The Key West Citizen Newspaper, June 12, 1952, Page 6

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‘THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ‘Thursday, June 12, 1952 xxkk xt kk kkk x kek _ELKS TAKE OVER FIRST SPOT IN LITTLE WEDNESDAY’S GAMES By The Associated Press American League New York 7 Detroit 2 Washington 1 Cleveland @ ca’s top baseball talent may be- come the hottest disc Sports. ..News On The Local And National Sporting Scene COCA COLA TIES WITH GENERAL [BASEBALL ELECTRIC FOR SOFTBALL LEAD | RESULTS New Kind Of | Lake Worth; Cocoa Baseball Records | In Class ‘A’ Finals BRIDEPORT, Conn. —Ameri-| FORT PIERCE (—It will be Lake Worth and Cocoa in the Class A high school baseball finals tonight at 8 p. m. EST. Lake Worth walloped St. Paul’s of St. Petersburg Wednesday, 12-1, Tennis Draw Set | At Park Tonight The draw for positions in the Key West Senior Mens Tennis Championships will be conducted tonight by tournament director Coach Van at 6:00 p. m. in Bay- favorites since Johnny Ray — all becaus a trio of Bridgeport sports fans pursued an idea that kids like | inside info direct from the lips ' is Boston 11 St. Louis 9 of the stars. to gain the finals and Cocoa| View Park. All interested are ia Philadelphia 5 Chicago 3 A plan here (Columbia Rec- | squeezed out a 7-6 decision over | invited to attend. LEAGUE AFTER 4.] WIN R ROTARY National League ords) has turned out ne; a ace Military Academy of Jack- Seedings for the tournament pa Chicago 3 Philadelphia 2 half million records in which | sonville at night. are made from the mens ladder. i xk kk Donnie Williams Twirls One Hitter As Coca Cola Nips Navy By 5-0 Score @ehind the one hit pitching of Donnie Williams, Coca Cola de- *. Hank Sauer Poles Out 3 Home Runs ‘By JACK HAND Associated Press Sports Writer % TROUT TOSSES 3 HITTER; SOLOMON, OWENS SHINE IN CRUCIAL WIN In the first game of a Little Lea- | gue doubleheader at Bayview Park Tuesday night, the Elks Club Big Turnover In FIL Pilots; St. Louis 3 Brooklyn 2 (10 innings) New York 3 Cincinnati 2 Pittsburgh 5 Boston 0 Florida International League four outstanding players dis-| Lake Worth got only seven hits pensed diamond lore in a friend- | but five St. Paul’s errors helped ly chatter. it pile up a 7-run lead in the sec- First stars to cut records for |ond and four more in the fourth. The seedings will be: 1, Bob Robison; 2, Jay Wagner; 3, John McNulty; 4, Leo Carey; 5, Peter Varela; 6, Harvey Sellers; 7, Guerra Out By GENE PLOWDEN Associated Press Staff Writer knocked the Rotary Club out of fourth place and took over this slot | themselves by defeating them 4-1, | and in the second game the second Lakeland 9 Miami 4 Havana 2 Miami Beach 1 Tampa 7 All-Stars 1 West Palm Beach 5 St.Peters! 0 Florida State League DeLand 8 Palatke 3 Orlando 9 Daytona Beach 6 Leesburg 7 Cocoa 5 Jacksonville Beach 12 Sanford 8 burg the educational series were Phi!|A booming double by Al Leverette Rizzuto and. Yogi Berra of the Yankees, Bob Feller of the Cleve- and Harry Thiel’s-single produced St. Paul’s only run in the fifth. land Indians and Ralph Kiner} Cocoa grabbed a 5-1 lead in the of the Pittsburgh Pirates. | Second on Jay Gould’s single, a General figures in what may be | triple by Douglas Pendergrass, a new boon for the record busi-| then a fielder’s choice, a stolen Coach Van; 8, Harold James. The darkhorse is a recent An- napolis graduate, Lt. Barnes, who is said to be a top star. Of‘the top eight players there is little dif- ference to be noted and a rous- ing tournament should. be ness are Roy Gregory, news- | paperman; Robert T. McHugn.| former local athlete and Air Force base and two errors. = — Two singles, a walk, a fielder’s choice and Charles Mainwood’s sult. netted another in the seventh but t | feated the Navy, 5-0, in the sec-| No one will dare ask Hank Sauer | Florida International League . . major of World War II; and John| double gave Bolles four in the | Cocoa had too much margin for : + ‘place Jaycees dropped the VFW air , 7 @ i ond game of the twin bill, en-/to sit out the 1952 All-Star game. |teams are changing managers so | 18-5. cos, ae re and former) Sixth and Lou Stark’s double !the Jacksonville younpsters. abling the Coke boys to go into a two way tie with General Elec- The big fellow from Chicago stands out today as the leading sluger frequently these days you can’t The Elks club drew first blood |in the second inning