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MONDAY, JUNE 9,.1941 SYNOPSIS: Even now that she und Martin Dane are mar- ried, Eileen Gardner can scarce- ly decide what was luck and what was purpose in the course that brought them together. For Eileen had come to New York to find Martin without even know- ing his last name, and_partly because of her effort to support herself, partly because of hero- ism, she has won him. That was true, literally, for Eileen had actually courted her young and rich husband, Chapter 23 Martin’s Private Devil ‘THE latchkey clicked in’ the door. Martin and Eileen Dane stood in the living room of his apart- ment, alone for nearly the first moment since the excited. frol- icking marriage at the county Seat nearest the lodge in the Adirondacks. She clung to him suddenly. “Oh, Martin, Tl try never to make you sorry!” she said. But he only said, kissing her as you would a ‘child, “You’re so cute and little, I don’t see how you could!” The manservant, William, soft- footed and properly welcoming. fame in to take their things. And Martin was, talking about prac- ticalities. Her allowance, the name of a good social secretary, the necessary shopping for their Honolulu trip. The intensity she had seen that once had not shown again. By the time they were off ‘the transcontinental plane and aboard the luxury cruiser, she ac- cepted the fact that the Martin of ‘that last day at the lodge was not the Martin she was to know. Even his most passidnate mo- ments had an overtone as if he was always watching not to care too much, Not to go too far. Not to give himself. away to anyone. But he treated her as if he liked her. As if he wanted her to have as good a time as possible. Indeed, he seemed to get a stimu- lus from her enjoyment of every- thing. So she tried to show as much Pleasure as she could. Over the new smart clothes, the luxurious Stateroom, the good food, the bowing waiters, the gala nights, the dancing, the swimming in the ship’s pool, the games. The whole long bright costly playtime. He was not willing that they should stay by themselves like most! soneymoon couples. “Nonsense. I don’t want to coop you up like somebody in a harem,” he said. She did not know how to tell him that she’d rather have bee~ cooped. Some- times she was frightened by the watching eyes, the whispers and excited attention that followed them everywhere they went. “You ain’t seen nothin’ yet,” Martin said, grinning. “Wait till - we hit the cameras at Honolulu. There'll be six reporters under every lei, We played in incredi- ble luck, getting off without them. Come on, there’s a horse Tace down in the lower lounge.” She was learning . something about Martin Dane; that under his deceptively easy manner he was driven by a devil of restless- ness, He would have tired out most girls. He nearly tired out strong-bodied small Eileen. They ran the gauntlet of the prophesied oo. Seba as they met the Roly Perrines on the dock at Honolulu. The gossip columns, the picture papers, got them. At the hotel the day the mails came Eileen, unused to cheerful im- pertinences of the columnists, cried for an hour on the deep- cushioned chaise longue at the foot of the bed, the papers scat- tered round her on the floor. Martin’s step across the floor stop) her, He looked puzzled at the idea that she minded, but he was kind enough. “It comes with let it got you down. it thavs le! jet you down. ... t's what fi is.” “What elst could it be?” she said. But she felt comforted. She got up and put cold water op her eyes and they went off to a cock- tail party of his friends, They od always drifting off ‘some- where, Bitter Words ‘GHE loved Honolulu, she was | ‘% happy with Martin. Half the pers at the big hotel knew iim and shouted welcomes to him and his bride. There were the everlasting guitars in the moon- light. There was dancing, half the wonderful nights. They lay about on the sands, or swam, They sat with drinks at little| tables. They drove to plantations ‘where more people knew Martin | and the crowd that drifted with . There were navy people, | cers whites, of course, , renee too. je realized that everywhere she went there would iwaee be} people who were Martin's old should make you like a gardenia.’ He was half laughing, but he bridegroom snatching his mo- ment, when a voice spoke from a deeper shadow somewhere be- hind them. “Did you see the girl who pulled off marrying Dane?” The whole thing stood out The moon, big and low on the water. The shadowy deck. The whimpering guitars playing “Wai- kiki” between the dances. And the sick terrified hurt feeling that shot all through her who had been as happy before as a child at a party. Martin, as he stood away from her, tall and wick lighting a- cigarette. in euppe hands. : A man’s cheerful voice an- swered “No. Anybody who could snake him off Caroline has what it takes. How come?” “Somebody said he went slum- ming with his mother and met her working on gents’ clothing,” the girl’s voice giggled. “Just a change, you know. She looks all right, little and rather cute, long a arecag’ I haven’t heard her alk.” “You have to hand it to her. It will end in a swell settlement for Little Dimbovitza or what- ever her name is and back to some original dream man With a good Tadio or movie engagement and the piece of cash.” The band crashed, and the un- seen couple slipped away, Martin said, exactly as if he had heard nothing. “Somebody jooking for you tor this one? Want to go back?” His face was as unmoved and pleasant, in, the bright moonlight as always. “Didn’t you hear them? Oh, Martin, they're wicked!” He laughed. “You'll have to get used to living in a goldfish bowl. Come along.” She clutched his arm her face tipped up to his in the moonlight, savagely shaking back her brown curls.” it isn’t so. If you hadn't a penny. Say it!” “Certainly. If I hadn’t a penny. Which would be a nuisance. I'd hate it.” He drew her along, back into the circle of the floodlight, danc- ing in his arnis, She thrilled helplessly as his hold tightened. She was so crazy over him that he must understand. The world thought like these people, she’d been a romantic little nut.to for- get that it would. But not Martin. Not Martin! Danger MEN hated being nagged with “Do you love me?” And— remember what had been hap- pening last month. Hard dreary work, Not enough to wear, scarcely enough to eat. No hope, nothing left—and now,, this! She should be happy. She would be. The rest would come. She would awaken that aliveness and inter- est which she had not seen again, But it took a Hawaiian surf which had frightened all’ the whites ashore to waken it, That was the next thing she learned about him; his passion for physi- cal risks. She hadn’t realized where he was, what he was do- ing, till little Robin Perrine screamed. Then she saw him. Out on the surfboard, riding the terrible white breakers that nobody could ride—that nobody had any busi- ness to ride. The guards, who had bullied everybody else ashore, ietting it happen because he was the millionaire Martin Dane, And she couldn’t scream or swim out to him or anything an ordinary bride would have done. ... He was in, safe, shouting, laughing at them. Not tired; not even serious. He went on laugh- ing and talking as he sent a boy up the beach for cigarettes and a drink. The edge of danger was what whipped him up to normal inter- est and pleasure. What had done it before, Eileen made _ herself smile as he threw himself down by the group, the way you smile at a difficult customer when you want to scream, “Hey, Dane,” one of the men said, “you'll have to cut out the fifty-seven varieties of ‘suicidal mania now, you have a missis.” Martin only, laughed and said, throwing a Wet arm around Ei- leen’s bare shoulders. “Not a bit of it. Eileen’s more of the same. Isn’t she Roly? You tell ‘em about the way she took that rot- ten ice. A man can’t own wife, can he, kid? The Perrines were telli the story eagerly to the group. Mar- tin listened with what seemed like a man’s normal pride in his wife's doings to the tales of her ski flight down the thawing snow over the sagging ice, to save Robin. “Just the same,” e ‘Eileen was scared on yrange just now, Risking one thing. Watching a brand-new husband ask for trouble is some- thing else again.” pals; and, presently, that all his/ eg yaa as wis evan an Caroline Dem i had landed Sweepstakes, She always remembered the moment when this first hit her.! They were on one of the battle-| ships, and she and Martin had! been dancing together. They had paused, slipping off into reeds pace by the rail, as if} he wan to be alone with her.) He was smiling down and =I “You know, Caroline was it. You are like a gardenia. | t sort of skin. And your eyes. | T don’t know why big brown eyes! did. As if she! top prize in a SUBSCRIBE FOR THE CITIZEN—26ce WEEKLY. st. touis Eileen wondered how cheerful, stupid Rely could know that, when Martin didn’t. For he only | laughed again and said, “Not Ei- leen!” Later, in their suite at the tried" to make ease, “Martin (0 make ‘ i vhy, do you take: tike that?” “For kick .6f, course.” He smiled oyer his. abot at her. He was a window alin a Japanese’ beach Tobe, his hair ruffed. Her heart jumped. Being Sitercat end delight nee Sex citement an ie om But it wasn’t enoagh for im. . Te be continued (Copyright, 192940, Margeret Widdemer) had bent.to kiss her, dike any | promote his _ _ AND DROP CARDS NATIONAL OPEN OUT OF N.L. LEAD DODGERS, DESPITE LOSS TO REDS, CLIMB ON TOP: RED SOX DISPLACE CHISOX IN AL. RUNNER SPOT sharp for the rest of her life. | (Special to The Citizen) | NEW YORK, June 9.—St. Louis Cardinals, suffering a dou- ble loss at the hands of the New York ‘Giants, ‘yesterday fell from | on top the National league heap, | and the Brooklyn Dodgers, de-{ spite a defeat, climbed onto the first rung. Giants, blanked for eight in- nings in the opener, scored five runs’ in the ninth to tie the score and won out in the tenth, 7 to 5. Then they took the nightcap, 12-7, by scoring early., Bartell, who knocked in two runs in the first game’s tying rally, poled a hom- er with a mate on base in the tenth. Cincinnati, producing a pair of doubles with two men on base and two out in the ninth, edged the Dodgers, 3-2. Philadelphia , Phillies, tallying four times in the opening frame, downed the Pitstburgh Pirates, 5-2, after dropping the curtain-raiser, 2 to |12, when the Bucs scored nine 'runs in the ninth. Chicago Cubs defeated the Boston Braves 5-1 in a twin bill opener but suffered a 1-13 loss in the nightcap. Cleveland Indians swept a two- ply affair with the slipping Phil- adelphia Athletics, 7-4 and 8-6.) Boston Red Sox replaced the Chicago White Sox in second place in the American league! by downing the Windy City nine 5-3 in a 10-inning opener and 3-0; on Thornton Lee’s three-hitter in the second. | A seven-run sixth inning, | sparked by a pair of homers, led the Washington Senators to a 9-3 triumph of the Detroit Tigers. Bengals took the series, two to! one. Belting seven four-baggers, three by Joe DiMaggio, the New York Yankees walloped the St. Louis Browns, 9-3 and 8-3. Sec- ond game was called after seven inning because of darkness. Results: NATIONAL LEAGUE First Game At New York lst. Louis ait -48 10 at New York ‘i 7.9 0 Krist, Shoun, Hutchinson and | |Mancuso; Schumacher, Lohrman, | Bowman and Hartnett. R.H. E| Setond Game At New York St. Lonis - 712 3 New York - 1214 4 Shoun, Nahem and Mancuso; Hubbell and, Danning. R. H. E, First Game At Philadelphia Pittsburgh Philadelphia Bowman, Sewell Hughes, Pearson, Livingston. HE 13 1 9 2 and Lopez; Bruner and R. 12 2 Second Game | At Philadelphia Pittsburgh Philadelphia Bauers, Strincevich, Klinger and Davis; and Warren. First Game At Boston Chicago 510 1 Boston nein 15 3 Lee and McCullough; Sullivan, Johnson and 'Berres. R. HE 28 2 5 41 Dietz, Podgajny | R. HE} Second Game At Boston Chicago ae Boston 13.12. 1 French, Errickson and Scheff- ing; Javery and Masi. R.H.E. At Brooklyn Cincinnati 3 8 | Brooklyn * 210 0 Derfinger and West; Wyatt and Owen AMERICAN LEAGUE First Game At Cleveland Philadelphia Cleveland Babich, Ferrick Harder, Eisenstat, Hevirig Hemsley. R. HE 1 R. H. E. 412 2 780 and Hayes: and Second Game At Cleveland Philadelphia Cleveland 810 0 Marchildon. Harris, Ferrick and Mayes; Milmar, Brown and Hemsley. RHE 691 First Game At St. Louis New York St Louis Ruffing and Dickey Ostermuelier and Swift Second Game At St. Louis New York RHE @ot 332 Breurer and ‘Rosar; } Russo. t neei ged 40-YEAR-OLD “GREAT RUN- ‘Craig Wood, the “Great Runner- pionships by one or two ‘strokes | {under par. | Friday and the two sparkling 70’s THE KEY WEST €ITIZEN: AND THE HATTERS a lTepresentatives in organized | baseball, Clayton ‘Sterling and NERUP” SWUNG WAY TO CROWN DESPITE INJURED BACK; ONE UNDER PAR DeLard Red Hats. came out at the plate in recent performances: | (Ry Associated Presa) ; FORT WORTH, Tex., June 9.— | up” who has»lost more »cham- than any other golfer ‘int his- | tory, Saturdaybroke the "spell | and cashed in'én- the fichest | prize in golfdom. | Wearing a wide belt to support an injured back, Wood painfully swung his way through ‘three days of alternate heat and rain to claim the National Open with a 72-hole total score of 284, one} Defending champion Lawson Little, Clayton Heafner j and Denny Shute had tied Craig at.144 each going into the final | rounds Saturday, but the 40- year-old veteran pulled away) with a pair of steady 70's. Wood injued his back two! weeks ago when he. sneezed while bending over to pick up aj razor blade. Despite the handi- cap he shot a 73 on Thursday, 71 The standing: Club— W. L. Pet. | 1. St. Augustine 3415 694; 2. DeLand 32 17 .653! DELAY WILL BE CITY-COUNTY RECREATION COMMITTEE Saturday. Shute, who. threw a seare with his 72-71. Saturday morning and afternoon, placed second with 287. | ‘At the invitation of Roy Ham- Conchs, members of the city- William Cates, members of a iaboesseoaienat AND BARBERS Pepper's Plumbers, half a night in the first end of a dou-! bleheader. The Barbers meet) Navy in the second game. | Plumber captain Jackie Car-/ bonell last weekend tossed league | officials a puzzling question to) decide when he claimed for his’ team the three postponed games | scheduled with the Marines, who have withdrawn from the league. ‘Carbonell said two games had been added to the NavStas’ win column when the Marines _ for- feited, and demanded that offi cials either award three games to the Plumbers, ‘or knock all Ma- rine games out of the stand- ings. P Acquisition of the three games would leave the Plumbers a mathematical chance of losing the league crown, but they would have to drop games to teams jlin, manager of the Key West \nich they have been walloping | all season. What would happen ;man-captain of Sawyer’s Barbers, ; ‘dropped into a tie for ‘second | \place with Porct, Navy short-|@"d other relief fan stop, each with an average of | \rose from..487 to tie Albuty. | |Rosam, former rookie | BERS’ ALBURY FOR SEC- ! OND PLACE: ROOKIE ROS- AM IN THIRD Philip Baker, NavSta captain- : of the. ints ond week in a row, the list with an average of .535, | mark. He 26 chances at the plate, scored walked three times. Esmond Albury, third base- 500. Albury’s mark remained| “person servi _ ;8ame.in frony of the Barbers and | third baseman, continues-to dom- that : _ heading into. the final games Of |jinate the E pe - 101 '261 304-12" the softball loop schedule, tangle | Island chy Sante 200001 300— 6 with Army at Bayview Park to- | spite a loss in (dec- | sald de tops | Drive, waters Bay, i, ein, it {O10 points Tess than his previous |, 0 SeRes ed 14 hits in| above | Rlevonth Jud three runs, stole eight bases, sac- in.and fer, Monroe rificed once, struck out once and {f, YD TOad. j pear. fs bill of LAE TCR aod pro sanjoese. will be entered ag ; defendan a secutive @ in fur oat Shebcbaber RCE DEPENDANT N_THE NAME OF THE STATE OF SLORIDA: Hi it appearing e affidavit avery Resclia “McNaughton, ‘plaintiff herein, that the defi Henry Bliss MeNaughton is over the _age of 21 years and that et ited te Milwaukee, — t is, therefore, . at the © Eh to “esata : s Nia ot yelp, AD. 1941, And: it 3 a decree of diverce laintift, der be published once week but! in Key West, Monroe County, | Third place goes to Charlie’ third sack-| ler of the league-leading Pepper’s | Plumbers. Rosam gained the} | feat without taking a chance at | the plate. } ‘Members of the Big Ten, all} batting 25 or more times, fol- ‘low: ida. DONE AND ORDERED this Bist » |day of May, A.D. 1941. SBA Ross © Saw: Ee the circuit Coart, onroe County, Florida. : ‘ Sd.) Anita AM. Salado. ‘ aes Deputy Clerk. »” juned-9-16-23-20, 1841 aN AND FLORID. IN ,earn by winning the Open. "PANDORA BLANKS Lowest round score of the three-day struggle was shot by, Ben Hogan, a two-under-par 68 in the morning play Saturday. Hogan sank a 70 in the afternoén to wind up with a total score of 289, the same held by Johnny Bulla. Best score of an amateur was the 296 of Harry Todd, Dallas golfer. Dick Chapman, national amateur champ, failed to place among the leaders. With the crown went a cash prize of $1,000, a small sum com- ‘pared to what Wood stands to county recreation committee and | to the standings if all the Ma: baseball managers tonight will rite Bios je Beir has " i not yel . . | meet ty City Hall for a ek If the Ph songs tonight | discussion of the uncomplet against. A oe xe as the. second- | !'Troumbo Island diamond. place Barbers Wednesday and} Hamlin, who claims work on then get their three games, they | the field has been unnecessarily will have = the crown. i |delayed, says the diamond is | Plumbers. ave six bag | | vitally needed to condition teat | oe phe iplayers for positions on Florida and only a game-and-a-half out | State league clubs. The Conch | of first, four. The two league | jpilot last week received urgent’ leaders meet for the last time calls from two state league teams Wednesday. Stas have two post- for infielders and pitchers. poned games to play with the A number of players have Pipefitters. : | agreed to accept the offers but The schedule has been revised | are reluctant to join clubs that by official scorekeeper to include , have been active for about two all postponed games affecting months withovt first putting the three leading clubs. All oth- | themselves in shape. (er postponed affairs which have “For over a month now local / no bearing on the fight for first- | players have been awaiting com- half crown have been eliminat-— REVELS TURNED IN ONE-HIT pletion of Trumbo field”, ae ot Lone President Samel declares. “If the field ha ‘arela and managers approvi PITCHING JOB; STRUCK lcompleted according to schedule, | the revision. { OUT 13 BATTERS Key West could have furnished) Games remaining to be played | the state league with a number | include: i of promising and veteran play-, TONIGHT—Army vs. Plumb- ‘ers without delay. As it is now, | ers; Barbers vs. Navy. the boys aré sluggish and entire- WEDNESDAY — NavSta vs. ly unfit to step into fast com- Army; Barbers vs. Plumbers. pany. We must have a field to FRIDAY—Army_ vs. Barbers; ; condition these boys and we must Plumbers. ys. NaySta. | have it at once”. 16—NavSta vs. Plumb- ‘Three hundred dollars was do- | ers; Atmy vs. Barbers. nated by the city and county for| JUNE 18—Navy véS. . Barbers; TROJANS, 5 TO 0 Behind'the masterful hurling of the veteran Revels, Coast Guard Cutter Pandora nine yesterday afternoon shutout the Trojans 5-0 at the Army Barracks field) Revels, who walked only’ two. batters and struck out 13, ‘held the young Trojans to a lone hit, a single by pitcher ‘“Bubber”. Wickers. Given excellent sup- port by his teammates, the Pan- dora moundsmen continually turned back the opposition’ with a beautiful change of pace. Wickers, who blanked’ the} Coast Guardsmen until the’ fate- ful ninth a week ago, yesterday gave up eight hits, walked four and fanned ten. He held the Angels of Mercy in check except | ~ for the fifth when all runs of the game were scored. Among the! safeties he allowed were a homer by Joe Navarro, catcher, and doubles by Berg, leftfielder, and | J. V. Woodson, shortstop. A partial box score follows: Pandora (5) Player— Domenech, cf McKay, 3b Revels, p Navarro, ¢ Berg, if Hundwin, 1b Boring, rf Woodson, ss Davies, 2b Trojans (0) Player— Davila, ¥ Juanie Navarro, ss-cf J. Carbonell, cf-ss Wickers, p Kelly, 3b Soldato, ¢ E. Albury, 2b A. Lastres, Ib C. Albury, rf { i Club— " Clevéltind Chicago - Boston New York Detroit Philadelphia St. Louis Washington Club— Brooklyn ;St. Louis |New York Sr ocerr en a SURRURSoR SESENENS Oo) 0) Club— 0} Pepper's Plumbers |Sawyer’s Barbers Kra-! NavStas | U.S. Marines *U.S. Army — }*U.S. Navy co 0 09 00 0 9 Oo et tet tt SOSSCHOHK SOOM CHOOHNNHE Harris, Caster, mer and Ferrell. Pirst Game At Chicago Boston Chicago Grove and Peacock; Lyons construction of the field approxi- Army vs. Plumbers. struction, announced recently| The light system at Bayview The meeting tonight will open home plate by either a right- or) outer gardens, except in W. 1 Pet.'tecliy. all decisions ee 565 game or before completion of an- 333 sence of several years but left) -688 could”. Arthur Griffin, the most} 487 he always returns the following | 0 | Pittsburgh ; Island City Softball League = tinue playing without the serv- Muncrief, 10 4 NavStas will soon mately a month ago. Paul Al-| _ JUNE 20—Plumbers vs. Army; bury, city-county recreation com- | Navy vs. NavSta. Jack of proper material and labor | Park field remains faulty. Only | had caused a slow down of the one of three new bulbs have been } at 8:00 o'clock. left-handed batter is still there, ; ‘and the outfielders continue to! STANDINGS sexe Securing umpires is a tough all. decisions rendered | -630 have caused those who have of-' 560 official contest. William Cama- .333 the field near the end of the sec- | ‘ond game of a twin bill. Cama-° 680 ‘consistent umpire, claims he | .522 loves the sport and although he | R | Cincinnati 429 game night. ; 9) Boston —.. 364 —_ | 0 | Philadelphia 348° Jackie Carbonell, Plumber ices of manager Ray Hamlin, | W. L. Pct. who severed his connections last il 2 69 310 mittee member in charge of con- work. installed, the shadow cast over | complain of Tack of light in the MAJOR BASEBALL LEAGUES problem Continvied™razzing by -560 fered to officiate to quit after a | returned to -480 | calling "em last week after an ab- Pet. | Tier said he had “taken all he! 490 retires under a barrage of taunts | 0 | Chicago o captain, says his team will con- B46 week 11 3 .786' iM 14 RH 5 ssa 3 THERE ISN'T ¢ “Where's Gus Moore?” “Haven't you heard? dead.” “Ah! There isn't any Moore.” iF - He's ilian personhel at the na Washington Detroit Leonard and Early Newsom, Thomas and Tebbetts. | ecsccscesccsccscesssesees| | Most | Sta, 8. tate of ABR H Aye. | "HiIZABETH RANDALL, County of Essex and State of aw . notfrica and "rea Jains or demands ° or el jeltber:af- you. say Mote 1 Seamed a ‘the City of. Player— 26 28 42 Rosam, PP 1.29 41 30 28 28 42 45 38 Thompson, M Nelson, A _ Langley, M - Stanley, SB Hopkins, SB _ Kerr, SB Tynes, SB fi gall, : of /County of Essex an Bate Jersey, in the office it ; gH Kelly, NS. se of Bal Johnson, N ‘ ide, Egg Other heavy-hitters: Garcia, |the first nt fea ‘this avsia, U6 Gt AB): willie roads Se Pepper’s Plumbers, 400; Higgs, ing ‘ang contain the place of resi- Pepper’s Plumbers, .392; Delaney, ence and post ae Patringn *: ne NavSta, .391 (23 times at bat), Jaimie A at or oe ae er Most times at bat—Johnson, sen be aaess “not 8o” inane prescribed otk eal We void. : ‘ por Ww Florida, this Sos i ae SUISASAL wd Sew Basen ssare Nayy, 21 each. _ per’s Plumbers, 23. - Most doubles—Thompson, Ma-: rines, 6. 4 Most triples—Johnson, Navy, | 6. } stolen bases—Buker, Nav- f é P Chemistry Most sacrifice ‘hits—Garcig, ee at NavSta, and Johnson, n 3 | roe: betel. palate mae each. | Student — Two cuffs a col- Most bases on balls—Cham- | lar. bers, Marines, 14, a Most times struck out—Wollet, Navy, 10. pesoae sees SPORTS any BASEBALL (MAJOR LEAGUES) TODAY American Open date. National Chicago at Boston. Cincinnati at Brooklyn. ‘St. Louis at New York. Pitstburgh at Philadelphia. — SOFTBALL _ (Bayview Park, 7:30 pm.) TONIGHT MONDAY NIGHT First _Game—U.S. Pepper's Plumbers game). ¢ Game—Sawyer’s Bar- ; Second bers vs. U.S. Navy. _ WEDNESDAY First Game—NavSta vs. US. Army (postponed game), i Second Game—Pepper’s Plumb- ets vs. Sawyer's Barbers. { FRIDAY WiGHT r j First Game—US. ‘Arn vs Sawyer's Barbers pon ar game). Second Game—NeySta vs. | Pepper's Plumbers (postponed | game).