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Salgado Named To Gold The Subrom 18 base ballers won {another in a long series of victories over the Key West All-Stars yes- SubRon 12 Whips Ke y West Stars i Club Owners Are E Reject Ballplayer’s Demands xpected To terday at the Navy’s Walker Field, Oast LonTerence All-Stars: | The Navy's Burns hurled master- Four Key West High School foot-jed from the conference, a bit of ac-)difficulties and will not be eligible Hse a a = see ra down tees ball players were named to the tion which was not surprising in for championship play until the J¥St two hits un ninth fram , view of their obvious lack of in- next football season. —an infield safety in the third in- Gold Coast Conference All-Star ae te he alee es ce football team at a meeting of that pence The coaches also took advantage of &e meeting to arrange their ning and a single in the fifth. j But he weakened in the ninth By JOE REICHLER | “Never at any time did the own- NEW YORK W—Three of the/¢rs make such a resolution. At dig league players’ maior demands Our Atlanta meeting Mr. J. Nore —boosts in pension benefits, elim-|man Lewis. our attorney, assured ination of the 30-day release clause the 16 player representatives that and an increase in minimum wages |there was no chaace of the pen- from $5,000 to $7,200—were ex-/Si0n plan being dropped. pected to be rejects] by the club) Tom Yawkey, owner of the Bos- owners at their three-day meeting Starting today. ton Red Sox and a member of the jExecutive Council,’ made it clear group Saturday at the high school.) They had flatly refused to play schedules for the coming season, WheD Anguierra singled to center 1 berts idal both | Other player ests, such as that the magnates are not going Hardworking fullback Diek Sal- Key West as scheduled and did not Key West will entertain the Sout Rare siga a eng Doth’ NEW YORK.w—By this time it"“sale™ since has beck thrown BE rd jay psig gp grea on Sane Page named were tackle ra The perernes also voted to boy- game of which the Conch officials oe yas Lips ros gaa Ce ete cab Lave woe aa or a signs the Sclgasleease ie: peed Pats pany RE the Executive Countil’s re- io Henriqui . a long rivalry. y fetaly ‘ veteran’ | dation. Stu Logun guard nine gg re we Dern vealp oes oo a eat aptos pi vi Lie at) But that was all for the locals, lately. We doubt though that the League fully ape to swoop down |road, nie fend tesien s Soerprey a ation. or a eval |mi was named to fill the gap in a dinner Saturday but a fishing'Greenwood hurled good ball for the eee rane nd Los ae Sia ia: eo \dediehendars monetary allow-| Vien Pineda, earlier elected by the gold Coast ranks by unanim: trip was cancelled Sunday due to Sgt teh oe peat ae ir beerypeas Be é rer years. placa ieiae Gpsiitce that/ance for players livins away from| Suey Peon aleeg Wits tackle in the Miami area jumped at the Campbell and "coaches Ed Beck- fall. Vidal hurled the last three lems though jronligant meer hacatianpacamnaphiger paginas granted, . eee eae eee ree eat ee eee rene | ee aes Hatned Allee Devresentad the Rasy Sere teal, feck nua luis phased gic Gartsta| manuel laseat@etos, ; | High on the agenda Js the re: y " i 7 ‘ Jeys. r : ‘ | ‘ i commendat by be i's five- erates action taken at the rm me will compete in hisket-| Next patie. will de held at i? soe ot = _ — Hemet Facer vmpartee a Te ‘ate pposirssca P macntive “ogo rpolg Sept. : : . nd cai . . | | meeting, Constance High was oust-|ball and baseball due to schedule South Dade High School in March. ae ae pacers nage ah jleague structure is threatened with|players into the big show than any 29 that a committee be named to | They scored two more in the/collapse. That means, believe it other minor, doesn't know whether|°™Sider terminating the pension| | Fat THE KEY WEST CITIZEN McArthur Home Milk Chuck’s Gulfstream NCCS Children’s Corner SEC Basketball Season Swings Into High Gear By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Page é Lions Clinch Tie For National Football League Title Sunday By BEN OLAN j NEW YORK W—Only the New) York Giants, one of the sete Mrs. MacFarlane National Football League elevens,| ° stood between the Detroit ton Rolls High Score and another Western Division title Ma! Charcy Masitaliane; steno today. Milk kegler topped the Navy Wives The Lions, winners of the 1952/powling League last week with a crown, clinched at least a tie for nice 191 game over the Naval Sta- the division lead yesterday by de-|tion alleys. Mrs. Carson was sec- feating the Chicago Bears 13-7. By ond high with 180. She rolls with G ithe Chuck’s Sandwich shop bowl- winning, they maintained their one- game margin over the San Fran-| Mrs, Duke, McArthur Dairies, cisco 49ers, who walloped the'was rolled the high series for the Grel8 Bay Packers 48-14. afternoon with 486 and high team If yesterday's performance by serate was rolled by the McAr- the Giants means anything, Detroit|thur combination with 753. They al- is a cinch to win next weekend.