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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1938. eee er a ne SPORTS 9 f ARMY TEN DOWNS LIGHTHOUSE UNIT DIAMONDBALL GAME /YES-: TERDAY AFTERNOON RE- SULTS IN SCORE OF 5-1 The Army diamondball ten de- feated the strong Lighthouse team yesterday afternoon at the army field, by a score of to 1. The Army scored their runs in the first frame, as usual, and the Slop- pies scored theirs in the seventh. Richards.of the Army pitched a great game. Twice he held the opponents scoreless with two on base and no outs. He kept them down to just five singles. Seore by innings: R. H. E. Sloppies 000 000 100— 1 5 4 Army .. 500 000 00x— 5 9 3 This afternoon at 4 o'clock the Slipperies will cross bats with the Pelicans at the City Park, weather permitting. RAIN PREVENTS BALL CONTEST The diamondball game that was scheduled to take place last night at Bayview -Park between El Fenix and Cubs was called off owing to the inclement weather. This game would have been the second contest of the new league schedule. #Hy, Angncmted Veena) It may not be surprising see.the two ‘most valuable player awards” for 1983 go to the pitch- ing aces of the world series. ri- vals—f'General” Alvin Crowder of the Senators and Carl Hubbell of the Giants. Jimmie Foxx of the Athletics to , the club from Toledo in July when! to ,sent to all German * fees for members with large fam-! PEARSON, COAXED 70 PITCH, ip | PILES UP MOUND VICTORIES {By Associated Pri | CLEVELAND, O., Oct. 3.—A- |tall right-hander, who plays the preferred football and basketball jguitar and sings hot-cha tunes|and had to be coaxed out to a \when it isnot his day to pitch, baseball diamond at Fresno, Calif., made life easier for the Cleve-\ where he attended high school. land Indians. And then he had to be coaxed The: Indians, who cracked up in! to pitch. mid-season and then recovered,’ first or third base. owe much of their recent wanes: team’s only pitcher ‘turned an streak to young Monte Pearson. |ankle, and that settled the issue. Down at the Lake Front Sta-| Pearson became a pitcher, with dium fans would just about as/Dytch Leonard, former Boston soon see Monte stroll out to the /and Detroit star, teaching him mound to start a game as any of ‘tricks, their favorite hurlers—Oral Hilde: pr a li i sii brand)'Mel Harder or Wesley F After ® little experience with rail. ithe semi-pro teams, Monte was The reason is that after joining Signed by Oakland and farmed out Bakersfield, where Louis the team was in a bad slump Pear-!Guistoe, former Cleveland first | son won eight games in his first baseman, really taught him to like 10 starts. One of his losses was ithe game. After that he was with due to errors afield, and another! Phoenix, Ariz., and then with Oak-| was by the score of 2 to 1. In land. seven weeks of campaigning he had an earned run average of 2.33. => Pearson is a chap who always But the Pearson became the property of Cleveland in 1931. POPULATION DRI OPULATIO UDRIVE ‘Today's Birthdays STRESSES HEREDITY '° sAilebep lena, Most Rev. James DeWolf Perry, | ececceccveeecrewecevoves He preferred to play} THE KEY WEST CITIZEN PAGE THREE BOO COTOCOCOSEOOSL COOCOOOOOOOSECO CODE TOTOSEUETECEDOTOTOTOOOS SCORE COO OOOOCOOS COCCOO OS OOOSESESOSOSSEHSSSESSOSSSESOSSOOEES C0800 Washington Senators, 1933 American League Champions ‘bishop of Rhode Island and pre- |siding bishop of the P. E. Church BERLIN, Oct. born in Philadelphia, ing the slogan, “Victory or Death, the ministry of propaganda has} launched a campaign to familiarize the nation with population prob- lems. German citizens, says an appez newspape! must be taught to think in t of “erbbiologie,” or heredi “Fundamentals must be mered