The Key West Citizen Newspaper, February 26, 1938, Page 5

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ar 7eve ———_By GRAVY——— Monthly Match Tie— Well, as ‘far’ as flour boys are concerned, they are about as good golfers as juice boys, but on the other hand nobody could say they were superior. In other words, gentle reader, the match seemed to be a tie on account of a couple or so golfers did not play and some had to change around. But in t evening of Thursday, everybody celebrated and had a good time. At least, they looked that way for the next day or so However, read for yourself and see if your hero was happy or whether he made out like he was. Okey’s OK— The first gang through was a two-some of little Okey Johnny Stout who calls Parkersburg, W. Va, as home, and Mt. Pangle, one of the lighthouse service’s finest. It se aghat Little Okey told Big je that . he couldn’t do the cours#*fn much under a hundred and like a lot of sailors, Eddie was very gullible. And to prove such, Little Johnny made a 42-43 (which he claimed was not much under the 100), while Eddie got lost with a 50-46 but had a lot of fun. Okey was ali smiles on acount of a two on the short hole where he has been taking a five but the grin turned to tears when he got an eight on the hole that is a usual six. How- ever, Little Okey was still happy on Thursday evening. Club Headed For Water— Our genial Postmaster and Mr. Cookie Mesa were partners against Mr.- Ned McCarthy and Mr. Charlie Ketchum and as far as anvbody can learn, it was a tie match. However, on one occasion Mr. Lieutenant Ned very nearly let his club slip out of his hand (on purpose) and the club almost went in the pond (much to Mr. Ned’s sorrow. for that is the place it was meant). But, with Cookie‘ being a captain of juicers and Charlie the head of the flour boys, it was considered the proper thing to turn in a tie score and that is what happened. Of course, Cookie claims that he and Mr. Samuel Ephraim Harris were too much of a match for the other side but the last heard, Mr. Ned McCarthy, secondéd by his able father, told Cookie and Sam to prove same. Leo Hughes Blazes 76— Mr. William Pious Watkins and Mr. Leo Hughes could not find the proper opposition and they elected to take on Samuella Gold- smith and while Willie came in with 89 strokes, Mr. Leo was go- ing like two houses afire and got a 76. Mr. Goldsmith considered himself very lucky to have had an 81, but all had a good time, especially Leo. Got Stung!— Mr. Colonel O’Donell and Mr. Capt. Slingluff got stung by bees and various animals and were un- able to play but admitted they had a good time at the dinner And Mr. Neal said he wasn't stung but was ditto. Hoot Mon. An Unset!— Mr. Ikey Parks told his part- ner, the Duke of Rock Sound, not to play too hard because they did not want to beat Mr. Charlie Salas and Mr. John Pinder too bad, but before long Mr. Ikey wished he had kept still... After the 7th hole, Ikey and Old Bye were one up but from then on it was an- other story and at the end, Char lie and John were five up. Mr. Salas had 78, while Mr. Ikey barely beat Mr. Old Bye by one stroke and the Duke is very hap- py to have lost urider those cir- cumstances The Professor Is Sad— Mr. Ned Calkins played 18 holes with friends and then start- ed on a match with Mr. Handsome Horace O’Bryant for a partner and Mr. Li Plummer and Mr. Bob Spottswood as opponents, but "Mr. Li and Mr. Bob were too, too much for Mr. Calkins and Mr. Handsome and so the professor looked more sad than happy, but who wouldn’t after listening to Li all day? However, Mr. Li says they are very lucky to have his smiling countenance. Milligan’s Putt Wins— Mr. Doe Willie Kemp and Mr. Pro George Dodge took on Mr. Eddie Strunk and Mr. Red Milli- gan and it got to the very last hole, in fact the last putt to de- cide the match. Under ordinary rules, Mr. Strunk and Mr. Willie would have won in a walk-away but Mr. Hurricane was not mak- ing the usual 82 and Doc made a good 86. Mr. Red Millie got a73 and Mr. Pro Dodge got a 75. Aft- er the 17th hole the match -was all even and on the end of the game Doc and Eddie were lying five each on the edge of the green and Dodge and Millie were three each. Dodge and Eddie both sunk and Dec missed but Millie knocked his down and so the Hurricane and Red finished one up and Mr. Red and Mr. Hur- rieane were very happy. BASEBALL GAME HERE TOMORROW PIRATES AND STARS WILL BE SEEN IN' ACTION: LIST * OF PLAYERS GIVEN A baseball game at the Army Barracks tomorrow afternoon