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The Key West Conchs returned | to the Island City Saturday to lick | their wounds after a bruising foot- | ball battle with the Seacrest Sea- | hawks which marked their first | loss of the séason. The Conchs came out the losers by a slim eight point margin, but a look at the statistics shows that the ballgame was much closer | than the score indicates. | Key West, happily, came through the game without incurring any serious injuries and they resume drills today for a bout with a tough bunch of farm boys from Belle Glade here on Friday night. Kicking is due to come in for @ lot of work this week. Some corners hold that better work in this department on last Friday Coach Ed Beckman reiterated today, the fact that he thought the Key Westers were the better club. ‘The pressure is off. Now we can relax and play football,” | Beckman said today. What will happen on Friday night is anybody’s guess as the Conchs bounce back from a loss-- something they are not used to, Back John Cruz is a possible star- ter for Friday night which will | make the team that much tougher to lick. He has been out of action \for the three weeks with a leg injury. While the Seacrest team showed | that they know plenty of football, Key West outgained them, both on the ground and through the air evening would have made the difference for the Conchs, GRID UPSETS By ED CORRIGAN NEW YORK (®—This is the time ef year that the titans of college football usually begin looking for- ward to the gold of bowl games or the glory of conference titles. Not this time. The muscle-men, noting the trend of things, are quaking as they come to each game. The up- sets haven’t been startling but each week some of the big boys are biting the dust. If Jowa, the punching bag of the Big Ten, can whip Ohio State, and Southern California can shut out Galifornia—a feat that hadn’t been accomplished in 60 games—nothing should be a surprise. Perhaps the only certainty, and that’s going out on the limb, is that Michigan State. and Maryland are the class of the country inso- far as the records are concerned. Neither has stumbled even once, and each has shown a wealth of power and an ability to stop the enemy when it counts. Right behind are once-tied Okla- homa and two Southern powers, Georgia Tech and Duke. The un- beaten list should be reduced by one come Saturday when Tech and Duke collide head-on at Durham, . C Until this week, California was igh up on the list. Then Southern California whipped the Golden Bears, 10-0. Roberts Leads Stars To Win The Key West All-Stars romped over the Marines 18-3. yesterday afternoon as the result of some heavy .stick work on the pari of DeWitt Roberts. Roberts hit a homer with the bases loaded in the second, a double with one on ih the Yourth anda triple with one on in the sixth. He drove in five runs and scored three himself. Hoffses hit a homer with one on in the first. Cabot hit a double and single and scored four runs. For the Marines, Brestle hit a single and a double and Adams and Coates each hit one safely in their only time at bat. Esquinaldo pitched the first six frames for the stars and he allow- ed 5 hits and three runs, only one earned and George Lastres pitch- ed the last frame. Keogh pitched the first four and one third innings and he allowed 16 runs and six hits. Headlough pitched to one batter and Betterly finished the game. In the Yield, Marcado and Mad- den were the best for the losers. D. Lastres, Roberts. Rodriguez and Quesada shone for the win- ners. The line score Marines June Camfield Tops Navy Wives Bowling Again June Camfield of OpDevSta CPO Team staged a repeat performance by taking the high single game for the week with a 189. Second best ef 181 went to Winnie Humphrey Winnie also bowled the high triple for a total of 506. Ruby Caldwell rolled the third high game of 175 team has now ped into lead position by four points. They rolled the high scratch team of 909 and high scratch team set of 2286 for the week None of these scores altered any of the league high standings, Team Standings Wins