into the consciousne: the nation,” says the ap) Germany's vast number of “ve- reine,” or civilian societies, have been drafted for the campaign. They have been asked to cut Employ- prov; jin America, 62 years ago. Frank S. Regan of Rockford, lll., lawyer, lecturer and Prohibi- 1 | Honist, born there,.71 years ago. James C. Roop, of Virginia, for- mer Direetor of the Budget, Wash- ‘iam. (ington, D. C., born at Upland, Pa., ; 45 years ago. ms | Charles W. Holman, of Wash- ington, D, C., farm coaperariye organizer, born at Winona, Miss:, 47 years ago. Dr. Robert Columbia University conomist, born at Ohio, 46 years ago. noted political Columbus, ; ilies and to-distribute* propaganda Haig, literature so “every German in! the remotest village will be reach- ed and permeated through and through by this enlightenment.” | Pamphlet material can be or- dered from the nazi party offices. | (All profits derived from the sale! ‘thereof will be turned over to| Dr. Virginia Gildersleeve, dean {of Barnard College, New York, ,born there, 56 years ago. Rt. Hon. James H. Thomas, and Chuck Klein of the Phillies, |needy large families. : this year’s batting kings, also willl “Heredity-thinking,” it explains, collect plenty of yotes again, but) “extends beyond the narrow| they won the big prizes last year SPhere of the individual, into the geeee | Britain’s Secretary for Dominions, bern 58 years ago. and hardly figure to repeat under the circumstances. Players like Mancuso, Ryan, Schumacher, as well as Manager | Terry himself, played yital fanal| <> in the suecess of the new National League champions, but whenever matters reached a critical stage, Hubbell was the man who 27 mightiest to the emergency. the yote were left to the Giants| themselves, they would, make it unanimous for the Oklahoma mas- ter of serew-ball. _ Like Hubbell, Crowder is one of . ing of workers in the He. shouldered the ‘games that the National need- Joe Shows 'Em “toe Hauser, in : setting a a new all- time record of 69 homers in Min-; neapolis of the American Associa- tion this year finally convinced his| ALLAN B. CLEARE, JR. closest neighbors and severest. eritics—the baseball writers of St. Paul—that there was not mach) “fluke” to his achievement, if any. It happened that Hauser broke his own baseball record by hit- ting his 64th and 65th in the St. Paul park, where the fans “razz-| ed” him as a big pop-fly hitter by taking advantage of the short right-field fence in his home grounds across the bridge in Min-| neapolis. “He made us eat some of our past utterances,” wrote a St. Paul critic afterward. “Joe demonstrat-! ed that fences near and far are no barrier. He can hit ‘em over any fence, as he demonstrated! when he hit two over the right field barrier, Only about tery of the park (carrying a dis- tance of 865 fet over a 30 foot barrier) gand mever before had any performer placed two balls over that fence in one game.” Canada Grabbing Gridders “You probably know,” writes M. J. Quinlan, sports editor of The Niagara Falls Gazette, “that ex-college players are finding a fertile field for their talent in |cludes Hamilton, Toronto fand Montreal, 30 have sailed over there in the his-| vast reaches of generations, cen-| turies, and millenniums.” Subscribe for The Citizen —20 ‘weekly. POLITICAL = ANNOUNCEMENTS | Soeocareroncoecepececses| For Tax Collector-Assessor SAM B. PINDER For ,Tax Collector-Assessor} JIM ROBERTS For City Councilman W. H. MONSALVATGE For Re-election For Police Justice | For Chief of Police CLEVELAND NILES For Captain of Police EVERETT R. RIVAS For Captain of Police. ' LAURIE ROBERTS | ee For Re-election ‘FOR, RENT—Furni ‘Today’s Horoscope | caedactexesednouaelaese The person born this day seems to be a lover of the mysterious and may very likely be supersti- tious. The indications are for a love of study in retirement or for a solitary life, and if other aspects jare at all vicious, there is danger ‘of imprisonment, or at least, of very severe . criticism, however much. deserved or not. CLASSIFIED OLUMN sso esete FOR RENT | RESIDENCE, corner Caroline and Ann streets. Commodious and modern in every respect. Gas range and Kelvinator. Other- wise unfurnished, $30.00 month. Wm. Curry’s Sons Co. sept25-tf ed fae Duval. ment sept. Apply 827 30-3t. NTED—You to know that we Yttawa| several fi col-} lege players from th be seen in action ; former Penn backfielde ing Ottawa and has a timports Tom Grab Johnson of Temple, / Penn and Abe Eliowitz of n State, “Montreal lege gridde singer Stevens of Syracuse ,and direetor of athl i versity of Toronto Iman, a team Toronto Argona Four Union. ‘ “Bill Storen, last year, is Michael's has s Detroit U t layer! new coach a college Canadian amateur football ranks which competes in these days. In the Big Pour In- Rugby Football Uni "| BLANK have the right prices on letter-| heads, envelopes, business cards, | of} statements and any form printing. Satisfaction guaran- teed. ae $1. The Artman jan7 FOR SALE able for every business. In duplicate with carbon paper. Only 5e each, The Artman Press, Citizen Building. Phone 51. junl4-tf ILD PAPERS FOR SA bundie Se, containing 25 papers. The Citizen Office. may!-tf RADIO REPAIRING | RADIO REPAIRING. We repair | all makes. Guaranteed service, bo | ! WANTED } | i N) N & 8 N) N) ) i \) ‘\ ) ) \ ‘ ‘ A) \) N .) SALES BOOKS—Suit-! “LUKE SEWELL eeecceonegoee MONTE WEAVER WACK RUSSELL LK JOE KUHEL FRED SCHULTE < 1656—Miles Standis! Pilgrim! er, died at Duxbury, Mass., about 7 Hawk. famous | 1838—Black . chief, died in Sauk Indian war Iowa, aged about 71. 1867—Hidioric Whiskey Riots | in Philadelphia. Buckets of sand are the fraps j}recommended by the bureau jfisheries to catch the small snail | “Ah, this is the life!’ sighs the) like drills menacing oyster beds. Puffy, “Heigh ho!” at = ———————— We're’ cheered by the crowd ‘every BENJAMIN LOPEZ ) place that we go!” FUNE ER AL HOME Established 1885 24-1 Ambulance Service Skilled Embaimer, Miastte Surgery Phoné 135° Night Phone 696-W | They're in a cage ara ret with theit host, As natives of Gweeze. drink their] health in a toast. ih ELL 2 wae. SOMITE ITEOEEE ES \ VOTE THE STRAIGHT RE PEAL TICKET of The candidates pledged to repeal the Eighteenth Amendment are 67 in number. They will be classified on the ballots as: GROUP A FAVORING RATIFICATION | (FOR REPEAL) | | If you vote for these for repeal. 67 candidates you vote r all 67. Pr e of eac h a cross mark (X mans 67 cross marks. y for more than hrown out front of the Do not vote 67 your ballot j candidate in Group A ar Vote for 67 I od to Ratification of the Twent A vote for Ratification is ; ote for Repeal. FLORIDA REPEAL ASSOCIATION IP PPPP POP ELLLL LLL L ELE 2 | ww ‘ ROSE BUSH SALE Get Soil Ready--Then Watch For A-Good Rainy Spell 15¢e Red or Pink Radiance, 25¢ Red or Pink Radiance, special lot at .. special lot at 10 for 10"for Red Francis Scott Key, on their own roots, $1.00 -50e Samet $4.00 ehaneereamtemtes S| | SPECIAL PAINT OFFERINGS $1.50 Four Hour Enamel, two sizes 10¢ AND 30c¢ Black Roof Paint, per gallon 80e 60 $3.50 Green Metallic Roof Paint, per gallon $2. 70 $2.35 ZILO---PURE LEAD AND ZINC PASTE $17.00 "$8.70 South Florida Contracting & Engineering Co. Phone 598 White and Eliza Streets “Your home is worthy of the best” Red Francis Scott Key, special lot at 1f for Sherwin Williams Master Painters Flat White, $2.00 per gallon ............ 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