Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 131, Decatur, Adams County, 4 June 1956 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

SPORTS

Klenk's Edges Celina Sunday By 6*5 Score KleTik’s of Decatur edged Celina, 65. in a Western Buckeye league game Sunday afternoon at the Celina diamond. The teams were knotted at 4-4 after eight innings. Decatur scored twice in the top of the ninth when Hoehammer survived on a Celina error and Andrews belted a home run. ' ■" . A pair of errors gave Celina one run in the bottom of the ninth and the tying run waa on base.but Orv Reed relieved Shaw on the mound and retired the next twc men to preserve the victory. Klenk's scored a single, run in the second and two more in the third. Celina counted once in the fourth and took the lead with a three-run outburst in the sixth, but Klenk’s evened the score with a singleton in the seventh. The Decatur team will entertain Buckland in another league encounter Sunday afternoon at

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DECATUR’S FIRST . . » . FUR & GARMENT STORAGE VAULT i k? CATE ° KELLY’S DRY CLEANING ■' «■ ■■ ■' FURS II BOX )| GARMENTS STORAGE • '■ 1100.00 Valuation OI VlWillC •TOPCOATS Insured against Fire, • LADIES COATS Theft and Moth damage ' J OC S X.OO • 801 75C Plus Cleaning Charge NOTHING TO PAY Insured «9«lnst Fire, Theft and Moth Damage. *TILL FALL • Nothing to Pay ’till Fall NOTHING TO PAY • We Furnish Th. Box ’ ""—”1 • Fill It Full Os Woolens . . . WE CL£AN, -then can us. GLAZE AND ele ”^M r * . and JZ to viatt our Pi in t •ure everything, safe and inspect our new REPAIR ,r ° m moth *’ flr« end theft. Storage Vault. See, _ ; ncroM' etn The Faf|> Woolen , wi|) for yourself why If E*ltDC I be re turned elean, refresh- wl * l P *XJL OU *? ,tore FURS I ed and re.dy to u „. your FURS and 1 Woolens. WE GIVE T T7JPI WE GIVE ' HOLDEN’S K k I I Y Si HOLDEN’S RED STAMPS Uta UUAbJ X RED STAMPS “Decatur’s Drive-In Super Market for Textile Maintenance’’ 427 N. 9th St,—OPEN DAILY «:30 A. M. to 8:00 P. M>—Across from 6. B. Plant

I Worthman field in this city. L Klenk's AB R H E 'Williams. If ..—4 0 U 2 Bowen, cf 4 10 0 Crist, ss 3 110 Hoehammer, lb . 5 3 2 0 Reed. 3b, p 4 0 11 Andrews, rs .... 4 I J 2 0 Minnich, c —... 3 0 10 Helm, 2b -v—. 5 0 10 Shaw, p, 3b 6 0 10 TOTALS 37 6 9 3 Celina AB R H E R. Gray. If 5 0 10 Schindler, lb ... ' 5 0 0 0 D. Gray, ss 4 12 1 J. Gray, 2b - 4 10 0 Andrews, 3b ....L.t.. 5010 Plummer, cf 5 110 D. Springer, rs 11 0 0 J. Springer, c 4 12 0 Brookhart, p —* 4 0 0 0 ■ TOTALS ... 37 5 71 - Score by Innings: Klenk's 012 000 102 — 6 Celina 000 103 001 — 5 ’—-i MI

minor /eayuefieMJ&ti AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W L Pct. GB Denver 33 14 .702 Indianapolis .. 24 18 .571 6Mi Minneapolis ... 24 21 .533 8 Omaha 23 22 .511 9 Louisville .... 21 21 .500 9V6 St Paul 19 24 .442 12 Wichita 18 27 -400 14 Charleston .... 14 39 .326 17 Sunday’s Results Minneapolis 9, Denver 8 . Indianapolis 7-3, Charleston 3-5 Louisville 5-2, Wichita 0-3 (2nd game 12 innings) Omaha 7. St. Paul C. — I Washington—An average American family throw's a,way 400 pounds of food a year: Portland — Several mlUlok bushels of potatoes are lost each year ah a result pf sprout growth during storage. „ft 'ft ft i ft ||| ■ ToiSwSVwS First Decatur Showing? Double Shock Show! ft iBBBi IhSoS fl yft J*/- • HHaSsl

