The Key West Citizen Newspaper, July 20, 1954, Page 6

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~ ChiSox Face Crucial 10 Tilts In Bid For Pennant Seven Game Series With Yanks Slated By BEN PHLEGAR AP Sports Writer The next 10 days can go a long way in deciding the American League pennant chances of the Chicago White Sox. During that spell the Sox face the New York Yankees seven times, starting tonight in Yankee Stadium. The Yanks trail first- place Cleveland by half a game. The White Sox are another four lengths back. It’s going to be a long hard road for Paul Richards’ Go-Go Boys, but their four-game sweep over the Indians just before the All-Star break convinced a lot of fans the} Sox still are a big threat. The Yankees are the big stum- bling block. In 12 meetings so far the White Sox have eome out on the short end eight times. Against every other team, including Cleve-| © land, Chicago holds a winning edge. Sandwiched in between the home- and-home series with Chicago, the Yankees meet Cleveland in a three- game set in New York over the weekend. It could turn out that the re- cently revived Boston Red Sox will hold the immediate key to he first- place scramble. While the White Sox are playing the Yankees, the Indians will be meeting Boston. And when Cleveland switches to New York, Chicago goes to Boston. The Indians and Yanks both won yesterday Chicago ha dthe day off. Cleveland defeated Washington, 43. New York whipped Detroit, 8-0. Boston won a pair from Balti- more 9-7 and 8-5. In the National League, Harry Perkowski of Cincinnati pitched a 12-inning, three-hit shutout over the league-leading New York Giants, winning 1-0 gn Hobie Laiidrith’s home run. Second-place Brobklyn also lost, 9-4 to Chicago. St. Louis beat Philadelphia 5-1 and Milwau- kee defeated Pittsburgh 4-1. The big thriller was in Cincin- nati. Perkowski, a left-hander who had lost seven out of eight deci- sions this year, pitched brilliantly against the Giants. He walked five, struck out six two of them in the 12th inning, and was in dan- ger of being scored upon only in the seventh when Monte Irvin led off with a double against the score- board. Irvin, however, was picked off second. Whitey Lockman doubled with two out in the sec- ond. Al Dark beat out an infield single in the 11th. Brooklyn put on one of its worst fielding performances of the sea- gon, committing five errors, in losing to the Cubs for the first time in 10 games. Peace and quiet reigned at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, scene of Sun- day’s riot, as the Cardinals whip- ped the Phillies. Rookie Brooks Lawrence scattered 10 hits in win- ning his fifth game since joining the Redbirds less than a month ago. In Milwaukee, Jim Wilson contin- ued to defy the jinx that’s sup- posed to dog no-hit pitchers, as he won his seventh straight game. He limited the Pirates to three hits. Allie Reynolds, back in action after x hip injury, stopped Detroit on three hits for his 10th in a row after losing his first decision. The Yankee attack included Willie Miranda’s second major league home run and Mickey Mantle’s 19th homer of the season. Cleveland had to struggle against the Senators. Manager Al Lopez employed three pitchers te check} a Washington threat in the ninth. Dale Mitchell’s pinch single in the seventh drove in the winning run. Home runs accounted for both, Boston triumphs over Baltimore. In the first game veteran Mickey Owen climaxed a six-run rally in the ninth with a grand-slam drive. | In the nightcap the Sox came from | behind with five homers. Jackie} Jensen hit a pair and Ted Wil-| liams, Milt Bolling and Jim Pier-| sall hit one each. Major League Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING—Noren. New York, .360. RUNS~Minoso, Chicago, 74. HITS—Fox, Chicago, 117. HOME RUNS- Mantle, New York, 19. STOLEN BASES—Jensen, Boston and ‘Minoso and Rivera, Chicago, 12. SATTCHING Reynolds, iew York, 101, re NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING -Snider, Brooklyn, RUNS~ Musial, St. Louis, 76 RUNS BATTED IN- Musial, St. Louis, Fi ae ie an ae STOLEN BASES Britoxs Milwaukee, 1B 361 Page 6 land City Softball League in hittin; played through Thursday, July 1: Blizzards is right on Lewis’ heels w top six hitters with .316. ments. Most Runs: Most Doubles: Parker, VX-1, 5 Coca Cola, 3 Softball Big Six Hitters Player — Team AB RH John Lewis, D-Q ... 