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romped all over the eg aed a tune of 13 to 1..J. Garcia ind Sterling hit two safely each. nt Sterling hit a homer for the only run the Dairy boys got. 3 In the field, J. Walker, J. Lew- is, Sterling and G. Lewis played | well for the losers, and Machin, Valdez, Perez. and Castro for the winners were the stars. Seore: R. H. E. B, Cap Inn 110 3701-13 9 1 A. Dairy 000 1000-1 4 4 With 2-1 Over St, L. (By) Aueciated Press) NEW YORK, duly 31—Broo! i Om Say 3 “4 chunal longine leat to 8% deonee'ny ey won from St. Louis 2-1. “weimmati lost to the Philadel- Phile 84 with i New the Chi- ses ata e Chi. , the 3 from 6-5 from the ‘New York Yankees the A’s beat! Boston Red ° win over | 4-0. H. EL} & Louis _ 4 Oo; Breokiyn ._ < 5 1 Pollett and Garagiola; Melton, Neteman and Edwards, RF at 2 RHE, Cincinnati — 4 oj Pailadelghia 8 18 0 Vandermeer, Hetki, and Rowe and Seminick. Muel- Chirago nd McCullough; Budnick, wmpson and Lombardi. Washington haute blancuso To Play : Th Ie Flovide a Joseph Lopez, Key West Golf club professional, left today to enter the Florida Open: golf tour- pmament.to be held at. the Clear- ‘water Country club, Clearwater, Plorida. The pie, starting this Friday, August 2, through Sun- day, August 4, ‘will be 72hole medal, and is open to both pro- fessionals and amateurs. Lopez's last participation was in the West Coast Open held in * St. Petersburg, where he won | sixth prize money. The Key West pro ts “on his kame” and should do well at the west coast course. €lem Price, local golfing en- thusiast, is well acquainted with the course and is of ‘the opinion ‘that Joe will score well on the 18-hole layout. The Weather Forecast Key West and vicinity: Partly, cloudy this afternoon, tonight 4 and ‘Thursday; local showers, mostly.in afternoons or evenings. Moderate to fresh east and south- ; east winds. New York t ort "Rev ons wks Page “and “Robi and Richards. Mhaladetphia harego hav age utels 2 8 4 Marechildon “and -De- Papish, Hamner and 480 evetand 030 Ferrss and Wagner; Gromek, Center and Hegan. How Stand AMERICAN LEAGUE Chub wW.L. Pet. Poet un 70 28 714 Rew York 57 39 «6.594 12% = treit 5440 574 13% Ma Moston a GB 50:46 .520 49 ahr tee Chicago 3858 «6.396 31 Philaiciphia 28 67 264 40 NATIONAL LEAGUE Chab W.L. Pct. GB Brockiyn 59 36 ©6621 m Louis 55 38 «585 | 3% Chucago 5143 543 7% Cmemnat: 4548 484 13 fe etan 4449 473 14 Mew York 4353 448 His 20% St Conde Philadelphia 4051 .439 Puteburgh _ 3755 402 CITY SPORTS DIAMONDBALL et Beyview Park Qiight Games) THURSDAY— 7 3)—oy'’s Auto’ Supply vs. Piying Eagles. @0)—American Legion vs. Square Deal Market. FRIDAY— 1 —Piying Eagles vs. Square Deal Market. o@—American Legion vs. Adams Dairy. gp hg bal ged 4 Handball “Courts, ( -eedert Stations. Fa = ay nae Pac ond Bat Beet Tee volume of air mail be- ceeen the United States and ere bes imereated in 15 years Ob tones what it first was. Florida: Partly cloudy today, ‘| tonight and Thursday. Scattered showers and thunderstorms in north portion today and over the ‘tentive state Thursday afternoon. Warmer in extreme north por- tion today. Jacksonville through the Flor- ida Straits and East Gulf of Mex- ico: Moderate winds, southeast to southerly over south portion and south to southwesterly over north portion today, tonight and Thurs- day except winds occasionally fresh over extreme north and ex- treme south portions today. Part- ly. cloudy weather with widely scattered showers and thunder- storms. Jacksonville to Apalachicola: No smail craft or storm warnings have been issued. {. Hprort | ‘Key West, Bla, July 31, 1946 | Gbsctvation taken’ at 8:30 a.m, Eastern Daylight Saving Time. City office.) Temperatures Highest yesterday Lowest last night - }Mean Normal PRECIPITATION Rainfall, 24 hours ending 8:30 a.m., inches (Daylight Savings Time) Sunrise Ns - 6:55 a.m. Sunset - . 