Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 110, Decatur, Adams County, 9 May 1958 — Page 7

FRIDAY. MAY A, 1958

Jackets Lose To Hew Haven Bulldogs, 6-4 New Haven’s Bulldogs exploded for five runs in the third inning, which carried them to a 6-4 victory over the Decatur Yellow Jackets in a Northeastern Indiana conference game at New Haven Thursday afternoon. The triumph was New Haven’s sixth in seven league games, and it was Decatur’s third loss in seven starts. New Haven’s only loss was inflicted by the Yellow Jackets in ap earlier game at Decatur. - The Bulldogs bunch four hits with two walks and a wild pitch in their big inning. Big blow of the inning was a triple with the bases loaded by Gary Ronberg. New Haven hurler. The Bulldogs picked up their other run in the fourth on a pair of hits. The Yellow Jackets were held I’- 11 scoreless for four innings, but scored three runs in the fifth on two errors, two bases on balls, and a double by Shraluka. Two walks and hits by Baumgartner and Moses were good for another / run in the sixth, but the Jackets failed to send in any more runners as the inning ended with the bases loaded. The Jackets will meet the Willshire, Or, Bearcats at Worthman field at 7 o'clock this evening. The Jackets will play at Willshire Tuesday, and entertain the Bluffton Tigers at 4 p.m. next Thursday at Worthman field. a Yellow Jackets AB R H E Reidenbach, ss 1110 Moses. 2b —1 4 111 Holtsberry, lb --. 2 0 0 0 Shraluka, C — 3 0 11 Ballard, rs 2 0 10 Gav, 3b 4 0 0 0 May, cf 3 1 0 0 Daniels, If ....!_ 3 10 0 Wolfe, p ... 10 0 0 "Baumgartner, p 2 0 1 0 Totals 25 4 5 2 New Haven . AB R HE Kinnison, If ..\3 11 0 Herman. If .1. 10 0 0 Buhr. lb . 4 0 10 Renier, c — 4 I.J 1 Kummer. 2b 3 111 Ronberg, p. ss 3 0 10 Dumford. ss 3 0 11 Honefield, p— 0 0 0 0 Nickerson, 3b 2 2 1 0 Woods, cf 3 110 Cass, rs .... 3 0 2 0 — - : i Totals 29 6 10 2 - ■■ ■ ■ , ——' CIRCUS SKATING PARTY SUNDAY, MAY 11 th 1:30 to 4:30 P. M. HAPPY HOURS ROLLER RINK MR. & MRS. J. C. MILLER OWNERS BLACK’ <^2XJ^LABELI W I® See , BASEBALL Game of the Week Kansas City vs Detroit SATURDAY, MAY 10 1:30 P. M. WKJG-TV

