Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 152, Decatur, Adams County, 27 June 1952 — Page 7

i ' 5 * FRIDAY, JUNE bl, 1652 4

Klenk’s Loses To McComb In Extra Inning I of Decatur suffered their J second Federation league (|efeat ( Thursday night, dropping a 6-5 de--1 Vision to McComb in 10 innings at - Worthman field. \ The defeat did not drop Klenk’s f oat of the league lead, however, as’the Decatur team still holds a | game lead over McComb ip second f place. ‘ McComb tallied once in the second inning', and Tour in the fifth to pile jup a 5-0 lead. Klenk’s, however, came back with four in j the same intiing on a pair of walks, singles by Reed ami Krueckeberg 1 and Kruetzman’s double. Klenk’s knotted the count in the eighth with one run on a walk to Miller, a. single by Andrews and a fielder's choice;) ? A walk and a pair of hits gave McComb the winning run in the first extra inning.\ \ McCOMB AB R H E Hornberger, cf 3 0 0 0 McComb, rs 4 0 0 0

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■■ ■ p Kestner, rs 2 0 1 0 Fry, 3b 4<- 11 0 Werling, lb 6 11 0 Reynolds, If 3 1 0 i !|0 Heath, lt‘ 10 0 0 Rondot, 2b •>4 2 2 1 Schmidt, 2b 5 14 0 May, c 2 0 0 0 Arnold, c-.,- 0 0 0 Fleck, p 2 2 0 0 0 Fredrich, p 3 0 0 ft TOTALS 39 6 9 1 KLENK’S AB R Hf E Helm, lb 4 0 0 2 Miller, 2b 3 1 0 1 Plumley, 2b 0 0 0 0 Crist, ss _ x - 5 0 0 0 Andrews, c 4,0.1 (i Reed, 3b, p 4 11 O' Hoehammer, rf3 10 0 Kruetzman. cf, 3b 3 1.1 ft JBowen, If 3 0 1\ - 0 Korte. If ___2 1 0 0 0 Krueckeberg. p, cf.J 4 11 ' TOTALS 34 5 5 ’4. Score by innings: McComb _ k . 010 040 000 I>— 6 Klenk’s 000 040 010 o—s — n - Bones] Made Into Fence LOUISVILLE. Ky. of human bones once stood in east Tennessee 4fter the Cherokee Indians had massacred several hundred white settlers who had destroyed their \ weapons after afli agreement with the' tribe.

Maglie Breaks Slump, Beats Dodgers 30 L By UNITED PRESS _lt took a combination of the Dodgers and 98 degree after-dark heat in the Polo Grounds to break Sal Maglie's month-long slump* and put the Giants in hot pursuit of first place in the National league again today. Maglie had a very simple explanation for his terrific three-hit, 3 to 0 victory over the Brooks in which he threw only 85 pitches Thursday night and reduced their first place lead to three gapies. “It was hot — hot," he said. “I knew that the weather would wear me down if it was a long ball game so I decided to gog as fat as I could, as quickly as possible come what may.\ Well, my control was perfect and the Rodgers helped out by going for the first pitch. 1 wanted them to hit the first ball and so I tried to get it in there. “Npw I think I’m out of the woods again." Allan Sliderule Roth, the Dod-, gers statistician, said no*- pitcher in any game involving the Dodgers this year had come close to Maglie’s 85 throws, not even Carl Erskine in his no-hitter last week. \j By blanking the Dodgers, Maglieextended his phenomenal mastery over the league leaders to 27 consecutive scoreless innings for the season. In his three straight shutouts, he pitched a two-hitter, fourhitter, and the three-hitter of Thursday night. He now has beaten the Brooks 11 out of 12 times since returning from the Mexican league. It was his 10th win v and that makes him the first National league hwrier to reach that figure. ’ Until Jackie Robinson singled to left to lead off the seventh. Maglie pitched no-hit ball. He yielded two more hits, both insignificant singles by Billy Cox and Roy Campanella. Meanwhile, the Giants, winning .their sixth game in a row and thei|r fifth straight from the Dodgers, “rapped" it- up in the firstj inning on three potent base hits. Davey Williams, doubled to start the game. Hank Thompson singled, and Bob Elliott blasted a terrific triple. Elliott also drove lb, the third run with a long fly after Thompson tripled in the third inning. In the only other game in a curtailed major league schedule, the Tigers pushed the Browns down to seventh pla&e by topping them. 6 to.ft on a six-hitter by lefty Bill Wight. It was the first victory for Wight since he came to Detroitfrom the Red Sox, and he had no difficulty acquiring it. Vic yVertz set him up nicely with a 450-foot three-run first inning homer. Cliff Mapes also homered for the Tigers and Wight himself drove in the final tw-o runs with a bases loaded single. Ned Garver was saddled With his seventh loss.

