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TUESDAY, JULY 29, 1947 YANKS CLIP Brooklyn Breaks Scorcless: Mound. Duel _In Ninths| Vander Meer Blanks Gis ants, 6-0 (Ry Ansne NEW YORK. 7 per lew York Yankees the Brooklyn Dodgers continued their winning pace at the top of | and the major leagues yesterday. At | lew York the Yanks beat Hal Newhouser and the Detroit Ti- rs, 5 to 1, to stretch their merican League lead to 10% dames, 4 At Chicago the Dodgers broke Up a scoreless pitcher’s battle be- tween Joe Hatten and Johnny Schmitz of the Cubs with four runs in the ninth inning to win, to 0. Hatten pitched a three- tter for the Dodgers’ 10th straight victory and his own sixth ih a row over Chicago this sea- sn. Phil Cavaretta’s fumble of Dixie Walkér's roller with the Wases full permitted Jackie Rob- ihson to score the first run and Emil Kush replaced Schmitz, ' Yielding the other three runs. The second-place St. Louis Cardinals edged the Boston Braves 8-7, at St. Louis, when Joe Garagiola delivered a pinch © single in the ninth to score Enos Slaughter with the deciding run. Del Rice, another Card. catcher, had tied the ball game: in the @ighth with a three-run homer. he Braves scored six in the fourth on two-run homers by Earl Torgeson and Tommy Holmes and doubles by Phil Masi, Connie Ryan and Johnny Hopp. At Cincinnati Johnny Vander Meer silenced the home run bats of the New York Giants and al- lowed only six hits in pitching a 6-0 shutout. Mort Cooper, start- ing Giant pitcher, gave way to a pinch hitter in the sixth. The Philadelphia Athletics manufactured a 5-3 win over the Chicago White Sox at Philadel- phia on a four-hitter dished up by Ray McCahan and Russ Christo- pher. Results: NATIONAL LEAGUE At Chicago R ALE, Brooklyn 460 Chicago 0 3 Kush and McCullough. At St. Louis R. H. E. Boston 716 2 St. Louis 815 1 Spahn, Johnson and Masi; Mun- ger, Burkhardt, Pollet, Brazle, Wilks and Rice. At Cincinnati R. H. E. New York 060 Cincinnati 512 0 M. Cooper, Beggs, Kennedy, Hanson and W. Cooper: Vander Meer and Mueller. Only games scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE Night Game At New York . HE. Detroit 167% New York 5 6 0 Newhouser and Wagner, Swift; Raschi and Be: . Night Game At Philadelphia Chicago Philadelphia Haynes, Maltzberger and Tresh; MeCahan, Christopher and Rosar. ww ga05 Fan FI Only games scheduled. SPORTS and RECREATION Td SWIMMING—South Beach, south end of Duval Street. DEEPSEA FISHING—Gulf Dock, west Caroline Street; Craig Dock, north end of Grinnell Street. BASEBALL —Games, usually on Sunday afternoon, at Munici- pal Stadium, Duck Avenue and lth Street. GOLF—Municipal Golf Course, Stock Island. TENNIS—Bayview Park on Di- vision Street (day and night - ey |ALL—Outdoor courts South Beach and Bayview ark. HANDB. jayview Park. SHUFFLEBOARD Bayview Park and South Beach. PICNICKING—Tables at Bay- view Park. PLAYGROUND — Rayview Park. COMFORT STATIONS—Bayview Park. Leaves on the north side of a tree are longer and darker, and heve lighter veins. 2 Hatten and Bdwards: Schmitz, | epuadeionie 5, Chicago 3, night gam .