Losses Pi u USO-NCCS OpDevSta CPO USS CERO USO-YMCS Nav-Sta CPO NAS s share of the ats to mes play World < $ per ce ed. by an amazing margin. The Conchs outdistanced the Now the Pacific Coast race is up in the air. Cal still can win it, but Southern Cal and UCLA, which like the Trojans, is undefeated, will have plenty to say. UCLA meets the Golden Bears this Saturday and if they can answer the ques- tion, they might win it. Georgia Tech and Duke will play the headline game of the South, and the Engineers will rule slight favorites. Both warmed up to their tasks Saturday, Tech clouting Van- derbilt, 30-0, and the Blue Devils conquering previously undefeated Virginia, 21-7. Feared Maryland, which whipped Louisiana State, 34-6, will test its might once again against Boston University. The Big Ten also 1s unsettled. Illinois and Wisconsin both were supposed to fight it out for the title with the Badgers probably going to the Rose Bowl in any event because the Illini were there last year. Today, the Illini are in the cellar. Purdue, overlooked in the pre- season ratings, and Michigan are leading the loop, And Purdue’s 40-12 triumph over Illinois Satur- day would indicate that the boiler- makers are getting more confident as the season progresses. If they can do that to the Illini, they ought home team on the ground by over a hundred yards and in passing by almost the same margin. But the Seacresters got their breaks in the form of a blocked kick, three pass interceptions and a costly series of penalties in the first period against the Conchs. Key West also managed to pick up 16 downs to Seacrest’s nine. Friday night’s contest marked the first time more than six points has been scored against either club in the current season. to one point, but they elected to go all the way. SEACRES~-KEY WEST STATISTICS ‘ K.W. S’cresi Yards Gained Rushing aes Yards Gained Passing Total Yards Gained First Downs z Passes Attempted _. Passes Completed Passes Intercepted 143 108 376 Near the end of the Conchs| By gambled on a passing attack---and when the Seahawks intercepted and scored, that was all for the Key Westers. The Conchs could have held the ball at the end and kept the game winning margin down ARE SEEN Southwest Conference. However, Texas is looking more and more like the class of the league. The Longhorns slugged Arkansas right out of the running Saturday, 20-7, and now take on Southern Metho- dist. Both are undefeated in league play. In the Ivy League, Yale, which currently is tied with Penn for the lead, each with 3-0 marks, faces Dartmouth, which should be a set- up for the Elis. Penn must play Penn State, no cinch, in a non- league encounter. Princeton, the defending champion, entertains Brown after whomping Cornell 27-0. In the Big Seven, championship- bound Oklahoma figures to run through a workout at the expense of Iowa State, and Kansas, the runnerup, should have no trouble with Kansas State. Missouri and Nebraska play the top game from a competitive standpoint. Oklahoma A and M and Tulsa go at each other in what could be a game to decide the championship of the Missouri Valley. In the Sky- line Conference Utah and Colorado A and M probably will fight it out for the title when they meet Nov. 8. The Aggies will rest up this Fumbles Own Fumbles Recovered - Penalties Yards Lost, Penalties _____ Gator Coach To Work Squad Hard For Sat. By F. T. MACFEELY JACKSONVILLE #® — Florida |Coach Bob Woodruff will have | quite a job keeping his football squad as keyed up for next Sat- urday’s homecoming game against Auburn as they were in last Sat- urday’s 30-0 upset victory over Georgia. The Gators were really up for that one, as they were two weeks earlier in trimming Clemson, 54-13.