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WEY WEST'S LUCY GCNZAlLEZ, who the Bernrickers just for a sizeable gain. Solomon Driven Out Of Bounds Citizen Staft Pi FULLEACK HAL & bounds in’ { Beanpicker tackle by his feet. ‘Tke’s Pro Ball Win Humphre; Career mie Cops Win In ; ween “ee ‘Navy Bowling NEW YORK (® —One of the first things President-elect Dwight | dD. > beret mht have h's pub-| This week Winnie Humphrey , tie relations staff clear up for the ':< resting on Se wi hation’s baseball fans is his short | 5.1 inte brad pe cle as a professional base- | ba e ge weer. © Dall player. The details remain |205. Second high score was taken clouded in mystery. by Edith Holt of OpDevSta with a It is understood the 188. played in the Central Kansas Edith also ‘took honors for t League ‘as “Wilson” during the high triple with her score 46 summer of 1912, while on furlough , Loretta (Carson, that is) of USO from West Point YMCS team made the third high There Were three Wilsons tn that | score with a 178. cirevit—Alfy, who man The USO-NCCS team again roll Great Bend club, and two who are | ed the high seratch team game and identified by neither first names /high seratch team set, a 775 and nor even Initials in the Spalding | 2120 respectively. They are now in Official Guide of 1913, _ {the first place position by four Ike was possibly either the Wil- / points and all league high stand- sea who was in 23 contests for | ings are held by their team Lyons. The Manhattan Wilson get | Team Stencirgs im 21 times at bat for 'uso-wecs 8 @ 333 average. The Lyons Wilson UsSs CERO at Played 23 games, collected 34 hits |QppeySta CPO in $3 times at bat for # 409 mark. | Uso-ymcs NavSta CPO NAS en off his‘feet and out of ht's-tussle. Bruising took hin»neompletely off w of Jack Hic) lor general Mid Matthews Cops, Victory Friday | | leiano last July SPOKANE, Wash., — Harry | pounds, % pow at 207, and, despite Wi (Kid) Matthews, Seattle veteran. | nous ten-round de reach, battered him with a strong left hook, 2 The crowd yelled for Ma sion over Harry Wilis of New} to end it quickly in the Jerk last night In his attempt te make a comeback into time. and be tried The Kid the dig punches nt Wills had N found knockout loss to Rocky Mar- trouble in the came back strong who suffered a two couldn't stop, takes a third \How To Feed A ‘Football Team | By JAXON It takes a lot to feed a growing |boy, at least when he’s already a | real big boy, like a football player, \Yor instance. At least that’s what | the folks out at the Sigsbee Snack- {ery found out Friday night. | In the interests of inter-city good | will, and just because they like and admire the Conchs, owners Joe {and Phil extended an invitation to |the Key West Football team to come out to the Snackery for eats ‘on the house after the game Fri- jday night | Well, after the game there was a dance at La Concha, and play- ing football and dancing makes a guy and a gal mighty hungry. So the team and their girl friends jtoo advantage of the kind invita- tion and went out to Sigsbee Park. Sure enough, eats were on the j house, and the kids sure did eat. ' Bowls of chili, dozens of ham- | burgers, gallons of ice cream, and barrels of*eekes disappeared like | magic. Evesyone had a wonderful +time and the place didn’t close until after 1 a. m.-Joe and Phil report that they had just as good a time as the team after all, feed- {ing people is their business, and it’s fun watching people eating and j enjoying it like that. The football team also reports | /a big weight gain, and a very en- joyable time, because it’s just like we said it sure takes a lot to feed a growing boy! Pope Says Sports ‘Strengthen Soul VATICAN CITY #—Pope Pius XII said today sports should bring men closer to God. The pontiff, addressing delegates to an Italian national sports con- gress, outlined the moral and re- .ligious aspects of sports. He praised the various types of athletic contests, but cautioned against exaggeration of their im portance “First of all," said» the pope “Render to God the honor that is due Him snd, above all, sanctify the day of the Lord, because sports loes not exempt from religious duty.” The pope said the proper use of sports should aim at three things development and strengthenin the body, perfectioning of t