when Sambill Gregory father of five children, | dreamed up a record on which/|] 4 ‘li y h without a . SSS = © trie for the league lead. Williams, }in all baseball. tell: who's on the bene |Holland got on base on an error ie ; : '} im gaining his fourth win of the} Barney Shotton, National League | scorecard. by Rotary 3rd baseman Tony Dopp. Standings Loca ey a me cols Ges ' struck out six and walked | All-Star manager in 1950, got him-| St. Petersburg’ signed Bill Her-| Bonner drew a walk and Owe SE ee i 9 aegis ‘ i i i if ... | brood as well as youngsters in | put one. A sixth inning single by | self in a jam when he suggested | ring, a pitcher formerly with Pan- | singled to center to score Hollan Mai neichbockood; ote cubliced | beet the only bingle off | that big Hank give way to Dodger | ama City, Wednesday and a few The Elks scort in the thi By The Associated Press haan : ay ' ed: aga shied for interest tests. They went fo ia Duke Snider in the starting lineup. |hours later Havana announced | when Barrosa, Rotary center-field- Won Lost Pct. *6 2 ERS, SESE ‘ E x took a 1-0 lead in|Shotton found himself without a|Manager-Catcher Fermin (Mike) |er, let J. Holland’s fly ball get] American League i# Sine an iginabiconaliniaaks ‘on two walks and an |centerfielder in his fan-picked out-|Guerra was being recalled by the away from him for two bases, |New York 2 18 800! per-like record with a speech ; | error. They added two more in|field of Enos Slaughter, Ralph | Washington Senators. Santana struck out, but Solomon | Boston 30 21 ame | on one side and a color photo of 4 the third on Catala’s single, wil- Kiner and Sauer, So he decided! Herring replaces Herschel Held, | lined a single to centerfield to Cleveland 30 (22 577 the player ‘on the’ other. ’T liams’ walk. and Bob Lastres’|to bench Sauer. i acting . manager since Gerald score Holland. The Elks last two Washington a B S11 | Obstacles, financial and other- f double. They acquired two insui-| The wires sizzled with fiery pro-| (Spec) Dozier waz fired last Fri-| tallies came in the 4th im , | Chicago 2% «25 510 | fala ee edi re y +) ance runs in the sixth when Wil-|tests trom indignant Cub fans. | day. Rumor is that Andrea Fleitas, | when Sibila hit to Rotary third- | Philadelphia a 3 ATT After yh vats Gregory was «| liams lived on an error, @ walk They applied so much heat that | Havana first sacker, will be named | baseman, who threw wild to first. |St- Louis 23 42! wear the surrender point. ~- to R. Lastres and vase F Commissioner Happy Chandler, |to succeed Guerra. The Rotary Club scored their lone | Detroit 15. 38 eT eweres, McHugh and Kelly ts double. Lastres led Coca Cola’s heeding the mounting pressure, Earlier changes in the Class B tally in the 4th inning when Dopp National League then stepped into the picture. ‘ attack with a double and single| ruled “Sauer must start. circuit's managerial posts include | walked, stole second, third and | Brooklyn Bo 1B +729 | They were convinced the basic in three trips to the plate. Sauer hammered three of “Cous- | Joe Medwick, let out by the Tampa | then stole home. New York E) Se va idea was sound. They went to|l} Stevens, the Navy hurler was| in’ Curt Simmons’ pitches into|Smokers in favor of Oscar Rod-| Both Trout of the Elks and Que- | Chicago Oi hE Gir mhie’ and’. iritepeated: Jamas! touched for six hits, but he was/the leftfield bleacher area for a riguez and Rip Sewell dropped at /sada of the Rotary pitched good |St- Louis B.. 2 420 &° Sparling, syndicate sales man- tight in the pinches. He struck 3-2 Cub win over the Phillies. Back | Lakeland for Buddy Bates. ball. Trout issued 4 base on balls, | Cincinati 4 27 ATL ng ager. He, in turn, sold the proposi _ out 8 and walked five. It was|in 1950 he also hit three homers| Lakeland thrashed Miami, 9-4; | allowed only three hits, two of | Boston 9 2 3% sion to top executives, 4 his third loss of the season with-| off Simmons in an Aug. 28 game | Havana edged Miami Beach, 2-1;|them doubler by Kenneth Pinder, | Pittsburgh M40 | Rizzuto, Berra, Feller andj + outa win. at Wrigley Field. No other major |Tampa whipped the hapless All-| Rotary sparkplug, and one single| Florida Internatic..’ Lesgue Kiner were approached and they | oe league batter ever hit three |Stars, 7-1, and West Palm Beach|by Tony Dopp, Rotary thirdbase- | Miami 41 22 | quickly offered their cooperation. : A four run igo) ecg fomers off the same pitcher in| blanked St. Peterspurg, 5-0. _ man, while his teammates commit- | Miami Beach 43 4 642 + gave the Telco on uh two different games. Bill Bofette spaced 10 hits at/ted one error. Although Hubert | Tampa 4. 