The Key West Citizen Newspaper, June 22, 1933, Page 3

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THURSDAY, SUNE 22, 1933. GIANTS DEFEAT CUBS; MAINTAIN LEAD IN LEAGUE, NING BATTLE. HOLDING ON) TO FIRST PLACE { { (Spectat_to ‘The Citiven) | NEW YORK, June 22.—The) New York Gi protected their! one-half game id in the Na-| tional League b¥ defeating the; Chicago Cubs. With Fred Fitz- simmons pitching three-hit ball! and his teammates making thes most of their seven blows off Pat; Malone, the New Yorkers went on to victory. The Boston Braves took both! games in a double bill with the Pittsburg Pirates. The Bucs had opped threet games in a row; o the Pittsburgh aggregation prior to the two wins yesterday. ~ The St, Louis Cardinals came to the front and defeated the Brook-| lyn Dodgers 7 to 5. The Cards scored five runs in the first in- ning and brought @ the two de- ciding tallies in the eighth. The Phillies downed the Reds when they made a clean sweep, copping the final of the four-game series 10 to 8. The contest start- ed out as a pitching battle between Austin Moore and_..Stout, — but ‘wound up in a slugging orgy. The New York Yamnkees broke; through the ranks and defeated the Si Browns in a thir- teen-innin e@, and maintained their on ie lead in the Ameri- . WESTERN WOMEN'S - CHAMPIONSHIP © Oxe |seeeesvesssenssecovosenssensscsnsorenecennossees ecccese ITS A GooD \\ THAT INVADED ENGLAND LAST MRS. HILL HAS CERTAINLY BEEN “ON HERS GAME 4 IN THE SOUTH THIS QINTER-. WEST CITIZEN 000000 COTCCOOO CEO ISOOOOODOOOO OOOO SOOO OOTHOOOOSOLOSOOOOOOES |eecccccccccccccccccccons -«-By Pap, FROM THE DUGOUT ‘All Rights Reserved by The A can League. Lou Gehrig knocked out his seventeenth homer of theleee season. The Detroit Tigers and the Boston Red Sox divided honors in a two-ply contest. the opener 10 to 9. The score in the nightcap was 5-3. The Indians sealped the Macks and the Nats shut out the Chisox. The summaries: American League First Game At Detroit Batteries: Rhodes, Weiland and Ferrell; Herring, Hogsett, Bridges and Desautels. Second Game at Detroit Dickey; Wells and Shea. was Chicago Chicago . and Cochrane; Ferrell and Spen- cer. Natfonat Leegue ‘hagn: mer, Hatris, French and G Cantwell, Zachary and Hoga’ Spohrer. At left is Primo Carnera, the vast ping at the right. Swetonic, Frankhouse, Mangum and Spohrer. Starr, At New York Chicago e New York Batteries: Malone and Hart- nett; Fitzsimmons and Mancuso. AMERICAN LEAGUE Club— L New York R. H. E.{ Washington 715 2! Cleveland 5 11 Carleton. Vance and} Chicago Beck, Shaute and | Philadelphia Detroit ; Boston R. H. E.{ St. Louis 813 1} 37 At Brooklyn St. Louis Brooklyn Batteries: J. Wilson; Lopez, Outen. 541] 517) a 23 21 mt IS to ty 3 one At Philadelphi Cincinnati Philadelphia 10 12 5} NATIONAL LEAGUE Batteries: Stout, Johnson,! Club— 1 Quinn and Hemsley; Moore, Han-| y sen, Liska, Elliott and Davis, } New: York 21 Louis sburgh Chicago | Cincinnati Brooklyn - Boston | Phitaderpnin Pet 625 610 508; 459 446 97 PASSENGERS = 37 H The P. and 0. S. S. Florida ict Five- year-old rived yesterday 3:45 o'clock from|Goodrum of McKenkie, Havana with 97 passengers, 22} who was assigned to the aliens. ship .sailed 6:30! grade when she entered school} o'clock for Tampa with 37 pas-jlast fall, has been promoted to sengers the fourth grade with an average Freighter Brazos, of the Clyde} of 96. Mallory lines, is due to arrive in Evelyn Clara} Tenn., third AMERICAN LEAGUE New York at St. Louis. Boston at Detroit. Washington at Chicago. Philadelphia at Cleveland. NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh at Brooklyn. Cincinnatj at New York, Chicago at Boston. St. Louis at Philadelphia. CLASSIFIED COLUMN Advertisements under this hea will be inserted in The Citizen at the rate of 1c a word for each in- sertion, but the minimum for the first