Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 173, Decatur, Adams County, 24 July 1958 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Adams County Pony Stars Win Tourney Opener The Adams County Pony League All-Star team, after many shaky moments, survived the first round of the district Pony League tourney Wednesday night, edging the WEEK - END SPECIALS! LARI)!b. 19c Neck Boneslb. 19c Sausage lb. 45c Pork Liverlb. 29c Sliced Bacon lb. 49c Minute Steak__ lb. 69c Pork Patties lb. 69c Beef Chopslb. 65c T-Boneslb. 69c Sirloin lb. 69c Round Steaklb. 69c Fresh Sidelb. 45c SUDDUTH’S Meat Market 512 S. 13th St. Phone 3-2706
DECATUR'S ONLY HOME OWNED UPTOWN FOOD MARKET ICED TEA speiiS'«... 48 "“57c GRADE “A” EGGSi -49 c ROLL BUTTER -59 c CUCUMBERS -a.tr 2 » 19c Head Lettuce *■£»£'■" 2 "» 27c I INSIST ON U. S. GOVT. INSPECTED MEATS ■ FOR YOUR FAMILY PROTECTION! Goodins’ are Proud to Offer to Their Friends and Customers I I. G. A. Table Rite Beef and Pork. Govt. Inspected—Graded H and Bought for Your Protection and Satisfaction. ■ Ml Table Rite ■ Rolled * RUMP v roast Lb. g£c Deliciously Flavored Table Rite Table Rite > ncn Tender — Juicy Tender — Juicy dLIuED ROUND STEAK CUBE STEAK bacon ■ 79c ■ 89c GOODIN’S SELF I M • WSSfe SERVICE Illi WOW store wgrxwLj j 132 N. 2nd Street STORE HOURS Phone 3-3210 MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 8:30 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. SUNDAY 8:30 A. M. to 12:30 4:30 P. M. to 6:30 P. M.
Tri-County team, 10-9. The Adams county team' now draws the bye into the semi-final round, and will next see action at I Defiance, 0., next Wednesday night, July 30, against an opponent yet to be determined. The local All-Stars overcame a 7-2 lead last night, then built up a 10-7 advantage, but almost lost it as Tri-County scored twice in the seventh and had the tying run on ' base when the game ended. Adams county used three pitchers, with the third, Tom Grabill, turning in a fine relief chore to ' i rack up the victory. The local team scored twice in, I the first inning on hits by Jim ElI liott and Denny Baumgartner, plus i« fielder’s choice and an error, j Tri-County, made up of players from Delphos. Venedocia and Spencerville, 0., evened the score with two in the second on Lang's double and four consecutive bases on balls. The Ohio team took the lead with two in the third on a double by Dray, three errors and a walk. Tri-County boosted its lead to 7-2 j in the fourth. After John Cowan ■ fanned the first batter, Seffernick i walked and Dray doubled. Dick Smith replaced Cowan on the mound but walked two batters and hit another, and Grabill was called to the moupd. After the first batter walked for the third run of the inning, Grabill got the next man on a fly to second and fanned MohI ler to end the inning. Adams county took advantage of i Dray’s wildness to score three runs ■ in the fourth. Three walks. Steve Blythe’s single and Grabill's sacrificefly accounted for two runs, ' and the third scored on an error.
