The Key West Citizen Newspaper, July 15, 1953, Page 4

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‘THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Wednesday, July 15, 1953; The Key West Citizen lishes, from The Citizen Building, corner of Greene apd Ann Streets Only Deily Newspaper in Key West and Monrce County & P. ARTMAN GORMAN D, ARTMAN Entered at Key West, Florida, as Second Class Matter TELEPHONE 2-5661 and 2-5682 ‘SMaember of The Associated Press—The Associated Press is exclusively entitind to'use for reproduction of all news dispatches credited to :t! @& not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news Qublished here. Member Florida Press Association and Associate Dailies of Florida! @ubectiption (by carrier) 25¢ per week, year $12, by mail $15. ADVERTISING RATES MADE KNOWN ON APPLICATION |Women Can Be Deliberately Taught How To Live As Widows 52fety a By CYNTHIA LOWRY 'Notes j v ee YORK u—Vanda Sauer- ‘ 's husband deliberately taught The elerans hee; ating more than 20 years of i married life, to be @ successfll —— Leo J. Sauerborn died three Corner \years ago, and his wife Here are authoritative answers ito his shoes as président of the from the Veterans Administration '¢*Panding chemicals business they! to four questions of interest ora bey shoestring at the \former servicemen and their fami-/Deight rely | Today this blonde Milwaukee] Q. May I take institutional on- grandmother, @ golfer and presi-| farm training under the Korean|@ent of several. related chemical \GI Bill on a part-time basis? 1/Preducts, corporations, believes: want to get a job in a factory in a'firmly that woman's place is in \nearby town the rest of the time, |the office or factory; that the more ‘A. Under the law, institutional|the little woman knows about the)me, that is on-farm training must occupy Source of the family cabbage, the | ¥@ys toward your full time. better equipped she will be to cope blem. It is Q. I was totally disabled in an/with the problems of maintaining enter. automobile accident over six mon-|‘€ supply if tragedy hits. | It is a question ths ago, and my National Service| “Why, I never learned to cook,” | be Life Insurance premiums are un-|¢*Plained Mrs. Sauerborn. “My der waiver, I have a permanent! thought that was a com-| pian policy. Will my policy con- waste of time. But we always tinue to build up guaranteed lot of entertaining because| values, like it did while I was pay- ing my own preniums? A. Yes. A permanent plan pol- icy under waiver of premiums provides increasing guaranteed val- ues - including the loan privilege and the right to dividends - just ‘as though you were paying prem-; jums. . Q. I’m getting a VA pension for a total and permanent disability,|o¢ marine and I live in a house that I Te-ltive che ceived through an inheritance. If| male T sell the house, how much of the proceeds must be an in- ‘come, in figuring whether I come NN auf I 3 ue oe tee EE i o gs id gF if g zg H fit i iil Ese 238 i i Sree [ Bt gil I u HI E é BE { 523 g . i i A J i , industrial and automo- micals, almost entirely a Preserve. And this well- , extremely feminine exec- jutive is able to talk intelligently with - engineers, diesel [ There te have been many warnings from economists pote that consumer debt, or the total debt of the readenl sconomy, was expanding too rapidly. Usually th words of warning have been accompanied by Meas & steep rise in consumer credit and other debt to- in the United States. It is true that the total debt of the American economy true #, and has been, rising sharply. However, one could not _ @xpect anything else. The income of the American econo- my. is rising, as well as savings, population, and total pro- ‘Thus, it is only natural for total debt to rise too. _, fo get an accurate picture of what the rising Ameri. ean debt means, and whether or not it threatens us with an - ‘economic recession, one must look at the inereasing debt , compared with increased production, income and savings. : One does this, it is reassuring, since it is discovered that the growth of savinlys is moving upward faster than ¥ 5 of the total American debt. In fact, only in one Ba orld War Il has the total American debt -than have increased savings. Also, when comparing income and the total American debt, one can summarize the comparison by showing that ie gross debt has expanded about two hundred per cent sinée 1940, while the national income has expanded over KEY BOOKS By A. de T. GINCRAS (THE ENORMOUS RADIO AND)this if followed through to the let- OTHER STORIES by John Cheever/ter, is that