{ildon (11-6), NEWHOUSER, TIGERS 51; DODGERS SPILL CUBS, 4.0, AND CARDINALS EDGE BRAVES, 8 TO 7 ‘ Key West Golfers Begin Series Of Dinner Matches 4 Members of the Key West Golf {Club will hold their monthly din- Baschall Statisties matches from today through Sunday, August 10. As usual, the By The Associated Press jwinners will be the guests of the ian | losers. | | * | STANDINGS ] Matched as follows are: ee ; Harry Knight, Fred Matthews | oT Bet |" Charles Yates, Jimmy Mir Havana 76 25° 152 | Humbert Mira, Bob Spotts- Tampa Ki 70 32 686 ‘wood vs. Alton Park, Gilmore } Park. an Beach ru os 58 Charles Smith, Moreno Wallace West Palm Beach 44 52 .458,¥5_Ken Toves, Jimmy Cooper. St. Petersburg 46 57 “4a7! Curry Harris, Paul Mesa vs. Lakeland 34 69 .330,Beb Knowles, Pinky Osborne. Fort Lauderdale .25 73 255| Norman D. Artman, Mel Hamel tional Leagu vs. Clem Price, Bob Dillard. ee a Pot, | Valter Vinson, Hugh Moore vs. Brooklyn q 625 Kermit Lewin, Fieldon Elbert- | ee son. Go dans: ‘AT 41 re Ignatius Lester, Bob Saunders Boston 49 43.533 ,VS: George Carey and R. Hyman. / Cincinnati 46 50 .479, Octavio Recio, Horace O’Bryant Chicago _.43 50 .462 Vs. “Pop” Londeree, Louie Pierce. | jPittsburgh - 3855 .409} Dr. Herman Moore, Bascom Philadelphia 38 56 404 | Grooms vs. Orvis Kemp, Hilary American League | Albury. Club— Ww. L. call Charlie Salas, Bob Dopp vs. New York 64.32 .667|Dr. Wm. Kemp, Francis Delaney. Boston _52 40 .565! Jack Sellers, Ed Gross vs. Ward | Detroit .. 49 42 .53g,Tyson, Tony Demeritt. Philadelphia 47 47 500; Bob Echdahl, Frank McCloskey Cleveland 40 45 .471,vs. Ben Freer, Kermit Loucks. | Washington 41 48 .461/ William Watkins, Kovash vs. Chicago 41 54 .432 Paul Sher, Malcolm Sawyer. St. Louis - 32 58. .356; Tournament Chairman C 1 e m| jPrice should be contacted if any | GAME RESULTS member’s name has been inad- Florida-Internations: ueague {V¢rtently omitted from the list. (Sunday's Scores) See ea eer ee **Half-Acre Clips Miami 5, Lakeland 4. ene cee ee { Adams, 10- 4; VEW postponed. National League (Monday’s Scores) Cincinnati 5, New York 0. Brooklyn 4, Chicago 0. St. Louis 8, Boston 7. t Only games scheduled. American League (Monday's Scores) | New York 5, Detroit 1, game. — Edges Legion, 3-1 ©. | Jerry's Half Acre won its third jStraight game against no defeats in the Class B City Softball League last night at Bayview Park, mauling Adams Dairy for ia 10-4 victory. The Veterans of ight Foreign Wars scored a 3-1 tri- TIE mph over the American Legion two-hit pitching of Frank Tynes. Only games scheduled. The Legion scored its lone run (6-10). New York at Cincinnati, night game—Jansen (9-4) vs. Raffens-! berger (3-7). Boston at Pittsburgh, night! Fo re a oh Voiselle (chin walked, Arias singled Philadelphia at Chicago — ‘left and Casado singled to cen- Heintzelman (4-5) vs. Lade (8-7). ‘ter, scoring Tynes and Machin. American League Tynes pitched a great game and Cleveland at Boston—Feller after the second inning only one | (12-8) vs. Galehouse (6-4). runner reached first, on an error. Chicago at Philadelphia, night: Machin hit two safely to lead game—Gillespie (5-5) vs. March- the hitters, and Casado was credited with two. In the field,| Griffen, Acevedo, Barber andj Hopkins played well for losers, and Casado, Machin were out- standing for the Vets. Score by innings: Legion 100 000 0—1 2 1 \VFW 000 102 x—3 5 2! Harris and Acevedo; F. Tynes! and Castro. Two-base hit: Casado; stolen bases: none; struck out: by Tynes ‘Machin, who had run to third on jthe play, went home when he saw no one covering the plate. In the sixth VFW game when M. Tynes and Ma- St. Louis at Washington, night game—Muncrief (5-11) vs. Scar- borough (3-3). Only games scheduled. Softball Standings CITY LEAGUES OUUUUUAONOUOAUQQOQQNQQ 00008 S04000QQHH00Q00eo0QQNOUOOeHOOONONOOEOO OO CLASS A }1, by Harris 4; bases on balls: off | Club— W. L. Pet.|Tynes 2, off Harris 5; time of VFW a = 2 0 1.000 game: 1.10. 1.500 0 .000; 2 .000' American Legion 1 0 0 Ww. L. 3 0 0 0 Bob’s Sports Shop USS. Gilmore CLASS B In the second game the Je scored their first run in the first jframe on a single and one error, Club— Pet.'added two in the second on two jas Jerry's Half-Acre 0 1.000 walks and two hits. The Dairy Adams Dairy 1.000 hoys scored their four runs in the Naval Hospital 1 .000'second on three hits and two Key West Merchants - 1.000 | walks. In the third, the Jerry’s won the game on three hits, one walk and a couple of errors, and added three more for good measure in Softball Games BAYVIEW PARK NIGHT GAMES TONIGHT— 7:30—USS Gilmore vs. and two errors. Bob’s | At bat Higginbotham, Lastres id Sawyer hit two safely to Sports Shop. a La, she 5. West Merchants vs.|lead the winners, and Sterling pou! hit two for the losers. In the Naval Hospital. THURSDAY— 7:30—American __ Legion Bob’s Sports Shop. 9:15—Adams Dairy vs. field, Sands, Malgrat and Villa- | vs, real were the best for the losers, «land Higginbotham, Lastres and Naval |Haskins for the winners. Hospital. | Score by innings: R. H. E.] FRIDAY— yadams 040 000 0— 4 6 4 Jerry's 324 003 x—10 10 2) 7:30—Jerry’s Half-Acre vs. Key West Merchants. | 9:15—VFW vs. USS. Gilmore. Walker and Villareal; fen and Sawyer. Three-base hits: Sterling and) Subscribe to The Citizen—25c'Lastres; two-base hit: Villareal; weekly. +stolen bases: Haskins 2, Mauldin, Sue Grif-| in the Class A game behind the | 7_—_—___ tin the first on a walk, a fielder’s TODAY’S GAMES choice and a fluke single by Lo- Florida-International League {pez over first. In the fourth in- Lakeland at Miami. jning the Veterans tied the score Miami Beach at Havana. twhen M. Tynes walked, and Ma- Fort Lauderdale at Tampa. chin bunted safely, A flied | St. Petersburg at West Palm out and both runners advanced a Beach. ‘base. Then F. Tynes hit to Pitch- : Nationa! League fer Harris and M. Tynes was Brooklyn at St. Louis, night!caught off third as Catcher Ac- game—Taylor (8-3) vs. Dicksonjevedo ran to the bag to tag him. won the | ae to} R. H. E.| the sixth on a walk, three hits | CITIZEN | Headed For High Swim Honors |~ THE KEY West ! i EVELYN BARBEE, of Sarasota, National Junior 100-meter back- | stroke champion, who is favored to win the Regional A.A.U. — | ming meet at Sarasota next month, | ‘Evelyn Barbee, Of Sarasota, Favorite | In Regional A.A.U. Meet. In August: cuca Fla., July 28— Evelyn Barbee, National Junior 100-meter backstroke rec- {ord-holder, has been swimming jin competition since she was ten ars old. Miss Barbee will be lin senior high school next year. \She hopes by her performance in ‘the 1947 | Women’s Regional Championships to get to the ;Senior Nationals in Chicago. Evelyn was high-point scorer in the regional events last year. She is defending fee of the 100-meter backstroke, and 800 meter fre le. She has picked } out a hea schedule of events in the regional meet, being clig- ible to compete in the 15-meter free-style, 800-mter free-style, | 400-meter free-style, and the two backstroke events. the 100 2aS and the 200 meter. The 1947 Regional Women’s A. A. U. championships will be held in Sarasota August 8-9-10. UMPIRE SCHOOL SEEKS KEY WEST AS WINTER SITE r tarbonell Asked Regarding* Establishing 110-Man In-/!te!