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‘— MONDAY, MAI 3 RED DEVILS LOST SECOND AND THIRD STRAIGHT GAMES SUNDAY AFTERNOON Caraballo Red Devils lost a; Summary—Home run: Sterling: doubleheader of baseball yester- three-base hits: Sterling, Ga- day afternoon at Army Barracks. briel, Moli M. Griffi > It was their second and third suc- "> Molina, M. Griffin; two- base hits: Soldano, J. Smith; cessive loss since,the inception of the Monroe Couftty League two struck out: by Bethel 14, by Mo- lina 7; bases on balls: cff Molina Sundays ago. 2, off Bethel 1, off Moore 2; stolen In the first game, the Reds made @ desperate try for vietory 1.0. ai Rodiigubz, Molina, G Acevedo; sacrfiice hits: Soldano after trailing six runs. In the opening frame, Sluggers scored five times on two singles, a dou- — ble and a triple, helped by a sac- Gabriel. Tifice and two errors. In the third, In the second game, the Ace- a walk, stolen base and a single vedo Stars administered the fatal brought home another man. Two. whitewash to the Red Devils. The errors and a single were combined final score was 10 to 0. to send another Slugger across In the first inning, a walk, a the plate. The Reds a lone mark- balk, a single and a triple by Bar- er in the initial frame on a single celo gave them two runs. In the and a triple. Then, in the fifth, third two, singles gave them an- another single, another triple and. other run, one more in the sixth a homer, helped by an error, gave on three singles and a stolen base. the losers four runs. Robert Beth- and in the “critical” seventh, 11 el was sent to the showers, and .men, batted. With two on, the Moore, a newcomer ing the Bar- | one-and-only Skip Rueda knock- the for the ed the ball over the left fielder’s head for a homer, and Eloy Ace- vedo singled to _score two. When the’ dust cleared off, Six runs had crossed ‘the’ plate: Howard’ Gatés, for the losers, fantied seven’ men and Malgrat. for the Stars, also whiffed seven. Sluggers hit three singles and-a{ E. Acevedo and E. Rueda were double and aided by two errors| leaders at bat, with two out of produced three runs. Two errors|three. Machin hit three out of gave them their last score in the’! five, as did Barcelo. Gabriel, W. ninth, with the final count being | Arias and Molina each hit a sin- 11-9. gle for the Reds. Lucilo and Gabriel were the; Al. Acevedo, A. Acevedo and only regulars who did not com-! Barcelo played a great game for mit an error. , the victors in the field, and Izzy M. Griffin, with three safeties Rodriguez and Stickney were out- out of five tries for the victors, standing for the losers. was the leader at bat. J. Rob- Score by innings: RHE erts and A. Rodriguez, two out Stars _ 201 001 600—10 18 4 of four, were also outstanding for Red Devils 000 000 000— 0 3 6 the Sluggers. Sterling led for the Batteries: Malgrat and D. Lo- Reds, hitting safely twice in five pez; H. Gates and I. Rodriguez. trips to the plate. —Home run; Rueda; Score. by innings: R.H.E three-base hit: Bareelo; stolen Sluggers _ 501 100 30111 10 8 bases: A. Acevedo, Rueda, J Red Devils 100 044 000— 9 7 8 Garcia; hit by pitchers: Machin, Batteries: Bethel, Moore and A. Acevedo by Gates, L Rod- Al. Rodriguez; Molina and Ga- riguez by Malgrat; time of game: ; briel. 2:00; umpire, C. Griffin. sore rene a ed a triple and combined by two miscues by his teammates, feft the mound. “Réthel cathe back in the box. Four,runs crossed the plate and the Reds were then leading, 9 to 7. In the seventh frame, the 1, DOINGS AROUND THE GOLF LINKS By GRAVY——— “Big Bertha” Sands— jweek, he had been telling Mr. From a member of native born Samuel Harris (our genial Post- “royalty’ ‘to a member of the master) about how he was going select crowd of 250-yard drivers; to lose a match if he took Sam- of golf balls, is the latest step of uella Goldsmith for a partner Mr. Old Bye Duke of Rock Sound. and allowed Mr. Leo Hughes -to It seems that last Thursday, Old play with himself. Of course, Bye was matched up in the same genial