Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 151, Decatur, Adams County, 27 June 1957 — Page 7
THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1957
>SI’ORTSi?»
Yanks Score Little League Win Wednesday The Yankees-defeated the Tigers, 7-3, in a Decatur Little League game Wednesday evening at Worthman field, played prior to the Junior American Legion game. The Yankees scored once in the first on a hit and three walks, counted one more in the second on a hit and an error, and two in the third without a hit on three bases on balls. The winners iced the game with three in the fourth on three hits and a sacrifice fly. The Tigers scored their first run in the second on a pair of hits, and tallied their other two runs in the sixth on three hits. Tigers AB R H E Lose. 3b - 3 0 0 0 , Beery, cf — 3 0 0 0 Martin, ss * 3 0 11 Conrad, c 3 0 12 Hakes, lb .... 3 2 2 1 Omlor, 2b . 3 12 0 Schultz, rs— 10 0 0 McGill, rs 10 10 Cowans. If —— 3 0 0 0 Mclntosh, p -- 2 0 0 1 Kalver, p 0 0 0 0 Totals .... 25 3 7 5 Yankees AB R H E Anspaugh, 3b 4 110 G. Ladd, c 3 110 Lose, ss 3 110 R. Ladd, p 12 0 0 Maddox, 2b2 0 10 Call, lb. 0 1 0 0 Reynolds, If 1 0 0 0 Eichenauer, If 0 0 0 0 Hake, cf ."•...—— 30 11 Mies, rs 2100 Bedwell, rs 0 0 0 0 Totals 19 7 5 1 Score by innings: Tigers - 010 002—3 Yankees 112 30x—7 Runs batted in—McGill. Twobase hits—Omlor, G. Ladd. Sacrifice—Lose. Bases on balls—Mclntosh 7, Kalver 2. Ladd 4. Strikeouts—Mclntosh 6, Kalver 1, Ladd 11. Hits off Mclntosh 5 in 4, Kalver Q in 1. Winner—Ladd. Loser— Mclntosh. Umpires—Lord, Beal. Sixth Nuclear Blast Rescheduled Friday LAS VEGAS. Nev. (UP) — The Atomic Energy Commission Wednesday night was forced to postpone for 24 hours the sixth nuclear blast of the 1957 series because'of “technical reasons." The shot was rescheduled for 4:45 a m. Friday. The sixth detonation was scheduled to equal 10,000 tons of TNT (10 kilotons) and be touched off atop a 500-foot steel tower.
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Week's Schedule For Pony League And Little League PONY LEAGUE Thursday—Monmouth at Berne Friday—Monmouth at Geneva. LITTLE LEAGUE Friday — Indians vs Senators; Red Sox vs Tigers. Saturday—White Sox vs Tigers; Yankees vs Red Sox. American League W. L. Pct. G.B. Chicago 40 23 .635 — New York 40 24 .625 % Cleveland 35 29 .547 5% Detroit 35 31 .530 6% Boston, 33 33 1 .500 B\4 Baltimore 31 34 . .477 10 Kansas City .. 25 40 .385 16 Washington ... 22 47 .319 21 National League W. L. Pct. G.B. St. Louis 36 27 .571 — Cincinnati 38 29 .567 — Philadelphia .. 36 28 .563 Vi Milwaukee .... 37 29 .561 14 Brooklyn 35 30 .538 2 New York .... 31 35 .470 6)4 Pittsburgh - 24 42 .364 13*4 Chicago 21 38 .356 13 American Association W. L. Pct. G.B. St. Paul 40 28 .588 — Minneapolis ... 42 30 .583 — Wichita 42 30 .583 — Omaha 38 31 .551 2% Denver 35 31 .530 4 Charleston .... 34 39 .466 B>4 Indianapolis .. 30 39 .435 1014 Louisville 21 54 .280 2214 WEDNESDAY’S RESULTS American League New York 3, Cleveland 1. Chicago 7, Boston Baltimore 1, Kansas City 0. Detroit 4, Washington 1. National League Pittsburgh 15-5, Chicago 5-5 (2nd game tie, 11 innings, called because Os darkness). New York 17, Cincinnati 7. Milwaukee 13, Brooklyn 9. Philadelphia 11, St. Louis 3. American Association Minneapolis 12. Denver 5. Louisville 6-1, Charleston 1-0. St; Paul at Omaha. rain. Indianapolis at Wichita, rain. *- Moths Are Threat To Christmas Trees LAFAYETTE (UP) gists at Purdue said today that Christmas tree plantations in Northern Indiana arc threatened by an invasion of a pine moth. Expert Don Schuder said on one LaPorte County tract, one-fourth of the trees were infested with the Zimmerman moth. He said there is no control except pruning and i burning infested parts. i
Natal Loop Race Tightens Up Wednesday By FRED DOWN United Press Sports Writer The team that eventually comes out on top in the chaotic National League struggle probably will go into the World Series with the lowest pennant-winning victory total in major league history. A mere 10 percentage points separated the first four clubs today, with the St. Louis Cardinals maintaining a four-point lead over the second-place Cincinnati Redlegs after both were beat e. n Wednesday night. The race tightened up to an almost incredible degree Wednesday night when the Philadelphia Phillies walloped the Cardinals, 11-3, the New York diants clobbered the Redlegs, 17-7, and the Milwaukee Braves drubbed the Brooklyn Dodgers, 13-9. The Pittsburgh Pirates routed the Chicago Cubs, 15-5, before the teams played an 