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JAY, MAY 26, 1933. THE KEY WEST CITIZEN poneceostl =SPORT: Oral Hildebrand’s Great Hurling gee ar cain 12-INNING GAME SLANTS meeps Giclee Todas tn Race)” iil UNE INGTON SENATORS ee : | WATKINS’ “DARK HORSE” AS, It’s possible to stir up quite; 2 } | KE CONTEST FROM ST./an argument about the most ver- PREDICTED FAILED TO) satile track and field performer VIS" BROWNS; INDIANS | 5, ‘this year’s college mats. leav- SHOW .Ne UE MATCHES Z % FEAT RED SOX ing aside the jacks-of-all-trades} - z : PLAYED YESTERDAY z Se Ne < e 2 eas who engage in the decathlon and 4 F Z ; : . SAD"SAM HAO. comprise a one-man team in : } ‘ay eS . A LOUD LAUGH - (Special to The Citizen) themselves. ; : a : ’ | (By GOLF SCRIBE) Pays ‘ 4 ES ecees HE GEaT - W YORK, May 26.—The Princeton’s Bill Bonthron cer- ‘ In spite of the fact that his “im- x . Ae aes lelphia Athletics defeated the bssioe Adon wis a asia ay dm 2 ‘ : | ported” players failed to arrive, if z : it Tigers, 4 to 8, through the The long-striding Tiger Ae tee f ' Captain Willie Watkins led’ his} | listanee clouting of @ couple) fast quarter-mile and he has dis-|_ {7 a j team to vietory in yesterday’s golf! iladelphia rookies, and the! played iron-man qualities by rac- matches at the Country Club. } ng of Mose Grove. The bat-| ing 800, 1500 and 3000 meters on iY ‘ ae il Bob Stowers and William De-; 1s a twelve-inning affair. jone and the same afternoon. At ; | meritt lost three points to Mayor Washington Senators de- these distances ue en three ee ¢ : Bill Malone and Sam _ Goldsmitk,} | the St. Louis Browns. The| Victories against Yale. ‘i ‘of the Bunker Hill team. ss Keith Brown, Yale’s ace pole- = | : ons Taare in this game was 7 to 2. The vauiter, and. George Spitz, New| [3 : , ‘ j Clem Price, playing sans part-| turned loose their heavy of-| York University’s great high- 3 é 2 } | ner, was whipped by the combina- e weapons and rode on to! jumper, have been doubling up to tion of Sheriff Karl Thompson and; y, with Alvin Crowder pitch-| keep warm as well as to gain ad- 4 5 Bob Spottswood, three points. i 8 seventh victory of the sea- ee oe x Pa Stes : : at | Willie Kemp and Johuny Kir- + Cleveland Indians triumph-| jn the high jump and Spitz won 4 # chenbaum came through with fly-} er the Red Sox, 2-3. The In-/the intercollegiate broad jump came back in this game after) championship indoors. ur oneet Saga os Ben Eastman is the west coast’s ; go Cubs shut out the g aig a a Braves and the Dodgers. en Pasian anes ae | Russell Kerr, stepped out and! summaries: abies to fake the wraps off the : : | trounced Cha Ketchum and Earl) American League Stanford star since early in the om . pa ate : ey peinte: to: it 2 4 ae s . % | Otto Kirehheiner and _ Berlin Philadelphia R. H. E.| season and it is still a question see ¢ P : Sawyer coasted along to a 3-0 vic- jee . 9) whether Ben will be at his best bs . j tory over George Brooks and John read toa 1\ for the I. C. A. A. A, A. cham- Two of the shining lights in C leveland’s brilliant, _ first-month | Carbonell. ( welvp Innings) pionship 400 and 800 at Harvard; ¢:ght for the American League flag were Oral Hildebrand, big right-| ‘Tim Pittman and Bob Shehee di-| PTCHER. OF THE teries: Sorrell, Hogsett and the last of May. hander from Butler university, and Bill Kaickerbocker, upper left, | vided honors with Joe Lopez and! CHICAGO WHITE SOX. pc ey, Peterson, Ward Season’s “Find” the sweet-fielding rookie shortstop, from Toledo. Hildebrand start- | Old Bye Sands, 1% points each. and Cochrane. Meanwhile it seems to Dale} ed with five straight victories, including three shuotouts. | Senors Miller, Sullivan and El- Stafford, the Pontiac (Mich.) ob- {gin, also r: ey es Boston HF | Season: ine Teatite versity of| SPORT CUT—ORAL HILDABRA er by the newcomer, Oral Hilde-|f"schn Key to attend the festive | OTR BRAZOS 10 1) Michigan has the — outstandin By €. CCRANMER Lena ties. ° . 