and finally x x x to brin closer to God.” 1 which does not contri ends should be rejected. U.S. Takes Win In Aussie Golf i\Tournament F SYDNEY Lakes . rr uA United S feated and @ wou Dtall £010 in last night's action Men hed Saved [Blimp Lost In Freak Mishap |- MAYPORT, Fla. (—Rescue was never in doubt to the 11 Navy men {dumped from a blimp into the: At- lantic Ocean 55 miles off South | Georgia Friday afternoon. A freak accident caused the trou- ble while the blimp K119 was tak- ing part in anti-submarine maneu- | vers. A window on the side of the cabin suddenly popped out, hit the right propeller and ripped through the bag and out the top. Except for that they felt they would have made it back to their Glynco Naval Air Station near Brunswick, Ga. The 11 men were joking and happy when they stepped ashore just before midnight at the new aircraft carrier basin near the mouth of the St. Johns River here. Lt. Keiser reconstructed the last trip of the K119 this way: When the window popped out, with a sound like a gunshot, they immediately headed back for their base. By dumping out equipment and everything possible to lighten the blimp they covered about 30 miles before it settled down on the water. The men managed to° get only | one of the two life. rafts out of the airship but within a few minutes others were dropped from two sis- jter blimps and planes in the um- | brella of rescuers overhead. | Sharks snooped around Ss. {Richard J. Janousek of Virginia, | Minn., came in for Rie ribbing | that. Shipmates ‘sai “was hang- ing his feet in the water oyer a side of the raft when #'shark glided up close. Janousek did a “rapid tumble backward into the raft, his mates reported, About an hour and a half after they hit the water the submarine Sea D ‘ook them aboard. Later o the repair anded them irt seriously — just rom the jar of the ater — and the n't worth talk HUMAN ROAD BLOCK FARMIN N . back JOHN VERMETTE TAKES A yard gain. The Conch offense, piled up nearly 600 yards. By JACK BELL WASHINGTON (® — President- jelect Dwight D, Eisenhower is ex- | pected to name a Southerner—and | possibly a Democrat—te his Cab- {inet in recognition of' the un- precedented vete he rofled up in Dixie. While the general hardly has had | time since his Jandslide victory’ in last Tuesday's election. to make progress toward picking any Cabi- net member, friends here said they believe he will make it clear by such an appointment that he | intends to deal the South in on his | administration.. 4 | Eisenhower's... three top sup- {porters in the South were Gover- |nors James .F. Byrnes of- South Carolina, Robert Kennon of Louisi- jana and Allan Shivers of Texas. None of them may want a Cabinet post, but all’ might be consulted about the selection of a Dixie | colleague. A Texas woman, Mrs. Oveta {Culp Hobby, co-publisher of the ;Houston Post, already has been mentioned as a possibility if a : Le dahl tis chosen tts, Ivy Py direetor of the Women’s Division of the GOP Na- jtionak Committee “said ‘yesterday |Eisenhower had asSured her he would appoint women to key gov- ernment posts, possiMly including |the Cabinet. However, selection of Mrs. Hobby probably. would not. repre- {sent ‘the kind of recognition for | the South that some of Eisenhow- er’s advisers have in mind. | These strategists are looking at the vote polled by the general in Dixie as the possible basis for re- vival of the Republican party in }an area where it Has been only a | skeleton organization in the past. | Eisenhower carried Virginia, | Florida, Texas, and apparently | Tennessee and these states are re- | garded as the best bets for starting uilding program | > straicgists further believe that Kentucky, which elected a Re | publican senator while it was going |for Gov. Adlai Stevenson of Iili- by a margin of only 1,047 votes in the final unoffieid! count, offers fertile grounds for work by | their party, The nois nds already are i to his expected re. four years om orate th g he to have eny such in 1856. ose strategists remem port here were Citizen Staff Photo PASS from Joe Pineda for a 22 both on the ground in the ®air Southern Demo. May Be Named To Post In Ike’s Cabinet yhere that Elliott Bell, former New York state superintendent of banks junder Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, might