Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 162, Decatur, Adams County, 12 July 1954 — Page 7

MONDAY, JULY IS, 1954

~ :'iM WBto JHHb I

Klenk's Whips McComb Sunday By 10-1 Score Klenk’s scored nine runs in the fifth Inning Sunday afternoon and carried on for an easy 10-1 victory over McComb Construction In a Federation league game at Worthman field. Decatur counted a single run Ln the fourth on a bit by Glllig, a force-out <and Reed’s triple. Klenk’s blew the game open in the next inning when they tallied nine times on only four hits, with three walks, two hit batsmen, a pair of stolen bases and a McComb error. The hits were a triple by Hoehammer, a double by Fredericks and singles by Bowen and Andrews. McComb scored its only run in the ninth on a triple by J. McComb and Koebl’s long fly. Ellenberger and Platt, dividing Klenk's pitching chores, kept McComb's eight hits well scattered. Rockford took a half-game lead over Klenk's tn the league race with a double beader triumph over Monroeville, 4-3 (11 Innings), and, 6-0. In other games Sunday, Kefi? dallville defeated Colonial Oil. 13-8; Paulding downed Payne, 6-2, and American Linen split with Club Manhattan, American winning the opener. 8-3, and dropping the nightcap, 4-3. Klenk's have four games scheduled this week, three of them at home. Paulding will play hete Wednesday night at 8 o’clock. Monroeville will be here Thursday at 8 p.m-. and league leading Rockford will appear here next Sunday afternoon at 2 o’clock. Friday night. Klenk’s meets American Linen at Dwenger park in Fort Wayne at 8 o’clock. McComb AB R H E Miller, 2b .... 3 0 0 0 Kennedy, 2b ..... 10 0 0 Buts, c 4 0 10 D. McComb, cf ... 4 0 0 0 Ludwig, ss ~ —'... 3 o i i Brendle, lb ... 4 0 0 0 J. McComb, If 3 13 0 Koehl, 3b 4 0 10 Pjfrvlance, rs... 4 0 2 0 tyoover, p 2 0 0 0 A3ams? o o' Fabln, p .... 4...- 10 0 0 TOTALS 34 1 8 1 Klenk's AB RHE Bowen, cf —... 5 2 2 0 Williams, If 3 1 0 0 Platt, p 10 10 Glllig. ss 4 111 Hoehammer, lb 5 2 2 0 Reed. 3b .. 4 12 0 Andrews, c. rf3 110 Ellenberger, p. ss .... 2 110 Fredericks, 2b...4 0 11 Helm, rs ....2 110 Melchior, c “..... 10 0 0 — TOTALS 34 10 12 2

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Score by innings: . McComb 000 000 001 —1 Klenk’s 000 190 OOx — 10 M/NM AMERICAN ASSOCIATION . W L Pct. GB Indianapolis .. 57 29 .663 St. Paul .... 46 87 .554 9% Louisville .. 00. 40* .529 11% Columbus 42 42 .500 14 Minneapolis .. 40 42 ,488 15 Kansas City.. 40 43-,482 15% Toledo 39 50 .438 19% Charleston ... 30 56 .349 27 Sunday’s Results Toledo 4-1, Louisville 3-3. St. Paul 8-2, Indianapolis 2-0. Minneapolis 8-6, Kansas City 5-8 Charleston 1-4, Columbus 0-3. Rural Youth Team Defeated Sunday The Howard county rural youth team defeated Adams county at Kokomo yesterday, 34- Pitcher for the winners was Jim Bolger; Raymond Worden pitched for Adams' county. Adams county’s four runs were scored in the first and sixth innings, and were made by Bob Heare, Dallas Neuensch wander, Sherman Arnold, and Raymond Worden. Also attending from Adame county were Karl Rich, Leslie Meshberger, Herb Marbach. Jerome Lehman, Earl Yoder, Carl Yoder, Sally McCullough, Barbara Kelley, Shirley Gerke, and Gloria Koeneman. Bag-Ettes Leading Ladies Golf League The Bag-Ettes took the lead in the Ladies golf league by defeating the Par-Ettes, 4-1. The DubEttes and Slic-Ettes tied at J%2% and the Drive-Ettes downed the Fore-Ettes, 4-1. Low scores for the week: Ethel Mae Sanmann 51, Mary Archer 53, Mardi Klelnhenz 53, Mary Jane Gage 55, Helen'Hutker 55. Lil MacLean 56, Janet Lane 57. Mart Terveer 57, Honora Haugk 59. No Farm League Games* In City This Week There will be no farm league games played on mornings this week at Worthman field because many of the team members are attending the Boy Scout camp at Big Island. Ralph Morris Wins Feature Race Sunday •Ralph Morris won the feature race at the Lake View speedway Sunday night, with Bob Tonnelier second and Carl Mankey third, in a close race. Fred Bischoff held the early lead but was forced out at the 17th lap when he blew a tire. Heat winners were Bischoff, Tonnelier, Mankey and Don Bollenbacher. In the consolation event. Bill Parker- was the winner, with Pete Ripple second and Earl Summers third. Races will continue to be held every Thursday and Sunday night, with time trials at 7:30 o'clock.

