The Key West Citizen Newspaper, July 11, 1947, Page 5

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CLASS A SOFTBALL TITLE WITH 9-5 WIN OVER V.F.W.; PLAY MERCHANTS TONIGHT: GIANTS, 11 t04; DODGERS WIN TWICE ects scrtece' 2°? Jette Baymont 8 tow eee SPORTS SHOP WINS FIRST-HALF Rule Slight Choice To BeatY¥——________ : Case Pistttalt Cham-| Six Turnesa Brothers Play-for-Play' plone In 24)ut-0F-3 Se. B 4 * b) a ‘But Amateur Willie May Top ’Em Bob's Sparts Shop won the first | Peewee . : | half Class A softball champion ohip lest night at Bayview Park outslugning the V ns of For- ean Wars, to win. 9 to 5. The Sports Shoppers start a two-out ranencen | the Key West B first half champions, for the ity first hall tithe { The results of the series will | on far toward deciding what team represents Key West in the fortheorming State wftbali cham- plomehips In the second ¢ at Bayview Park. Noval Hospital whipped Adams Dairy, 15 to 7 cy on eshiietion ve were in true cham Bob's b last might in re- pranship turn polemae the Vets who needed into a tie " wily & win to go the first half tithe The Sports Shop drew bleed im the first frame twe outs, Villareal singled to ter, Merling singled to left and Villoreal seored on a wild pitch. | In the second. the Vets scored twe and went into the lead. Her nemder walked, Castro hit a dou first With The seven golfing Turnesa brothers—six. pros and amateur Willie— line up in order of age. From left, Phil, Frank, Joe, Mike, Doug, Jim and Willie. By FRED STAFFORD AP Newsteatures HITE PLAINS, N. Y.—Normally the best policy is to string | We te right center, and scored . . .. om Tynes’ Gy to left 1 wit the pro’ over the amateurs. Nine times out of 10— ln the fourth. Bob's scored Maybe more often—it's a wise one. fer rune McCarthy fanned, Rob- But start talking this pro-over-amateur theory around this singled to ©. Johnny City and nearby Elmsford, where the famous clan of seven golf- Gude beet ome out and James img Turnesa brothers—Frank, Phil, Joe, Mike, Doug, Jim and Gaeden laid down a bunt and beat illie—grew up and you'll run into arguments. There are @ eut. Castro threw to third and | cil of links fanatics who hold that Willie, youngest of the fet Roberts with the ball, Buster Turnesa brothers and only. worms Beker doubled to right amateur in the group, is the! and Johnny and James scored. best golfer of the lot. MS ff ft ft Carbonell singled wo left d Bo-| They're i i her went to third. Carbonell stole that Willie has helped Ameriea’s| Lo» Albury’ In Buc Roster Stands For | rend ond Baker scored on the team lug home the Walker cup pley Carbonell was out at sec: , and has personally returned | | ond when he over ran the bag. | wearing the British Amateur ¢ Je,,,9 In the fifth the Vets scored crown. Jim’, Not Esmond one more on a walk to Alonzo Starti: tnt in the pro- ‘ Then Machin smacked to} Willie obec is that Bah Calling all City Baseball conter and Alonzo scored -| hot and all he needs is the op- League fans, players and of- chin wee thrown out, catche ficials!) Esmond Albury is to| portunity to play steadily. He thd fm thelr helf the Sports! gained titles in numerous NOT to play with the Pirates. Shuppers scored one K r| Westchester events as.a youth The report in yesterday's ver pete om em error, MeCarthy ; when he spent a great deal of Citizen to the effect that fhe seertieed him te second, and, time on the Fairview Country veteran Red Raider catcher Johemy Cetens single brought) club layout, where his dad, is now in the Pirate fold was oom Bob's three Michael, was employed’ and | based on the roster submit- ted to this paper for pub- lication, containing the name E. Albury. mere fame im the sixth for the | where all seven Turnesa boys hell game Three errors and three | did their golf groundwork. bite turned the trick. Baker sin- | John Inglis, veteran Fairview } ied 1 center, Carbonell was’... Met: litan PGA pre- Old time baseball follow- ee on an error. Baker scoring eee eee ne reine eos mterg | ers et The Citizen thought it Villarest was safe on an error bY and tells how he used to see the} must be Esmond. They Arias and Carbonell scored on Turnesa faithfully couldn't think of any other youngest om error by the cateher. Sterling practicing his swing in the front wee wut and Kerr singled to