11-inning, 5-5 tie halted by darkness. / The Chicago White Sox retained their, half-game margin in the "runaway” American League race when they outlasted the Boston Red Sox, 7-5, and the seeondplace New York Yankees beat the Cleveland Indians, 3-1. The Baltimore Orioles defeated the Kansas City Athletics, 1-0, for their third straight shutout and the Detroit Tigers downed the Washington Senators, Simmons Beats McDaniel The Phillies unleashed a 16-hit attack that included four hits by Chico Fernandez and a homer by Harry Anderson to hand the Cardinals their third straight defeat in four games. Curt Simmons pitched a steady nine - hitter to win his seventh game while Lindy McDaniel suffered his fourth loss. The sixth - place Giants buried the Redlegs with a 20 - hit bombardment that saw Bobby Thomson drive in five runs with a homer, double and two singles and Willie Mays knock in four with two doubles and a triple. Johnny Klippstein suffered his seventh defeat. The Braves overcame a 9-4 deficit with three runs in the fifth inning and six in the eighth to snap a two- game losing streak. Hank Aaron, Eddie Mathews and' Wes Covington tied a major league record by hitting successive homers in the fifth inning of a game marked by eight roundtrippers. Mathews topped the Braves' best attack of the year, driving in five runs' with" a pair of homers and a single «as Gene Conley picked up his first win for Milwaukee and Clem Labine suffered his fourth straight loss for Brooklyn. Dee Fondy and Roman Mejias had four hits each and Frank Thomas drove in four runs in Pittsburgh's 19-hit opening - game attack that gave Vern Law his fourth win. The Cubs, tied the nightcap when a walk, Bobby I Morgan's triple and Jim Bolger's ! single produced two runs in the ninth. Chisox Get Third Straight The White Sox scored their
Tg» DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
third straight victory and seventh in a row over the Red Sox this season when a fifth-inning homer by Bubba Phillips and Earl Torgeson’s run-producing ninth-inning single helped them fend off a late Boston rally marked by homers by Billy Klaus and Ted Lepcio. Jim Wilson got his /eighth win. / Relief star Bob Grim throttled a ninth-inning rally to preserve Johnny Kucks’ fifth victory for the Yankees. All three of the Yanks’ runs resulted from sacrifice flies —two by Hank Bauer and one by pinch-hitter Enos Slaughter — as Bob Lemon absorbed his fifth defeat. Connie Johnson hurled a threehitter to stretch the Orioles’ scoreless stripg to 32 consecutive innings and won his sixth decision when Jim Busby cracked his fifth homfer in the fifth Inning. Arnold Portocarrero hurled a three-hitter for the Athletics but was charged with his third setbackJim Bunning won his eighth game and completed the cycle of scoring at least one victory over each of Detroit’s rivals with a six-hitter that dealt the Senators their fifth straight defeat. Chuck Stobbs, who snapped a two-year 16-game losing streak in his previous start, absorbed his 12th defeat of the year. Convinced Dodgers To Move To West WASHINGTON (UP)—A Brooklyn congressman said ruefully today he is convinced the Brooklyn Dodgers have definitely decided to move to Los Angeles next season. Rep. Emanuel Celler (D-N.Y.) said he drew this conclusion from testimony Wednesday of Dodger President Walter O’Malley before a House judiciary subcomihittee investigating baseball. Celler heads the group. But Rep, Kenneth B. Keating, an upstate New Yorker and senior Republican on Celler’s subcommittee, differed sharply with his chairman. Keating told reporters he believes O’Malley still might consider staying in Brooklyn if the city/ of New York makes an acceptable offer for building a new stadium. O’Malley said if an acceptable stadium plan can be worked out the Dodgers will stay where they are. But he said “time is running out” and he will make the final decision soon. ' Celler said he gained the impression O'Malley is "over the brink” and will move to the West Coast no matter what Brooklyn does to try to hold the team. The subcommittee recessed Wednesday after six days of hearings on tjaseball “and will m< ct again July 10. Purpose of the hearings is to determine whether sports anti - trust legislation is needed. Bill Sfcowron Out Os Yankee Lineup NEW YORK (UP) — New York Yankee first baseman Bill Skowl ron, who miss e d Wednesday’s j game with the Cleveland Indians because of an injury to his right hand, is expected to be out of the line-up for several days. X-rays of the hand revealed no break, however.