|$0 swept the high team series The New Yorkers were the victims Scratch with 2108. in Cleveland's 11th straight victory} THE arenoies ey as the Eastern Division champions on bie compiled their highest total in four - ae years 62-14, The championship) a ane game is scheduled for Dec. 27 on! =H sein the field of the Western Division| A er leaders. In other games, the Pittsburgh 24 5 19 Steelers downed the winless Chi-) cago Cardinals 21-17 and the Wash-| ington Redskins blanked the Phil-| adelphia Eagles 10-0. Los Angeles) dropped Baltimore 45-2 Saturday. However, yesterday’s Detroit vic- tory mathematically eliminated the Rams from the Western Division race. Doak Walker and Bobby Layne} were the big guns in the Detroit) Southeastern Conference basket- attack. Walker kicked a weal of ball swings’ into high gear this Foie orgs eer Dinble ;week with 15 games on the agen- The Bears, hammed in by the|4a, including at least one for each Monday, December 7, 1953) Yawkey Says He'll Vote ‘No’ On Increase By JOE REICHLER third inning when Lyons walked or not, that baseball as we havejit is going or coming since it lost o Coto ack base on an error. known it is in genuine danger. |Baltimore to the American League. {Both runners advanced on a bad| No set of big league magnates It has only six assured clubs at \throw and Blazek singled to right ever met before with as many|the moment and almost surely will {to score them. The fifth inning produced one run |for the submariners on doubles by} ;Blazek and Doolady. They came jback with another run in the! sixth when Schulte scored on a balk. pressing problems on their minds have to take in Havana, with a as those who will be gathering 1,500-mile airline hop, to remain here this week. Their wrangle with in business. the players about the pension fund) The Piedmont League is unhappy is comparatively small potatoes. 'hecause it believes the Interna- though it is, of course, potentially tional League is trying to swipe explosive. its best city, Richmond. The big cause of one of the biggest player- owner disputes in years, popped back in the news iast night when Ralph Kiner of the Chicago Cubs, |National League player represen- | tative, said the owners had never} — Presented any resolution to end |the plan. Kiner and Allie Reynolds of the New York Yankees, American jplan. The multimillion-dollar plan,|_ ISPECTONS CALL “OTTO” THe Call 2-3254 Werld’s Largest Pest Contre! €o. Jalousie, Awning League player representative, met NEW YORK w—Tom Yawkey,| The Navy scored two runs in the} President of the Boston Red Sox eighth without the aid of a hit.) Vidal put out an infant rally in the ninth when Blazek singled to open the frame by fanning the next! three batters to face him. Decisions need to be made right fish are gulping the little fish and now toward relieving the distress everybody is pretty miserable. No- of the minor leagues, Even a year body wishes to invest in minor from now might be too late, un- jeague ball any more. less the majors have resigned The big leaguers, some of them themselves to eventually drawing 'taced with actual deficits the past ‘their talent from the colleges and Season, are reducing their farm ‘with player spokesmen of all 16 |clubs last Tuesday. But the coun- \cil’s recommendation on the pen- sion plan wasn’t made public until Wednesday, and then only after Kiner and Reynolds walked out on a conference with Commissioner Rupp used the sitdown—ordered| semipros. jclub holdings as fast as they can Only five seasons ago, in "in favor of “working agreements” there were 57 minor leagues io'with minor league teams. They might eventually help stock the two cent of the minors the past sca- big leagues. This past season the son compared to 30 per cent four