Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Stepping By Wins Key Wes: | Marianao Will ‘Start In The Feature Race Here Tonight Fred Palermo’s five year eld, Stepping By, came in a winner last night in the Key West Consolation Derby ever a top field by an pressive six lengths. Some- thing of a longshot, the win- ner started from the number one box and took the lead early in the race to pay 21.00, 20.80 and 5.60. Brindle Comer was an @asy second and Noremac tan third. The Comer paid a whopping 35.00 and 4.80 while Noremac returned 5.20. Avenger, a heavy favorite of the fans, ran a disap- pointing sixth. As action at the track moves into its 89th night, R. K. Hutchings’ Marianao will be out seeking his fifth win of the meeting here. In six starts, the frisky speedster has finished first four times. Chief threats are expected to come from Cliff Waller’s Please Note and Paul South- erland’s Jack O’Lish. Other entries include No- vella, . Chuckie’s Choice, Magnate, Fusbudget and Jack Cameron, Post time is 8:15 p.m. 2 Boxing Results WEDNESDAY’S FIGHTS By The Associated Press FT, WORTH, Tex.--Willie Pep, , 129%, Hartford, Conn., outtpointed Jack Blair, 131, Dallas, 10. Dick Says— If the Key West Police Depart- im- Date of Last Race MILE Time—31.4 5- 9"* Adjust 5- 9° Paleface Pete 5- 9° Thunderette Staver 5- 9* Phoned 5- 9° All Time 5-11? Storm Bugler 5- 9° Judy Go Winner—Mrs, H. E. ADJUST PALEFACE PETE THUNDERETTE 6142 . Russell’s ie 2 4.00 1.50 5.00 * O 99.00 4.00 « 5.00 .*! 7.10 * 99.00 Qutr Red B., 10.00 3.40 4.80 4.20 7.40 3.20 Quin.ela Stron; 8 Clo. No factor June, 1951. Real Red—Cei Date of Last Race SIXTH RACE—5-16 MILE Time—31.4 gz finish se Tim| Highest Reward Suki Susie _ Spring Festival Peck ‘un Her! 3-4 J va TIMBER Date of Last Race SECOND RACE—S5-16 MILE Time—22 Social Success Wise Mike Winner—Cliff Waller’s Brindle SOCIAL SUCCESS WISE MIKE Date of Last Race 58 70 6542 61 51 6042 5832 68 ber Jack UR DIONE ‘b’s Pride Bronunanen 3 B., 13. JACK SEVENTH RACE—S-16 MILE a 5.80 Easil; x 4 4.00 * Steady gain 8.10 * On inside 1.60 *! Early speed 68.80 *! No factor 15.60 2.40 21.40 Fell ist turn . eae Find—Jo Ann Lee 3. 3.60 Quiniela (2-3) 34.20 7.60 Time—31.2 5- 9” 5- 9° 5-11* 5- 4° Bushy Jury Duty Lucky Tinkle 5- 8° Beach Tramp 5-11‘ Sooner Shindig 5- 8'* Summer Special 5- 9* Smart Dude 5- 9° Waneetah Winner—Paul Sutherland’s R ;USHY JURY DUTY LUCKY TINKLE a4 55 56 69 50% 68% 70 54 4.60. Won 3.60 °* J 6.49 WIM OH WIM wHN co 1 on ND ed B- = 1951. 0. B 3.00 6.40 8 , July, 1.20 Daily Double—Adjust and Bushy paid 44.20 5- 9° 5-11° 5- 9° in foto 5-11" Goo Kitty Hutch Royal Kahili Vendome Navy Diver 5- 9° Last Summer 5- 9° Initial 5-11° Fancy Trouble 62 70 63% 60 63 592 68 6844 P RAI WOO d And Glad Saved ground * Good effort On inside “i Late rally 30") Shut off 20 * Faded back 6.40 * No factor 10.40 * Outrun Winner—R. K. Hutchings’ Blue Fawn D., October, 1949. Honest Hutch— Dancii ing Luck KITTY HUTCH ROYAL KAHILI VENDOM. Date of Last Race THIRD RACE—5-16 MILE Southern Gent Mares td le Song Real Black ‘Jenny Mc Tender Moment thy Ann Luck Winner—E. F. SOUTHERN Gi IRISH CHEER PURPLE SONG Date of Last Race Guajira Gail Fax Focus Slick Miss Aska Kay Top News Cameron Hilander Mail. Pouch 4 Snipes’ Black D. ENT 51 57% 66 57 59% 53 60 63% Winner—Marianao Kennels’ Faw 66 59 56 63 53 65% 59 17.40 Quiniela FOURTH RACE—5-16 MILE Pes macnmeae = Rosanne 55 wsemuann ES Date of Last Race FIFTH RACE—5-16 MILE 5- 9" My Bitsey Nick Lutz Jaden Payette Top Bracket 5- 9* Glen Page 5- 9° Rathmore Lass 5-11° King’s Gal 53. Winner—E. F. Snipes’ Brindle B., MY BITSEY NICK LUTZ JADEN BASEBALL RESU AMERICAN By The Associated Press New York ment has its way, B-girls, scant- | St ily - clad entertainers, and the *bump-and-grind’ dancers of many | ¥' Yoeal nightelubs are going to be | Pause felics of the familiar past. The heat is on! Police Lieutenants Cer- ezo and Hernandez can be obser- ved at all hours of the night mak- ing quick, unannounced visits to the places which specialize in girly shows. When you reach my age, you're not particularly interested in res- que entertainment but I'll have to admit that the words ‘bump.