child might not want to get up at all, but would prefer jto remain a very much amused convalescent with a continually varied program of entertainment. Guest Review by Dick Milne ‘by Bryan MacMahon, novel of \twenties in Ireland, published by |E. P, Dutton Publishing Company, ‘New York City, 512 pages.) Finn Dillon, the Prince of Cloone, ‘was the natural leader of all his fellows, a happy, devilish Irishman “in the old tradition of Erin. Here, through Finn and his’ friends and foes, passes the alter- mately quiet and uproarious pano- rama of an ancient Irish village of twenty five years ago. Ches MacNamara is ‘the ptory- teller for novelist Bryan MacMa- hon; He tells of the leadership giv- en by the legendary Finn to the young and old of Cloone, their happy stories, their occasional bloody forays. The. author, first introduced to en fret. & E eRe HF ge A Hy EH ft the _ two hundred fifty per cent. Therefore, the American debt 4m 1952 was a smaller proportian of the national income ’ than it was in 1940. : SEEK U. S. JET AIRLINERS A bill has been introduced in Congress which pro- vides Government loans up to twenty million dollars to U.S. companies which would build a jet airliner. Senator} ‘Charles W. Tobey, New Hampshire Republican, recently asked aviation leaders or views on the bill. *.* The chairman of the Civil Aeronautics Board, Os-| wald Ryan, replied that the bill would stimulate jet de- ‘and noted that U.S. air lines were lagging be-|Previously hind British air lines in this field. The C. A. B. chairman’ noted that the British had gained a lead of some five Years and that this was a matter of concern to the Board. Ryan also observed that this was not necessarily an insurmountable handicap, although he urged intensive devélopment on a jet airliner at once if the British ad- vantake was to be eliminated. The bill mentioned, pro- viding for loans up to twenty million dollars, would grant companies producing jet airliners a two million dollar loan cancellation for each jet transport produced. If a builder produced ten airliners, his loan would be cancel- led out. While there is a difference of opinion on this particu- lar bill, and some opposition to it from air line executives’ and-officials, we do not hesitate to endorse the general idea of a government-financed prod in the jet airlined de- velopment field. It should be kept in mind that the British Overseas Airways Corporation is a semi-govern- ment undertaking and that British jet airliners were pro- duced at least partially as a result of government aid. It should also be remembered that the American aircraft! industry was called upon three years ago to concentrate on military aircraft and that this has also slowed progress toward, completing the first U. S. jet airliner. » ‘With these facts in find, it is altogether proper for the Government to push development of a jet airliner, either through Congressional enactment of the proposed Hi American readers with “The Lion Tamer,” a’ collection of short stor- ies, continues to:paint a true Gae- lic in his new. work, And when Finn finally comes to’ {the end of the road via the noose, this fellow townsmen raise the age- {old lament, the Caoine. Ches, Finn’s inveterate ally, comes into his own as the new ;Prince of Cloone, and makes a i F ir Fe tre if i : : Bf HA zg fe FE fess 3 : it F E z & & 5 gee & i i i i rt [ jeffort-to carry on. Mr. MacMahon’s story is salty, poopie. ore, real > beaut Sbeas le.are + beaut rage age abd) PON and Madcap O'Neill; Gali- 'Ieo, the atheist cobbler; Metal Bel- ‘ly, the bellman; Old Font, reposit- lory of knowledge, and Brink-o’-the i f BR ge of i i i er, and eff for the bines sat fans. The ‘sophistica’ make up i -and funeral director. It’s an easy story to read, a hard one to forget, i ag amt of the ie| ‘The National Geographic Society says ships may someday be able ito mavigate by picking out known jfeatures on the ocean bottom with echoing devices. a B8ba Te zeix Py | i [ E Affi yA? rf fe rir if eee | ! i RB i i E SEs { i 5 £ k a fi ries sefid E (CHILDREN OF THE RAINBOW), lvaliant, and probably successful,’ 3 Grave, who.acts as both. midwife! BUCKLEY under the income limitations for a) pension? A. In the case of a house that came into your through inheritance, all the proceeds will be considered as income, for pen- sion 8 Q. I was released from service! (Today's Women By DOROTHY ROE Associated Press Fashion Sditor | NEW YORK (#—Every dog has | this day and the poodle’s day is) gone from the field of fall fashion.