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Chisox Wallop Cleveland In Double Header NEW YORK (INSJ— The annual All-Star game break today found the Yankees coming, the White Sox "go-going’” up again and the Indians acting like tired old league leaders who could use a little vacation. Cleveland’s American League lead was sliced to a half-game Sunday as the Indians dropped a doubleheader to the White Sox, 3 to 0 and 8 to 2, and the Yankees made it nine wins in a row by defeating the Washington Senators, 7 to 3. Paul Richards’ third-place Chicagoans stirred up 45,466 pennant hungry partisans at Comiskey Park by moving to within three games of the top with the double win, which gave them a sweep of a four-game set with the Tribe. Encouraging to the Palehose was the brilliant return to form of lefty Billy Pierce, who blanked the Indians with two hits in the opener. Pierce, who’ returned recently after being sidelined for a month with a sore arm, stretched his scoreless pitching skein to 18 straight innings. Home runs by Minnie Minoso and Matt Batts helped the lefty win his fifth game in ten decisions. In the nightcap Virgil Trucks won’his 12th game of the season with a five-hitter, besting All-Star teammate Bob Lemon. Rookie •Ron Jackson’s three-run homer in the third gave the Sox a lead they never relinquished. Trucks lost his shut-out-and the Tribe ended 28 scoreless innings in a row—when Cleveland tallied twice in the ninth. The world champion Yankees, who had a five-game lead before last season’s lal-star layoff, continued to surge upward aS Bob Grim, rookie righthander, notched his 10th win of the season at the expense of the Nats, The 23-year-old Grim, who has lost three times, was helped out by Johnny Sain in the seventh as the Bombers made it 26 wins in their last 33 games. Mickey Me-; Dermott suffered his tenth Joss for the Senators. In other American league games, the Boston Red Sox swamped the Philadelphia Athletics, 18 to 0 and 11 to 1. with a 40-hit barrage, and the Detroit Tigers neud oat the Baltimore OtToles. 2 to 1. New York’s Giants maintained their 5%-game National League margin by splitting with the lastplace Pirates, while the runnerup Dodgers divided with the Phillies. The Giahts, rapping out six homers, including Willie Mays’ 31st of the season, won the opener, 13 to 7, but American League referee Dick Littlefield southpawed the Durochermerif 5 to 1, in the afterpiece. The Phillies beat the Dodgers. 3 to 1. after Brooklyn had eked out an 8 to 7 win in therppener.. St. Louis edged the Chicago rCube, 4 to 3, and Milwaukee and Cincinnati broke even in a couple of 6 to 5 decisions. Everything went bad for the poor Athletics Sunday. Slugging leftfielder Gus Zernial may be lost for the season due to a-broken left,collarbone he sustained while attempting to make a ca(ch In the opener. Early season rookie sensation Bob Trice, who lost his fourth straight game, was optioned to Ottawa. Rookies Frank Sullivan and'Torn Brewer tossed five-hitters to get the Red Sox out of the cellar and into sixth place. Sammy White had six hits in the twin bill and Ted Williams, who homered in the first game, had four for’’six and raised his average to -.367. Bonus rookie Reno Beroia’s first major letgue hit—a homer—gave the Tigers their margin over the Orioles, with Billy Hoeft and Steve romek showing in tjhajate innings to protect the witrTOsAl Aber. Mays' fine-game homer put him 11 games ahead of the pace set by Babe Ruth during the Bambino's record 60-year in 1927. The Babe didn't get-No. 31 until his 94th game. The "say hey" kid of the Giants hit his In his 83rd game. Willie was joined by Al Dark. Mofite Whitey Lockman. Henry ThJfrnpson and Don Mueller as Sal Maglie notched his ninth win despite three Rue homers. Littlefield became the first pitcher to go the route against the Giants in 19 games in the nightcap as he held them.homtrless for the first -time (nH-’-gatnest- He-got-help from a two-run by Frank Thomas. boubles by Billy Cox and Junior Gilliam got Brooklyn the win-., ning margin In the eighth,lnning of their opener. Rooic Phiille third baseman Jim Command set some sort of modern mark when lie made his first major league hit a grand slam homer in a six-rpn eighth. '' Del Ennis' home run broke a 1-1 tie in the seventh Inning of the second gamd as Henn Wehmeier bested Don NewcembO with the aid of some brilliant rclieling by Rollin Roberts. Gus Bell and Ted KlUsiewski hit buck’buck homers 'to help

