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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER Dodgers and Cincinnati Reds =~ 12, 194 Lock In 19-Inning Tie Game PIRATES TAKE TWO FROM GIANTS WHILE CUBS, BRAVES EVEN (Ry Assoetteq Press) NEW YORK, Sept. 12.—Brook- lyn Dodgers gained a half game on the league-leading St. Louis |. Cardinals yesterday as they bat- Lake Worth Nine | ‘| Will Come Here On Bus Saturday The Lake; Worth Players are coming down on a special char- POOP CC CL LL Carrier Boys Shun Trouble THE LIFE OF MY AUNT MATTIE By NINA LESLIE CALLEJA PART II I sce where OPA is battling— fled to a 19-inning 0-0 tie with | tered Greyhound bus and will be who aré employed as news- sweatin’ and dyin’—to keep 'pounds.a paper carrier boys are seldom Hectic as Aunt Mattie’s last was a-carrying on with a red-} ladies skirts short. Save ¢loth, Herzog of in trouble, according to Harry | fifty-five years were, they headed huzzy named Sal Whit-|that is the slogan. Art ¢ Bailes, local police chief, and jj couldn’t compare with: the first taker. I knew it, too, but I was} Anybody — bronze, white or ' Perry, Norman a fifty. She lived at a clip that just |so worried with those twins get-| black—who up to now, have had Bers to i le “In all the years I was in the detective bureau, that is from 1930 until 1944, when I was named chief of the de- Jainking about would exhaust jting ready to be born that I just the present generation. The couldn’t get up the strength to present and also the last three'go horsewhip the sin out of her generations were no good at all,: like I should have done. Bold as in Aunt Mattie’s estimation. A! brass, she was. Used to send lit- a sneakin’ idea or notion, or any Kind of idea or notion that OPA knew what it was talking about, can now. abandon same. The Paris dressmakers say skirts are: spineless, gutless lot, she labeled them. tle colored boys to my house with notes, for Bill, and sometimes I The dressmakers don’t the Cincinnati Reds, coupled w @ Redbird defeat at the bande nt the Philadelphia Phillies, 9 to 4. Pittsburgh Pirates claimed two mes with the New York Giants, -to 6 and 7 to 5. Chicago and | Boston tied a 17-inning game, 3 to 3. : In the American League, the Cleveland Indians won 11-2 from the New York Yankees and the Chicago White Sox scored 6-1 over the Washington Senators. Boston Red Sox won 7-3 from the letics lost to the St Louis Browns, Detroit Tigers. Philadelphia Ath- 4-0, in a night game. Results of yesterday’s and last night’s games are as follows: NATIONAL LEAGUE At Brooklyn R.H. E. Cincinnati - Brooklyn _ a (19 Innings) . Vandermeer, Gumpert Mueller; Gregg, Casey, Herring, Behrman and Edwards. At Philadelphia RH, E. Si. Louis 49 Philadelphia = £107 1 Beazley, . Burkhart, Brazle, Wilks and Kluttz, Rice; Judd and Seminick. {here at 5:30°p. m., Saturday, and of , Will meet at the Elks Club, and|" the Elks and Lions from then on will be hosts tothe visitors, _ The line-up yesterday was right with the exception of one jmame, that of the great sports ; enthusiast who never misses a ball fame, will be coach at third for the Conchs, none other than Dr. Fred Carbonell. We all know i what a fan Dr, Freddie is, so with ‘Freddie on third and: Pepin , Acevedo, one of the seven broth- ‘ers, covering first, we can’t lose. ; The Seven Brothers, Pepin, or 'F. Acevedo, Manolo, Albie, Ar- ;mando Eloy, Geo. Albert, and even the sister, used to play base- “ball, and the brother-in-law, Fi- ; del Lopez, are on the club, so it - 910 2 is a family club. At least five of} Jacobs Falkenstine who met her - 0 8 1. the brothers will see action and| husband when he ‘it is al set that Manager A. and, Acevedo will start Vidal or F.|tricht, Holland. qLastres with Delfin Fernandez in reserve. Tie visitors will start the gréat Swede Hansen, and Dennis will be behind the plate. Saturday night a dinner. will be given in their honor and a dance. partment, I cannot recall a single case in whica-a juven- ile arrested for any cause a @ newspaper carrier She was evidently a beauty in | couldh’t get hold of ‘em to tear her day. Old family letters fre-|’em up and Bill would go lar- quently carry mention of her, Ex-|Tupin’ off to her as fast as he cerpts like: “She has the big-| could. Red-headed women! One gest, most sparkling blacw eyes| day I went out to try and sell in North Carolina,” and “I never | the last one of my diamond rings, saw a girl sit a horse so well.” Aj and what with the twins and visiting male cousin from Scot-|the worriation I was played out land wrote home in 1849: “All; When'I got back home, Bill was our American cousins are nice,|in the bedroom, standing fixing War Bride Gets longer. say why. Maybe folks have tired of dimpled knees or maybe thick calves, or maybe thin ones, or bowed ones, I don’t know. I am not researchin’ that subject. I am saying that OPA, if it is so opaque — thick, for short — as to think it can combat styles, it is just proving 100 per cent that it is an amateur. to be longer. So, they will be shipment: af penton wih | Vegetables. and ; = ables.” . | The seafoods are to. be ‘is also to be the site of a State Farmers’ Market beitg ~ up jfor operation next year. ‘dent Joe Seales, Jr., of thé Taylor , County Chamber of Commerce, \ said that the shipment of fish by Homesick, Takes GI Spouse Home AP Newsteatures RGANTOWN, W. Va.—A because yesterday she bit me.” but Martha Ann is very beauti-; his hair in front 0’ the glass. I ful and vivacious. However, she} happened to look down on the seems to be possessed of a/floor, and sure enough, there was strange and uncertain temper, | one of Sal Whittaker’s light bone {hairpins lying right there. I says There was an old story about | to Bill: ‘Don't lie to me. Sal Whit- NB lair would provide invaluable ex- Agd if it is an amateur on! perience for the aerial ttanspor- such a simple idea as styles for | tation af eeeekathtank : i ved rf . mamma; what is the chance of it} ‘The fish, which will be “ship- knowing beans about how many j ped in consumer size packages, pourids of feed to allow per hen ij) pe pre-cooled and kept” eg eo war bride who's si y 3 homesick is taking her husband | 2 Louisiana French miniature back with her, in a reversal of| Painter having killed himself un- the usual order. {der the grape harbor because of j a nee She is 17-year-old Madelaine| unrequieted love for her, but/@ue to your delicate condition.’ this tale was never fully authen- | holds up the light hairpin. ‘Bill,’ strolled into | ticated. The half-finished minia.,1 says, ‘what color is my hair? her parénts’ bake shop in Mass-| ture still exists, but whatever | ‘Black as a raven’s wing, he happened to its artist is shrouded comes back, ‘and just as pretty. Husband Lawrence Falken- | in mystery. Aunt Mattie, queried | ‘Bill’ I says, ‘don’t give me any stine is a veteran of the Battle! on the subject, said certainly she |0f that sweet talk now. What of the Bulge. remembered him; he was a thin| Color is this hairpin I'm holding Madelaine wants to return to; man with nerves. Did he kill| Up?’ ‘It looks light,’ he says, sort Masstricht to visit her. parents, | himself? “I wouldn’t be surpris-| of uncomfortable-like. ‘It sure is Mr. and Mrs, Charles Jacobs, and’ ed,” Aunt Mattie replied. “He light, I says, ‘and furthermore, her 20-year-old brother at the said he was going to.” its that Sal Whittaker’s, and don’t University of Delft. Naturally she had a host of stand there looking me square in taker’s been in here.’ Bill tried to look innocent. ‘Marthy,’ he says, ‘you're imagining things so as to get the most eggs. Or the least eggs, if we happen to be in a cycle where the Govt. says to; eat. oatmeal versus eggs, to clean! up a surplus of oatmeal that we paid a subsidy to get. Yours with the low down, JO SERRA. Third Degree All morning little Richard had been asking questions, and all morning: his mother had been pa- tiently providing the answers. Finally, the long-suffering wo- man. warned, “You'd better keep der refrigeration en route to-mir'- | ket, but will not be frozén. Ex- periments are in progress»; “the State Farmers’ Markets andsthe | State Extension Service’ in®-pre- ! packaging vegetables which would be -suitable’ for “aitborne shipment. r wis SSRs A Difference : New Resident—I hear that. the village boasts a chorak society. Old Inhabitant—Well, wedon’t boast about it—we suffer it in silence. a0 } Adams Dairy Will eee ‘S . i Sport’ New Suits In First Game r 9 “ At New York RUE Park Tilt Tonight Pittsburgh 3s See oe Adams Dairy and Roy Auto New York - 6 10 0 Parts will be playing the first Heintzelman, Lanning and | 84me, and Adams Dairy will be Baker, Salkeld; Koslo, Thompson, {Out in their new togs, and they Abernathy. Jones and Lombardi. |sure look good. They will pitch Falkenstine said he would ac-| company his wife and try to land a job as a civilian employe of the war department in Europe, He was honorably. discharged from the. army last February and Mrs. Falkenstine came to this country soon afterward. , because he was fortyish, baldish, admirers and suitors, but some- how, probably because of family | pressure, she became engaged to! a Mr. Faulk, who was more com- | monly known as Old Man Faulk! red-bearded and the financial! catch of the county, if not the Second Game At New York. R. H. E. | to boys the little wonder, Claude Pittsburgh ___. 