brings together the Pirates, man- aged bv Frank Caraballo, and the Stars of*Armando Acevedo. The game will be called at 2 o'clock. Both clubs are in prime condi- tion and a hot game is anticipated. It will be a warm-up affair for both clubs as they are getting ready for the Monroe County Basebal} League play which will Start Sunday, March 6. Line-ups for the clubs will be Pirates: Gabriel. ¢; Pete White, P; Sterling, th: H. Gates, 2b; Bak- er, 3b; Woodson, ss; Molina, Cara- ballo and Hopkins, outfielders. Willie 5 | ie | Sweeting in reserva : Stars--lzzv Rodriguez, c; Mal- grat ‘Lefty’ Roarigded, ‘ p: Bar- celo, lb; Al. Acevedo, 2b; D. Lo- pez, 3b; Armando Acevedo, ss; H. Machin and Nodine, out- F. Acevedo in reserve. league president jood game tomorrow e crowd will be at telephone direc At the corner of Petronia and Thomas streets, a) new arena im a bow! shape is being built by enthusiastic colored fans. It is understood that fighters will be brought from Miami to clash with some of the best local -olored pugs. @outh Dakota was the first state to live-rap pheasants for stocking Purposes. boxing . Local fans have started picking the winners in the big leagues’ races. Some, because the Giants and Yanks won last year, are picking them again this season, not counting on the changes in the clubs during the winter trades and those made recently. Bobby Shultz Picks ‘Em— Bobby Shultz picks them this way for 1938. . at least for the present, for he generally chang- es in July: Cleveland, Chicago, Philadelphia. Washington, St. Louis. National League Pittsburgh, Chicago, St. Louis. New. York, Boston; Cincinnati, Philadelphia. Markowitz, Too— be “Big Phillip” Markowitz likes» these: } j_ Detroit, New” York,’ Cleveland Boston, Washington. Philadelphia, Chicago and St. Louis. i National League ! New York, Chicago, St. Louis, Boston, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Philadelphia and Brooklyn. And Riggs— Dewey Riggs says that the Yanks and Cardinals will be in the world’s series; that Detroit. | Cleveland, Chicago, _ Boston, ; Washington, St. Louis and Phil- adelphia ‘will finish in that order in the American League, and the Cubs, Giants, Pirates, Bees, Reds, Dodgers and Phillies in the Na- j tional League. | Pete Romaguera— Pete Romaguera picks Detroit, | jz jNew York, Boston, Cleveland, ; | Chicago, Washington, Philadel- Phia and St. Louis in the Ameri- can; Cubs, Giants, Cards, Pirati * Bees, Dodgers, Reds and Phillies! in the older loop. Me. Too— The writer thinks there will be some changes in both leagues. In the National, the Cards, Cubs, Pi- rates. Giants, Bees, Reds, Dodgers and Phillies will wind up this way. In the younger circuit, the Yanks, Red Sox, Tigers, Indians, White Sox, Senators, Browns and Athletics. C “Stag” Stickney is a Giant fan; Baeza is a Yankee follower; of the Machin brothers, one is a Giant rooter and the other a Pi- rate. We'll get the way they stand in this column as soon as they tell us. Shots— With Dizzy Dean accepting a cut in pay and Ear! Averill al- ready signed, as are also the Wa- ner brothers, it seems asythough “the holdout crop for 1938 going , to be small.4..#@msley help, the Cleveland Indians ‘in at ‘Teast secornt-place in the Jeague. -A bold thief entered ti home of yr. ag » Dizzy an in} Bradenton ‘fhe other night and’ took ‘away 45,000 of welry, mostly belonging to Mrs. an. It is reported that Jimmie Ada- mick, a protege of Kearns. the man who carried Jack Dempsey to fame, will fight Joe Louis be- fore the champion tackles Max Schmeling in June. New faces on the Yanks may be Joe Cronin or Billy Knickerbocker at sec- years of experience. sand watches. WATCH HANDS work is guaranteed. If you BPaMBBDaBRaAPOMMaAaBaLD LA S12 Duval Street WATCH CRYSTALS. Any Size or Shape Our prices are lower than Miami Jewelers and our us repair it. If we don't cive satisfaction we will return you the amount paid fer repairs. Isn't that fair? WE STILL SELL JEWELRY ON balance as low as SOc weekly. buys anything we sell. Pollock’s—-Reliable Jew Who Said Watch Repairing? We have two watchmakers working with over thirty s ®. This enables us to repair any watch —no matter what the trouble is. We have repaired. in the last 12 months, over a thou- $2.00 $1.80 25< have a troublesome watch. iet TIME! $1.00 down— : N N N N) N N N) ‘ . Phone 465 VIP OIOOLIPIIIIIIISS Th’ taxpayers’ fire o’ indignation sure must make th’ collectors’ faces red. T’ air opinions is human but t know when t’ stop is sublime. Child Expert Finds Family ‘Rows’ Helpful (By