The Key West Citizen Newspaper, July 7, 1933, Page 3

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FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1933. BROOKS’ BOYS SWAMP SAWYER BOTH BROOKS AND SAWYER PLAY UNDER NORMAL, BUT BERLIN FAILS TO INSPIRE TEAM SUFFICIENTLY Over a steaming hot course the Bunker Hills mopped up the turf with the Divot Diggers in yester- dey’s golf matches. ° Though Berlin Sawyer clipped many a stroke off his normal score and defeated his age-old rival, Lewis Pierce, George Brooks’ fine under fifty rounds along with Juan Carbonell proved a margin of victory in their four- some with a 3-0 count. Berlin claims he felt as if he were still at work while “clipping” off those strokes. Brooks says that Berlin went “up in the air” at times, but the hard playing barber states that was O. K. as he was tired of hitting ‘his drives along the ground, anyway. Spottswood finally put one over on Price, when he and Ket- chum beat Kircheiner and the sponger 21-2 to 1-2. New en- trants were matched with the ini- tial appearance of the team of Cobo and Lester against Hayes and Maloney. A 2-1 score was marked up in favor of the latter team. Grooms and Julian failed to live up to the reputation they heve been making in practice rounds and fell easy victims to the sharp-shooting Ayala-Julian combination. Mayor Bill Malone thundered his drives and ap- proaches down the fairway but took ‘so many putts to put the élusive pill into the cup that he and his partner, N. Artman were taken 3-0 by P. Artman and Pitt- man. Strunk and Russell pulled a surprise victory by grabbing every point from Stowers and Kirschen- baum. Matches were over early yes- terday but that was not surpris- ing with the mosquitoes from the recent rains pursuing the golfers around the course. Reports that are not confirmed have it all other matches |. begid e one Berlls Bester ee > ae ‘play in next time will be restricted to nine holes so that the final nine holes of the Sawyer-Brooks match ma&y be fully enjoyed. Berlin claims that if he were allowed to talk, there would be. no. ques- tion, as to who would win the next: match. The pairings for next Thursday will be decided in Berlin’s barber shop soon. Ringside seats will be reserved at the price of a hair- ' SERIES TONIGHT TURE TIDAL WAVES AND EMBALMERS Will it be a swamp or an inter- ment? This question will be decided tonight at Bayview Park when the | Tidal Waves meet the Lopez Fun- eral Homers for the final game of the three game diamondball King Of Clout WN = — * IN THE SIXTH ROUND CARNERA LANDED THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Seeoececocccceecsccoooccee ---By Pap 0000006220080 COOOOOOOOES OOOOEEOOOOOOSO® Le SG _» THAE IT MAS wiis DESPISED SX AT BROUGHT LRN PRIMO THE WORLO'S ~>S HEAVY WEIGHT = TTE at ee bP # CARNERAW - <THE G\I6GEST MAN TO WEAR THE _WORLO'S CROWN By ALAN GOULD (ity Associated Prexs) In a year that is witnessing a tremendous upheaval in sports and getting tougher all the time for those on top, it may be just as well that Primo Carnera has weight boxing champion. The premium on monstrousness, After al, sBeiiis’ no’ Wofse from either the financial or artistic an- gles of the pugilistic industry than the payoff on one of the most er- ratic careers in fighting history. A majority of boxing — critics long have felt that Sharkey nat- urally possessed the ability to be ranked among the greatest of modern heavyweights, but he dis- appointed them more often than he sustained ‘their forecasts and he reached the end of the trail, knocked out, by a giant he had once pasted all over the Brooklyn baseball park. Fumbled Bi, Sharkey never did the expected. He fumbled his biggest chance for fame against Jack Dempsey, who knocked him out while the sailor was about to complain for a low punch. Against a second rater like Phil Scott, whom he figured to stow away in a few well-di- rected. punches, Sharkey, was as wild as a rookie southpaw, flew est Chance ly lost the fight on a foul, He was disqualified against Max Schmeling in their first title fight and won the next time on a high- ly questionable decision. Sharkey knocked out Maloney series with the curtain scheduled to rise at 8:00 o’clock. j Lunn will most probably pitch | for the Embalmers, but Bethel} may get the nod, as he has been doing good work in the key en-| gagements. 1 With the Tidal Waves it is an| equal tossup. Ward is a first class pitcher, but McGee won the | last engagement for the Cates’/ aggregation. | Either way the victory goes fans will see plenty of excitement | tonight. | | | ' Ignacio Carbonell! will challenge Peter Varela for the city tennis| championship Sunday afternoon at! the Marine Hospital. j The championship will go to the winner of the best three out of} five sets. | In the recent tournament be- tween Miami and Key West, Varela defeated Jack Roy in singles and! was a member of two doubles team winners. Ignacio whipped “Bo” Willaford and helped with a doubles win. Unofficially, he also beat H. Kramer and J. Roy in an} exhibition match. These Miami players are all well known and the Ignacio-Varela wins show the type of tennis these two netmen are playing. i McTigue but he and Delaney, stopped and whipped Harry Wills, was outmauled by a draw by Heeney and als by Mickey Walker, an overgrown middleweight. ly in his career he was knoc out by a wild Chilean clubber, Romero < Rojas. He looked to be the master of Carnera in their second fight un- til a right uppercut added one more and perh to a baffling career. Never a popular ring with the masses, as ch challenger, Sharkey hin f real. ized it, If crowds didn’t boo his introduction he thought something was wrong. His remark 7 leaving the ring, following his l knockout, was che “Well, I supp . are happy I was knocked o Some Time, Maybe The knockout victories of Max Baer and Primo pointed t match be heavywei, the days are ¢ lopment of tomatically ¢ a within reasonable time. If Tex Rickard would be would be brow: ring wh mand ¢ were alive safe to wa of a ousted Jack Sharkey as the heavy-/ into one of his tantrems and near-| Risko, held to| ps the final touch | ¢| fore eevcece | ' \ ! Boy From Budapest May Succeed Vines As National Net Champion ‘ ' By CHARLES DUNKLEY | (Associated Press Sports Writer) CHICAGO, July 7.—Strangest | of all baseball leagues in America} is the Nebraska state league. It is making money! Back of it is an amazing story. While Babe Ruth is, roughly speaking, collecting a salary of; $11,000 a month, the youthful! players on the four clubs com- prising the Nebraska state league} receive exactly $50 a month apiece—no more, no less. The Nebraska state league is} composed of Lincoln, Neb., with! ja population of 175,000; Sioux Falls, S. D., 32,000, Beatrice, Neb., 10,000, and Norfolk, Neb., 10,000. Can’t Use Cast-Offs Operating on the theory that} ; young ball players fired with an ambition for major league fame, are willing to work for $50 monthly, like a young bank clerk starting to learn the banking busi- ss for a small salary, the league! lis overloaded with ball players. Collegians, sandlotters, farmer} boys,—all inspired with the dream! to earn big salaries in the major} leagues. Under the rules of the league,| no castoff players are taken from} other league clubs. Neither can} a player remain in the Nebraska | {state league longer than two! years. If he does not make good! in that time, and pass on to al league of higher classification, he} might as well make up his mind: that he never was cut out for a} ball player. Wearing Same Clothes The young players are re- cruited from all sections of the | nation, some of them still wearing} the overalls and jumpers, or trousers and sweater, or a coat {enclosing a coupon in every loaf | PLAYERS IN NEBRASKA LEAGUE WAX WEALTHY ON $50 A MONTH of one material and trousers of| another, the same in which they| reported at the league’s opening, this spring. By mid-summer, they, hope to: have saved enough from| their salaries to buy a new suit of clothes. The aspiring youngsters are so plentiful that 125 of them re- ported for a try out on the Lin- coln team. The manager sat him- self down in a big chair in the outfield, much after-the fashion of a movie director out on loca- tion, and watched the youngsters take a cut at the ball or go through their fielding paces. If he thought they could not make; the grade, he jerked his thumb toward the exit, and the hopeless young player took himself away. | It was hard work cutting down} the big squad to the 14 players, including the manager, allowed by the league. Game Draws 8,800 New and novel schemes are successfully worked to lure the customers to the games, which are played at night. In Lincoln the other day, a bakery firm bought the night’s game for $250, of bread good for admission with ten cents. If you didn’t buy a loaf of bread it cost 25 cents to get into the game. The game at- tracted 8,800, which is some crowd for a class D league. The same idea is worked with other merchants, even to newspapers, which printed a coupon. The players travel around the league in big buses, and eat at restaurants which usually adver- tise all you can pack in for 25 cents. All four clubs in the league are in a healthy condition, and so are the players. evscocce CLASSIFIED | COLUMN Advertisements under this head will be inserted in The Citizen at the rate of le 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 accounts may have their advertise- ments charged. Advertisers should give their street address as well as their tele- phone number if they desire re- sults. With ‘each classified advertise- ment The Citizen will give free an Autostrop Razor Outfit. it. FOR RENT |FURNISHED HOUSE with all modern conveniences; $15 month. june1-tf Ask for! 1116 Grinnell street. | AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit at New York, NATIONAL LEAGUE : PAGE THRE BACK-STAGE UPROAR |WIN RIGHT FOR ‘ OVER ITALIAN ENCORE HEADING PARADE: (By Associated Press) (ty Annoclated Presa) : MILAN, Italy, July 7.