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Score by innings: , Yellow Jackets ...... 000 031 o—4 New Haven .... 005 100 x—6 Ho/d Little League Tryouts On Saturday At Worthman Field Tryouts will be held at 1 o’clock Saturday afternoon at Worthman field for new candidates for the six teams in the Decatur Little League. All boys of the city in the Little League age group, and who did not play on a L. L. team last summer, are urged to attend the tryouts, as managers and coaches will make their selections for new members following tomorrow’s tryout. Boys who played on the Little League last year are reminded not to report at Saturday’s tryout. They will be notified by managers of the time for practice sessions. League officials plan to open the 1958 season during the first week in June. Major League Leaders National League Player A Club G. AB R. H. PCT. Musial. St.L. 17 68 14 36 . 529 Hoak, Cin. 17 70 10 27 .386 Mays, SF. 22 86 16 32 .372 Temple. Cin. 17 60 12 22 .367 Walls, Chi. 21 85 20 31 .365 American League Vernon. Cle. 17 45 10 18 . 400 Skowron, N.Y. 14 55 7 21 .382 McDgld, N.Y. 14 54 8 20 370 Robnson. Bal. 16 54 7 20 .370 Cerv, K.C. 16 60 21 -22 .367 Home Runs National League — Walls, Cubs 9; Thomhs, Pirates 9; Sauer, Giants 8; Cepeda, Giants 8; Mathews. Braves 7. American League — Cerv, Athletics 8; Jensen, Red Sox 4; Brown, Indians 4; Williams, Red Sox; Lollar. White Sox; Maris. Indians; Minoso, Indians; Sievers. Senators; Triandos, Orioles, and Skowron, Yanks all 3. Runs Batted In National League — Ceped», Giants 19; Banks. Cubs 19; Walls, Cubs; Thomas, Pirates; Spencer, Giants: Mathews. Braves all 18. American League — Cev, Athletics 24; Carrasquel, Indians 14; Skowron. Yanks 13; Vernon, Indians 12; Minoso, Indians 12; Jensen, Red Sox 12. Pitching National League— Podres. Dodgers 4-0; Elston, Cubs 4-0; Spahn. Braves 4-0; Purkey, Redlegs 3-0; McCormick, Giants 2-0 American League — Harshman, 1 Orioles 4-0; Turley, Yanks 3-0; Garver, Athletics 3-0; Grant, Indians 3-0. (Six tied at 2-0•. . .n ■ ! South Side Winner In Triangular Match Fort Wayne South Side scored 25 points at Brookwood Thursday afternoon in a triangular match. Decatur finished second with 14 points and Fort Wayne Concordia was third with nine. The Jackets will host Van Wert at the Decatur Golf club this afternoon, and will compete in the NEIC tourney at Crooked Lake Saturday. Thursday's results: Gilardi (S> 40, Kruse (C> 43. Conrad CD' 48; Graham <S> 46. Theye (C> 47, Edwards (D> 50; Dailey <D) 43, K. Bosekel (C> 47, Berning <S» 52; Biteman <S> 40, Beery (D> 48, Dickmeyer <C) 51; LeFever <S> 43, Burk (D) 50, Moellcring <C) 51; Cravens <D) 50, Springer <C) 50, Stewart (S) 51; Winder (S) 47. Ratliff <D) 50. Counden <C) 55; Platko <S) 49, Knodel (D) 55, L. Bosekel <C) 59. Ortiz And Lopes In TV Fight Tonight HOLLYWOOD — (IP) — Unbeaten young Carlos Ortiz, a stylish boxer with championship ambitions, faces able Joey Lopes tonight in a nationally televised (NBC, 9 p.m. c.d.t.) lightweight 10-rounder at Legion Stadium. The handsome Puerto Rican via New York City), unbeaten in 26 fights, will be making his first serious bid for national recognition against the veteran Portuguese from Sacramento, Colif. Lil* Leaguer igg L 3 —ill “Do you HAVE to wait three hours before you can call the game because of rain?”