49 14 19 J. Villareal, D-Q .... 37 10 14 Lastres, Coca Cola 33 8 12 Valdez, D-Q 55 16 18 Gaffney, S-S 44.414 Halford, VX-1 19 5 6 D-Q—Dairy Queen §-S—Sonar School Graham Thinks About Quitting After Licking By JACK HAND NEW YORK W—“When you get licked by a potato like that, it makes you think about quitting.” Billy Graham, admitting he will be 33 at his next birthday in September, was a thoroughly dis- gusted man as he sat in his ring togs last night affer losing a split decision to Danish Chris Christen- sen. “When a guy like this hits you, wrong,” he said. “You ask your- self, ‘Why don’t you counter?’ Right now I feel let down. I thought I won the fight 6-4 but I am dis- gusted. “Tl know in a few days about fighting again. After I sit down and have a talk with Irving (Irving Cohen, his manager).” Graham looked ring rusty in his second fight in seven months. He was slow and missed often against the faster Dane, who kept pouring leather at him through the 10 rounds at Brooklyn’s Eastern Park- way. Christensen showed no solid power with his flicking punches, often resorting to a backhand right, but he was too quick and too busy for the New Yorker, who came within a whisker of winning Kid Gavilan’s welter title back in 1951. Referee Teddy Martin voted for Christensen 5-4-1 and Judge Dave Stewart, 6-3-1. The other judge, Bert Grant, scored it for Graham 54-1. Graham weighed 150, Christen- sen, 148. Pet. -388 378 369 328 328 316 Al Andrews, who won a unani- mous decision from Sauveur Chioc- ca of Corsica in the feature 10 at St. Nicholas Arena, headed back for his home town, Superior, Wis., for a vacation. ‘ “He's tough’ to fight,” said An- drews, who weighed 153 to Chioc- ca’s 146. “He can tie you-yp on the inside and he throws a pretty good punch. I'd like to fight in Superior, but until I get someone to fight there, I'll do some road- work and box with the amateurs.” Baseball Set The Beavers wil] meet the Bob- cats tonight at 6:45 p. m. in a Midget League encounter in Bay- 4 view Park. Ronnie Kirk will hurl for the Beavers with Adolpho Rodriguez tossing for the Bobcats. Boxing Results MONDAY NIGHT'S FIGHTS BROOKLYN — Chris Christensen, 148, Den- mark, outpointed Billy Graham, 150, New York, 10. 'W YORK—Al Andrews, 153, Superior, | outpointed Sauveur Chiocca, 146%, Corsica, 10. MONTREAL~Johnny Greco, 151%, Mon- treal, outpointed Billy Lauderdale, 149%, Hialeah, Fla., 10, square flags and only N= hana, New York, 13-2, used in modern times. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Lewis Tops Island City Loop Batters John Lewis, Dairy Queen, outfielder, continues to lead the Is- smooth fielding shortstop, Danny Lastres, is hitting .369. Center field- er Claude Valdez holds down fourth place with an average of .327 Scott Gaffney of the Sonar School is in fifth place with a .318 per- centage while the VX-1 Flyers centerfielder, Halford, rounds up the Below is a breakdown on leaders among other offensive depart- Most Hits: John Lewis, Dairy Queen, 19 Moyer, Sonar School, 17 Most RBI: Valdez, Dairy Queen, 18 Most Triples: B. Villareal, Coca Cola, 3 Most Homers: Wertz, Sonar Sc! Most Stolen Bases: Kerr, Angueira, Dairy Queen; B. Villareal, Most times truck out: Brown, Coca Cola, 17 Most times walked: Moyer, Sonar School, 18 Best pitching record: Grooms, 7-0, Roberts, 7-1, Dairy Queen Most strike outs: Grooms, Dairy Queen, 73 Most walks: Joe Lewis, Coca Cola, 45 Most hits allowed: Joe Lewis, Coca Cola, 68 Most Innings pitched: Joe Lewis, Coca Cola, 81 Best Earned run average: Roberts, Dairy Queen, 1.18 | Early symbols of chivalry were in later} times were flags of greater length than width adopted such a’ those Tuesday, July 20, 1954 with an average of .388 in games . Manager Jack Villareal of the ith .318. In third place, Coca Cola’s hool; Roberts, Dairy Queen, 4 SurAsDevDet Wins Naval Base Tourney The Naval Base Golf Tournament has come to a close with the Sur- AsDevDet