Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 110, Decatur, Adams County, 8 May 1952 — Page 7
THURSDAY, MAY 3, 1952
[sports|
I Sectional Track : Meet Friday At \ North Side High The annual sectional track meet, /with 16 schools and 226 boys entered, will be held at the j new North Bide high school track in Fort Wayne Friday afternoop. ! Tiipe trials Will start at 1:30* P-m., with regular events starting
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one hour later. Firit four placers in every event except thp 440, which'will be three, will Qualify for the regional meet, also to be held at North Side next; week. The top two teams in each Telay will advance to the regional. Three Adams bounty schools have entered athletes in the seci tional. They are t|ie Decatur Yellow Jackekts. Cardinals i and the Monmouth Eagles.
DIKUTUB DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUB, INDIANA
i Reinking Hum/ No-Hitter To Beat Bluffton Don Reinking, slight Decatur Yellow Jackets pitcher, hurled a no-hitter at the Bluffton Tigers Wednesday afternoon as the Jackets chalked up a 1-0 victory over their arch rvials at the Bluffton diamond. Only four men reached base on the Decatur pitcher, one on an error, two ori walks and one hit by a pitched ball. Reinking, meanwhile, fanired 11 of the Bluffton batsmen. The Yellow Jackets scored the only run of the game in the first inning. Roger Pollpck led off the game with a double, and after Norm Pollock and Hank Lehrman had ' been retired; Pollock scored the winner on Junior Conrad’s three-base blow. Only other Decatur hits were singles by Gene Vetter and Jim Helm as Gilliom hurled four-hit ball for the losers. The Yellow Jackets will meet/ the Warsaw Tigers in a Northeastern Indiana Conference game at Worthman field Friday afternoon at 3:30 o’clock. ’ Decatur AB R HE R. Pollock, c 3 110 N. Pollock. If 4 0 0 0 Lehrman, cr 3 0 io f) Conrad, ri2 0 10 Duff, 3b 3 0 0 1 Vetter, ss —— 2 0 1 > ■J Plumley. 2b 2 0 0 \ 0 Helm, lb B 0 1 0 Reinking, p 2 0 ’0 0 TOTALS 24 1 4 1 Bluffton AB R H K Micklitsch, '3b 3.0 0 0
sif/rs I . i ■ . I ■ . t > . Z-- ■ ■ Ar ■! AH A .. ■ x 1 7 ; ■ wfW r zW' A/iS * A' fei . v irZ I 1 - /« \w / ’Zx , • 1-. •~i a fl J/Ok Kb. ■ 1 wIHW W-TT vIA ■•raw OA ?w '“M ■ Terrific Values in WfZZ SQWBE-KIIKI MM 'suits • ;*X “V 1;W)% Pure Wool Worsteds, I Sharkjkins and Gabardines!, r*. I Newly designed and expert- ' I ’ MF '? ly tailored. Come ift and let ri us sh< »w you how you can be |sS| I is * REALLY well-dressed at a I I - IN very bioderate cost. Plenty tt Ztm * styles to choose from. \ *. Others $45 & $49.50 THE WHY Decatur \ r
Athan, Jf —5 0 0 6 Santon, ss - 3 0 0 0 Speheger, lb 10 0 0 I Garton, c 2 0 0 0 Mallars, 2b 3 0 0 0 High, jrX 2 0 0 0 Cobb, iof 2 0 0 0 Gilliom, p 2 0 0 0 TOTALS 21 0 0 0 .Score by innings: Decatur 100 000 oi—l Bluffton 000 000 o—o MAJOR ’ NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. G.B. Brooklyn 131 4 .765 New York 13 5 .722 % Chicago 12 7 .632 2. Cincinnati 12 8 .600 2% St. Louis 10 10 .500 4% Philadelphia 612 .833 7% Boston' _k_: 713 .350 7% Pittsburgh 4 18 .182 AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. G.B. Boston 14 5 .737 Cleveland 14 7 .667 1 Washingioii r .ll 7 .611 2% St. Louis 10 10 .500; 4ViNew York .8 10. .444 4% Philadelphia7 10 .412 6 Chicago 7 12 .368 7 Detroit ...4 14 1.222 9% YESTERDAY’S RESULTS National League Brooklyn 5, Cincinnati 4. Pittsburgh 5, Philadelphia 1. NewjYork 3, St. Louis 1. Boston aT Chicago,, cold. American League Cleveland- 7, New York 2. Boston 7. Chicago 2. Philadelphia 1. St. Louis 0. Washington 6, betroit 2. L T? Peanut oil.has been used successi fully ip India as fuel for high-speed ; diesel-engine tractors.
Senators Win Sixfhlnßow Over Detroit New York, May 8 — (UP) — As if there wasn’t enough excitement in Washington in this presidential election year, Bueky Harris and his Senators have to go stirring up j some more with A six game winning streak and a drive that coudd make them solid contenders —if they don’t fold up. And if the names of Sid Hudson, Jackie Jensen, Archie Wilson, come into the conversation in the senatorial cloak rooms today along with Eisenhower, Kefauver, Taft, Russell, and a few others, it is to be expected. Usually, the Senators told up nicely and let the election take its; course in other presidential years. They finished seventh in ’48, : eighth in ’44, and seventh in ’4o.] And they were pre-season choices to do that again this year. But the wily Harris seems to havfc other plans. Last night as the; Nats made it six in a row with a five-hit, 6 to 2 victory over Detroit by Sid Hudson, they strengthened their hold on third plade and stood only 2V4 games out of first place. They kept pace with' first place Boston which downed Chicago, 7 to 2, and with second place Cleveland which agafn banged the Yankees, 7 to 2. And they picked up a full game oh the fourth place Browns who were downed. 1 to 0, by the Athletics. Ip the National league, Brooklyn stayed half a game in front Os the Giaprts by winning a |5 to 4 decision at Cincinnati, while the Giants topped the Cardinals, 3 to 1. The Pirites ended a six-game losing stroak by defeating the Phillies,5 to 1, and the Cubs and Braves were idle because of cold weather. Hudson, a veteran who was supposed to have been washed up because of arm trouble/ now is ; throwing with a full overhand motion again and he gave it the worjts against the Tigers last niglst for his second straight routegoidg performance. In his last outing ;he topped Cleveland, 2 to 1, in 13 innings. The newly-acquired ex-Yankees kept up their spree since joining Washington on Sunday. Jensen singled and doubled and. ;drove in a run. Wilson went httless but drew two key walks and 'still has a .524 average. JiuK Busby, their third new outfielder from' the White l Sox, collected two hitsljand scored two runs. Wilson got a >I,OOO raise when he joined up with the Nats, proving it is sometimes belter not to be a Yankee. \ MINOR AMERICAN ASSOCIATION i i J W L Pct. G.B. Milwaukee 12 6 ,667 Louisville 12 8 .600 1 Minneapolis 11 9 .550 2 anhai City 11 10 .524 2% Uiiianapolis 10 12 .455 . 4 Cdihimbus 912 .429 4Va Toledo 912 .429 4V4 st! Paul 8 .13 .381 5V4 YESTERDAY’S RESULTS {Jelumbus 4, Kansas City 3 (14 inninga), Minneapolis 5, Indianapolis 4. MSkr Paul 8, Louisville 3. . Milwaukee at Toledo, postponed. Starting AH-Star Five is Completed Undianapolis, May 8 — (UP) — Deaft Rainbolt, Bloomington high > «Umbl’s five-foot-10 flashy forward | i toda’y completed the starting quin- . telUff the Indiana high school allstara who will meet Kentucky prepsters here in June. first of the five players; Who was not on a team in the find) four of the recent state basketball tourney, averaged 21.1 points In 20 regular season games sinking 152 ’field goals in 472 tries and 1 18 of 151 freethrows. Tho starting five in the order chpsdn 'by Indiana sportscasters IMITATIONS? i MANY! DUPLICATES? NONE!.. .They u-ST WOLVERINE SHILL HOR6EHIDIS M Oh Wbal i Difference! You feel that differjMESEvt ence two ways; (1) In amazing extra comfort; < 2 ) In months and miles of extra work shoe ' wearl {■/ KAYE’S ! SHOESTORE i ; : i:. > - \
and writers are Joe Sexson, Indianapolis Tech; James McLaughlin,] New Albany;Fritz Franz, Lafayette Jefferson; Danny Thornberg, Mancie Central, and Rainbolt. MORE MEAT <C»»ttawed Frojm Paste Owe) is gram, for figures on every sale of beans it made between. March 25 and May 1, 1952. Democrat Want Ads Bring Results r Attention Men GIFTS FOR MOTHER’S DAY v Wrapped Free E.F. GASS STORE
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A l l'-V- 1 . m "A DRAFTSMAN H< ; ' ■ h . x z-" • GOOD PAY • PRODUCTION BONUS • PAID VACATION • •ADVANCEMENT and OTHER BENEFITS Z Z i Franklin Electric j!.■• . i C I 1 J | Bluffton, Ind. il. . - \ •,. I i' '
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