Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 164, Decatur, Adams County, 13 July 1951 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

(SPORTS |

County's ASA Tourney Will Start Monday Pairings for the annual Adams county softball tournament, under auspices of the ASA, were announced today, with the tourney opening at 7:30 o’clock Monday night at McMillen field in this city, b Fourteen Adaiqs county teams are entered. Ross Way is Adams county commissioner for* the tourney, which is being sponsored for the third consecutive year by the Central. Soya Recreation asspcia- - tion. Games will be played Mbnday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of next'week. There will be a lapse during July 20, 21 and 22 while the state VFW tourney is’ held at the local field. ' County meet play will be resumed Monday night, July 23,; with semifinals scheduled fbr July 24 and the championship game Thursday, July 26. ■ < Trophies will be awarded to both the champion and the nmnerup.. with bo,th these; teams -advancing to the sectional ASA tourney, which will, open at Ossian August 6. Dunbar of Berne is'the defending chamOfficials for pH, tourney games be Harold Strickler. Mel Ladd and Roily Ladd; | The complete schedule follows: I' * July 16 ; J Game p.m—Berne Farm Equipment vs McMillen. Game 2—9 p.m.—Future Farmers of America vs Knights of Columbus. ' ! j ~ .

Tonight,SAT. & SUN. Continuous Sat. & Sun. Nation’s Two greatest Cowboy Stars on One Program! ROY ROGERS “SPOILERS of the PLAINS” & REX ALLEN “HILLS OF OKLAHOMA” Only 14c-30c Inc. Tax

i 11 1 IM-.W SUN.MON.pJESfI t |'■ V Continuous Sun. frpm 1:15 vjk <\ 1 YaJL-U-CTJ® 14c-44c Inc. Tax < AIR CONDITIONED) w— .. H /iiyzwvrv7/r/ 4 Sv 1 / .>jr ifrißk I/ 79 1 1 ■ |U| isl mJ f * r^)>> w stw * ft* t w lr' Ifc* . Jul w-<* a x j £ ‘ ’ >’£ mad* it th* ««» laKg K, K> ’ • - X • Kill Jr iTOr SWep ■■* fv 'i Mr iTO < * ' W|i w i iMb —. _ GARY . . Cooper o Jar greerm SBfeiww>-1 ! j/ f to ■!• /1r i m U /11 IT *» ■ Pl /TO A MILLAM) MHCHEU A EDDIt ALBtkT — TONIGHT AND SATURDAY — / j . p Continuous Saturday from 1:45 ’‘The Apaches Are Over the Border*’ > ... f Terror Cry of the Old West.” Here’s the* Kind ,: ■ of Breathtaking Action You Love—filnjed in % Glorious TECHNICOLOR! : “APAPHE DRUMS’* ,j| .< a | \ A Stephen McNally, Coleen Gray, Willard Parker . II ALSO-—Cartoon; Comedy; News—l4c-44c IncLTax