- and + grind’ immediately make me perk up my ears. That's because I’m in the tire business - Dick’s Tire New York 9 Cleveland 4 Boston 3 Chicago 0 Philadelphia 2 St. Louis 1 Detroit at Washington ppd-~ TODAY'S SCHEDULE ‘Chieago at New York Cleveland at Boston Detroit at Philadelphia (n) ‘St. Louis at Washington (n) NATIONAL By The Associated Press ahs Service, you know, at 929 Truman | $t Ave, I can’t help but think how U. S. Royals or re-caps from Dick's are made to take every sort of raul surveillance. (It is reported jin drivers were so angry 4 nertube, or battery troubles. My phone number is 2-2842. (adv.) Chicago YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Milwaukee 1 New York 0 ‘Other games ppd-weather TODAY'S SCHEDULE New York at Cincinnati (nm) Brooklyn at St. Louis (n) rhia at Chicago Pittsburgh at Milwaukee (n) YESTERDAY'S B ESULTS Jacksonville 4 2 ston 4 City ppd~wet Louisville ppd-wet greende 4 Columbus 3 Won Lost Pet. Behind see foe rae) 2 3 rn 5e 6 te ate 6 Seratched April, 1950. Bi 17.20 7.80 8.80 7.60 15.60 1.40 5.69 7 2.90 * Earl: 5.60 No 15.20 '° Outr 5.80 2.60 ‘Quiniela ol. Cameren—Miss Ruth Time—31.3 Save ( ly pace ill Stroller—Gangway Miss 4.20 5- 9° 5- 9" Parking Sam 5- 9* Bonnie Acre 5-11° Hazy Moon 5- 8" Flighty 5- 9° Obe 5- 9° Picture un (2:3) 48.60 Time—31.4 Date of Last Race 5- 9° Pagoda Forward E EIGHTH RACE—5-16 7 4 6644 1 59 63 57 6812 80% W-aner—I’, B. Stutz’ Blue Brindle. Town PAGODA FORWAR. i 6 3 2 8 4 6 1 3 8 2 6 7 dience 5 4 2 7 5 6 3 8 7 -» July, 5 Ouwmsnuse wo D PARKING SAM Date of Last Race 20, 11.60 TENTH RACE—3-8 MILE Quiniela (6-8) 55.00 MILE rE 2 3 ry 5é 6 Time—31.3 Saved ground * Steady gain * Outfinished " Late effort * ‘No mishap * No factor 7 4.20 * Weakened 8 12.20 * Outrun 1949. Razor’s Edge—All Over 3.80 4.20 -Quiniela (3-4) 35.60 4.00 1.70 31.60 4.20 12.20 11.40 3.20 Time—39.2 KEY WEST CONSOLATION DERBY 5- 9° Stepping By Brindle Comer 5- 9'° Noremac 5- 9° Honest King 5- 9°° Claro 5. 9” 5-'9'° Ave 5- 9° Bee’ 5- 9'° Renegrade f Winner—Fred Palermo’s Brindle 64 pe te Lee 5 2 nger A ’s Trouble 7 5 2 3 8 4 6 al Berane 7 5 13 34 8 6 47 68 nd Whi Lightning Roll STEPPING BY BRINDLE COMER NOREMAC 21.00 gS ss o 271 3u aa 52 6t ,p 9.50 Saved grouvd 11.30 * Best of rest 14.60 “} Outrun sir. 3.70 * No mishap 25.60 **! No factor 60 “4 Off late 110.80 * No contender 8 8.40 * Outrun D., August, 1949. Flying Joc— Quiniela (1-7) 32.20 ok dal 83s Date of Last Race TENTH RACE-3-8 MILE Time—39.3 d for win effort late d gap 5-92 5-11° 3- 9° 5-1i* 5- 8° 5-9" T. Idol actor un (6-7) 53.00 5- 9" Man Power 5- 9" Beseech Cindy Sue Daisy’s Silver Gay Beauty Painter Pete V. Star Winner—Cliff Waller's Brindle D., MAN POWE BESEECH 4 3 si er 24 5.5 ee § 7 6 Red re R CINDY SUE 28.20 10.80 LT RNATIONAL Ottawa 3 Toronto 0 Buffalo at Montreal ppd--wet grounds hester at Springfield ppd-rain aS paeaed 6 Baltimore 2 (called end 5th, PACIFIC. COAST 7 Sap Francisco 0 Los Angeles 3 San Seattle 4 Hollywood Oakland 4 Sacramento 1 TODAY's Basi Diego 1 0 ity Charleston at Louisvile Indianapolis at Minneapolis at St. Paul ALABAMA-FLORIDA at Andalusia Eufaula at Fort Walton Panama City at Greceville TEXAS Houston at Dallas San Antonio at Fort Worth Beaumont at Tulsa Shreveport at Oklahoma City INTERNATIONAL BASEBALL STANDINGS y The Associate? Press INTERNATIONAL ‘Won Lost Rochester * Toronto ~ Syracuse ~ Springneld AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Kansas City St. Paul Following Through Pedro hate Both clubs are at top sir jand holding regular drilis for jannual Armed Forces Day ba ball classic which will be played Saturday at Walker Field ‘The Navy will have an extreme. ly strong elub on the field with such performers ss bert, Zydiack, Hog }finwell, Brice, La M \ et, Cardillo and Rirt The Navy will be seeking their . lion dollar stadium, where they svt club has drawn 172,781 cash cus- 7 | tomers. By BEN PHLEGAR AP Sportswriter It’s about time the travel agents | of the nation paid a special tribute | to the Milwaukee braves. Where | could they find a better example | of the benefits to be obtained by a change of scenery? The 1,000-mile westward shift from Boston to Milwaukee has worked wonders for the once- downtrodden ball ciub that finished a dismal seventh in the National League last year. | A quick glance at today’s stand- ‘ings shows the Braves only half a | game out of first piace. They have | seven more games on their present | home stand at their new five mil- have won seven out of eight. 