left yard of the family home in Elms- whe made an error and Villareal ford | sored In the last inning they waite a student at Holy Cross red two runs. Singles bY Willie played plenty of golf and und Garcia, At von the New England intercol- Albury with the initial “E.” Roy Hamlin, somewhat dis- turbed by the furore caused by the announcement, ex- plained this morning. how- ever, that Jim Albury is the id Castro eash hit ed sai rat player meant. The “E,” it the losers and hla eH seems, stends for Eugene, wice meda : -| Sim's 1th 1 ‘ aber ee vline oy ong pate tercollegiate event, and gained Tinie little enown: reel name aney Onden cach wo for epiaiond O ie Reet the In the field, Santana, jhe, %™! moat ote SS SS bd hed deal Alonzo and Hernandez were the ie won the Westchester Coun- | Reet for the losers, and James ,, var crown in 1936 and '37| SQ) tha yames Ouden. Cortonell, Baker and ong added the Metropolitan ama-| Villeree! for the winners. Johnny BAYVIEW PARK teur title the Ouden made « great catch for Upon grad Fre RREa Bob's | cross in’ '38, Willie added the [as oe fieore by innings RH. E. New York State amateur cham- /*0° os : Vet : 020 010 2—5 9% 6 pionship to his string and, in | 8:00—Bob's Sports Shop vs. Key | Bobs 100 415 x9 13 0 September of that year, he hit West J SSCHENS An enen| Aves ond Costro: Roberts and. his high point by capturing the AG game @ ne cna Corbemeti | National Amateur at Oakmont. | title series (9 innings). ‘Teo bewe bite Cagtro, Sterling. Pittsburgh. How finely he had lfor the 1946 U.S. Open but then Rate tolen bases. Carbonell, developed his game with steady ('°! ieenge =r Villareal cpiiiee bit’ McCarthy: play during this period is par- | withdrew oie! let jon ca tenes deuthie plays. Baker to Villareal tilly shown by the overwhelm. ‘take his place in the big test al t Sterime. Santane (o Ruedo; ing margins with which he took Cleveland. title matches. He defeated for- He participated in the National} vruck by Roberts 3. by | h ; Aves 2 bawee om balls off Rob- mer stete titlist, Tommy Good- | Amateur but, not having had an oe 2 off Actas & bit by pitch- win, 8 and 7, and thrashed jopportuity for steady practice or ee MeCerthy earned runs: Vet- Bud Abbott by the same count |tourney play, fell by the wayside orem: 5. Bob's 5; time of game: in the National finals. early. 130 umpires: F Vilaree! and J., Starting a business career and| Even this Spring, after being} Mire: scorer: Aguilar the serving four years in the;named to the Walker Cup team, e Navy, Willie found himself with|he had little opportunity to put tm the opening game, for Naval little time for competitive golf.!in heavy practice. His job kept | and Miller each He was discharged from service |him from winter golfing in the} ‘ely and Martin, Rodg- late in 1945 and last season join-' South. Cold and wet weather had| “ky two ewch Aled Knollwood Country Club,|Jinksmen in this area cooped up| for the where brother Mike is profession-|until late Spring. Then a bout score, Griffen went al xious to further his busi-| with the flu bedded Willie. Adams and was ness career and to spend as much It wasn't until he reached end cight time as possible with his wife and| Scotland with the Cup team ' » the leet three frames. two children—Anne, four, and} that he had an opportunity to Mille veheved Martin fer the Charles, two—Willie found him-| do any day-after-day practic- Heapite! and steuck out five bat. self pretty much a week, end| ing. He put in long hours pol- ters in the two innings he pitch Ifer last season. He qualified) ishing his game before the Heapital Henke hit three ore and Br Cree het tw With o tie im te piteh for nidhed for seven hits losers od ——_ —_—_——— | St. Andrews event and was one | te the field. the best were first-half winners read something! of only two Americans to pick | Welle, Rodgers. Bresnesky and like this up two points in the Cup com- | Demald for the wir Bob's—Carbonell, Roberts, Ster-| petition. Graham, Al Cruz ling, Parks, Jack Vilareal, R. With the Walker grind be- Maigret for the losers. Arnold James and John Ogden,| hind him .along with a week of ania R. H. E. D. McCarthy, R. Bethel, K. Kerr,| steady practice at Carnoustie, oat 408 5-15 15 4 G. Gonzalez and Dutch Goehring,| Willie had his game at a peak O40 120 0— 7 6 6 manager when the British Amateur came West Merchants—A. Brost, rtin bes y and Well. Ke) along. He battered down Brit- | woes ‘onion al D. Fernandez, S. Griffen, C. Val-| ish and American foes alike. Home run: Mh wee-base dez, Rodriguez, Alonzo, C. Garcia,! He capped his showing in the hit Miller, ¢ we hits Henke; R. Garcia, Blanco, sado, R.|finals with a magnificent come- eteten beees Miler, Figaro, F. Beiro, C. Vidal, Alayon and) back after being five holes Sends, Ingraham; bases on balls: Manny Alayon, manager, __ down at the end of the first off Martin 5, otf Walker 8, off The firs f championship se-| nine against a former West- Griffen 3, struck out: by Miller ries will start at 8 o' clock tonight,| chester rival, Dick Chapman. & ty Ma 3. by Walker 8 by and will go the full nine innings.|_ And, at his present peak, many Officials will be Floyd Villareal | fans hereabouts will bet you Wil- _ and James Mira as the umpires |lie could take any of his six pro- ja doubleheader THE KEY WEST CITIZEN DON BLACK CAME FOR Slap Double Defeat Qn Chicago Cubs, 4 to 0 and | 7 to 2; Braves Split As; Yanks Win In 9th | (By Associated Press) H NEW YORK, July 11—A no-: Black of the Cleveland Indians for a 3-0 win, marked yesterday’s major league clashes, but from the pennant-race angle the St. Louis Cards’ 11-4 triumph over the New York Giants was even more significant. The Cards left no° doubt that they are in the National League free-for-all to stay and have put hit, no-run game dished out to ; the Philadelphia Athletics by Don } HURLS NO-HIT, NO-RUN- PAGE THREE TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS | Apply To Wed (Know America) 7 An application for a matriage Mayor William O’Dwyer 3-0). WIN; CARDS DEFEAT jivezcc 2°"! Sites wise food At Bat With ‘The Hat’ their early season slump far be- three Giant pitchers, the World Champs enabled Red Munger to coast to his eighth win, against one defeat. Stan Musial homered \for the Cards in the first with} | one on and Thompson for the Giants with none on in the sixth. Black’s superb performance was especially satisfying to the Indian ace as it was with the Athletics that he had had some ldifficulties as a “bad boy” pitch- er. ~ With the Cards flapping almost at their heels, the Brooklyn Dodgers earlier had taken two games at Ebbetts Field from the Chicago Cubs, 5-3 and 4-3, Ralph Branca rang up his 13th and 14th victories. A pinch single in the tenth inning by Arky Vaughn drove in the winning run of the } second game after Branca had pitched two and two-thirds in- nings as reliefer for Harry Tay- lor. The twin win put the Dodgers a full game ahead of the second- place Boston Braves who broke | even in a doubleheader with the ! Cincinnati Reds. In the opener, | Tommy Holmes led the 16-hit | Brave attack with two homers. | Mike McCormick drove in the deciding runs in the eighth with | a double with two on. The three-hit .pitching of Bob Lively turned the Braves back in the nightcap, played under the lights, at Boston, 2 to 1. Bill Voi- ; selle holed up with Lively in a mound duel but gave way to! Clyde Shoun in the late innings. Bob Feller and Phil Kleinman emerged with a 2-1 win over the} Philadelphia Athletics in the sec- | ond game of a doubleheader last | night at Cleveland, although Al| |Fowler held the Tribe to only |four hits. George Binks’ homer in the sixth was the lone Phila- delphia run. Edwards’ round- tripper in the seventh with none on was the deciding margin. The game was the nightcap of opened with Black’s no-hitter. Joe Page won his own ball game for the New York Yankees by coming through with a ninth inning home run for a 4-3 vic- tory over the St. Louis Browns at St. Louis in a night game. Page had relieved Spud Chandler. The second-place Boston Red Sox and the Detroit Tigers, an eyelash behind them, played a} 2-2 tie at Briggs Field. The twi- light game was called after eight innings. The Washington Senators took two games from the Chicago White Sox, 4-0 and 7-2, Early Wynn winning his 10th of the sea- took two games from the Pitts- burgh Pirates, 7-2 and 2-1. Results: NATIONAL LEAGUE First Game | At Philadelphia R. H. E., Pittsburgh 243 Philadelphia 7 Ad (0) Bagby, Singleton and Salkeld;| Leonard and Seminick. Second Game At Philadelphia R. H. E. Pittsburgh 1 5 0! Philadelphia 2 6 1; 1 Higbe and Howell; Hughes and Seminick. Shoun and Camelli. } First Game | The rosters of the two leagues’ and Pedro Aguilar, scorer. fessional brothers, At Brooklyn R. H. E. Chicago — 81 Brooklyn sa . -512 0 Borowy, Meers, Meyer, Kush | hind them. Clouting 15 hits off: Game Between F.