The Key West Citizen Newspaper, May 28, 1952, Page 4

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Page 4 THE KEY WEST CITI. LIONS Thrift, the Lions walloped the Elks, 2°-2, in the first of . sched- uled doubleheader at Bayview Park last night. Drzal collected two doubles and two singles and batted in four runs. Thrift belted two do"bles and a single and al- so batted in four runs in four “trips to the plate. The Lions jumped on Buddy Owens in the first inning for three runs on three walks and two hits. They added 3 more in the second on two walks and doubles by Drzal and Leo Cur- ry. In the fourth, the roof really fell on Owens when the Lions combined 4 hits and 5 walks for seven runs. Owens’ wildness con- tinued in the fifth, and the Lions jumped on him and reliefer Dick Bomer for nine runs. The Elks’ two runs came in the first on two walks and Carl Trout’s single. In th« second game, a fourth ‘mning double by Wilbur John- ‘gon spoiled Sandy Snow’s bid for ano hitter as the Jaycees stop- ped the Kiwanis, 5-1. Snow struck out nine and issued three free passes as he registered his ‘third win of the season, An er- Tor, an infield out, and a wild pitch allowed the Kiwanis their lone run off the Jaycee ace. Trailing by one run, the Jay- * eees jumped on Roy Valdez in the third inning for two runs on three hits and an error. They added another in the fourth on a hit and three consecutive walks. The Jaycees finally iced the game in the sixth without the aid of a hit. Three walks, a hit batsman and a wild pitch gave them two more runs. Danny Puig, Jaycee shortstop, ‘led the winners’ attack with two hits in two official trips to the plate. LITTLE LEAGUE STANDINGS Teams- W. L. Avg. Lions 4 1 800 Jaycees ret SB TED Rotary Sa ae ee! Kiwanis 2 2 500 Elks — 1 3 250 VFW ——— 9 4 .000 FIRST GAME LIONS “ ABRHPOAE Martiheg, cf - 3 3 0 1 1 0 Thrift, 3b a3 0 ft % Garcia, 1b - 30600 Drzal, ss - §44121 L Cury,p.— 3 210321 Pazo, 2b 223i 2:28 ie ee et SS OO Dae 0 2 SO 0 8.6 J. Curry, #0 20000 Total _ 25 221215 8 3 ELKS ABRHPOAE Santana, H 3 0 1120 Solomon, ss —3 0011 0 $. Holland, Ih 21060 0 Owen, p-3b —.2 10220 Trout, ¢ eee 2S a SG Bonner, 3b-p .2 0 0 1 2 2) Averette, rf —1 0 0 000 Brennen, ff -1 00 0 0 0 Parks, ff -- 000000 Sibila, ef -100000 J. Holland #2 0 10 0 Total —__-_---- 1992315 9 2 Teams— R. H. E. Lions — vim te 3 Elks — ima oe - Thrift (4), Garcia (@, L. Cu Pazo (2), Trout bh — Thrift (2), Drzal (2), I Curry, pP — - Martinez, L. BB off Owens, ry 2; off Bonne: SO by Owens 3 Pazo, Curry, Paz 15: off *,. Cur its off Owens, 11 in 4 ngs; off L. Cur n ni it es: Rosa’ 1 Es q », Albury f 1 Ww L.¢ Loser: Owen SECOND GAME JAYCEES W 2 0 } 0 F 4 } H c P KIWANIS P x ¢ 2 Yates, ef 20008 WALLO 22 TO 2 LAST NIGHT Led by Mike Drzal and Gilbert *- Garcia, P Sonar School Defeats FT Group 4-3 ‘The two baseball squads sponsor- ed by the U. S. Fleet Sonar School played an air-tight ball game at the Seaplane Base last Sunday. The Sonar School Students edged out the Fleet Training Group 4-3. Captain W. H. Truesdell, USN, Commanding Officer of the U. S. | Fleet Sonar School tossed the first ball across the plate to Lieutenant Commander L. L. Tyndall, USN, Officer-in-Charge of Enlisted Men Instruction. After the first ball crossed the plate, the Fleet Training Group nine took over and batted in two runs in the first inning. The side retired and Willy Wisdom, hurling ito M. Vonesh, kept the Sonar Stu- dents from scoring in the first inning. In the second inning the Sonar Students closed the gap by bringing in one man. Then, in the third, they forged ahead 3-2 and then 4-2 in the fifth inning. The Fleet Training Group team slammed back in the seventh and drove in another run. But the So- nar Students held the lead and chalked up a 4-3 victory. J. Hinton, B. Hilliard and Lt. J. Brewer hurled to J. Landi for the Sonar Student team. Baseball Standings By The Associated Press Won Lost Pct. American League Cleveland a 632 Washington 2 «15 71 Boston 2 «15 571 New York uw 6S 531 Chicago 19 (18 514 St. Louis 13 2 439 (Philadelphia a3 38 A19 Detroit 0 23 303 National League New. York 25 8 758 Brooklyn eee -719 Chicago 20 16 556 Cincinnati 1% «17 514 St. Louis 17 20 459 Philadelphia a5. 