Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 171, Decatur, Adams County, 22 July 1958 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Junior Legion Pilchers Toss No-Hit Game Daniels and Wolfe combined to hurl a no-hitter Monday afternoon as the Decatur Junior American Legion team blanked Willshire, 0., 3-0, at Worthman field in this city. Only baserunner for Willshire was R. James. He led off the ball game by being hit with a pitched ball, but was thrown out attempting to steal second. The same player walked in the fourth inning but the next three batters were strikeout victims, as 15 Willshire batters were fanned. Singles by Dellinger and May, plus a wild pitch, were good for Decatur’s first run in the first inning. The other two runs tallied in the third on successive hits by Dellinger, May and Reidenbach. The Decatur and Angola teams will play a ffouble header at Worthman field Wednesday afternoon, with the first game starting at 4 o’clock. Willshire AB R H E R. James, sslo 0 0 • Mandolph, 2b 3 0 0 0 Duff, 3b 3 0 0 0 Bates, lb 3 0 0 0 F. James, p 2 0 0 0 Byers, rs ... 2 0 0 0 Shaffner, c 2 0 0 0 Stiver, If 2 0 0 0 Brittson, cf 2 0 0 0 Totals 2.. 20 0 0 0 Decatur AB R H E Dellinger, 2b 2 2 2 0 May, 3b •.3 12 0 Reidenbach, ss3 0 10 Gay, c 3 0 0 0 Lytle, lb 2 0 0 0 August, lb ... 0 0 0 0 Wolfe, cf, p 3 0 0 0 Harvey, If 10 0 0 Fawcett, If 0 0 0 oj Snyder, rs 10 0 0 Clark, rs 0. 0 0 0 Daniels, p, cf. 2 0 0’ 0 Totals 20 3 5 0 » Score by innings: Willshire 000 000 0-0 Decatur 102 000 x—3 MAJOR National League W. L. Pct. G.B. San Francisco 50 38 .568 — Milwaukee .... 48 38 .558 1 Chicago 46 45 .505 5Mj St. Louis 42 43 .494 6*4 Cincinnati 41 46 .471 8% Philadelphia ... 39 44 .470 8% Pittsburgh 41 47 . 466 9 Los Angeles .. 41 47 .466 9 American League W. L. Pct. G.B. New York 58 30 .659 rBoston 47 41 .534 11 Baltimore 43 44 . 494 14% Detroit 42 45 .483 15% Chicago 43 47 .478 16 Kansas City .. 41 46 .471 16% Cleveland 41 49 .456 18 WashihgtSn ... 38 51 .427 20% MONDAY'S RESULTS National League Cincinnati 9, Chicago 4. St. Louis 5, Milwaukee 4 (14 innings). . Only games scheduled. American League No games scheduled.

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Winners Are Listed For Archery Shoot Seventeen shooters competed in the Limberlost archery and conservation club's club shoot Sunday afternoon. The trophy winners were in the first expert, bowman, archer, and novice of each division. In the men’s division, trophies were won by Al Huston, Ist expert; John Winkler, Ist bowman; Churck Reed, Ist archer; Bob Wendel, Ist novice. In the women’s division, Mrs. Harold Nash, Ist expert; junior division, Jerry Morningstar, Ist expert, and in the intermediate division, David Mitchel, Ist expert. Ribbons were won in each division by, men’s division, Frank Sardella, 2nd expert; Dwight Whitacre, 2nd bowman ; Bob Laßrun, 2nd archer; Ronald Hill, 2nd novice; women’s division, Mrs. Dwight Whitacre, 2nd expert; junior division, Tom Drake, 2nd expert. Nonribbon winners were men's division, Larry Steven, 3rd expert; Jack Macklin, 3rd bowman: Dave, Brown, 3rd archer; Harold Nash, 3rd novice. The next shoot, an invitational, will be held August 3 and will be a novelty shoot. Names Decisions Group To Serve In Pony League Meet R. O. Wynn, president of the Adams county Pony League, and assistant director of the district • tourney, today announced members of a decisions committee for the tourney opener, which will be played at Worthman field at 8 ( p. m. Wednesday. 1 Edwin Kauffman, of Decatur, is j chairman, with Norman Steury, c Decatur, and Eli W. Habegger, j Berne, as other members. They >j will check all birth certificates and j the eligibility affidavite of each j team, and will also rule on any j formal protest, with their decision final. In Wednesday’s game, the Adams county All-Stars will meet Tri-County from Ohio in the dis 4 trict meet opener. * Bill Walker Named J As Greenfield Coach < GREENFIELD, Ind. (UPD—Bill 1 Walker was named head basket- 1 ball coach at Greenfield High School late Monday to succeed Vernon Childs who resigned to become assistant principal at Huntertown (Allen county.) Walker, 25, coached three years at Wolcott in Pike County and also coached at Freeland Park. He is a graduate of Indiana State Teachers College. ...... East Chicago Grid Coach Dies Monday EAST CHICAGO, Ind. (UPD — John Zitko, 46, who guided East Chicago Washington to three mythical Indiana high school football championships, died of a heart attack Monday while playing golf. Zitko was touring .the links at nearby Cedar Lake with Hammond Morton grid coach Maury Zlotnik when he collapsed. Zlotnik called an ambulance but Zitko was dead on arrival at King Clinic at Cedar Lake. After 16 Years EAST MILLINOCKET, Me. — (IP) — Mrs. Domenic Moscone received a postcard mailed by her son, William Moscone, while he was a corporal stationed at Muroc Field, Calif. The postcard was dated July 23, 1942.

Both Decatur Teams Win In Pony League Decatur teams swept an Adams county Pony League double header Monday night at Worthmari field, the Cardinals defeating Monmouth, 11-3, in the dpener, and the Braves downing Berne, 5-2, in the nightcap. Monmouth took the lead in the opener with two runs in the second inning on three walks and two errors. The Cardinals scored once in the same frame on a walk and a single by Jerry Knavel. and took the lead with three in the third on two bases on balls, an error and hits by Dave Gay, Steve Marbach and Gerry Werst. After picking up another run in the* fourth on hits by Jim Martin and Steve Blythe, the Cardinals iced the game with six in the sixth on a combination of three walks and hits by Tom Grabill, Blythe, Marbach and Bob Walters. Monmouth tallied its final run in the Seventh on a walk, an error and a wild pitch. . ■ , The nightcap was a. close battle for five innings. Berne scored single runs in the first and second innings, combining two hits with a walk in each frame, but thereafter was blanked on two hits by Rudy Kleinknight, The Braves scored two in the first inning on two errors, a walk and Max Eichenauer’s triple. The winning run scored in the second on three walks and an error. The Braves scored two insurance runs in the sixth on Eichenauer’s hit, three walks and a hit batsman. Monmouth AB R H E Gallmeyer, 2b ....— 4 0 11 Kolter, lb ---v 3 0 10 Reiter, cf 3 0 0 0 Spencer, c -- 3 ®* 11 Bieberich, ss 2 1 0 0 j Thieme, If, P 2 0 0 0 j Braun, 3b 2 2 0 1 Brown, rs -— 2 0 0 0. Bleeke, p, If 3 0 -0 0 t Totals 24 3 3 3 j Cardinals AB R H E * Fravel, ss —1 0 0 1 Walters, ss 3 0 11, Martin, rs 4 2 ? I Gay, 2b — 2 2 1 ? Grabill, ,2b. P 3 11 1 Blythe, cf —- 3 12 2 Marbach, c —— 4 2 2 1 Werst. 3b 3 11 0 Maddox, 2b 0 1 0 0 Knavel, If 3 11 0 Kohne, lb - 10 0 0 Baker, p 0 0 0 0 Cpwan, p, 3b 2 0 0 0 Totals - 28 11 10 6 Score by innings: Monmouth 020 000 1—- 3 Cardinals 013 106 x 11 Runs batted in—Blythe, Marbach 2, Werst, Knavel, Cowan. Two-base hits—Blythe, Marbach. Bases on balls—Baker 3, Grabill 1, Bleeke 9 Strikeouts—Cowan 6, Grabill 3, Bleeke 2, Thieme 1. Winner-Gow-an. Loser — Bleeke. Umpires — Krueckeberg, Pollock. Berne AB R H E K. Habegger, 3b —- 3 110 G. Inniger, If ------ 3 0 0 0 B’mgartner, p, lb, ss 3 1 3 0 Smith, lb, p ------ 3 0 0 0 G. Habegger, c. p— 2 0 0 3 Fox, rs 3 0 10 Maitlen, cf. 3 0 1 0 Stahly, ss — 3 0 0 1 F. Inniger, c ------- 0 0 0 0 Biberstein, 2b — 3 0 0 1 Totals 26 2 6 5 Braves AB R H E Elliott, cf 2 L 1 0 Ahr, If 3 10 0,

-WeATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA

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Rambo, 2b 3 0 0 0 Kohne, 3b —3 0 0 1 Eichenauer, ss 3 12 0 Ro. Kleinknight. lb 2 0 0 0 Conrad, c-1 1 0 0 Ladd, rs 110 0 Beery, rs 0 0 0 0 Ru. Kleinknight, p- 3 0 0 0 Totals ... 21 5 3 1 Score by innings: Berne 110 000 o—2 Braves —— 210 002 x—s Runs batted in — Baumgartner, Eichenauer, Beery, Elliott. Twobase hit—Baumgartner. Three-base hits — Baumgartner, Eichenauer. Bases on balls — Kleinknight J>,' x Baumgartner 1, Smith 6. Strikeouts—Kleinknight 14, Baumgartner 4. Smith 12, Habegger f. Winner— Kleinknight. Loser—Bhumgartner. Umpires—Pollock, Krueckeberg. / Denver Is Added To < *1 International League FORT WAYNE, Ind. (UPD— The International Hockey League ’ prepared today to open the 1958-59 season with a 6-team loop as in the past, but with Denver replacing champion Uincinnati and Indianapolis apparently back on “solid” ground. Cincinnati withdrew following last season after winning the championship for the sixth straight time. ' General Manager Mel Ross announced recently that hockey in Indianapolis, in the red for three straight years, had come to the end of the road and no agreement on a lease was reached with the Indiana State Fair Board for the spacious Coliseum. But Max Silverman, Louisville, attended a meeting of the IHL board of governors Monday night and indicated he would take over the Indianapolis franchise. League president Frank Gallagher said Eugene Clift of Denver was granted a franchise contingent on a deposit fee and other matters. Gallagher said Denver had agreed to pay travel expenses for visiting teams. The Denver games will be played in an auditorium seating 9,500. Troy, Ohio, which also announced it was quitting, has received financial aid and plans to continue in the league. Should the Indianapolis venture fall through, the IHL may shift that franchise to Memphis, Tenn., which applied for membership. Gallagher said no decision would be made until Aug. 1. The league scheduled another meeting at Detroit for next week to work out schedules and transact other business in preparation for the season slated to open late in October. Others attending were Leo Gasparrini, Louisville; Ken Wilson, Troy; Andy Mulligan, Toledo, and Ernie Berg, Ramon Perry and Harold Van Orman Jr., all of Fort Wayne. Brown And Kuharich Senior Bowl Coaches MOBILE. Ala. (UPD — Paul Brown of the Cleveland Browns and Joe Kuharich of the Washing10th annual Senior Bowl here next ton Redskins will return to the year to coach the North .and South All-Stars. It will be Brown’s eighth straight contest and the third in a row for Kuharich, both head coaches of their National Football League teams. If you have something to sen oi rooms for rent, try a Democrat Want Ad — They bring results.

Giants Launch Arduous Road Trip Tonight SAN FRANCISCO (UPD — Riding the crest of their longest "winning streak of the year, the smokey-hot San Francisco Giants open a 24-game, 21-day tour of the nation tonight at Philadelphia —confident they can win the 'National League championship. Before they return to the friendly confines of Seals Stadium, from ’their crucial road trip they will ' have tangled with all seven teams ' and they expect then to have the line on just ho vO good their changes are of ousting' defending champion Milwaukee. “This is a good road club,” said manager Bill Rigney before the Giants took to the air. "In fact, until we finished off the Current home stand with six straight wins, we were better on the road than we were at home.” Have Impressive Record The records show the Giants have won 29 and lost 21 at home, while on the road they have won 21 and lost 17. Rigney hopes to do better than the usually - expected .500 on the road trip. “We have some players who seem to perform better on the road than at home,” said Rigney. “Among these is catcher Bob Schmidt. He'll see more action on the trip than he did in the recent games at home.” Schmidt, who is batting .255, has 12 home runs and has knocked in 34 runs on 63 hits. Os his 63 hits, 28 have been for extra bases. But the records show he is batting only about .200 at home, while clouting at a .400

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pace on the road. Took Last Six ■Die Giants finished off their ’ current home stand by winning three straight from Pittsburgh i after taking three in a row from Philadelphia. They have made a | believer out of manager Danny Murtaugh of the Pirrftes. “You guys are in a streak where everything is going right,” said Murtaugh. ‘You have the hottest club in the league. You have a helluva chance of winning the pennant, i'll see you at the World Series.” t With a youhg club composed ( mostly of rookies, the Giants fig- £ ure to get better as the season , progresses. When the campaign , started they won despitd lack of , experience. j 1 Deorsey Resigns As • Senators Director < WASHINGTON (UPD — The ’ resignation of C. Leo Deorsey as a director of the Washington Senators apparently was prompted by a warning from American League President Will Harridge' that baseball’s most outspoken individual besilenced or fired. Deorsey, one of baseball Com- 1 mtSSlOfief'Fofd'FYidirs''“'sevefS'st' “* critics, tendered his resignation ’ in a letter to Calvin Griffith, the ’ Senators’ president, July 11 but Griffith withheld the announcement until Monday. ' Meanwhile, United Press'lnter- i national learned that Harridge i sent Griffith a telegram last April 1 accusing Deorsey of an ‘unwar- 1 ranted and unjustified” attack on I Frick and demanding that Dorsey i cease or desist. v Deorsey, confirming that Har- 1 ridge had sent such a warning, i denied any suggestion that he had ' quit under pressure or was fired. ’ Both Frick and Harridge, when ! informed of Deorsey’s resigna- 1 tion. declined comment. 1 “I have never met Mr. Deorsey i and don’t care to comment on his 1 resignation,” said Frick. “He’s retired and I’d just as 1 soon leave it at that,” added 1 Harridge. > Deorsey accused Frick of “un- i warranted meddling” in the Washington club’s internal affairs r last May. At about the same time, he charged that baseball is being “murdered” by the big leagues; that unless Congress acts quickly, ‘the greed and public-be-damned attitude of a few club owners and officials will destroy” baseball. a ■ As a parting shot, Deorsey Monday assailed the house-passed bill to exempt professional sports from anti-trust regulations as “a private bill for the benefit of 16 big league club owners.” The bill is pending before a Senate antimonopoly subcommittee. WAGNER’S Cigar Store I' . and Sport Center Will Be Closed July 28 to Aug. 11 Inclusive--for vacation |

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Cards Defeat | Braves In 14 Innings, 5-4 By FRED DOWN United Press International Bill Wight, a pitcher both Baltimore’s Paul Richards and Cincinnati’s Birdie Tebbetts gave up on within the span of a couple of months, shaped up today as the relief hurler St. Louis Cardinal manager Fred Hutchinson has been seeking all season. Wight, a 36-year-old left-hander from Rio Vista, Calif., who’s knocked around the major leagues with indifferent success since 1946, pitched six shoutout innings Monday night that enabled the Cardinals to beat the Milwaukee Bravei, 5-4. in 14 innings. It was the best relief job turned in by a Cardinal pitcher all season. Rookie Curt Flood, obtained from the Cincinnati Redlegs last Dec. 5, broke up the game when he homered off Lew Burdette in the 14th. It was the eighth loss of the year for the 1957 World Serieshero , who went all the way and had a 4-3 lead in the ninth when Wally Moon tied the score with a homer. Move Into Fifth The Redlegs whipped the Chicago Cubs ,9-4, in the only other major league action of the day or night and vaulted from last to fifth place in the National League. Harvey Haddix wept all the way for the Redlegs to register his sixth victory. The Braves jumped off to a 3-0 lead as they routed Lindy McDaniel in the first inning but the Cardinals pecked away a run at a! time and finally tied the score at. 3-3 in the top of the seventh when' rookie Ruben Amaro scored after knocking the ball from Burdette’s glove during a run-down between third and home. Joe Adcock homered in the bottom of the inning to put the Braves back in front but Moon’s ninth-inning blast sent the game into overtime. Wight tobk over for the Cardinals in the eighth inning and lim-

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TUESDAY, JULY 22, 1958

ited the Braves to four hits over the last six frames. Double plays helped him out of jams in both the 11th and 13th innings. Record 16 and 16 The Braves collected 16 hits, including four by Bill Bruton and three each by Hank Aaron and Adcock but left 16 runners stranded. George Crowe’s two-run fourth inning double and Bob Thurman s three-run seventh -inning homer were the big blows for the Redlegs, who dealt rookie Marcelino Solis his first defeat. Haddix yielded 10 hits and struck out four batters as he raised his recrord to 6-5. The Cardinals' victory over the Braves gives the San Francisco Giants an opportunity to ’’make hay” tonight when they have a suspended game, which they are leading, to complete before playing the Phildelphia Phillies iff a regular game. In the American League, the runaway New York Yankees are in Detroit protecting an lead. The Yankees stand only 6-9 against the Tigers for the season but are 14-7 in the West so far this year. j MINOS /eapieseAUsA' American Association W. L. Pct. GB Denver 58 38 .604 — Charleston. — 57 37 .594 1 Minneapolis 56 45 .554 4*4 Wichita 52 46 .531 7 Omaha - 49 52 .485 11*4 St. Paul 46 59 .438 16*4 Indianapolis — 43 59 .422 18 Louisville i 36 61 .384 21*4 Monday’s Results \ Wichita 5. Indianapolis 3. . Mineapolis 3, Omaha 0 (10 in- ! nings). St. Paul 10-3, Denver 9-6. r Charleston at Louisville, postponed rain. An average of more than 10,400 new residents have settled in the 13-county San Francisco Bay Region every month since 1950. according to the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce. years ago.