8:11 p.m, Moonrise - 10:55 a.m. Moonset _ - 11:26 p.m. TOMORROW'S TIDES Naval Base High Tide Low Tide 1:37 a.m. 6:52 a.m. 1:33 p.m. 7:46 p.m, Your Horoscope In this nature spirituality is added to the benign nature of the week and the rise in fortune will be justly due to a just, aspiring arder. The mind is intuitive pather than logical but always sincere, a very valuable trait eee teten property balancéd by push band endurance. Beware of treach- ery, for this danger is ever pres- rent, in some degree, for nearly every one born this day. Well— Rastus—Yo’ ain't yo-self no more? Sick or sumpin’? Mose—Got insomnia. wakin’ up every.few days. Keep | veterans, 5,100 of s | dream of putting canned veg- The Rev. Melrose S. Avery, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, will conduct the church service at 11 am. Sunday with pie Sunday school beginning at 10 a.m. Returning from Asheville, North Carolina, the Rev. and Mrs, | fR°. Avery will be at home Fricay and look forward »to seeing the | T members and visitors at the Morning Worship hour m church. Disabled Veteran Placement Work For the purpose of emphasiz- ing the importance of making employment available to disabled veterans, Fons A. Hathaway, Tal- lahassee, State Director of the United States Employment Serv- ice, acting in cooperation with the State Veterans Employment Representative, R. E. Macdonald, Palatka, is designating the week of August 5-9 as “Placement of the Disabled Veteran” week. “The magnitude of the prob- lem can be readily recognized,” stated Mr. Hathaway, “when we note that a total of 5,294 disabled them World War II veterans, have made ap- plication for work at Employ- ment Service offices in the state during the past six months.” Job placements by the Employment Service offices during this same period for disabled veterans to- taled 1,114, including World War II veterans. At present there are 4,276 dis-! abled veterans seeking employ- ment through United States Em- ployment Service offices in Flor- ida. Special effort will be made during the week of August 5 to place as many of these applicants as possible. Hathaway stated’ that these applicants are physic- | ally able to fill many jobs, and in all instances should be as satis- | factory employes as those not! handicapped. Physical capacities | appraisal is made on each of the | disabled applicants, so they are} referred only to jobs on which | they will be well qualified and | able to compete with any fully able bodied worker. ? | Studies have shown that the | disabled worker’s absentee rate, | as well as his safety record and| labor turnover rate, is much low- | = er than that of the normal work-}| |Carapbell’s, 928 Division, phone "Matal USES offices in the state | | will ‘review the applications of | disabied veterans .in their . file’ and employers :in the community | will be contacted in an effort to | make a satisfactory placement. Hathaway concluded by stating | that ‘employers throughout the! state have shown a commendable | and patriotic spirit in their ef- | forts to give: employment to the } disabled. It’s Not All Picnic! U.S. Girl Finds | ‘ \ AP Newsteatures | MELBOURNE. — American! brides in Australia can’t take ad- vantage of the can-opener to produce a meal for their Aus- tralian husbands. They’ve got to | know how to cook to please the down-under gentlemen. That’s one of the things that Mrs. Kenneth Shergold, a former | WAC of Lexington, Ky., learned | when she moved to Australia. | She says: “Australian ‘gals would not | etables or meat on the table. They oven bake cakes. pastry. cookies and. biscuits — and they're all wonderful cooks.” But one of the reasons Ameri- can girls have such a difficult | time is that things are often much different here in Australia. Pumpkin, for instance, is eaten as a vegetable; sweet potato. is whitish-grey and seldom eaten; steak and eggs is the favorite | food combination. Flour is self- | rising. Mrs. Shergold says: “The first cake I baked in Australia practically jumped — through the oven roof. I had | added baking powder to the | self-rising flour.” Nevertheless Betty Loves Mel- | bourne where she lives. Life | seems to move slowly, she says, and people take things more easily than do Americans. There are plenty of picnics and visits | to surf-beaches where a bath| house ¢osts but 8 cents. | And just to make yeur mouth water, sirloin of beef is‘only 16 cents a pound; lamb: chops are 24 | cents a pound. As a matter of | fact, Betty finds money goes a great deal further in Australia | than in the States. She says: | “T can budget for all the