stroke-masters on top of the heap with a-total of 2016 strokes. The long 72 hole grind was really a thriller and enjoyed by every one of the 75 Navy divot diggers. The Championship team from SurAsDevDet was composed of R. E. Witzel, YNC; S. J. Ford, SN; Lt. R. H. Smith; R. D. Gudding, TD2; Lt. R. H. Robeson; W. D. Wymore, TDC; and Ledr J. R. An- tink. The team approached the tee Wednesday morning with deter- mination to retain their 34 stroke lead from the last week. Each man was playing under tourna- ment pressure making every stroke count toward winning the Admir- als Championship Team Trophy. The highlight of last Wednesday’s play was when Lt. Smith broke 80. He has been playing good golf all through the tournament but was just getting his putts in the hole. He fired a neat 77 to go with his Previous scores of 84, 84 and 83. The individual Low Medalist tro- phy was won by’ R. E. Witzel of SurAsDevDet as he mastered scor- es of 74-76-73-72 for a total of 7 over par, 295. Larry Rouse of HS-1 was the runner-up for the indivi- dual play, hitting 72-76-73-75 for a total of 8 over par, 296. When these two free-swingers teed off in the foursome with Dick Clark of FAWTULant and C. B. Thurman of VX-1, Rouse was standing at 221, Witzel had a total of 223, Clark was third with 225 and Thur- man of VX-1 was fourth with 227. Rouse started badly, having put- ter trouble and his tee shots were off the mark. His only comment was that “my wedge just wasn’t working today.” The runner-up team trophy was captured by VX-1 with total strokes of 2066. All members of the VX-1 team were out to lick Sur- | AsDevDet, but couldn’t quite make |it. C. B. Thurman of YX-1 was the leader for the runner-up team with a total strokes of 302, which placed him in third position for the field. Close behind at 314 was Ens. M. Smith. The final standings of the teams and their scores are: SurAsDevDet — 2016 strokes VX-1 — 2066 strokes HS-1 — 2100 strokes Naval Station — 2135 strokes Fleet Sonar School — 2333 strokes Naval Hospital — 2394 strokes ZX-11 — 2409 strokes AUW School — 2517 strokes This tournament is also consid- ered the qualifying round for par- ticipation in the Sixth Naval Dis- trict Championship Golf Tourna- ment to be played in September. Members making up the team to represent the Naval Base will be Gene Witzel, SurAsDevDet, Lar- ry Rouse of HS-1, C. B. Thurman of VX-1, Dick Clark of FAWTULant and Alex Borylo of HS-1. Chief Halpin of the Special Ser- vices Department of the Naval Sta- tion conducted the tournament in excellent fashion and ail services performed by him were appreciat- ed by all the participants. 1 The largest asteroid (Minor planet) is Ceres, about 500 miles in 1801. Baseball Results TUESDAY'S BASEBALL AMERICAN LEAGUE ‘Won Lost Pet. Behind Cleveland 28.685 New York 37 30 $4 387 RESULTS New York 8, Detroit 0 Cleveland 4, Washington 3 Boston 9-8, Baltimore 7-5 (Only games scheduled) TUESDAY'S GAMES Chicago at New York Cleveland at Boston Baltimore at Washington Detroit at Philadelphia (2) NATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lost Pet. Behind New York 60 30 667 — Brooklyn Cincinnati Milwaukee Philadelphia St. Louis Chicago Pittsburgh MC Chicago 9, Brooklyn 4 Cincinnati 1, New York © (12 innings) Milwaukee 4, Pittsburgh 1 &t. Louis 5, Philadelphia 1 TUESDAY’S GAMES New York at Cincinnati Brooklyn at Chicago Philadelphia at St. Louis (Only games Jacksonville Savannah Macon Columbia Montgomery jumbus Augusta Charlotte MONDA’ Jacksonville 4, Savannah 3-9, Columbia Macon 8, Columbus 4 Augusta 12, Montgomery 1 TUESDAY'S SCHEDULE Augusta at Columbus Jacksonville at Columbia Macon at Montgomery Savannah at Charlotte ~ SOUTHERN lotte 3 13 ASSOCIATION ‘Won Lost Pet. New Orleans 61 41 598 Atlanta. Birmingham Chattanooga Memphis Mobile Little Rock Nashville 37 SULTS 2 MONDAY’S Birmingham 21, Atlanta Chattanooga 6, Nashville 3 New Orleans 5, Mobile 2 TUESDAY'S SCHEDULE Birmingham at Chattanooga Mobile at Little Rock Atlanta at Nashville (2) New Orleans at Memphis MONDAY'S BASEBALL RESULTS INTERNATIONAL Montreal 2-4, Richmond 1-9 (first, sus- pended game of July 13) Havana 10, Ottawa 6 Syracuse 2, Rochester 