insertion in every instance is 25e. Payment for classified adver. tisements is invariably in advance, , but regular advertisers with ledger {aceounts may have their advertise- j ments charged. Advertisers should give their street address as well as their tele- phone number if they desire re- sults. eeoceecc: j eseeee | Boy, that was a nifty bal! game ; Bethel hurled \for the Sluggers | Sunday. | Manager Mendoza of the Pi- | rates appeared discouraged at |the way his team performed in | the fourth game of the city cham- ‘ pionship series. i Well, it seems as though Man- | ager Gonzalez’ prediction of four straight games will prove to be true. The Sluggers have won | two successive after dropping the | first. Anyone that: overheard the \conversation in the Pirate dug- ‘out during their practice session ' would surely have bet 2 to 1 that the Sluggers would have been de- feated. Luck was with Ivan Saun- ders (Barat) a heavy Pirate bet- ter, when he arrived a little too late to get an earful. You could laugh this one off, but Berlin Sawyer thinks that Manuel Varela is the sweetest little ball player in the City | League. How about it, Berlin? Willard (Bill) Russell thinks, in fact he knows, the Sluggers! will take the series from the Pi- rates. We doubt, however, if Mr. Russell will take his predic- tion to Arturo Martinez, the Pi- rite fan who yells in broken Eng- lish: “You waitie, tha game is jung yet!” 4 jon occasions in the past. i | (ty Associated Press) With a few conspicuous ex- ;ceptions, major league baseball! has been making a comeback at/ the turnstiles so far this season but the game “still needs a tonic’”| in the opinion of Cleveland’s vet-| Ed Bang, who out-} lines his proposai thus thei Cleveland News: i “Do away with the present reg-| ulation nine-inning game. Sub-| stitute for this a bargain-day at-} traction each day, a double-header every day of the playing season. Do not increase the present price of admission. Let them remain} as they are. “Instead of the regular nine- inning game, two six-inning games could be played each after- noon. Instead of the champion- ship season schedule calling for 154 games this could be increased to 308 games. “This plan holds forth many} fine features. First of all there| would be far keener interest in a} schedule of 308 games on the part of the public and players. ern observer, in |The season would scarcely be con- sidered over and done with and the championship decided by May} What Makes a Safe Tire? That boy Salinero is going to give them all trouble when he ac- quires a little more experience. Wonder how Cyril Griffin man- | anest to put his uniform back to- gether. Last week he told friends that to make sure he would not be coaxed into playing with the Pirates ball club again the had poured gasoline on his | uniform then put it on fire. Fun- ny how he wore the same suit he had burned to ashes, on last Sunday’s game. Henry Mayg, new field cap- tain of the Pirates is rounding the team into good shape. He is especially giving the boys plenty of hitting practice. Boy, and how they needed it! No club can win a ball game on two hits. There is no doubt about Ar- ikees or some other team seores, backs in games {posal and no doubt most major y nowadays. PAGE THRER 15 or June 1, as has been the ease! out. Those are the innings when fa pitcher is most likely to crack. “Times without number ball Would Pep Up Game games are decided in the first or} This season has produced many second inning. When the Yan-! examples of. extraordinary come- apparently Tost beyond contrel, The Yankees nings of the game the fans lose} pulled out one game, with a 12. interest in the proceedings. jrun rally, while trailing the White “Tt would not be working a} Sox 11 to 3, in the eighth. The hardship on. the players to ask champions yielded 11 runs to the them to participate