- But in between those big wins was a 20-13 surprise defeat at the hands of Vanderbilt. Woodruff has to see there isn’t a letdown. And he hopes the Ga- tors don’t repeat the mistakes they made against Vandy. All the errors were on the side of Georgia in that rare, sweet- tasting Florida win Saturday. As many times in the past, Florida’s defensive line had a lot to do with the opponent’s mistakes. “While the effort of the entire squad was all that anyone could ask, it was obvious that Rick Ca- week, but Utah will entertain Colo- | rado of the Big Seven, Idaho State | is expected to clinch a share of | sares did a really great offensive job and Charlie LaPradd and Joe the Rocky Mountain crown by de- to be able to take it. feating Colorado Mines Saturday. Nor is anything settled in the Georgia Tech-Duke Tilt Tops Southeastern Conference Slate By STERLING SLAPPEY Associated Press Sports Writer Four games this week end--in Birmingham, Durham, N. C., Ox- ford, Miss. and Knoxville--will have a lot of influence in determining which Southeastern Conference teams play in a bowl New Year's day. First off, Georgia Tech’s most important game of the year will be played Duke. Both are unbeaten and un- tied., Duke is a member of the bow! banning Southern Conference, so the Blue Devils’ chances of a New Years game are clouded. Not so Georgia Tech. The idea persists that should Tech win in Durham, something that’s highly | possible, a bowl bid will be ex- tended and accepted then and Browns Top there, regardless of how Pro League fares in remaining games against Army, Alabama, Florida State and | NEW YORK #— The National Georgia, % | Football League--where the boys Tech received and accepted a | play for “dear old gold and silver” | bid to the Orange Bow! last year | neaded toward the halfway point | just after mid-season and just after | today with the American Confer- | tying Duke 14-14. Tech and Coach | ence engazed in its annual past- Bobby Podd are well known and'time -- chasing the Cleveland {well liked by all the bowls, es-| Browns. i pecially the Orange which likes to With Lou Groza kicking four get the jump on the bigger Sugar | field goals, the Brownies rallied to | Bowl. defeat the Washington Redskins, Alabama persists in holding! 19.15, yesterday to take a one- open its bowl candidacy. The Ala-} game jead in the American Con bama-Georgia game in Birming- | ference. jham could give the Tide a boost] While the Browns were moving in prestige although Georgia is}in front, the unbeaten San Fran eastern all the way--Auburn-Flor- \ida in Gainesville and Mississippi State-Tulane in New Orleans. Flor- | ida belted Georgia out of the first jclass of bowl team with another | 30-0 count. Auburn lost to Tulane, 21-6. Weakened and injured Kentucky | whipped Cincinnati last week, 14-6, | and goes to Florida this week to in Durham against | eet the Miami Hurricanes. Cleveland badly off key this season in de- {sense, Alabama lost its big game, | 20-0, te Tennessee two weeks ago ‘but followed that with a fine 42-19 jwin Saturday over Mississippi State. The record is now 5-1. Tennessee should win not only at home Saturday against North Carolina, but also in every other game this fall-against L. S. U., Florida, Kentucky and Vanderbilt. Gen. Bob Neyland’s defense mind- ed Vols who suddenly have de veloped an offense, lost only to were upset by teams which were / The USO-NCCS! Duke, 7.0, in early season. Satur-' decided underdogs. | day litde Wofford was a 30-0 vic- tim of the Vols, The final “bowl” decision game I should be the L. S. U.-Mississippi r gether in Oxford, Miss. The Rebels still are unbeaten and now cisco 49ers (5-0) held their two game bulge in the National Con- ference by biasting the winless Dallas Texans, 48-21, as Hugh Mc- Ethenny, Joe Perry and Frankie Albert sparkled. These two games ran according tto form, but. two others didn't jand that's why the Browns are on top once again The New York Giants and Chi cago Cardinals, both tk? with Cleveland before the day's action The Philadelphia Eagles, 15° point underdogs, stunned the Giants, 14-10, with crunching line play and @ brilliant 52-yard punt return by Ed Bawel. And Pittsburgh, winless fn four jseem to be percolating properly. | games and 12-point underdogs, sur- | They are twice tied however, and | prised the Cards, 4-28, as Jim lack prestige which is helpful in | Pinks passed for three touchdowns wooing big bow! invitations. Last week Mississippi mauled Arkantsas, 3 L. S. U. got kicked jaround badly hy Maryland, losing ¢ with Washington and Lee in Nash Vandy was out of its S against Tech. It shouldn't be against W. and L Two games this week are South t i In other games, Detroit's latent offense exploded for a 52-17 romp over Green Bay, and Los Angeles punched out four touchdowns m the final peried to whip the Chi- | Lyne Aplanalp, Sam Jose State quarterback, once threw six wech down poctes in one game while im Wikem (Les Angeles School. High D'Agostino were just as great de- fensively,”” Woodruff said. Casares gained 108 yards rush- ing, scored one touchdown, kicked three conversions and a field goal. Buford Long, though he lost his leadership in the Southeastern Conference scoring race, made one touchdown on a 77-yard scam- per and gained a total of 116 ards, Doug Dickey quarterbacked a ] Monday, October 27, 1952 TH Sports Roundup By GAYLE TALBOT NEW YORK (® — In the event you didn’t hear about it, the Old- timers Club has asked the great Red Grange to turn in his suit because of a piece he helped author in a national magazine the past week. It-is a sad case. The Wheaton iceman, one of the last persons {the club would have expected to | sully its banner, came out and said that today’s college football teams are much better than they were Citizen Staff Photo HALFBACK JOHN CRUZ, who has missed the past two Conch football starts, is expected to be on tap Friday night, and for the First Annual Key West Shrine Football Classic on Thanks- giving Day when Key West will meet the Cristobal (Panama) ,, Tigers. Last year, the Conchs eked out a tough 2-0 win in their meeting with the Tigers. Ticket sales at this date indicate a - sellout. —: SPORTS — Vets Golf Tourney Is Underway Sun. PINEHURST, N. C, #— Their once-booming drives no longer winging down the fairways 250 yards and more as in days of yore, 240 veterans, 55 years and up, swarmed over two courses to- day in the qualifying round of the fine game. While he threw only | three passes, two were complete | and one was a vital factor im Flor- ida’s first touchdown drive. Dickey scored the T. D. from less than a yard out. Florida’s other score came on an ll-yard pass from Fred Robin- son te Len Balas late in the game. One facfor which could have been important was the ouster of Seorgia’s all-conference end, Har- ry Babcock, and Florida's star linebacker, Arlen Jumper. They were sidelined by officials after a brief scuffle when the game was hardly two minutes old. SPORTS MIRROR By The Associated Press TODAY A YEAR AGO Dick | Kazmaier led Princeton to a 53-12 | victory over Cornell, accounting | for 236 yards by passing and 126} on the ground which directly fig- ured in five touchdowns. FIVE YEARS AGO — Notre Dame forged to the front in the Associated Press weekly football poll, replacing runner-up Michigan. TEN YEARS AGO — Whirlaway won the Pimlico Special in a walk- over, earning $10,000 to boost his total winnings to $538,336. TWENTY YEARS AGO — Di- rectors of the International League voted to reduce the player limit from 20 to 18 and the maximum salaries of a baseball club from hemaned to $44,000 per season. Today's | Stock | Market NEW YORK # Railroads Stepped out im front of an other- | wise mixed stock market today The rails were up fractions to ' around a point while the remainder of the list spread out over a small fractional range either way. Rails were encouraged by excellent earn- mgs reports. On the higher side along with Railroads were steels and a few oils. The air lines were a shade lower. All other major divisions of the list were mixed | _ Higher stocks included Santa Fe. Pennsyivania Railroad, Union Ps cific, Texas Co, U. S. Steel, Beth lehem Stevi Internatoona!l Harvest er, Allied Chemical, and Philip Morris. { inaugural North and South Senior Invitation golf ‘tournament. The oldsters came into their own at the Pinehurst Country Club’s No’s, 1 and 2 courses as the tourna- ment--a replacement for the dis- continued 50 - year-old North and South Open--began a week’s run. Twenty-eight states and Canada were represented on the entry list. Officials