2 ingemn hia Pe Se (iy Associated Press) Pitched A One-Hitter en ‘ ge 7 track man of the year in Willis cL , " oF. ue ” | Two of the ladies were indis- Hildebrandt} wg negro sophomore, who will CLEVELAND, O., May 26. ‘Slats,” as the natty ex-col-| )4:e4, and that match also was ipencer; Rhodes and Ferrell. . Good pitching and spectacular, !egian is called, boasted five| postponed | straight victories and no defeats|” Aj fier the dint aud: camoke oF % . cE he tei | :. se! id ess es " : “In the past Ward has _ been] land Indians are putting up a fight | : be Adee Thvée of | hie battle had cleared and scor Ferry Parrott arrived yesterday ington .. 714 0) only a high jumper and 100-yard for first place in the American | victories earn gs hsinomnanon arid) Ss Sone Ae alee ye afternoon 5:30 o’clock from Cuba! jteries; Rerbert, Gray, Knott| dash man; broad jump and high! peague. | one of them the result of pitching! 71:11 boys, announced the results | With 26 carloads of pineapples. Of hea; Crawder and Sewell, hurdles are new to him,” writes in| that yielded a meagre single. Al-! .., dase ; 29 i 4 Meattatd "He ran second: to The club that has been noted in toucthee Li cans ware decked | Divot Diggers, 9% points; Bunker| these, 23 cars contained 10,940} ing colors to down Captain Strunk} et the opposition, and Melvin Rus-} sel, two points to one. Captain Watkins, playing with} OLD PAPERS | carry the Wolverine colors in the} “' East’s blue ribbon meet. fielding explain why the Cleve- WWIII D IID IL EM. gave Jack Keller a great race in eatei bine: tits seven starts. 2 “inet : ‘ A ‘ , and at the same They are still at a loss to know Freighter Brazos is due tonight National League the nee hurdles at‘Ann Arbor} time for its loose fieldiig, has} Tallest man on the squad—six | now Captain Watkins, with a{ from Galveston. There is a large . . | recently. been submerged in! the batting! feet, three—Hildebrand came to| crippled team, licked them so|shipment of seafood awaiting n 8} “He is only a sophomore and] averages cellar so far this season! the Indians after only four months! neatly. “ % 3 -| transportation to New York, also} go i 1| barring injury I am confident he] and ooeking around top position in iP organized baseball after leaving | money Baan ty ad cs chigivenits of sponges nad cigars. | teries: Zachary, Seibold andj will become one of the great) fielding. | Butler university, Indianapolis. | : ai | Power boat C. W. Powers, of the Malone and Hartnett. | track men of all; time. 4 While some of the hitters have | Rated a starting pitcher by mi¢ -| been giving stellar performances.| Thompson Fish company arrived | “Incidentally Ward will ‘be| been comnig out of their shnhp.{ Seasou last year, he won eight’ and| “Brilliant Play Afield from Collier City. this morning | playing left end.. on * Michigan's] only three so far ard batting hbowel] Jost six. : His ‘chief stock in‘trade) As-for fielding, features have} With shipments of clams and clam football team next fall. He was|.300, and Joe Vosnlik, the : 5 Bundles for 25 in bundle i ‘denion | is a baffling change of pace, and been one-handed circus. catches by | Products. ubsti ute’, last |, pegenn, ibeing flychaser,. had an. average .of..iny head-wor Ke ‘s Vosmik!and sparkling: plays: by. the| TDM ama KR IEG tigS first, underitidy’ tb! Mati William: der .150 after the first. tionth. | Meanwhile, Ferrell has.been get-| rooki¢, | Bill Knickerbocker,' at! GOOD EXCUSE ‘son’ atid ‘Ted Petoskey, Michigan's} And pitching—about ithe most] ting a slower start toward the 20} shortstop. With the regular ‘se¢ond ; great flankmen.” interesting phenomenon ‘ in: ‘thé? victoriés that mean a bonus to him| baseman, Chalmers Cissel, on the{ seasons past for its dangerous ten-| )°° sre nd) Hill, 8% points. The Bunker Hill! crates. Three of the cars con- N eago-New York, wet grounds. | Metcalfe in the 100 at Drake and} gency to break out in a rash of| 29 hits made off him in his first lteam is nonplussed. “| tained fruit in bulk, \ @) r a e \ ee i eg eee cuinige eres e(N THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ee ‘aces Spitz In. High Jump ribe's play to date has been the! this year. But he, Clint Brown and, bench much of the time, Knicker-) failure to show up for juty duty,| i e LER | Wet] Ward will not hate tts oppose | threatened displacement of. Wes-| others, of. pitching staff that/dggs| bocker apd Johnny; Burnett: have|T. V. Montgoitiery Of this city ex-| 5 “51, leuch champions ‘as Keller ‘ani| ley Retell as the club's acti hurl-!not itdlude a Single Southpaw, have | kept the #nfitld Welt plugged. plained that he had been in jall.