|in July, 1952. pa Foigd must I Polished woolens that shine like|Start training ler the Korean . iGI Bill? ee ee A. Veterans such as yourself, re- leased from service before August 20, 1952, must begin their training under the Korean GI Bill be Aug- ‘ust 20, 1954. Those released after August 20, 1952, have two years from date of separation in which | day for coats, suits and dresses, jbeing previewed this week for the! jnation’s fashion press at showing) by member firm of the New York! {Dress Institute and other fashion ‘houses, | Elegance is the keynote of the, bextit new season, expressed in sumptu-) . jous fabrics, lavish fur trimmings, |(Veterans living in Key West, rive |glitter embroidery and a silhouette ida who wish or seg a cata |that is needle-slim for daytime, |about their cages Pana Post with full skirts and petticoats re-the VA office at aos served for after dark. Office Building.) ie shaggy-deg fabries of the ist two seasons have practically) jvanished, and in their place is ’ Polar Runway {procession of high-luster woolens such as shiny zybeline and satiny| WASHINGTON (—Navy_ Sea- (broadcloth, often stiown in black bees, working with the Air Force, that shinés like a polished shoe, {have packed \snow into a hard, | Heavy. slipper satins and .rich! oa runway near the North ‘brocades and lames make their/Pole. ‘appearance in costumes for cock-| The Navy, announcing this Mon- ‘tails, dinner and the theater, often|day, said the site is the farthest! \trimmed with mink, sable or er-/point north thaf it has tested con- mine, struction equipment. The exact | No fabric’ is confined to any onejlocation was not disclosed. type of costume, Visiting fashion| Work on the runway, 150 feet ‘editors are seeing satins used ‘in Wide, began late in March. By the \s sorsey end of June, the Navy said wheeled \Spectator sports wear, wool jersey/®! landi nd. taking trimmed with fur for ,cocktailiaireraft were landing a j i ff. The planes which took the men dresses and jewel. ~ embroidered!© i ith ‘wool dinner guits, Silk gauze of/im, originally were equipped wi ithe type used in the Indian sarij is ppm lined and ysed_ by b ‘one igner for a simple after- ‘noon dress which acquires distine- Name Cost Jo A tion from the rich drapery of the) NEW YORK W—A 74-year-old ifabrie. man, fired after 45 years as a The full-length evening gown is'city laborer because he used an ‘important once more, often shown! assumed name, has asked the with a matching full-length coat or State Supreme Court to order his jcape. reinstatement. The “bathtub look” of bare! Nicholas Lana said in his peti- ‘shoulders and ‘revealing necklines| tion Monday that he had used’ is being replaced by a covered-|the, name “Joseph Porgie” while up look, Many dinner dresses have'on the city payroll because that sleeves and. modest necklines. name appeared on his original Many formal evening gowns haye/employment card. He did not ex- straps. plain why. ; It is a ladylike era of well-bred} . luxury, no doubt influenced by a coronation year. Vulgarity i Safe In Fire Passe, sho¢king exposures are bad| ip Rosa taste, and elegance is the order of Sal tall be it ar re Hy 4 a budge from their fourth-floor apartment as flames enveloped it. Deputy Fire Chief Joseph Gray told them, “Okay, but when you're ‘overcome we'll carry you out,” An hour later the fire was ‘under control and the Rosas calmly walked out, Their flat was the only part of the top three stories of the building not burned out. YOUNGSTER REVIVES PORTALES, N. M, #—Mrs. D. B. Lieb found her 17-menth-old son knocked unconscious Monday by a live wire he had rut in his mouth. experts and plant operators about ‘technical problems, Her firms (Lubaid and Zecol) Produce some 26 different products which by chemical action clean ie running parts of motors, House Passes Bill WASHINGTON (#—A bill to sim- plify customs procedures, backed ‘was passed by the House unani- mously Monday and sent to ‘the ‘Senate, Most of the changes it would make are technical ones, eliminat- Crossword Puzzle Mims i ACROSS 1. Quick drying 6 Young dog 9. Solemn wonder 12. Fragrance 13. Southern stute: abbr. 29. Blunt 3. 35. Kind of weak ii ge bill or similar legislation. Li z cn vee é I “WH you save a little money every month, you will be wealthy. i = F i cy i FE sf RBS RESENS BS ERES SEE © eae é i «We confess that some of today’s hep tunes are be- yond our reach. r i if I We are a little tired of people who refuse to say: whether they are or were a Commun’s, on ground: y~% & would incriminate them. ERE ? RES IF THE FOOD HERE ISN'T AS GOOD UR MESS HALL!” in i 4 £ {

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