_ at Rockledge. Fla. stitution Here For Ten;° which i two in a room ($3.00), twin and shower. If you Weeks » for housing to meet | j . we would be Key West is being sought to locate fhe school in your the site of a ten-week umpii school during the coming win City Commissioner Louis Car- |r bonell has received a lett jing if the city could acco: you have some a unoccupied id be used for this purpose. “If you are interested in hav- date a 220-man school. her ing us locate in Key West, please \two sections of 110 men each iwrite me at your earliest. con- The letter was written by Rocky , venience.” sown’ of Bill Me-j Carbonell said that he is School. Me- vassing the city for po umpire in housing facilities for the ies, having served ‘and believes that the pro 23 years. and students at $1.50 (single) or Rooms for instructors of bringing the institution are favorable. $3.00 (double), ‘with bath, are The McGowan School annually needed. graduates a number of ump’ “it you cen arrange for into organized baseball. Kardas, istant manager of the Miami \Tourists. “During the past two years,” Flammia added, “the school was operated at Cocoa, Fla. Last | year we had 200 G.I. students. | This coming year we expect another 200, at least. The | course consists of two, five- week semesters or a period of 10 weeks. Each class will have approximately 110, which will | include the students and the instructors. | “Our main problem in locating |the school is the housing prob- | Hem at reasonable prices for the |students. Last year, we were jauartered at the Indian River and didn't sing, and a lot of peo- the organ had been fixed!” BROADWAY CIGAR STORE 610 Duval Street COMPLETE BASEBALL SCORES POPULAR BRANDS of 1 Gigats and Cold ine Sawyer, Calero; struck out: |by Griffen 6, by Walker 3; b: on balls: off Griffen 7, of ff Walk |7; double plays: Malgrat to Ster-| es a ling, Lastres to Mir time of! S f Dri k: eae: 1.15: umpi qriffen andi 7 0 t mM: Ss i {James Mira; scorer: Aguilar. if a suburb of Cocoa, for $1.50 a! barracks, that at; and | housing to meet these prices,” (who umpired with the Miami Flammia wrote Carbonell, “we Tourists, is a graduate of the! would be anxious to locate the school. school in your city.” | | Flammia said he was advised | A Sour Note jto contact Carbonell by Romeo} uwpy did you stop singing Sardas, Florida-International in the choir, Thomas?” League umpire, and Bill Cate: ~ one Sunday I was sick _ple in the congregation asked if} _ The Weather FORECAST Key West and Vicinity: Partly cloudy this afternoon, tonight | and Wedriésday. There will be | scattered showers and thunder- storms in the area. Moderate to fresh southeasterly winds. Florida: Considerable cloudi- ness with scattered showers and thunderstorms this afternoon, to- night and Wednesday. j East Gulf and Jacksonville through Florida Straits: Gentle to meéderate winds, mostly south to southwest over northern por- tions and southeasterly over southern portions this after- nooh, tonight and Wednesday. Considerable cloudiness with scattered showers and thunder- storms. No small craft or storm warn- j ings are being displayed any- where in the area. REPORT Key West, Fla., July 29, 1947 (Observation taken at 8:30 a.m., Eastern Standard Time, { City Office) \ Temperatures | ‘Highest yesterday — {Lowest last night :Mean - . {Normal Precipitation Rainfall, 24 hours ending 8:30 am., inches —... 0 Relative Humidity 66% | | Tomorrow's Almanac i | (Eastern Standard Time) | Sunrise ... 