arranged a heavy sched- ule of consolidation play so that each contestant may play at least five rounds during the week. Match play will get under way tomorrow in groups of 32. First group winners tomorrow will go into the 16 - man championship flight. PODS hes DODGERS SET WHIFF RECORD FOR SEASON BROOKLYN N. Y. (AP)—The defeat the Yankees in the World Series but their hurling staif did set a National League record for striking out the most batters dur: ing the season. The pitchers from Flatbush whiffed 773 opposing bats- men. This broke the record which was also held by the Dodgers class of 1950, who fanned 772. COAST GUARL HAS {Continued from Page One) tritus case directly to the Naval hospital. Finally the Coast Guard has teen conducting a widespread som munications search for three days to find the Paquito Arrivara. out of Honduras, over due at Jackson. ville. With seven men aboard. the Paquito Arrivara was en route from Caibarien, Cuba to the up state city. She has not been heard from in some days. Lt. Pearson said his command has been trying by every communi cations means to find the missing vessel. She may have found shelter during the storm and storm warn ings of last week. , (Continued From face One) Rickwa's car sustained $75 dam- age Saturday at 12:90 p. m. at Flag ler ave. and 12th st. 2 Pontiac sedan being towed by Ira Taylor 52 Pt. Village, lost a right front wheel which careened off. and erashed into s parked car owned by Ladd Jaycocks, #17 Whitebead st. The parked car was damaged on | the left rear fender, tail light and gravel shield for %5. Taylor bad mo driver's license in addfitign to charges of peckless driving and causing #8 Secktent. Anaconda Copper, Air Redoctioa, back in the 20s when he was streaking about for Illinois. To be explicit, the old All- American immortal declared that, on an average, the current crop is approximately 50 points better per game. Last season’s Illinois team, he ventured, would have trounced his Illinois team by that margin, and last year’s Notre Dame eleven would have done the same to Knute Rockne’s fabled Four Horsemen. If he were playing today, Red said, he would have to learn to start running a lot quicker than he did in his salad days to keep from gumming up the offense. To- day’s tricky and vastly varied at- tacks, he shudders, would have tipped the set defenses he knew to rags and tatters. Red really laid it on the line. Personally, we found the article refreshing, coming from a player of Grange’s unquestioned caliber. It is the first of its kind that we can recall, cerning any sport, and it’s about time that one of the old-timers turned honest. The head- ing of the piece, which quoted Red as saying that he couldn’t play on today’s teams, was of course pure piffle, but headline writers are strange men who ha- bitually read only every third word. What Grange says is that he and all the other stars of yesteryear would have to learn a great many they were to play on one of to- day’s top teams, because football has become a complicated science within the past dozen years. You don’t play it by ear any more, things and work much harder if} }ond half of play, 40 teams are | record include Florida A & M. | 4, Pinder said. pennant-winning Dodgers couldn't | . jlever where there are | of President, Vice-President, Play in every major sport in this country has improved in vary- ing degrees in the time we have been watching them. Polo has not improved, but it no longer ‘can be classed with the great sport it was back in the 20s and early 30s when |Tommy Hitchcock was in his prime and international matches drew overflow crowds to Meadow- brook. Wrestling and ice hockey doesn’t count, You can’t get a baseball man to Seven of the teams are major | #4mit that the game has improved since he was playing it 25 or 30 colleges. They include Maryland, p 2 ’ | years ago, but it has. That is, the Georgia Tech, Duke, Southern Cali- | general level of play is better be- fornia, UCLA, Villanova and Michi- | cause there are more skilled play- gan State. All Have won six straight | ers, games except Michigan State | In one breath the baseball old- which has taken five in a row. | timer will regale you about the A pair of minor schools, Peru | super teams and super stars of (Neb.) Teachers and Northern | his time, and in the next he will State (Okla.), each have seven suc- | describe the meticulous coaching cessive victories. | given each big le: today Among the teams to drop from - ee ae Forty Grid Teams Remain Unbeaten NEW YORK, #—As the college football season swings into its sec- | listed among the nation’s list of | unbeaten-untied elevens. j must keep in mind, doesn't add up. In golf, we feel that Ben Hogan jat his best was a little better | golfer than either Walter Hagen or {Bobby Jones was, because he ; worked at it harder, and in tennis }we are quite certain that Frank Sedgman’s all-around modern gam would have beaten Bill Tilden and the Frenchmen Move over, Red Bucknell. * Schools with a five straight win DON’T LOSE YOUR (Continued ?rom #.ge One) tional amendments on the ballot.” Voters must pull down 15 levers in all on Election Day, November He is calling together all clerks and inspectors at the courthouse Thursday night at 8 p.m. to drill} them in this new method of voting. | “Everyone must come to this meeting. Otherwise there will not only be confusion at the polls next Tuesday, but some people will lose their votes by failing to pull the opposed candidates as there are in the case Gov- ADVANC! LE {Continued From Page One) with an opening dinner at the Woman's Club last night with volunteer workers present. Guest speaker was Roy Williams, repre- sentative of Community Concerts, Inc Officers of the local Association are: president. Mrs. George Mills White: ‘irst vice-president, Mrs. Emeline Bodler: second vice-pres ident, JJ. Trevor Willlam Neblett; treasurer. Edgar ernor and Representative.” Meanwhile Pinder and his deputy Mrs. Edna Mae Bullman are piow ing through the job of sending out r staff of experts and tell of the | jthe ranks Saturday were Cali-| myriad little details a modern in- |fornia, Holy Cross, Virginia and | fielder secretary, | 450 absentee ballots. Though this number doesn’t come near the 968 absentee Voters in the May prim-| ary, it is expected to go up 2 few hundred more by November 4 j Sample ballots are now available at Pinder's office for those who want to peruse the longest list of names and amendments in history MAN HOSPITALIZED (Continued From Pate One» ites the county jail pending the signing of a warrant against him Also in the county jail is Thamas Mcintosh whe slashed Alfonso | Sears early Saturday morning. The serious wounds were inflicted by s Jastice of the Peace Roy} | Hamlin said that be will be held in Stark; membership chairman and campaign manager, Mrs. Ann DEATH GROVER CLEVELAND ROBERTS Grover Cleveland Roberts, 67 | died yesterday afternoon at his re | sidence, 301 Elizabeth street, after a short Hiness Roberts is survived by two broth ers, Leroy of Jacksonville and Frank Roberts of this city: four éaughters, Mrs. Florence Mickler Mrs Elizabeth Solano and Miss Marjorie Roberts of Key West and Mrs. Ellise Specht of Caldwell, N d.: a som, Clarence Roberts of Mi butcher kuife and reqaired 47 ami, two sisters Mr. Lilie Saw stitches. Sears is still im critical condition at Mosroe General Hos Key West and six grandehikiren Funeral services will be beid on yer and Mrs. Marguerite Albery of; pital. Biood transfusions cessary, The argument started over rent money. Melstesh gave himself up to the city polk® whe turned him ovewvto the sheriff s de- partment. Sears ix expected to sign an affidar# agaist the bude wield et. The vilcene Pores whee © erepe Lower were United Alr Lines, | International Paper, and Chrysler, year 7 A. D. were ne) Wednesday afternoon at the Plem ing Stret Methodist Church st 5. ip. m. with the Rev. James © Statham, assisted by Rev. J. Peal Touchton, officiating. The body will be placed im the charch st 2 © p.m (on Wednendasy. | Burtel will be ie the family plot Cg tee Ola, |E KEY WEST CITIZEN Page 3 National Football League By The Associated Press Sunday's Results Los Angeles 31 