Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 143, Decatur, Adams County, 18 June 1951 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

|SPORTS|

Klenks Loses In Fed League Game Sunday , Decatur Klenks. suffering their second straight league loss, were dropped into a first place Federation loop tie Sunday afteronon when the East End Merchants of Fort Wayne scored a 6-3 victory at Worthman field. ' . McComb Construction pulled ini' to the first place; tie by swamping Wane, 18-4, in Sunday’s other loop I tilt. The Merchants drove out four hits and obtained three walks from Ray Miller, which, combined with two errors, gave the victors five runs in the first two innings,’ and shelled Ray Miller from the mound. Bowen took over and held Fort Wayne to two hits and one run: Willie Doehrman limited Klenks to three hits. Two runs tallied in the first inning oln a hit, ja hit batsman and a pair of fielder’s choices. Decatur scored its final run in the eighth on an error, a stolen bake and an infield out. Klenks will meet Wane in a league game at Dwenger park Wednesday nfghl at 8 o’clock. Merchants 7 AB, R HE Ottenweller, 2b —2 2 0 0 Underwood, lr __u_ 5 3 10 Koomjohn. C 4,0 11 Conway, rs 4 12 0 Hoover, 3b 3 0 1 0 K. Miller; ss j*_ 4 0 1 2 Purviance, lb 4 0 0 0 * Thompson, cf 2 0 0 0 W. Doehrman, p 3 0 o 0 TOTALS 31 \6 6 3 'A Klenks AB R H El GiUig, If ____ 4 0 11 Crist, ss, 2b3 1-0 1

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Af/W AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. i Pct G.B. Kansas City — 35-26/ 1574 Milwaukee 1- 34 26 ,567 ft Minneapolis - _-4 31 28'- 1525 0 St. Paul— 27 28 .491 5 Toledo. — . 29 3.J .483 sft) Louisville 29 31 1.483 sft Indianapolis .... 27 3? .458 7 S Columbds - 24 34 424 9ft' SATURDAY'S RESULTS Minneapolis-3, Toledo 2. | j Indianapolis 6, Milwaukee 0. I Kansas City 10; Louisville 7. ’ St. Paul 11. Columbus 7. YESTERDAY’S RESULTS Milwaukee 11-3, Indianapolis 7-5. Louisville 6-1, Kansas City 3-0. St. Paul 3-12. Columbus 2-9. Toledo 8-3. Minneapolis 6-1. ,ii i " i,'n iim f. Ijriiin " _ '^■| l Helm, lb _..- h 4 10 0 Andrews, c .l_ --M i 0 1 0 Reed, 3b ; 4 0 0 0 Kahle, cf 4 0 1 0 B. Miller, 2b 1 0 0 O Bow’en. p 3 * 0 0 0 R. Miller, p. ss 3 0 0 1 Getting, rs .3 1 0 0 . ' #—♦—— TOTALS 33 r,3 3 13 Score by innings: 0 ’ ,j Klenks 200 000 010—3 Merchants 300 001 OOx—6 ARMOURBLAMES (Coati nurd From Pp*« One) corresponding period Jast year; \ The beef operations of the big packers traditionally .have been conducted on a narrow profit margin and depend op hekvy volume and rapid ’ turnover. With production 1 cut drastically, industry spokesmen said the big packers like Armour have been hit hard. Financial sources said Armour may be suffering the most, because it was caught in a period Os expansion of its pharmaceutical line. It has invested heavily in the so-called miracle drug, acth, which it has sold fpr a nominal price to promote research. ■ 3 I In his report, Specht said the company only last March" negotiated the sale of $12,000.000/in first mortgage 3 percent bonds to finance construction of a tiew phartnaceutical plant at Bradlejr, ' . -— ——— ■ | Decatur Lutheran Defeated By Bingen f Bingen defeated the Deqatur Lutheran team, 18-7. Sunday Afternoon at McMillen field. Bingen scored six runs in the first to give a good lOad to Don Gallmeyer. who hurled steady bail for the winners. The line score :! .’H H E Bingen 624 042 0- 18 29 3 Decatur 100 031 2-7 8 9 D. Gallmeyer and K. Gallmeyer; McDougal, Schnepf and Christian-

