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Fes AT GOLF COURSE “Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Ryzow,r Mr. and Mrs. Clem Price, 93- sparkling golf, came in|22—71; : | = Peed afternoon to win place honors in the season’s mixed two-ball tournament. Ryzows played . alternate shots and chipped and putted themselves into a fine 93 for the WM-hole route. -Their handicap of 27 gave them a net 66, which was five strokes ahead of their near- est threat. Tied for second place were three teams with net 71.5. They were: Mr. and Mrs, H. N .Wood, 96-25 —l; Mr. and Mrs. Clem Price, 93-22 —i; Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Caruthers, 93-22—71. Prizes consisting of golf equip- ment were awarded to the win- mers at a bar-b-q held after the tournament. A complete list of the players and their final scores are as fol- Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Ryzow, 93- 2766; Mr. and Mrs. H. N. Wood, 96- 256-71; Fishing Information ... By JACK DELANEY, Fishing Editor ADBAAABAAAAADAADABAADDDADAAAAEED piece of news to this reporter, it is a little early to become jubilant over the matter. The closing down of Dredgers Key on February Ist, leaves the city with no other alternative 2 Tipping the Scales Leading Catches Fish— Weight ~ Amberjack 49 Lbs, Cobia — 25 Lbs. Bonito - ll Lbs. Crevalle Jack 20 Lbs. ‘Geesoer ne Loe * poate Fa" a tbe ae than to remove marl from the ; Bight, for street pur- But the contractors have not yet moved in with their equip- , and until they do, we'll sit tight and wait. "Yachts Will Come To Key West I am still of the opinion small! yachts will come to Key West and berth in the winter, if facilities were available to them. It's true, the day of the large Yacht is over—the trend today is t@ smaller craft—but I still can not help but feel these would still Use the outside route into Key West, provided the weather is not too rough. That the Inland Waterway is Mecessary to this city, I whole- heartedly agree, that the interests #f Key West from the yachtsmens standpoint would be better serv- a is also true, but in spite of this We still do not have a yacht basin fe handle the craft when they Some to this port, so, why not Start on the basin now. p eld saying that, baby ‘ust creep before it walks,” still holds true Aside To Steve Young, Jr. Many thanks for your card. I stand prepared to send booklets en “How To Paint Your Boat” to any of your friends that want them. Just send in their the books will be forthcoming. Along The Florida Keys 93-22—71; ‘ Mr. and Mrs, Joe Kinsey, 105- 32—73; Mrs. W. B. Kirke and R. F. Spottswood, 85-10—75; 24—71 Miss Janet Shupp and Tom Drace, 94-18—76; Mrs. Jean Dunn and J. J. Sul- livan, 102-25—77; 99-22—77; Mr. and Mrs. Don Henning, 108-30—78; Mr. and Mrs. Mel Miller, 104- 20—84; Mr. and Mrs. F. Harlfinger, 112- 29—85; Mr .and Mrs. A. C. Husband, 151-40—111; Mrs. Joe Lopez and Har Knight, withdrew; Mr_.and Mrs. W. H. Rogers, withdrew; luxurious | 1 names, BRUSH FIRE KILLS | Mr. and Mrs. Gardner Thomas, withdrew; 4 Mr. and Mrs..M. H. Harris, withdrew. Wyvvyvvvvvvvvvwrwwwwewe | San Carlos Saints ae We took our first trip to the Keys in some time, last week-end, and it is really amazing the pro- gress this section has made in the last few years. Talk about your charter fishing boats, in any sec- tion it is possible for a boat to anchor, you can see them laying at the docks. It may very’ well be that on other trips we have missed the boats for the simple reason that the weather in the past has been ideal for fishing trips, or that we went up the Keys early in the morning, but our trip last week was made in the afternoon. The Key area isin the past To Date |»28 been termed, “America’s last; frontier,” but Tavernier, Islamo- rada, and Marathon, today are no longer frontier towns, but thriv- ing little communities. Just A Suggestion The appearance of the charter boat docks could be greatly en- hanced if the boatmen would set- tle on one color for painting the docks. Some of them are