Postmaster never cares crowd as Mr. John Telegraph Pin- whether he wins, loses or draws der, Mr. Cookie Mesa and Mr. (except he must be a winner of Charlie Ketchum. Mr. Old Bye some kind) told Mr. Pious that if claims that it was not fair to give he lost the match he would quit John Pinder to him as a partner playing golf. ond that while he admits he is the holes it looked that way to Sam best golfer in the foursome, it is and Sam on account of Mr. Pious not right to make him carry John and Mr. Leo started off by win- sll over the course. Anyway, it ning a couple of points and Mr. started out a friendly match but Sam and Mr. Sam did not catch before long Mr. Old Bye was get-| up until the 16th hole when they ting such drives as from No. 5 tee’ got one ahead but Mr. Postmaster to the soft spot in the the fairway down near er. Also he got such a drive on number 8 that he was up by the second bunker, beyond the coco- nut trees; in fact, he claims he had about a Watkins’ putt to the green. Now, either Mr. Old Bye has been spoofing his friends cr else Mr. Sands is Mr. Jimmy Thompson in disguise. Mr. Duke admits he made so many long Grives that those on Nos. 2 and 5 were nothing to talk about. He says you ought to hear about how far he could knock the ball home when he used to play in the vicin- ity of Eleuthera island. He tells about the time he stood in front all even and the same thing hap- draw all the way ‘round and now as heretofore. Grandpa Stowers Still Good— Mr. Bob Stowers got to think- ing that before long he would be so young that he would not enjoy a good golf game, so he grabbed his golf bag for the first time in several months and journeyed to the course and was surprised to get 50’s on both rounds, which He had Mr. Bascom Grooms for For a matter of 16) i f. ited, one into the Boke ty ey e 17th ended | pened on the 18th, so it was a/ our genial Postmaster continues . seeessesecosceossesoeses FOLLOWING THROUGH | (By AGUILAR) erccece Boxing— Maxie Baer came te life Friday night and won a 15-round deci- sion over Tommy Farr. It was a bloody battle. He had the Welchman down for counts twice and did not look like the Baer that clowned with Louis, or Farr, in London, but the Baer that beat Schmeling for the title and the one that fought Braddock. If he fights like he did Friday night he will again be fighting for the crown now held by Joe Louis. In the Class B section of the state tournament the Homestead Growers lost to Chipley, and the club that the writer thought was the strongest in the section was eliminated. Lake Worth was af- so defeated by the Cross five, leaving Cross City and Chipley as the real contenders for the class B crown. In the class A section, the Mi- ami Beach and Miami High are the representatives of this dis- trict and the writer believes that Miami High will go into the fi- nals. The Typhoons, under Johnny McGuire, have entered the state tournament five times, and have been eliminated the last four times in the first round of play, but this time the writer be- lieves they will give the upstate boys a run for their money. In the girls’ tourney, the Adae and Hooper and the Greyhounds of Miami Beach will be in the fi- nals for they both have good clubs and the only ones that may give them a battle are the Mag: Chefs of Tampa, champions for the last two years and Elliott Pi- rates of Jacksonville. They are playing in the Miami Beach High Sehool Gym, so the Beach girls are in their own back yard. Baseball— Charles (Flash) Mendoza, the ardent Giant fan, the one and only Key Wester that has writ- ten a poem to the club and who léarns his baseball from a book. has the following to say about his club: First, he predicts that they will finish first; second. that they | , will win the world’s series, and. third, that with Mancuso and Danning behind the plate, Hub- bell, Melton, Castleman, Coffman, Gabler, Schumacher, Smith, Gumbert, Baker and Lohrman ~ our) (what a staff, he claims) in the box, McCarthy, Leslie, White- head, Bartell and Ott, a world’s ‘eater infield, Moore, Ripple, Lieber and a few new ones who are coming up—the Giants are hard to beat. So Flash Mendoza claims that the Giants will repeat their win the National League and take the world’s classic. . . Gehrig is still out with the Yan- kees and has just turned down a $39,000 offer of the owners, and Rupert says that his last offer for DiMaggio is $25,000. So there are still where they started. . Rollie Hemsley is back with Cleveland He got in dutch but has been for: given and claims he will behave The Red Sox are bellicose but |bewildered. Big question mark. says Jack Cuddy. Grove, Mar- cum, Wilson and Ostermuller are four starting pitchers, and young Jim Bagby may win a berth, and Charlie Wagner may make the grade. Borg, DeSoutels and a rookie named Peacock may be the receivers. The rest of the club is mostly seasoned veterans and may carry the team to second po- shows that he can still play golf.| sition. of the post office and in two shots! company and they joined up with | Boxing— knocked a golf bali from Rock: Mr. Eddie Pangle and Mr. Valter Armstrong, the sensa- Sound to Governors Harbor and/ Vinson but Vince showed all ofjtional Los Angeles negro, will then to Spanish Wells up on the places as the Glass Window and} 7g or give up the game. the Cow and Bull but of pac | KZ : when he described that, most people misunderstood him and said they thought that was ex- actly what they were thinking, | Parks and Mr. Melvin too. However, all joking aside.) the other, a few things mi the Duke got fours on the Tthissid For instance, we mii hole both times and got a couple/ peat the conversation of skins thereby. place on the Sth when aa Parks had the hole won Postmaster Nearly \ iit Golf birdie four and Mr. Melvin ababe Kemp and Mr. Charlies Sal- as on the one hand and Mr. kins takes a great deal of pleas-jwith a par five. Of course, Ikey 4 }them how to score a neat 88./ north end of the island, the ball! Grandpa Stowers says that when | wei passing in the meantime such jhe gets Vince's age, he will make! In the case of Doc William Pen-| Champion Lou Amber# =a | back to Tt seems that Mr. Pious Wat-j sell came along and tied the hole households of 'while gloom w: fight Barney Ross, the welter- ight champion, on 26 at the Yankee Stadium or thé Madi-; }son Square Garden. has agreed to meet Ligh! t days after this fight. and fives and went up im the K Salas, as order of ure in winning golf games and/had just won the fourth with a/ business around a certain dairy when he does not win, he feels} birdie and cut the lead of the op-/and around another guy’s certain OW SALE AT ALL GROCERS that he is slipping. For a whole position from four up to two up'diary. cd THE KEY WEST CITIZEN _ BILL NEXT SUNDAY The regular Sunday afternoon Monroe County Baseball League doubleheader at Army Barracks will feature the Sluggers. In the opening fraeas, the lead- ership of the circuit will be at stake as Acevedo Stars start off the Sluggers’ double feature. Cellar-occupant Caraballo Red Devils will attempt to win their first game in the nightcap. LEAGUE STANDING W. L. Pet. ee 1 6 1000 Red Devils.0 3 .000 ° eeeveceocesesecs “CLASSIFIED COLUMN Seossccseesossesseseeeee EASTER CHICKS = POR SALE—1,000 day-old baby chicks for Easter. Only 10c each, while they last. Arriv- ing Wednesday. Monroe Meat Market, 510 Fleming Street. Quality Meat and Poultry. mari4-Iwkx REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE — Conservative, practical advice. 37 years’ ex- perience on Florida. Keys. E Registered Broker. P. O. No. marl2-tf R. Lowe, Tavernier, Florida. 21. . POULTRY FRESH LAID EGGS everyday from nest to you. Call at 1609 Flagler Ave. marll-imo WOMEN—Address and mail ad- vertising material for us at home. We supply everything. Good rate of pay. No selling. No experience necessary. Mer- chandise Mart, Box 523, Mil- waukee, Wisconsin. marll-3tx FOR RENT APARTMENT—One or two bed- rooms, shower and tub. Con- tinuous hot water, GE refrig- erator. See R. R. Lord, County Court House. maré-lwk GARAGE APARTMENT, modern conveniences, electric ice box. 1502 South street. marl4-lwk BICYCLES BICYCLES FOR RENT, by hour, day, week or month. J. R Stowers Company. nov2-tf MOTO-SCOOTS RENT A MOTO-SCOOT by hour or day. “A Treat That Can” Be Beat”. Moto-Scoot Service, 701% Duval street. mar4-12tx FOR SALE CORNER LOT, 50x100 feet. Cor- ner 5th and Staple Avenue. Apply Box D, The Citizen. nov2-tt FINE PIANO in excellent con- dition; cheap for cash or terms to reliable party. Apply Haydn Illingworth, 615 Elizabeth St. ~ marl2-tf SECOND SHEETS—509, for 5c. The Artman Press. may19-tf MUST SELL 30x11 ft. boat fully equipped for living aboard, 16 hp. Regal motor. Anchored Roosevelt Bivd. (Division St. continuation) one-half mile from White St. Inquire at boat after 5 P. M. or see Clem Price, Realtor. mar9-6t FOR SALE—Child’s Bed. Rea- sonably priced. 1208 Pine street. marl4-Itx BABY CHICKS FOR SALE BLOODTESTED Big Type Bred To Lay White Leghorn Chicks. Write for new low price. Fain’s Hatchery, Edison, Georgia. marl4-itx NURSERY STOCK ROSE BUSHES/— World’s best we caches ahd ~ Culture. 7 i “catalog Mc- ch Rose X » Ty- ig Bros 8 ursery, Ty. marit-itx — TRY IT TODAY — STAR * BRAND CUBAN COFFEE Pi LLLLLLLLALA LALA ALAA AA ALAA AeA AAA .- SLUGGERS IN TWIN BRUCE.PRAISES ART CENTRE INCOMMUNICATION TO MORGAN - Edward Bruce, who was the man Julius Stone, first named ad- ministrator, turned to and said, “What projects can you suggest for Key West”, and who answered that an art project would be a wonderful publicity and cultural feature, the suggestion resulting in the establishment of an “Art Coloney” here for two years, praises the local Art Centre in a communication to F. Townsend” 5 i¢ector. Mr. Bruce is re- Key West is 4 is like a Morgan, dit * to“one ol ment in United States”. this month’s issue, compliments i Mr. Bruce on the award, and states that “it was an honor well deserved, and its awarding to the widely-loved Edward Bruce brought a glow of satisfaction to thousands who plug for the ,de- velopment of art in America”. Mr. Bruce is With the Treasury Deparement Art Projects, and al- though other government art projects have been widely criti- cized, no serious indictment has “Dam also ‘Been lodged against the efficient q@eally charming exhibition they Miro eer flows: were able to produce America ’s letter follows: “Mr. Townsend Morgan, Director, “Federal Art Project, “Key Art Centre, ‘Key West, Fla. “Dear Mr. Morgan: “Tt was very pleasant for Mrs. Bruce and me, after being away BIBLE READINGS | ALE. Booth. of Pasadena, Cali-’ Hehts ao: that they. coud aut Be fornia, will give Bible readings on worn without splitting. Tuesday and Wednesday evenings and a lecture and prayer mieeting on Thursday and Friday of this! and ‘the coming week at 7:30 o'clock at Grace and Truth Hall, 1127 Southard street. ‘ This is said to be a rare oppor-! tunity for Key West Christians. {| Gospel services each Sunday night. DONT DO THIS CUMBERLAND, Md. — When Albert Alsip of this city returned to his parked car he found a po- lice ticket for illegal parking on it. He tossed -the ticket into the} getter, and ss a risus Sad te pays a $10 fine for littering the streets plus a $1 parking fine. | Subseribe to The Citizen. Old Island Trading Post See Our VARSITY SHOW Matinee: tra, 15-20c. ditional insertion. CLASSIFIED-- --ADVERTISING AT THE PRICE is a BARGAIN you can’t afford to overlook. It’s inexpensive adver- im and day out—brings results! Cent (1c) per word for each ad- id 15-25¢ The Key West Citizen Fh hhh hake ded dada deadk dick did, huudidl| Chnoddead hth Added ee eecece FOR SALE Paridy furnished two-story house and _ lot at 1307 Whitehead street. In exclusive neighborhood. Beautiful view of the sea and®, overlooking Coral Park. 42,000 CASH—Ralance The Citizen Office Gf Residence. [Attention Hou __ Double Bargain —_ THE NEW GENERAL | ELECTRIC RANGE NLY now Taal, _ Whitehead St. WAS Alt 3 THRIFTY FEATURES! Here it is—the new “cn You will want for your " “J @) 2 4 bi if A | i =. = = <i queer a