Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 248, Decatur, Adams County, 21 October 1957 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Purdue Stuns ' Spartans On 20-13 Victory CHICAGO <UP) — Michigan State and Minnesota today started therapy to free them of upset jitters caused Saturday by a pair of Big Ten upstarts. The cure was certain to include extended hours on the field and before the blackboard for both the Gophers, who were bombed, 34-13, by Illinois, and the Spartans, who were ambushed, 20-13, by Purdue. Hie stunning Purdue triumph shattered Michigan State's No. 1 national ranking in its first test and tagged the Spartans with their first setback after bowiing over three opponents Illinois, coming up with Jis annual upset in conference play, likewise threw a roadblock into Minnesota's championship tour after three earlier victories had snared a No. 3 rating for the Gophers. Minnesota faces Michigan next Saturday and Michigan State tackles Illinois. lowa and Ohio State Lead The result of the double upset and other Big Ten activity left

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COCKSHUTT DEMONSTRATION Come and See the New .... 421 Mounted Corn Picker in Action Wednesday, October 23 on the ABE INNIGER FARM 4 Miles South of Coppess Corners or 2 Miles North of Berne on U. S. 27 See the ROTOCYCLE STALK CHOPPER « Shred the Stalks. See the Powerful GOLDEN EAGLE DIESEL TRACTOR pulling the famous high clearance 24A COCKSHUTT PLOW. Do Not Forget! WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23 • 9:00 A. M. to 4 :00 P.M. ADAMS COUNTY FARM BUREAU CO-OP ASS’K. MONROE, INDIANA

Ohio State and lowa sharing the league lead with 2-0 records. Michigan State and Minnesota were right behind with 2-1 showings, and Illinois. Michigan and Wisconsin followed with one win and one locs each. Ohio State bombed a hopeless Indiana team, 56-0. lowa defended it* conference crown in tripping Wisconsin, 21-7, and Michigan rallied in the final period to beat Northwestern, 34-14. The victory for lllini Coach Ray Eliot was a big one and solidified his coaching status, which may have been becoming shaky following losses to UCLA and Ohio State. Eliot's 13-point underdogs staged an upset that recalled similar form reversals. The lllini whipped a previously unbeaten Michigan team in 1955 and knocked off Michigan ’State last aeason. Coach Ray Mollenkopf's Boilermakers also followed tradition. They bumped Michigan State 6-0 in 1955 to end a 20-game winning streak for the Spartans. lllini Display Teamwork Purdue's Ross Fitchner connected on a 43-yard pass to Tom Franckhauser for a first down in the third period and Mel Dillard plunged for one touchdown. Kenny Mikes sprinted 34 yards for another after a Michigan State fumble and the Boilermakers were never in trouble after that. The Illinois rout was a team job with most of the heroes in the Hine. The backfield stars were Jack Delveaux, who scored two touchdowns. and Dale Smith, Bob Mitchell and Ron Hill who got one each. Six players contributed touchdowns to Ohio State's breeze over Indiana. They were paced by quarterback Frank Kremblas and halfback Dick Lebeau, who scored two each. Jim Van Pelt came from the hospital where he was recovering from the flu to help Michigan beat Northwestern. He passed for two touchdowns and ran for another. lowa needed all its power and a last-minute break to stop Wisconsin's winning streak at three games. Randy Duncan's passing was the big factor in the Hawkeye offense, but it took an intercepted pass In the fourth period to clinch the win. In other games next week, Vil-

