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Popes THE KEY WEST citizen Sait: joous 1, wie The Key West Citizen Only Daily Newspaper in Key West and Monree County NORMAN D. ARTMAN Business Manager| i Entered at Key West, Florida, as Second Class Matter Subscription (by carrier), 25¢ per week; year, $12.00; by mail, $15.60 a a teetehcncteonadatennad humans ene ee enatntetsi inta tierra soe oti ogee een ee GOOD LOOKING POLITICIANS The Republican Party’s National Chairman, Leon- ard W. Hall, has come up with some advice to would-be politicians, He says recent elections have proved voters today want candidates who can put their personalities over well on television screens. The Republican National Chairman says it helps if the politicians are good looking, and explains that modern communications media are changing political campaign techniques. This appraisal, with which we are in general agree-|. Editor's Note: This is the four- mont, makes it probable that the field of politics will] %,!" 2 sree slvine the com- attract more erstwhile glamor boys than heretofore. We} tiandling aA juveniles in Monroe have no particular objections to this, except that the| County. The report was compiled trend might spread to the opposite sex and. we might pe egg ager a soon find ourselves witnessing keen competition from] tional Probation and Parole Asso- members of the fairer sex to attract votes, The more we| <istion, think about this, the more interesting it becomes, and the ladies might be able to put on quite a show. : Although a study of services pro- Whether the candidate is male or female, however, howe id the cael system Lie, it appears that a good camera technique is going to be|%t a0 objective shal “agp one of the major necessary qualifications for successful hiro hacer giradies the pores politicians in the future and thosé who seek to achieve|provided by the schools and de- success in: tics;would do well to start brushing up their Expert Reports School Services linquency are of such importance| that we feel comments regarding camera tec hoe ; Get off to a good start this year by helping your|dren requiring . special church and actively participating in its work. ¢ Peace will be assured.in the world when there is|that the.visiting teacher has no| enough force for peace and. less wishful hoping. es LN ean a 3 of attendance. officer. i teacher. It is understood, however, pecial training in either.the field edi * A Now is the time to watch Newspaper pages gid Pomona piegpaongers clearance sales which always make December. prices Rice’ deinen, i seem pretty high. We are of the belief that the Air Force is entitled|™ ¢ . to its own academy especially since it is now the major Hens oracatly offen 3 treatment program based on military service from the expense standpoint. an ceiacaeadae of behavior cau- sation. The school is an ramen So far as the legal records disclose, there has never be chided april rier agg been a trial, since the advent of law, that Has resulted in 8 pgs oral aaed occur. a thoroughly satisfied plaintiff and an equally satisfied defendant. INIEILISIMA| LIUIDIE aa . BRUCE OMT ANI TIE MWIETETOIS! FIA) i TRIWIATY(S} GIO MMAIRIEIAI IRIAINEERIE/ DIS} 12. Shops 17. Part of an 20. Before 22. Invite 24 Inhabitant of: suffix 27. ila animal Bg i; i ii i Fr iff H *F j | ee od OS ad wid 9 NS) On Coun andling Of Juvenile Cases pose ge array foolproof security features. Fix- tures and: furniture should not be of the type used in jail cells but light and maintain. Tooms are essi activity area for boys and gi couple should be included in this small, family type detention home. An interview room may be also used for a medical examining room’ with. scales and examining tables stored in the closet when not in| use. Closet and storage space should be ample, call for emergencies . a 5 On several occasions, there were| @s many as two white girls on hand | at a tir. « Therefor». 