The Key West Citizen Newspaper, September 30, 1941, Page 3

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° Brown, Boh Stub | Become serie Unde. ae a ‘| a YORK, ft 30. eg “Calling? | NEW YORI, "Sent. 30.—The That’s the way, this corner! sige a ie Bhlicon Series. e. Yan ould triumph, but} NEW, YORK, Sept. 30.—Joe /not: in. their sauce | four Louis rests his case. | straight games. I) expect the se-j He’s. a part of the. garish, his- | T@S. to go, at; least; six games. tory, of fistiana today, conqueror The men: of; MeCartl oy posers’ of the Californian Loy. Nova in | 90 TRUE ale ang tog. much. six rounds last night and ap- {pitching — fon parently slated to become the | league TEAS; Resides. they have first champion. since Gene. Tun- jthe Poise and; canfiience that ney to.hang.up his: mitts unde. | Comes: from, experience.in those feated—the second, such. cham- {l! Bost-season engagements. Pion, in all. the annals of, the | urom ®. defensive: andle,. tno, the Heavyweight boxing ‘gains | Sank have. an, edge, with a In one brief burst of violence, *nter dntiaid unity i L gebhepe R-iinite-<the « Bowe. ith Charley. Keller in there “hoy thie“ Gotton © tel ds oft? contribute his power punches, Wika ghitibrwa: ‘ane te; the Yanks might; possibly win. in sions of Nova, the Yogi man, left” four Beet Bub withaut. him, hin” staggering: < Bedlerk ah d ind, wit! several ‘other regulars bloods; teady, for the protection | under par physically—I say five “Referee Arthur Donovan gave ronan: games. vic No. team, has. more. hustle and him by halting the fightin’ 2:59 of the sixth ‘a i: spirit than the Dodgers. Brook- Joe Louis: some 60,000;" of the: than its share of extra inning faithful paid an. estimated’ $600,- | contests. 000 into'the coffers of thé Polo (tinue into the series, Wyatt \Grounds to see. And they prob-'gefinitely should bother the| ably won’t see him again. Yanks. And they might have| The Army's Next difficulty: with Kirby. Higbe. But | So Joe gets his wish. to. carry Brooklyn canit match, the Yan- his. title with, him into, the kee batting power. army, another first on the record) And, after thein nerve-strain- of @ champion who has defend- ing dogfight right down to the ed his. title successfully almost: wire, the Brooks are in danger as many times as all the cham-'of a letdgwn. pions before him together. |. It: should; bea good tight series Nova, whose chief claim to, with the Yanks. just: a, little too fame may well be the distinc- , tough: fon their: rivals. tion, of being nineteenth and: last on Joe’s list; proved, definitely : ee last night that nobody could.) STANDINGS beat Louis by not, being afraid. | That’s been one of the talking) Island City Baseball Sata Club— Pet. points of all the challengers since! Max Baer cringed. and quit. be-.| *Key West Conchs 0 1.000 “*Pandora Bears 0 1.000 (Snecial to, The Citizen), fore the Bomber’s flashing mitts, | but fearlessness didn’t do Nova much good when. Louis. finally stalked him down and made his’ Trojans — 1.667 kill last night. Red Raiders _. 2 3338 It had been a dull fight all) the Regulars 2 .000 way, and the big crowd, shiver-|*Borfeit) game from Trojans. ing in the cool . September. air, was booing and yelling for action when the end: came. Nova. Lands. Right Noya, who had been shaken} ers. and: Conchs. KS THE: ¥ANKS | (Amnociated, Press Feature '§ their National} That luck might con-/} **Tied one with each Red Raid-| oe | BROOKLYN, Nov. 30—-The;home runs. gies of the, three trouble with the guy, they’ ve hitting aggre Box his.” Only (always said, is that he (won't) the batts )Jeadership get mad. | was Of his. ‘reseh, @2BoIph, al He's a fine player, but what a,jso)is. perhaps the best.’ di star he’d be if he’d get sore now'! fensive. player, the. jand then, \sacker in the loop. Perhaps Dolph Camilli hasn’t; It is just that the fellow who. been actually riled this season! has done most in. driving the but he’s certainly awakened. |Dodgers toward the, champion- | He’s the boom-boom blaster of/ship. should: be. the £IPSL one Lar- the Dodgers, the fellow who’s|ry MacPhail bought ‘When he carried the Brooks toward the! took over. the club four ‘years ‘pennant on the strength of his!ago. Larry bought Dolph. from timely, tremendous thumps. the Phillies, where. he. had lan~| Camilli is a quiet; easy-; going | guished: for three years, for $60, sort who does his best without! 000, getting excited and takes the bad | Dolph has always heen a foot | decisions without getting het up.| clutch hitter, a guy Who. pro- | He's content to let the other fel-' duced: hits. when would low do the arguing and bellow-| score runs. He lways ing and: the other guy can have! knocked a flock of homers, ithe headlines, too, for all he! This year, though, he. has sur- cares. But he’s a baliplayer’s | passed all his previous highs. ballplayer, a team man, always), <‘Tinie after. time this’ Year He’ doing. his. best. has témé ‘through wth*>the ~ hits-(‘ Rookie Peter Reiser was a (that won games and kept the | batting championship contender Dodgers in the fight, His big | | and Joe Meowick is. a bally-~-/btudgeon™ has pulled “the Brooks | hooed: slugger but the. chappie (out of their occasi slumps. | who really. biffs those counters Chances are that he'll across the platter is Dolph, league’s most valuable player} He was leading the National award and none . wilt Say he league in runs-batted-in andi/didn’t deserve it. | { | eee Uae ee DRAMA, HUMOR, THRILLS ALL HAVE ‘Lucky Seventh’ Comes, In For Big Share; Fourth Bad eae see eae THEIR INNINGS IN BASEBALL'S SERIES (Associated Press Feature Service) NEW YORK, Sept. 30.—Rec-, unearned runs—and the ords show that the “lucky sev-|The game ended 3-2. enth” inning usually turns up Fifth Inning Spectacular |more.than its share. of thrills) The fifth inning produced two | and the uausual. of the most spectacular individ- | Take, for instance, the classic’s | ual: stunts. most sensation scoring rally, the) he unassisted triple play by | A’s 10-run barrage. against the Cubs in the. third 1923. game. |i! Watmbeganst “of: Cleveltind, The A’s went to bat behind 8-0, |i the 1020'series against Brook- | ended the inning ahead, 10-8,/lyn has never been equalled in The victory put the A’s in. the; | World Series. play. series lead, 3-1, | And. Babe Ruth’s homer in the | There have been some fancy fifth inning of the third game} {fielding plays, too, in the big'against Chicago in 1932 will al+| sevenths. !ways be remembered. Ruth, an- Fielding Gems |gered at the taunts of the Cubs, series. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN “y PAGE THREE a, SAP IBPREAELD LL SL FLL ADADABDAEAPPAEL ED LL LA ht A CAROLYN BEAUTY SALON For the Fall Season— Do Your Hair In The: Newest Mode! 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SOLD ON EASY TERMS WATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIRING “AT REASONABLE PRICES. —~ FRIGIDAIRE SALES AND Pe. : eet Diamonds. - Watches - Jewelry Souvenirs - Gifts G04 Duval Sicens The Old Bolidble Since 1298. the. low cost, will: be, justified. many ‘times, COMPANY only once when Louis. caught —— ee | Today In History him in,a brief flurry in the 1787—The “Columbia”, first to Shoeless Joe Jackson made | Pointed to a spot near the fag: | one for the Chicago White Sox in 1917. In the first game, the; {pole and proceeded to poke the ball. out of the lot right at that fourth, nailed: the champion pa a Oa ty me: ee the world, sails from Boston—re- Louis whipped back with qi turns August, 1790. hook to the head .and they both) missed: hard rights as the tempo stepped up. Then Louis, crouch: ing under the challenger’s lead paniom Ps right square the jaw! 1800—A treaty between them and the big Californian crumpled | averts seemingly inevitable war to the canvas. with France. He was up at, the nine count, hf apa and Louis, the finisher, exploded, 1812—Russians in Alaska build with the same shoeking. burst of |@ fort at Ross, only 18 miles from fire he has shown. most of the | Bodega, Cal. ho made bind mistake of): seat Nova's, 7 1846—Medical history made im in: jee Dr. William T. G. Morton, iii | Buston dentist, ‘éxtravts a tooth ovan,| With, aid of ,ether; ;wake patient | ehter. | by dashing. cold water, on his and |face. breezily. ‘con success | against the man he ‘said couldn’t! 1877—Gen. Nelson A. Miles| take a punch, said afterward he ends historic forced march of wasn't hurt—only dizay—but if) 160 miles to contact Indian Chief he had the guns to bring Louis| Joseph; Chief Joseph entrenches down he never showed them last! himself but surrenders Oct. 5th, night, and the three-minute test thus ending the Nez Perce war. period before the seventh round eases probably would have done littl more than prolong the slaugh: ter. Louis, unmoved and without | a mark, said Nova hurt when he hit him, but if he did nobody no ticed it. The champion and challenger | came in. at almost identical weights, Louis at 202% and Nova | at 202%. carry the American flag. round 1777—Sixth. Continental ress meets at York, Pa. Con- 1911—More than 100 ifves lost as pulp, mill dam at Austin, Pa., | breaks. « 1918—President Wilson draws inst draft number. 1938—Munich agreement ced- ling Sudetenland. to Germany. Dr, po of Wasfitr spine: | ton,” : Dz Sse econogpist, bone in Col ich., 65 (Island City Leauge, Price Field) | a Tita SUNDAY Margaret Widdemer of New) First Game (1:30 p. m.)—Tro-; ‘York, author, born in Doyles- jans vs. Pandora Bears. : |town, Pa. Second Game (4:00 p. m. —| Se . Regulars. Elizabeth F. Corbett of New per West ee | York, novelist, born in Aurora, SOFTBALL [Hie BA pen Bi. (Island City League) Howard R. Tolley, chief of the! S00, BH | Bureau of Agricujtural Econom- | in TOMORROW NIGHT ics, Dept. of Agriculture, born First Game—Red Raiders vs. | Howard Co., Ind., 52 years ago. Dr. Arthur Keith of Washing: nm, D. C., noted geologist, _ born | : NIGHT lin, St. Louis, 7% 71 years ago. p First Game—Pepper’s Plumb- fers vs. Navy. ‘Thomas W. Lamor “Lamont of New) Game—NavSta, vs. ‘Claver- a i aE aS ll per’s Plumbers. FRIDAY ‘point. Sox were protecting a 2-1 lead) when Lewis McCarty, Giant, Vinth, Inning, Thrills, catcher, blasted a liner to left, The ninth, inning, quite natu: field. Jackson took off and slid rally, has, had its, thrills—and_ it: | for several feet on ‘his chest, | terrific letdowns. reaching out to haul the ball inj One of the latter came at New |safely and prevent a tying run. York in, the last game.of the The. Sox won, 2-1, and took the |rate-Yankee series in 1927. With | series in. six games. the teams. tied: at 3-3 in the last | Long George Kelly of the|of the ninth the. series, ended Giants, in 1923, turned, in, a sev-| suddenly, when Miljus’ threw a! enth-inning beauty. In the first wild pitch past Lazzeri, Combs game Babe Ruth blasted a white scoring. The dazed: fans could |, ;het grounder down. the first base | scarcely’ tealize. the «game—and | \line. Kelly risked his bare hand’ series—was. over. on it, clung to the ball’and-in al-) And'in, 1939, the first. Cinvin- most one motion. whipped it home | nati ertor of the Yanks-Reds. se-| in time to. nip Dugan, The Giants ries allowed: the Yanks to: win in won, 1-0. In‘'the same’ series, two four straight, Going “imto. the games later, Casey Stengel broke Lpinth t the 2S Miers ‘up a 4-4 tie witha ‘seventh-in- | ever ‘baa score, ning homer, dropped: Frey’s double. out, pe to Then there’s the World Series ‘on. Dahlgren’s The | Reds, went to pieces aha 10th and provided a comic, {drama classic, the time Grover peretta finish, with Catcher , Lombardi Cleveland Alexander came in from the bull-pen to stem a Yan- kee uprising in the seventh in- sitting on, the ground. as Yankee ining of the seventh 1926, game. runs flashed past him. With the,bases filled and two). That Stengel homer.within the park in, the 1923 series was. a jninth-inning thriller and gave out he fanned dangerous Tony Lazzeri—then went on to win. ithe Giants a, 1-0. victory. over the — SO eT Ms peu Unlucky Fourth | The fourth inning, the records | ¥anks, ‘nidicate, is.a good one to, watch | First Inning, Important, for slip-shod baseball. | The first inning has been im- | In 1928. Rabbit Maranville, |portant in. many. series... games— | playing with the Cards against and often thrilling. _.. ‘the Yanks, reached second after’ No one who. saw it will forget a bad throw to. first. Bengough,| the first inning of the second the. Yankee catcher, on a prear- game in the Tiger-Cub 1935 se- ranged play, shot the ball back ries, The first three men. hit jto. pitcher Waite Hoyt, who safely and Greenberg, fourth a lthrew to second without looking. homered to give the. Tigers “There wasn’t anybody there and} leaning 4-ron start: bes se Maranville scampered ‘home,| In the first inting ot ars | aughing aloud at the Yankees. "game af i at § ey gene cs In. the fourth inning of the series, Peckinpaugh of the ‘deciding game of the Giant- allowed Long George kenya! ‘White Sox series in 1917 the Sox | easy grounder to go through his | got three of the four unearned |legs, scoring Bancroft for the run they collected that day for/only run of the final game. a 42 victory. Eddie Collins, i i safe at first on a bad throw, went all the way to third. Jackson got ‘on on a dropped fly, then Flesch ‘hit a roller to Benton who chas- ed Collins back to third, then thréw to Zimmerman at third. |th Rariden, the Giant catcher, had ;' left the plate unprotected and | Zimmerman. chased Collins all! the way to home plate but failed {to touch him. Meanwhile Jackson ‘and Felsch ‘advanced a base and MM 4 | The fourth Inning of the, de (Pe See, Eanes ee LT 4 In Every Town —THE— : REXALL STORE | Is The Best Prescription Store! Your, Family. Deserves THE BEST i and PHONE 177 € , the Rg mee dire ee sive COLA COMPA

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