Dunbar, VFW Win 0 ? 1 II In Softball League { Dunbar edged t hja Willshire Merchants, 6-5 in innings, and the VFW bked cjiit a 3-2 wjn over the K. Os C. in pepatur Soft--1 all league games played Thursday night at the 5 There will be no league games r next week because of the county - ASA tourney, which will open ar McMillen field in’ tljis city Mqn- ’ day night. ' i Imst night’s I; ’ R H E 5 Willshire 020 2<jl 00—5 12 4 1 unbar j\’ 401 M» 01 6 71 B. BBaker and Dajhs; H. Mijler 4nd Ilabegger. ’ | [] 4 if R hle Wfw 1 010 joo o—3 S-2 f K. of C. 1 010 >OO 1 2 410 Mercer and Summers; Gillig ppd , jU. Hackman. ■/] 11 ~ Ju-y ir Tr Game 3—7:30 p.ntf-Smith Bi|r>s. Furniture vs Willshire Merchants. Game 4—9 p.m.r-llunbar Mfg, Co. vs Veterans of Foreign Wars.; | July $ Game 5—7:30 p.ite.—GraberTin & Plumbing vs Pteim Restaurant. Game 6 —9 p.m.—Sterne Oil -Co., ys Decatur Merchants. July 1$ v Game 7—7:30 p.nis-—Berne ServUs>Store vs Rural. Y|iith. Game B—98 —9 p.m.—Winner of gijnne 1 vs winner game 2/ ,2McMiID ' jj • L|| 7 July 23 Game 9—7:30 p.nj|— Winner • of game 3 \vs winneh giftne 4. r v Game TO —9 p‘\n.-/jwinner game 5 vs winner ga.me-fl|j Jdly 24 Game 11—7:30 J).m.—Wintier game 7 vs winner garjie 8. i; Game 12—9 p.m.—Winner ga|ne 9 vs winner game I<| July 26" Game 13—Winner game Hf|vs winner game 12 j i ~~T ■Hi Bicycle Hike Far Junior Police C|ub J The Decatur junio| ■ police clhb will hold a bicycle Saturday, starting at 8 a.m., wi|h the mejn 1 ers to meet at 803 Dferkes street. f>ch boy is to bring ;a long knife ind a hand hatchet, land his pin unchi preferably one! (which n|fed npt be cooked., In any bojs can not fide their bijycles, a cpr will be provided. * J Announcement was, also made that rifle practice, scheduled :fi»i next Wednesday, hra been cam celled.- t O >■ -JjTry A Democrat WantrAd— It Pay*. !•- » .

Red Sox Take Lead; Reynolds Hurls No-Hitter New York, July 13—(UP)—The ■nqw blood injected into the Red Sox veins to give them pennantwinning life jumped the Bostons into (he American league lead today after a marathon doubleheader sweep from the White Sox. Lou Boudreau was grabbed up as an expensive transfusion I by the Red Sox when he was fired as Cleveland manager. Clyde Vollmer was obtained last season in a trade with Washington. And these newcomers —not the old Williams, Goodman* bunch — provided the runs shat beat the White Sox, 3-2 and 5-4 last night. The s second game went 17 innings, setting a new American league record *for h night gapie.' Vollmer, who figured in all three victories over the Yankees Inst week-end, hit a two-rupt homer and Boudreau drove in the winning run with a double in the first game before 52,592’\fans. In the 17th inning of the second game Boudreau opened with a single,, went to third on Billy Goodman’s single and then scored on a long fly by Vollmer—and that made the Bosox the league leaders. The second game was an especially bitter loss (for Chisox righthender Saul Rogovin, because he went the full record distance against three Boston pitchers. The longest night game. this one was 16 innings when the Browns beat the Athletics in 1942. In the National the Phils bleat the Reds in 19 innings at night last year. ‘ Eighth inning errors mauled the White Sox in the late game. A two-run blast in the seventh had given them a 4-3 lead. Pinch-hit-1

DANCE ROUND AND SQUARE \ | \ EVERY SUNDAY NlGiyr |. ' AT " e| . GEELS BARN I ij 11/ 2 miles West of Decatur |l / on State Road 224 I GEELS FAMILY ORCHESTRA | Carl Geels, Caller and Instructor I® A: • \ I All other nites except Saturdays open ior private parties, weddings, etc. Call 3-8645 for Details. Come and learn to Square Dance. The \ dance that is taking the Nation. - SUNDAY ONLY fcgtar//noncg so. O„U. Open, r:w First Show at Dusk I Children Under 12 Free FIRST DECATUR SHOWING (V GREATEST STAR AND SONG SHOW TfM£\ Meet PECOS S “JOHNNY APPLESEED" Tff>H^ UL A> “LITTLE TOOT" and /g r/ a host of NEW Disney < GREAT SONGS i vn« and played by: pJV Pl ? ROY ROGERS J «/»/ ■ DENNIS DAY 'j FREDDY MARTIN \ flB & j J SONS OF the PIONEERS %\ FRED WARING and V '‘ Hi* Pannsylvanlant BUDDY CLARK Distributed by A p, ETHEL SMITH »*<> eadio pictures Cw D r « PLUS Featurette—“South of Santa Fe” & Shorts \ — (. TONIGHT—DoubIe Entertainment! “MONTANA”—ErroI Flynn, Alexis Smith—ln Color & ‘TRAVELING SALESWOMAN* Joan Davis, Andy Devine _£_o o NEVER ANY WAITING—Our 550 Car Capacity Insures . Room for Alli—Playground for the Kiddies! ' \ ' ; O O Mon. & Tues,—“Beau Geste”—Gary Cooper, Ray Milland