number had shrunk to 38, and there’ years ago. They get the same bene- will be fewer this year. In 1948 fits as from a farm club without all baseball, minor and major, did)naying to pick up the tab. 68 million dollars worth of busi-| In other words, the evidence ap- ness. Last year the figure was 49'pears fairly complete that the big million, leagues, through selfishness or stu- The Pacific Coast League, high-|pidity or both, have injured the est of the minors and long a bul-'minors seriously and are facing wark of the game, is in a ridicu-'the consequences this week. By lous fix where a man recently was grabbing the television money they able to buy the San Francisco/haye incubated millions of big franchise for $100,000 dowa. That jeague fans who no longer are in. - 7 a ~—|terested in watching anything but ( wn the best. Kennel er What the men meeting here will ° ° do toward helping the litile fellows, Arrives In City it anything: We wouan' ‘tr Lead One bast record, they The first kennel owner to arrive Will consult their own immediate at Key West Kennel Club for the interests and take a chance on season was Walter Owens from Playing the college boys a decade Black Hills, South Dakota. Mr./{fom now. Owens brought twenty dogs with| him, of which three Lady Sandy, | Meadowcraft, and Just Sable were: outstanding on the northern trac! Other owners will be arriving \daily in preparation for the school- | ing races which start December 14 the country producing players who nad such agreements with 40 per| Ford Frick. The piayers said they jleft because their lawyer, J. Nor- |man Lewis, wasn't allowed to at- tend the meeting. “The statement the owners made | that they had a resolution to end/ the pension plan and that Allie Reynolds and I had failed to no- tify the players about this resolu- tion is a complete falsehood,” Kiner said. BILL'S LICENSED PAWN SHOP $333 3333 TWINS GARAGE |1130 DUVAL $T. DIAL 2-2401 $$$ $ SAVE $335 SAVE | Monroe Motors, |] 1119 White St. and Window Service | Repairing, Servicing and Cleaning ALL TYPES OF JALOUSIES AND WINDOWS All Work Guaranteed . Your Satisfaction Is Our Success PHONE 2-3923 After 5 P.M., 25702 Genuine FORD BATTERIES 12 Mos. ___ $ 8.70 18 Mos. __. $11.75 | 24 Mos. ___ $14.00 36 Mos. __. $18.00 (With Old Battery) INSTALLED These Batteries Fit Most Cars Inc. 25601 Tel. Lions’ bruising line play, waited team. until the final two minutes for their lone score, resulting from an ll-yard pass from Tommy O'Connell to Ed Macon, The 49ers had an easy time of it against the Packers. They scored two touchdowns in the first and third periods, and singles in the second and final quarters George Ratterman, substituting at quarterback for Otto Graham,! completed 15 of 27 passes for 235' yards and three touchdowns as the} Browns scored cight times on the! Giants and added two field goals and eight conversions by Lou (The} Toe) Groza. Bob Toski Wins In Havana Golf By BEN MEYER HAVANA (®—Bob Toski of North- ampton, Mass., had everybody on his side in the Havana Country Club's invitational tournament as soon as it became known he was! to marry pretty red-haired Lynn Steward at Cocoanut Grove, Fla., Dec, 14. The Cubans promptly called Tos- ki “la Bomba Atomic,” because he weighs only 130 pounds but plays a powerful game of golf. Toski didn’t let his fans down. He won the 72-hoie tournament,| beating 30 other professionals with! @ four-round total of 272, That was! one stroke better than the scores) singers, N * New Orleans and W of Franklin, Mich. The little New Englander put on alter Burkemo par 4 18th hole was to the right of the fairway behind palm trees. it between the paims," “Fortunately, it right.” came out The ball stopped 18 inches from rivals in a row,, is a 17-10 favorite. the hole and Toski’s fans cheered He sank the putt Steward at the edge of the green. The victory was worth $1,500 to Toski. Besselink, Burleno and Haas received 3 each Al Wall of Pocono Manor, Pz., was fifth with 274. Defending cham- pion Dutch Harrison of Ardmore, Okla., wound up with 284. and a member of baseball's Exec- utive Council, said today he would vote against the major league Players’ demand for an increase| Blazek had two doubles and a! in pension benefits and hinted he Single in four tries for the Navy) jalso was against boosting the min- a Anguierra led the civilian bat- imum wage from $5,000 to $7,200. : The