631 . * tion ar 10-6 victory over ae, Despite the bombing, Turk Lown | Miami while the ,Pilots shelled | Quesada did as well, walking | Havana 32 535 Fussy Chicken the first game of 4 reragepan “ needed some bonehead Phil base-|Labe Dean and Art Seijas for 16. |three and striking out 12 batters, |St. Petersturg 32. #4 « J » at the Bayview = aan runing and relief help from Dutch | Four walks, two singles and two his teammates committed 4 costly | West Palm Beach 30. 35 462'| CHARDON, 0. ‘®—Banty, a pet * Dewitt Roberts’ — ~~ ve in| Leonard to beat Simmons. — Miami errors gave Lakeland a 3-/errors and the Elks 3 timely hits| Lakeland 4 -333 | bantam chicken, does her egg lay- ‘ two runs ne pay Sond oe With the bases loaded in the|run margin in the first and the | by Solomon, Owens and Trout| All-Stars B 3 -197 jing ty the fireplace in the J. C. | _) wally and break.a | leadloc! sixth, Richie Ashburn singled to | Pilots kept going. | spelled the difference between vic- Florida State Le--ve Redgers home near here. of ° ve hors Sab ek eear ts se Brown oars Camelio Pascual, the 17-year-old | tory and defeat. DeLand 40-17 + .702| Mrs. Rodgers says the chicken es irom. to without touch-!and Raul Sanchez held Miami | In the nightcap, the VFW and | Orlando ir 627 | waits patintly outside the door j sa gap og ee plo ing second base. Two runs were|Beach to only four hits while | Jaycees were playing good ball up | Jaxville Beach 35 21 —.625 | until admitted. Then she walks to mM . al ene ‘ona itch, VXl nullified when the Cub: infield| Havana collected nine off Bob| until the last of the fourth with | Sanford 31 (6 -544 | an alcove near the fireplace, lays | : — peak with =e in their —_ sa ed ball at Eddie| Palmer. Singles by Tony Pachero |the VFW leading 54, but in the | Palatka 30 27 ©5268! am egg and strolls’ out again. * | Miksis stepped on secon retire |and Bob Tapanez, a double by | Jaycees half of the fourth the bot-|Daytona Beach 27 30 474 __ ‘ Be eta test hee Se ae oe for a third out. ta de Silvio hogs and Guerra’s fly | tom fell out and they scored 9 runs | Leesburg 23 s 397 Tokyo Fisures " uer's slugging was netted the Havana runs in the | and added 5 mote in the 5th. All | Cocoa 20 7 351 4 be when Higgins and Pigg singled. | news of the day, althou: ital | c A gh_ there | fourth. total the Jaycees capitalized on 14! i " * cergingaed oo the)/was much fussing and fuming| Tampa’s Smokers swept their 3-!VFW errors and 8 base on balls | U TOKYO (® — The metropolitan CORNER OF SOUTHARD ee catot ingles) Wednesday night at St. Louis | game set with the homeless All-| to chalk up their sixth win of the | Today S$ GAMES — government Wednesday said Tok AND WHITEHEAD STS. . “Yaxct scored twice in their hait| “here both Manager Chuck Dres- | Stars to make it 12 out of their | season, on only 6 hits. What little | | yo’s population June: 1 was 7,015,- te gasend owheo. Gahnest oe ge Captain ie ey oo ga 14 games. Red Barrett doled | Tony Estonez, VFW pitcher, lacked | By The Associated Press | 000. == Se ; rook: ive hits while Tampa col-|in control, he more than made up| American Lea : woe singled, Goodman walked, Shipps | the pt oe ytd hey : sige Boe | ave ' ' game with the St. Louis Cardi- | lected 13 off George Vidal. for it with his bat by hitting two | Detroit at New York { eo oe error | Pals. Del Rice's single in the 10th | Alex Patterson was nicked for |for three. The VFW was able to | Chicago at Philadelphia | gave Telco a single tally in the gave the Cards a 3-2 win, slicing | six hits and West Palm Beach | get to Manuel Perez, Jaycee pitch- Cleveland at Washington fourth frame. VX-1 jumped on a eee National League lead | pasted George Greene for 11, all|er, for 5 runs on 5 base on balls, St. Louis at Boston red Knowles for three runs to io four games. of them singles. George Sopko led | 4 errors, and 4 hits. Pere struck National Leagne e the ous ra walk, an er- Peden rss brag gs os |the hit parade with three in four | out four. Sandy Snow, old reliable, | New York at Cincinnati 5 ‘ i nts past cinnati, 3-2, a|times up. Jack Fox, Gordon Prag | who relieved Pere in the fourth klyn at St. Loui: Tcloe co aa game in 4-hitter and lite Murry Dickson | and Butch