house- | hold expenses excluding rent, gas and light on $10 a week without | any trouble.” (SR 2 REESE SS Petroleum is a complex mix-| ture of hydrocarbons and their sulfur, nitrogen and oxygen de- | rivatives. | i |Stére and second floor living |For Sale—Single bed complete, HELP WANTED. IF IT’S GooD SNe PAY Telephone Operators, Receive $25 A’ WEEK ' About $108 a Month from. the Very First Day. That’s for a 40- |Hour Week, with Opportunity: to Make More for Overtime at Time- and-a-Half. $30 A WEEK (About $130 a Month) After 6 Months’ Training and-Experience SCHEDULED PAY INCREASES LIBERAL { EMPLOYE. BENEFIT PLAN VACATION WITH PAY Interesting Work— Congenial Associates APPLY TELEPHONE OFFICE Mrs. McDermott Chief Operator SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE and TELEGRAPH COMPANY jly29-tf Upholster and trimmer. Key West Bedding, Apply jlyll-tt Wanted — Colored combination -bell boy and porter. Apply | Overseas Hotel. jly31-3t MISCELLANEOUS Refrigeration sales ‘and’ service. Repairs on all makes. All work guaranteed. Mumford & Ross, 220 Duval st., phone 333. jly18-tf 189, Keys made, locks repair- ed, etc. jull imo \Dr. A. M. Morgan, Chiropractor, 1400 Reyholds St., Tel. 874. jly3-1mox For guaranteed plumbing wotk and repairs, call John Curry, 512 Margaret street, phone 781. Give us.a try on your next job. Free estimates. jly16-l1mox | Business opportunity—Be your own boss. Ideal for young cou- ple capable of earning from $40.00 a week to $140.00. Total investment $20.00. Expense to} operate business not to exceed | $1.50 a day. Please don’t ans- wer ad unless you mean busi- ness. Box E-14, Citizen Office. jly31-6t FOR RENT RENT A CAR | ¥ou drive. Late model conver- tibles and sedans. By day or ve ° Duval ang Division St juval Di sion x mm a “tal 1stt Furnished cottage. One block from beach. Apply at 1224; Duval St., between 3 and 7 p.} m. jly29-6t One studio and one two-bedroom apartment for rent. Adults only. Electric refrigerators. 400 Sim- onton or phone 159-W. jly30-6tx quarters, furnished. 706 Duval St. Phone 1028-M. jly30-6tx | OVERSEAS HOTEL | Special rates to service and lab- oting men, weekly $7.00 and up, daily $1.50 and up. jly31-6t ROOMS FOR RENT Light housekeeping rooms, $5.00 weekly. 411 William Street. | jly11-1mox | | PHOTO SUPPLY Frames, an assortment of. sizes, 50c and up, Pilkington Studio, | 615 Fleming Street, Phone 99. jul 1-té i FOR SALE Coolerator; practically new. Ap- | ply Bottle Cap Inn, 1128 Simon- ton street. jly2644£ double bed complete, couch, breakfast set, coffee table, clothes hamper. 6-1 Poinciana Place. jly31-3tx cenescGecenauun te ot Dee When vou trink of plumbing is Syst Se . Plumbing i 512 leming, ‘Phone 118 jul 1-tf ‘Bleetric Water Pump: and Tank. Apply’ Citizen Office. jly29-tf 3. Trailers / with Jarge attached rooms. Ome at $75, one $90, one Adams, Commodore. this year. is ae is Vice-Pres. Hotel Men’s Associ who. operates the EB oe i Beach, Deponn f meeting in Tampa last points. It was hk the Division reviewed the such a a '| State’s tourist development effort, inf’ okedt but ‘and considered plans for the com- }pemaucrenent was ‘ing season. The meeting was one frighten of the best attended and most en- ' thusiastic ever staged. no time, ‘the session here. this summer. otherwise — a got down to business at an 8:30 motor. breakfast after which the immediately adjourned. the! conference room to listen to re-! ‘ports of committees, engage in| ‘round table discussions and map! plans for future activity. *Roy C. Beckman, Director of “\the “Florida State Advertis: ' Commiss: ween, ren “Taxi, 602 Duval . » Sly29-3tx F Chevrolet sedan. Ap- 4 Seminary St. Tiy29-3tx | 5; 2-bedrooms, living room and’ kit- chen; including large electric re- frigerator, washing machine, new gas stove and Phileo cabinet radio. Rubber tired lawn mow- er and other extras. Price $400 cash. | Call Mrs. Pickard at 9381, between 9-3. jly29-3tx “oy it Large heavy galvanized water tank. | 603 Southard: street. jly29-3tx 88 De Sota 4-door sedan. 80-1 Poinciana Place. jly30-3tx Arm chair, desk and chair, smok- |’ ing stand, what-not table, com- plete, $25.00. Crib, $15.00. 