Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 280, Decatur, Adams County, 28 November 1959 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
yO'SPORTS'W*
State Champs Launch Season With Victory INDIANAPOLIS (UPD — The champs are at it again. Indianapolis Attucks launched its Indiana high school basketball season Friday night with an easy 57-42 victory over Sheridan. The Tigers of coach Bill Garrett, aiming for a fourth state title with the help of seven lettermen. used 12 playlets. The starting line-up began taking a rest as early as the second period. Midway in the third, the reserves were in full command. It was 31-16 at the halfway mark and 45-29 going into the final period. Scoring was balanced, with Don Swift hitting 11, Bill Jones and Jerry Trice 9 each. Claude Williams 8. Williams hit his first four shots, then took it easy. Sheridan's Jim Godby led all scorers, however, with 15. Half, a dozen North Central Conference clubs bagged non-loop victories, led by power - packed Muncie Central’s 91-41 rout of Fort Wayne North, the Bearcats* third straight one-sided triumph. Hughs Hits Whiner John Dampier topped Muncie with 23 points and Ron Bonham contributed 14 in the 13 minutes he played. The regulars ran up a 50-17 halftime lead before coach John Longfellow pulled them out. Kokomo's state tourney runnersup had a rough time subduing Elwood's defending Central Conference titlists, 52-50. Guard Ronnie Hughes swished in the winning bucket in the final five seconds. Elwood went into the intermission with a 29-24 lead. Richmond buried ’Muncie Burris, 76-50: Marion whipped Wabash. 63-47: Frankfort edged Lafayette, 66-61. and New Castle outlasted Noblesville, 62-59. New Castle, playing in its spacious. spanking-new goalhall, was pulled out of the fire in the final period by John Lee, who hit four fielders when the Trojans trailed by nine points. Lee, who chipped in 28 points, stole the ball twice and scored twicx within 20 seconds
— uji, , ~ ?Ti«Si I I II I. Hf.- r SYNTHETIC j " M / —7 POUNDS DETERGENTS / 80° j—1 —* — ilWl nMV W— ii I I < too — -faf I; ’ i SOAP j ■ —- ■ ■■ QI oExi.,l j~t~ri 11 ri.ll,lliX> 11 ri Li.i 111 ll 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 | COMING CLEAN—Synthetic detergents are more and more £ taking the place of soap in the nation’s laundries, as chart above (shows. Detergents overtook soap tn sales in 1953 and have been steadily ever since. Detergent sales in the third quarjjter of 1959 totaled 882.5 million pounds, a rise of 9.3 per cent |over the same period last year. Data from Association of Amer* Sican Soap and Glycerine Products, Inc.
I Notice to Patrons 0f... ’ Adams County Farm Bureau Co-op Lumber Yard WILL BE CLOSED TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY DECEMBER Ist and 2nd . FOR INVENTORY
_ —ALLI TO —1 / Fine'. NOW 60 TO YOUR OFFICE. YOU SEND HEfcX IT'S SAFB FOR A MORT WHILE] C , PUT TT IN MY BAG, AND NOT SURE! ACT EXACTLY AS TOO DO NORMALLY! SAC<_.STIU. ) OL®A. LU WAKE HER ON THE] An ®otSw IT °U T <* M HANDS'.J 1 UAPe NO I CHECK YOUR PAPER WITH THE ORGWAI, I HYPNOTIZED! J PHONE! AND SHE'LL HEYER. I TdaVS? MISTAKES.\ ™EN PCWROy « <*“■ K ANY OF W INCIDENT J P JSffI&JSL t H paper is on the Ti I- rg -UT W ITIMVrZ Id MAGAZINE SHANDU - IfJIWk 1/ 1| Wll BOMB W?A \ W'. Wil A 13 HAD HANDED HER Mvßf* iTN|£-M WWZ 1 /?. dK -■ All lEsall "V/ N MMWroyna! gsr & IMS Er\Xj HI e v ' MMi AH VL. ',, ~JMi| \aMWI ISO nn E ° PEWS THE magazine, and ■ *S OliA UU UNDER A SHEET OF CARBON 1 g TtXfi HUdi paper is a duplicate of I Y Bwl WHAT PENAN HAP WRITTEN 1 . |
Week's Schedule For Adams County Basketball Teams Saturday Commodores in CIC conference tourney at Marion Bennett. in the final minutes. | New Castle led 34-29 at mid- | game, but the Millers hit 21 mark- ’ ers in the third period for a 50-46 lead. I ; I: , Hunters Lose First Game i In the Southern Conference. Evansville Central opened with a hard-fought 46-41 victory at Boon- •| ville. Jasper, knocked from the perfect ranks at East Chicago ; Washington Wednesday, rebound;i ed with a 57-48 win at Washing- ■ ton; Evansville Reitz nipped Tell II City, 61-57, and Bosse of the Pocket City clipped Huntingburg's four-game winning streak, 43-37. ; Fort Wayne Central rebounded . from an opening-season loss to I Anderson to spoil South Bend Cen- . teal’s opener, 71-62, behind T. C. :j Williams’ 25 markers. Williams :, hit five of seven shots in the sec■ond stanza to give the Tigers a I 32-29 halftime lead. Also upstate, Hammond Tech • trounced Portage. 92-59, and Bill • Slaughter’s 21 points paced LaI Porte to a 59-48 victory over Gary t} Mann I Terre Haute Gerstmeyer, which plays Attucks tonight, opened with a 71-65 victory over Springs ValHley. the “Cinderella” quintet in the ’,1958 state tourney. > j Connersville won a South Ceni tral Conference game at Colum- > bus. 46-45. when the Bulldogs’ lastditch rally fell short. Columbus, ■ losing its third straight game, was • down six points with 1:20 to go • when Jay Shumakers’ pair of ‘ buckets put the game out of I reach. i Dolph Camiili Signs To Scout For Yanks NEW YORK (UPD — Dolph Camilli, former Brooklyn Dodger first baseman, has signed with the New York Yankees as a scout for the Utah. Idaho and northern California areas. Camiili, who had been a scout for the Philadelphia Phillies, is the fifth full-time talent hunter employed by the Yankees on the We§t Coast.
Sparfans Lose Sixth In Row Friday Night The Pleasant Mills Spartans were handed their sixth loss without a victory Friday night, dropping a 74-50 decision to ConvoyUnion at the Convoy gym. The Ohio quintet led at the first quarter. 19-9. at the half, 34-21, and at the third period, 51-34. The winners had four players in double figures, Helm leading the way with 19 points. For the Spartans. shining on offense were Dwight Brunner with 17 markers and John Snyder with 14. A battle to get out of the county cellar will be staged at Pleasant Mills next Friday, when the Spartans meet the Monmouth Eagles, also winless on the season. Convoy-Union Helm 8 3 19 Ward 1 0 2 Webb 7 0 14 Wambsganss 6 2 14 Crabtree ..5 0 10 Bker 11 3 Wortman 4 0 8 Hiltonl 2 4 TOTALS 33 8 74 Pleasant Mills Brunner 5 7 17 Martzo 0 0 King ~ 10 2 Snyder 5 4 14 Deatho 11 Archer 10 2 Butler 2 2 6 McGi11...2 0 4 Jackson 2 0 4 Daniels 0 0 0 TOTALS 18 14 50 Officials: Burke, Cook Preliminary Convoy, 48-19 High School Basketball Fort Wayne Central Catholic 71, | Garrett 62. Fort Wayne Central 58, South Bend Central 47. Muncie Central 91, Fort Wayne North 41., Indianapolis Attucks 57, Sheridan 42. Indianapolis Cathedral 59, Indianapolis Manual 51. Alexandria 57, Warsaw 52. Kokomo 52, Elwood 50. Richmond 76, Muncie Burris 50. Goshen 56, Plymouth 46. Marion 63. Wabash 47. Connersville 46, Columbus 45. | Frankfort 66, West Lafayette 61. New Castle 62. Noblesville 59. Terre Haute Gerstmeyer 71, Springs Valley 65. Evansville Reitz 61, Tell City 57. Elkhart 68, Nappanee 48. South Bend Washington 62, Penn 48. South Bend St. Joseph’s 66, Hammond Morton 65. Crawfordsville 70. Monticello 42. Bloomington 63, Greensburg 44. Jasper 57, Washington 48. Evansville Bosse 43, Huntingburg 37. Rushville 90. Martinsville 43. Lebanon 85, Greencastle 61.
APRS?*
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
r f gjflni j j.. 'NO STRIKE-—Despit® the actions of the players, Elgin Baylor, 22, and Rudy Laßusso, 35, of the Lakers and the Detroit Pistons’ Earl .Lloyd, right, they were not struck by lightning in Minneapolis. What appears to be lightning was caused by static on the photographer’s film as the combatants collided on a rebound play. Baylor is top-drawer player.
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| Today's Sport Parade } (Reg. U. S. Pat. Off.) By JACK CUDDY United Press International I NEW YORK (UPD — Sports i parading with short steps: | The New York Yankees are I strongly opposed to the idea of a ! second major league baseball team in the city—-whether through: I expansion or inclusion in the Continental League—and think they have received a taw deal from New York officials. “Everybody seems to forget ■that we are the team that stayed.” co-owner Dan Topping tells intimates. "All this talk about building a beautiful new stadium for a team that’s never played, j a game here is ridiculous. The Yankees can’t even get the little extra parking space we want anti yet they talk of building W-mikß Jipn dollar stadiums for otherslW Commissioner Ford Frick ha» | led a behindthescenes drive [keep New York City open terri tory ... the Yankees obviously 1 would be delighted to see the city 1 closed to another major leagues club. ( Gil McDougald, Herb. Score ana ‘ Hank Bauer are among the fa 1 mous names who may be in volved in trades during the major 1 league meetings next week ... Rc 1 member all that hoopla about : Harmon Killebrew last June—and the advice of knowing baseball men that Bob Allison might turn out to be the better of the two players? Allison recently was named rookie of the year—sec ond straight Washington Senator player honored ... at 6-4 and 218 pounds. Allison looks like an even better hitter than he was in 1959 when he clouted 30 homers. .Bob Pettit, the St. Louis Hawks’ star and defending National Bas ketball association scoring cham- . pion, is burning up at teammate Clyde Lovellette...Lovellette, •currently injured, i^ c accused of nevI er passing off to a teammate, and being the biggest “gunner” tri*W league of “gunners”. .Pettit has “conceded” the current NBA scoring race to one of three stars — Elgin Baylor. Wilt Chamberlain and Jack Twyman. Bobby Layne, who has pitched winning touchdown passes with 89 and 41 seconds remaining in his ;last two games with the Pittsburgh Steelers. Is considered the ■ top clutch player in the National Football League...and don’t iyou imagine those rough - tough McKeever brothers out Southern California way will get their | chance to show how really tough they are when they join NFL teams?
b -fl" ■■• * w . f ,rF\J < w r M ‘" w/I X m. GOLDEN JUBILEE - This Stamp commemorates the 50th anniversary of the founding of the Boy Scouts of America. Artist Norman Rockwell designed the khaki and blue fourcenter. It’ll go on sale Feb. 8, 1960.
Billy Hunter Wins Over Alex Miteff NEW YORK (UPD — Heavy- ' weight contender Billy Hunter gets a shot at fourth-ranking i Eddie Machen in Madison I Square Garden, Dec. 18, for rising from the canvas and beating I gory Alex Miteff again Friday I night in their return TV fight at the Garden. Machen of Redding, Calif., accepted the match by telegramTall, slender Hunter of Detroit, I weighing 191-1-2 pounds to Mitef’s 203-1-2, won a split 10-round decision over the broadshouldered Argentina contender whom he had stopped in the seventh round at I Syracuse, N. Y.. Sept. 25. > Friday night’s verdict Was bofjbd by the 2 3,000 fans.■» Billy almost scored another seventh round technical knockout over Miteff, who sufered two cuts on the brow and outside corner of his left eye, where he had been sliced at Syracuse. Friday flight’s wound on the brow was more than an inch long. Dr. Samuel Swetnick examined the bloody cuts but permitted I the fight to continue and thereby prevented Hunter from scoring his third consecutive seventhround kayo. In addition to the September victory over Mites, Billy had stopped Tony Anthony in the seventh round at the Garden, Oct. 23. s' Only One Twin Bill Scheduled By Giants SAN FRANCISCO (UPD — The San Francisco Giants will play only one home doubleheader next season —a Memorial day twinlain with the Chicago Cubs. San Fcancisco has added two night ’games to the home schedule for a total of 23 arc light dates in the new park at Candlestick Point.
■mi« I m I fW 5 iMi - B Bl i|| p, I aBBMB 5*R v< I ■Hr El ■ I -CMSI Hr V 6 E / \ <3 3 / — V eoBSS fS|»h|< >2l k \ | \vßßKbm ■ffijgtßi'lß Ml b| ; II* WwS*:* wzip' ?0 ' ./awMllwßglßMMME&iwn & ■ ■ Bal ZjwSM'S R|BR ■■ B ■ R k ’ dMmßt S $ I» a i S Bk. W-4 -' /StrlH'l ? LI i ili 1 ;ii BB B B —!.»»,»—<» — t . ■—■ SKI SCENE This is the new ski Jump at Squaw Valley, I Calif., site of the 1960 Winter Olympic Games. The picturewas taken with a telescopic lens which fore-shortened the picture, making it look as though the jumpers would land Jon tha ahelter’a.rooL 109 yard%fron»_the_
Forty-Niners And Browns In Top Pro Game By EARL WRIGHT United Press International The Cleveland Browns and San FranciscoriJForty.NineK*match the National* Football League’s two record rushers Sunday in a game neither can aford to lose. San Francisco, tied with the Baltimore Colts for the Western Division lead, has pro football’s all-time rushing leader in Joe Perry. Cleveland will counter with Jim Brown, holder of the league’s all-time rushing marks for a single game and season. Cleveland, favored by 10 points sigainst the invading Forty-Nin-ers, is in the tightest spot. The Browns and Philadelphia Eagles trail the (giants by a game in the Eastern race and must win to assure themselyes of staying within range of New York. Giants Favored The Giants are favored over the visiting Washington Redskins by 10 points while the Eagles are 3M> point underdogs against the Steelers at Pittsburgh Baltimore plays host to the Los Angeles Rams and is favored by 10 points. In Sunday’s only other game, the Chicago Bears are favored over the Chicago Cardinals by seven points. The Bears are only a game behind the two Western leaders and could tie for first by winning, if the Colts and FortyNiners lose. The other two teams played Thursday with the Green Bay Packbrs downing the Detroit Lions, 24-17, in their traditional Thanksgiving clash. Y. A. Tittle, San Francisco’s top quarterback, will not play against Cleveland because of a knee injury sufered during last Sunday’s 45-14 loss at Baltimore. John Brodie will take over Tittle’s passing and signal - calling chores. Perry Holds Record Perry. 32, but still spry, holds the NFL career rushing record with 1,131 yads going into Sunday’s game. He collected 1.344 more back in the old All-America Conference. John Unitas, who leads the league in touchdown passes this season with 24, leads Baltimore against a Los Angeles team weakened by injuries and other troubles. f Quarterback Charley Conerly of NW Ywfr lifts S sprained ankle. but the Giants are in glowing health compared to their Sunday opponents, the Redskins. Quarterback Norm Van Brocklin leads the Eagles in one of Sunday's toughest assignments. They tackle the Bobby Laynesparked Steelers, who have whipped the Giants and Browns during the past two weeks.
AT “Don’t you feel bare after we« ing all that football gear”
.. S * » # 1 M I . At HORSESHOE CHAMPIONS— The Adams county horseshoe league held its annual party recently at the Preble restauarant, with a chicken dinner served to the nearly 30 members present. Percy Gould, of Berne, was elected president", Fred Dellinger, of the Johnson Studio team, was named secretary-treasurer, and James Johnson, of the same team, was elected recording secretary. In the top photo are members of the Berne championship teamleft to right, first row. Clyde Green, Robert Neadeihouser, jßichard Johnson, Clifford Green; left to right, second row, Percy Gould, Clair Christener, Kermit Yoder. Not present for the picture were Glen Rupert, Terry Green and Roman Liechty. In the lower photo, Alton Corson, past president, is presenting doubles championship trophies to Troy Fennig and Floyd Reed, of the Riverview Gardens team, and runnerup trophies to Robert Neaderhouser and Clair Christener, of the Berne team.
Dave Ragen Leading Al West Palm Beach WEST PALM BEACH (UPD — A 22-year-old golfer who was still a school boy when , some of thq men behind him weraJwinning major titles, went iniMghe -Ibios round of the West Palm Beach Open golf tournament today with a three-stroke lead. Tall, lanky Dave Ragen of Orlando, a professional for only 18 months, slashed seven strokes off par for a 65 in the second round of the $15,000 tournament Friday. That, with his opening day 70, gave him a 135. Closest to Ragen was another relatively unknown Floridian, Jay Brewer of Crystal River, who fired a 66 Friday and had a two day score of 138. The highest placed name golfer was Arnold Palmer, the muscled swinger from Ligonier, Pa., who is a pas tMasters champion. Palmer shot a 75 Friday for a threeway third place tie at 139. Tied with him were . Gardner Dickinson of Palm Beach. Fla., and Pete Cooper, Tequesta, Fla., the defending champion.
>'. '■■' " 4"'j < t ~ Not A Bit Too Early.. to start making Your Christmas Party and Dinner Reservations FAIRWAY
ANNOUNCEMENT! VOGLEWEDE & ANDERSON LAWYERS HAVE MOVED THEIR OFFICES TO THEIR NEW BUILDING AT THE CORNER of THIRD and MADISON STREETS DECATUR, INDIANA PHONE NUMBER 3-3127 REMAINS THE SAME.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1959 *
Bowling Scores Merchant League W L Pts. Painters - 26 10 36 Citizens Telephone .. 24 12 33 Price Men’s Wear ... 24 12 33 Slick’s Drive Inn .... 22 14 28 Preble Restaurant ... 20 16 27 i“8” Ball *l9 17 25 No. JO Team ......?. 14 19 18 Kru* Sherwin Williams ... Iz 24 15 Green s Team 4 29 4 Sherwin williams won 2 from Green’s, Preble Restaurant won 2 from No. 10 team, Krick Tyndall won 3 from “8" Ball, Painters won 2 from Citizens Telephone, Price won 2 from Slicks. High games: C. Painter 213; O. Agler 212, J. Schlickman 199. College Basketball Winona Lake Tourney Malone 54. Fort Wayne Concordia 49. Huntington 79. Grace 65.
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