7 9 1)\Valdes, will pitch and Joe Fleitas New York 5 8 3) will catch. In the night game the Gables, Heintzelman and Sal- | Floyd Villareal and F. Sands will | |be behind the plate. For the Au- B29 Sher Jewelers will play keld; Voiselle, Gee, Budnick,}the Key West Merchants, Vidal Kraus and Cooper. and Fernandez for Merchants i dakacicas and Parks and Sweeting for the At Boston R. H. E.} Jewelers. Chicago Aa 8 Be Boston Ca NE Bee anne oy Bs Schmitz, Kush, Borowy and CITY SPOR Scheffing; Wallace, White, Bar- " rett, Spahn and Masi. DIAMONDBALL Re ae. Pe eerie roe at Bayview Park ~~~AMERICAN LEAGUE (Night Games) At Cleveland R. H. E!| TONIGHT— New York ~2 9 3) 7:30—Bottle Cap Inn vs. Key Cleveland he 1116 0 West Merchants. Bonham, Marshall, Queen, Ly-| 9:00—VFW vs. American Le- ons and Robinson; Reynolds and gion. Hegan. FRIDAY— 7:30—Griffin’s Bar vs. Del- ' At Chicago R. HE. monico. Washington - ~1 8 1} 9:00—Miami Daily’ News vs. Chicago = a Ot 2 Miami Herald. + Newsom, Candini and Early; PEO Smith and Hayes. RECREATION ‘ Bayview Park—Tennis, Basket- As Defeat RHE |eall and Handball Courts, Dia- Detroit __ gga se tmondball, Kiddy Playground, 7 8 2i comfort Stations. Ferriss, Dobson Klinger and Bir , : South Beach and Rest Beach— Wagner; Trout and Tebbetts. Swimming. pre Gulf Dock and Rest Beach— At St bigs Game RHE Deepsea Fishing. Small Boats. Bhiladeiphia —-—---- @ 8 2] GIRLS CYCLE 1.500 MILES Knerr and Rosar; Kinder, Bis- NEW ORLEANS.—Two young ‘can and Moss. How: They Stand NATIONAL LEAGUE women, Jean McCann, 22, and Doris Culham, 17, of Galt, On- tario, tecently arrived, via bi- eycle from their home: in Can- ada, but will return home by train. They left home on August state. Aunt Mattie’s people, new- ! eomers from Scotland, had al sizeable estate, ° ° Will You Smile | alas. iad, 4 What, No Sinal? {slaves and were more or less Angelo had been hired to work ' comfortably situated. But Old | with a road gang high in the Man Faulk owned immense plan- mountains and had been warned tations, hundreds of slaves nad about rattlesnakes. He had been was commonly said to have more told, however, that a rattlesnake money than there were tobacco | would always give a warning leaves on his property. before striking. Aunt Mattie frequently re- One day as Angelo sat on a called her life of luxury as the log eating his lunch, he noticed young bride of Old Man Faulk. a-large rattler a few feet away, “Every space he could hang dia- coiled and ready to strike. De- monds on me, he did. I had nine- pending on the information he teen lavallieres, about sixty pairs | had been given, he nonchalantly, of earrings and so many brace- | the face and trying to tell me she hasn’t been here.’ Finally he | admits yes, she was, but he swore it wouldn't happen again, and it didn’t, because he never was there again, either. That night he er, some said to New Orleans. Nobody’s laid eyes on hair nor} and Sal Whittaker ran off togeth- | hide of either of them since that night,” she finished with gloomy satisfaction. A few days later the much- heralded twins arrived, and both died immediately, which, as Aunt Mattie said, “was almost a bless- ing, Lord forgive me for saying it. But my money was running very low and I already had two mouths to feed besides myself.” When money gave out entirely, and Aunt Mattie was faced with threatened starvation, she pocket- ed her pride and wrote home to her family, asking for help. Her Poppa returned her letter, neatly torn in quarters, with a note stat- crossed his legs and waited ae aes and rings I never had time the signal. to even count the dratted things. Just as he made this move, the And he was always buying me rattler struck, landing on the log new