be chosen for that role. Any such . designation would whip up speculation around Bell as a pos- sible choice for secretary of the | Treasury. Truman's ‘hew message went to Eisenhower after the outgoing President met with his Cabinet for the first time since the election. Atty. Gen. James McGranery told newsmen the session was devoted to discussion of how to make the transition to a Republican admin- istration ‘as smooth as: possible McGranery said that, while the Cabinet didn’t talk about the elec- tion, he thought the issue had been settled mostly on the basis of Ei- senhower’s personal popularity and was not a repudiation of the Dem- ocratic party. Although McGranery said Tru- man did not discuss the election with his Cabinet, the President did express his views to Sen. Benton (D-Conn) during a half-hour meet- |i ing at the White House yesterday. “The President felt we (the Democrats) could have been a little better organized, but’ that it wouldn’t have made an appre- ciable difference in the outcome,” Benton told reporters after the meeting, adding “The President pointed out that Gov. Adlai Stevenson polléd more votes than he, Henry Wallace and Saturday, November 8, 1952.. -THE KEY WEST CITIZEN. Page Touchdown Jaunt Citizen Staff Phote LUCY GONZALEZ, who with Joe Pineda dominated the pic- ture for Key. West last night, takes off on a 70-yard touchdown run in the opening’ minutes of the Conch-Pompano tilt. Ike Heads For Round Of Golf J. Strom Thurmond got in 1948 combined,” Benton himself was defeated for ‘re-election although he drew 54,000 more votes than in his winning campaign two years. ago. Gramp Was Slow ‘But Sure Reader LOS ANGELES # — Grandpa may have been a slow reader, but as a boy he could read material that would baffle today’s young- ster, says a language expert at the University of California at Los Angeles. Dr. William E. Bull, associate professor of Spanish, who has spent years studying the mechanics of language and how it is taught, made this observation today about grandpa and your own little jun- When granddad was a boy, he| was handed a book with all the seldom used. words ieft-in it and taught to read it. The most fre- | y used words — pronouns, | verbs, conjunctions — he i almost unconsciously be- | cause of their constant repetition. | Consequent! his attention and time was concentrated on learning a constant stream of contest-bear- | ing words, mostly nouns “Today's G-year-old knows the | 1.900 most often used words before he starts school. We add another 1.000 or 2,000 words to his basic and we carefully restrict ~ content-bearing nily used because meaningful words the The student, therefore, who} ty the common words is with cement and things to be ike 2 of ww bo is given 16 , t and 505 bricks and told ; build « Bouse.” ? Associated Press Wirephote GENERAL DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER gives with @ big smile as he heads for the tee on his first round of gélt during his ten day rest here at the Augusta National Golf Club. the is fol- lowed by his caddy who says his name is Cemetery, en nausenemmmmmeanmmneeed TV VIEWERS SEE FIRE {DIE IN TANK ACCIDENT HUNTINGTON, W.VA. — An| Bisa Le” Germany #—U. & estimated million doller fire that | Ser Army headquarters Fridsy, destroyed a four-story fureiture released the memes of three Amer> store and vacant theater building can soldiers killed Oct. 21 whee, yesterday was seen by a television |their tank plunged 30 feet from @ sutience in three states bridge into the Kocher River 00 Thousands of persons jammed Gailsdorf. into the area te see the spectacle. They were Sigt. Chatscho Hodge, Others within 2 60-mile radius of of Box 24, Forestom, § C.; here in West Virginia, Oio and! Roxcoe B. Clarke, whose Kentucky had ringside seats when | Mrs. Herman Pitiman of station WSAZ-TV trained its cam- Helena, Ga, and Set eras on the diare from its studios Boodle, Lawrence, Ind. less than two blocks away | Four other soldiers. ‘ously injured, are stil! in AE ma ii VOLCANO ERUPTS TOKYO @—The new Pacific vol- canoe Myojin was erupting violently this afterncon, beiching smoke ; nearly $.000 feet high. an alr force officer reported Friday Capt. John Yahr of Chicago es i timated the voicane 219 miles south i = 5 si of Tokyo «es about 100 the water. Ui