Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 53, Number 163, Decatur, Adams County, 13 July 1955 — Page 7

~ JULY U W-

White Sox And Yanks Win In little League The White Sox and Yankees were easy victors in one-sided Little League games played Tuesday night at Worthman field. The Sox defeated the( Senators, -12-3, in the opener, scoring/ajl their runs in the first three Innings. The winners made only rive hits but were aided by 10 walks and nine errors. In the nightcap, the Yankees whipped the Tigers, 17-2, in a game halted after four innings because of the league’s time limit. Nine runs in the first inning iced the contest for the Yankees. The Senators and Red Sox will meet at 6 o’clock this evening at Worthman field to make up a ' postponed game. The White Sox will play at 6 o’clock Thursday evening at the Homestead. and in Friday's double beader at Worth man. the Indians and Red Sox meet at 6:15 p. m., followed by the Senators and Tigers. Senators AB RHE Custer, 2b, p. 3 0 0 1 Hakey, p 0 0 0 0 2100 Cancino, lb . 2 10 1 Sharp, ss 3 0 10 Kelly, 3b 1 10 3 Fawcett, If, 2b .... 2 0 0 2 Rumschlag, cf 3 0 0 0 Colter, rs 0 0 0 0 Coffee, p 10 0 2 Poling, If 2 0 0 0 TOTALSI9 3 1 9 White Sox AB R H E Raudebush, 1b....3 2 0 0 C. Strickler, 3b2 3 1 0 Gay, c 0 10 0 E. Nelson, p 3 3 11 Odle. 2b 2 0 2 1 F. Strickler, 2b ... 11 0 0 Callow, ss ... 10 0 0 M. Nelson, ss 2 0 0 0 Kitson, rs 3 0 0 1 Fravel. It 2 0. 0 0 Ahr, rs 10 0 0 Elliott, cf . r 2 2 1 0 TOTALS ...1.. 22 12 5 3 Senators 000 120— 3 White Sox 354 OOx —12 Two-base hits: C. Strickler; sac | rifice; Gay; bases on balls: off

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Coffee 8, Custer 2, Nelson 7; hit by pitcher: by Nelson (Cancino); strikeouts: by Coffee <4, Custer 3, Nelson 11; hits off: Coffee.s in 4. Custer oin 2. Loser: Coffee. Umpires: Ladd, Lord. Yankees AB R H E Scheiman, lb ... 4 2 1 1 Ralston, 3b 8 4 10 Rambo, ss ... 12 0 0 Eichenauer, ,2b 3 3 1 0 Marbach, c 4 2 11 Dellinger, cf ...— 2 10 0 Hoffman, rs 11 0 0 G. Ladd, rs 2 0 0 0 I Vegara, If — 2 0 1 0 Maddox, If 4— 10 0 0 Redwell, If 0 0 0 0 R. Ladd, p 2 2 11 TOTALS 25 17 6 3 Tigers AB R H E Ross, ss 2 0 0 2 Beery, If 2 0 0 0 H. Ballard, rfl 0 0 0 McGill, rs 10 0 0 cf, lb .... 2 0 0 0 Kauffman, lb, p ... 2 11 1 Conrad, c 2 1 0 0 Embler, p. 2blo 0 0 Martin, 3b 1 0 1,1 Mclntosh, 2b 0 0 0 .0 Dawson, p-- 10 0 3 R. Ballard, cf 1 0 0 0 TOTALS 16 2 2 7 Yankees 9 0 3 5—17 Tigers 0 0 0 2— 2 Runs batted in: Eichenauer 2, Marbach 2, Dellinger, R. Ladd 2; Two-base hits: Ralston, Eichenauer, Marbach; bases on balls: off Ladd 2, Embler 4, Dawson 4, Kauffman 2; hit by pitcher: by Kauffman (Dellinger, R. Ladd); Strikeouts: by Ladd 7, Embler 1, Dawson 1, Kauffman 1; Hits off: Embler 2 in 1, Dawson 2 in 4, Kauffman 2 in 1; Loser, Embler. Umpires ;Lord, Ladd. Parts For Midget Racers Are Stolen INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — Chester L. Hudson, of Indianapolis, told police the thief who stole $1,250 in automotive equipment really got a humpty dumpty. Hudson said that much of the loot was specially ground parts, custom made fat two midget race cars. Hudson said:. "They were priceless to me, but they won't be worth a dime to the thief unless he can go steal the J race cars, too.” Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

