciation of their slion dollars. “The homes when filing income tax re- | tax paying obligation for pur- turns.” poses of this memorandum is He said his figures for the ;calculated at 25 per cent of his number of owner - occupied | income. dwellings were based on findings of the Census Bureau, the Fed- “The net saving to home- owning taxpayers would there- eral Reserye Board and the NHA. He divided them into 17,- fore be 25 per cent of two 244,823 non-farm homes and billion, or $500,000,000. _ “The average saving on in- 4,500,000 farm dwellings. “We assume -from all exist- come tax to the average home owning family would be about ing data,” he said, “that in } AC ALL METAL gAWNINGS When OPEN—It’s A Distinctive Awning When CLOSED—It’s A Perfect Storm Shutter CONSTRUCTED OF HEAVY GALVANIZED SHEET METAL GUARANTEED WILL NOT RUST OR ROT Finished in Gleaming Enamel—Your Choice of Colo Monparam, or Design Simple to Operate - Terms - Model on Demonstration “Beg LEE BROS. 614 GREENE ST. PHONE 4 Phone for FREE Estimate cp Sun al Storm | | i | LUCKY STRIKE sci THE TOBACCO AUCTIONEER! “I'VE SOLD well over 350 million pounds of tobacco at the auctions down South, and year after year, I’ve seen the makers of Lucky Strike buy quality tobacco...fine, light, _ fragrant tobacco that makes a grand smoke.” J. H. Burnett, independent tobacco auctioneer of Buffalo Springs, Va., has been a Lucky Strike smoker for 16 years S/MFT $9 remember,., "lat Corsica, Pa., 67 years ago. Dr. Pau] ago. 4 Dr. Waldo G. Teland, director | average home owner’s ; 1947 of the American Council of Laath:! éd Societies, Washington, bérn in ‘Newton, Mass., 68 years ago, James Cagney, actor, born. in New York. 43 years ago. { Rev.. Dr. Frederick W. Evans iof Troy; N. Y., former moderator of the, Presbyterian Church, born | rr, Klapper, president af! Queens College, Flushing, N. Y,, jborn in Rumania, 62 years ago. Fish, like cattle, seek st from the sun in hot days. Company, | Fast, Dependable Freight and Express Service MIAMI and KEY WEST Schedule: (No Stops Ea Route) LEAVES ‘cine ee a a Siem, Office: 813 Caroline Street ae WAREHOUSE; Corner Eaten ond Franck Bosete THE MAN ‘WHO KNOWS— Lucky Strike Means Fine ya So Round, So Firm, So Fully Packed —So Free and Easy on the Drew »>

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