-I. Baseball Statisties' AP Newsfeatures Harry (The Hat) Walker, Philadelphia Phillie batting star. takes his two-toned bat to the plate and follows this fidgety routine before every pitch. Walker rests the bat between his knees, doffs his cap (hence “The Hat"), scratches his arm, replaces the lid, blgws on his fingers, puts the bat back between his knees while he rubs his palms. The ritual pays off and Harry lashes out another hit in the bottom Photograph. By The Associated Press STANDINGS Florida-International League All-Stars And Havana Postponed GSneein’ to The Citizen’ HAVANA, July 11.—Post- ‘pened from last night on ac- | 2Cluee ME i Ee count of rain, the game be- = ,,¢Vane 62 26 705 tween the Florida-Interna- MEL Beech 48 37 1365 tonal: League Mista 2nd wy est Palm Beach ... 39 43 1476 the league-leading lavana ze a $e ‘ Cubans will be held here this UP ug 38 30 oe evened: ‘Lakeland 3059 The All-Stars rate only a slight favorite to defeat the league-leading Cubans who iFort Lauderdale 21 62 National League Ww. have a good lead in the F.-I, | Club— Ls, pennant race. Posibility of Brooklyn 44 31 a full house at the annual Boston 42 31 38 31 38 35 38 40 36 38 32 34 rgh 28 45 American League Ww. classic is indicated by the | | advance ticket sale. 1 -15 and Scheffing: Branca, Behrman, Casey and Edwards. F New York St. Louis Second Fame Club— .L. Pet.| At Brooklyn R. H. E. New York 48 26 .649 Chicago 3.11 0 Detroit 37 32 536 {Brooklyn . 4 6 0 Boston 38 33.535 (Ten Innings Clevelz 33 32 .508 Chipman Erickson, Meyer and. Phii 36 38) 480 McCullough; Taylor, Branca and Chicago 35 41 461 Hodges. Vashington 32 38.457 ———— . Louis 25 44 .362 Night Gare i ee At New York R. BoB St. Louis li 13. 0 GAME RESULTS New York 411 1; National League Munger and Garagiola; (Thurs ’s Scores) tung, Beggs, Trinkle and Cou Brooklyn 5-4, Chicago es | Boston 6-1, Cincinnati 4-2, sec- | AMERICAN LEAGUE ond game at night, i | First Game | Philadelphia 17-2, Pittsburgh tee at Chidago. | At Chicago R. HE. 2-1, pon) in the On nee AU Cree eee washington 4 8 0! St. Louis 11, New York 4, night At Philadelphia, the Phillies [Ghar ain 0 game. American League Scores) go 012. called at} Wynn and Evans: Smith, rist, Maltzberg » Second Game 2, Detroit 2, At Chicago Vig leh 19% darkness Washington Gis] 3-2, adelphia 0-1, ; Chicago 210 2 second gam | Scarborough and Ferrell; Pap-; New York 4, St. I ish, Grove, Maltzbeyger and game. Tresh. The fT using under- At Detroit R. H. E.' ground gasification of coal on a | Boston 2 7 Olcommeric le | Detroit 231 (Calied, end of 8th, darkness) Ferris and Tebbetts; Newhous- er and Wagner. BROADWAY Day Game Day Game | | At Boston .} At Cleveland R. H. E. CIGAR STORE \ Cincinnati : Philadelphia 000 Boston 6 16 1iCleveland 3.10 0 610 Duval Street | aariensberger, are and} McCahan and Rosar; Black and: | Lamanno; a t, anfranconi, ; Hegan, i | )Shoun and M: “ — H COMPRETE: | =e ae BASEBALL | Night Game At Cleveland 2. HE, ie At Boston R. H. E.!Philadeiphia 16 0 ' Cincinnati 2 7 1-Cleve 24 0 SCORES H Boston 13 Fowler and Guerra; Feller, i Lively and Lamanno; Voiselle,;Kleinman and Hegan. | POPULAR BRANDS of i Night Game ' At st’ bau Cigars and Cold New York 3| . I SCRE Page and Rovner Soft Drinks i Sanford, Potter and Moss, - aa {born in Maryland, 54 years ago. ! {dent ef Armstrong Cork, Lancas- fats for magnesium is in the | MILL N Howard Vincent O’Brien of West Palm Beach, with County Walter Wanger, movie produc- | er, born in San Francisco, 53 | weekly. . years ago. | Dr.,Samuel A. Goudsmit, Univ. Your Green uate a STAR * BRAND of Michigan professor of physics, | atomic energy authority, born in | Holland, 45 years ago. | | ! Thomas B. McCabe, president | AMERICAN COFFEE of Scott Paper Co., Philadelphia, | and CUBAN foreign liquidation commissioner, ! —Try A Found Teday—— SEEM ERTS Clarence Buddinton Kelland, of Phoenix, Ariz., popular novel- ist, born at Portland, Mich., 66 years ago. 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