5:54 a.m. Sunset 4:12 p.m. Moonrise - ; Moonset TIDES Tomorrow Naval Base (Eastern Standard Time) High Tide Low Tide 7:55 a.m. 12:58 a.m. 6 p.m. 2:59 p.m. | Additional Tide Data Reference Station: Key West Time of| Height of i | Station— Tide high water | Bahia Honda —Ohr. (bridge) 10min. 0.0 ft. No Name Key -+2hr. ! (east side) 20 min. | ie Chica —Ohr. (Sandy Point) 40 min, Valdes Channel +2hr. (north end) ..10 min. +1.4 ft. 000 (NOTE: Minus sign—correc- tions to be subtracted. Plus ‘tions to be added.) | sign—cor ELABORATE PROGRAM (Continued from Page One) Breakfast; 9:00 a. m. to 12:00 !Noon, Floral offerings to statues jof Jose Marti, USS Maine vic- jtims and Dr. Carlos Finlay; 2:00 jp. m. to 8:00 p. m. Exchange of Key West ‘Flags, i and Cuban jbor uses in -his automobile. He |Scouts; Motor trip to country— Strenuous exercise causing extreme Ss hndgos Seaala be avoided during the ie summer months Precaution against A age thé National Foundation for Intan- tile Fabsitels, its lo- cal chapte: Mis at oo int et : The OBSERVATION POST | (Continued from Page Two) | tricity in Key West are virtually ; {the same, said a well known local | public utility man today. | “Nearly everyone has the same | story to offer”, said this man.} “They all say: ‘We only cook one | meal a day. How could the rate} be so high?” “They even go so far as to bring in cards bearing the rates paid by their neighbors. Of course, it shows the neighbor has aid a low te than the per- | on complaining. “They don’t seem to realize that the neighbor’s use of gas or electreity is about like the neigh- may use it more or less than the complaining person. “Why do people always com- plain their bill is too high? Well, one thing they don’t real- ize is that they just Have to watch their pots and pans on the stove. As soon as a pan of water comes to a boil, they | should turn down the 7s electricity. The water will stay just as hot under a low fire as it will under a high one. “I've seen my wife and my Over-Fatigue Invites Polio in Summer Months | en th tle pie of a dt ie amr ti ve ig extre: e iS a wor! ution | the polid danger morths—Jane through ue pee | i Pie dae ole apy cae fue TLR Z ----— 4 j mother leave the gas or electri« {city on and walk over to the sink and start to peel potat my lor onions. After they're througlt ipeeling the potatoes or onions, they put them on the stove. So the gas or electricty has beep {burning briskly for several mine utes. : “As a matter of fact most Key ,Werters eat only one meal @ day: so that argument is out of the window as far as I am cons cerned. Folks protesting the bills will go out and spend plenty on other things, and then kick on a dime a day for gas a The service the pul furnisly electricity. lic utili companies with their supplie call, is about the ch in their lives.” 2 At all events, it seems to us that it would do well for Key Westers to think of another rea+ son why their gas or clectrié bills should be lower.” — a . RN. PS after en ing troubled by distress of fe- male. Munctionsl monthly disturb- ances? this make you suffer from pain, feel so nervous, tired, weak—at such times? Then po try Lunch and Dinner. Monday, August 18, 8:00 a. m., Departute of Scouts for Key West. 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Let | us tell you how the low cost will be justified many times. With 18-Gallon Tank With 28-Gallon Tank H No Down Payment $105.00 120.00 | Pay Only $5.50 A Month Pierce Bros. PHONE 270 Fleming and Elizabeth Streets | WY GME ENETIAN BLINDS CARD TABLES $3.65 BATH TOWELS 60c Each NO LIMiT Restaurant Equipn me MAXWELL = CO. tn FURNITURE and PHONE 682 909 Fleming St., Cor. Margaret BLINDS THE BEST THAT MONEY CAN BUY Aluminum TIAN $6.50 $7.00 $7.00 $8.00 8.50 Eaeh Each Each Each Each “Mohawk” 34-Piecve DINNER Se) Ald bl SET Sertice for Six s]72.50 tent and Supplies FURNISHINGS St. Key West, Fla.