1 Toronto 6-6, Buffalo 4-2 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Minneapolis 6, Columbus 3 Louisville 6, Kansas City 1 Indianapolis 12, Toledo 8 Only games scheduled TEXAS Houston 5, Dallas 2 Fort Worth 6, San Antonio 4 Tulsa 5, Shreveport 4 (13 innings) Oklahoma City 8, Beaumont 4 ALABAMA-FLOBIDA West All-Stars 15, East All-Stars 14 PACIFIC COAST San Diego 5, Portland 1 San Francisco 4, Los, Angeles @ TUESDAY'S BASEBALL SCHEDULE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION St. Paul at Charleston (2) Minneapolis at Columbus (2) Kansas City at Louisvile Indianapolis at Toledo XAS Dallas at Houston Fort Worth at San Antonio Oklahoma City at Beaumont Tulsa at Shreveport INTERNATIONAL Richmond at Montreal Havana at Ottawa Buffalo at Toronto Rochester at Syracuse (2) ALABAMA-FLORIDA Graceville at Fort Walton Beach Panama City at Andalusia-Opp Crestview at Dothan BASEBALL STANDINGS INTERNATIONAL AMERICAN ASSOCIA’ Indianapolis Louisville St. Paul Kansas Gity Toledo Charleston sussssees” axseaee San Antonio Oklahoma City sersesees Dallas PACIFIC COAST Won Lest Pet. Hollywood 9 Al 627 San Diego San Francisco Oakland Seattle Sacramento Portland __... Los Angeles Reginald Griffen R. 1. P. (Eds. note: Pedra Agu’ dean of local sportswriters, written this evology for his geod friend Reginald Griffen.) , Reginald Griffen, known to his many friends as Reggie, has pass- ed to the great beyond. Oldtime fans will never forget Reggie. Dur- ing his playing days, ed at the old barracks field. He was a pitcher with a great fastball but not much control. He loved the game. He played in Miami and Miami| Beach and came to Key West on ’ Grid Tickets On Sale Here Today The Quarterback Club placed 1500 season tickets for the 1954 Key West High School football campaign on sale today. Earl Adams, Quarterback Club president said that the tickets entitle the bearer to re- serve seats at all of the Conchs’ eight home games which will be played in the new stadium being erected adjacent to the Poinciana School. Price of the ducats is seven dollars They are availab m any member the Quarterback Club and at Paul Sher’s Jewel- ry Store, 608 Duval St. and at Evan's Sport Shop, 509 South- ard Street. Adams urged any- one wishing to buy tickets whe has not been contacted, to Phone him. The season’s schedule: Sept. 17, St. Theresa; Sept. 24 Mia- mi Tech; Oct. 1, Hialeah Var- sity vs. Key West Jayvees; Oct. 8, Sanford; Oct. 15, Cur- ley; Oct. 22, Constance; Oct. 29, Miami Beach (away); Nov. 5, Jackson, Tenn; Nov. 12, South Broward; Nov. 19, Chat- tanooga, Central; Nov. 25, South Dade (away). Open Winner Points For PGA Victory By HUGH FULLERTON JR. ST. PAUL, Minn. — For the first time since Ben Hogan scored his first “‘slam” in 1948, the Na- tional Open golf champion is shoot- ing for America’s No. 2 pro golf prize, the PGA championship. And even the celebrated ‘“Min- neapolis Line” won’t give you much idea of “crooked arm” Ed Furgol’s chances of winning this tough event over a course that could be plain murder to followers of golfing form. Furgol, the surprise winner of the Open, got into the PGA cham- pionship on a sort of rain check— that’s a rule which automatically qualifies the reigning Open title- holder even though he may have missed out, as Ed did, in the sec- tional rounds. Hogan doesn’t play in the PGA championship any more. He fig- ures the seven-day grind is too tough for him. And, until Furgol came through at Baltusrol last month, no other Open winner has been a full member of the PGA and eligible for the title. The only other Open winners, Cary Middlcoff and Julius Boros, hadn’t completed their five year “apprenticeship” to play in the PGA tournament when they won the big title. As it stands, Furgol is just one of 135 players who'll start shooting to- morrow for 63 places in the match Play bracket. After 36 holes of qual- ifying, the survivors will start Fri- day on the knockout phase, which winds up with next Tuesday’s 36- hole final. Only the defending champion, Wally Burkemo, is ex- empt from this qualifying test and he plans to shoot for the $250 Medalist’s prize anyway. Sports Roundup By GAYLE