Chicago Bears 7 San Francisco 48 Dallas 21 Detroit 52 Green Bay 17 Philadelphia 14 New York 10 Pittsburgh 34 Chicago Cards 28 Cleveland 19 Washington 15 Football Results By The Associated Press SUNDAY Villanova 34 Xavier (Ohio) 20 St. Vincent's. (Pa) 21 Scranton 20 LATE SATURDAY Connecticut 25 Delaware 13 Glenville 26 Davie-Elkins 7 Lenoir Rhyhe 42 Western Carolina 13 Carson-Newman 20 Maryville 0 Emory-Henry 27 Middle Tenn 7 East Carolina 41 Guilford 0 Allen 13 Morris Brown 6 Catawba 12 Elon 0 Appalachian 27 East Tennessee 27 (Tie) West Georgia 13 Hiwassee 6 Millsaps 21 Mississippi College 20 Parris Island Marines 54 Stetson 13 Tulsa 28 Wichita 0 Arizona 13 Hardin-Simmons 12 Houston 6 Arizona State (Tempe) 0 New Mexico 14 Texas Western 13 Arizona State (Flagstaff) vs New Mexico Highlands, ruled ‘no contest” when lights failed with 12 seconds left San Diego Navy 25 College of Pa- cific 7 Whittier 45 California Tech 6 94 DOLLAR QUESTION (Continued from Pase One) “I'd take pleasure in carrying the money down to City Hall and building a new one.” Others wanted vw expand the water supply, however. One of these, Miss Laura Strahan, child welfare worker new to Key West said: getting “I'd put mine toward more water for Key West.” Rex Biaza, 1832-A_ Poinciana, agreed. , A brand new approach was that of Joe Allen, president of the Key West Art and Historical Society, We interviewed him at Stevenson- for-President headquarters at his Duval street shop. “I'd invest my $94 in the fu- ture of Key West by diaging up our past so that people who come here looking for our attractions can see them. Also so our chil- dren will know the glorious past of Key West. How many young. sters know that at one time Key West was the largest city in the state? How many realize that we had the only millionaire in Flori- da when Miami was just # Sem- inole Indian camp? We have o history thet is terrific and noth- ing to shew for it, You can't get people interested in’ our history though, that’s why | ‘d give my $94 to that.” Leonard Beldner of the store by the same name said: “Td get a new bank. I think | that would improve Key West more than anything I know.” Comdr. Ray Byrnes, USN Ret,, lcornered at the Post Office said: “1 have tong’ hoped that some big-hearted person would see fit to bequeath a sum which might | be matched by the city or # civic | group for « public library. Think | what it would mean to our teen- | agers or younger children. They could use it after school or Sat- | urday as « reading center. it is | se commen in other cities — thet | is what | wish my 994 would be Children were also the concern ie Mrs. Arcenia Dean, 312 Virgi- nia street. She reptied | “I'd give it to help children in the prevention of pollo, or in pro- viding homes for orphans.” | Alfred G. Mendoza, 616 Ashe st., said: “1 guess the sewer system Is the best thing to give my $94 to.” Mrs, C. M. Capps, of Stock Is land, agreed on sewers as the number one problem in Key West. Charles CL. Curry, 96 Fleming said he'd donate hie share of the city's assets to streets. Mickey Parrot, 906 Florida st., | said | “Pd give mine for more recreae , ‘tien to make better citizens In the | future. Teenagers 16 to 2) need @ swimming pool, public library, 6 city auditorium. 1 could think of so many things.” Johnny Delgado, 799 Truman ave nue, agreed on the vital need for aa auditorium, County Commissioner Gerald Saunders replied | “t weuld build » civic conter for Key West, for conventions and visiting groves. 1 should seat about 7,000." Alfonse Salgsdo, 9 Eaton @, said “| would beautify the clty by cleaning @p streets and lots.” Mrs. Violet Foster, 46 Whitehead | Mreet, joioed the chorus of cithens wishing for Setter streets, Mosree County Sheriff Bertie Sewyer and Deputy Sheriff Serge i Hereanies, “TR inet new Bow, oe thelr 94. | “it's = shame, te way te streets ore.” cabd Sawyer, i “E hed @ cow cor.” said Serge jHersssdes. “Et iol new tow. street. Vexsvias buried. im the city cemetery with the Lopes ht rattles 2 over the place be im the Funeral Home in charge of ar cause of driving ever Key We )stegeta.” &