lanova is, at Indiana; lowa at Northwestern, Miami of Ohio at Purdue and Ohio tate at Wisconsin. Colts, Browns Handed Initial Season Losses By EARL WRIGHT United Press Sports Writer Brilliant Sunday performances by Bobby Layne, Howard Cassady. Sunny Jurgensen, Y. A. Tittle and Charley Conerly produced first-place ties in both divisions of the National Football League. The Lions set up a three-way tie for first in the Western Division by rallying from a 27-3 deficit to edge the Baltimore Colts at Detroit, 31-27. Layne climaxed Detroit's 28-point second half spree with a 29-yard touchdown pass to Cassady with only 50 seconds to play. Three-Way He Taking advantage of Baltimore's first defeat, the San Francisco Forty-Niners tied the Colts and Lions for the Western lead as Tittle fired two touchdown passes and scored himself in a 24-14 victory over the Green Bay Packers. The three leaders have 3-1 records. Jurgensen, a rookie quarterback from Duke, replaced the injured Bobby Thomason and helped the Philadelphia Eagles pull the day’s biggest upset. He threw a touchdown pass and plunged for another as Philadelphia downed the Cleveland Browns, the only other previously unbeaten club, 17-7. The Eagles had lost 14 straight games, including exhibitions, and took a 24- whipping at Cleveland last Week Conerly threw two touchdown passes to Bob Schnelker as the New York Giants, defending league champions, shut out the Pittsburg Steelers 35-0. The Giants, playing like titleholders for the first time this season, boosted their record to 3-1 and tied Cleveland for the Eastern lead. Galimore Scores Four Individual stars also sparked in the other two games. Willie Galimore’s four touchdowns helped the Chicago Bears — defending Western Division champions — score their first 1957 victory, a 34-26 triumph over the Los Angeles Rams, Lamar McHan threw three touchdown passes and scored on a plunge to lead the Chicago Cardinals to a 44-14 victory over the Washington Redskins. John Unites threw two touchdown passes to Jim Mutscheller and two to Lenny Moore to give Baltimore a 27-3 lead in the third quarter. Tobin Rote then raised the hopes of 55.764 Detroit rooters with a 14-yard scoring pass to Steve Junker. Cassady, enjoying the biggest day of his two-year pro career, caught a 26-yard touchdown pass from Layne to open the fourth period. Detroit scored twice In the last 90 seconds. Cassady caught a 25- from Layne to set up John Henry Johnson’s one-yaYd plunge and caught the game winner after Yale Lary recovered Moore’s fumble on the Colt 29. High School Football South Bend Central 48. South Bend Riley 7. Evansville Mater Dei 45, Evansville Central 0. East St. Louis (Ill.) Lincoln 66, Evansville Lincoln 0. College Football Purdue 20, Michigan State 13. Ohio State 56, Indiana 0. Illinois 34, Minnesota 13. lowa 21, Wisconsin 7. Michigan 34, Northwestern 14. Butler 27, Valparaiso 0. Anderson 36, Indiana Central 7. Franklin 21, Manchester 14. St. Joseph’s 42, Indiana State 0. Wabash 38, Sewanee 21. DePauw 40, Ball State 14. Taylor 14, Central State (0.) 7. Hanover 47, Earlham 3. Missouri 35. lowa State 13. Oklahoma 47, Kansas 0. Syracuse 26, Nebraska 9. Miami (O.) 26. Ohio U. 0. Detroit 30, Xavier (0.) 20. Bowling Green 29, Toledo 0. Louisville 33, Dayton 19. Cincinnati 14, Marquette 0. — Virginia 38, Virginia Tech 7. Duke 34, Wake Forest 7. Auburn 3, Georgia Tech 0. Maryland 21, North Carolina 7. Navy 27, Georgia 14. Tennessee 14, Alabama 6; Mississippi State 29, Florida 26. Louisiana State 21, Kentucky 0. Texas A & M 7, Texas Christian 0. Texas 17, Arkansas 0. Rice 27, Southern Methodist 21. Oklahoma State 6, Houston 6 (tid). Baylor 15, Texas Tech 12. California 12, Southern California 0. UCLA 26, Oregon State’ 7., Stanford 21, Washington 14. Oregon 14, Washington State 13. Brown 20, Pennsylvania 7. Harvard 18, Columbia 6. Yale 18, Cornell 7. Colgate 12, Princeton 10. Army 29, Pittsburgh 13. Vanderbilt 32, Penn State 20. Dartmouth 14, Holy Cross 7. Boston College 12, Villanova 9. Boston University 28, Bucknell 0. If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad— they bring results.