TALBOT NEW YORK There is no reason why the Australians should 3 not be permitted to take a few bows for the recent successes of their. young athletes in interna- ional competition. Rulers of world tennis for the past three years, they now are eS making threatening gestures to- ward a similar domination in golf They have John Landy, holder of the mile record of 3:58, and they 439} are among the world’s mightiest swimmers. They have been the world’s cricket champions for so _ long that England is thoroughly sick of them. Two of the most coveted golfing i | crowns fell in recent months to a pair of sharpshooting Aussies whose names scarcely were known in this country. First, Douglas Bachli, a small-size tavern owner from Rosebud, Victoria, won the British amateur title by defeating our own Bill Campbell in the final, and then Peter Thomson, a 23- year-old pro from Melbourne, who had done well on the American winter circuit, mopped up the British Open to complete a great double. All of which adds up to an amaz- ing record for a nation which at the most recent head count num- the fourth of July with a club from Miami Beach and a great three) game series was played. in diameter, which was discovered | May he rest with the great Crea- | tor until we meet again. | | Price, $7.00 i FOOTBALL Season Tickets Now On Sale _ Limited Number Will Be Sold Seats Are In Special Section Buy Now From: Quarterback Club Managers Paul J. Sher Jewelry Store — Key West High School Evans Enterprises |Giles To Air Philly - Cardinal Free-For-All At Hearin g Today Eight Minute Brawl To Be Considered ST. LOUIS ) — National League President Warren Giles holds court here today on a free-for-all be- tween the St. Louis Cardinals and Philadelphia Phillies Sunday in a game the umpires forfeited to the Phils. Giles arrived in town yesterday from Cincinnati but quickly made himself unavailable for comment. Giles suspended Cardinal Man- ager Eddie Stanky, catcher Sal | Yvars and pitcher Ellis (Cot) Deal | of the Birds and first baseman} Earl Torgeson of the Phils pending the hearing. He took no action against Phil Manager Terry Moore, who also was involved in the ruckus. | Coach Johnny Riddle directed the | Cards as they defeated the Phils 5-1, last night in a game as quiet and orderly as the second game} of the double-header Sunday was | riotous. Presumably the circumstances leading to the forfeiture of the game, as well as the fight, will be gonsidered at the hearing. Giles notified the Cardinals of| his action in a telegram yesterday | after Redbird General Manager Dick Meyer asked the league prexy to come here for an on-the-spot investigation. To be on hand for the hearing, Giles said, are Managers Stanky and Moore, their coaches, not more than three other representatives of each club, Yvars, Deal and Tor- geson and the umpires. The brawl started after Torgeson objected to close pitches by Deal and then got into a fight with Yvars. The two managers, enemies since Stanky fired Moore as a Cardinal coach in 1952, and play- ers from both teams poured onto the field. Police broke up the free-for-all | after about eight minutes. Shortly afterward, still in the fifth inning, Umpire Babe Pinelli forfeited the game to Philadelphia because of | delaying tactics byy the Cards. Casualties from the fray were minor. Willie Miranda Hits Second Home Run NEW YORK (®—Guillermo (Wil- lie) Miranda walked gingerly from the shower and laughed as he head- ed for his locker in the New York Yankee dressing room. “See,” he said grinning, “you hit a home run and everybody waits to talk to you. There are more guys around here now than | there have been all season.” | This was yesterday, some min-| utes after the Yankees had blankd th Detroit Tigers 8-0 on Allie Reynolds’ three-hitter. Two of the Tuns came on Miranda’s first ho- mer of the year and the second of his major league career. “They all were kidding me in the dugout after I hit that one,” he said. “They said, ‘Are you weak or something. Why can’t you hit it into the upper deck.’” Actually, the blow ‘was a solid one, traveling on a line about 350 feet into the lower left field seats. Willie, a switch-hitter, who