——————— MAJOR AMERICAN ASSOCIATION \ W L Pct. G.B. Kansas City 47 24 .662 - Milwaukee- 43 23 .652 I’4 St. Paul 36 35 .507 11 ■ Louisville 36 36 ..500 11’4 Minneapolis 33 39 .458 144 Columbus 33 40 .452 15 Indianapolis __i 31 38 .449 15 ; Charleston 23 47 .329 23’4 YESTERDAY’S RESULTS Columbus 7. Indianapolis 4. Louisville a, Charleston 4 (17 innings)! Milwaukee 4, St. Paul 1. Kansas City 6, Minneapolis 4. Trade In a Good Town — Decatur

* Hk I W~ 13» ■ ' wfell ffe <3 FSi rO c_L, 'f - - ? »wwg Hr! . r mBBbF ifi* ; - 4r > *’-l I ;■ • jk—Br ' " ~ F , ■T> * <Ba» 1 4 ■.vitw^.bi..' •■ ) - . MWsiMb&L. •- * -» William Hinkle in hospital. Innards: light objects, blades. |» "I JUST ATE 40 razor blades. I’ve got a stomach ache,” William Hinkle, Carbondale, Hl., told a taxi driver in Chicago. Taken to Cook County hospital,, a fluoroscope examination revealed a pile of blades (single j edge) in his stomach. He gave no reason for the metallic meal. He even say whether they tasted sharp. His father said William pulled a previous swallowing stunt in Belleville,- Hl.

DBCATVH DAILY DEMOCRAT, DDCATUR, INDIANA

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M/W NATIONAL LEAGUE , W L Pct. G.B. Brooklyn ,44 17 .721 I New York 41 20 .672 3 Chicago ___4 35 28 .556 10 St. Louis 35 33 .515 12% Cincinnati 29 35 .453 1G' 2 Philadelphia 27 35 .435 17% Boston -a 27 37 .422 18% Pittsburgh 17 50 1 .254 30 AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. G.B. New York 36 24 .600 .A Boston I_-i_ 36 29 .554 2% Cleveland 36 30 .545 . 3 Washington : 32 28 .533 ' 4 Chicago _l__ 35 31 .530 4 Philadelphia 26 31 .456 8% St. Louis 30 36 .455 9 Detail 21 43 .328 17 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS National League New York 3, Brooklyn 0. - On'ly game scheduled. American League Detroit 6. St. Louis 0, Only game scheduled. .

• I • r• •• -w-- • 1 f*i AMONG the kingpins of the GOP whotn you will want to be able to recognize at the Chicago Republican presidential nominating convention is Guy G. Gabrielsoh, national chairman. (International/

Byelene Is Named Marion Grid Coach MARION, Ind. UP — Mike Byelene, all-Big T>en halfback at Purdue in 1941, was named head football coach at Maridn high today, succfecding Robert. ~Pfohl, who resigned last February to enter private business, j Bits leftover foods \are easy to in the ice box if stored in trapsparept plastic boxes. USED CARS ■ ; : . ■ > .■ 1951 FORD {Convertible, radio, heater, turn signals, j w-s-ti 11)51 STUDEBAKER Landcruiser, auto-ftrans., radio, heat - er, turn sighals, bumper guards. 1951 PLYMOUTH 4-dr. sedan, radio, heater. * 1951 MERCURY, new w-s-t. radio, heater, overdrive. 1950 NASH Ambassador, air condition heater, auto- ; matic transmission. Local car, 13,00 C miles. 1?4 CHEVROLET Club Coupe, radio, heater, undercoat. 1949 PLYMOUTH 4-dr., Cadio, heater, local car, very nice. 1949 FORD 4-dri, radio, heater, | very sharp. 1948 FORD,, very nice, priced to move; ' ]■ 1948 KAISER, local car, fine family car, priced to move. 1947 MERCURY 4-dr., radio heaVsharp and nice. 1\947 HUDSON, fully equipped, local one owner car. Priceci right. 1946 PLYMOUTH 4 dr. Nice appearing car. Fbr sale I reasonable. 1952 DODGE pickup truck, ; 4,ooo miles. A good buy on today’s market. 1950 STUDEBAKER >/ 2 -ton pickup truck for sale reasonable, 7 \

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Robinson Rejects Retirement ideas NEW YORK, UP — Sugar Ray Robinson flatly rejected suggestions of retirement today and asked for a return bout with Joey Maxim. Promoter Jim Norris said, “I’m certainly interested in staging a return bout, perhaps at Chicago.”’ However, the trend of negotiations at the ’ International Boxing dub indicated that Maxim would defend his light heavyweight crown against ex - middleweight champion Jakd at Detroit before, tackling Sugar Ray again. The Detroit/hout would in September. In his first statement to the press since Wednesday night’s heat-collapse at Yankee Stadium, Sugar Ray said, *\l certainly don't plan to retire on Wednesday's performance. No sir, 1 still have to be convinced that can beat me." Middleweight champion Robinson chatted with a reporter at a country retreat where he is resting and "returning to normal" after Wednesday’s peat prostration and 14th-round technical knockout before 47,983 fans in the Stadium. The heat registered 104 degrees in the ring. V' He said he first (began to feel the effects of that heat in the ninth round when he seemed, “sort of floaty.” ! ■His collapse had not been caused by Maxim's punches ' because “none of them hurt me befotre the 10th round, and after that 1 don’t remembef anything very well.” He did recall very hazily that in the 11th round, "I wanted to walk out of the ring some place for some reason.” Robinson was proud of his ringrecord when 1 he faced Maxim. He never failed to go the distance in 136 professional bouts. He had

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« IE IF ‘/I L- E .A A FULL investigation is ordered after Brig. Gen. Francis G. Brink, 58, chief of the U. S. military advisory group in Indo-China, is found fatally shot in his Pentagon office in Washington. District of Columbia coroner A. Magruder MacDonald said he was satisfied the three bullet wounds were self, inflicted but that he would withhold a death certificate until he completed inquiry. (InternationaD been beaten but twice. He had knocked out 86. And- he was trying to win his third world title.

DANCING EAGLES PARK, MINSTER, ONIO h SATURDAY, JUNE 28th EARL BALISES and His Orchestra Dancing Every Saturday 9 to 12 ' I -.1 V ' ! ' v ■ . ■ ■■' :

PAGE SEVEN

Dunbar Is Winner Over Rural Youth Dunbar defeated Rural Youth. 8-3, in a Decatur Softball league game Thursday night at Berne. Two games will be played tonight at Worthman field, -Beavers and. Decatur Merchants at 7:30 o’clock followed by VFW and Preble. Last night's score: RHE Rural Youth ... (TOl 200 o—3 1 3 Dunbar 101 240 x—B 4 3 Getting and Worden, Harvey; Neuenschwander and Spriinger. Democrat Want Aus Bring Results

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