gray, some blue, some brown, while others have not yet been painted. One color scheme would make the area much more attractive. And while we are on the sub- ject, the water around the docks is littered with oil cans and other trash, that is beginning to present an unsightly appearance. The gulls and pelicans will take care of any fish thrown overboard, the cans can be disposed of at sea. As I said it’s just a suggestion. SCALES: A new leader makes its ap- pearance in the amberjack cla: with the entry of one weighing 48 pounds, that measured four feet three inches, and had a girth of 28 inches. This catch was entered by S. L. Deitsch, of Sandy Hook, Conn., and was caught while fish- jing from Captain Ted Canova’s jcharter boat, the Flo-Along. Captain Cleveland Niles, of the charterboat Lucky Strike, sub- mits an entry from Mrs. Thelma Reich, of Chicago, Ill., a grouper weighing 35 pounds, measuring 3 feet 7 inches, with a girth of 28 incehs. : Reef fishing is doing very nice- | ly also, the yachts Aileen, and the Storm King, returned to port with some nice catches of grouper, porgie, grunts, and many other | varieties of fish. Before closing I would like to repeat for the information of the ‘tourists in the area that there are over six hundred varieties of fish in the waters surrounding Key West. Some big, some small, the size you catch is up to you, so go to it. $1,000 REWARD (Continued From Page One) se many that no count kept of the patients. Camp Carson is the base for Mounting what is planned to be the longest mass airlift in Ameri- fan militery history on January ; ed for the arrest and conviction of 2nd and 27th. Supplies will be flewn from the camp to White- hiorse in the Yukon as part of an Army arctic exercise. Officers ould not say whether the fire destroyed airlift equipment or what effect it might have on the maneuvers. The land area of the Christmas Mand atoll is 164 square miles. immediately | (Continued From Page One) was!shots apparently meant only to frighten the occupants. ! The Pensacola City made the announcement. ‘A $1,000 reward has been post- the gunman. THE ARTMAN PRESS PRINTING T Bi Capt. and Mrs. W. R. Caruthers, a igs Mrs, A. J. Nelson, 100- Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Faraldo, Council } [Bulldogs Beat’Cats At Basketball First _ |Time In 19 Years |By New Virus ATLANTA, Jan. 18.—(#).—It happened again last night—no fluke either—the Kentucky Wild- cats lost another basketball en § ney Oepor the first'time in~-nineteen the’ beet the ’Cats. The score—71 to’ 60. Last night's Georgia score was the highest a Southeastern Con- ference quintet. ever ran up against a Rupp five. The story of the game was the tale of two tall centers. Georgia’s Bob Schloss was so much the bet- ter it was hardly a fight. Schloss dropped in 28 points to only eight for Bill Spivey, his - eight-foot rival. : Z The Bulldogs were tied once in the game, but never behind. In Florida, Tampa hung up a record too. The Tampans, beat the University of Florida for the first time since 1941. They ran up an early lead and held off Florida’s second half rally, wining 63 to 50. led by Harry Oryan and George Montz, with thirteen points each. Tampa's balanced offense was} has added to the great financial ‘Mild Polio Cases May Be Caused An unknown number of so- called mild polio cases during last summer’s epidemics may have ben caused by an entirely 3 new National Foundation. for - Paralysis. Recent research reports ‘ from the sation headquarters of the Marc! imes organiza’ state that this new virus, ee unrelated to any of the — : known polio viruses, can cause clinical symptoms identical to mild, non-paralytic polio, he said. C. B. Harvey explained that the Marchof Dimes supported scien- tists term the new virus, the Cox- sackie virus, named for the New York State village where it was first isolated. He said that it is impossible for doctors to dis- tinguish clinically the two dis- eases. “As a result,” the chapter chair- man declared, “this new disease drain on the resources