Junior Legion Team Wins By 7 To 3 Score The Decatur Junior American Legton team, although held to only three hits, defeated Huntington, 7-3, Wednesday night under the lights at Worthman field ta this city. Decatiff scored all tha needed runs in the third-imiingwhen the ' local lads scored BteAthnes z only one hit, a double by Mosrt, but they benefited by four bases on balls, a hit batsman and two Huntington errors. Decatur scored its other two runs in the fourth on a hit batter, an error and Kable’s triple. Huntington tallied once in the l hlrd inning on a pair of hits and two in the fourth on one hit and two Decatur errors. Huntington AB R H E Harris, If ..4 12 0 Colgan, c ......- 2 ,0 0 0 Drew, ss .... 4 0 11 Pfister, cf 3 0 0 0 Hammel, 3b 4 0 10 Kroeger, lb .. 3 10 0 Wehnsler, 2b 3 0 0 2 Kindler, rs 3 10 0 Pyle, p .. 3 0 2 0 -• Totals 29 3 6 3 Decatur AB R H E Dellinger, 2b 2 10 0 Egley, 3blo 0 0 Daniels .... r 3 10 0 Kable, ss3 112 Shraluka, c 2 10 0 Moses, If 2 0-2 1 Giesel, lb, 3b 3 0 0 0 May, cf 2 0 0 0 Hildebrand, rs, lb .... 1 10 1 Reed, p 12 0 1 Totals 20 7 3 5
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Score by innings: 1 Huntington 001 200 o—3 Decatur „ t 005 200 x-7 Runs batted in—Harris, Kable, Mose? 2. Two-base hits—Harris, Moses. Three-base hit—Kable. Sacrifice—Dellinger. Bases on balls— Pyle 6, Reed 8. Strikeouts—Pyle 8, Reed 7. Hit by pitcher—by Pyle (May, Reed). Umpires—Lord, Terveer. Bobby Boyd Wins Over Costelloni CHICAGO (W — Rocky Castelilani had no apologyZor defeat today because he fought Bobby Boyd for 10 rounds and “put on a good show for the television fans.” , | Boyd, the 8-5 favorite, was hard pressed all the way to win a split decision, and when his arm was raised most of the 1,772 fans booed lustily. Actually Castellani had more points credited to him than Boyd. Referee Bernie Weissman scored it 47-45 for Boyd and Judge Frank Clark had it 47-46 for the winner, the same margin as the United Press card. Judge James McManus gave Castellani a four-point bulge, 47-43. When /©w <©«* is most important PRESIDEJIT Is the best buy si<- 59 Inwm 4 « PUM tINSEfD OH I Whw" I 55% TITANIUM MOMENT FORMULA RAY’S Paint & Gift Shop 105 N. 13 th St. Decatur, Ind.
Chicago Cracks Down On Teen-Age Killers CHICAGO <W — A fourth youth faced a lengthy prison term today in an apparent crackdown on Chi; cago teen-age killers. / Joseph Schwartz, 18, was sen* tenced Wednesday to 50 years in prison for the senseless bludgeon murder of a Negro boy. Trial of Schwartz’s 11 fellow gang members accused in the hammer slaying of Alvin Palmer, 17, began immediately. Exactly a week ago, a Criminal Court jury sentenced three youths to terms ranging from 99 to 110 years for murdering a motel operator during a holdup spree.
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