portly Red Sox owner, who favored the resolution calling =: Kenteky |possible termination of the pension| \plan, said he was all in favor of [ ® k. T 1 jthe players operating the nud ll ACKS emp: e themselves if they wanted to. | “It would be very nice to turn it over to them if they want to| ers, run the thing,” he said. “I would] be glad to turn my end over to| LEXINGTON, Ky —The feel-! an iieoupamtle case's ~_ for ing around the ’Blue Grass today! Yawkey said the players’ request] #5 that Kentucky, college bas- \to raise the pension benefits from|Ketball’s sleeping giant, woke with a $50-$100 scale to an $80-$150 and|a snort. — é jlowering the qualifying age from| The Wildcats, nervous, jittery {50 to 45, was not workable. jand somewhat clumsy after a full “It’s like the age-old law of sup-|Season on the sidelines, waded ply and demand,” he said. ‘You through a good Tempie team, 86-59, can’t take out twice as much qs/Saturday night, and Coach Adolph you pay in. If there were enough|Rupp saw enough to Please him. of an increase in revenue from) “We made mistakes,” Rupp said the television receipts of the World|today, “but they were expected. Series and All-Star Game, I don’t|We are capable of playing much believe anyone would object to in-|better ball. Give us four or five creasing the benefits: But I cer-|more games and we should look tainly won't vote for it because|Much better. : |you just can’t give away what you| Kentucky, long a leading nation- haven’t got.” jal basketball power, had to sit | The wealthy Red Sox president |OUt last season as punishment for believes, however, the differences) °Veremphasis. between the players and owners ican be straightened out to the sat- | The Vanderbilt Commodores and isfaction of both sides. jLouisiana State Tigers get things; “I certainly intend to try my jrolling tonight. Coach Bob Polk’s|best, despite my personal feelings Commodores entertain the Duke|in the matter, to use my best Blue Devils, who whipped Tennes- judgment to do what I consider is see 101-61 Saturday LSU, defend-|for the best interests of baseball,” ing SEC champion, plays host to|he said. “There is no reason why Louisiana College. Vandy also has a rough game Saturday night when it plays Southern Methodist LSU enter- tains Kansas the seme night. Auburn and Georgia Tech tangle in Montgomery Saturday night in the first game of the season be- tween two SEC outfits. It won't count in conference standings. Alabama also has two tough jones on the agenda. The Tide plays St, Louis Thursday and Ili- nois Saturday in road games, The schedule for the week: Dec. 7—Duke at Louisiana College at State. Dec. 8—Clemson at Tennessee; Howard (Ala.) at Mississippi State. Dec. 9—Wofford at Florida. Dec, 10—Kansas at Tulane; Ala- bama at St. Louis; Mississippi at Union (Tenn.), Dec. 12—Southern Methodist at Vanderbilt; Georgia Tech vs. Au- Vanderbilt; Louisiana {burn in Montgomery; Cincinnati’ at Tennessee; Kansas at Louisiana State; Florida at Miami; Alabama at Illinois; Kentucky at Xavier (Ohio). |this thing can’t be straightened out, All that is necessary is a little common sense by both sides.” Yawkey verified that the owners are not going to decide whether to jretain or drop pension plan at jeurrent meetings. They simply jwill consider the resolution |Point an exploration commit |study the possibility of diss ‘the fund. The owners can dr plan with 90 days notice. | Each league has scheduled sep-! jarate meetings today and tomor- |row. The three-day conclave ends Wednesday with a joint meeting presided over by Commissioner |Ford Frick. The National has a |Proposal to change its rules on Playing off a pennant tie. The Na- jtional now has a best-of-three play- off and the American a one-game finale. If the amendment is adopt- jed, the National also would play one game. tee to olving ‘op the! —————— Christmas Fund show Willie Troy of Washington and Tuzo (Kid) Por- ,tuguez of Costa Rica meet n an- jother middleweight 10. Turner, who recently moved into the 160-pound ranks, by the Southeastern Conference an \the National Collegiate Athleti Association—to work on some re- well may be justified. Th Hoosiers had their troubles lick. /finements he said he had in mind, and the word was out that Ken- tucky was “loaded” for its return to the campaigns. Kentucky was unable to live up to the “loaded” reputation against Temple, although the victory was an easy one and although Cliff ‘Hagan broke some scoring records with his 51-point production, But Rupp’s word that the Wild- cats should regain in four or five games the polish and poise lost to aP-ithrough a year’s inactivity will do| nothing to comfort a long line of opponents, College Cage Scene Is Back To Normal Now By ED CORRIGAN NEW YORK #—College basket- | ball took on an aura of normalcy | today because: 1, Kentucky was back in action after being suspended a year by the Southeastern Conference. 