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

ter Fred Hatfield beat qut a sin- < gle in the eighth Rogovin threw the ball wild into right field, allowing Hatfield to -reach third. He scored the tying run on Dorn Di Maggio’s single. The Yankees regained second ,1 ofi Allie Reynolds’ no-hitter ' and Gene Woodling’s homer which gave them a 1-0 win over Cleveland. A 10-hit blast including Hoot Evers’ homer and four doubles gave the Tigers a 5-4 win over Washington, and the A’s 1 swept a nigfri double-header from the Browns, 9-3 and 13-0, to corn- / pletO the American league schedule. The Dodgers rqn their National league leftd to nine and a\ half games with a three-homer 9-3 win o\dr the Cubs, while the Cards ( took second with a 2-0 win over the Giants on Billy Johnson'ls fifth 1 inning two-run homer. The Phils ; routed Murry Dickson for an bl-6 conquest of the Pirates, while the ; Reds ('and Braves were rained out. ' Reynold’s no-hitter barely beat Bdbljy Feller’s four-hitter as the fumbling Yanks sought to launch a cotaeback. Indian Allie had one scajre when Hank Bauer had to against the-wall io catch Sain ■ Chapman’s long fly-.-in the seventh a<fter Woodling had Ijiit his; homer. Feller's only hits were the homer, a double by Mickey Mantle and singles by Yogi Berra and Gil Me? Dougald. Feller, who pitched a no-hittcr himself two weeks ago, had one going until the sixth when Mantle spoiled it. Curl Furillo, Roy Campanella and Billy Cox whaled homers in the Brooklyn triumph over the Cubs. The pitching honors in the National league went to the CardGiant game where winner Gerry Staley gave four hits and loser Larpy Jansen only three. , V NEW REBUFF i ' (Comtluurd from I'ace One) ministration requests for food subsidy powers and Authority to build I government defense plants. J ■■ - I If You Have Anything To Sell Try I

MAJOR] NATIONAL league A W. L Pct. G.B. Brooklyn L--— 5$ 26 .662 St. Louis —,— 41 35 .539 9(4 New York -J—— 3? -538 9(4 Cincinnati — 36 38 .486 13(4 Philadelphia — 36 41 .468 15 Boston — 34 40 .459 15(4 Chicago 30 40 .429 17(4 Pittsburgh 31 45 .408 19(4 AMERICAN LEAGUE W1 L Pct. G.B. Boston 49 29 .628 Chicago —— 49 31 .613 1 New York— 46 29 .613 1(4 Cleveland.- r - 44 33 .571 4(4 Detroit - 35 38 .479 11(4 Washington 31 45 .408 17 Philadelphia — 31 48 .392 > 18(4 St. Louis 22 54 .289 26 YESTERDAY’S RESULTS J National League St. Ixrnis 2, New York 0. Philadelphia 11, Pittsburgh 6. Brooklyn 9, Chicago 3. Cincinnati at Boston rain. V . American League Detroit 5, Washington 4. New York 1, Cleveland 0. Boston 3-5, Chicago 2-4 (2nd game 17 innings). Philadelphia 9-13, St Louis 7-0. MIIWK AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. Pct. G.B. MJlwqukCe 49 38 .563, Kansas' City 4$ 38 .563 y 1 St. Paul 46 39 .541 2 Minneapolis —43 42 .506 5