—The CHICAGO, July 7.—For the- first encore to be sung at the| third consecutive year Arizona* famous Scala opera house in more) legionnaires have won first hon- than 20 years has created a back-| ors for membership among all state stage uproar with threats of| departments of the American Le- changes in the theater’s staff for: peo! and as = — will page next season. position in the big parade at the’ Feador Chaliapin sang the en-| legion convention Sse next Octo-> core. Franco Ghione, orchestra! &?, 3- ‘ director, bore the brunt of the| Parade positions, as well as con- blame by Manager Mattaloni. vention seats and housings, ate de- Since before the Toscanini days besten = state membership . audiences at the Scala have ap- aeiene: 4 he 5 ee Reece NOR ot sirepett | departments to have exceeded 100° {percent of its four-year quota” says the theater management had} average, showin 1 no right to break -the a er armel tradition) California has 117.08; Mississippi! despite the thunderous ovation! ppt i 109.74, and Tennessee 102.90. that greeted his singing in “The Barber of Seville.” Ghione certainly knew it and’ Phillip Keyes Yonge of Pen- sacola, Fla., has served as a mem-) should not have obeyed the star’s; ber of the state board of control signal to start over again, Mat-jfor institutions of higher learning taloni maintains. The manager is} 25 years. said to have been so worked up}|-.—§ —————-———-~——_—— over the incident that he told the| when Chaliapin called to him to maestro he need not expect to be) start again “da capo” or “from: re-engaged next year. the beginning” he had either todo The maestro’s defense is that/ 50 or create a scene. . { | ROOM and :-% PRIVATE COMFORT and HAPPINESS GARAGE SERVICE COFFEE SHOPPE Philadelphia at Pittsburgh. Boston at Cincinnati, New York at Chicago. Brooklyn at St. Louis. YESTERDAY No games scheduled in either of major leagues. Subscribe for The Citizen. FLORIDAN TAMPA ASSOCIATED HOTELS JACKSONVILLE HOTEL GEORGE WASHINGTON HOTEL MAYFLOWER - HOTEL FLAGLER MIAMI...,HOTEL ALCAZAR od FOR RENT—House, unfurnished, modern, 1210 South near White. | FURNISHED 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 $50 monthly. Apply to L. P. Artman, 1309 Whitehead street or The Citizen Office. LOST | husky who | to carry on for that from the championship. was Vines at the same age. ‘FINES SILENCE | | DEMONSTRATIONS (My Axsociated Press) / DORF, Austria H .—Heavy fines imposed by the government on nazi followers | for shouting “Hail Hitler” have resulted in silent demonstration for the German party's chief. { a “turnfest” held the nazis lining th ed the arriving delegate aising the right arm, but they put the left hand over the mouth. | HOW THEY Club Wash New Ye Philad. } Chi in Carnera are unlikely to fight be-| pe 1934 then, Jack Dempsey, f the old Richard flair. would te willing to send his protege, into title action this y ‘arnera will be in no hurry t with » NATIONAL Club— N Ww I 44 re to be lionized at “ = among other t over the vast Ve int any ing action shot of Gene Mako, the 17-year-old | groomed by Southern California tennis fanatics | tion when Ellsworth Vines, Jr., steps down They declare he is further advanced than | Mako was born at Budapest, Hungary. —_—— | BLA AMERICAN LEAGUE 481} LEAGUE |LOST—Thursday noon, Gold Anchor Lapel. Reward if return- ed to Frank Lopez, 1210 Duval street. july7-2tx FOR SALE ES Fo cette SALES BOOK | able for every business. | duplicate with carbon Only 5¢ each. The Py Citizen Building. 51. In paper. Phone juni4-tt 500 SHE. Only 50c. Artman Press. Get them at | Phone 51. | jan7 RADIO REPAIRING | RADIO REPAIRING. We repair all makes. Guaranteed service, J. L. Stowers Music Co. mayl WANTED WANTED—You to know that we have the right prices on letter- heads, envelopes, basiness cards, statements and any form of Printing. Satisfaction guaran- teed. Call 51. The Artman Press. jan? MISCELLANEOUS t4 AN AUTO STROP RAZOR ontfit; given free w each classified | advertisement. ASK FOR IT.j jenli: Suit-! Artman! ETS typewriting paper.; The| To Make Our For Storm Shutters, $ $ 1-2x4 Pine Ceil- ing, per M. .... 1-2x4 Cypress Ceiling, per M 1-2x12 Pine per M. And all other Galvanized Shingles, square .. per yard | ' Screen Doors . 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