2. Branch McCracken, coach of NCAA champion Indiana, has ex- pressed dissatisfaction with his | m. Ring Roundup both lightweight champion Jimmy Carter and middleweight King Bobo } & finish that had a touch of dra-'Olson may come out of this week’s Hartford, Conn., is matics. His drive on the 38l-yard top two bouts. towering lightweight contender from Cincin-| England special at the Boston Gar- 2¥™' nati, and Orlando Zuiueta of Cuba,/den Saturday night. Red Top also “The only way 1 could get from the fourth time Friday night at is the New there to the green was to put a Madison Square sharp slice on the bal! and knock all even so far, ; and walked broadcast straight into the arms of Miss (NBC). weight contender from Cleveland, gres: main l0geander at the Cisvelend a a fine card on the Cleveland News’, who is no relation » 18 a surpris- jing 8 to 5 choice bs ee i The Castellani-Turner fray will jbe telecast (CBS) starting at 10 'p.m. EST, 3. The raves over Bevo Francis and bis Rio Grande College team, which on occasion reached a fever pitch, have subsided. All ths and the season only one By MURRAY ROSE ' NEW YORK (#—Challengers for panes Teddy (Red Top) Davis, the No sek scl feather ontend : weight con ar oy Adolph Rupp’s Kentucky team favorite to beat young Tony de SPeDt most of last year oracticing Wallace (Bud) Smith, the No. 1. Marco of Boston in a hot New {F the current campaign with the ed intention of winning the} n nal title and showing no England lightweight ™€rcy in the process. Garden. They're king but his regionai title won't be The Wildcats looked like they each with a win, at stake. New England will be Might make good their threat in ” Toski said. loss and a draw. Botb have been blacked out of the coast to coast their opener Saturday when they all clamoring for a crack at Carter, (ABC) telecast, which starts at 9 ™assacred Temple 86-59 behind the Smith, who has flattened five P.m., EST. 51-point scoring binge of Cliff Ha- 7 i gen, their 1951 All America. This The 10 p.m., EST, bout will be! Paddy de Marco, the No. 9 light- Tepresented a Kentucky record for (ABC) ard telecast weight from Brooklyn, faces Car- one-game point production. los Chavez of Los Angeles, in the ‘We didn’t play nearly as well ponte main 10 at Brookiyn astern as we are capable,” said Rupp. Rocky Castellani, No. 2 middle- Parkway Arena t “We'll aeed four or five games e Brookly the feel of competition and Gil Turner, No. 4 from Phila- 11 to 5 favorite delphia, face each other im the is making his New York ain eventer. Paddy was defeat- Arens Wedmesday night. & Swpa ed in Boston by Tony de Marco i McCracken s pessimism over In-/ ing Cincinnati 78-65 after holding a slight one-point margin at the ‘half. | The coach sadly proclaimed the} club had “a long way to go” if it! lis going to repeat as Big Ten NCAA titlist. The Hoosiers won't have a chance | to relax tonight. They play Kan- sas State, one of the three teams! to defeat them last season. State | opened its campaign with a 70-41 veitory over Denver. As for Francis and Rio Grande, they have played four games and won two after running up a 40-| game winning streak. Bevo has hit for 176 points in the four games for an average of 44 points per game. In all, the general impression | was that Rio Grande is a good, | small college team, but still very much in the small college class. 1 The following courses will be taught: S-p-e e-d-w i-f-i-n-g- THE EASY TEACH THIS SYSTEM, wie Typing — LEARN TO TOUCH TYPE IN THE Equipment and Instructor Will Be Sent To Key West When it has been determined that there are at least 30 people in- terested in definitely enrolling. The demand fer trained personnel is still very great. — Prepare for 1. The better jobs in your city. . Civil Service. 3. Higher grade in Military Services. 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