238 455 Boston 13 19 406 | Pittsburgh 7 Si © 7386 Florida International League Miami 34 7 667 Miami Beach 3120 -608 Havana 29 20 592 Tampa 29-20 592 West Palm Beach 27 23 +540 St. Petersburg 26 24 520 Lakeland 16 34 +320 Fort Lauderdale 8 42 -160 Florida State League | DeLand 30 11 -732 | Orlando 2% 15 634 |Jaxville Beach 25 15 625 nford 2 #17 605 | Gainesville 2 18 Daytona Beach 17 28 Cocoa 15 25 - Leesburg 5 #2 349 | St. gustine 10 32 .238 Today’ ‘Today's Games By The Assoc American League hicago at St jeveland ONLY National New York St. Louis at ¢ Cine P { ONLY GAMES | Flrida International League Florida International League at Ha a GA ui Florida State League Palatka at Lee Daytona Beach 3 Orlando at ( Wednesday, May 28, 1952 i ELKS Followinc Through Pedro Aguilar JR. BASEBALL GAME TO BE PLAYED TONIGHT AT WICKERS’ FIELD At 7:30 p. m. tonight, Junior Baseball game to be played will be between Pepe’s Cafe and Evans Enterprise and they have} met three times before—Evans| has won every game. The Pepe’s boys have been at the last fold up and lose. | In the first game Pepe’s scored j two in the first and lost in the} third when Evans scored eight} runs—final score, Evans 11, Pepe’s 10. In the second game the score was nine to three in the last| frame and Evans came to bat in the seventh and scored seven runs | to win the game.” | In the third game, and the last | time they met, was on May 14 and Pepe’s scored three runs in the} very first frame and lost in the sixth, when Evans scored five| runs and won the ballgame. Manager Gras _ claims he will have the boys fighting tonight and he will get all they have in; them ... just watch their smoke | tonight. The clubs _ will thing like this. PEPE’S CAFE Player— Balbontin, 2b Bazo, cf Leon, 1b ~ E. Rodriguez, c L. Rodriguez, rf Peneda, 3b — Navarro, ss Osacar, lf — E. Mira, p —— lineup some- EVANS ENTERPRISE Player— 4 Diaz, 2b - P. Frohock, rf ——___ Atwell, 3b __. Knowles, ss —— Santana, p —____. G. Gates, 1b Kerr, c Herce, cf | Pita, If — i - .285) Umpires—Rocky Gugliermo at the plate, Rodriguez on bases. Game time—7:30 p. m. Bank Left Open DALLAS (® — Police shook the | | door of the Love Field State Bank j before dawn Tuesday and found it | open. Suspecting burglars, Officers J. | ‘W. Gallaher and C. H. Hockett | drew pistols and entered. | | The vault door also was open- |Piles of currency and sacks of |coins lay on the vault floor. But no burglar. The officers called a bank vice president. | “I guess somebody was just in a hurry to get home and left the bank open,” he said. 9| About one-sixth of the world’s {oil comes from wells in the } | East. | Overseas Tr. | Gian’ leading in almost every game and He v8-; over the Garver, who turned in shutouts in a By JOE REICHLER Associated Press Sports Writer If Brooklyn is distressed today blame it on New Y s Salvatore Maslie. Bis dreaded curve ball cutting the corner as sh as a razor, Sal (The Barber) Maglie treated |the Dodgers to one of his copy- righted clippings Tuesday night as he pitched the ants to a triumph, The righthander was in an es- pecially clip-happy mood. He not only strapped the oks with four meager hits but cut down six of them via strikeouts. S earned run percenta is now 1.14. It was a big victory for the Giants as well as for the 35-year- old Maglie. It not only was the * sixth straight triumph but it was their second in a row over their arch interborough rival and it increased their National League lead over the Brooks to a game and a half Maglie it was the ninth t win. He nas yet to taste defeat this season The Giants got only six hits off Loser Ben Wade and John Ruther- ford but they included homers by For Willie M and Don Mueller. Maglie’s wag not the only out- standing pitching performance Tuesday. Allie Reynolds of no-hit fame yielded only two safeties as he hurled the New York Yankees to a 7-2 victory over the Washing- ton Senators, Yogi Berra, Reynolds’ battery- mate in his two no-hitters of last year, hit a pair of homers and a double. Irv Noren, principal figure in the May 3 trade with Washing- ton, chipped in with a 2-run homer. Washington remained in a tie for second with Boston still 244 games off the American League pace when both Cleveland and the Red Sox were beaten. Vie Wertz’ 3-run homer climaxed a 6-run sixth-in- ning outburst by Detroit to give v8.