| WOM TOGO GLO OG MG MM a. ladelphia-St. Louis, double. | Metcalfe in’ two of the ‘features | - at ot i OSES Sa a A Erato! aiiaets: nee ; of the T) CsAv“A. A, A, meet but fre: peiaiared REO: he will compete with George} al Spitz in the high jump. Their dual may give the bar-lifters an all-afternoon arm-ache. Ward just missed making the Olympic team in the high jump; last summer, tying for fourth ati 6 feet, 5% inches, an inch short Ey é Spitz and first place. The Michigan star has cleared over 6 feet 7 inches, however. In addition he has consistently shaded 10 seconds for 100 yards : A \ : and bettered 15 seconds over the N EW SERIAL high hurdles. ‘ ‘ . ; by Ruby'M. AYRES AMERICAN LEAGUE th— We le York .............. 20 11 .645 21 16 = .568 -- 18 14 .663 . 18 14 .563 19 16 .b43 ~14 20 412 “STRAND THEATER - 14° 23) 878} 4121 ae NATIONAL LEAGUE Mable Stark, who has spent ib— W. L.. Pet, | more than $5 years bossing lions) surgh: .. ee Ase 7 | and tigers around under the big! York... 19 14 .576| oP makes her movie debut with ‘dale W419 16 {648} Buster Crabbe, world-champion anati come, 17 18 .486 |.8Wimmer, and Fran Dee, estab-| go .: 9 472 | lished film star, in “King of the n ss .459 | Jungle,” animal _ thrill-romance| dyn hea si .452| which is showing at the Strand} delphia 361 | Theater tonight. —_- Miss Stark has spent most of} | her life allied with Ringling, Hag-j tenbeck, Sarrasini, and other cir-| | cus impiresarios, and has trained! j more wild animals than any wom-/ } an who ever lived, Her body ear-| ries hundreds of scars testifying} to her profession. She has made; some 30 trips to hospitals, one of} AMERICAN LEAGUE | them lasting for more than aj; jcago at New York. | year, as the result of her n+} weland at Boston. | counters with recalcitrant beasts. | Louis at Washington. | “King of the Jungle” centers troit at Philadelphia jaround the Lion Man—the role, 4 for which Crabbe was chosen| NATIONAL LEAGUE jfrom among scores of other ath-| w York at Pittsburgh. jletes tested for the part. He is aj poe a youth who was raised in the; ‘on at Chicago. 1 ‘. “ jjungle among lions, and iater Hladelphia at Chicago. | brought to America as a stited} fee ; : pot | ICHOLAS BOYD crashed from the gold-lined scene; BOYD forgot he was not a real-life hero, rushed in trainer, Climax of the picture '’ PMA comes hen the beasts break 9B clouds of movie fame to the depths of oblivion to save the girl, was trampled, emerged a crippled, broken tleose from their cages during a ptice To Subscribers fire and spread « trail of death} 7m in a few flashing seconds. Syntheti¢ deeds of man. Lucrative movie contracts, adoring fans, friends and | throughout the city. j ‘ : . . Please be prompt in pareve SPR STANTON ; courage before a camera had lifted him to the even his wife fell away—BOY D was “by the world forgot.” ee = co a pinnacle of public adulation, but it was ironically an act of RUBY AYRES writes this gripping story of a man Sea ca ie te you tee 30. {of tis city, recetved #8 sent beck flesh-and-blood heroism that wrecked his glamorousdomain. deserted when he most needed help and the unexpected love tae An unknown extra-girl was thrown from a horse ina film and romance that rebuilt his life. ats. His profit for delive.~ is S cents weekly on each | years ste i becriber, If he is not pald | A noiseless electric fan Fie mates |i consis, STARTS MONDAY, MAY 29 --- THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Od A A hadade i perfected.