ABC Goll Tourney In Decatur May 18 The first A. B. C. golf tournament in Decatur will be held on Sunday, May 18, Luke Majorki, pro manager of the Decautr golf course, said today. This popular 18-hole event will be based on the total amount of points accumulated by each team, Majorki explained. Each team ' will include three or four players, I depending on the number of en- < tries. Every golfer, regardless of how good or how poor his ; game is, will have a chance to be : on a winning team. Points are counted as follows: one point for a bogey, two points ' for a par, three points for a 1 birdie, and four points for an ' eagle. All who desire to enter must ! sign up at the club house by next Thursday, May 15, to allow for pairings. Tee-off times will be j announced in the Decatur Daily Democrat. Monday, the city league will start action again. The first pair- • ings are as follows: Blackwells vs Post Office; Central Soya vs i Budget Loan; G. E. Club vs , 49'ers; Highway Sales vs Stef- ; fens. i i Today's Sport Parade (Reg. U.S. Pat. Off.) By OSCAR FRALEY United Press Sports Writer NEW YORK (UP) - Connie Mack, one of the inventors of the game, once estimated that pitching is 60 per cent of baseball. This placed pitching and defense : under one category and left 40 per cent to attack. Which means that in the old gentleman's active mind, pitching had a 20 per cent bulge on hitting if the matter of winning ball games All of which is being proved once again this season. The proof is being posted by such gentlemen as Stan Musial and Mickey Vernon along with tfieir clubs, the Cardinals and Indians, as well as such assorted teams as the Yankees, Cubs and Senators. S Consider first the Cardinals. Musial is batting a blistering .529— a mere .143 points ahead of his closest competitor—and is hitting as if he intends to wrap up the National League batting title by Memorial Day. Pitchers To Blame Yet his Cardinals are about ;to drop through the bottom of the National League with a record, as of Thursday, of 14 losses in 17 , games. The answer is irjr the records of the Cardinal throwers. In • the 14 games they lost, the "pitchers” gave up an average of 12 hits and seven runs a game. Not a pitcher has gone the distance and in the three games won by the miracle of Musial’s bat they gave up 33 hits—or an average of 11 I per game. ■ The Cubs are the surprise team of the early season, right up I there in the unfamiliar heights i when they figured to be doormats. , The answer again is in the pitch- . ing Chicago’s hurlers have held I the opposition to an average of three runs a game and an average of seven hits to post those startling triumphs. Vernon is leading American League hitters with a .400 mark and yet the Indians are playing no better ’ than "7:500 ball. The pitching figures contain the answer. In the losses, they gave up an average of 10 hits per game—and in the victories cut that down to an average of six hits. Yankees Roll On Meanwhile, the Yankees go right on rolling along and the answer isn't strictly power. The Yanks have built up a long-time reputation as ptwer hitters since the days of murderers' row but, hidden beneath the hitting hoopla, they always have solid pitching and a smooth-working defense. This season their pitchers have gone the distance six times in 14 victories while the surprising A s and Senators each has received five route-going performances. If you still give power the edge, take a look at the Boston Red Sox as well as the 1947 Giants and 1956 Redlegs. The Red Sox have seen Ted Williams win five batting titles. Yet their only pennant in recent tfrnes came when Williams didn't bat at the top but curried the ball for a mere .312 average. They won it when Tex Hughson and 800 Ferriss had 20-plus seasons and Mace Brown was great in relief. The Giants set a major league record of 221 homers in 1947 and finished fourth. The Redlegs tied that mark in 1956 —and finished third. ’ Mr. Mack is gone but his figures still are with us. Sell Seven Guernsey Heifers For Shipment" Peter B. Lehman and Stanley Arnold sold seven Guernsey heifers last week, part of a consignment to be shipped to 4-H clubs in Louisiana. The entire carload of 30 ; heifer calves was shipped out of Lafayette last week, Lehman said.

1 <3HK DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DRCATUR, IWDLARA

Redleg Rally Knocks Cubs Out Os Lead By JOHN GRIFFIN United Press Sports Writer Sweet sanity reigns again in the National League, now that they've booted the upstart Chicago Cubs out of first place, but those whacky Washington Senators are getting out of hand in the American League. The Cubs didn’t go quietly—it took an eight-run riot by the Cincinnati Redlegs in the ninth inning of Thursday’s game in Chicago to hand them a 10-8 defeat that dropped them 13 percentage points behind the world champion Milwaukee Braves. But the Senators, those perennial AL sad sacks are refusing to back up at all. • A 4-1 victory over the Detroit Tigers Thursday with the help of another goose-egg relief job by Dick Hyde was the Senators’ fourth win in their last five decisions and moved them just a halfgame behind the mighty and firstplace Yankees — with whom they open a four-game series tonight under the lights in New York. Could Tie Yanks A win for the Senators tonight, and they have Cuban ace Pedro Ramos (2-0) ready to hurl, would give the Senators a percentage tie with the Yankees for first place. Hyde, 29-year-old righthander who had only a 4-3 record last season, is the latest Washington hero. He was called on to save this victory for starter Ralph Lumenti, ended the Tigers’ only threat with a double play, and blanked Detroit for the last 3 2-3 innings. That gives Hyde a string of 9 2-3 innings in which he hasn't allowed any runs — and a string of 15 without allowing an earned run. In 22 innings this year, he’s allowed only 11 hits and three earned runs for an earned-run-average of 1.23 Lumenti, a 21-year-old bonus hurler fom Milford, Mass., got credit for his first big-league win. Detroit rookie Bob Shaw matched Lumenti's shutout hurling for four frames and then, after retiring 13 straight batters, yielded two runs in the fifth on singles by Jim Lemon and Norm Zauchin and a double by Rocky Bridges. Lumenti walked two runners in the sixth and Reno Bertoia drove in one with a single, but Hyde relieved and nailed Jim Hegan on a double play to end the frame. The Senators wrapped it up with two more runs in the sixth on a single by Albie Pearson, a double by Roy Sievers, a sacrifice fly by Clint Courtney, and a single by Lemon. ‘Winningest’ Team The Senators actually are the “winningest” team in the league —they have 11 wins, one more than the Yankees. However, they've lost two more than New York. The Cubs’ heady week atop the National .League standings seemed certain to last a little longer when they carried an 8-2 lead against Cincinnati into the ninth inning. But then that oldtime Redleg ppwe broke loose. The rally included five singles, one walk and one error, and was capped by a three-run pinch homer by Smokey Burgess. The Cubs had built their lead with single tallies in the first and second innings, a five-run rally in the fifth that included .Walt Moryn's fifth homer, and Dale Long’s bases-empty homer in the Joe Nuxhall, fourth of five Redleg hurlers, was the winner and Dolan Nichols, fourth of five Cub flingers, was the loser. The only other game scheduled in the majors Thursday. Cleveland at New York in the American League, was rained out. Plan Sheep Building At 4-H Club Grounds Arrangements have been made to cut down diseased elms, transport them io the saw mill, cut them into lumber, and bring the lumber back to the 4-H club grounds, so that a sheep building can be built, Peter B. Lehman, chairman of the 4-H building committee, announced. The building will probably be put up during July he said. It will be of the same general type as the hog building, constructed last year. Plenty of air circulates through the open construction, keeping the animals in better condition for the fair.