Charles Favorite To Whip Paul Andrews - CHICAGO (INS)—Ezzard Char- . les rule* a 2 to 1 favorite to whip Paul Andrews of Buffalo, N. Y„ ' in their televised 10 round heavy- ’ weight m’atch tonight at Chicago ’ stadium. , The oddsmakers installed Charles the choice because of his long' j er experience—some 40 years — L and a thresspound weight advan- ) tage over Andrews who is. expectj ed to tip the scales at 189 pounds. ) | Charles said: [ “I need to win tonight to keep > up my hopes for another chance j to regain the title." ) I Charles lost the championship ) In 1951 to Jersey Joe Walcott who ) hi turn lost It to Rocky Marciano. ) Charles has twice . unsuccessfully L attempted to dethrone Marciano, . suffering an eighth round knock- { out In the second match. j • —— Klenk's Loses loop Game To : American Linen American Linen surprised j Klenk's of Decatur Tuesday night, I edging out a 6-5 victory over the > Federation league leaders at Dwen- , ger park in Fort Wayne. These same teajns ; wiH meet . again Thursday night at 8 o’clock : under the lights at Worthman , field in this city. r American Linen scored a pair ; of runs in the third winning but . Klenk’s counted three times in the : fourth on singles by Krueckeberg , and Bowen, a triple by Hoehammer • and Reed's long sacrifice fly. Linen tied the score in the fifth but Klenk’s again went ahead on an error and a walk for a run in the sixth. Linen bunched three hits and a fielder’s choice for three runs in the seventh and the vic- ' tory. A pair of walks and a fielder’s ‘ choice accounted for Klenk's final run iq the eighth inning. Klenk’s AB R H E Baumgardner, ss 3 0 0 0 Crist, ss2 0 0 0 Krueckeberg, rs 2 110 . Gillig, rs 2 0 0 0 Bowen, cf 4 12 0 , Hoehammer, lb 3 2 11 Reed, 3b ...2 >-,0 0 Andrews, c 3 0 0 0 r Williams, .ft ...2 0 0 0 - Rowdon, 2b —1 0,;-l 0 ■ | Groves, p— 4 0 (M TOTALS 32 5 5 1 American Linen AB RHE Rondot, ss —- 10 11 Vance, lb —... .4 3 3 0 Koomjohn. If ------— 4 10 0 Covell, c ....3 0 10 L. Parrish, cf 4 0 2 0 G. Parrish. 3b 4 0 0 0 Miser. 2b 2 0 0 0 Wright, rs 10 0 0 Hoover, rs 3 0 0 0 Wagner, p 2 110 a- Brendel ....— 1 0 1 0 b - Gumbert, p ,0 1 0 0 TOTALS 29 6 9 1 a- Singled for Wagner in 7th. b - Ran for Brendel in 7th. Score by innings: 8 ’ — Klenk's 000 301 010 — 5 Linen ... 002 010 30x — 6 MINO® AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Club W. L. Pct. G.B. Minneapolis 54 40 .574 1 Toledo ..'55 39 .585 Omaha 52 43 .547 354 Denver 52 44 .542 4 Louisville 46 44 .511 7 St. Paul.,'—— 46 49 .484 954 ; Indianapolis ..-40 55 .421 lo'i ■ Charleston — 31 62 .333 2354 Tuesday’s Results Louisville 4-3, Charleston 1-4. St. Paul 2-3, Denver 0-0. Omaha 12, Mjnneapolis 8. 1 Toledo 7, Indianapolis 2.

JHE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Musial Homers In 12th For National Win ■, • - MILWAUKEE (INS) —Stan ;Musial, a moderii' day baseball great who has indelibly Inscribed his name In the game's record books alongside the ftnmorfal« of the past, had a hall of fame reservation wrapped up today-but he was-too busy piling up new honors. Musial. still going strong at 34. and apparently still far away from •tils day of retirement, added new glory to his already brilliant career Tuesday when he homered <in the 19th Inning to give the National League a dramatic 6-5 victory over the American League in the 1955 All Star game. I The sudden death wallop by the ‘St. Louis Cardinal veteran came ion the first .pitch of the inning jserved up by elongated Frank Sui[livan of the Boston Red Rox aqj lit, climaxed three hours and 17 ■ minutes pf , baseball mayhem I Which excited 45,643 fans in Milwaukee’s County Stadium. This 28nd edition of the classic was one that, could match all its preceding showings. It had everything and then some, and Stan “the Man” was the star of stars. Musial, oldest player on the N. L.’s dream team roster, was in his 12th All Star game. This gave him a new record. His 400 tool rpeket into the rightfield bleachers was his fourth All Star homer and it also represented a new major league mark. The National League’s ninth triumph in the series and their fifth in the last'six years, was a come- ■ back win achieved when they erased a 5-0 deficit by scoring twice in the seventh and three times in the eighth. Injected with an initial hypo by flamboyant Willie Mays of the New York Giants and bolstered by sparkling pitching from unheralded Cincinnati southpaw Joe Nuxhall and Milwaukee’s Gene Con- ; ley, the Nationals snuffed out some outstanding performances by their riva-ls-both batting and hurl- ; ing. i i There was a tremendous 425-foot i homer over the center field fence ) by Mickey Mantle in the first in- ) ning, a three run smack that cap- ) ped a four run getaway agains' I Robin Roberts before the magnifi- ) cent righthander could get a man ) put in his record equalling fifth J .All Star game starting assignment. ) masterful pitching starter Bi,lx. - pfefee and - Ko. 2’ in an Early Wynn 1 with another run in the sixth off ; Harvey Haddix. Pierce, southpaw I ace of the Chicago White Sox, per- ) mitted only a- leadoff single by ) Red Schoendienst in the three injhlngs he toiled; j Wynn, 35 year old Cleveland Ini dian righthander, gave up three ) hits in three scoreless inings but t distinguished himself by striking ) out Musial and getting the great I man to hit into a double play in > the two times he faced him. I The Nationals came to life ir. the seventh after Mays, in his customery dynamic manner, robbed mighty Ted Williams of a homer when he leaped up "against the fence in right center to catch the thumper's towering drive. ; Singles by Mays in the seventh and eighth also ignited his team's rallies against southpaw ’ WUiTey Ford, who turned out to bj th A. L. only pitching sore spot daspite the fact that the loss went 10 young Mr. Sullivan. The Nationals gdt help in hot' innings frent fielding mishaps by shortstop Chico Carrasquel ants third baseman Al Rosen. In tin 'sfeventh CLritasque! niislwendv II and then threw badly on a grounder by Stan Lopata to mess up ft forceont. which would have ended the inning, but which produced :• run instead. ,'And Rosen gammed up a throw from rightfielder Al Kaline in the eighth which permitted the Nationals to score the tying run. Milwaukee’s Johnny Logan singled across’ the first Natinal run of the contest and the home folks made with a lusty roar when Henry Aaron followed singles by Mays, Ted Klu.sewski and Randy Jackson with a single to right in the eighth. Big Klu came across with the fourth run and Jackson the fifth when Rosen allowed Kaline’s peg to squirt through Ms legs. | The victory, appropriately enough, went to (’onh y. who came on the scene in the 12th inning and I brought down the house by stsik- ; ing out the side. I But Nuxhall, whose biggest pre- | vious claim to fame was the fad that in 1944, at the age of-15. KF became the youngest 'player evei to appear in a major league game, also was superb*. ' Lefty Joe struck out Ford with the bases loaded to end the Americans' eighth ajtd pitched three -noiT hearted and scoreless innings. He fanned the side in .the tenth and stopped threats in‘the ' aintb and 11th. g .. Jhe victory-gave Lco/.Durociicr a repeat over Al Lopez, the It How lie beat in. the World Series.. T‘li? , Gjant skipper 'ffs’etFf very niau c;i & squat! witir tile exception cd