3 are clamering at the In seven homes dates the Last year’s total attend- ance in Boston was 281,778. Yesterday, with the thermome- ering at 59 degrees, 9,943 ns turned out to watch their ves smother the New York Ss, 11-1 Charlie Grimm has me up with a mers in pitch- »b Buhl and Don Liddle and Bill Bruten But his old; eup has become revital-| Then its pitching folded and by as well, { Braves had only one Pitcher | Johason—who finished last | an average as high as| games, has a 2-0 record and a 2.12 earned run average. He came in at the start of the third inning against the Giants aft- er st-rter Johnny Antonelli had injured a finger on his pitching hand and stonned New York on four hits. In his previous appear- ance he relieved An‘onel!’ with two out in the first inning a Brookiyn and went the rest of the way to beat the Dodgers handily, something the Braves did only three times last year. Milwaukee moved into second place over Brooklyz, which was frozen out of its scheduled game at Chicago. Rain and wet grounds also caused the postponement of the other two National League con- tests—Pittsburgh at Cincinnati and Philadelphia at St. Louis, In the American League the New York Yankees wos their third straight over Cleveland, 9-4, drop- ping the Indians into third place. Boston whipped Chicago, 3-0, and Philadelphia broke its seven-game losing streak at the expense of the St. Loyis Browns, 2-1. A night game at Washington between the Senators and the Detroit Tigers was rained out. Shut out on one hit the previous night, Cleveland came up with four runs in the first four innings against the Yankees yesterday. the end of seven the Yanks were aaead to stay. Mike Garcia was the loser against Eddie Lopat. Marv Grissom handcuffed the a 2 3° at a ‘ 6 e 7 Driving * On inside * Early pace * Tired "! Evenly ‘** Collided 4.00 * Collided ratched Jan., 1951, Harvest Star—Jo Ann Lee 6.20 6.60 3.89 Quiniela (4-6) 38.00 2.60 MILWAUKEE SHIFT HAS AIDED BRAVES’ HOPES | “Armed Forces Day would be a truly successful Ameri- can venture if each citizen would search out just one | member of the Armed Forces and let him know that his efforts and sacrifice are ap- SS OMan N. Brapier Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Army’s July Call For Men Is Low WASHINGTON if — The Army draft call for July is 23,000, the lowest since last June’s record low - Yet nine of their 13 victories | White Sox on four hits for Boston. | of 10,000. season have been registered} st year’s mound staff. | d yesterday's win- Despite the loss Cnicago moved over Cleveland into second place. An eighth-inning home run by The July call, issued yesterday. brings to 1,469,436 the number of men drafted or earmarked for in- remarkable im- Euu.e voost provided the victory | duction since selective service was Working as a long-dis-/ margin for the Athletics over the ' resumed after the Korean War man, Burdette has} 13 innings in three | raight win in the annual Valdez of the Key West! i have Eddie Fernan- erts, Clarence Alce, Pedro Rodriguez, ido, Crip Lastres, 2. Al Pazo, Al Cabot, Didi Torres, C. Brown, | Valdez, Tito Anguierra and Smith availae jor the! game is scheduled to get p.m. Friday and wited to attend. The gates should be » gala entrance to the Navy Browns. STRATEGIC CARGO IS ON U.S. VESSEL SINGAPORE —The U. S. nav- al tanker Cahabs completed load- ing 10,000 tons of jet fuel from the Finnish tanker Wiima today and sailed for @n unannounced destination. The strategic cargo originally, had Deen