Lawing got two apiece | with one out, was able to hold the \phnndsiphie at Chicago | ; lof Pittsburgh blanked Boston, 5-0. |to cut the Saints’ lead over the | VFW to one hit and no runs for Boston at Pittsburgh the sixth stanza with a four j by | 8 rally as a result of two wi | sangre baba ee pi: | Indians to a game and a half. his 2 2-3 innings. He struck out 3.! Florida International League | 5 Ribas’ double, Maycardk en eir American League lead | Miami at Havana CELEBRATING 100 ¥ OF BREWING , with a 7-2 win over Detroit on | West Palm B t Ti EARS ~ rhea charged oo but | Johnny Sain’s pitching and home | Valian t Tr ix arabe at ulsed See | THE ORL D’s | was relieved for Roberts in the|TU8s by Joe Collins and Yogi | x | All-Stars vs Lakeland at St. Peters- | Ww MOST FAMOUS fifth who got credit for his first|Berra. | burg. win of the season. Knowles struck | Washington's Bob _ Porterfield | Florida State League | out five and walked five. Rob- |Shut out Cleveland’s Bob Lemon, | | DeLand at Daytona Beach erts struck out four men and! 1, to let the Boston Red Sox take | Palatka at Jacksonville Beach passed one in his two inning | Ver second place with a come-| stint. Richards started for VX-1|from-behind win over St. Louis, | but was relieved by Otte in the/ 119. The Red Sox blasted Satchel | second and was charged with the Paige for six in the ninth, includ- loss, Roberts led the attack with | homer by Catcher Sammy White. | two doubles in four trips to the! The Philadelphia A’s knocked off | plate. He batted in three runs. | Chicago, 53, on a 4-run rally in} Cabot aided the attack with a|the sixth that included a 2-run Leesburg at Orlando | Sanford at Cocoa, ‘Port 168 Downs Insurance Nine | double and a single in four! homer by Al Clark, filling in for | | ™ ji $ 4 _ y 4 j ] American Legion Post 158/ tries. | injured Gus Zernial. won their fifth straigut game last eee eerery: ae i . night in the American Legion Jun- — . E.} ior Baseball loop at Wickers Field Coca Cola —..001 202-5 6 ) Charges Filed | when they defeated the Key West javy —.....-. 000 000-0 1 2 pets oe a Insurance Company nine by a 5-2/ 4 a irs mul in Team— R. H. E./ charges have been filed pei! “aration yes yoo Telco —————. 320 104—10 8 3 two 18-year-old servicemen in the | moments led to his downfall. VX-1 — 120 300-6 6 2) death of Lloyd L. Minton, whose} The Legionnaires scored two) U. Of Florida’s Hall To Defend High Jump Title GAINESVILLE w—J. L Hall, University of Florida football and track star, will defend Rational collegiate high jump at Berkeley, Calif., this week-end Hall's hopes of competing in the Olympics at Helsinki this summer ride on the NCAA meet. It will Serve as a qualifying event for the nie ‘tyfals later this month i still faces possible from a pulled leg muscle Tt has been a severe handicap to his jumping all spring, keepi him out of some meets. “It will troub.e (Papa) | \body was found floating in Bis- cayne Bay May 25. | Justice of the Peace Thomas S. | Ferguson issued the order against | Pfc jCorps and Carl Girard Crocker, a sailor. | According to Homicide Detective arence E. Hall, both youths ad- itted beating a man severely and j throwing him in the bay the ni {before Minton’s body was found. (Jerry) jbe in perfect condition today and jon the blink tomorrow,” Hall re- ported d to nurse it very nd even then I never it's going to stiffen das No. 2 high compete at Ber was fifth at Miwaukee Hester, F Tr. also w He wek keley last Donald Reed of the Marine | | counters in the first on two walks, | an error and a single by Key. In the fourth, they scored one | more on a walk, an error and a single by Bennett The Insurance nine scored their first run in the fourth when Salgado walked and Perez singled to right, and Salgado} scored on a bad throw to the plate. ; In the sixth, the Ingurance Com-/| pany scored their last run when | Perez doubled to left, and ad-/ vanced to third and subsequently scored on a bad throw which failed to net a ever Bob Kiphuth has been swimming | coach at Yale University since; isi6. During the past 100 years we have produced almost 100 million barrels of the world’s finest beer ...much more than any other brewery. And today Budweiser is more popular than ever before. & —_) — ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC ie, too Make Budweises the Beer of Your Li . ST. LOUIS, MO. NEWARK, N. 4

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