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MAJOR American League W L Pct. GB New York 10 4 .714 — Washington .... 11 6 .647 % Kansas City ... 8 7 .533 2*4 Baltimore 8 8 .500 3 Cleveland 10 10 .500 3 Boston 9 11 .450 4 Detroit 9 12 .429 4*4 Chicago 4 11 .267 6% National League W L Pct. GB Milwaukee .... 12 7 .632 — Chicago 13 8 .619 — San Francisco .. 13 9 .591 *4 Pittsburgh 11 9 .550 Vz Cincinnati 9 8 .529 2 Philadelphia .. 9 11 .450 3% Los Angeles t.... 9 13 .409 4*4 St. Louis 3 14 .176 8 Thursday’s Results American League Washington 4, Detroit 1. Cleveland at New York, postponed, rain. Qnly games scheduled. National League Cincinnati 10, Chicago 8. Only game scheduled. Midgets Race At New Bremen Sunday NEW BREMEN, O. — One of the top racing attractions ever presented at the New Bremen speedway will be held Sunday, , when 42 United States auto club midgets will battle. The day’s program includes time trials, beginning at 12:30 p.m., four 10-lap heat races, a consolation, helmet dasle by the four fastest qualifiers, and a 50-lap feature for the 24 fastest qualifiers. The first race will start at 2:30 p.m. Rep. Adam Powell Indicted By Jury Charge Congressman With Tax Evasion WASHINGTON (UP)- His indictment by a federal grand jury left Rep. Adam Clayton Powell Jr. (D-N.Y.) unscathed today as far as his membership in the House is concerned. Not only does Powell retain'all his congressional prerogatives and pay, but on the basis of past performance, other members will act as if they don’t even know he’s in trouble. Powell was charged in New York Thursday jvith income tax evasion. This Is the kind of charge which could, if he is convicted. send him to jail. Even then his House membership would not be denied him. He could resign Or he could, like Rep. Thomas J. Lane IDMass.) beforfe him, serve his prison time while holding his seat. Lane, jailed for tax evasion in 1956, not Only continued to serve but ran for another term and was re-elected. His official status in the House remains unimpaired. The House takes a lenient view of the troubles of its members. By and large the attitude is that it’s up to the voters in each congressional district to select heir represenative. The House is not inclined to interfere with their judgement. Powell’s position in the House at the moment is probably in greater jeopardy on political than legal grounds. Democratic leaders in his district are reported hoping to dump him. mostly because he bolted the party in 1956 and supported reelection of President Eisenhower. Powell was accused specfically of preparing a fraudulent income tax return for his wife, pianist Hazel Scott, for 1951 Her return listed her income as $4,815 when it should have been $9,181. He also was charged with evading taxes on a joint return with his wife in 1952 by listing joint net income as $5,252 when it actually was $8,952. Allen County Child Is Killed By Auto FORT WAYNE UP) - Three-year-old Jansen Lengacher, daughter of the Victor Lengachers, died today in Park view Hospital a day after she was struck by an automobile while running across Ind. 37 to join her father. Authorities were told the girl's father shouted a warning when he saw his daughter dart into the highway but she was hit by a car driven by Alice L. Longsworth, 41, Hicksville, Ohio.