The Ibcal lads tied the score in the fifth on a walk, an error and Max Eichenauer’s two-run single. Two batters had been retired in the sixth before Adams county exploded for the winning rally. With two out. Smith, Cowan and Steve Marbach singled. At this point, Hirn, a lefthander, replaced Dray on the mound and was greeted by another two-run single by Eichenauer. which scored what proved to be the winning run. Hirn opened the seventh with an easy bounder to Grabill, but the latter’s toss, to first was dropped by Smith. Then followed singles by Bickle and Dreyore, good for one run. Another scored when Grabill fanned Dray, but the batter had to be thrown out at first, Bickle scoring on the play. The Adams county hurler then fanned Lang and Bowsher rolled out to Smith. , unassisted, to end the game. Tri-County AB R H E 1 Mohler, rs ... 3 0 0.0 Hirn, rs, p .. 110 0 1 Osting, If — 3 0 0 0 ‘ a—Bickle . 1 1 1 0 ' Seffernick, ss —3 10 1 Drewyore, c 10 10 Dray, p, rs „ r 4 2 2 0 Lang. 2b 4 2 11 ■ Blockberger, lb' 3 1 0 0 1 b—Bowsherlo 0 0 : Fischer, c. ss -. 2 0 0 3 1 Rupert,ef-z--~.-:.--2 —I—o1 —0 -O ' Schnelle, 3b 3 0 0 0 I Totals 31 9 5 5 Adams County AB R H E Elliott’ cf 3 0 10 Grabill, ss, 2b, p.. 3 1 0 1 Baumgartner, 3b, c. 4 11 0 Smith, lb. p, lb 4 11 2 Cowan, p, 3b 3 2 10 Marbach, c, If 3 3 10 Eichenauer, 2b, ss .. 4 0 2 2 Blythe, rs 4 111 Inniger, If. lb ----1 0 1 11
WCATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA
Walters, ss ,11 0 O' Totals 30 10 9 6 a— Singled for Osting in 7th. b—Grounded out for Blockberger in 7th. Score by innings: Tri-County i... 022 300 2— 9 Adams County 200 323 x—lo Runs batted in—Drewyore, Cowan, Eichenauer 4, Blythe. Two-base hits—Dray 2, Long. Sacrifice—Grabill. Bases on balls—Dray 4. Cowan 6, Smith 2, Grabill 2. Hit by pitcher—by Smith (Blockberger). Strikeouts—Dray 12, Hirn 1, Cowan 6, Grabill 5. Hits off—Dray 8 in 5%. Hirn 1 in Cowan 3 in 34, Grabill’ 2 in 3%. Winner—Grabill. Loser—Dray. Umpires — Bressler, Benecke, Strickler, Krueckeberg. Brown Defeats Lane To Keep : Championship ' . By JACK CUDDY United Press International 1 HOUSTON, Tex. IUPD-Light-1 weight champion Joe Brown said today he will grant a return bout 1 "as soon as possible” to southpaw Kenny Lane, who menaced his crown Wednesday night before a sellout crowd that paid a record Texas fight gate. Brown’s thundering finish in the 15th round probably saved his 135-pound title on the unanimous decision that snapped Lane’s winning string at 19 straight and extended Joe’s unbeaten streak to 18. including a draw. Because of the terrific fight, the new record Texas gate of $69,203 and a record paid crowd of 10,994, Rex Braun, -president of Texas Boxing Enterprises, Inc., announced. "We’ll stage a return title fight in late September at the Coliseum, if the managers are willing.” Lane, of Muskegon. Mich., and co-managers Jack Kearns and Pete Petroskey declared in unison that Kenny had won but hadn’t got the verdict. They demanded a return as quickly as possible. However, Lou Viscusi, manager of Brown, was not as eager for a return tilt as the champion was. He said. “I don’t know what we’ll do next. We'll have to talk things over for a couple of days.” Brown, 32, of New Orleans, received the largest purse* of his career — approximately $42.400— for his magnificent defense against, the underrated chalenger who had gone into the ring a 13-5, underdog. Lane, 26-year-old ex-farm boy. will get half as much as Brown or about $21,200 for his 20 per cent of the net gate and $45,000 TV money. Brown wrapped up a successful fifth defense of the 135-pound title in the 15h round whdn he twice staggered Lane with right uppercuts and left hooks and> knocked out his mothpiece for the second time in the bout. There were no knockdowns, al--though each was well . shaken many- times. The deepest oil well ever drilled in Texas went down 21,687 feet on University of Texas land in Pecos County. The drilling was done in 1957* at , a cost of 1.2 million dollars, but it was a dry hole. Trade in a good town — Decatur.
H— ' 1 1 """""* ■?wtv ■BfesOftl ■SMWf'AaCllfllJfCygsyigjjßig iK>»ftVZfc«?xsss ■«■,,J /v'ix® isilSiiiE PARADIS $850.00 MIAMI $675.00 ASBURY $675.00 BILTMORE $675.00 To $5000.00 Wedding Ring $225.00 Wedding Ring $250.00 Wedding Ring 00 .; • , H -,.:■ < [ .ssss JULIET $575.00 DESMOND $575.00 HOLMAN $575.00 LONGMONT $500.00 Also SSOOIO 2475 Also to $2975 Wedding Ring $150.00 Also S3OO and 575 Wedding Ring $175.00 Wedding Ring $200.00 Wedding Ring $150.00 John Brecht I Jewelry 226 North 2a4 Stmt ' Phone 3-265 P rfut&Mfyed 'Ketfteci£e fewetei
College All-Stars Report For Drills EVANSTON, 111. <UPD — Fiftytwo football players, selected for the College All - Star squad which will meet the Detroit Lions in Soldiers Field Aug. 15 reported today at Northwestern University. The players represent 35 colleges and universities in 26 states’ and the District of Columbia. Club House Chatter Central Soya League This week’s results: Elevator 5.. Hexane Four 0; Lab 5, Research 0: Traffic. Feed Mill 2; Engineers 4, Office Team Standings Pts. Elevator — 124 Traffic 124 Lab 12 Hexane Four ... 11 Office 10 Engineers > 10 Feed Mill 8 Research 4 Low scores: J. Bleke 42, G. Schultz 43, D. Hirschy 45. N. Highland : 45. B. .Christen 45, E, Selking 45, R. Stevens 44. major. National League W. L. Pct. GB Milwaukee .... 50 38 .568 — San Francisco -. 50 40 .555 1 Chicago ... 46 46 .500 6 — St. Louis 42 25 . 483 74 Philadelphia .... 41 44 482 74 • Pittsburgh .... 43 47 .478 8 Cincinnati .... 42 46 .477 8 Los Angeles .... 41 49 .456 10 American League W. L. Pct. GB New York 60 30 .667 — Boston 47 43 .522 13 | Baltimore 44 45 .494 154 j Kansas City .... 43 46 .483 164 Chicago 44 48 .478 17 Detroit 42 27 .472 174 Cleveland 43 50 . 462 184 Washington .... 39 53 .424 22 i WEDNESDAY’S RESULTS National League Philadelphia 3-2, San Francisco ’ 2-0 (Ist game completion of sus- i pended game of June 22). Pittsburgh 11-6. Los Angeles 3-3. Cincinnati 6, Chicago 5 <lO in-' nings"). Milwaukee 6, St. Louis 0. American League 1 Baltimore 6, Chicago 4. Cleveland 5, Washington 3. New York 17, Detroit 4. j Kansas City 3, Boston 1. ;| MINOR American Association l_ W. L. Pct. GB 7 Charleston .... 57 40 .588 — Denver 58 41 .586 — Minneapolis .... 56 47 .544 4 I. Wichita ..1 5§ 47 .530 54 , Omaha 51 52 .495 9 St. Paul 49 59 .454 134 Indianapolis .... 45 60 . 429 16 Louisville 38 61 .384 20
Cardinals At Berne Game Is Postponed Tonight’s scheduled game between the Decatur Cardinals and Berne, at Berne, has been postponed because of the Pony League tourney. No date has been set for playing th game. Philadelphia Phils Sign Gus Niarhos PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — GusNiarhos, former New York Yankee catcher, was signed Wednesday by the Philadelphia Phillies. The Phillies made room for Niarhos by sending pitcher John Gray to Miami of the International League.
m E ' T,s Q I SALE SENSATIONAL dfa ■ FRIDAY & SATURDAY You’ve Been Asking ■.. “WHEN?”.. ■ Now’s The Time! I SALE of SALES ! I Kfil 1 FABULOUS BARGAINS RIGHT IN SUMMER I //J A Nationally Advertised Fashions In This Sale ! I I / yTILAMP!,. . . MINX MODES . . . TEEN A PAIGE . .. IWV\ CAROL KING ... FOREVER YOUNG and many others! W DRESSES AU sices 7to 15—10 to 20—124 to 244. in Newest, Most. Wanted Cottons, f // Sheers! Oyer 300 Dresses to Choose from in Sunbacks ... . Sleeveless ... 1 i i all the fashions . . . Everything you need for a hot summer. /- 4 FOR THE f \V -A PRICE OF ■ OBAnro “Here's how it works!” Select any Two (2) Dresses SPORTS" .... pay for the higher priced of the two and the WCMD second one is FREE! a eunnTC EXAMPLE: You select two $5.95 Dresses, pay $5.95, the second one FREE! You select one $8.95 Dress and one $7.95 * Pi’QMFRQ Dress, pay $8.95 and the $7.95 Dress is FREE! Regretahly m $3.99 Dresses are not included in this sale—thev are reduced to \ $3.18 each—REAL VALUES TOO! • SKIKI> nw • BERMUDAS ' 1/3 Group of Famous Name one table 1/ au SUMMER BLOUSES COSTUME /2 IFWFI DV An outstanding selection of Summer UfcnLLni —| Blouses .. . with and without sleeves GLOVES New Fall # solid co | ors an( j patterns. Fashions ■ ■ ■ Regular $1.99 to $3.95 BELTS Take a peak at our New FaU Fashion e g t/_ PR|ftE Dresses. Skirts, $ g Aft ’ -id ft lUIUU Sweaters. JL to JB JANI L Y N “Tomorrow’s Fashions Today” 119 N. 2nd St. Decatur, Ind.
OPEN HOUSE NEW 4-BEDROOM HOUSE 1221 LEWIS DRIVE SATURDAY AFTERNOON
THURSDAY. JULY 24. 1958