consigned to! Communist China The U. S. negotiated for some three months with the ship's own- Lers to prevent delivery of the jet started in mid-1950. All but 81,430 of these, who went into the Marines during s 10-month period, were called for the Army. for July 1. Subseribe to The Citizen [SSS 5 SAVE $335 $ |For QUALITY USED CARS fuel from Red Romania to the! Peiping government. The famous Hope Diamond is as biwe as & sapphire. '1198 DUVAL ST. $33 SAVE $355 Wleet Cocoa In Doubleheader \ By The Associated Press Cocoa and Jacksonville Beach mix in a double-header at Jack- sonville Beach tonight with. first Place in the Florida State League at stake. But they will have to keep an eye out for “Daytona Beach, at home to seventh-place Sanford. Cocoa emerged from Wednes- day night games at the top of the heap, beating Sanford, 4-2, Daytona Beach pulled Jacksonville Beach off the pinnacle by blast- ing the Sea Birds, 7-2. That left the two tied half a game behind Cocoa. ~ Leesburg handed last-place Or- lando their fifth straight beating, 8-2, and Palatka snapped a losing streak by thumping DeLand, 9-7. For Cocoa, Leo Simard pitched himself out of trouble in three in- nings, held Sanford scoreless aft- er the first and knocked in the winning run with a double in the fifth. Sanford got two men on base with none out on two occasions and loaded the bases with one out another time. Simard stranded those seven plus five more. Daytona Beach plowed into Dave Whitten, Jacksonville Beach pitch- er, in the first inning with a double by Bartow Irby, singles by Skeet- er Baller and Ed Levy and a Sea Bird error that went to make up three runs, That was all Dick Mitchener needed. He gave Jack- sonville Beach only five hits. Clyde Briggs got four of them and batted in both Sea Bird runs, Bill Phillips’ six-hit _ pitching gave Leesburg the impetus to beat Orlando, Claude Ramsey banged out three of the Lakers’ nine hits and drove in ‘three runs. Palatka got a big lift from two home runs by Al Pirtle. He drove in five runs ‘to help Billy Bass Pitch the victory though giving up 12 hits, WEDNESDAY RESULTS Daytona Beach 7 Jacksonville Beach 2 Cocoa 4 Sanford 2 Leesburg 8 Orlando 2 Palatka 9 DeLand 7 THURSDAY'S GAMES DeLand at Orlando Page 6 -| Palatka THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Consolation Derby At Kennel Club Wednesday Key West Kennel Club Result Charts — Wed., May 13th| Jax Beach To FIRST RACE—5-16 Evans Downs VFW In Legion Game . The Evans Enterprises nine climbed all over. three VFW hurl- ers last night to gain a lopsided 24-4 victory in American Legion Junior League action at Wickers Field. The Evans batsmen hit safely 20 times last night for a total of 38 bases. The hit parade included five doubles, two triples and three homers, In the second inning, the winners Scored seven runs on four hits, dn- cluding a pair of homers by F, Curry and Julio Santana, both with one man on base, In the third frame, they con. tinued their scoring spree with nine runs on seyen hits, The VFW came back with three Tuns in the third frame on three walks, a hit batsman and a single. They scored their last run in the sixth on two triples, At bat, F. Curry smashed a homer, two doubles and a single. Julio Santana had a homer anda triple, Kerr, a homer, double and two singles and Knowles, five sing. les in five times at bat. In the field, the play of Kerr and F. Carey for the winners and-D. Carey for the losers, was outstand- ing. MAYBE A LOOSE NUT - BUT NO. LOOSE WIRES BALTIMORE (®—“Got any loose wires in here?” asked the. man who poked his head in’ a. second- story window of police headquar- ters. yesterday. Patrolman Vernon Green didn't know of any, While he engaged the man in conversation, two other po- licemen crept along the narrow ledge outside and grabbed him. Identified as Frederick W,. Krause, 43, he was booked on a disorderly conduct charge, Sanford at Daytona Beach Cocoa at Jacksonville Beach (2) Leesburg at Palatka STANDINGS: Cocoa Jacksonville Beach Daytona Beach DeLand Leesburg Sanford Orlando la! eeseunen: