Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 144, Decatur, Adams County, 19 June 1958 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Braves Defeat Monmouth In Pony League The Decatur Braves defeated Monmouth, 9-6, in an Adams county Pony League game Wednesday evening at McMillen field in this city. The Braves scored once in the first inning on hits by Rudy Kleinknight and Jim Elliott, and tallied three in the second on Steve Gause, Dennis Ahr and Bob Ladd, plus a walk and two errors. Monmouth tied the score with four in the third on four bases

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on balls and two errors. The Braves won the game with five runs in the fourth on three walks and hits by Max Eichenauer, Bill Conrad and Gause. A walk, passed ball and Reiter’s hit accounted for a Monmouth run in the fifth, and Ron Thieme, Monmoitth pitcher, closed out the scoring with a long home run in the sixth. Braves AB R H E Ladd, rs 2 110 Beerv, rs 10 0 0 Ru. Kleinknight, If 3 2 11 Elliott, cf 4 0 10 Eichenauer, ss „ 5 11 0 Ro. Kleinknight. lb 11 0 1 Ru. Kleinknight, lb 4 1 0 1 Conrad, 3b 4 1 j Kohne, 2b 2 0 0 1 Rambo, 2b 0 10 0 Gausb,' c 3 13 0 Kauffman, c .... 10 0 0

Ahr, p 2 110 Hakey, p 2 0 0 0 TOTALS —— 33 9 10 4 Monmouth AB R H E Gallmeyer, 2b 4 0 0 0 Selking, rs 0 10 1 Brown, rs 1 r «4l 0 0 Kolter, lb —— 3 2 0 1 Spencer, c 3 10 0 Reiter, cf 4 0 2 0 Blakey, If 3 0 0 0 Braun, 3b 3 0 1 Q Bleberich, ss 3 0 0 0 Thieme, p 2 2 11 TOTALS .... 26 6 4 3 Score by innings 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Braves .... 13 0 5 0 0 0 9 Monmouth 0040110 6 Trap Shoot Planned Sunday Afternoon A merchandise trap shoot will be held Sunday afternoon at the St. Mary’s and Blue Creek Conservation club located one and a half miles west of Willshire, 0., bn Indiana 124.

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Junior Legion Team Defeated In Twin Bill The Decatur Junior American Legion team opened its season Wednesday evening with a double header at Worthman field, and fell before the Celina, 0., team in both ends of the twin bill, 10-1 and 7-3. Celina pounded out 11 hits and was aided by eight Decatur errors in the opener, and put the game on ice with five runs in the first two innings. Decatur was limited to two hits, and scored its lone run in the second inning on a walk to Gay and Wolfe's base hit. The visitors scored three runs in the second inning of the night cap but bounced back in the same inning with three on three walks and hits by Dellinger and May. That was all the scoring for Decatur, while Celina picked up single runs in«> the next four innings for the double victory. FIRST GAME Celina AB R H E Baucher, ss 3 2 0 0 Maier, 2b ;..... 10 0 0 Quilling, 3b 4 2 2 0 Gehle, rs 10 10 B. Brandon, cf 2 0 10 Bollenbacher, cf .... 2 0 0 0 Hallman, lb, c ...— 3 0 0 p Plummer, 2b, ss 4 2 3 0 Schamp, p 4 1 2 0 Cisco, rs 3 0 10 Bookhart, rs. If 0 10 0 Cran, If. 3b 4 0 0 0 R. Brandon, c 3 111 Long, lb 0 10 0 Totals 34 10 11 1 Decatur AB R H E Dellinger, 2b — 4 0 0 0 May, cf 4 0 0 0 Reidenbach, ss .... .2 0 0 1 Shraluka, c ... 3 0 0 3 Gay, 3b 11 0 3 Wolfe, If 3 0 10 Conrad, If 0 0 0 1 Daniels, p—--— 3 0 0 0 Harvey, lb — 2 0 1 0 Snyder, rs 1 0 0 0 Agler, rs 0 0 0 0 Totals 23 1 2 8 Score by innings: Celina 320 100 4—lo Decatur 010 000 0— 1 SECOND GAME Celina AB R H E Baucher, ss 4 10 0 B. Brandon, cf 5 1 3 0 Schamp, If 4 0 0 0 Hallman, lb 3 1 0 0 Plummer, 2b 3 0 1 0 R. Brandon, c 3 2 2 0 Cran, 3b 3 12 1 Bollenbacher, 3b ... 1 0 0 0 Brookhart, rs 2 1,1 0 Cisco, rs 20 10 Dell, p 4 0 10 Totals—-.- 34 7 11 1 Decatur AB R H E Dellinger. 2b 4 0 2 1 May, cf, ss' .. 2 0 11 Reidenbach, ss, cf .. 3 0 0 1 Shraluka. c 3 0 0 2 Gay, 3b 3 0 0 2 Wolfe, p — 2 0 0 0 Daniels, If 3 10 0 Fawcett, lb 0 0 0 0 August, lb 0 0 0 0 Harvey, lb 0 1 0 0 Clark, rs — — 10 0 0 Snyder, rs. 11 0 0 Totals 22 3 3 7 Score by innings: / Celina // 031 111 o—7 Decatur ...030 000 o—3 Club House Chatter Central Soya League Results of matches this week: Lab 5, Feed Mill 0: Office 3, Elevator 2; Engineers 4, Wlexane four 1; Traffic 3, Research 2. Standings Pts. Traffic -- 12 Lab - W 4 Engineers 16 Hexane Four .*t— 1414 Research ' 1414 Feed Mill 13 Office ..4 11 Elevator ..- 914 Low scores: E. Bohnke 39, E. Hutker 40, IL, Eley 44, J. Laurent 45, D. Abbott 45, Dr. Cravens 45. Willie Mays Slated ’ For Physical Exam PITTSBURGH (UPI) — Willie Mays of the San Francisco Giants, the National League's leading hitter who was benched Wednesday night for the first time this season, left early today for a physical examination in New York. Club officials said Mays, who complained of feeling “weak and tired” the past, few weeks, would be examined by Dr. Stewart Cosgriff in New York and was expected to rejoin the Giants in time for Friday night’s game in Philadelphia. Although leading the league. Mays recently has been beset by] the worst batting slump in his ca* T reer. I

Cubs, Tigers Win In Morning League The Cubs edged the Yankees, 4-3, and the Tigers nosed out the Reds, 7-6, in Morning league games this morning at Worthman field. Two games are scheduled Monday morning, with the Cubs playing the Reds at 9 o’clock, and the Tigers meeting the Yankees at 10 o’clock. Today’s line scores: RHE Yankees — 102 o—3 2 1 Cubs ...310 x—4 3 1 Snriitley, Lehman and Miller; Alanos, Mayclin, Putteet and Hake. RHE Reds -— 24—6 5 2 Tigers 52—7 5 1 Beavers, Teeter and Hammond; Contreros and Patch. League Standing W L Pct. Cubs— 2 0 1.000 Tigers, 11 -500 Reds —1 1 - 5 0° Yankees 0 < 2 .000 Decatur VFW Team Defeats Uniondale The Decatur VFW team defeated Uniondale, 4-2, in a Vim rural softball league game, as Herman Everett limited Uniondale to four hits. Kenny Butcher and Ronnie Ballard each had two hits for Decatur. The line score: RHE Decatur 100 200 I—4 7 0 Uniondale 000 001 I—2 4 3 Everett and Kiser; Decker and Ely. MAJOR American League W. L. Pct. GB New York 37 19 .661 — Boston 31 29 .517 8 Kansas City-..- 28 29 .491 Detroit ------- 28 29 .491 9M> Cleveland .... 29 32 .475 10% Baltimore 26 30 .464 11 Chicago - 26 31 .448 12 Washington 26 32 .448 12 National League W. L. Pct. GB Milwaukee — - 32 22 .593 — San Francisco -- 33 27 .500 2 Cincinnati 27 26 .509 4% Pittsburgh .... 29 29 .500 5 St. Louis 28 28 .500 5 Chicago 28 32 .467 7 Philadelphia .... 25 31 .446 8 Los Angeles 25 32 . 439 8% WEDNESDAY’S RESULTS American League Boston 13, Chicago 9. New York 3, Cleveland 2. Baltimore 5. Kansas City 3. Washingtori at Detroit, postponed, rain. National League Los Angeles 3, Philadelphia 0. San Francisco 2, Pittsburgh 1 (10 innings). Cincinnati 6, St. Louis 1. Chicago at Milwaukee, postponed,

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Don Newcombe Wins First As Redleg Hurler ...' By MILTON RICHMAN United Press International A beaming “new’’ Don Newcombe today credited it all to that ‘‘old’ psychologist — Birdie Tebbetts. Newcombe had that new look in a lot of respects Wednesday night. He was pitching in a Cincinnati uniform for the first time, he was working under Tebbetts for the first time and when it was all over, he was a winner for the first time this season following six straight losses with the Dodgers. Big. Newk, traded by the Dodgers last Sunday, did it with a sixhit 6-1 victory over St. Louis but he insisted that Tebbetts share his hour of triumph. The canny Redleg manager made a special trip to the mound after the Cardinals loaded the bases on three successive singles with one out in the ninth. Birdie Talks Him Home “I know you . . . you are going to finish this,” Tebbetts said “Take your time ... get in an argument if you want to slow down.” Newcombe promptly retired pinch hitters Irv Noren and Hobie Landrith to end the game. “Walt Alston would have had me out of there,” said the huge right-hander, who gave up the Cards' only run when Stan Musial tagged him for his- 12th homer in the first inning. Good as Newcombe was for the Redlegs, the Dodgers did some rejoicing of their own over the showing of rookie Stan Williams, who shut out the Phillies, 3-0, on four hits. Williams out-duelled Robin Roberts for his second victory since begin recalled from St. Paul. The game was marked by a fifth-inning shower of beer cans from Philadelphia fans, who didn't let up until umpire Frank Dascoli threatened to forfeit the game tc Los Angeles. The uproar all came about following Joe Pignatano’s two-run homer, which some of the fans felt had curved foul. Car) Furillo made the rumpus a purely academic one when he singled home another run in the sixth. Mays Rode Bench Whitey Lockman, given a chance to start when Willie Mays was benched for the first time this season, rapped out a 10th inning single to give the Giants a 2-1 win over the Pirates. Lockman’s single sent Bob Friend down to his sixth setback The winner was Giel. Eddie Mathews’ 14th home run was wiped out when rain caused postponement of the MilwaukeeChicago game with the Braves ahead. 1-0, in the second inning. The Braves still led the National League by two games. Casey Stengel s parting message before leaving New York was “Watch our smoke on the road,”

Chamberlain Signs With Globetrotters NEW YORK UPD— Wilt Chamberlain, one of the most publicized players in basketball history, has left the confines of the amateur courts for the greener pastures of professionalism. With another year of eligibility remaining at Kansas University, the seven-foot All-American from Philadelphia quit the wheat belt for a $65,000 contract with the Harlem Globetrotters. The pay eclipses the high mark of the estimated $35,000 received by Goose Tatum as a Trotter. . The 21-year-old Chamberlain had to decide between leading a South American tour which may have grossed over a quarter-mil-lion dollars or signing with the Globetrotters for a year. Apparently the knowledge that he could receive $65,000 without much sweat swayed the tall man. A pile of dollgr bills probably stretching -to the height of the seven-footer also awaits Chamberlain when he finishes the tour with Abe Saperstein’s Globetrotters. The Philadelphia Warriors of the National Basketball Association have first call on Wilt's draft rights in 1959. The Warriors, under a special league ruling, claimed Chamberlain while he was starring as a 17-year-old high school player in Philadelphia. However, they couldn’t touch him until his class graduated from Kansas. and the Yankees made him look good by taking their second straight from the Cleveland Indians, 3-2. Art Ditmar got his first starting assignment of the season and turned it "into his first victory. He didn t allow a hit until the sixth when the Indians scored both their runs but Ryne Duren took over in the seventh, retired the last seven men in a row and wrapped it up. Pappas Wins Milt Pappas, a 19-year-old fastbaler, . out - pitched 41-year-old Murry Dickson in Baltimore's 5-3 .riumph over Kansas City. The A’s went ahead with two runs in the first inning-all they ever got off Pappas—but Gus Triindos’ 14th homer with one on ;ied the score in the sixth. Pap>as later belted a double that produced the tie-breaking run. Boston snapped Chicago’s fourgame winning streak, 13-9, with a 15-hit attack that included homers by Marty Keough. Don Buddin. Jackie Jensen, Frank Malzone and Ted Williams. Rain washed out the Detroit•Vashington game in the fourth inring after the Senators had taken a 3-2 lead with the help of Neil Chrisley’s two-run homer. Grade in a good town — Decatw

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THURSDAY. JUNE 19, 1958

Little League Gjimes Friday And Saturday x Deqatur Little League teams wul be m action both Friday and Saturday night at Worthman field. The usual double header will be held Friday night, with the White Sox meeting the Indians at 6:30 o’clock, followed by the Senators and Rex Sox. Saturday at 6:30 p.m., the Indians will play the Tigers, fallowed by a Pony League game between the Decatur Braves and Berne, which was postponed last week. Story Hour Friday At Public Library Janet Hahnert will be in charge of the story hour at the library for classes one and two Friday at 4 o’clock, Yama Bahama Wins Over Kid Gavilan MIAMI BEACH; Fla. UT’D— Yama Bahama beat Kid Gavilan so decisively in their TV fight here that the former welterweight champion declared morosely toBaham, weighing 151% pounds to Gavilan's 150%, not only won the unanimous 10-round decision Wednesday night by a lopsided margin at the Miami Beach Auditorium; but he had the Cuban “keed” woozy in the ninth and well-rocked in the eighth. His handlers had told him to press Bahama constantly — carry the fight to him in every round. The ’ keed” did exactly that and ried to slug it out, “instead of boxing him like I wanted to.” Whether 32-year-old Gavilan was "over the hill” in his bout with younger and stronger Yama, ex-fishing guide from the nearby island of Bimimi, 8.W.1., is the big question Gavilan couldn't answer definitely today. Manager Yamil Chade said, “If I thought he was finished. I’d retire him. But I think he was out of condition from fooling around. I’d like to give him one or two more fights, but forcing him to stay in a training camp under close watch while he gets ready.” .... Gavilan had been a slight favorite at 7-5. Meanwhile Bahama, 25, said. “I felt very fast at 151% pounds. And I know I could be a lot faster if I pared down,to 147 and went after the welterweight title.” Yama registered his fourth straight victory and his 49th in 59 starts. The 10-point voting was 98-94, 100-92 and, 99-93. Gavilan, never knocked out in his 143 bouts, suffered his 30th defeat. For Athlete* Foot Use T-4-L for 3 to 5 days. Watch the old tainted skin slough off leaving healthy, hardy skin. If not pleased with powerful, in-stant-drying T-4-L, your 48c back at any drug store. Today at Kohne Drug Store.