re- sides in Havana and plays for Almendarez in the Cuban League during the winter, has a lifetime big league batting average of | 222, Except for one start in the June 1 game against Boston, the 27-year- old Miranda has been used solely as a late-inning defensive replace- ment for shortstop Phil Rizzuto. That was until the first game of Sunday’s double-header against De- troit when Manager Casey Stengel scided to give Rizzuto a much- needed rest. Now Miranda may be kept in the bered only about 7% million per- sons, not counting aborigines. As ong who has made several trips to the country, we are asked with increasing frequency if there is any ready explanation for the out- of-all-proportion successes of the Aussies. The answer is, well, yes, They : are a big, healthy people, and they are crazier about more different forms of sport than the inhabitants of any other plot on the globe, including this one. Eight Home Games | fight only to have the de round kayo over Gordon Wallace in Detroit on June 16. | A CBS network of 101 TV sta- jtions will air the middleweight jscrap nationally at 10 p. m. Easte Jern Daylight Time Station TV, !Channel will serve local fight fans, Ward, Pompey Vie Wednesday In TV Bout On Wednesday night July 21, the vast Blue Ribbon Bout televison audience will see Yolande Pom- pey, rated internationally as the fourth ranking light heavyweight, make his American debut when he clashes with Moses Ward, sensa- ional fight-puncher. The 10-round middleweight match will be tele- | vised nationally from the Chicago Stadium. Currently the toast of the Euro- Pean continent, Pompey brings to America a rather impressive ring record. Although his early record is unavailable, he has lost but one fight in 24 encounters, since 1950. | Seventeen of his- victories were by knockout. Of his two draws, one was with Jimmy Slade two years ago in London. In a return bout in| 1953, Pompey decisioned Slade in a 10-round slugging duel. The Bri- tish West Indies boxer is classified as a heavy middleweight and is in-| ternationally rated fourth among light heavyweights. A tremendous , favorite in London, the 25-year-old fighter is noted for his punching prowess and sharpshooting tactics. In his first fight in this country Pompey tackles a young Detroiter who splashed into the national fis- tic spotlight with thrilling Blue Rib- bon Bout. performances against Willie Troy and Holly Mims. Al- though the loser on both occasions, Ward gave a good account of him- self against’ two of the toughest middleweights in the business. The | Troy affair was one of the most| savage battles in years with no let-up and no clinches from start to finish. Against Mims, Ward took | command early and forced the! on go against him. The 5-foot 7-inch slug- ger has chelked up a record of 18 wins in 25 fights, while losing five and drawing in two. Ward’s | most recentevictory was a seven- | Marine - Automotive - Transport Diesel Starting - Lighting DIAMOND BATTERIES Buy from your local independent dealer at chain store prices. lineup agai Sox tonigtit an important four-game set. Although she doesn’t care to dis- cuss it, Stehge! nlainly is worried by Rizzuto’s. inability to produce. Phil, who will be 36 on Sept. 25, is batting only .203 and has slov down perceptibly in the field Hence, Miranda could well p! a more vital role than expected in the club’s drive for a sixth straight pennant. the Chicago Whité | Battou Seo orola ‘Mot BUY A Guaranteed HESTER BATTERY With Its Emergency Self Charging FEATURE A $15.58 Battery That Fits Most Cars —ONLY— $8.95 Exch. Lou Smith, 1116 White Mohogany plastic table model. 21-in. glore-free tube has greater clority, Lifetime Focus. Also Distonce Selector. New, improved 1954 model. Fed. Tox incl © New, Exclusive Double-Power e! © Built-In All-Channel UHF-VHF Antenna! MODEL ‘Model 21T13 5209 STOCK-UP TODA with i. smoother tasting | sine ka Blue Ribhon Beer FOR COMPLETE FIGHT WIGHT ENJOYMENT Faéct Blue Ribbon PRESENTS Moses Ward pee ee Yolande Pompey| . Monroe Beer Distributors, Inc. COMMERCIAL CENTER Poinciana, Key West ‘elephone: 2-5947 or 2-8667

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