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HURSDAY, JULY 27, 1933. f SPORTS , NEW DIAMONDBALL LEAGUE IS PLANNED FOUR TEAMS HAVE PROMISED TO JOIN IN NEW SERIES ANTS CAPTURE JOUBLEHEADER; . INCREASE LEAD RDINALS TAKE ANOTHER 'NDER FRANKIE FRISCH’S| EADERSHIP; YANKS SPLIT #ITH RED SOX cess of formation and is expected to start play after the series be- | tween the Lopez Funeral Home jand Key West Stars ends. Four teams have signified their (Special to The Citizen) ‘EW YORK, July 27.—The + York Giants gained a full te on the idle Cubs as a result A diamondball league is in pro-| ‘SANCHEZ RESIGNS AS TEAM MANAGER MARIO GARCIA SELECTED TO SUCCEED HIM AT MEET ING LAST NIGHT | At a meeting held last night by the Fenix baseball club, Aurelio formally resigned. Mario Garcia, a former umpire ‘of the City baseball league, will take his place. Reports that the Stunning Assaults On Mile Mark Have Come At 10- Year Interval: | Sanchez, manager of the team,! { TRADITION OF OLD FAILS TO SILENCE NEW SENATORS SEVERAL FIGURING IN OUT-, ' BURSTS UPON THEIR ENTRY’ WILL CAUSE THEM TO. ' NEBRASKA BOASTS ‘NO NATIVES IN CONGRESS (Ry Associated Prenay LINCOLN, Neb. July 27.4 Nebraska has seven co! but not one was born in Three, Reps. Edgar Howard, ‘Jo! Morehead and Terry - Carperiter} were born in Iowa, while both sen- ators, George W. Norris“and liam H. Thompson, were { tives. Rep. A. C. Se’ | ger’s birthplace is Toulon, -Ill. BEAR FUTURE WATCHING / Running Water, By HERBERT PLUMMER (Ry Associated Press) WASHINGTON, July 27.—Most of the new senators who came. in with the “new deal” observed the traditional silence of first term- ers during the special session, but one or two of them figured in outbursts that will cause them to bear watehing in the future. One was young Bennett Champ Clark, son of the former speaker jof the house, junior senator from Missouri. Senator Clark gave every evi- town of Rep. Edward R. Burkee RUSHES TO PAY FINE i MEMPHIS.—W. B, Potts, | this city, arrested for speeding a4 'serted that he was rushing: to: po- |lice court to pay @ $5 fine for his | wife for traffic violation, aT | Filling a new-type fountain pen ; with water starts it manufectur- ting its own ink from a cartridg in the barrel. jeee errrrtt * { COLUMN dence from the start that he nea not be content to sit idly by un-| Wekai is he had learned the ropes. At) Lhe chet lh hss enendae that he enjoyed seniority over the] Advertisements under this head \first termers, for Senator masta as sayings in Tee Citizer he | resi, i in th ty-ithe rate of 1c a word for each: resigned his seat in the ‘seventy netian bak the atl sms jintention of joining the league. Fenix was to disband are denied The Zacharias club with L. Mar-! by players, and they further state tinez as manager has been rais- that they will show the fans some ing money for uniforms and ex-; mighty good baseball when they pects to join as soon as the call, meet the Sluggers Sunday. for teams is posted. The addition of several new The old Park team will be re-} players was also discussed and will vhipping the Brooklyn Dodgers te by close scores in both tes. The tally in the first was > 3,.and in the second, 4-3. he Detroit Tigers turned back St. Louis Browns, taking the te by a 9-7 score. Although! K {second congress so Clark might amy Bridges yielded 13 hits to|Vived and managed by Jonathan |} be brought up next Friday at the = FINLANO~ Browns, he won the contest ertheless. the New York Yankees fn with the Red Sox. The Yanks « the first game of the double by a shutout score of 2-0. The y in the concluding contest was ‘he Cleveland Indians trounced) “rarin’ to go” he states, Hudlin six White Sox. cked the Chicagoans ns. ‘he Cardinals downed the Cin- Hallahan to be relieved in the fifth be- se of a sore arm but got credit tati Reds, 3 to 2. the victory. ‘he summaries; Willis with American League First Game it Boston’ «* w York . iland and Ferrell. Second Game it Boston w York ston .. . batteries: W. Brown, Moore and R. IL. KB, . 410 -9 12 key; L. Brown and Ferrell. At Detroit Louis jroit . Batteries: Stiles, Hudlin and Pytlak;| Lopez; Parmelee and Mancuso. Vashington at Philadelphia, | i 4 Hebert ta; Bridges, Hogsett and Hay- *th. 4 R. HB. .7 18 9 14 R. i. 1 6 National League First Game it Brooklyn roklyn v York Batteries: Benge, Shaute R. # HI. 4 5 8 broke and K, and} Cates. { And the Lopez Funeral Homers, } which has been whipping all oppo- sition so far this summer season, have also agreed to put their team in the league. As a fourth team the Cubs,’ managed by Pedro Aguilar, is} DIAMONDBALL ON TOMORROW NIGHT KEY WEST STARS TO MEET LOPEZ FUNERAL HOMERS Those Lopez Funeral Homers might be beaten this time. They have accepted a challenge from the Key West Stars, a newly} formed team with Peter Castro{ as manager, which will be fully, as powerful an organization as the Undertakers. They will play a three series starting Friday. 1 3) game 2 0. Lopez; Schumacher, Bell and Man-| vuso, Richards. | Second Game At Brooklyn Brooklyn New York Batteries: 2 1} 0 8 Carroll, Beck and At St. Lonis Cincinnati . Mae es, ae | St. Louis Be sietaton 3 9 2 Batteries: Derringer and Hems-! tley; Hallahan, Mooney and O’Far-; rell. R. H. E. 1 Chicago at Pittsburgh, rain, No others scheduled. | Chicago regular league meeting. AMERICAN LEAGUE Club— L. Washington - 33 New York 34 Philadelphia 46 Detroit ..... 48 Cleveland 50 Chicago 50 Boston 51 St. Louis . 63 NATIONAL LEAGUE Club— Pa New York .. 36 42 43 45 45 54 Pittsburgh it. Louis . Boston .. Cineinnati Brooklyn. ... 52 Philadelphia 52 SSE! Se ca AMERICAN LEAGUE New York at Washington, Philadelphia at Boston. St. Louis at Detroit. Cleveland at Chicago. NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago at Pittsburgh. Cincinnati at St. Louis. Boston at Philadelphia, games. Brooklyn at New York. Subscribe for The Citizen. +641 +630 -505 +489 479 462 446 «857 Pet. -604 558 { 543 516 bil 432 416 23 —-— 4.10 19 JOHN PAUL JONES ~CORNELL— 1913 -- 4314-45 | In the space of 20 years, at exact 10-year intervals, John Paul Jones, Paavo Nurmi and. Jack Lovelock have one at a time taken big chunks out of the world record for the mile run. wondering when some super-runner will come along to stun the athletic universe with the dreamed-of “four-minute mile.” Can it be d lone? By ALAN GOULD | (By. Associated Press) \ The only big league managerial (ghake-up to occur so far is the jtime battery-mate of © Grover *Cleveland, Alexander, from the helm of the St. Louis Browns, but (the baseball woods are full of stories that it’s just a beginning. The talk is that Killefer will be found with the Boston Red Sox in 1934, where he would have a much "better chance to display his talents. The Dodgers have denied flatly that: Max Carey is under fire, but have some kind of an overhauling. Frank Frisch has been mentioned, if Carey should step out. 1 Rogers Hornsby may not get azabby Street’s job and his old one back again as pilot of the Cardin- als, but the’ Rajah seems slated for a manager’s job somewhere next year. Bill MeKechnie certainly should have his contract renewed with the Boston Braves, on the basis of his excellent four-year job under some difficulties, but Bucky Harris of Detroit and Lew Fohseca of the Chicago White Sox, as well as resignation of Bill Killefer, old-; By CARL C. CRAMNER (ity Axsocinted Press) RUSHVILLE, Ohio, July 27.— Just one hundred years ago—on July 22, 1833—Benjamin Russell Hanby was born near the little dis- trict school where he later scrib- bled on a blackboard the words to ing exercise for his pupils, And at nearby Fultonham lives Mrs. T. M. Adams, now 90 years old, believed to be the only living pupil who attended that school from the poet himself. It is her brother, Gearge E. Kalb, 85-year-old Rushville news- {paper man, who tells at first hand |how Hanby wrote: “There’s a low green valley on the old Kentucky shore, Where I’ve whiled many happy hours away, A-sitting and a-singing by the lit- tle cottage door, Where lived my poor Gray.” \ | Hanby was the son of a United | Brethren miuister and spent his boyhood days playing about an old | ‘DARLING NELLIE GR AY’-ECHOES ON POET'S 1 00TH ANNIVERSARY | ~-4:07% 4) 4 } Now they are made his bow. get preference’ in committee as- signments. Young Clark had been in the senate but a short while when he It was on the side of Huey Long. . Clark came ‘to jthe “kingfish’s” support in his po- litical troubles: down in: Louisiana, No Silent Spectator He has bobbed up frequently in isenate debates. He was quite active when the economy bill was up for consideration and was one \for confirmation of Guy T. Hel- vering of Kansas for commissioner of internal revenue. Nevada’s new senator, the plump, white-haired Pat McCar- yold Churchyard ‘that gave Hanby| "an, is another first-termer who and learned the words of the song| Particular, and Hyde, who Nellie| South. his inspiration for the song. But it was not until Hanby had moved away with his parents to struck out rather boldly in the special session. It was McCarran who sought Circleville, then to Westervillé, Ohio, and returned to Rushville to teach school that he wrote the song. He renewed his friendship with fond of spending hours in the old churchyard where they had played as boys. Ai Blasted Romance One grave interested them in had learned the story, said it was the grave of Joe Selby, a negro slave who had. escaped from Kentucky and had died of pneumonia. Selby, so he had told the little group of sympathetic abolitionists gathered about his death bed, haa! been in. love with a slave girl by the name of Nellie Gray on a neighboring plantation, ownet had been forced by debt to sell her to a new owner farther: In desperation he had tried to escape to Canada where he hoped to earn enough to pur- chase her freedom. Deeply impressed by the story, Hanby went to his room and be- gan jotting it down in the form of But her} to stop progress of the ad- ‘ ministration’s economy plan ‘through the senate by a par- liamentary move, He tried to | get the bill sent to thé judiciary “Darling Nellie Gray” as a sing-|Hyde, and the two of them were| committee, but was snowed un- jder by a three-to-one vote. i Defeat didn’t down him, how- lever. A few minutes after the roll call he was in a squabble with Senator Glass of Virginia. Glass made a scarcely audible remark which McCarran caught and jump- ed to his feet to claim the floor on personal privilege. He Tackled Glass He warned Glass that he wanted '“to put a stop’ to sich “remarks” ‘and declared that if they weren't stopped he would “inyoke the rule of the senate.” There are few senators, even , among the old-timers, who care to get into an argument with Glass, but the reputation of the | Virginian did not stop McCarran. He is a product of the southern Nevada mining boom days. For- merly a district attorney in the center of the Tonopah boom, he has gone far in the judiciary of of the senators who led the fight{{ first insertion in every instance. 25c, ‘ Payment for classified adver tisements is invariably in advanpe, but regular advertisers with ledger accounts may have their gdvertise- ments charged, * ek eae Advertisers should give - 1 street address as well as their tele- phone number if they desire re eults. mas With each classified advertise- ment The Citizen will gi an Autostrop Razor erties for i | FOR RENT ee FURNISHED HOUSE FOR n containing 12 rooms, on Jot 560x198 feet, in select section of city, 1307 Whitehead street; op: posite beautiful Coral vie Boe facing the sea. Garage im r¢ to L. Rent $50 monthly. street or The Citizen. P. Artman, 1809 Whitehead eS FOR SALE