The Key West Citizen Newspaper, April 15, 1950, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

aed <—H =i al ee OS Feaaw Bae = j 5, 1950 ' PAGE BIG! EIGH? (HE KEY WEST CITIZEN SATURDAY, APRIL 15, : ” i : | FERNANDEZ BROTHERS ; a . [- | wl ¢ ag (Continued From Page One) i - Ss 3 a ea i ¢ | i ‘s Lloyd Leo McAvey, Albert L. I DiNegro, McCurdy Morrow and : | Robert Braun.. The conference i @ | lasted 40 minutes. Judge Caro immediately after- i i ward sentenced tne four men. : } “This is a serious crime you } committed,” said Judge ea € ———-—~ ——— ~~ If you behave yourselves in Defeat Hamblen, Bowen : state penitentiary you willbe Y WHO’S MAD? NOT I, SAYS LUKE p Nan G given every break. But if you ge In Very Close Match Thursday mS BASEBALL STANDING MAES tough, ou alle receive: hard); of : treatment. And if you confess to Jack Sellers and Ralph Hartenstine won the Key West Doubles, ISLAND CITY LEAGUE | patticipation in other mbes Championship yesterday in Bayview Park, but it wasn't easy. E.! Club— Be L. Pet. 300 HITTER AND }5- committed in Key West I wi nd C i e Adams Dairy 1 a . take that into consideration in A. Hamblen and Charlie Bowen fought them to a 7-5, 6-4, and F ; 0 ; ine’ iv: : ; Key West Cubans H 2 66 passing sentence for the robbery held two set points at 5-4 on Hartenstine’s service. > i H NS } sia F : USS Epperson 0 4 “000 of Mom's Place. Playing late in the afternoons: | oats slaw zi 1 thas four renee leak meee wun -bated= and | the Ilan missed the kick for the extra - ‘ ——s wind down, the Navy team show- L 2. Up 0 Bi ll eae re 4 ; ed:themsclves to be way “up” Ce n bl | | point. But Holy Cross was out in So Says Bob Carpenter, * ; Mail The Citizen to Kelatives for this one by going after Sel- ‘front, 13 to seven ; ee re = : lers..and Hartenstine from the mabe ad At 13th Then the bad luck that Osman-| Who Is Investing lout of als balebs He te e He igan State hurler who will work Soeene aun ase pul: eee ie |ski had during his coaching career Total Of $450,000 In| Pest Prospect. is | right-hane''r | for Seba eter attack into the base line and had Paes be oat S . aa S H s, a Mich- vague is season. the: favored r squeezing for 'Hole This Morning : ogee os began to mak : _ Young Farm Hands i = points to y even. At twoall, t 1 sel elt. Midway through 1e | . n ee re at the | CAINESVILUR, April tn-—i0). eee nee Pe | ee on 2 sa Clearview Outside Jalousies s o 1 power dri that 2 reside sub penter Naw at once broke through Sel. {7m Lee, Jr, 1946 State Ama! | peared destined to end in another| the Philadelphia Phillies say eis ler delivers ‘with deep cross. | tur Golf champion, took an early Manuendoia Holy ercss eyed |his team could win the National Available at the Prvi ot that dr e | lead over Bill Stembler, Miami }lentlessly down to the Colgate | | League pennant this year if he; ail Se Meche ts chaeg ast | Golf finals today. \meedRaidersi held ana) took the, den and a. 1aeanie pitcher tea to break ound vfs | Lee won the Ist and 3rd holes | ball Ga iis And ae the! That's a rather sizeable if, isn't! VENETIAN BLIND COMPANY Games then foliowed service to| 0! their 36-holes finals match , {Crusaders could recover, Colgate| it? And nobody knows that bet-; OFFER PROTECTION 5-4, in favor of Bowen and Ham- | over the 6,073-yard Gainesville jhad boomed 92 yards for the} ter than Carpenter. As he points COME 40 THINK OF IT—- blen wher Hartenstine wobbled |Country Club course. All he! jgame’s equalizing touchdown.|out, you can't buy players like \DONT BELIEVE | EVER | AGAINST BURGULARS on gervice with two double faults | needed were pars on those two. Egler, who had contributed a 30-| that and they're just not avail-| and the Navy held those two set} Stembler got even by winning ij yard run to the advance, boomed} able on the Philly farm tear points. Ploving with the slower|the Sth with a par and the 6th {one yard for the score. Cochran| Carpente rsays that a team has A . Dunlaps rather than Wright and| with a birdie two : "oa | Was Called upon to convert and he| to go to its farm clubs for fresh Provide Privacy Ditsons, Hartenstine’s spins were} Then Lee went out front again (®) Wirephoty | Sent the kick spinning straight} talent these days. In Bob’s words At All Times less: ferocious, but Bowen and| by taking the 9th although he | and time. Colgate was in the lead,} you can buy players, but only} Hamblen still could ‘not grasp nen ave pat Ae Me one a LUKE APPLING (left) of Sandy Springs, Ga., veteran shortstop 14 to 13. : ni vas oat Bs Ip you finish in that one big point that would} "irl ihe 12th hole, Lee tak. | £0F the Chicago White Sox, will have you believe he’s not mad Holy Cress dominated the en-| tHe second division. have meant the set. ine his two-hole edge into the} at anybody because of Rookie Teammate Chico Carrasquel | tire fourth period. The Crusaders’} | Abou the 1950 National can At five games all Sellers show-| 36,0 WOO CCR (right). This nice little scene was posed during an exhibition | Smashing back tore off big chunks Lear ate ab Seay meals one spark of divinity with |" po iored by gusty winds on] game at Memphis, Tenn., to rout rumors that Luke is in a huff | °f yardage. But lady jue OS" Louie, Home aod ee all glass louvers . . . a combina- two games’ worth of brilliant aa . és # with Osi.anski. One Crusader! 1 a. Accused watievs that took.the set the par 36 front nine, neither} at the management because Chico has been doing a lot of pley- | 4... steam-rollered to the Col-. are all having a look-in. sj tion of clear and fros' glass = nN vy seized the first two | W25 close, te par. On the front) ing at shortstop in spring training. Luke returned to the lineup | 34. 14-yard line. There a fumble] _ Carpenter pointed out that the re cea tee cack [hee ned 4h Stembler A against Detroit at Memphis and got a double and a single for | jalted th» march. |Phillies are investing $450,000 | ing Hartenstine’s vaunted service = a four times at bat _| _-And late in the game, the Cru-| 1 Young (20m ee 3 me Ne BBC enstian* blind Co 04 : play on both sides to tie at two esc OSMANSKI IS HONORED, with ; Sevartalne power: Bee aneney ai ae “the e 123 DuvAL ST j all and a moment later at three| Jsland City Baseball League i aves vom ies fete oa ay wi! a ou es ock to win the game, : all. At this point they again Qfunicipal Stadium, | Holy Cros: reached the Colgate} 0 3 broke through Bowen's delivery | Afternoon) | two-yard line with a first down Holy Cross had dropped a one- and Sellers’ first service found SUNDAY. BUT HOLY R and goal to go. Four. times, the| point decision on the day on ; the mark for the first time to 1:00. een West Cubans vs. Crusaders stormed into the Col-} which Coach Osmanski was hon-} : make it 5-3. “USB ¥pperson Gaven. “dn. | gate line. And four times the Red) ored with a ‘ And that was} The lights were turned on and] pings) CK | Raiders withstood the attack. Col-| the kind of luck that followed| i Hamblen unleashed four tremen- 3 1 % e ‘ gate took possession of the ball on| Osmanski throughout his stay i dous twist sevices to narow it Pe yas vaetann its own three-yard line and ran with the Crusaders si ia pages : a Fagg with Hartenstine’s ‘service They Hold Osma: 4 = — ~ +A ARONO VEFZ mau, t = | . gees In the crucial tenth game the} TENNIS Day At Worcester; Ivictory in ten games. And ‘it was ¥ : Navy manhandied Hartenstine’s Bayview Park : eS ‘climaxed by a crushing 76-0 de- & i fast flat service with two un-| Morning, Afternoon and Night)| Team Loses By jfeat at the hands of the Crusa- ee answerabie service returns. Daily and Sunday play 14 To 13 Score ders’ traditional rival, Boston, 2 : With half the game lost inside 2 | | College. we foresee a for this gay of six ‘seconds, Hartenstine eos (By; The! Acqueitund: Press) {| A ‘saddened and disillusioned © switched to the American twist Municipal Golf Course Bullet -Bill Osmanski: was the Dy. Bill Osmanski resigned un* ; that =the Navy had broken (Stock Island) Adol, of Holy Cross college back der Pocus during (ees : through. He turned the ball into! paily and Sunday’ play in thd late thirties When as Cru-| {5 'he suceeded by the man’ whe Prsagibabcan Sy ete Sane it was . | sader ofullbgek «he , was ripping i ad coached him in colleg ki four straight points and’ the enemy football lines to shreds.; 5 FE ee eee o SKATING | "After his @radustion, Bill Os, | Eddie Anderson. Dr. Ande a Bayview Park |had left Holy Cross for Iowa in. B se b: Il S E j manski became, a national arid | 1939 and gave up the Iowa post Me jseae ‘ 3 ase a core: *RIDAY. ight) iron * hero’ ‘as a smashing full-1 to return to the Crusaders. ut 4 H) Be . ‘ 3 back for the Chicago Bears of) = . t By The Associated Press 7:30 to 9:00 P.M. the © Nationgl Football League | Qsmanski might have gained a wei anes Sa Ee FLORIDA STATE Leesburg 11, St. Augustine Sanford 8, Deland 7 Daytona Beach 10, Orlando 4 Palatka 12, Gainesville 9. FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL Miami 4, St. Petersburg 1 8, West Palm Beach 1 Miami Beach 4 When his days as a player ended, Doctor Osmanski (he had become a dentist) served as assistant coach under the Bears’ Head Coach George Halas Then in Janurary, 1948, Os- manski was invited to become; head football coach by his Alma! Mater, Holy Cross. Dr. accepted joyfully. The post, meant a return to the Worcester, Massachusetts, campus where he! 3 SHUFFLEBOARL a Bayview Park | Morning, Afternoon and Night) | Daily and Sunday play. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS (Know America) Marian Jordan, the “Molt | “Fibber McGee and Molly “| fame, born in Peora, Ill, 52 years Gakoland 7, Fort Lauderdale 4.| 28° |had achieved such glory and = | Louis H. Bean, noted-Govern-'been so beloved as an. under- . Ck ment economist, born in Russia, ' graduate, COLLEGE {| But Bill Osmanski found no Alabama 5, Louisiana State 3.| on, of Johns glory as head coach at Holy Auburn 9, Georgia Tech 5. Hopkins Jniversity, famous Cross. His 1948 team achieved 2 Florida 19 Ttmpa 6 political scientist, born in Es- mediocre record. And his 1949 j Kentucky 14 Napceriit 6. thonia, 67 years ago. season was } disas tious, only one: FIELD—SNOW NO GAME AT EBBETS (®) Wirephoto A FREAKISH MID-SPRING SNOWFALL covered Ebbets Field in Brooklyn Friday and caused postponement of a game between the Dodgers and the New York Yankees. As game tim _ap- proaches, the snow and members of the ground keeper's crew are in sole possession of the field. The teams have just returned from spring training camps in Florida. ELECT FOR.... county commssioner LOUIS CARBONELL® ECON owner- | Osmanski | i halfback Alan Egler. Bob Coch-! {hint of the’ bad fortune "him as Holy ‘Cross co: in his tenure. That was on Oc4 tober 23rd, 1948, when Holy Cross faced its old rival from upstate New York, Colgate, on the Cru+ saders’ home field at Worcester. That was the day that Holy Cross and the city of Worcester chose officially to welcome Bill Osmanski | k to the scene of’ his under-graduate triumphs. It was designated as “Dr. Bill Os- manski Da It appeared like a good day to pick. Holy Cross was ‘favored to whip the three-times beaten Colgate team. And Colgate hadn't won a game from Holy dss in seven Jong .years. Before. the opening . kickoff, | | Holy Cross officials, students and | alumni joined with Worcester city | officials.in , heaping extravagant praise on Csmanski and showering { him with gifts, The ceremonies over, the ref- | eree’s whistle sounded and the | game was on. And Osmanski’s ‘day must have seemed complete as his Hely Cross team struck for a touchdown late in the first! | quarter. Quarterback Wally Bren- | nan passed 39 yards to end Jim Dieckleman on the Colgate eight- yard line. Three plays later Bren- | j nan tossed to Dieckleman in the end zone for the touchdown. Jack Nolan placekicked the extra point} and Holy Cross led, seven to | nothing. But the Crusaders’ lead was} | short-lived. Holy Cross kicked- | joff and four plays later the Red Raiders’ Quarterback Ray Scott \ threw a 3@-yard scoring pass: to awaiting | Perhaps you saw... this imported Nelly Don Voile —woven and dyed in Switzerland, advertised April Ladies’ Home Journal. Traced with filigree embroidery for fragile “shirt bosom” effect. Cape sleeved. Wonderfully smart to wear right now at the very dawn of its day. Blue, pink, wheat, lilac. Also city darks, 12 to 42 and 14/2 to 24%. Crease-resistant. 14.95 the score was, deadlocked at sev-| ensall, \ But date it the Second quarter, | Holy Cross. foxged into the lead. again. Dieckleman broke through | to block a ‘punt by Colgate’s Walt) i Piebes.. Tom Kelleher of Holy | i Cross recovered on the Red Rai- | ders’ 31-yard line. | Five plays later Johnnie Con-; noly slammed three yards through j | {the middle for the second Holy! \Cross touchdown. This time, No-! ran booted the extra point and | FABRICS Cohama Crisplin, washable, crease resistance fabric in all the wanted «olors, only 79¢ yard. Indian Head Fabrics in solids and prints at nationally adver- tised prices—solids at 79c yard; prinis at $1.00 yard. Imported. crease resistant Voiles at $1.19 yard. * APPELROUTHS THE STORE OF FASHION’ 1 Duval Street Phone 174 JUNIOR : bolero dress As seen in PHOTOPLAY ad. ' | | ' i | | t | | i } | Wear. ‘‘Fortunet’’ dals for Ser an 1p cool | sls shoe t costs Looks Better! OES THAT WON 'ASHION | ACADEaSY 1 CHAS. ARONOVITZ "sine “UUM KEY WEST'S LARGEST STORE Sis

Other pages from this issue: