The Key West Citizen Newspaper, May 3, 1926, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

MONDAY, MAY 3, 1926. BASEBALL SESHeSeorsesovesoseesens YESTERDAY'S RESULTS American League Chicago, 8; Cleveland, 3. St. Louis, 9; Detroit, 6. Washington, 4; Philadelphia, 3, Others not scheduled. National League Y Brooklyn, 9; Boston, 1. Philadelphia, 7; New York, 4. Cincinnati, 4; Pittsburg, 3. Chicago, 6,; St. Louis 5. TODAY’S GAMES American League Detroit at Chicago. St. Louis at Cleveland. Washington at Boston. New York at Philadelphia. National League Boston at Brooklyn. Philadelphia at New York. Cincinnati at St. Louis. Only games scheduled. , at STANDINGS American League W/L.» Pet. 813 684 -588 526 412 1353 333 316 od New York .. Chieago _... Cleveland ... Washington National League W. L. . Pet. Brooklyn .... 10 625 Chieago .. “588 New York . 529 Cincinnati .... 563 Philadelphia . 500 St. Louis . 444 Pittsburgh 421 Boston . 853 - SCROR CONCHA eeeseenenees {BY Associated Prens) NGGALES, Sonora—Jack John- Sem, former heavyweight cham- pion, beat Pat Lester, Tucson, 5 15 rounds, CSCseCa-sseveseee0 CALENDAR OF SPORTS Seeeesecesacseceecccoene RACING—Meeting of Metro- politan Jockey Club, at Jamaica. Meeting of Maryland Jockey Club, at Pimlico. Meeting of» Ken- tucky Racing Association, at Lex- ington. Meeting of Juarez Jeckey Club, at Juarez, Mexico, BASEBALL—Opening 6f the seasop of the Tri-State League. oe GOLF — Massachusetts profes- sional championship, at Dedham, Mass. BOWLING—Pacitic Coast Bowl- nig Congress tournament, at San Too Old | { | eeescees ago today | COeeececcessooocecsceRes, leevecccecseccecccoccoces | j Ceeeeecoooooocorcocococe aaa tn fh enh te TODAY'S EVENTS NOTES OF SPORT _ MARINE NOTES THE KEY WEST CITIZEN leccccccccscovccccccccoce | 2.500 t Steve Donoghue, England’s pre-| palma, Capt. Ward, sailed for Ha- rly 2,500 build- ier jockey, will continue to ride! yana, last night, with 26 cars ex- Ny \as a freelance this year. y-five years ago today €, Fla., also was vis:ted | ri,<¢ in 20 years) is to be played| Flagler, Capt. Hansen, s |by cable between chess clubs of| Havana last night with conflagration which de-| r | stroyed $10,000,000 in property. Dareic Froggate, 40-year-old jockey of Attica, Kas., who is arousing much interest in his handling of race horses at Maryland tracks. Turf ex perts opine he would have been an; other Sande had he left his Kansas tory with Try Again at Bowie the other day, showed him to be a smart pilot { GREAT BRITAIN FACES GENERAL STRIKE TONIGHT OVER ONE MILLION WORKERS. TO JOIN MINERS WALK- } ING OUT ON MIDNIGHT) FRIDAY i the e hurst, ) A celebration of National Music WwW wi begin today in more than 1,500 e.ties throughout the United States and Canada, annual spr.ng meeting of | ican Banke: gan its ons today Cc. An international conference of _dtamatie and musical crities, the | first of its kind ever held, is to be- g-n a five-day session today in | Paris. Federal Judge George W. Eng-} ‘lish, of the Eastern Illinois district, has been cited to appear at the bar of the U. swer charges of usurpation power and other misdemanors. Hearing of a Government re- quest to file an amended bill || aga‘nst the Standard O!l Company} of Indiana and 50 other corpora-} farm years ago. His sensational vic-| tions charged with violating the} anti-trust laws, is to be held in the Federal court at Chicago today. “The Educational Significance of the Parent-Teacher Movement” | is to be the general topic at the hirtieth annual convention of the National Congress of Parent- Teacher Associations, which is to beg'n its sessions me popes couey in in Atlanta. | Miss Mary Thompson Thompson And Ernest Burton Marry Saturday Afternoon A very pretty wedding was jsolemnized at the Congregational | |chureh Saturday afternoon when cutive council of the Amer-} Association is to be-| at Pine-| “ S. senate today to an-| of| A six-board chess match (the} vhicage and London. | The Memphis Country ;,;;Club! will be host to amateur championship golf tourn-} jament during the third week of! | June. The Lecdon sporting fraternity | is to give a big testimonial on |May-9 to Ted (Kid) Lewis, who {has announced his retirement from jthe ring. Boston baseball fans are won-| |dering how soon Arthur Vance,| [the crack pitcher of the Braves, | | will come out of the slump he has been in ever since the start of the} |training season. | Miss Ryan, California’s cele- brated international tennis player, | | believes .in the luck-bringing| | Powers of a toy black cat. A} | friend regularly sends here one | ‘on the eve of an important | match. | In tennis circles it is generally | |reckoned unlucky for a player to| |wear green, and even a racquet strung with green gut or with! \green binding on the frame is| looked at askance by many play- ers, | | It is said that the ball is less| jlively this year, but this fact seems | |to have made no difference in the} jterrifie batting of the New York) |Yankees. Thier record of fifty-| |two hits in foar games shows that | all balls look alike to the Yanks. | The rules of the Jockey Club jof England have been adopted by | nearly every sporting country in| 's Mary Thompson, daughter of | ithe (By Associated Press) LONDON, May: 3.