|the Tigers a 5-4 decision over the Indians. Bob Lemon absorbed his fourth defeat after pitching five 7\innings of hitless ball. Gus Zernial’s 2-run homer in the §| fifth and Eddie Joost’s 2-run dou- ble in the ninth gave Rookie Harry 7) Byrd his first win and the Phila- delphia Athletics a 7-3 triumph over the Red Sox. Saul Rogovin pitched the Chicago White Sox to a 6-hit 3-0 victory St. Louis Browns. Ned his first two starts, absorbed his fifth straight licking. Enos Slaughter rapped four hits including a home run and Stan Musial also came through with a 4-bagger to lead the St. Louis |Cardinals to an 8-5 win over the Chi ce Eddie Peilagrini, inserted at first base because of a recurrence of a shoulder injury to Hank Edwards, banged a l4th-inning home run to give the Cincinnati Reds a 5-4 vic- tory over Pittsburgh. Boston’s Braves and’ Philadelph- ia’s Phils split a twi-night double- header. Thr field out runs in the the 2th and a 4-2 opening ve Braves two KEY WEST OUTBOARD SALES AND SERVICE 1116 EATON STREET REPAIRS TO ANY MAKE OF OUTBOARD MOTOR Prompt Service All Work Guaranteed ansportation Company, Ine. Fast. Dependable Freight and Express Service betw MIAMI AND een KEY WEST Also Serving ALL POINTS ON FLORIDA KEYS Between Miami Express Schedule (No Stops En R LEAVES KEY WEST DAILY CEPT SUNDAYS Fives at Miami at night. LEAVES MIAMI SUNDAYS) at 6:00 o'clock A.M. Local Schedule (Stops At All Intermediate F LEAVES KEY WEST CEPT SUNDAYS AM. and arrives o'clock P.M. LEAVES MIAMI SUNDAYS) and arrives at o'clock PM. Free Pick-Up and FULL CARGO MAIN OFFICE and WAREHO PHONES: 12 might and arrives at and Key West e EX at Py 12:00 o'clock Mid DAILY (EXCEPT o'clock Mid Key West DA at 8 t Mia pape Key West Delivery Serv INSURANC and Francis Sts $2 and 3 3-0 Maglie Sluts Cut Broo’! yn Devers 3 To 0 * | BASEBAT, RESULTS TUESDAY,S GAMES By The Associated Press American League | Detroit. 6 Cleveland 4 New York 7 Washington 2 |Philadelphia 7 Boston 3 | Chicago 3 St. Louis 0 |. National League St. Louis 8 Chicago 5 ‘Cincinnati 5 Pittsburgh 4 (14 in- nings) New York 3 Brooklyn 0 Boston 4-4 Philadelphia 2-5 (first | game 12 innings; second 10 in- | nings) Florida International League Miami 6 Fort Lauderdale 2 |Tampa 2 Lakeland 1 ‘Havana 7 St. Petersburg 5 Miami Beach 4 West Palm Beach 1 Florida State League Gainesville 8 Jacksonville Beach 6 Daytona Beach 5 Sanford 1 Leesburg 3 Palatka 2 Orlando 6 Cocoa 1 4 DeLand 7 St. Augustine 3 game A triple by Del Ennis and Willie Jones’ fly gave the Phils a 5-4 second-game triumph in the 10th. | Miss Betty Conant | To Become Bride Of Carl Holland Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Conant, 3532, | Avenue D, announce the approach- ing marriage of the daughter Betty | Gwenn to Carl A. Holland of Glous- | Glamor Gals n mc difficulty since there tions in the try. Know language ter, Ocho, The ceremony will take place | Monday, June 2 in the Naval Sta-| tion chapel at 2 p.m. with Chap-| lain Menges officiating The groom is attached to TU ,Boca Chica Filed an bride is employed by Sout Bell Telephone Compan: The couple will leave immedi. ately following the marriage rites for a brief honeymoon. Quick Marriages | circte Two Witt Mee Communist) 4¢ The Sterling Home WASHINGTON (Pp rulers of Hungary have stream-/ lined the marriage ceremony so that newlyweds can hurry b: to they are pronounced man wife. This obviously represents great; munist newspaper, since previou: ly each couple took an average of two days off from work. P-*= ~-*vice Station BROCK IsLAND, HIGHWAY NO! Hungarian newlyweds, the Com- munist newspaper “Fuggetle Mag. making sound track Italian: pay -y in Italy. Foreign’ film pl statemer players have more working for ts, me Invade Italy take less money Circle Two of the women of the First Mrs. T. R ing is 3 p.m Presbyterian Church their factory jobs 30 minutes after| meet next Monday, June 2 and| home of Mrs. James Sterling, 70932 | Truman Avenue. will at the Pritchard will assist progress, says a Hungarian Com-| the hostess. The time for the meet- | yarorszag” says the new gratitude.” ROOSEVELT Bayview Service t BLVD. & PALM AV<. mn with “have welcomed regulations deep The normal differences in length of life between different kinds ef animals as well as those between different individuals are believed to be inherited. TONIGHT KID GAVILAN Welterweight FRITZIE PRUDEN Welterweight SPONSORED 8Y CBS. MONROE BEER DISTRIBUTORS, INC Larry Dion, T. B. A. FRANCIS & JAMES STS,

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