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Aloma Scores Win For Sox In Ist Start New York, Jdne 18.—(UP) - Paul Richards is doing' niftily as a manager but if he ever wants fb quit his job with the White Sox. ne should be a cinch in a career as a professional magician. [ Along with the black magic ani voodoo he undoubtedly must use on that crazy-quilt pitching staff to make it function, he also put on a “disappearing act” yesterday, but his team won a double header, 4 to 1, and 9 to 0, from the Athletics anyway. ! .J He was bapished from the premises for an argument in the fourth inning of the first' game, bu| the spell he weaves over pitchers who couldn't win for anybody else, kept working and he came up with a new “find”—Cuban Lott Aloma. Aloma made his firpt league r.»art in the second game and it vas a dilly. He gave up only five bits, one walk, and struck out three, put him in the same class aS Saul Rogovin, Lou Kretlow, and Harry Dorish. Used onb in relief last season and only three tJmes this year in brief rescue toles, he had been troubled witn a-sore arm and for a time wasn't even on the active list. Rogovin couldn't win at Detroit but was a whiz as soon as Richards waved the wand- when he came to Chicago. Dorish hadn't won a game since July of 1950 with the Browns but they can’t stop him now. Kretlow’s last win was on July 7, 1949 before he came through, on June 6 tor Richards pnd he is now a regular starter. .<* In the opener* Randy Gumpert, who won only five games all last season, scored’ his sixth triumph fn a row. spacing out eight hits. Al Carrasquel drove in two rubs with two hits to set the offensive pace. Aloma had plenty of help at the plate, the Sox making 16 hits as they won the second game, to avenge the three straight that the A’s won from them before the twin bill. Minnie Minoso with five hits for the day, including a double and ’xiple in the second game, boosted his league leading average to .379. Jim Busby hit\ a second game homer. The Sox boosted their lead to 3ft games over the Yanks. The Red Sox also made the’r twin bill a “win-bill,” drubbing the Browns, 5 to 4 and 3 to 0, while rhe Yankees topped Detroit, 5 to 0, and Washington made it-A three In a row over Cleveland, 5 to 1. Brooklyn boosted its National league lead to six full garpes by coming from behind to beat Chicago, 3 to 2, on Roy Campanella’s homer in the ninth. Pittsburgh defeated the Giants, 11 to. 5, and the second game, suspended in the

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DHCATUR DAILY DWOCRAT, DBCATUR, INDIANA

Pirated, Giants Win This Morning Summer recreation league play started this morning at Worth* man field, with the Pirates blank* Ing the Cubs, 5-0, and the Giants whipping thitt Dodgers, -7-1. The line scores: * ' , 1 r. R H E Cubs 00G 00 - 0 2 3 Pirates 300 2x - 5 2 2 Duff, Schmidt and Auyand; Handier and Rowley. R H Giants 203 20 i7> 6 2 Dodgers ....—ii... 000 01 -1 3 1 R. McCurdy and Werst; Wolfe, and Agler. eighth with the score 6-6, will be completed on July 24. The I Cards topped Philadelphia, 5 to 4, 1 in 10 innings, while the Reds edged th® Braves, 2 toil, then were blanked sto 0. C I 7 | Ray Scarborough pitched siv 13-hit first game support for him hit ball and Bobby Doerr paced the with a homer and double. Johnny Bero and Paul Lehner homered for St. Louis. Ted Williams, who drove in four runs for .the day gave Mel Parnell the lead he reeded for an eight-hit shutout, with a two-run homer in the first inning. • ' ; Allie Reynolds pitched artfully nil the way to gain -his sixth victory and hie second shutout, giving up only four! hits to. the punchless Tigers. He did not walk a batter. The Yankees made two runs in the; second on singles by Gil McDougald and Jerry Cole man, walk to Reynolds, an Infield out and an error by George Kell. A final three-run burst came tr. the nint|i on Jackie Jensen's single and stolen base. Yogi Berea's double, and Johnny Mize’s tirst homert>bf the year. Fred Sanford, who couldn’t win for the Yankees, pitched a threelutter in his first start for his new boss, Bjacky Harris, giving Washington its |hird straight over off-and-on Cleveland. Stan Musial’s 14th homer and his second bf the day gave reliever Gerry Staley his eighth victory as the Cards made it three; straight over the Phils. Willie Jones homered for thd losers. Cincinnati and Boston got heartening help from lesser-light pitchers, Harry Perkowski twir Ung a three-hitter for the Reds in the opener for his first win since 1949, and rookie Chet Nichols retaliating rwith an eight-hit shutout for Boston. Earl Torgeson started Nichols off right with a three-run third inning homer. Pittsburgh snapped a five-game Giant winning streak as Howie Pollet pitched his first victory of tbe year! n his new Pirate uniform. Another ne*w Pirate, Bill Howerton, supplied i homer, while Monte Irvin and Willie Mays hit Giant homers. Try A Democrat Want Ad—lt Payw