—Great Mr. and Mrs. John F. Thompson, Britain at midnight tonight faces’ lof this city, was joined in wedlock the gravest domestic menace which ‘© Ernest A. Burton, formerly of has overhung the nation since the West Palm Beach, but now con- fall of the Stuart dynasty. This |nected with the Armour Company is a general strike which it is esti-/of Key West. Rev. Eldridge per- thated will call out immediately | formed the ceremony which was | some 1,405,000 men to join the | quiet. , 1,120,000 miners who went pn/ The newlyweds will reside strike at midnight Friday. The crisis culminated early to- day when the government an- nounced that its negotiations with on Margaxet street. | The mascot of Mile. Suzanne endeavor to prevent a walkout of iS her color scheme—a yellow, the workers in various trades had %t¢en or red bandeau, with a silk) broken down. The announcement *veater to match. She selects said the government would decline | these colors according to the class to reopen the negotiations unless | °f player she is going to meet. the congress withdrew its order | Yellow stands for a player of lit- for a general strike and repudiated | tle account; green for an op- Diega. FENCING international York, BOXING—tTiger Flowers vs. George Jones, 10 rounds, at At- Janta. Tony Marullo vs. Martin » Burke, 15 rounds, at New Orleans, TIME LIMIT IN QUALIFYING FOR PRIMARY ENDS MAY 9 (By Associated Press) TALLAHASSEE, May 3.— inday, Mey 9 will be the fing of the time limit allowed un- the law in which prospective didates for office may qualify the June primary, it was an- need today at the secretary of te’s “office. ‘The law prercribes that all can- must have their qualifica- in £6 days prior to the day thé primary, which is June 8. Thompson Trophy matches, at New | IT_DRIVES OUT WORMS ‘The surest sign of worms inj; dy is paleness, lack of in- in play, fretfulness, vari-| appetite, picking at the nose! sudden starting in sleep. | m these symptoms appear it is} to give White's Cream Vermi-| A few doses drives out the and puts the little one on rbad to health again. White's | um Vermifuge has a record of y years of successful “use./ ieelBSc, Sold by all “Ser aut F <a 2 IN 1 WHITE POLISH Shu-Milk Polishes For White Kids line of All Colors Polishes GOODYEAR SHOE SHOP 612 DUVAL ST. } FURNITURE RENOVATED, Upholstered and Refinished. Mattresses Made Over Parlor Cushions Made other overtacts which were de- | ponent worthy of some attention; seribed as challenging the con-! land red~ signifies the danger stitutional rights and freedom of |Siznal, when all her strokes and} the nation. © | skill are to be put forth. On behalf of the workers it! - ti at the home of the bride’s parents, | the trades union congress in an| Lenglen, the French tennis star, |i world. It has reciprocal | jagreements with the clubs in Ire-| land, Australia, Canada, France, | | Belgium, Brazil, the Argentine and many other countries. The present year marks the | fiftieth anniversary of the All- England tennis championships at} Wimbledon, and extensive plans| are being made to celebrate this |very important anniversary in a} way befitting what is practically the golden jubilee of lawn tennis in England. A team of Australian cricket | | 1 h ed England for} players has arrived in England for} Ja, series of games with England's best. It is just fifty years since the first Anglo-Australian cricket matches were held. Since then there have been 109 matches, of jwhich number the mother coun-! try has won 41, Australia 47, and} |21 matches have been drawn. was declared that their efforts to! obtain an honorable settlement’ had been wrecked by the govern- ment’s ultimatum and that the’ negotiations for peace were ended. Allan B. Cleare & Company Wholesale Grocers and Commission Merchants \ 511 FRONT STREET P. 0. Box 18 Key West, Fla. What's The Difference BETWEEN A COBBLER AND A SHOE REBUILDER? BECAUSE— assets. BECAUSE— The answer is found in the work turned out by this shop Bring Your Shoe Repair Work Here 0. K. SHOE SHOP precious asset. BECAUSE— live fuller lives. BECAUSE— Paul P. Lumley BECAUSE— HARDWARE AND BUILDERS MATERIAL PAINTS AND VARNISHES, ROOFING play” for County. BECAUSE— wisely and econom Cor. Grinnell and James Sts. Free, Prompt Delivery PHONE 838 =. VARMA ALAAA ALAA AA hh hd dd de Your children are your most precious The health of your children is their most Education will enable your children to Edueation prepares your children for the many duties of life. All patriotic citizens should be for “fair all the Every cent of the money will be spent edueation and health of the children. Vote “F OR BONDS” Tomorrow VA s*II IAAL AAALALLL#L TOW. 40th St. Dox. as New York Cay H LOOTOOOTTOTTO TIES: “THE BOND ISSUE” REASONS WHY ALL MEN AND WOMEN SHOULD VOTE FOR THE BOND ISSUE: children in Monroe ically, to safeguard the ‘wf wieridereivennniarerivrwete the Southern | White, arrived from Havana this | will arrive from Gavana this eve- ‘TODAY IN WASHINGTON | eocecccccccocccovescsecs i E C. Senate sits as court of impeach- ferry Estrada ent in English ease. car House committee considers co- Eso | ification of international law. NOTHING LIKE IT ON | EARTH The new for flesh, cuts, sores F. E. y Henry M. iled for treatment wounds, or exports. P. & O. steamship Cuba, Capt.|derful work in flesh healing is |the Borozone liquid and powder morning with 120 passengers, and | combination treatment. The liquid sailed for Havana at 8:30 a. m.| Borozone is a powerful antiseptic with 285 passengers and U. S./ that purifies the wound of all mail. | poisons and infectious germs, while the Borozone powder is the |great healer. There nothing | like it on earth for ed, safety and efficieney. Pri (liquid) 30e, 60c¢ and $1.20. Sold by F. E. C. ear ferry Joseph R. Parrott, Captain Harrington, sail- ed for Havana at noon today. P. & O. steamship Miami, Capt. | Albury, will arrive from Havana|#nd 60c. this afternoon, with passengers and U. S. mail. all druggists. M-W-F | STRIKING CONTRAST F. E. C. car ferry Estrada Palma} NEW YORK— workers who go to chure! mornings offer a to revellers leaving night clubs, in F. E. C. car ferry Henry | the opinion of Mayor Walker. Flagler, Captain Hansen, will ar-| When he said this at the Si rive from Havana this evening | Jubilee of the night workers with ears and will sail for Havana! association, he was urged to purge tonight with cars exports. the clubs and not forget the stage. ht arly ing contrast | ning with ears, and will sail for) | Havana tonight with cars exports. | IF I AM ELECTED TO THE STATE SENATE, I PLEDGE THE VOTERS OF MONROE COUNTY TO WORK FOR: State Aid for Roads. Pipe Line and Right of Way for same. Better Transportation: Service. The prompt completion of the Tamiami Trail. Extending of City Limits to include F. E. C. properties on the Island of Key West. Any necessary local legislation. Other statements will follow ubjects may arise. I have no connections which will embarrass me with any of the large corporations or individuals, F. H. LADD, Candidate for State Senator, 24th District, State of Florida. torn | acerations that is doing sueh won- | Powder 30c | Sunday | PAGE THREES (The nine inch Oscillator supplies IO cool hours Jor a nickel ! Cool, healthful hours—useful hours. Indoor hours as full of activity and energy as if they were freshened by an outdoor breeze. That never-tiring G-E breeze keeps you going—keeps you happy. At home, in stores, in restaurants, in sheatrey Vereen East of the Rockies (60 cycles 110 volts) Ten cool hours for anickel! GENERAL ELECTRIC Under no condition buy a Fan until you see our line and get our prices which run as low as $5.00. Pierce Brothers Company PHONE 270 FREE TRUCK SERVICE SUBSCRIBE FOR THE CITIZEN 15¢ Weekly how Different the traffic looks Jrom the inside he New-Da: JEWEFLSIX Lightning-like accelera- tion. ve. got to get inside this car—grasp its capable wheel— and take it through a maze of traffic to appreciate how entirely new and how infinitely better this car Teally is. One of the first superioritiés you'll discover when you sit at the wheel of The New-Day Jewett will be its much wider vision. Jewett has elimi- nated the deadly “‘blind spot.” You can seeeverywhere. Try it! It’s just impossible for a pedestrian or driver to approach unseen from a side street. This wider, freer vision is one of the reasons why The New-Day Jewett Sedan is the safest car in the world to drive. Another is the [fact that the slightest pressure on its Paige- Hydraulic 4-Wheel Brakes brings the car to cushioned rest almost instantly. And wheri you slip easily into an ex- tremely small parking space—when you have occasion to turn completely around in a narrow street—when you must quickly back up and go around a “stalled” car—when an unexpected hole in traffic suddenly opens and you glide through it instantly—then you'll begin to appreciate something of that need. exclusive ‘‘New-Day” ease of han- dling this car offers. Ask for ademonstration. It will cost nothing—and yet it will prove, be- yond doubt, that there is an entirely new type of motor car performance available today—and that only The New-Day Jewett Six has it! Paige-Hydraulic 4-wheel brakes. Abundant power and for any driving Easiest steering, shift. ing, and parking of any car built. Clearer vision—almost total pppoeyere of the dead — spot’—st saan Rebaihesnes equal to much longer cars. Paige quality srr pee out in materials workmanship. And Jewett’s lowest closed car price. tt prices — Stender’ foe Po ‘De Luxe Seda: be mice we | PAGE & VILLAREAL CORNER SIMONTON AND PETRONIA STS. WILLIAM BURCHELL, Service Managet™

Other pages from this issue: