Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 282, Decatur, Adams County, 1 December 1958 — Page 7
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I Colts Clinch I First Title In I Pro Football By EARL WRIGHT United Press International ■ The Colts, Baltimore’s biggest 1 sports find since Babe Ruth, have 1 won their first pro football diviI sion title and will play the Cleve- ■ land Browns or New York Qiants ■ for the National League champi- ■ onship Dec. 28. ■ The Colts proved their class Sunday by scoring 28 points in I the second half to erase a 27-7 I San Francisco Forty-Niner lead I and clinch the Western Division 0 title with a 35-27 triumph. Each U NFL club has two more games fl and no team has won the WestI ern race so easily since the I league assumed its current setup I in 1950 with the Browns, Forty-
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I f MONEY FOR HOLIDAY I EXPENSES Phone, Write or Call for Fast, Friendly Loan Service LOCAL LOAN COMPANY Phone 3-2013 138 N. 2nd St. Decatur ADMINISTRATORS PUBLIC AUCTION HOUSEHOLD GOODS ' The undersigned. Administrators of the Estate of Fred M. Engle, will sell the following described Personal Property at Public Auction, on the premises, at 219 Ragg Street, Decatur, Indiana, on I' Saturday, December 6,1958 At One P. M. Perfection 30 inch Gas Range, like new: 1953 Frigidaire 7.4 cu. ft. Refrigerator, like new; Walnut, Duncan Phyfe, Drop Leaf Extension Table & Four Chairs, like new; China Closet; 2 Piece Living Room Suite; Two Coffee Tables; Corner Table; End Tables; Room Size Rugs 4 Smaller Rugs; Chairs; Mirrors; Lamps; Hall Tree: Regina Sweeper: New Royal Cabinet Sewing Machine; Kneehole Desk & Chair; Bookcase 4 some books; Underwood Typewriter; Old Couch; Console Radio; Walnut Bedroom Suite, complete; Double Walnut Bed; Chest of Drawers 4 Dresser: Clothes Cabinets; Chrome Kitchen Set (4 chairs); Miscellaneous Dishes. Cooking Utensils, etc.; Oil Stove & Supply Tank; Johnson Outboard Motor: Picnic Table: 4 metal Lawn Chairs; Janson 4 cycle Reel Mower: Lathe with small motor 4 other miscellaneous hand tools; Porch Swing; Mapy other articles too numerous to mention. NOTE: Property may be inspected any time before sale by phoning Ned C. Johnson, 3-2796. TERMS—CASH. Not Responsible for Accidents. MARY E. BUNDRICK and RICHARD W. ENGLE, Administrators Ned C. Johnson—Auctioneer John L. DeVoss, Attorney 33606—dia1—32796, Decatur, Ind. Bryce Daniels—Clerk ft BSMT ~ I 1,098 OTHER ★ ust ask any Hull salesperson about I I ft VALUABLE PRIZES! * Rexall SUPER PLENAMINS I • 3 RCA VICTOR ★ America's Largut Selliuf Multi-Vita aria t I ■ 21-inch COLOR . ■ ■ TELEVISION SETS ★ One daily tablet gives you 11 £7 ■ ■ >l4 RCA VICTOR » vitamins and 12 minerals ■ I DELUXE 14-hwh * With B,„ iron and true liver W « 1 I PORTABLE + concentrate. It’s no wonder I I TELEVISION SETS * Super Plenamins have become I ITrca vSoR ★ the nation s top choice! g» I I Steree-Orthnnhonic jl. NOTHING TO BUY! I H£UMIV>| I I HI-FI VICTROLAS NOTHING TO THINK UP! I 1 W NOTHING TO WRITE! I I PLENAMINS ★ tbut yous name a ” d I B REMEMBER, yeur chance to win is as good a* Smith Drug Co. *f ' .
I Week's Schedule For Adams County Basketball Teams Tuesday Yellow Jackets at Geneva. Huntington Twp. at Adams Cen- 1 tral. Wednesday Commodores at Huntington Catho- I lie. Friday t Adams Central at Commodores. • Yellow Jackets at Berne. . Pleasant Mills at Monmouth. 1 . Chester Center at Hartford. 5 Geneva at Bryant Saturday Dunkirk at Berne. i . j Niners and Colts entering from : 1 the AU-America conference. i Such stars as John Unitas, Leni ny Moore and Alan Ameche prob- i 5 ably could be elected mayor of . Baltimore this week but the Colts » and their rabid rooters also owe ■ > a vote of thanks to the league’s I . hottest current club, the Pitts- < burgh Steelers. Steelers Defeat Bears Hie Steelers, playing in 16-de- i gree weather at Pitt Stadium, <i were as hot as a blast furnace ’ while whipping the Chicago Bears i —only club that had much hope I of matching the Colts, 24-10. The victory, the first the Steelers ever : scored against the Bears in 14 tries, enabled the Colts to boost their margin to three games with only two to play. Cleveland put basketball shoes on quarterback Milt Plum in the final period and maintained its 'one-game margin over New York in the Eastern race. Plum’s pa'sses, plus the receiving of Ray Renfro and Lew Carpenter’s running. enabled the Browns to rally and defeat the Washington Redskins. 21-14, while the Giants defeated the Philadelphia Eagles, i
24-10. Kams Beat Cards Billy Wade’s two touchdown passes to Leon Clarke in the last 20 minutes gave the Los Angeles Rams a 20-14 victory over the Chicago Cardinals in the other game. The Detroit Lions scored a 24-14 victory over the Green Bay Packers Thursday and those two clubs did not play Sunday. The Steelers, who have swept their last five starts, trail the Browns by two games and the ; Giants by one but don’t get an- , other crack at the two leaders. < The Browns visit the Eagles next Sunday while the Lions entertain , the Galants. The Giants then , play host to the Browns Dec. 14 ; in the game which probably will decide the Eastern race unless ( Cleveland and Detroit win Sun- j day. , Ruth went on from Baltimore ; to become baseball’s greatest slugger but it’s doubtful if even , the mighty Babe ever caused as ] much sports excitement in the j Maryland city as the frisky Colts, j Things looked black Sunday when ] Y. A. Tittie, the bald-h ead e d , quarterback who once played for ( tile Colts, scored twice to spark the Forty-Niners to a 27-7 halftime lead. But Coach Weeb Ew- j bank's Colts reacted like thor- . oughbreds in the last 30 minutes. , Colts Daze 49’ers Passes by Unitas set up two 5 one-yard scoring blasts by Ame- j che and cut the Forty-Niner lead ( to 27-21. Then the sellout crowd of 57,557 in Baltimore’s Memorial Stadium got its big chance to ( cheer. Moore raced 73 yards to L score. The dazed Forty-Niners ap- ( peared to have him trapped at ( least four times as he galloped . down the sideline, then cut back , to midfield en route to the fourth 1 period touchdown that climaxed the rally. Steve Myhra’s conver- , sion made it 28-27. Unitas fol- J lowed with a short pass to Ray , Berry for Baltimore's last touch- ’ down. , Washington held Jim Brown, 1 Cleveland’s record-busting rusher, ( to a season low of 12 yards on ■ 11 tries and took a 14-7 lead into ' the final period after Eddie Le- . baron’s third-period touchdown , toss to Sid Watson. Plum, wearing basketball shoes to get better footing on Cleveland's frozen turf, then passed to Renfro and Pete Brewster to move the ball 88 yards to the Washington three. Carpenter plunged for the tying touchdown. Plum, Renfro and Carpenter then led an 80-yard march. Plum plunged a yard for the winning touchdown after running 22 for a first down in a third-and-20 situation on his 41. Giants Beat Eagles Norm Van Brockiin’s 14-yard pass to Bob Walston gave the Eagles a 7-3 first quarter lead at New York in 22-degree temperature but the Giants went in front to stay when Frank Gifford s sixyard dash ended a 75-yard second oeriod march. Don Heinrich threw passes to Bob Schnelker and Kyle Rote for the other New York touchdowns. Bobby Layne, Tom Tracy and Jim Orr were Pittsburgh's offensive stars against the Bears in 16-degree weather. Tracy scored on runs of 30 and 18 yards. Orr. who set up one Tracy touchdown by covering 59 yards with a Layne pass, scored Pittsburgh’s other touchdown on a 38-yard Layne pass. High School Basketball Fort Wayne South 68, Fort Wayne Concordia 46. Woodburn 76, Ashley 56. Harford City 58, Marion 50. Southport 48, Indianapolis Tech 46. Lafayette 49. Attica 27. Hammond Morton 47. Whiting 42. Gary Mann 57, Rossville 45. Evansville Bosse 60, Huntingburg 44, South Bend Adams 84, Sheridan 76. Hammond 60, South Bend Central 48 Rensselaer 66. Momon 50. Rushville 77, Martinsville 62. New Albany 75, Mishawaka 57. Indianapolis All uc k s 67, Terre Haute Gertsmeyer 52. College Football Army 22, Navy 0. Notre Dame 20. Southern Cal 13.1 Air Force Academy 20, Colorado 14, Southern Methodist 20, Texas Christian 13. Florida 12, Miami <Fla.) 9. Mississippi 21, Mississippi Ctate 0. Oklahoma 7, Oklahoma State 0. Clemson 36, Furman 19. Auburn 14, Alamaba 8. Tennessee 10, Vanderbilt 6. Houston 22, Texas Tech 17. Rice 33, Baylor 21. Georgia 16, Georgia Tech 3. George Washington 20, The Citadel 14.
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Top Games On Card This Week For Prep Teams INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - The new Indiana high school basketball season reaches the hectic preChristmas holiday stage this week with heavy Tuesday-thirough-Sat- , urday firing expected to determine the top front-runners for the 1959 state crown. A juicy program will whittle down the number of major un- ( beatens within the next couple of weeks to a point where they can be counted easily. Games involving unbeaten® this week include Gary Roosevelt-Gary Froebel Wednesday, New AlfoenyAnderson Thursday, AlexandriaHuntington, Jeffersonville-Frank - lin, Lafayette-Kokomo, Blooming-ton-Terre Haute Wiley. East Chicago Washington-Elkhart, Val-paraiso-Michigan City, all Friday. Top contests Saturday include • Hammond at Lafayette, Southport at Jeffersonville, Franklin at Indianapolis Howe, Muncie 1 Burris ' at Hartford City, Huntington at Fort Wayne South, and South ' Bend Adams at Terre Haute ; Gerstmeyer. Madistfn Leads Pack About 16 major teams are off i to flying starts by winning at least 1 their first three games. Madison’s ■ Cubs, state champs in 1950, lead 1 the pack with a 6-game string and are highly favored to make North Vernon their seventh straight victim Friday. , Although major surprises are , still lacking, the hoopsters came , up with a couple of weekend Hartford City, which dropped its first three starts, dumped Marion, 58-50. The Giants blew a 9-point lead and managed only 5 points in the last stanza. Evansville Bosse, which dropped all 10 football games, opened cage warfare by spilling Southern Conference foe Huntingburg, regarded one of the best downstate, 60-44. Also downstate, New Albany coasted to a 75-57 triumph oyer Mishawaka, its third in a row. South Bend Adams matched that record, romping over Sheridan, 84-70. Hammond’s Wildcats, apparently quite improved over last year's disappointing 5-15 regular season ■ record, besit South Bend Central in their opener, 60-48. The South Benders, picked as one of the top teams for state honors, thus find themselves in the awakward spot of having dropped their first two games. Attacks Beats Cats Southern Conference warfare is heaviest this . week. It’ll be Princeton against Evansville Central, Jasper at Huntingburg and Washington at Vincennes Tuesday. Tell City tries Evansville Memorial Wednesday, and Huntingburg is at Washington and Princeton at Jasper Friday. Other top games this week: Wednesday — Gary Mann-East Chicago Washington. Friday — Connersville - Rushville, Anderson-Marion, SeymourSouthport, Logansport - Muncie Central. Crawfordsville - Brazil, Terre Haute Gerstmeyer-Indian-apolis Manual, New Haven-Fort Wayne South. Indianapolis At-tucks-South Bend Central. Attacks is off to another fast start. The Flying Tigers made it two in a row on the road Saturday with a strong finish to down Gerstmeyer. 67-52. Fort Wayne South’s state champs won their second game in three starts from city foe Concordia, 68-46, behind Tom Bolyard’s 25 points. Southport spoiled Indianapolis Tech’s perfect record with a 48-46 sizzler as the winners dedicated their 7.000-seat gymnasium. Pro Football Eastern Division WL T Pct. PF PA ) Cleveland 8 2 0 .800 271 190 New York .... 7 3 0 .700 214 156 Pittsburgh 6 4 0 .600 209 195 Washington 3 7 0 .300 180 254 Philadelphia - 27 1 .222 221 265 Chi. Cards — 2 71 .222 226 288 Western Division x-Baltimore .. 9 1 0 .900 341 152 Los Angeles .. 6 4 0 .600 280 2301 Chi. Bears — 6 4 0 .600 247 20C Detroit 4 5 1 .444 228 236 San Francisco 4 6 0 .400 188 291 Green Bay —1 8 1 111 152 300 x—Clinched division title. Sunday’s Results Cleveland 21, Washington 14. New York 24, Philadelphia 10. Pittsburgh 24, Chicago Bears 10. Baltimore 35, San Francisco 27. Los Angeles 20, Chicago Cards 14. Only games scheduled. / . !
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j/ Te» Stnflhca W L Pct. Geneva 4 0 1.600 Berne 4 1 .800 Hartford 4 1 .800 Yjellow Jackets .... 2 1 .667 Adams Central — 3 2 .600 Commodores 1 4 .200 Monmouth 1 5 .167 Pleasant Mills 0 6 .000 The Decatur Yellow Jackets hold the spotHght in Adams county high school basketball this week, as the Jackets play two county foes, both away from home. The Jackets will meet the undefeated Geneva Cardinals at Geneva Tuesday night. The Cardinals have Won their first four starts and are the only undefeated team in the county. Decatur has won two of three to date, defeating Monmouth and Fort Wayne Concordia and losing to Elmhurst. In the other; game Tuesday night, the Adams Central Greyhounds, who came up with their best game of the season last week in downing Lancaster Central, will entertain Huntington township. The Berne Bears, winners of four of five, will be hosts to the Yellow Jackets Friday night in the remodeled and enlarged Berne gym to feature the five-game card. The Decatur Commodores, winners of only one of five contests, will also see action twice. The Commodores will travel to Huntington Wednesday night to meet the Huntington Catholic Ramblers. —oOo— The Commodores will entertain the Adams Central Greyhounds Friday night at the Decatur gym. Other games Friday in addition to! the two Decatur teams are Pleasant Mills at Monmouth, Chester Center at Hartford, and Geneva at Bryant. One game is on the Saturday schedule, Berne entertaining Dunkirk at Berne. ' Coach Al Lindahl has an- / a change in the ComSimtores’ home schedule. St Mary’s of Anderson will play ~the Commodores at the Decatur gym Saturday night, Dec. 13, instead of Friday, Dec. 12. The change was made to accomodate the Anderson team. Since fire destroyed the Anderson public school gym a few weeks ago, four schools in that city have only two gyms in Which to play, and the switch was made to enable Anderson to change a home game to Friday. Don Baker, Commodore guard, is the county’s individual scoring leader with 118 points in five games for a 23.6 per game average. Phil Sprunger, Berne, is second in total points with 85 in five contests, but Bob Shraluka, of the ' Yellow Jackets, is second in average with 67 points in three games for a 22.3 average. The 10 top scorers, ■ with games played, total points scored, and average points per game, follow: GP TP Ave. Baker, Commodores 5 118 23.6 Sprunger, Berne 5 85 17.0 ( Schwartz. Berne 5 81 16.2 Foreman, A. Central 5 73 14.6 Shafer, Monmouth 5 68 13.6 Shraluka. Y. Jackets 3 67 22.3 Bultemeier, Monmouth 5 60 12.0 ■Egley, A. Central 5 52 10.4 i Irwin, Pl. Mills 6 52 8.7 i Hoffman, Geneva 4 49 .12.3 P. Gross, Commodores 5 49 9.8 11 —oOo— Results one year ago this week: Yellow Jackets 43, Berne 42. Commodores 64, Huntington Catholic 41. J Cdmmodores 57, Adams Central 54. Hartford 56, Chester Center 54. , Huntington Twp. 61, Adams Cen- ; tral 40. , Monmouth 41, Pleasant Mills 37. Bryant 36, Geneva 35. Pro Basketbail Saturday’s Scores St. Louis 98. Cincinnati 86. Boston 110, Detroit 96. Minneapolis 108, Syracuse 105. New York 115, Philadelphia 103. Sunday’s Scores Philadelphia 103, New York 100. I Minneapolis 84, Cincinnati 77.
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Pairings For Major Bowls Are Complete | By FRED DOWN United Press International lowa, Louisiana State, Oklabo|ma, Texas Christian and Mississippi were established as early favorites today in the five major bowls whose pairings were completed in Saturday’s grand windup of the college football season. A national odds-making syndicate made lowa, champion of the Big Ten, ft 17-point choice over California in the Rose Bowl and listed LSU, the only major team which went through the 1958 campaign unbeaten and untied, as a 14-point pick over Clemson in the Sugar Bowl. Oklahoma was made a strong 14%-point favorite over Syracuse in the Orange Bowl, Texas Christian was listed as an eight-point choice over the astonishing Air Force Academy in the Cotton Bowl and Mississippi was a sixpoint pick over Florida in the Gator. Bowl. i The lineup of the five, major bowls with season records in parentheses is as follows: BOSE: lowa (7-1-1) vs. California (7-3-0) SUGAR: Louisiana State <lO-0-0) vs. Clemson (8-2-0) COTTON: Texas Christian (8-2-0) vs. Air Force <9-0-1) ORANGE: Oklahoma <9-1-0) vs. Syracuse <7-1-0) GATOR: Florida < 6-3-1 > vs. Mississippi (8-2-0) Clemson, the Air Force. Florida and Mississippi all won their bids in Saturday's action, which also was highlighted by Army’s 22-6 vctory over Navy and a half dozen upsets or near-upsets. Clemson Wins Bid Clemson, the Atlantic Coast champion which was left waiting in the wings while the Sugar Bowl committee flirted with Southern Methodist, finally won the bid to face LSU with a 36-19 triumph over Furman. The Tigers zoomed off to a 30-0 halftime lead and then weathered a brilliant second-half passing show by Furman’s Billy Canty. The Air Force, unquestionably the most surprising of the nation's top powers, clinched the Cottori Bowl invitation by beating Colorado, 20-14. The Airmen were ? pushed all over the field by Colorado but recovered six fumbles and made a great goal-line stand in the final minutes. The Air Force, playing its first season in the big time, won nine games and played a 13-13 tie with lowa. Quarterback Bobby Franklin earned the Gator Bowl bid for Mississippi by running for one touchdown and passing for two others in a 21-0 triumph over Mississippi State while Florida earned the other beVth with a 12-9 win over Miami (Fla.) John Macbeth plunged for a first-period touchdown and Jimmy Dunn passed 30 yards for a third-period tally for , the victors. ? _ Sooners Edge State s Orange Bowl-bound Oklahoma - scored on a 30-yard run by Bobby - Boyd with five minutes left to 8 sneak past surprisingly tough Oka lahoma State, 7-0, and Texas - Christian was upset, 20-13, by s Southern Methodist. SMU appar- - ently was fired up by the mis1 taken notion that a victory over s TCU would earn it the Sugar Bowl bid opposite LSU. Army completed its first un--6 beaten season since 1950 after re--0 covering from a sensational early 2 Navy attack. The Sailors got an in--6 itial break when they recovered 6 the opening kickoff and then un3 veiled a series of new formations. q featuring a two-phase advance to 4 the scrimmage line and numerous ■j i flanking movements, which led to 2■ a first-period touchdown and 6-0 8 mmm Fights Cold Miseries c . REXALL SUPER ANAPAC 1 Time-tested A.P.C. plus H Li vitamin C, citrus biofla- M nfflw Q >' vpnoid, antihistamine. 72, U R $3.89;30,51.98;12 IUMR ANAPAC JU. for children. 24, »9* SMITH DRUG CO.