of the Na- tional Foundation’s chapters. Since it is impossible to distin- guish between the two diseases, all patients with early symptoms of polio must receive prompt-and !proper polio care, lest possible, 0 3 000 (NOTE: Cubans and Bombers have one tied game.) Basketball Standings Island City Basketball League High School Gym crippling after-effects that could be minimized occur. So far, he revealed, no cases of crippling have resulted from an infection with the new virus. But further reasearch may prove seri- ous paralysis to be possible, and doctors are reluctant to withhold the usual polio treatment until more is learned about the new disease and it becomes certain that no crippling will result. March of Dimes-supported sci- 1 0 1.00 ; “ : Oversees erate beer tao entists are continuing — intensive Banbao. Rau 1 0 1.000. investigations of the new disease, Spider Web Drive-Inn 0 1 .000| Mr. Harvey revealed. Vogue Cleaners - 0 1 .000;, 1 .000 Sonar School _. 0 Sports Calendar BASEBALL Island City Baseball League (Municipal Stadium, Afternoon) Each Game, 7 Innings SUNDAY— 1:00—San_ Carlos Atomic Bombers. 3:00—Key West Adams Dairy. BASKETBALL Island City Basketbali League (High School Gym, Saints vs. Cubans vs. Night) WEDNESDAY— 7:00—Spider Web _ Drive-Inn vs. Sonar School. ‘ 8:00—Bamboo Room vs. Vos,ue Cleaners. 9:00—Overseas Garage vs. Pol- lock’s Jewels. THURSDAY— 7:00—Overseas Garage vs. Bam- boo Room. 8:00—Spider Web Drive-Inn vs. Pollock's Jewels. 9:00—Sonar School vs. Vogue Cleaners. GOLF Municipal Golf Course (Stock Island) Daily and Sunday play. TENNIS Bayview Park ‘Morning, Afternoon and Night) (Morning, Afternoon and Night) Daily and Sunday play. SKATING. Bayview Park (Night) FRIDAY— 7:30 to 9:00 P.M. SHUFFLEBOARD "People’s F rum 298, a will be lean requested otherwine, OK’S MARCH OF DIMES Editor, The Citizen: There is no better time than now that there is a March of Dimes Drive on to express my ap- preciation to all the people of Key West and the Keys and tHe Monroe County Chapter of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis for the aid given my little daughter, Nell Rose, who was stricken with polio in. 1938 at the age of 3. Had it not been for4 the dimes and dollars contributed by Monroe County. people, little Nell Rose together with about 70 other children possibly would have gone without proped ed- ical attention and hospitalization during the epidemic. I think much credit is due the group of volunteer who each year take time away from their own family and friends to collect these dimes. Mrs. Wilhelmina Harvey, one of the leaders in aid- ing polio, is always ready to lend a cheerful word and a guiding hand at any and all times when called upon, and my family hold her high in their esteem. It has been said that “Service is the rent paid for occupying space on this earth,” and I am sure that the voluntary charity services graciously given by Mrs. Harvey were ever measured, it would be startling. To all polio volunteers and con- tributors, we heartily say, “Thank you” and may polio never strike in your family. HOWARD SANCHEZ. Bayview Park Daily and Sunday play. WANTED: MONKEY CATCHER NEW DELHI.—().—Want an outdoor job with lots of live prospects? They need a monkey catcher here. The field hasn’ been worked since 1947. A ne ly-hired monkey catcher, a Mos- lem, left India suddenly during the communal riots of that year before getting down to work. Hindus won't take the job be- cause monkeys are sacred to them. Besides perpetrating such an- THREE HOTELS IN RATES REASONABLE MIAMI =F2rtarracs Located in the Heart of the City ROOMS .ratsecy NEE, with BATH and TELEPHONE Ford Pershing Miller Hotel Hotel Hotel Elevator Elevator 80 Rooms Solarium Heated Elevator 3 BLOCKS FROM UNION BUS STATION 1713 Washington St., Key West, Fla., Jan. 14, 1950. ————$—$— In its wild upper reaches, China’s Yangtze river has a name for almost every tribe along its banks. noyances as swiping golfballs right off the greens, the monkeys are occasionally vicious, Captured monkeys