Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 168, Decatur, Adams County, 18 July 1958 — Page 7
FRIDAY, MY 13,
Colonial Oil Beats Klenk's Thursday Night Colonial OU, scoring aU its runs in the first two innings, defeated Klenk’s of Decatur, 7-4, in a battle for first place in the Federation league Thursday night at Worthman field. The teams are actually tied in games won and lost, but the OUers have an .833 percentage with a 102 record, while Klenk’s is at 12-4 for .750. Colonial bunched five hits, including Hanour’s triple and Parrish's double, with a walk for five runs in the first inning, before Kirchhofer relieved Ehrsam and fanned Doehrman for the final out. The Oilers scored their final two runs in the second on three hits and a base on balls. They were held scoreless the rest of the way as Kirchhofer aUowed only four hits in the final seven innings. Klenk’s scored its first run in the opening inning on hits by Doan and Hoehammer. Two tallied in the third on Doan's hit, an error and a pair of infield outs. Decatur scored its final run in the fourth on hits by Hernandez. Pierce and Whetro, but were held to two hits the rest of the way by Ortlieb, who relieved Doehrman in the fourth. Klenk’s has only two more league games this season. Edgerton will play ' here next Thursday night, and Klenk's has a postponed game with Tony & Jim’s Canitina to be played. Colonial OU AB H H E Vance, rs . 5 0 2 0 Berry, cf 3 2 10 Ellenberger, 3b 4 1 2 2 McCoUy, lb 4 2 10 Koehl. c 4 0 11 Hemminger, ss „ 5 1 2 0 Hanour, If 5 12 0 Parrish. 2b5 0 1 0 Doehrman, p .... 2 0 0 0 Ortlieb, p 2 0 0 0 Totals 39 7 12 3 Klenk’s AB R H E Whetro, c 5 0 3 0 Doan, 2b 4 2 2 0 Crist, 2b 3 10 0 Egly, ss 2 0 0 0 Hoehammer, lb 4 0 1 0 Knape, If 3 0 0 0 Reed7“3tT”.. .T" FTJ —I ““IT Hermandey, cf .. 4 1 2 0 Harmish, rflo 10 Pierce, rs 3 0 10 Ehrsam, p 0 0 0 0 Kirchhofer, p .... 2 0 0 0 a-Koch 10 0 0 Totals 36 4 11 1 —Grounded out for Kirchhofer in 9th. * Score by innings Colonial Oil 520-000- 000—7 Klenk’s 102 100 000—4 Runs batted in—Ellenberger, Koehl, Hemminger 2, Hanour 2, Parish. Whetro, Crist, Hoehammer, Knape. Two-base hit—Parrish. * Three hit—Hanover. Stolen bases—Berry 2. Bases on balls—Ehrsam 1, Kirchhofer 4, Ortlieb 3. Strikeouts—Ehrsam 1, Kirchofer 10, Doehrman 2, Ortlieb 9. Hit off—Ehrsam 5 in %, Krichoffer 7 in 8%, Doehrman 8 in 3, Ortlieb 3 in 6. Winner—Ortlieb, loser—Ehrsam. Umpires—Krauss, Bartels. " ■ ■ * 1 ■ 1 ■ '”' ’"xTmeu" ISuiC life See .... BASEBALL Game of the Week DETROIT vs BOSTON SATURDAY, JULY 19 1:00 P. M. WKJG-TV
Three Stars Out Os Clay Court Tourney RIVER FOREST, fl. (UPI) - Top-seeded Barry Mac Kay, Dayton, Ohio, and two-time women’s champion Dorothy Head Knode, Forest HlUs, N.Y., today faced stiffened opposition in the National Clay Courts tennis championships, although three stars already were eliminated. Mac Kay takes on Sam Giammalva, Houston, Tex., in the first men's singles match of the day. Both had easy victories Thursday, when the Dayton ace downed Robert Perry, Los Angeles, 6-4, 6-3, and Giammalva, seeded seventh, beat Allen Fox, another Los Angeles entrant, 7-5, 6-4. Mrs. Knode defeated Sue Metzger, Kalamazoo, Mich., 64), 6-0 in an easy match but was due for a tougher go with Baby Vivanco, of Mexico City. Miss Vivanco showed an upset potential when she beat Nancy O’ConneU, Highland Park, 11., 6-4, 0-6, 7-5. Fifth-seeded Grant Golden was due to face Whitney Reed, Los Angeles. Golden, of Chicago, beat Esteban Reyes, of Mexico City, the No, 3 seeded foreign competitor, while the third seeded Reed took the measure of another Californian, Gordon Davis, of Santa Monica, 6-4, 6-3. Bernard Bartzen, who is expected to face Mac Kay for the men's crown, wiU play Chris Crawford, Piedmont, Calif., who starred in a giant-keller's role Thursday. Bartzen had little trouble in handing John Douglas, Los Angeles, a 6-1, 6-2, defeat, but Crawford upset eighth - seeded David Harum, Miami, Fla., 6-3, 6-2. Western amateur champion Alex Olmedo, of Peru, seeded No. 4, will have an all-Latin battle with Gustavo Palafox, the top foreign seed from Mexico City. Olmedo, also the national intercollegiate titleholder, routed Donald Dell, Bethesda, Md., 6-0, 6-1, while Palafox overcame sixth - seeded Mike Green, Miami Beach, Fla., 6-1, 6-1. Train For Title Bout Next Wednesday Night HOUSTON, Tex. <UPD — Kenny Lane workerd five rounds with sparring partners Thursday in preparation for his title bout with lightweight champion Joe Brown next Wednesday. Brown, in a jjfiarby training camp, floored one of his sparring mates with a quick left jab in a workout against southpaws. Major League Leaders National League Player & Club G. AB R. H. Pct. Musial, St. L. 77 276 43 102 .370 Mays, S. F. 84 334 71 115 .344 Dark, Chi. 69 275 34 92 .335 Ashburn, Phil. 82 328 50 108 .329 Walls, Chi. 87 348 63 112 .322 American League Power, Clev. 79 318 56 106 .333 Runnels, Bos. 79 299 52 97 .324 Kuenn, Det. 73 283 36 91 .322 Cerv, K. C. 78 290 57 93 .321 Goodman, Chi. 53 204 22 65 .319 Home Runs National League— Thomas, Pirates 26; Banks, Cubs 24; Walls, Cubs 21: Cepeda, Giants 19; Mathews, Braves 19. American League— Jensen, Red Sox 27: Mantle, Yankees 24; Sievers, Senators 24; Cerv, Athletics 23; Triandos, Orioles 17. Runs Batted In National League— Thomas, Pirates 73; Banks. Cubs 69; Cepeda, Giants 59; Anderson, Phils 59; Walls, Cubs 54; Boyer, Cards 54. American League—Jensen, Red Sox 81; Cerv, Athletics 64; Sievers, Senators 60; Lemon, Senators 53; Colavito, Indians 52. Pitching National League — McCormick, Giants 7-1; Phillips, Cubs 6-2: Koufax, Dodgers 7-3; Semproch, Phillies 11-6; Spahn, Braves 11-6. American League— Delock, Red Sox 9-0; Turley, Yankees 14-3: Sullivan, Red Sox 8-2; Hyde. Senators 6-2; Ford, Yankees 11-4. DANCE SATURDAY, JULY 19 EAGLES PARK Minster, Ohio Dancing from 9 till 12 KARL BEACH ORCHESTRA
Musial Stars But Cardinals Lose To Braves By FRED DOWN United Press International What appears to be a year of defeat for the St. Louis Cardinals is alihost certain to be one of towering triumph for Stan Musial. The Cardinals seem to be drifting out of the National League race but there’s no stopping Stan The Man who already has passed two milestones this season and has three more major goals within his grasp. Musial, who earlier in the season joined the select group of players with 3,000 career hits, passed Lou Gehrig on the list of the greatest extra - base hitters when he blasted two homers in Thursday's 8-7 loss to the Milwaukee Braves. His career total of 1,191 extra base hits is surpassed only by the 1,356 hammered out by the king of all sluggers, Babe Ruth. But it looks like there are still more honors to come before the 37-year-old Musial is finished this season: —With 397 homers he needs only three more to become the sixth player in history to hit 400 during a career. —With a .370 batting average that tops second - place Willie Mays by 26 points he has a strong chance to tie Honus Wagner’s National League record of eight batting championships. » —And, with his amazing ■ allaround season, Musial rates better than an even chance to become the first player in history to win four most valuable player awards. All For Naught Musial drove in five runs with homers in the first and third innings to give the Cardinals an early 5-1 lead Thursday but rickety St. Louis pitching couldn’t hold the Braves. Homers by Del Crandall and Wes Covington and a run-producing double by Hank Aaron helped tie the score and then Mel Roach singled home Felix Mantilla with the winning run in the seventh. Lew Burdette, who shutout the Cardinals for the last five innings, won his ninth game for the Braves who have a tidy four - game winning streak. The San Francisco Giants came up with another of their sensational late-inning rallies, so reminiscent of 1954, to remain a halfgame behind the Braves with an 8-7 triumph over the Philadelphia Phillies. The Giants, want info the last of the ninth trailing, 7-5, but tied the score on rookie Orlando Cepeda’s two- run double and won it when relief ace Dick Farrell wild - pitched ' the winning run across with the bases filled and one out. Marv Grissom, 41-year-old reliever, won his sixth game for San Francisco. Streaks Broken The Cincinnati Redlegs snapped a seven - game losing streak when they beat the Chicago Cubs, 3-2, and the Los Angeles Dodgers scored a 5-3 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates in other Rational League action. The New York Yankees remained 12 games ahead in the American League when they beat the Detroit Tigers, 4-2. The Boston Red Sox topped the Kansas City Athletics. 6-2, the Baltimore Orioles shut out the Chicago White Sox, 3-0, and the Cleveland Indians .whipped the Washington Senators, 8-3. Frank Robinson’s two- run homer in the second inning and an unearned run In the eighth en”'«i th£ Redlegs to end the Cubs’ five - game winning streak. ■i ,e Nuxhall went the distance although tapped for 10 hits for his SlAtn will. ... .-... _ Don Zimmer, Gino Cimoli and Gil Hodges homered for the Dodgers while Hank Foiles and Roberto Clemente connected for the Pirates. Stan Williams gained credit for his sixth win with relief help from Clem Labine in the eighth. Hank Bauer's two-run sixthinning triple snapped a 2-2 tie and gave the Yankees their sixth win over the Tigers in 15 tries.’ Art Ditmar received credit for his fifth victory although relief star Ryne Duren shot out the Tigers with Tine hit for three innings. Jimmy PiersaU’s tie - breaking single and a two- run single by Frank Malzone sparked a fiverun Red Sox uprising in the fifth inning. Tom Brewer went 8 1-3 innings to win his fourth game as Murray Wall mopped up. Tom Gorman dropped his fourth decision against a single victory. Billy O'Dell scattered nine flits for the Orioles to best Chicago’s Bily Pierce in a duel of lefthanded All-Stars. Two singles, a passed ball and a sacrifice fly produced two runs for the Orioles in the fourth inning and Brooks Robinson hit his third homer in the sixth. Rocky Colavito drove in four runs with his 15th and 16th homers as the Indians beat the Senators behind Cal McLish’s eight-hit pitching. Minnie Minoso also homered for the Indians while Roy Sievers hit his fourth in three games and 24th of the year for the Senators.
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Reds, Tigers Win In Morning League The Reds edged the Cubs, 3-2, and the Tigers defeated the Yan-. kees, 6-2, in Morning league games today at Worthman field. With the victory, the Tigers took over first place in, the league standings, which are as follows: Tigers - 6 3 .667 W L Pct. Cubs 5 4 .556 Reds - 4 5 .444 Yankees - 3 6 .333 Games scheduled Monday are Yankees vs Reds at 9 a. m., and Tigers vs Cubs at 10 a. m. Today’s line scores: RHE Cubs 002 00—2 11 Reds 002 01—3 4* 0 Schultz. Thieme and Fairchild. Noack; Ball and Birch, Beavers. RHE Tigers 0 0 6—6, 3 2 Yankees 2 0 o—2 2 2 Melchi, Contreras and Barger; Smitley, Lehman and Miller. White Sox Practice Here This Evening The White Sox of the Little League will hold a practice session at 6 o'clock this evening at the Stratton Place diamond. All team members are asked to be present. Stan Musial Second in Long Base Hits ST. LAUIS (UPl)—Stan Musial of the St. Louis Cardinals was second in the all-time extra-base standings today. The 37-year-old first baseman got his 1.1915 t long blow Thursday as he passed Lou Gehirg in the extra-base department. He now is second only to Babe Ruth who had 1,356. Musial drove in five runs with his 15th and 16th home runs, but it wasn’t enough as the Milwaukee Broves downed the Cardinals, 8-7. Boy Is Critically Shot By Playmate GARY, Ind. (UPI> — Mario Duron, 9, was in critical condition today at Mercy Hospital after being shot by a 6-year-old playmate who told police he did it because “Mario called me a bad name.” Die boy was struck in the chest by a .22 caliber rifle bullet. Police said Jeffrey Pappas, 6. admitted the shooting. They said they did not know what the “bad name” was". An 11-year-old witness; said the Duron boy “made a silly remafk” and the six-year-old shot , him. Milton Eisenhower On To Costa Rica TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (UPI) — Dr. Milton S. Eisenhower leaves by plane today for Costa Rica, third stop on his good-will study mission to Central America. He and his team of financial and economic experts met twice with President Ramon Villeda Morales and his aides during his two-day stay in Honduras. Eisenhower, president of Johns Hopkins University, is making the swing through the Central American republics as the personal rep* resentative of his brother, President Eisenhower. Tennesee Youth Drowns At Winona WARSAW, Ind. (UPI) —Herbie Sherrod, 21, Mascot, Tenn., drowned late Thursday in Winona Lake near here. Sherrod, a summer employe at a resort here, apparently walked off a pier into the lake. Authdrities said he was in a daze or sick.. His body was recovered about five minutes later. Physicians from the Murphy Medical Center here worked over him for more than an hour. Sherrod was a student at Robert Jones University, a seminary school at Greenville, S.C. Young Bloomington Man Found Guilty BLOOMINGTON, Ind. <UPD — Kenneth Ray Elliott, 22, Bloomington. late Thursday was found by a Monroe Circuit Court jury of four charges in connection with the theft of a safe from a Bloomington business firm March 19. Elliott was charged with grand larceny, second-degree burglary, safe burglary and huto banditry for stealing a safe. from the Champlin Edsel Sales-office. The safe was empty. Judge Nat U. Hill delayed sentencing until Monday. Morning Horn RICHMOND, Vt. — (IP) — After refusal of requests to restore the train which used to awaken residents at 7 a.h. with a blast from its whistle, residents were successful in getting a bus driver whose route runs through the tow nto suond his horn repeatedly at the same hour. Consumer expenditures for food and groceries are expected to increase 25 per cent within the next five years-
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Cubs, Braves Open Series In Chicago Today CHICAGO (UPD— Chicago Cub oficials expect 100,000 fans to crowd into Wrigley Field between today and Sunday while the National League’s third place upstarts entertain the pace-setting Milwaukee Braves in a three- . game series. The series should serve as the r most decisive episode in the Cubs’ ) 1958 success story. And it should . prove to the club’s growing horde , ot fans whether manager Bob > Scheffing’s crew is a serious pennant contender. On this point Scheffing himself j says he “has no illusions.” I “But we're going to give it a helluva try,” he added. ‘ 'Scheffing, who saw Joe Nuxhall ’’ cool off a Cub five-ganie winpiijjs;, streak with a 3-2 victory for Cincinnati Th u rsday, has picked Johnny Briggs (3-0) and Moe Drabowsky (8-8) for the first two games against the Braves. No Sunday Plans Scheffing has no plans for the 5 third game, but it could be Taylor '! Philips, a left-hander who has j won six out of eight decisions, or 1 possibly Bill Henry, another south- . paw who at 30 is the “dean” of * the Cub pitching staff. ' The Cubs will enter the series ' three and a half games behind 5 the Braves and with their best . chance of the season to move to- 1 ’ ward the top. In 13 previous ' games this ~ season, the Braves ' won seven to six for the Cubs. ' But win or lose, the Cubs are certain of topping last year’s 'attendance by better than 100,000 and may even have a chance of hitting the million mark for the since 1952, when they caused some excitement with a , fifth place finish. The Cubs have drawn 567,277 so , far this season compared to 468,625 for the same number of dates t last year. Their current figures, I with 26 more home games, is only . 113,352 off last year's total for the f season. t “ • Fans Desert Sox “Barring rain, we should hit • 100,000 for the Milwaukee series,” , busy Ticket Manager George . Doyle said. i The Cubs, who have caught the fancy of the only two-team city in the majors, have attracted five crowds of over 30,000 this season, compared to only two such gatherings in 1957. Their box office appeal appar- - ently has been at the expense of - the White Sox, whose rooters have 1 been deserting in droves because t of the club's disappointing showi mg and th lengthy Comiskey i intra-family legal squabbles. . i James Wolfe, a fan who admits 1 deserting the White Sox for the 1 Cubs, probably summed up the , reason for the Cubs’ growing pop- ' uiarity. : "They’ve got an aggressive and i exciting team. They may not win the pennant but they’ve got a
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good bunch of young pitchers and almost every man in the lineup is capable of an extra base hit any time." Daughter Os Prominent Logansport Man Dies LOGANSPORT, Ind. (UPD — The daughter of a Logansport man prominent in state and national politics a generation ago, died Thursday in, St. Joseph's hospital here. She was Margaret Fagee, 88, daughter of the late Rufus Magee. Magee was U. ,S. minister to Sweden under President Cleveland and Indiana state senator for many years. He died in 1929 at the age of 83. Miss Magee who never married, left several valuable business properties to Indiana University. Lafayette Woman Is Killed In Accident LAFAYETTE, Ind. (UPD— Mrs. Linda Lou Felix, 21, Lafayette, was killed late Thursday in a twoj&r collision at the intersection of a White County road and Ind. 18 near Brokoston. Mrs. Felix died enroute to St. JPlizabeth's Hpspital here. She was the daughter of State Police Sgt. eßrnard Leavitt of the Lafayette Post. State police said Mrs. Felix ran a stop signal and collided with a car driven by John Lesage, 26, Lafayette. She was a thrown from the vehicle. An illuminated fountain on the Place de la Concorde in Paris I marks the spot where Louis XVI, Marie Antointette, and Robespierre were guillotined. [ BFS I ■ . ■ U * Iggy fa ||iF -. 1 / v*' gar ' : -'O. I"» '• FItST SINCE '56-Blonde and breathless, Marilyn Monroe boards a plane in New York with her husband, Arthur Miller, to return to Hollywood where she will make her first movie in Filmland since 1956.
Finsterwald Early Leader In PGA Open HAVERTOWN, Pa. (UPD—Dow Fins ter wald, a little guy who hits the ball a mile, paced the field into the second round of the PGA golf championship today with a one-stroke lead and predicted “it looks like the time I’m going to break my second place jinx.” Finsterwald, who hasn’t won a tournament since February, 1957, when he captured the Tucson Open, played it “safe all the way” Thursday when he carded a three-under-par 67 to beat out Jay Hebert by one stroke. ■ “I’ve just got the feeling that I’m going, to do it,” the five-foot ten-inch 160-pounder said. “I’m getting awfully tired of finishing second.” Since the Tucson victory, Finsterwald has finished second 18 times. There was a string of 72 tournaments in which he finished in the money. After that streak was broken he got back on his game and last Sunday finished second to Jackie Burke in the Insurance Open at Wethersfield, Conn. , —“l’m in a. .good-spot/.’., he..said. “If that ball keeps hanging ■for me, I ought to make it.” By hanging, he meant that his approach shots over the 6,710yard Llanerch Country Club course were straight and true “and they stopped on the greens as I hoped they would." Jay Hebert, explaining that “I gambled because no one remembers who finishes second,” thought he had the lead wrapped up when he came in with a 68—one stroke better than his brother, Lionel, the defending PGA champion, and four others. Only seven in the field of 163 golfers were able to crack par. Grouped with Lionel Hebert at* 69 were Dick Mayer, Jimmy Demaret, Felice Torza and Ted Kroll. At even par 70 were Burke and Bob Crowley. Cary Middlecoff, one of the favorites, was among seven who carded 71’s. The others in that bracket were Bill Collins, Leo Giagetti, Bob Rosburg, Art Wall, Buster Cupit and Don Whitt. US. Open champion Tommy Bolt was another stroke back at 72 along with Doug Ford, Ken Venturi, Julius Boros and five others. Sammy Snead, another of the favorites, had a 73, as did Billy Casper. Arnold Palmer, ing money winner on the tournament trail this year, was far back with 76. He had a four-putt green. Two of 11 former champions in the field, Vic Ghezzi and Chick Harbert, had 75’s. Gene Sarazen, twice U.S. Open champion and the oldest golfer in the field at 56, shot a 78. Crawford, Ortega In Return Match weights Mickey Crawford and Gaspar Ortega will meet in a return match Aug. 13 at Madison Square Garden, Ortega scored an upset split decision at the Garden last Friday in which there was a wide discrepancy in the voting among ring officials. Fullmer, Giardello Fight In September SALT LAKE CITY (UPD — Promoter Joe Dupler has completed a rangement for a middleweigh bout between Gene Fullmer and Posey Giardello in September Dupler, in his initial Utah promotion, said the fight will be held here either Sept. 8 or 10. Lir Leaguer ■Hi” f I A UELm “I know where your knees are, and that pitch was over them!”
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Rep. Keating Urges Sports Bill Passed WASHINGTON (UPD — Rep. Kenneth B. Keating today urged approval of pending sports legislation as a "measure intended to be equally good, not equally bad, for all professional team sports.” The New York Republican, senior GOP member of the House Judiciary Committee, said a pending Senate bill to exempt major professional team sports from the anti-trust laws is “essential if we are to eliminate the discriminatory treatment of our national team sports under present court decisions without at the same time subjecting all of them to potentially ruinous antitrust litigation. Keating made the statements in testimony prepared for the Senate antitrust and monopoly subcommittee. Also scheduled to testify with Keating were Bob Feller and Jackie Robinson. “There is no grave threat to our economic system from the alleged baseball or football or hockey or basketball conspiracy which demands that sports be treated so severely,” Keating said. He said all should be treated alike as opposed to the present confused status in which baseball holds broader exemption from anti-trust statutes than football or other team sports. ■ MAJOR , American League W L Pct. GB New York 56 28 .667 — Boston 44 40 .524 12 Detroit—- 41 42 .494 14¥ 4 Baltimore 41 43 .488 15 Kansas City —. 39 44 .470 16*4 Chicago- 40 46 .465 17 •'’Cleveland 40 47 .460 17*4 Washington 37 48 .435 19*4 National League W L Pct. GB Milwaukee 46 36 . 567 — San Francisco .— 47 38 .553 *4 Chicago4s 42 .517 3% St. Louis 39 41 .488 6 Pittsburgh 41 44 .482 6*4 Philadelphia 38 42 -457 7 Cincinnati 38 44 .463 8 Los Angeles .... 39 46 .459 B*4 THURSDAY’S RESULTS American League , New York 4, Detroit 2 Boston 6. Kansas City 2 Baltimore 3, Chicago 0 Cleveland 8, Washington 3. National League Cincinnati 3, Chicago 2 Milwaukee 8, St. Louis 7 San Francisco 8, Philadelphia 7 Los Angeles 5, Pittsburgh 3. American - Association W L Pct. GB Denver 57 35 .620 — Charleston 57 36 .613 *4 Minneapolis .... 52 45 .536 7Vi Wichita — 49 46 .516 9*4 Omaha 48 49 .495 11 >4 St. Paul 44 57 .436 17*4 Indianapolis .... 41 58 .414 19*4 Louisville 37 59 .385 22 Thursday’s Results St. Paul 2, Omaha 0 Charleston 2, Indianapolis 1 Wichita 7, Louisville 5 Denver 4, Minneapolis 0. I HEY BILL! HAM SUPPER Saturday July 19 6 to 8 P.M. *I.OO Decatur Elks Club