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Four Braves Are Named On All-Star Team NEW YORK (UP)-Hank Aaron, Red Schoendienst and Warren Spahn, the three key men in the Milwaukee Braves’ march to a world championship, were the only unanimous selections today on the United Press' 1957 National League All-Star team. A fourth Milwaukee star, thirdbaseman Ed Mathews, was named to the team which also included first-baseman Stan Musial of the St. Louis Cardinals, shortstop Ernie Banks of the Chicago Cubs, outfielder Willie Mays of the New York Giants, catcher Ed Bailey and outfielder Frank Robinson of the Cincinnati Redlegs and rookie pitcher Jack Sanford of the Philadelphia Phils. The team was selected for the United Press by a special committee of 24 baseball Writers from each city in the league. The Brooklyn Dodgers and Pittsburgh Pirates were the only teams not represented on the squad. The voting was close only at Shortstop where the hard-hitting Banks beat out slick-fielding Roy McMillan of the Redlegs, 10 votes to eight. The other six votes were divided among Dick Groat of the Pirates, Al Dark of the Cardinals and Chico Fernandez of the Phils. Although sound defensively, the tea m's outstanding attribute — could it actually take the field in the flesh — would be hitting. The eight regulars walloped no less than 247 home runs this year—an average of 31 per man — and five of the stars hit more than .300. The top average, of course, was compiled by the 36-year-old Musial, who won his seventh N.L. batting championship with a .351mark. Other ,300-plus hitters were Mays, .333; Aaron and Robinson, .322 each, and Schoendienst, .309. Mathews hit .292, Banks .285 and Bailey .26L Knickerbockers Win Exhibition Games NEWARK, N.J. — Ken Sears scored 20 points to lead the New York Knickerbockers to a 102-96 win over the Philadelphia Warriors Sunday in a National Basketball Association exhibition game. The Knickerbockers had beaten the College. All-Stars, 109-94, on Saturday night. Russo Is Favorite Over Eddie Lynch NEW YORK (lf> — Danny Russo. young Brooklyn welterweight, is a slight favorite at 6-5 to beat Eddie Lynch of New York again tonight in their return TV 10rounder at St. Nicholas Arena. Russo, 19, won a split decision in their rough and bloody fight at St. Nick’s, Aug. 5. That bout was only an eight-rounder. Tonight each will be attempting 10 for the first time. Lynch is 22. | Pro Football Detroit 31, Baltimore 27. San Francisco 24, Green Bay 14. • Chicago Bears 34, Los Angeles 26. Philadelphia 17, Cleveland 7. New York 35, Pittsburgh 0. Chicago Cardinals 44, Washington 14. Bowlina Scores CENTRAL SOYA LEAGUE Feed Mill 3 pts.. Dubs L.pt.; Farm Supply 3 pts.. Elevator 1 pt.; Lab 3 pts.. Wonders 1 pt.; Master Mixers 3 pts.. Office 1 pt.; Blue Prints 3 pts., Spares 1 pt. High games: Wable 182. 176; Singleton 197; Hirschy 181, 175; Fennig 203, 186, 179; Stevens 186; Schlickman 191, 183; Godfrey 185; Grafton 182; Bayles 184; Lenhart 185. Big Ten Standings W L Pct. TP Ot» Ohio State .... 2 0 1.000 77 Y lowa 2 0 1.000 68 14 Michigan St. . 2 1 .666 102 26 Minnesota .... 2 1 .666 75 57 Illinois 11 .500 41 34 Michigan ....x 11 .500 40 49 Wisconsin .... 11 .500 30 35 Purdue 1 2 .333 51 57 Northwestern . 0 2 .000 20 75 Indiana 0 3 .000 7 157 - If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, tty a Democrat Want Ad— they bring results.