I I I cutcC {tyea'u&t I I ' ' ' -J ' ; ? I Repair Service and J I . ' 1 • • ,| ■ Genuine Factory Approved Parts j H --> *|- .I■ ’ I i . -3 :. 1 ' B I SEE SAILORS ( lll3l!()LhT SILLS ■ r I J ■ • -'M I 25 Cmllmons Years of I SALES-SERVICE-PARTS-ACCESSORIES I I Trained Mechanics Give You f ■ I the Best in I I. □ Lubrication □ Brake Repair | / ■ Motor Tune-up /' Motor Overhaul . • ' 1 '■. I ". Body Work and Painting '» ■ r . . / . ; ' L !- .-j i-1 I { ■ $35,000 Stock of Genuine Parts and; j ; Accessories on hand to serve | \j; I -I, /. your immediate needs ■ | I '■ I Saylors Chevrolet Sales I DECATUR, INDIANA ■ 1 • " ■' ,' • ./• J J ■•• A • ' ' ; ' B OZARKIKE ; r . ■ WU Y *U Be ) ,%"U R &H S *o°a/ ' ■ 'a M rAp uiT* D m,T am TAKC SENP &eA rtf£?n l 5r < W 'Ce= = - L A .ma M X TH'NAIL •< MAY BE TO OPT,ON/ JT TO vu«Kf /' RIGHT ON BACK W JYmB ■ WEEK; / ISZ/7\l M'FINGUM. TO TH' F/ x S.ll wnam /-> bushes f li2*\ — s Im I w Zi£i k\ Sv ‘ /lit / I 1 1 // \ 1 I / 1L- ii.u—\ l^<ddw/Sw^CS 1 <±si»x2t- i / MBF/JBOr UkS® rhroTw—

Fed League Lead /s At Stake In Game Here Sunday First place in ttife Federation league will be at stake Sunday afternoon when Decatur Klenks battles McComb of Huntertown at Worthman field at 2 o’colpk. Huntertown has an exceedingly scant lead in percentage points and a victory for Klenks would move the Decatur team into the top league spot. Decatur baseball fans are urg*j to attend the game and boost Decar tur’s only entry in the Federation league. Special attendance prizes will be awarded. Indianapolis 40 41 .494 6 Toledo—39 45 .464 8% Louisville 40 47 .460 9 Columbus— 33 49 .402 13(4 YESTERDAY’S RESULTS ' Kansas City 15, Minneapolis 13, St. Paul 2, Milwaukee 1. Columbus 5, Louisville 4. Toledo 6, Indianapolis 3. Outstanding Record : By Wm. Burke Herd William Burke, breeder of registered Guernseys for a quarter of a century, has established an outstanding record as his herd has averaged more than 1,000 pounds, of milk per cow two months fn succession. Average production of the Burke herd for May was l.lpl pounds of milk and 45.5 pounds of butterfat, and for June 1,105 pounds of milk and 46.2 pounds of l-Utterfat. ■ I Our earliest reliable reference to tea dates back 2.300 years. Idaho’s firse capitol cost >3O- - the present one cost |2,290.000.

Annual Golf Stag Is | Held Here Thursday j E. Approximately 40 golfers tetd off Thursday in the annual ChamtH^ - of Commerce golf stag, and white practically all of them managed complete the specified number holes for the afternoon’# play, orfß' nine of them walked off £ wfcft awards. " if ■ Those nine were compensated fixseveral things in the line of gifij, ranging rfrom loir gross, won tey Mack Neledn, to the blind boggy prize, wim oy Beil Webster. W i v r ' - •' / a

iiisijiii.i. ' I ' DECATUR KLENKS ■l■ ’ ' jvs HUNTERTOWN FI , ■ 7 .■ £ - ■ ‘ 1 ■ a ■ WORTHMAN FIELD 2 P. M. . ■i■,A /’ ' . j|| /J A.■; A-- ■ SUNDAf, JULY 15 /I• .h I - | . ■ See these teams battle for the Federation / 1 - i ® ’ .1 ’"v ; • ; • j League leadership, t r 1 ( "' 1 / f K ' ' 'l’ll ’ 'J. £ f /. f.. {

FRIDAY,’ JULY 13, 1951

Other winners were Don Koos, f second low gross; Jim (Vail, long- : est drive; ‘Dick Wertzenberger, closest to the pin on number four f .hole; Harold Engle, closest on r number seven; Louis Jacobs, clo<j- » est approach shot on number nine;’ ’ Everett Hutker, most pirdies, and f Cliff Saylors, most pars. ’>■ r ' ' ~.. Indians in New Mexico were r building with stone, successfully , using clay mud for mortar, when < the first white explorers arrived r in that area more than 400 years ago. ;