lefthander Luis Arroyly of St. Louis. This was the second All Star game in history to go Into extra innings. The 1950 game at Chicago went 14 innings and the National League won it 4-3 on a homfer by iSdhoendienet. The St. Louis redhead happens to be th® Toad roommate of a felIw named Sian Musial. Tigers, Cubs Win In Morning League < The Tigers defeated the Indians, i 4-2, and the Cubs downed the Dodgers. 5-2, in morning “big league” games Tuesday at Worthtnan field. I Thursday’s schedule: 9 a.m., Indians vs Cubs; 10:20 a.m., Tigers _v,a J Tuesday s line scores: RHE 'lndians ; 020--2 1 3 Tigers 40x—4 3 2 Strickler and D. Vanhorn, :Black; Banks and Flora. I . < RHE ICu6? 104 o—s 0 1 'Dodgers. 101 o—2 4 4 I Beal and Andrews; Kable and Black. League Standing W L Pct, Tigers 6 0 1.000 Dodgers 3 3 .500 Cubs 2 4 .333 Indians 1 5 .167 Boys Report Bass Jumped Into Boat ROCHESTER, Ind. (INS) — “Honest, a bass this long jumped right out of Lake Manitou into our boat.” i And to prove it Timmy Birch, 7, and Ronald Thomas, 11, had the 16-inch large mouth bass to prove it. The young Indianapolis boys nearly fell into the lake when the fish juftnped in but all three got to shore safely. . ■ — —1 - —

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Geneva Still Leads In Horseshoe League Geneva and Monroe are still running a close race for the lead in the Adams county horseshoe league, with Geneva leading by half a game. Results of last week's matches: Monroe 6, Union 3; Salem 6, Ohio City 3; Herne 5. Monroeville 4; i Geneva 7, Preble 2. . • ' j. The, leading individual scorers: Maitland 72, KniUle 61, C .Landis 57, Buuck 57, Van Natter 56, Christner 54. Neaderhouser 52, Campbell 52. J. Johnson 51, A. Landis 50. Green 50, < Matches Thursday night: Ohio City at Monroeville, Union at Salem. Geneva at Berne, Preble at Monroe. League Standing W L Pct. Geneva 71 .875 Monroe 6 1 .857 Uniton 4 4 .500 Berne 4 4 ,50ff Ohio City 3 5 .375 Monroeville - 3 5 .375 Salem 3 5 .375 Preble ...1 6 .143 . $273,254.02 Profit From All-Star Game MILWAUKEE (INS) — A profit of $273,254.02 after taxes was realized in the 22d major league All Star game in Milwaukee. Most of the money will go to ward the players’ pension fund. Attendance was 45,314. The gross amounted to $179,545.50 with a of $163,254,02 "Ttfter taxes of $16,291.48. Television rights were $75,000 and radio $35,000. If vou have something to sail o* rooms for rent, try a DemoWant Ad. it brings rssuits.

Senate Committee Okays Resolutions Proclaim Hope For Satellite Peoples WASHINGTON (INS) — The senate foreign rem<tons committee unanimously approved today resolutions proclaiming hope for the enslaved satellite peoples and rejecting “Communist imperialism and other forms of colonialism.” The committee unanimously agqin rejected an effort by Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) to make the satellite statement a more specific repudiation of Russia and Communism. An earlier resolution by McCarthy was defeated, 77-4, by the senate three

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PAGE SEVEN

weeks ago. Senate action on Its bipartisan expression on freedom for the satellites and on a house passed concurrent resolution on colonialism is expected Thursday. President Eisenhower leaves Friday for the Big Four conference at Geneva. Attacks Coach May Take College Post INDIANAPOLIS (INS) — Ray Crowe, who guided Indianapolis Crispus Attucks to the city's first state basketball title, confirmed today that he has been offered a college coaching Job. Ray said he was seriously considering taking a job as head basketball coach at Prairie View College in Texas, about 45 miles west of Houston.