female slaves. One time I just a quarter of an inch away had so many I didn’t know one from Angelo’s leg. For a second from t’other. And horses! That's there was nothing but dust, and a what I liked — to get onto a few hundred feet away Angelo good spirited horse and get go- ing succinctly: “My daughter Martha Ann is dead.” “Well,” one can picture Aunt Mattie saying to herself as she surveyed the situation, ‘that be- ing the case, I reckon I have to still or something will happen to you. Curiosity once killtd the cat, you know.” Richard lapsed into blessed silence, and mother was congrat- ulating herself upon her strata- gem, when out of the blue came the eager question, “Say, mother, what was it the cat wanted to know?” t Japanese emperors once were so .poor they had to sell their own autographs to make a living. CIGAR STORE. 610 Duval St. SRE LELELSTL ATELIER. BETTE IE Your Grocer SELLS That GOOD STAR * BRAND and CUBAN Try A Pound Today!! was heard to say: | “Son of a gun, what’s a da; mat you no ringa da bell?” JUST A SCRUB The president of a midwestern railroad had a life-sized painting of a cow framed and hung on the wall behind his desk. 1 The cow was just an ordinary looking animal and friends who asked why he should want such a fixed both of them, and the out- | go to work.” The’ townspeople of Louisville weré kind, and tried to help “the young widder” find some gen- teel work to support herself and her children. She “took to sew- ing.” Get going she did, just exact- ly eight months after her mar- riage. The overseer of Faulk’s plantation, Bill Scanlon, a poor’) but stalwart Irishman, took a}. ~.,, = » = look at Martha Ann and Martha | ee nee ae ene . + at | WE @ rths, F: Ann took a look at him. That | ow managed to struggle along for seven years. Those seven years must have been pretty grim. | come was that one dark night Martha, Bill and two of Faulk’s best horses lit out for Kentucky. Goo en EDDING RIN PAUL SHER fine painting of an ordinary looking cow in his office were; Faulk lived long enough to di- told: | vorce his faithless spouse, then “Our trains through the dairy died of a broken heart, accord- belt have killed hundreds of cows ing to popular opinion. Aunt and that is the only ‘scrub’ cow. Mattie’s clan hung their once they have ever hit. The farmer! proud, heads in mortification, who owned that cow said she! and her Poppa went so far as to was just a ‘scrub’ worth about have a headstone set up in the $40. All the other cows that our | family cemetery inscribed with after no one had the temerity to mention her in his presence. Queried as to why she had ev- er done such a_ revolutionary thing, Aunt Mattie, with a rem- Tramp: Lady, you mean well, | iscent sigh, replied: “Bill had the but you can’t make work sound) most beautiful eyes any human any better by using a big word) being ever had. Blue, they were, for it. champions.” Still Work Mrs. Blank: Do you want em- ployment? A SURPRISE TO EVERYONE PHILADELPHIA. — Ronald Paczynski, 642 pounds, surprised ; like the Irish say. He had an | Irish way with him, too. Taking.” Things went fairly well for the at It was the ‘scandal of the decade. } trains have killed have been his daughter's name, and there- | and put in with a smutty finger, | runaways in Kentucky. They had | (TO BE CONCLUDED) Cowboys Get Their Nylons; ( i | AP Newsfeatures | aren't going to like this, but | cowboys, too, are waiting in line for nylons, and they're get- ting them. | Only the cowboys’ nylons are ropes. Over the objections die-hards, the use of nylon ropes ‘has caught on among the men 'who work the horse and cattle j corrals for a living. In the words of some cowboys, So Do Steers LLIANCE, Neb.—The scans of some} } Jeweler | i sgso Wide. gold engraved everybody, particularly his moth- er, by arriving one month too} soon and right in the middle of plenty of money first, since | the nylon rope is tougher than al Aunt Mattie had had the ‘fore- | two-bit steak. The Army started | sight to carry along a couple of; it by using them as tow ropes ‘ Teams— W. L. Pet. G.B.}11, and traveled 1,500 miles to St. Louis 87 50 .635 New Orleans, traveling approxi- Brooklyn 8451 622 2 | mately 100 miles a day. Chicago 73 60 .549. 12 a = = hs Se ane 5.496 BABIES IN 47 YEARS neinnati : HARINSBURG, Ky.