The Key West Citizen Newspaper, December 1, 1954, Page 9

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__ Hell Shine In Friday Night's Mee Annual Conch Bowl Contest| 322% December 1. 94 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Page 9 ¢ Swimming Stars To Appear : At Upper Keys Lime Festival OLD TIME REVIVAL NOW UNDERWAY Two children who are potential Olympic Stars will demonstrate their swimming styles to residents of the Upper Keys during the Key Lime Festival, on Friday, Decem- ber 3, at 3 p. m. at Plantation Har- bor Motel swimming pool. Patty. McKee, 11-year-old daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Art. McKee, Homestead, will give an exhibition of swimming strokes. At the pre- liminary AAU tryouts on Saturday at Shenandoah swimming pool, Mi- ami, Patty placed first in back- stroke. This qualified her for the contest against a team from Ber- lin, German, in the near future. At the same time she placed second in breast stroke and third in free style. Red-headed Patty, learned to swim at 11 months and at 3 won a gold cup for swimming and div- ing in her class. At present she holds second place in the National AAU championship records for backstroke. Brother Rickey, 6, placed, second om Saturday in the backstroke and will also give an exhibition on Fri- day. Both childre. have a love for the water, but father Art, who spends most of the time under the water as a marine archeologist and former Navy diver, insists that they swim for enjoyment and re- main inthe amateur class. Toll reads being built in the Uni- ted States today usually cost well over a million dollars a mile. For A Quick Loan #570 0 See “MAC’ 703 Duval Street TELEPHONE 2.8555 SEASONAL RENTAL COTT. ‘AGE 4-ROOM Clean, Attractive - Everything Furnished, including Utilities - Inside Parking, Lawns, Shade - Beach Club Membership - Private Pool - $700 to Apr. Ist COMPARE Box XYZ, Citizen 7:30 NIGHTLY, EXCEPT SATURDAY Evangelist Inez Smith A Woman Preacher God has Blessed Her in a Number of Successful Revivals over the Midwest and the South Lots Of Good Music PHYLLIS CARBONELL WHITECOMB Known by Many in Key West Will Assist In Music SOLOS - DUETS - PIANO - ACCORDION with HARP and GUITAR Glad Tidings Tabernacle ns , (ASSEMBLIES OF GOD) Georgia St. Phon 773 Pitts, WE’ INVITE TOU TO. BUROLL IN OUR as ree mpi Peas FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY .... 9:45 EVERY AY FIRST SHOWING TOMORROW AMERICAS MOST ADVANCED NEW CAR_1955 MERCURY ° SHAW FLYER STAR= rterback: Johuny Gramlitg, holdér of 11 Auiantic ~ pCoast Conférence; fecords during his sojourn as‘a University.of South Caro- lina footballer, will be: calling the signals Friday night when his Shaw Air “Force Base eleyen faces the Pensacola. Goshawks in third annual Conch Bowl game here. Gramling, who was selected All-Conference quarterback for two years, played for the Ottawa Rough Riders in the fast Canadian Professional ab football league last year. Roundup ; By Gayle Talbot: NEW YORK @—Navy’s decision to play Mississippi ‘in the Sugar Bowl, which came as a- distinct surprise to most Eastern obser- vers, could be-the forerunner of «| wil be under heavy pressure from much more liberal attitude on the every section of the country io part: of both ‘service schools to- | Spread thei ward playing genuine big-time Overseas Transportation Company, Ine. Fast, Dependable Freight and Express Service between : MIAMI and KEY WEST Also Serving ALL POINTS ON FLORIDA KEYS Between Miami and Key West Express Schedule (No Stops En Routé) LEAVES KEY WEST DAILY (EXCEPT SUNDAYS) at 6:00 P.M. Arrives at Miami at. 12:00 o’clock Midnight. LEAVES MIAMI DAILY (EXCEPT SUNDAYS) at 12:00 o’clock Midnight and arrives at Key West at 6:00 o'clock A.M. Local Schedule LEAVES KEY WEST DAILY (EXCEPT SUNDAYS) at 8:00 o’clock A.M. (Stops at All Intermediate Points) and arrives at Miami: at 4:00 o’clock P.M. LEAVES MIAMI DAILY. (EXCEPT SUNDAYS) at 9:00 o'clock A.M., and arrives at Key West at 5:00 o'clock Free Pick-Up and Delivery Service FULL CARGO INSURANCE MAIN OFFICE and WAREHOUSE: Cor. Eaton and Francis Sts. TELEPHONE 2-7061 | fodtball schedules within a couple | more seasons. | A radical change in «policy is being forced upon Army and Navy by the determination of the newly formed Ivy League to get away from it all. Beginning in 1956, its |eight members plan ‘to play full | themselves. This will leave lot of blank jspace for the soléiers and the sailors tofill in their schedules, | and there is no question that they vors around. There breathe few congressmen who will | not be-in-there pitching for a fair | share of the loot. Once they become enmeshed in | representative national schedules, | where. they r rly met leading teams from each of the major con- jferences, the two schools—provid- ing they have —will be in increasing dem: he various | bowls. They'll be fair game too now that Navy has succumbed. Army officials with whom we have discussed the bowl problem | at one time or another have based their opposition to the fact that members of t Sadet squad would | be forced to forego their Christmas holidays at home. In many cases, they pointed out, the Christmas break offered Army players their’ only opportunity all year to get away from the strict military grind and see the home. folks The premise that a football play- er would rather go home for | Christmas than perform in one of |the bowls might have gone un | challenged forever if Navy's, cf ficials, no doubt mindful of the changing scene, had not put it to a vote of their athletes after be ing given their pick of several invitations last week. From all ac-| counts, the Middies didn’t need to| have their arms twisted. Mozart, Beethoven, Naumann | and Hasse composed music for the harmonica, an instrument compos- led of glass bells, not a mouth or- | gan. DR. A. M. MORGAN Chiropractor 16 Years In Key West 1430 REYNOLDS STREET TELEPHONE 2-2912 STARRING THE DRAMATICALLY LOW MONTCLAIR_THE HIGHEST STYLED, HIGHEST POWERED MERCURY EVER BUILT N halfway measures here. No hold- ing to the past. Hundreds of ideas earmarked “for the future” went into the design of the 1955 Mercury. Take styling. Never before has there been such aliveness of line. Take size. These are longer, lower, bigger Mercurys. Take performance. No matter what yardstick you use to measure it, 1119 WHITE STREET Mercury’s got it. High V-8 horsepower for all series (198 and 188 hp). 4-barrel carburetor performance. Super com- pression. Matchless efficiency. Dual exhaust for the two top series. Super pickup in every speed range. And that’s only the beginning of what's new. There's a new Full-Seope windshield. There are new tubeless tires. There’s new, smoother, quicker- acting Mere-O-Matic Drive (optional), with far more getaway power. Best of all, there’s a far wider of models to choose from, in 3 series: the new ultra-low Montclair, the Monterey, and the Custom. Better stop around at our showreom. IT PAYS TO OWN A NEW 1955 MERCURY —FOR FUTURE STYLING, SUPER POWER Monroe Motors, Inc.

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