21 NAS. jly30-2tx Skiff, outboard motor, 5% h.p. Qars, anchor, everything, com: plete. Reasonable. - 109-D Poin- ciana. Jly80-6tx Piano, good tone, $30. Desk, Show gases, water tank with heater, china closet. Phone 1028-M. jly30-6tx NOTICE—A small shipment. of mother-of-pearl toilet seats in varies colors just arrived. stele up ; your ‘entire etait fs HN eng Plumbing, Supplies, 512 Flem- ing. jly30-t£ Man's bicyele;- balloon tires, good paint. $19.50, 1990 Staples Ave. jly30-2tx I Lady’s bieycle; balloon tires, good paint... $19.50. 1900 Staples Ave. flyip-2tx Lady’s bicycle; balloon tires, good paint. $19.50. 1900 Staples Ave. jly30-2tx |Place orders now for radiance rose bushes to arrive Oct. 1. Freeman's, 1121 Catherine St., |‘ Phone 672-W. jiy13-mws-1l0tx Lot 90x 46’ on*Reynolds St. $900 cash or terms, Apply. 23-2 Poin-|, ciana Place. jly31-3tx i Furniture and household goods. Apply 923 Angela St. jly31-5tx ———. ; One 12’ dinkey with large well and 5 h.p. Sea King outboard motor. 1024 Elgin St, Phone 1001-J. jly31-3t« For Sale—Reasonable: 5-piece kitchen set, 1 Hollywood bed} and chest of drawers, I % bed and dresser, living room pieces}: and 9 x 12 summer rug. 555-A W. Poinciana. jly31-3tx For Sale — Complete Hawaiian guitar outfit, including ampli- fier. Apply 1022 Fleming street. jly31-2tx emeiemeememnneed Furnished trailer for sale, $50.00. Apply 1111 Georgia St. jly31-5tx |) Baby Crib and chest, bed room suite, maple couch and chair. Apply Apt. 4-B, Porter Place. jly29-3tx Tires; new, two 600 x 16, one 650 x 16. Skating Rink. - jly34 26’ Cabin Cruiser; Model A con- }j version. Rods, reels (Jewfish lines, leaders, hooks, sinkers). Apply 143-B Poinciana, W. L. } ‘Turner. jly31-3tx FOUND Will gentleman. who left glass case in Sears Order Office Please cell. sion, reviewed the wor done by the.Commission to date ‘atid’ expiained in detail how in- quiries were handled. His tefk was well received and the Com- mission was given a vote of con- fidence. Chamber of Commerce secre- taries from points as distant as Miami and Pensacola made re- ports on conditions in their sec- tions and compared notes. All h- dications pointed to another big tourist season .but secretaries re- ported much improvement in fa- cilities for handling visitors and expressed confidence that all who came next season would be able to find rooms and urged that ‘the practice of frightening tour- ists away with stories of folks sleeping in their cars, in hotel lobbies and parks be discontinu- Pointing out that it was always eet soome, i-th i | but vin no authority 6 pendent stations, it was to get operators. to. places clean. T. B. advisable to urge folks to make}. advance reservations if possible, they contended that thousands without reservations could still be taken care of and told how} stories of over-crowding and lack of facilities last season kept thousands away and shortened the season. Railroad and bus officials ex- pressed confidence that their fa- cilities for handling traffic roe be much improved by fall. lines now have new equipment }' LOS? thought was developed and: its effect will be felt inthe better handling of florida's tourists: 1 Some. archeologists: say. that All | Cuicuileo.a temple: pyzamid: in 4thonths old toy poodle; female, | answers to name “Smarty”, ear and a healing sore inside of left hind leg. Last seen fn vicin- ity of 124 Duval street. Cali 1044-F. $100 reward. }Brewn billfold Saturday night with identification papers and / driver's license, belonging to W. J. Whitesell. phone 147-M. Reward. jly30-3tx | Your Grocer SELLS. That GOOD _ STAR * BRAND eacusax COFFEE cars penne all white and has a spot on each || jly30-3tx | Finder please | | i t Overseas Transportation Company, Inc. * -* Fast, Dependable Freight and Express a... Between MIAMI and KEY WEST “ Also Serving ALL POINTS on Florida Reys Between Miami and Key West & Express Schedule: (No Steps LEAVES KEY WEST D. CEPT SUND: En Route) AILY (EX- JAYS) at 6:00 P. M, Ar rives at Miami at 12:00 o'clock Mid-, a rons Eey All Intermediate Points: WEST DAILY DAILY (EXCEPT yclock =Mid- CEPT SUNDAYS) at 8:00 o'clock M. and arrives at Miami at 4:00 o'- a P.M. AVES MIAMI uUNDAYS) at 2:00 p clock arrives at Key West at PM. conga LL pi FULL CARGO INSURAN' Office: 813 Caroline Street. WAREHOUSE: Corner