will be deported rather than killed. Municipal President Suda Singh thinks they might bring some much-nee eee eded dollars a ny N MASKED ¢ STILL AT LARGE; $1,500,000 IN BOSTON 4 2F ; : bs “f “The gunmen got away in a “ : parked outside the garage. It is a sweéping hunt for seven mask- js " - ed gunmen who last night staged believed two men waited outside rirhudbieaipacee’ swphgagaiy chased TT aktey binek Colmer in history. is ’ i». \through the streets of the West | The bandits took one million | Roxbury District. The police lost| dollars in cash, and half a million i the car but they believe it was; dollars in checks from the Boston| the getaway car. The Cadillac, a office of a famous money trans- af carried stolen license} ~ porting company. ‘| plates — Massachusetts Number, © The hold-up was in a garage of | 156533. The police say they think! Brink's, Incorporated, in the| it headed for Providence, Rhode! & ‘ ; waterfront section of Boston.|Island. Several other tips con-j the window into Seven men, all wearing grotesque| sidered a lead toward the bandits Caf. On the back rubber hallowe’en masks and|have proved worthless. 1 navy peajackets got through six es locked doors to the vagen-in New York Police Searching For money platform. They surprised five, employes Boston Bandits NEW YORK, Jen. 18.—(4).— working by the va The.ban- New York police have begun a dits tied Sagged'the men, re- moved thé bullets frém guns on a search of parking lots and ga- rages. A car similar to the one in company rack and walked out with all the loot they could carry. That was one and one-half mile lion dollars worth. They left be= Boston’s one and-a-half million dollar holdup was sighted this morning. John Koziatek said he was on hind one million dollars more in’ duty at a filling station in Upper cash—simply because they could not carry any more money. The loot included 400-thousand dollars in Federal Reserve Bank funds—and that brought the fed- eral government into the case. Crack FBI agents now have joined police along the entire eastern seaboard in a search for the bandits. And Massachusetts State Commissioner of Public Safety John Stokes has called every state police trooper and de- tective on the job for one of the biggest underworld round-ups ever staged by Bay State police. The twenty-minute precision hold-up apparently was planned down to the most minute detail. The gunmen all were armed, all masked, all dressed alike, and prepared for everything. They carried rope and tape to get the Brink’s employes tied and gagged, They carried bags to remove the money. And with the exception of one man who wore shoes with erepe rubber soles, all, the ban- dits wore rubbers. Descriptions of the men are hazy. Boston Police Superintendent Edward Fallon says, “This job NR MORNE A NI STRONG ARM BRAND COFFEE TRIUMPH We Use Bausch and Lomb . 24 Hour Service On Any Eye Glass Preseription ° OFFICE HOUMS: * to 12 and 2 te 5 PM, GARDNER'S PHARMACY was definitely pulled by some- 114 DIVISION STREET "Se Gani body who knew every inch of the At Corner of Varela Street company’s layout.” He added,| *hone 177 Free Delivery | “It's very obvious that these men (£0404 0aneeesreeeee - Dollar for Dol you cant beat a DELIVERED HERE 5-Passenger Streamliner Six-Cylinder The Least you can pay-for the Best? Let's start with the idea that you want to drive the very best car your money will buy. Who doesn’t? You want to be seen in a big, beauti- ful outstanding automobile. You want to enjoy the thrill of silken- smooth performance. You want to know for sure that the car you're driving will give miles and miles and miles of carefree service. What you want is a Pontiac! Prove it for yourself—come in and we'll show you that Sots for dollar you can't beat a Pontiac. Bumper tw bumper, invide and out, one thing is apparent—n@ car offers you more for your money than a new Pontiac! Come in soon! State and Local sories—exira, Pri iw surrounding due to MULBERG CHEVROLET Co. 419-421 CAROLINE STREET and TELEGRAPH a reer KEY WesT, F