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Results Are Listed For Archery Shoot Results of the archery shoot held Sunday afternoon at the Limberlost Archery club grounds, west of Decatur, were: Expert — Albert Huston, first; Frank Sardella, second; bowman — Jack Chilcote, first; Jim Striker, second; archer — Robert Laßraun, first; novice— Richard Miller, first. Ladies expert — Mrs. Harold Nash, first; junior expert — David Mitchell, first; junior bowman — Dick Miller, Jr., first; archer — Mike Hartsough, first; junior novice — Don Laßraun. SIOO,OOO Fire At Franklin Saturday Two Elderly Women Injured By Smoke FRANKLIN (IB - Work crews today battered down brick walls of « three-atory building which was swept by a SIOO,OOO fire Saturday night, ruining four shops and several apartments. Two elderly women apartment dwellers were injured by smoke and taken to a hospital. One of them was carried down a fire department ladder to safety. The blaze broke out in the Nash Photo Studio, one of four businesses on the ground floor of a building owned by Horace McClain. The building was the worst damaged structure in a severe windstorm which roared through Franklin on the Fourth of July, and repairs were completed only recently. The first spread to the Prevue Barber Shop, Smith’s Launderette and a television repair, shop. At Smith’s, all but one short row of automatic washing machines tunbled into the basement when the floor collapsed. A professional building housing the.offices of two doctors and a dentist, and a dairy products building, flanking the structure were threatened but saved along with a grain elevator and ice plant and coal yard nearby. ■ Firemen from several nearby cities and towns helped fight the flames, and a policeman’s ball broke up when officers and offduty firemen were called into service. DEFENDANTS IN CQoutlnued from Page Ona) had told the jurors. Anyhow, he said, he “couldn’t see any purpose*' in such a statement* as Smith suggested. Walker said Smith did not mention what be wanted Walker and the other commissioners to say in their statement. Walker was the first witness and occupied the stand more 1 than an hour. 31 ! He also testified that "as far as I know" the purchaseoftheback lots never was authorized. Walker said he and Smith and Sorrell once went down to the Madison Ave. site with "either Teyerbaugh or Doggett,” ’ he. couldn’t remember which, apd inspected the two back lots. Teverbaugh |s Nile Te ver ba ugh, chief right-of-why buyer under Smith. Doggett is Harry Doggett, Teverbaugh’s chief assistant. Both are co-defendahts with Smith and Robert Peak, a Milan attorney, in the conspiracy trial. Asked For Authority Walker said that either Teverbaugh or Doggett told the commissioners during the trip that it seemed they could buy the entire lots as cheaply as only the front, considering the risk of having to pay damages because of lack of access to the expressway from the back lots. Walker said the commission was asked on that tfip for authority to buy the back lots. Walker said such approval was not given, however, and no change Open Bowling , Every Afternoon at Mies Recreation FREE INSTRUCTIONS FOR BEGINNERS Now Being Given Week Day Afternoons 1:00 to 4:00. CALL 3-2942 BOWLING SUPPLIES AVAILABLE

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in plans was made or as, fara s Walker knew. Walker also testified that Smith once introduced him to Peak and that Peak came several times to visit Smith, although Walker said as far as he knew Peak had no officii business with the highway department ■ i - — —. COURT BLOW (Continued from Pago One) hammer and knife murders of Camile and Joseph Banks, owners of a beach resort. The high court had turned down two previous appeals. —Let stand a decision permitting New York state investigators to disclose a recorded conversation between convicted extortionist Joseph (Socks) Lanza and an attorney, Sylvester Cosentino. The court did not act today on a request for a hearing on a Chicago police ban against showing the French movie "The Game of Love.” It is among cases in the court’s backlog which presumably will be placed on the docket or rejected next Monday. Trade in a good town — Decatu ■ --i — 1 " ' If you have something to sell or rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad— they bring results.

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Three Minor Wrecks Reported To Police No One Is Injured In Three Accidents Three minor accidents caused property damage in Decatur Saturday. The first occurred at 1:30 p. m. on Second street in the 100 block north, when a car driven by Dora James Ramsey, 41, of Elgin, 0., rammed into the rear of a car driven by Ross Lewis Winas of Decatur route six, who was stopped in the lane of traffic. Damage was estimated at SIOO to the Ramsey car and none to the Winas vehicle. A light post at the corner of Mercer and Rugg streets was • knocked over at 10 p. m. Satur- , day when it was hit bv a car driven by Max O. Ainsworth, 23, of 940 North 13th street. The accident was reported to the police and damage to the car was not listed. Kenneth Baumgartner. 19, of Decatur route two, was arrested on a charge of improper passing following an accident at 10:50

MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1957

p. m. Saturday on Monroe street near the Second streel intersection. Baumgartner started to pass an unidentified third car on the right and struck a car driven by Don R. Peterson, 19, of 603 Penn street, as Peterson approached in the right lane. Baumgartner is slated to appear in justice of the peace court tonight. Damage to the two vehicles totalled about SIOO. JUDGE REFUSES (Continued from Pag* On*) tion a week after the convention tided. Committe Chairman John L. McClellan (D-Ark.) said the diegate took an active part in the convention and voted in the election. The AFL-CIO Executive Council meets Thursday to take up its order directing the teamsters either to clean house or face expulsion on corruption charges. A court ruling voiding the election and putting the union into the hands of a court receiver might cause the council to defer its decision. Hoffa also faces trial cm wiretap charges and for perjury in an appearance before a federal grnd jury investigting the wiretap charges. ,