TMI DBCATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

ALLSTAR JINX? ... - - By Alan Mavef ~ STENGEL, who set w/tH > straight ft ■ 4 ‘‘ worlp SERFS jjE ‘ ; r WMS, W/LL Tpy Z‘i srop A A T/QAIAL. , Wbj O. \f u* ieaeje fxom setting /Mr ▼/ j A RECORP OFS STRAIGHT z m TjEg/sr ’ - ‘ x, O£FqRE 'CA9E TOOK OVER TOR THE iiT '/ f , j X OR H/G R PREVIOUS Z // all-star managerial ■/ Zz ASSIGNMENTS 7NE HOWEVER, /N f 95/ STENGEL WAG NATIONAL LEAGUE WAMPEREP OTA RULE RESTRICTING HAP NEVER EVEN HIM TO ONLY ONE HURLER FROM WON TWICE IN A ROW. ANV ONE TEAM. ANP IN 1952. ’ —-r- — THEY PLAYEP ONLY 5 INNINGS fain canceller the game.

the Redlegs beat the Braves and Milwaukee won the second game despite Bell's second circuit, a triple and two singles. Rookie joe Cunningham homered to- give the Cards their win over the Bruins. The first baseman's fifth rpundtripper since joining the Red-Birds on June 39 broke a 3-3 tie in the sixth in-' ning.

MAJOR NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB New York .... 57 27 .679 Brooklyn _.j. 51 32 .614 5% Philadelphia 40 87 .519* «3% Milwaukee4l 41 .500 15 Cincinnati 41 42 .494 15% St. Louis 40 42 .488 16 Chicago 29 50 .367 25% Pittsburgh .., 27 55 .328 ,29 AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB Cleveland 56 27 .675 New York .... 56 28 .667 % Chicago 54 31 .625 3 Detroit 35 44 .443 19 Washington .. 32 47 ,40*5. 22 Boston 31 48 .392 23 Philadelphia . 30 49-.380 24 Baltimore ~... 31 61—-.378 24% Saturday’s Results -Nationat LAtpue - Pittsburgh 10. New. York 7. Brooklyn 10, Philadelphia 5. Cincinnati 7, Milwaukee 3 St. Louis 2, Chicago 1. American League Detrojt 2, Baltimore 1 Chicago 3, Cleveland 0 Boston 5. Philadelphia 3 (11 inningskNew York 9, Washington 1. Sunday’s Results National League New York 13-1. Pittsbutgh 7-5 ' Brooklyn 8-1, Philadelphia 7-3 Cincinnati 6-5. Milwaukee 5-6 St. Louis 4. Chicago 3. American League Chicago 3-8. Cleveland 0-2. Boston 18-11, Philadelphia 0-1. New York 7., Washington 3. Detroit 2, Baltimore 1. — LA' ■*“ ' s.-A*’ |Jal. ■ «s <» I r»>. xK.XWai6M6WI.WII; -a > XBw. 1 DR. JULIUS SCHREIBER, i former lieutenant colonel who heeded the programs section of the U.S, Army Orientation Branch "during World, War 11, points angrily at a photographer dur- .. ing his witness stand stint before the Senate internal security committee tn Washington. He testified he was not a Communist when he held a top post in the Army's wartime informa- , Lon program

SPORTS BULLETIN NEW YORK (INS)—Brooklyn Dodger pennant hopes soared today when they learn-* ed Roy Campanella, their star catcher, can continue to play despite his hand injury and has no permanent paralysia, as feared. Doctors .who examined the big catcher’s hand, declared, “the injury is not a progressive one and will not bat a permanent one.” Monmouth Is Winner Against Woodburn 1 Monmouth scored a 15-3 victory over Woodburn in a Pony League game played at Woodburn Saturday, The line score: RHE Monmouth 420 090—18 13 1 Woodburn OTO H(A 3- 4 -9 McDougal aud Busick; Gerig, Woebeklng and Schug. Finn Twins Are On Jail Hunger Strike Attorney Seeking To Obtain Release LOS ANGELES' (INS)—An attouney.. fur., the. starving ,£iim. twins. George and Charles, who ore on a "win or die” hunger strike agaiust being jailed, goes to court today to attempt to get the iron-willed twins put on bail. The twins’ attorney. Bernard B. Crhen. said he go before the ninth U. S.?cfrcuit court of appeals today witty a plea that the 4t)-year-old brothers be admitted <0 immediate bail. Cohen intends to into the tourt’s crowded docket on the ground that thO brothers, who have not eaten in three weeks, are in peril of death and need Immediate relief. The Finns, fliers in World War II and the Berlin airlift, were sentenced to a year in jai| on June .21 after a conviction of interfering with a federal officer. They bad plated LI. 8. attorney Leugh.lin E.'Waeas under zen's arrest" as part of a continuing battle with the gAernment over ownership of a war surplus airplane. ’ They spurned probation “In lieu of justice" and began their hungerstrike the day they were sentenced. when Federal Judge Ed ward P. Murphy refused to grant them ball pending an appeal, < Democrat Want Adi Briny Results Trade in a Good Town — Decatur. If you nave something to sell or ooms for rent, try a Democrat ■Vant 4d. It brings remits.