7 that the » Tee Sent to ‘ther planning. Staff é. A detention home is. subject to as an aid.in 2 it) aay Result: his hips and waist- ;|pow run 34 to 36,” ty Few Taboos Today -|few taboos in this modern age,” Ee des TERR PAGE CA NDR 3 lextreme fluctuation in population. jit may be like a foster home one} tention home and should be on! Aiea Get WR Se Cowboys Are ° Bigger All Over DENVER ® — It isn’t only in their feet that cowmen are bigger than they use: to be. They’re big- ger all over, A Denver buyer of Western clothes, noting a boot salesman’s | observation that the famous West- | ern boot is several sizes larger| than it was in bygone ‘years, said | today the same holds true ‘for| clothing. ‘Take pants, for instance. “The average rancher\ doesn’t| ride a horse as much 4s be used to,” the buyer. said. “He uses a truck or a jeep for a lot of his ie are expanding, Pants sizes It's different with the rodeo cow- boys, who do a lot of the stiffest kind of riding. They keep their weight down, so their trouser sizes’ Tun mostly 30 to 33, The rodeo hand’s favorite hat now is a “dogger style’ number with a four-inch brim. TULSA, Okla. @—An FBI man told members of the State Sheriffs and Peace Officers Assu, Mon- day the “code of morality which usually guides the lives of most of our citizens is being thrown into discord.” . He said this was particularly true with juveniles, J. F. Rogers, special representa- tive to FBI Director J, Edgar! Hoover, added: | These youngsters believe that base and vulgar things are the! order of the day. Lewd shows and| -| salacious literature are not frowned | upon in modern society. There are| MAY NEED JAIL COPAN, Okla. Ww — Last week! this northeastern Oklahoma -village tore down its jail for lack of cus- tomers. Tuesday burglars broke into a hardware store and stole $1,000 worth of merchandise, Sher- iff W. D. Spears said. Ch i rh i a fil g & re : P | TFs i ; iE Z ii fi E F f ih : é i a i é aBf rir Brae E Hy i S258 i F i Bite it F, i i 2 3 “ER [ : Hi h} : [ | i H i i H Ft Bt a 3 fi i mah mf 7H tie f z £ 3 Fs 2 sf H ED =i : : t : z : sf 4 nas Eis iF *t i U : i i cy Pr 3 rf se sii ae. | f g3 i ! 2 Ay i fe ze i y : of i ifs ile re E 3 : F i E A F EF F z a igh Ht if if Hj ; et fi Mi F E fF j i rd} uh rr Hi i § B 3 iE ii E if i Es 4 & fi i as 53 1, Load it on naval véssels’ sail it around WASHINGTON ( — Anybody] The butter costs the government/wears out, know what to do with 131,000 tons|about 66 cents a pound but sells of butter? ion the world market for only 46 Some .of ‘the best brains in gov-/cents. ernment are trying. to figure out} The government's problem is thatidous a lend-grease program to ‘get ridjthere seems to be no way to get of it, but no one has come up with|rid of the butter without making’ the right answer. somebody mad. The present administration is iz plagued with the problem of sur- pluses—Surplus debts, surplus taxes, surplus unemployment, sur- plus leftover Democratic office- holders. It also has its shortages, of course, including a shortage of Re- but for the lingering resentment they still hold against us for the|utter memorial dried eggs we forced therm to ac-\®¥et, and provide the cept after the last war. Se _ Cs Rpdecd attraction ult a stout ice meh _~ haps outweighing it, too, It might be sold to the Soviet 3. Offer it to the Soviet govi ment for nothing if each Russian Beare jprogram the supply is being added| error of underestimating their cus- before. publican Senators, But to a visiting taxpayer the most striking shortage is the shortage of ideas on how to! et rid of that 131,000 tons of sur- plus butter. Meanwhile, under Uncle Sam’s farm price support government, which is reported to be yearning for 100,000 tons, if it would make for real friendship. But the statesmen here figure they have already learned that butter won't melt in a Russian mouth, It can’t. be given away to the poor because that would be gallop- Derity. 4, Congress wants to get-a°raise |in pay but is bashful about peasant and bureaucrat got a free jone-pound block of butter labeled “Gift of the U.S.A.” This would to at the rate of 1,000 tons a day. Today's Business la flat bonus in surplus; butter in- | stead of crass cash? « é NEW YORK (®—Steelmen are| But if strike-hedge buying beginning to wonder if that ex-|be added to this hoped-for spring pected order pickup is going to|buying upturn, steel business could come in Fi after all, Ogilook pretty good during the first will it be put off until March? (half. Their customers seem to have a much fatter inventory of steel than steelmen had counted upon in their earlier predictions. The steel mills have made this same ats zg fe i 83 ; eiiets ae FE: bf: eiEb. zg i Cc I I i % I “f E i i i i Lo ¥ ! @ To ¥ 3 H z Fy? f E i F ie li et chat i