Decafur Team Wins Over Liberty Center Sautbine A Simerman Home Builders came from behind to eke out a 12-11 victory over liberty Center in a B & L leaguer game Sunday afternoon at McMillen field here. ~ Decatur took an early 4-0 lead but Liberty went out tn front with six runs in the third. Decatur tied it with two in the same inning and made it 8-6 in the fourth. Liberty, however, scored four in the fifth and one in the sixth for an 11-8 advantage. Reinking, who had relieved, Gaunt in the third, blanked the visitors the rest of the way, while his mates counted twice in the seventh and two more in the eighth for the victory. The 9 & 8 team will play at Uniondale next Sunday afternoon at 1:30 o’clock. Liberty Center AB R H E J. Craig, p 5 2 2 0 Clark, c —... 6 1 3 JO Dunaway, cf 3 2 1 0| T, Craig, 3b — 5 0 11 Ifolmes, sss 1 0 a Huffman, If — 5 2 10 Tinkle, lb 3 2 0 1 Niblick, 2b 4 12 1 Lewis, rs 4 0 0 0 ft TOTALS 40 11 10 4 Deeatur AIRHE R. Plumley, c -. 5 2 2 2 Sautbine, 3b. 2b 5 2 12 Conrad, u, 3b 4 11 0 Busse, lb _*-.3 1 0 0 Gaunt, p, cf 4 2 11 Worden, If L-ft.S 3 2 0 Lehrman, 2b — 10 0 0 C. Plumley, 3b, ss —. 2 2 0 0 D. Plumley, cf, rs ....‘5 0 \ 0 Reinking, rs, p 4 2 2 1 St iiu _— TOTALS ft-ft 38 12 10. 6 Score by Innings: ; . Liberty Renter - 006 041 000 — 11 Decatur 312 20022 x—' 12 _ -- ft- ■'' MAJOR national league ~u ; . W. L. Pct. G.B. Milwaukee - 20 13 £O6 % Pittsburgh —-24 16 .600 Cincinnati ——23 ilB .661 » lf4 St. Louis 34 19 .588 Brooklyn u.... 20 19 -518 8% New York —l7 23 >415 7 Philadelphia —ls 23 .395 hr' Chicago 13 25 .342 13i ' SATURDAY'S RESULTS IP Chicago 8-5, Brooklyn: 1-4. Cincinnati 5, New York 2, if Philadelphia 6,9 L Louis 4;, If Pittsburgh 4o Milwaukee 2. Jft SUNDAY’S RESULTS" H Cinchjnati 7-3. Wr*York f St L 0.,, M. XM ; ERItA WLEAGUi W. L. Pct. G.Bi. New York .... 29 16 .644 — Chicago 20 16 .556 4*4 Cleveland 23 19 .537 5. * Boston 21 21 .500 6tf .Detroit ....— 21 21 .500 0% Baltimore .... 20 23 .465 8 Kansas City .. 17 25 .405 ip>4 Washington .. 18 27 .400 11 SATURDAY’S RESULTS Kansas City 11. Boston 3. Cleveland 15, Washington 0. Detroit at New York, rain. Chicago at Baltimore, rain. SUNDAY’S RESULTS Detroit 6-7, New York 3-4 (2nd game 10 innings). Kansas City 7, Boston 6 (10 innings, 2nd postponed, rainj.

THX DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT,-DECATUR, INDIANA -

Maior League Leaders By UNITED PRESS NATIONAL LEAGUE Player A Club GAB R H Pct Repulski. St. L. 30 100 22 40 .400 Long. Pitts. 42 158 31 62 .392 Boyer, St. L* 43 171 32 61 .357 Bruton, Milw. 29 105 20 36 .343 Aaron. Milw. :<3 126 24 42 .333 Walls, Pitts. 39 123 £5 41 .333 Bailey, Cinci. 33 102 13 34 .333 AMERICAN LEAGUE Mantle, N.Y. 45 168 4 5 69 .411 Maxwell. Det. 34 109 26 41 .376 Kuen, Det. 42 174 27 62 .350 Lollar, Chicago 34 112 16 38 .339 Berra. N.Y. 36 136 26 46 .338 Home Runs —Mantle, Yanks 20: Long, Pirates 15: Berra. Yanks 13; Sievers, Senators 12: Bauer; Banks, Cubs 12. Runs Battled in—Mantle Yahks 50; Boyer, Cards 41; Long, Pirates 41; Berra, Yanks 37; Musial, Cards 35. Runs —Mantle. Yanks 45; Blasingame. Cards 35; Bauer, Yanks 35; Lopez. Athletics 33. ; Hits —Mantlet, Yanks 69; Kuenn. Tigers 62; Boyer, Cards 61: Long, PirSles 60; Ashburn, Phillies 52. | Pitching — Lawrence, Redlegs 6- Brewer, Red Sox 7-1; Friend, Pirates 9-2; Wilson, U’hite Sox 7- Ford, Yanks 7-2. Chicago 12-9, Baltimore 0-2.. Cleveland 8-1, Washington 4-7 (Ist game 12' innings). Cincinnati Few mechanical refrigerators were in domestic in the U. S. befofe 1921. Washington — Aluminum is said j to be among the most abundant so I all the metal elements found ini the earth’* crust.

.. ... .. — ... .y_— . .. A Thp lines are All 18 Ford models for ’56 have the low-to-the-road, style-setting look of the Thunderbird , ' ■ ylf'l V M\ . — . r—'. z >? - - i . - -' • - * I r r" >. • *? . » .*■ ' \ ' t ‘ ■ • i ‘ f > ’■* -, v '.Cr. ■* * V -"k ■ •' i*' \ ,■' •• j • • ■ . r-d ; ■ • And so’s the 4 price 4 . * in - - . • •. ■ .. ‘ ■ -,T - 1 Thunderbird-inspired beauty, Lifeguard ttesign, and Thunderbird V-8 7 GO* can be yours in the ’56 Ford ... America’s largest-selling Eight! ’Die Thunderbird inspired the long, sleek lines of the personal car. Then, in the ’56 Ford you can have the ’56 Ford. Our terrific selling pace inspired the deals. In Thunderbird’s own engine. And at no extra cost! For short, our record turnover means we’re dealing as we’ve - the mighty Thunderbird V-8 is the standard eight m all never dealt before. Fordomatic Fairlane and Station Wagon models. Best of all, you get Ford’s new Lifeguard Design—safety features But the test of any deal is the car. Look at what you to • ye you added protection wherever you drive, get in Ford. First, there’s the dramatic styling that made the dashing Thunderbird America’s moot-wanted - What a ear! And what a deal you can make on it! -* ' ■ 56Ford Come in and get our Quick Turnover Deal! SCHWARTZ FORD Co., Inc. ONLY YOUR FORD DEALER HAS -Qg> USED CARS AND TRUCKS

Mrs. Knule Rockne Is Taken By Death SOUTH BEND , Ind. — Messag* of sympathy from all over the nation came today to the family of Mrs. Knute Rockne, widow of the remowned Notre Dame football coach, who died Saturday. Mrs. Roekne was 64. She died in St. Joseph’# Hospital after a lingering illness. As preparations for funeral services Tuesday were under way, tnesages from sports leaders of the present and the Rockne era were received from all parts of the nation. Included among them were words of sympathy from men who played under the great coach when be made gridion hHtoty at Notts Dame from 1918 to 1930. Rockne was killed in a plane ‘crash Marth 31. 1931. Mrs. Rockne will be buried beside hie grave in South Bend's Highland Cemetery following a Solenti High Mass tn Sacrted Heart Church on the Notre Dame campus. Baltimore Orioles Make Roster Change BALTIMORE. Md. (UP) — The Baltimore Orioles announced today they havg optioned veteran infielder Fred Jfatsh to Vancouver of the Pacific Coast League and once again added another veteran infielder, Bobby Adama, to their ! own roster. Adams. 34, was given ! hia unconditional release by the I Orioles a week ago but had continued to work out with them.

Five Junior Leaders To Attend Conference Five Adams county 4-H junior leaders will attend the state 4-H junior leader training conference at DePaaw University in Greencastle June 12-15, it was announced by Leo. N. Seltenright. county agent. The 4.H council selected the delegates to attend this training coritbreiibe. V ; They are Danna .Small, Gretchen Schnepp, Alice Joan Sprunger. Michael Lehman and Kenneth Von Ounten. Henry Armstrong is . Reported Improved LOS ANGELES (UP) — Henry Armstrong, only boxer ever to hold three world titles simultaneously, was reported in “good condition and feeling fine” today after suffering an apparent digestive disorder. The (S-yeanold former champ, now a Baptist minister, was stricken at his home Saturday night and taken to Los Angeles general hospital. 'T —% Anti-Trust Suit Is % Opened Against HBA * NEW YORK (UP) — Maurice Podokiff, president of the National BattetbMl Association, was expectM th. be the Am witness today in the Initial bearing on a |1 million antl-trtlSt siit against the league. ’ * Plaintiff iR the suit, which will be heard in federal court, is Morris Fox, head of a Washington group which has been trying to acquire a franchise in the proses-

sional circuit. Fox charges Podoloff and the league with “conspiracy, to Restrain and monopolize’’ pro basketball for refusing to grant his group a franchise. He terms the

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MONDAY. JUNE 4, 1958

rejection "arbitrary, capricious and unlawful." If you have »omethin< ro sell or k rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad. It brings results.