Za BLANK SALES .BOOKS—Suit- able for every business, In duplicate with carbon Only Se each. The Press, Citizen Building. . Phone 51. juni { 500 SHEETS rs Only 60c. Get them ‘at Artman Press, Phone 61, SALESMEN WANTED © ——— A RESPONSIBLE MAN wanted by a Nat'l credit reportti agency to Supervise their, © in Key West district; y Best Pay. Write W. A.: Me- GUFF, 105 Cass Street Arcade, Tampa Florida. Jub 29-1tx —— RADIO REPAIRING «? RADIO REPAIRING. We sera all makes, Guaranteed serv’ mayt Marty McManus of the Red Sox,/°hureh. which also served as a J. L. Stowers Music Co. cannot consider themselves fix. |SChool and the adjacent cemetery. tures. | One of Hanby’s playmates was boy named Hyde, a poem. A few days later he! Nevada, but retains many charac-) . wrote it upon: the school black-| teristics born of gold rush times. board and began teaching the —_—_—— veaepitpenaieanebanaemmniiaaat words and tune\to his pupils. About 82 percent of the sea-|AN AUTO STROP RAZOR outfit It was some time later before; men below the grade of licensed; given free with each he revised the song, secured ajofficer employed by the American; advertisement. ASK coypright and sold it for $25, merchant marine are aliens, nena Fevntajeewien cieniaie ACTED: ee MISCELLANEOUS — | outhern Speed Boys eeeesoes | Stop Mr. Phelps x “Either the International League} Slave Grave Inspired Him pitchers are too tough for him or According to Kalb, it was the Gordan Phelps, general handy man; grave of a runaway slave in the of the Albany Senators, is having an off-year with the bat,” writes'~ Chief Scout Addington of the, minor league organization. “It's! to assume this is Phelps’ first | ar in Class AA ball. But Ont-/ fielder Rupert Thompson of the} same Senators stands as a refuta-| tion to that. | “During his three year 8 ball, Phelps had led his batting each season, but he’s struck! a snag in the International, for! it’s pesos to peanuts he won't be on top at the close of 1933. } “Starting with Hagerstown of! the Blue Ridge League in 1930,} | Phelps blasted a .376 to acquire! the batting crown. He was third | in homers with 19 and first in | doubles with 38. H “With Youngstown of the Mid j dle Atlantic League next year, he | hit a torrid .408 to outdistance ail { clubbers, and tied the league ree- | ord for most hits in a season, 178. ecccccecce | jen! { err Retain THE Naturat Beauty your ‘1 WITH THIS MARVELOUS OLIVE OIL FACE POWDER @ the thinolls do @ inp 2B1y eth cod mapybe Vert soe -W TALUS FLASHY OUTFIELOS® Tis New MORK YANKEES HAVE OnE OF HE OUTSTANONS ROOKIES OF Te ava you looked # your com lation lately? Really looked a ie?... Is it s0ft, smooth anid clear? Or is it 2 little course. 2 little cough? Outdoor life will do thove things the skin, Just 2 few days expo sere to winds and cold causes the face to chap... to hecome red and oid ionkang. WALKER AND CHAPMAN ARE WSEPARABLE “TREY Eves Thompson Thrives ; “Youngstown shifted to the ; Central League last year and/{ ‘There is 6 new Olive Oil face pant Phelps went along, taking his big! ee der kneren 8 Ovrreoon Gat white bat with him. At the close of the | 3 ne cralnen eer the mem wit ob Ce season he was first on the list with | , . pletion wm remain salt, fom ond voutdel The svar: powder ace i werage. He played first | base and was selected to man that | pest on the Central's all-star team. | “He's a valuable man to Bill ; MeCorry, even though he isn’t headed for his fourth straight year j of lemgue-hitting. He can | play the outfield or go to | base. | “Thompsen, also with Youngs | town last year, 341 against the ame sort of pitching Phelps saw. This year. he’s the Senators’ chief gunner, smashing areand the ‘ agajast the same péteh cette team ne Cores. Conran, Willis Ave, NY .C Dept 108 fesreeee fire | OUTDOOR GIRL OLIVE OIL FACE POWDER - aed hy PE OMe. HAD To 6 GOOC % PUT EARL COMBS ON THE BENCH. all NS J