—On Aug- Philadelphia ..58 79 .423 29 | yst 30, Dr. John E. ‘Kincheloe New WORK, ——— 9 04 800): was honored by the 5,496 babies Pittsburgh 53.78 .405 31 |he has delivered during his 47 AMERICAN LEAGUE years of practice. The oldest and Teams— Ww. L. Pet. G.B.) the youngest “Kincheloe babies” Boston ~—-96 45 681 were present, as were some 5,000 aaa 2 Ae 0 te Ta other persons who turned. out to om 20 - o honor the physician. Washington 67 71 486 27%] on Chicago 6475 460 31 Great, If True! Cleveland 63.77 450 32%) 4 parrot was mascot on one of St. Louis — $2 hy -437 34 | the troop ships, so the story goes, | Philadelphia ...47 92 338 48 | 444 was at liberty to roam at) acs ee aa will. DOOLITTLE FLYER One of the G-I5s was a profes- JAP MISSIONARY sional magician and in order to | GRSHAM, Ore. — While 200 keep in practice and also to en- | persons looked on, Jacob D. De- tertain the boys, he gave daily | a downtown Philadelphia de-} handfuls of jewelry, gifts from! for troop gliders. After the war} partment store. the fatuous Faulk, As soon as| enterprising manufacturers oF Mrs. Herminia Paczynski had! they learned the old boy had di- | fered them as ropes to the cow- gone to pay_a bill when the! yorced her, she and Bill were| boys. | stork paid his surprise visit. She married legally and properly,| Cecil Wilson of the Nebraska was taken to the infirmary of the! and settled down to enjoy the| Brand Committee in Alliance shazer, 33, of Madras, Ore., mem-! exhibitions of his skill. The par-| ber of the Doolittle crew that rot was always on hand and aft- first raided Tokyo and who er each performance would} dreamed in a Japanese prison scream, “Fake! Fake!” much to) camp of ministerin to his cap- the annoyance of the magician. al tors, was wed to Florence Ma- The ship was torpedoed ani theny, 25, of Toddville, Iowa, Sank almost immediately. The who ‘plans to accompany ician came to the surface, but | her Magi husband to Japan as a mission- saw no one but the parrot sitting | ay. ~ sie 1 tie sy ae a floating object. eee | “You wir, you win,” screamed | Aid Needed ‘the parrot, “but what did you do} with it?” | A bish3p attended a banquet | and a clumsy waiter dropped a Frankfurters are a “natural” plate of hot soup in his lap. The for use in casserole dishes. Try | clergyman glanced around with them with green beans and aj a look of agony and exclaimed: cheése sauce, with lima beans} “Will some layman please say and corn, with scalloped potatoes | something appropriate.” , and onions. i | Dionise started to hiccough, off | joying the company of loose | Strawbridge & Clothier store, ; fruits of respectability | He used to use about five or six clared it was the first birth to ' qaughter. oecur in the store in his 28 years’} As long as the money held out | connection with the store’s in-. Bill was all right, but when old nylon rope is_ still going firmary. The store presented | funds began to get low his spirits strong. Now all the cattle brand Ronald with a complete layette— ' sank correspondingly. As Aunt inspectors are being supplied with nylons. A 600-foot nylon a gift to its unexpected godchild. | Mattie said of him: “He was a SS a ae | grand man to live with, but not coil weighs only 20 to 28 pounds CHAMPION HICCOUGHER |; much of a hand to work.” He) AMBRIDGE, Pa. — Victor Dio- | took to frequenting questionable | ~ nise, 30, lays claim to the title | gives about town, drinking and_ That's All, Honey of world’s champion hiccougher. } gambling a good deal, and en- | mlialahinventevedio News York harbor. As she passed the Statue of Liberty there was absolute and on, 15 years ago. Some spells | jadies. In 1855 Aunt Mattie was lasted fifteen minutes, others an! again “expecting.” | hour and others a week at a! The denouement is best told in! a soldier at the rail shouted ac: time. He has tried all the rem-| Aunt Mattie’s own words: | the water, ‘ . edies and still hiccoughs. “Everybody in town knew Bill H honey, In | in the| was one of the first to give the; where the doctor in charge de-/ form of a son, and later on, a/ elongated coal tar product a try.) hemp ropes a year. But his year-} against 40 to 48 for manila hemp. | silence on boar§, when suddenly 532 Duval St. . $69 t= 30 . F $: Weddi ing with 3-diamond 14K gold 20 4 Apert: om ‘band, Diamonds individu- ally set. Budget Terms Paul J. Sher, Jeweler PHONE 155 Key West, Fla. We Cash Government Payroll Checks Without Obligation