Associated Press) DENVER, Feb. 26 Brooklyn, , ouraging t! er and fat told parents stitut y argument.” h the mi ‘ef disagree, Denver Univers: “Healt said; “gives cl e into the problems of 1 CHAMP BANANA EATER CORAKL Australia—Breaking his previous record for banana eating, Mervyn Walmsley of this city recently devoured 52 help- ings of the fruit in 20 minutes. ond. Henrich may be outfield once in a while. en it Changing Lineups— Other question marks: - For the Tigers. Christman or Croucher in the infield: White Sox, Gerald Walker in the outfi#ld and Owen at third; Indians, Hemsley behind the plate; Red Sox, Vosmik in the outfield and Doerr may be regu- second baseman s. . May win outfield berth Athletics, Hasson may play fi and Lodigiani second; Browns West or Bell in the outfield and Clift at third will be the only regulars from last year. National League: Giants will | stick with last year’s club; Cubs, Triplett may win berth in out- field and Lazzeri may play second base once in a while; Pirates, Riz- zo may play in the outfield; Card- inals, Slaughter may play in the outfield with Medwick and Mart~ in and Terry Moore, Padgett will field; Bees will t year; Dodgers, and r Reds have some fine rookie prospects. @ Every month, every week you put off buying your new G-E Refrigerator you are very likely money out. Your present refrigeration almost surely costs more to maintain than the new low operating cost of a G-E Don’t put up with an ia- adequate, old-fashioned refrigerator any longer. GE, the first choice of millions is mow popularly priced! Value than ever. 2—Low Catrent Cost. 3—Long Life. CLASSIFIED COLUMN TEACHER'S REGISTRY TEACHERS register pow. Imme- diate and future vacancies. Southeastern Teachers Agency, 403 Postal Building, Miami, Fla. feb25-3tx MUST SELL 30x11 ft. boat fully equipped for living aboard, 16 hp. Regal Anchored Roosevelt Blvd. (ivision St. continuation) ohe-half mile from White St. Inquire at hoat after 5 P. M_ or see Clem Price Realtor. feb21-6tx x100 feet. Cor- 5th and Staple Avenue. 'y Box D, The Citizen. nov2-tf FRESH LAID EGGS everyday from nest to you. Call at 1609 Flagler Ave. jan28-Imo WANTED WANTED—A ch: 2 «ta ibid on i order. ey may19-tf -page catalog—blades, notions, novelties, aspirins, shoelaces, carded specialties. Money makers. Broad es FOR RED ni House, completely renovated. e bedrooms and bath up- roo! St floor. “nm conveniences, running water; good neighborhood. Ap- ply, Johnson & Johnson. feb9-tt ROOM, private entrance, private bath. 619 William street. feb26-3t UPSTAIRS APARTMENT, all modern conveniences. 1502 South street. feb25-6t - REAL ESTATE TO SELL OR BUY REAL ES- TATE or mortgage on Florida Keys, address E. R. Lowe, P. O. Box*21. Tavernier, Florida. nov9-tf RENT A. MOTO-SCOOT by hour or day. “A Treat That Can't Be Beat”. Moto-Scoot Service, 701% Duval street. feb18-12tx The Key West Electric Company rip @ P oudtsfanding feature of Cap- tain MANUEL LOPEZ’ parties this week aboard the “FIVE BROTHERS” was the hand- line catch of a 45-pound grouper by a young lady nam- ed “Elinor” im a terrific fight. Lopez was out nearly every day last week. Other good catches were five amberjack and a 40-pound kingfish. Lo- pez guarantees his parties a fish good enough to photo- graph each trip. Next month he savs will be “sailfish month”. He will then guaran- tee a sailfish every time he goes out. Amazing Trolling Catch! Trolling on the inside route with Captain BERLIN MA- LONE in “THE BEN” the par- ty of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Da- vis and Dr. and Mrs. C. B. Mott of Morganton, N. C., brought in . N N N : N N N \ . N . , N : : . : 8 . N \) a ” 820 Caroline Street FOR HIRE— LOPEZ GUARANTEES DAILY SAILFISH SOON; HUGE JACK : DOLPHIN FEATURE CATCHES fish, yellowtail, grouper, snap- rH i ‘ if Teer aa : ! Vom Hof, Pfleugers, South Bend, Shakespeare Phane 886 in the fully equipped ‘“*BIRDIE*’ ‘* PILOT 2°° Docieine A: Gulf End Simonton St. SMALL OUTBOARD MOTOR BOATS FOR BOTTOM FISHING OR EXCURSIONS Willi M. 4 SEO MMABMLDaALM, WaIIIIIIIIMNIIIILIDILIIILIII SS LISS IOOIIISILISOISID COA AIOE EI if § i 41} A Hl (tnt wil | : f TH i i, ik f bf t F fa if i VCO OLE OEM OEEEEEEMEe Cah ahha he hdd Ahad hade had ddd Aatictd ddd didads datiadadiath dhahatadahaddaddiatiddddadidadadadtiataheds {i ret He i ® * F ! Hy pened i ¥ | f Wit Mi uit Ta Hit bliin i | HH If cf rt ; | ili f i 7 i i ot F TT | ; i il tt Mf i! ff if f it ii it i tel ite ! | | (j it i H | | ti H ’ 4 i

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