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21st All-Star Game Tuesday In Cleveland BULLETIN CLEVELAND (INS)—Southpaw Ed “Whitey” Ford of the New York Yankees was named as a surprise starter today to oppose the Philadelphia Phillies’ Robin Roberts in the 21st major league All-Star game at Cleveland Stadium Tuesday. CLEVELAND (INS)—There was a time when the home run was the American League’s stock in trade, but now the National League makes the loudest noise with the long ball and hopes to put It to good use in Tuesday's 21st AllStar classic in Cleveland. When Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig were wielding the mace, the American League was top-heavy with power, but the era has changed and the Nationals are far out in fronj to that department this year. As the cream of the major league crop enter the All-Star game at spacious .Municipal Stadium —home of the Indians —the senior circuit boasts five players who have hit more than 20 homers so far this season. Leading the group is the New York Giants' Willie Mays, who has blasted 31 roundtrippers and, ironically, was not voted as a starter in a nationwide (roll of fans. The American League, which also hopes to bank heavily on the long trail, does not have a player who has hit the 20 mark as yet. New York’s iMickey iMantle leads the loop with 18 homers. In addition to .Mays, the National League’s "murder incorporated" is composed. of Stan IMusial of the St. Louis Cardinals (26); Gil Hodges. of Brooklyn (23); Ted Kluszewski of Cincinnati (22), and Brooklyn’s Duke Snider who has blasted 20 homers. The “boom-boom” boys of the National League will be out to hand the American League its fifth straight All-Star setback. They’ve beaten the Americans in each of the four games managed by Casey Stengel, who, incidentally, has had uninterrupted success in leading the New York Yankees to five straight world titlee. In all I sit last year’s game, homers played an important -part 4n setting the Americans back on their heels. But despite the National League’s surge jn the power departrtientr—the ArfiWtctHft stffF 'hold a 12-8 edge in the mid-sain-mer’s classic. In 1950. when the Nationals won their first .contest since 1944, Ralph Kiner hit a ninth-inning four bagger to tie the score at 3-all and "Red’’ Schoendienat homered in the 14th to give the senior leaguers a 4-3 win. St*n iMuaial, Bob Elliot, Gil Hodges and Kiner hit for the circuit In 1951 to pave the way for an easy 8-3 victory and in 1952 Hank Sauer and Jackie Robinson provipower in a 3-2 triumph. ... Tjespite a wealth of power on I l>oth eides last year, not a homer j was hit. Yet. the National League managed to dump the Americans. | 5-1. and beat Stengel for the fourth j straight time.

Ks 'TH OLot ‘ ■ '*'* * u J ‘s < Sk t Wil > >%JW I ' J \ \ v i ->,-fIWL A V will VIRGINIA HILL (above). In whose Lot Angeles home underworld, character Bugsy Siegel was killed (while She was in Europe) in 1947, is und«r federal indictment in Los AJigeies, charged with evading 190,180.02 tn income taxes for years 1944-47. She is in Salzburg, Austria, with ski instructor husband, Hans Hauser. (International)

1 Hi iIHLWX 7 / r 1 ■ « I ■ * i I : K.- A < *• • v* ’’ 'Ww^ r '' ' ****** K; Oil rwHI NEW FRENCH Premier Pierre Mendes-France (left) is congratulated on his election in Paris by British Foreign Secretary Anthony Biden st British embassy event f International Soundphotol

EL* J ■ t i ■ w* A « ; - F\ I An < Jo * * k pfak h - \ I . .yj -v '~. k ERNEST ANGELL, chairman of the American Civil Liberties union, is shown testifying before the Senate rules committee to urge adoption of a fair ptay code for all congressional probes. The ACLU said John Q. Citizen should have the same protection as Senator Joseph McCarthy (R), Wisconsin, or Army Secretary Robert Stevens before congressional investigators. (International) Democrat Want Adk Br'ng rtesutte IT vou have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings results.

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PAGE SEVEN

Pony League Games Here This Evening Two Pony League games are scheduled tonight at Worthman field in this city. The Decatur Cardinals w’ill meet Marsh of Bluffton at 7 o’clock, followed by the Decatur Braves and the Ossian Boosters. In a Pony League game Friday night at Bluffton, the Bluffton Moose defeated the Cardinals, 12-6, scoring seven of their runs on only two hits in the third inning. Trade in a Goo.l Town — Decatur.

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