lead. j Expect Upset At this point the crowd of 100,- < 000 in Philadelphia’s Municipal ; Stadium and the national televi- , sion audience throught it was about , to see another great Navy upset bpt the Cadets steadied and grad- ■ ually took control of the game. The first of Bob Anderson’s two touchdowns plus Harry Walters’ conversion gave them a 7-6 halftime lead and they iced matters with two touchdowns in the final period Army’s record was marred only by a 14-14 tie with Pittsburgh while Navy finished with a 6-3 record. Auburn completed its second straight unbeaten season with payoff drives of 553 and 39 yards in a 14-8 win over Alabama; fullback Theon Sapp gained 103 yards in 17 tries and halfback Fred Brown gained 80 in 10 tries as Georgia upset Georgia Tech, 16-3; tailback Billy Majors paced Tennessee to its 10-6 upset of Vanderbilt and Lonnie Holland passed 22 yards to Billy Ray Dickey ip the fourth period to give Houston a 22-17 victory over Texas Tech in other games. Slim Pickings For Major League Draft WASHINGTON (UPI) — The pickings will be slim in the annual major league draft today with no more than six players expected to be selected although such "retreads” as Dave Pope, Larry Raines and Jim Pisoni may earn another go-around. Draft price for any major league club wishing to take a chance is $25,000 and if that club cares to return the player after a 30-day "look,” it gets only $12,500 back. At that rate, it amounts to 512.500 for a look—so a lot of clubs, including the world champion Yankees, aren’t even going to bother. Two clubs, the Cubs and Orioles, are interested in Pope, a long-ball hitting outfielder who batted .316 with San Diego of the Pacific Coast League last season and now is on the Toronto roster, j Pope played briefly with the Orioles two seasons back but spent most of his big league career with the Indians. Pittsburgh is reported toying with the idea of drafting Raines, another former member of the Indians who played shortstop for San Diego this year and batted .303. Several clubs are interested in Pisoni, a fine outfielder on the Richmond list who has had major league experience with the St. Louis Browns and Kansas City, Athletics. He hit .313 and drove in 67 runs for Denver this year. Last year, the Senators had first crack in the draft apd picked a second-baseman, Bob Malkmus ■
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from Wichita. The Phillies, eighth place finishers this year, have first choice in today’s grab bag and they also are seekng a sec-ond-baseman. The Senators have second choice after the Cubs, then the Dodgers, Athletics and so on up the two major league standings in inverse order of how the clubs finished in 1958. Hockey Results SATURDAY’S SCORES National League Boston 3, New York 1. Montreal 6, Detroit 2. Chicago 2, Toronto 1. International League Toledo 6, Fort Wayne 3. Indianapolis 5, Louisville 4. SUNDAY’S SCORES National League , Montreal 7, Detroit 0. Toronto 2, Boston 1. * International League « Fort Wayne 3, Louisville 2 (overtime). Troy 8, Indianapolis 3. Lit* Leaguer "I don’t mind feeding his basket- - ball team, but that football team * * was an expensive proposition!” ' FREE I INSTALLATION H ON MUFFLERS and TAIL PIPES Lifetime Warranty p » FREE . ® GREASE JOB « with ; • OIL CHANGE * I ■ I !!■■■ . RIEHLE’S B 1 1409 Nuttman Ave. Ljl
