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THE KEY WEST CITIZEN SI BASEBALL CONTEST WILL! ALS0,TAKE PLACE AT NAVY | FIELD TOMORROW wee at the Navy Piel@, beginning at 1:30 o'clock, between the Miami Daily Newsboys and The Citizen Newsboys. The visitors will arrive on the; noon train témorrow with the} game inder way a short time Pie beg This exhibition gives promise of being interesting throughout. The Miami boys will leave at.5 o'clock on the same | afternoon on the return trip home. the ‘diamondball ‘¢on-; will be a baseball game; bed between the Pirates and Coast Guard. From.all indications this contst “will also ‘be quite in- Yas’ both ‘teams “are said to/be in good shape for the battle. es aeeggeraay 4 ‘ 1 DOROTH : ae, Kirby, Atlanta school:girl, * "t hit agolf ball very far, but Girl, 13, Defeats Veteran | To Win Georgia Golf Title KIRBY ths less than 100 pounds hits them on the nose. feated a field of veteran stars’ in winning the state crown, nding up with a victory over a \ former southern champion. (iy Asnociatea Press) ATLANTA, Oct. Peter: ents. ‘ment largely out of curiosity. But! ips are sitting dnithe back seat it ‘realm of Georgia women golf: ew took her seriously until she jtarted trimming ‘the sails of her rs, for the. higetiiy of state cham-!opponents as fast as she met them. tresses - reat on And she did it with ease,*winning » By BYRON PRICE *Press, Washington) President Roosevelt's political} | managers priecked up their ears in-, > jtently when agitation for’a ~e SOCCOPESO SHOE SEHOOESEOOSSSOSEEe | party” suddenly was revived at the! convention of the’ Washington ite Re Federation of Labor. Mr. Roosevelt has made no se-.* leret ofthis desire to unite all “li 2S) eral elements” into a continuing ‘working organization under demo- jeratic and insurgent republican leadership. Emergence of any jreal “labor party’? would compli- | eate that plan seriously. Although the project appeartd to be getting nowhere with federa- tion Jeaders, the president took | oceasion to reassert his leadership i when he spoke at the dedication of jthe Gompers ‘status. { ; All in all. the Roosevelt mana- |gers“appeared unworried by the imet result. President Green of j the féderation, who a few days be- ;fore had .been complaining that the NRA did not give labor enough, | praised Mr. Roosevelt in his con- ivention speech and asked his ‘col- {leagues ‘to stand by the govern- | ment. Whatever the background lof that speech, it cheered admin- listration leaders immensely, | Pbese leaders do. not now look |for the development of any pow- erful ,independent labor méve- !ment in politics, but whether labor |ps-a unit.can be kept in line be- LIGHTHOUSE BOYS: DOWN ARMY TEAM: DIAMONDBALL GAME YESTER-' DAY AFTERNOON RESULTS © IN- SCORE OF 10 TO 6 The Lighthouse diamondball Army yesterday afternoon and again the.former were victorious, the contest ending with the score standing 10 to 6. This is the sixth game that has been played by these aggregations and the soldier boys have taken jbut two of the series, i However, there are other games to be played in this series, and the fighting squad of Uncle Sam be- lieve they will eventually be the victors when the final summing up is made. : of Dorothy pSivas ot ‘Atlanta, 43- Bt her engagements by sizable} worry about statee Gs up her putts? ear-old’school girl ‘She won it by” deteating the veteran’ Margaret Maddox «in ‘the game he took suspect he and Bésiness Manager: ‘of the Yankees might; to let Babe Ruth go to Boston, to manage the Red New York could wanted in new player to enjoy a substantial revival of interest this year, the value of Ruth's entry as a player-manager of the Red Sox hardly can be over- estimated. tournament played on the East Lake links, . Bobby Jones’ Engaging in her second jouipe- iment, Dorothy seored’a medal of 2-as against 88 for Miss Maddox, ho has a southern championship 'to her cerdit. In the 18-hole final igner, two up. ‘Weighs Under 100 Pounds Acbig: gallery trailed the little eetor el is slight of build, weigh- | ing less than 100 pounds. There- fore, her shots don’t have much power behind them, but none in the tournament couji outpoint her around the greens, and her iron jots were true. She is a calm sort of child. Dubbed shots don’t fluster her, for ‘why should a person ‘only 13 worry over a‘few Stray balls. She just ignores her errors and comes right ' back to smack the next ball against the pin. And why should a 13-year-old TPIKHED He GIANTS To VICTORY INTHE FINAL “GAME AFTER. SCHUMACHER- HAD FALTERED ! Well, here’s one who doesn’t, She merely steps up and hits them, and into the hole or stop close enough for an easy second. Opponents are singing praises of her demeanor under fire. She nev- er whines. She congratulates her rivals on their good shots and ¢on- soles them in their errors. Dorothy's start in tournament competition a year ago gave ‘some hint, of her coming prowess. to her credit, but lasted through three rounds. ALEX MECOLL-, 39-YEAR-OLD ROOKIE OF HE SENATORS, Did NoT ALLOW REW YORK “4 AIT IN THE LAST Wo NGS OF A=) - Sur fe € a GE SECOND We Damace fi + CONE BEFORE we- <oT WO He cane Us (Chief Of Bureau, The Associated! team had another fracas with the’ in ‘most <cases they either tumble, She! had only a few months of practice “POCCO SOOO O0000O0 0000000000 5050500000000 OSSTTOOSSUCTSSSTOSTSSSST SV OSESESTSTOE “Wisecracker” Important Post ‘LABOR PARTY’ TALK NOW FINDS “ADMINISTRATION VERY. WATCHFUL hind Roosevelt remains to be'seen. In the past, efforts to corral \“the Jabor vote” on a national | aap for anybody have resulted in peated agree | | Eyes On The Treasury | Politicians of every feather are | state of the United States treas- aneed is a mitter already in con-! troversy. President Rooseyelt re-! cently said it was,"but Republican House Leader Snell insists no such ; conclusion ean be yeaehed except! by “trick beokeeping.” The official figures early \in October, entering the seeend quar. ter of the fiscal year, showed ex- penditures outrunning receipts by around $200,000,000. Ineluded in the outgo, however, was abont| $300,000,000 listed as emergency | payments so that considering “or. dinary -expenditures” alone, the budget appeared $100,000,000 to ihe good, The money spent on the emer-} geney reeovery program will be a subject of mounting discussion, ' taking increased interest in the | ury. Whether the bud; jn hal |Kennet Beck ‘Rassmussen, jwork-out to keep the “place” | Willaman as the proud a eocccccescccccesocs cay Associated Press? COLUMBUS 0., Oct. 21.—] There is a new position on the| football team at Ohio State Uni- versity this fall, It’s called “‘entertainer’’—and be- | { j | ispectacled musician and wit of sorts, from Cleveland, is so good | at the job he doesn’t even have to on \the team. It is a new note in gridiron war- favre, it appears, with Coach Sam! origina- | tor. Rassmussen (the boys call him ‘“Rasputin”) eats, sleeps and gets into football toggery with the squad. “It helps keep down that certain tension onsthe team,” Willaman explains in all seriousness. “The boys are in.a good humor, relaxed, at ease. It is good stuff all the vecause this sqxt of spending hard-| way around.” jy has begun, The farm administration has! paid out’ only about $100,000,000, | mostly to cotton and hog produe-| Public works -aetually has} disbursed -even less, although it} has allotted on paper upward of | $2,000,000,000. The reconstrue- | tion corporation, once the biggest! spender, is passing out of the bud-| get pieture because it is receiving |i in repaid loans almost: as much as | ‘it is putting out. Treasury bookkeeping is so foea gre that politicians are | able to draw all srots of conflict- ing conclusions—and doubtless will as the 1984 campaign ap- proaches. Patronage Pleas Persistent Underground pressure for dem- acratic patronage is growing every day.. As weeks go by with many fat appointments . still unmade, members of congress are wonder- ing whether the patronage lever ien’t being reserved to ease ad- ministration legislation through at {the January session. The strange part about it is that, i although Postmaster General Far- When Willaman ran an eye | down the roster of likely prospects ‘and picked out 50 to report for the early drills this season, he sent Rasemussen a letter too. The clowning Clevelander. a sophomore now, went out for the freshman squad last year. But it soon became apparent to all hands that his value to the team was not in making spectacular tackles, ' booting high spirals, | running around end or making smash plays | through the line. But as a spreader of good cheer; and rare humor—well, he was a postive genfus. So Willaman hit upon the idea of having him around this year. And so far it has been a good idea. He will stay with the squad as} long as he can be persuaded to do so, and very likely he -will be among those putting away his uni-., ‘ form after the final game of the year, ley continues to joshi and take it on the chin, in his ostensible role of “patronage dispenser”, the Teal | decisions are being made by the) White House, itself. i PAGE SEVEN On Ohio State’s Grid Machine Here’s an intimate sort of Kenneth Buck Rassmussen, official “entertainer” for the Ohio State eleven, getting the boys in shape for a tough battle his week week end. ELOPES WITH PORTER ‘TWO POLICE Docs” LONDON.—Mrs, Hannah Ellis, VOICE COMPLAINT inmate of a poorhouse in this city, (By Axnocinted me eloped ‘with a porter in ‘the in- DENVER, October 21.—A “ten-| stitution. ible commotion” in the basement } alien apa eominal Mark’s church, which neigh | Jimmy Sands, 11-year-old, who alis the champion cook of the Mad- ison Square Boys’ Club in New won his title making rs reported, sent police on hunt for vandals. Instead they found two police dogs that had! York City, fallen down an air “well” at the side of the building and were com- plaining vigorously. Georgia’s bright leaf tobacco erop this year brought farmers more than $6,000,000 in cash. Subscribe for The Citizen, ss a Why did you buy this NEWSPAPER? SUPPOSING ‘that, beginning tomorrow, all the newspapers are diseontinued. What a furore the public would make. “News! News! We must haye news or we will be no better off - than ancients.” All right, suppose we give them news but cut out the advertisements? Then yen would discover that politics, the doings of;sotiety,"” , notices of fires, accidents, deaths, scandals, sorts, thé’ activitiés | of the police and criminal add little or nothing to the real eom- fort and happiness of this greatest age in the world’s histery. Advertising is the NEWS of all the looms; of all the furnaces, of all the laboratories, of all the shops, of all the stores, of all the world, and all working for you. Because of advertising, luxuries and necessities that once eost a king’s ransom are yours at little prices. Advertising pits merchant against merchant, artisan against artisan, producer against producer, for your benefit, forcing out the best there is in everything and fell the world about it. Read adyertising. Keep abreast of today. Advertising fur- nishes you with facts and opportunities that otherwise you weuld never know. In Key ‘West the most effective method of ativertising is throngh the-eolumns of THE DAILY CITIZEN