Racers Step Up Practice At Speedway INDIANAPCLIS (UP) — Teh drivers turned saps at better than 140 miles per hour Thursday as practice stepped up for the 500mile Memorial Day auto race. Tliirts-yix drivers took advantage of the second straight day of mild temperatures and sunny skies to take test drives and most of them hit speeds in the high 130 s or over 140 m.p.h. Top speed of the day and fastest since the track opened for practice May 1 was a lap at 144 m.p.h. turned in by Dick Rathmann of Trenton, N.J. Rathmann also turned laps at 143 22 and 143.23 m.p.h. in a car owned by John Zink, the same racer in which Ed Elisian, Oakland, Calif., set the previous practice high of 142.4 m.p.h. on Wednesday. Tony Bettenhausen, Tin 1 e y Park, Hl., turned in a lap at 14Z8; Jimmy Bryan, Phoenix, Ariz., did a lap at 142.5; Pat O'Connor, North Vernon, Ind., did 141.7; Elisian had laps of 143.49 and 142.63; Jimmy Reece of Speedway, Rodger Ward of Los Angeles, Bob Veith of Oakland, Eddie Sachs of Center Valley. Pa., had laps at about 140 and Jim Rathmann of Miami. Fla., did one at 141.3 m.p.h Johnny Boyd of Fresno, Calif., had a lap just under 140 m.p.h. World champion Juan Fangio passed the final phase of his familiarization test with flying colors. The Argentine ace completed the 130 m.p.h. phase under the watchful eyes of chief observer Walt Meyers and a group of veteran drivers stationed at various points around the 2t£-mile oval“From where I stood,” said Myers, “it looked like he did a perfect job all the way.” Most of the other drivers agreed the 46-year-old champion Grand Prix racer did a good job although he still has “a few things to learn.” “Now we can test the car,” Fangio said after he was told 'the good news. He smiled as he ripped off the three stips of tape from the tail of his racer to symbolize passing of the test. Bryan, the national champion anjjr among those observing Fan- ' gfo's style, said later he still is Convinced the foreign ace “hasn’t 1 got -a—Chance to win" the “500.” > “Look at Fangio's record,” he t said. “It speaks for itself. He’s a 1 great race driver and I’m not f trying to run him down. But in this case it's like trying to make a ' quarter horse run 2% miles. c “He's just not used to this f closed circuit racing,” Byanr ’ said. “He's used to downshifting 1 and jmning through the corners, * things they don’t do here—He’s, just another race driver at the Speedway ” Bryan did concede that Fangio has “a good chance” to make the starting field. “He did a wonderful job in completing his driver’s test.” A.J. Foyt Jr., of Houston, Tex., 1 passed the —lls and 120-m.p.h. phases of his test and was expected to finish the final phases today. Rex Easton, another rookie from Springfield, 111., also was ; slated to begin familiaization tests today Len Sutton, Portland, Ore., will take a test at the 130-m.p.h. speed today. Sutton passed his driver’s ' test in 1956 before the 130-m.p.h. 1 phase was added and Speedway ' officials ruled he would have to ; be checked at the higher speed ' before he would get clearance to ’ practice, : 1 Forty-seven of the 56 cars en- ’ tered in the May 30 classic were in the garages and the rest were ’ expected in the next few days. : The twin Novis were slated to ar- ; rive in “Gasoline Alley” on [ Saturday. ’ Long Association SOUTHBRIDGE, Mass. (W—The seven Dumas brothers, ranging in age from 65 to 86 and now all living in retirement here, worked a total of 367 years for the American OptiCal CO. - - L ——

U. S. A. C. Midget Races New Bremen Speedway—New Bremen, Ohio SUNDAY, MAY 11 Over 100 Laps of Racing - 50 Lap Feature See the Stars in Action! . Elmer George—Don Branson—Rex Easton—Ed Elisian—Ted Hartley—Gene Hartley — Gene Force — Leroy Warriner—Len Sutton—Len Duncan—Ed Dutch Schaefer and a host of others. Fdit reservations Ca 11—3621 or 5123 New Bremen, O. Over 40 entries received—Rain Date May 18 — Bia Purse — If no rain date is needed modified stock car races May 18

No Record Homer Pace In Coliseum By FRED DOWN United Press Sports Writer Walter O'Malley is getting a bum rip from critics who say his Los Angeles “Chinese Theater” is making a travesty of home-run hitting That's the evidence produced today in a United Press survey of homer-hitting during the first three weeks of the big league season. There’s no denying more homers were hit at the Coliseum than at any other park — but in past seasons homers were hit at faster paces in three other stadiums. In fact, the 49 homers hit in 18 games at the Coliseum are only four more than were hit at San Francisco’s Seals Stadium —a park which nobody has yet charged is making a travesty of anything. The figures establish the following key points: —The current rate of homerhitting at Los Angeles and San Francisco is less than record paces established in the past at Brooklyn’s Ebbets Field, New York’s Polo Grounds and Cincinnati’s Crosley Field. —Nevertheless, National League home run ’hitting is up 15.6 per cent over its 1957 pace. —Home run hitting in the American League is the same as last season. “It’s about time somebody injected some sanity into all that criticism of the Coliseum,’’ commented Baseball Commissioner Ford Frick. “I would accept these figures as proof that no new home run records will be set because of the Coliseum’s unusual layout. “Another thing to remember is that homer-hitting is usually greater early in the season than later on when pitching staffs are straightened out,” Frick added "I would say homer hitting will decrease as the season goes on.” If the current pace of homerhitting were continued over the full season, a total of 198 would be hit at Los Angeles and 182 at San Francisco- These totals would fall short of the 219 hit at Cincinnati's Crosley Field last season as well as the 207 at Brooklyn’s Ebbets Field in 1950 and the 206 at New York's Polo Grounds in 1947. At the same time, the clubs responsible for the sharp rise in National League homer-hitting—-the Chicago Cubs and Pittsburgh Pirates — did do a lot of their homer-hitting at the two West Coast parks. ! Chilean Communists Restored Vote Right SANTIAGO. Chile (IP) — The Chamber of Deputies Thursday night approved a bill to restore the voting right to the Chilean Communist. The Senate had previously approved the bill, which now goes to President Carlos Ibanez for action. I,ad‘_ m a good town — Decatur DANCE SATURDAY, MAY 10 EAGLES PARK Minster, Ohio Dancing from 9 till 12 JIM HECKER’S ALL GIRI, ORCHESTRA Must Be 18 To Be Admitted.

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j MINOR American Association W L Pct. QB Deaver 14 4 .77$ iCharleston 15 7 .682 1 Minneapolis- ....15 8 .652 l\i Indianapolis .... 9 10 .474 5Yi St, Paul; 9 13 .409 7 Omaha 9 13 .409 7 Wichita 8 14 .364 8 Louisville 6 16 .273 10 Thursday’s Results Denver 5-8, Louisville 0-2. Omaha 7-3, Charleston 0-8. Wichita 8. St. Paul 6. Minneapolis 5, Indianapolis 3. NEW RAMBLERS, AMERICANS, DODGES AND PLYMOUTHS 1866 DODGE Lancer, 2-door, Radio Heater, Powerflite. 1966 MERCURY 4-door Hardtop, Radio Heater, Mercmatic. 1966 V-8 FORD 4-door, Radio, Heater. 1966 FORD 2-door Ranch Wagon, Nice clean car. 1965 CHEVROLET V/8 Convertible, ! Radio, Heater, t Powerglide. 1954 FORD M 2-door Ranch Wagon, Radio, Heater, Local Car. 1954 FORD , 4-door, Radio, Heater Black Beauty. 1953 FORD V-8 9 Passenger Wagon, Radio, Heater, Overdrive. 1953 PLYMOUTH 4-door, Radio, Heater, High Drive. 1953 CHRYSLER 4-door, Radio, Heater. 1963 RAMBLER - Radio, Heater, Overdrive. (953 FORD 4-door, Heater, Radio. 1951 FORD 2-door, Victoria, Radio, Heater, Fordomatic. 1952 FORD 2-door, like new. 1960 FORD 2-door, Radio, Heater. 1949 BUICK 4-door, Radio, Heater. 1948 HASH 4-door. WE FINANCE IILMIY MOTOR SALES 1805 W. Monroe St. r Decatur, Ind. OPEN 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.