Indiana All-Stars Defeat Kentucky 7; Indianapolis June; 18—(Ut*)— Indiana's high school basketball ARStars boasted a six-game winning streak over Kentucky today. But the 11-year-old rivalry’s record book might have been different had the boys from the Blue Grass state given flashy Charley Hadden more help. / Hadden, a six-foot shooting ace from Lexington, Ky., was voted the “star of stars” by sportswriters and sportscasters covering the Saturday night event although the Hoosiers, functioning more smoothly as a team, won 68 to 57. Hadden, the third Kentuckian to win the award, led both teams in scoring with 19 points and treated 10,574 sweltering ~ fans at Butler Fieldhouse to a dazzling exhibition of dribbling and ball-handling. T Indiana, coached this year by DePaw’s former All-American McCreary, hasn’t been beaten by the Kentucky Stars since 1945. The Hoosiers showed they meant business this year, too, when they rang up a quick nine*boints while holding Kentucky without a goal for the first five minutes. Ed Diddle’s boys then found the range and caught the Hoosiers at nine-ail. From then on, the first half was a see-saw affair. The lead changed hands four times and Indlana led at the half, 38 to 33. / Both teams resorted to desperation shots from the floor when they repeatedly failed to crack each other’s defense. But Indiana, with its height advantage, concentrated on reboundgrabbing and fast breaks to chalk up its final 11-point margin.

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Horseshoe League Schedule Listed Thursday night’s schedule for the Adams county horseshoe league follows: t Pleasant Mills at McMillen; Salem at Monroe: Preble at Si. John's;.. Union at Genevan Burke’s .a*.,. m ■■ t Serson’sjlck Tilley topped diana scoring with 15 points, ed by big Don Schlupdt pf Washington-Clay with 12 and Gary Froebel’s Johnny Moore with 9. SETTLEMENT , (Ceatteael From Fa<e One) the ARA’s picket lines, meaning thousands of west coast waterfront workers would be idled as long as the strike continues. \ i ) TRUCK DRIVER I; "fl (Continnett Fmm ye«» One) pany be wap working for when arrested, had offered him a, job and he was going to talk it over witn them. \ ne«4, and I need it quick” paid. / REDS APPEAR (Ceattsaea From Pas* Oa«) the Manchurian border in the northwest corner of Korea. The dogfight ranged from 28,000 feet almost to ground level and ended with five communist jets plummeting to earth and two streaking for home damaged. No damage was reported to American Jets. • . J Birthstone for the month of June is either pearl or moonstone.

'Major 1 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct. G.B. Chicago _L 38 17 .691 f New York 34 20 .360 > Boston 33 22 .600 6. Cleveland 29 26 .527 9/ Detroit L 26 26 .500 16ft Washington .... 21 32 .396 16 St. Lou’s 18 37 .327 20 Philadelphia 18 37 .327 20 NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct G.B. Brooklyn ...— 36 19 .655, New York -32 27 .542 6 St. Lottis27 .518 7ft Boston 28 29 .491 \ 9 Cincinnati 27 28 .491 9 Philadelphia —- 26 30 .464 10% Chicago ... ...' 23 29 .442 lift Pittsburgh. 4 21 33 .389 14% SATURDAY’S RESULTS American League -'" f Washington 4, \Cleveland 3. Philadelphia 6, Chicago 5 (11 innings). Detroit 4, New York 0. Boston 10, St. Louis 5 National League St. Louis 6. Philadelphia 5. New York 6. Pittsburgh 1. B Chicago 6. Brooklyn 4* Boston 3, Cincinnati 0 YESTERDAY’S RESULTS American Leagua ’ , Chicago 4-9, Philadelphia 1-0. Boston 5-3, St. Louis 4-0. New York 5, Detroit 0. Washington 5, Cleveland 1. National League Pittsburgh 11-6, New York 5-6 (2nd game tie, called after 7ft Inih ings because of Sunday law). Cincinnati 3-0, Boston 1-5.

MONDAY, JUNE 48, 1951

Brooklyn 3, Chicago 2. St. Loui* 5, Philadelphia 4 10 innings). ”| ; JFRANCE (C*Bti**ed Fr*«n Pag* <>■*> less on the U. S. and Britain. De Gaulle's critics claimed he wanted to set himself up.as a dictator j The middle-of-the-road parties stood firmly behind the North Atlantic pact and warned that a victory > by either the De Gaullists or the communists would plunge France into a civil war.: ? Democrat Want Ads Bring Results

fJBnl SQUARE DANCE TUESDAY June 19 Music by HILL BILLY RAMBLERS of Fort Wayne