in 12 innings! Athletics in another, but came each day. They are not over- ‘back with 10 in one frame them- taxed physically and a half hour selves and won the battle, 17 to jto 45 minutes extra work should, 11. The Pirates beat the Car jnot result in any falling off in, dinals recently by tallying 10 {their general play.” i markers in the ninth. Nothing New To Cards But, on the average, two ab- ; . breviated or inning games cer- fae tainly would furnish more excite- a rs ment and add more life to the league club owners would shrink] snort thin: the wrdinéty nites away from it, at first thought. | *P ; i ning affair. Yet the idea already has Maen = na developed, to some extent, by the steps taken to increase the Aes L E G A iL 5 ber of “bargain” double-headers. St. Louis clubs have been permit-; ted to combine regularly sched- uled Monday games in Sunday} double bills, as an added attrac-| tion, as well as an acknowledg-j ment of the fact that fans SE Ie) jall they can get for their money| Honorable, {count five or six runs in the -early in- pro- THE COUNTY MONROB COUNTY, OF FLORIDA—IN PRO- return, Executrix ussell, de~ It would take considerable! ¢. then’ and argument to convince the old-|Wudae for a imal settlement of my timers, especially, that six innings | administration of said estate, and constituted a real ball game. They | i for an order discharging me a8 such could point out that most of the: day of M crises are reached in the s*venth, | eighth or ninth innings and the] Ay Pace records probably would bear them fhayt-11-13 time, Mehis the 4th ... L KNOW/ RE you willing to risk your life on advertis- pr pra seen ana wap and unblow- tires? One manufacturer gives as the reason for claiming blowout-proof ppeveiaper ye! oh alr atc another colo: a patented “‘no breaker” scratch} eonstruction—a mail order house, high stretch “elastic” cords, etc., etc. Acthally the fundamental cause of a tire blowout is the flexing of the tire which causes friction of the fibers in the cord, re- mando Acevedo being the whole] sulting in heat and ee the rubber to soften and cords to deteriorate. Slugger team. He won the sec- ond half pennant for the “Tail- qj or’s” bunch and is going to win the series, too. Well, the manager of the Pi- rates is thinking about having Chelo Castillo come over and help his team win this seven game championship series. Chelo, a! Key West boy, is playing a great second base for the city team in, Tampa. How about a 3 game series between an all star local club and an out of town team, baseball oars is a reason why consecutive years, the most gruelling tire test. Tires have won the 500-mile I: race for 14 Denter waa Acer ora Gum-Di; ne Phe tes every ith pure gives strength to the cords nd wh prevents friction and heat in the fibers. This year 42 drivers in this pcr Pigg ye pa sep oan ga ag and not a single driver had any tire trouble Race drivers know why Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires are safer and not subject "leas and will not risk their lives on ordinary tires. Your life and the lives of your family areoften in danger at the high road specs of tod and you should not take vers who male sare that they have the best ahd oofest tier they Firestone patented extra saturates every fiber rubber—-vhich ‘With each classified advertise- promoters. Undoubtedly, it will] can buy—Firestone. Come poet sme sane tac . We will give you a | road work and carrying his 260 pounds Sharkey of Boston tanes up his footwork with a round of rope-skip- |iag molasses at Caibarien, ment The Citizen will give free an Autostrop Razor Outfit. Ask for it. FOR RENT ipals in the big heavyweight | FURNISHED HOUSE with all modern conveniences; $15 month. 1116 Grinnell street. one from Italy, out for a bit ov} lightly. Champion Jack |FomsrsiteD HOUSE FOR RENT, containing 12 rooms, on lot 50x198 feet, in select section of city, 1307 Whitehead street, op- posite beautiful Coral Park, and facing the sea. Garage in rear. Rent $80 monthly. Apply to L. P. Artman, 1309 Whitehead street or The Citizen Office. BOTH VESSELS ARE EXPECT-| FOR SALE ED TO BERTH AT PORTER DOCK able for every duplicate with carbon Only 5e each. The Press, Citizen Building. 51. business. | Artman Two ships are expected to be} at the Porter Dock company’s piers Sunday. The Norwegian; ~~ -500| ship Nidarholm and the capes a PAPERS FOR SALE. Five bundles papers. Se, containing 100 old hip Ceib: ip Ceiba. The Citizen Office. The former vessel is now toad-! Cuba, and will come to Key West enrout to Mexican and Honduran ports! es ray “ear maa replenish | RADIO REPAIRING. wore 5 all makes. Guaranteed service, J. L. Stowers M Co. mayl RADIO REPAIRING WANTED LICENSES ISSUED WANTE! D—You to ) kkow that we have the right prices on letter- heads, envelopes, business cards, ' statements and any form of printing. . Satisfaction guaran- teed. Call 51. The Artman Press. jan?! This week there have been three} marriage licenses issued from the office of Judge Hugh Gann. Last! week there were none. H Those to whom issues were made] this week are James R. Ward and/ —___—_— [Clarice Iverdell Albury; Basil] AN AUTO STROP RAZOR outfit PR a MISCELLANEOUS junel-tf paper. Phone junl4-tf | ams, mayl-tf We repair} draw good. The following ought to make a good line up for a Key West team: Robert Bethel, Joe Casa and Frank Salinero, pitchers; Cy- ril Griffin, catcher; Mario Pena, first base; Flores Castillo, sec- ond base; William Cates, third base; Armando Acevedo, short stop—that completes the infield. For the outfield, there’s Angel Fruto for left, Ludy Acosta for center and Charlie Vidal, Arman- do Perez or Arthur Griffin for right. A Miamian the other day r marked that Key West has a _lteam strong enough to lick any- ithing in the East Coast League. There is no doubt of this as the (BLANK SALES BOOKS—Suit-| local team was once declared win- In}ner of a pennant of the East Coast Loop. Our baseball expert, Earl A‘d- criticized the score keeper because Ludy Acosta, Pirate, wag given a hit on a beautiful fielded ball in the fifth inning of Sun- day’s game. Adams feels that Acevedo who fielded the ball) should have been scored an error, jalthcugh no fumblé was made. Something similar occurred inj the fourth inning when the Pirates} 'scored their only run. Henry} |Mayg hit a hard grounder to! jthird, the ball took a bad hop! ‘and hit Cates on the inside of} the left lee before he had a} ichance to field it. Adams was of| jthe opinion that the fielder be _{given an error. How can a} fielder be given an error on a} non-fumble and a perfect peg? |The scorer would like to have this | | explained. It’s never too iate |to learn. Out of each tax dollar spent by i} Re Rs roe ityto"6 iOF ce arse Times paouty for sale by mail order houses mado without the magufecturer’s Same endl goasuntse. Tho a “The Tire on Firestone sarrenies i Firestone Bat- teries set a new high standard of Power, Dependa- bility, Long Life and Economy.We willtest any make of Battery FREE. Aatow As High Speed Tlase-the enfost abies in the World. Firestone Firestone SPECIAL 58° Sire | FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY | £S*" AND MONDAY er Q5. Tires a, Battery Checked Terminals Checked Top Dressed Fes thee | i ca fol da A eee a es A a Pn Chicago PAUL’S TIRE SHOP RAYMOND CURRY, Mgr. Fleming and Grinnell Streets Phone 65 we | Tynes and Natalie Crusoe; Miguel} given free with each classified | Subscribe for The Citizen—20c} Angel Cruz Rodriguez and Con-; advertisement. ASK FOR IT.| Kentucky, 42.9 cents goes to port Friday night from Galves- ton. “weekly. chita Garcia Norcisa, janl1! roads. * i

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