Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 123, Decatur, Adams County, 24 May 1960 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Decatur High School's Foothall And liasketball Schedules Are Announced

Decslur high sctowl * I •*>*’- fmiball Utd Uggpetboll »rhrduk-» havr been annwuiwrd by <wcb«-» Bob Worthman nnd Piiul BcvvlMinor, Ttw* only chons* wii th*' replww- ( rtirnt of Pvnn on tbe forkball *<*h<*<t ul» The Jark«*t» will open ih«t» na«n again*! the Angola Hamrt*. in tfwir flrrt yesr nt varsity eomprtltKin The basketball »chcdulc remain* th*- wmr with ih« <»ceplion of tt« holiday tourney b« mg held at Hartford City instead «< Portland. The schedule* mltow. Football Sept. d-Angola at Uecatur <c». Sept. 9—Auburn at Auburn »rt. Sept IS-Carrrtt at Decatur »c» Sept. 23— New Haven at Decatur I Cl. Sept 30--Portland at Decatur. Oct. 7—Bluffton at Bluffton •<?!. Ort 14—Columbia City at Columbia City >c> Ort. 21—Kendallville at KendallSllh Oct 26—Fort Wayne Concordia at Decatur 'e>. Basketball Nov. IH—Adams Central at Decatur. Nov. 23—Fort Wayne Concordia at Decatur <cl. Nov 29—Geneva at Geneva. Dec. 2—Berne at Berne !><■ ,6—Ossian at Ossian. Doc. 9—Central Catholic at Fort Wayne. Dec. 16—Columbia City at Decatur <C>. Dec. 20—Bluffton at Bluffton <c>. Dec. 29-30 — Holiday tourney at Hartford City. Jan 13—Auburn at Auburn 'c>. Jan 14—Huntington at Huntington Jan. 20—Kendallville at Decatur DRIVE-IN ~ THEATER - Last Time Tonight - Comedy In COLOR! "OPERATION PETTICOAT" Can Grant. Tony Curtis PLUS — An Hour of Shorts. —-0-OI—-WED. & THURS. From Guadalcanal to Okinawa, the Marine Air Devils Biased a Trail of Glory! Exciting in Color! JOHN WAYNE ROBERT RYAN “FLYING LEATHERNECKS” Janis Carter, Don Taylor —io-0i— Coming Sun. — “Suddenly Last Summer” for 4 Big Days! pTne LAKE OPENING SATURDAY, MAY 28 SWIMMING CONCESSIONS PICNIC AREA Registered Life Guards POOL HOURS: 12 to 9 P. M. Daily & Sunday •} 3¥2 Miles West of Berne on 118 PHONE 5-5140

Moving Date -June Ist 10% DISCOUNT ON AU MONUMENTS and MARKERS " Now on the Zwick Monument Property MONROE STREET (Up-Town) II B Y MONUMENTS /■J... ? — (Formerly Zwicks) MONROE STREET , Bonded Guaranty*! _ PHONE 3 ' 3602 OF jliriinniAlC FOB APPOINTMENT MAtttfP PHONE 3-46C6

Jan 24—Monmouth at Decatur \ Jan 27- Angola at Deeatur ’C*. Feb 3 -Portland at Pur Hand i Feb ♦—Elmhur*! at Decatur '«• I'Frb 10—Garrett at Garrett ifi, I Feb IT—Winchester al Decatur i <ci.-Northeastern Indiana conferVfICT MeltTW* Koufax Hurls iOneHitter To Beat Pirates By FRED DOWN United Pre** International The Dndgrr* are wrestling with a fjvovrar-old question again I* Sandy Koufax on his way to star* dom or was Monday night’s oneI hitter just another false start' It’s the same old question they've been trying to answer ■ about the 24-year -old firebailer ever since he was signed to a I 321.UU0 bonus contract in 1954 One day Sartdy looks like a world beater. But then weeks, even months, may pass before he wins ■ another gome. t His 1-0 victory over the National league leading Pittsburgh Pirates r for example, was his first triumph since Aug. 31. 1959. when he Ued Bob Feller s major league strikeout record by fanning 18 San Francisco Giants in one I game. Overpowering Fastball Onl v one thing remains constant about Koufax — when he’s really f got it he’s one of the most overpowering pitchers anybody s ever seen. Li- It was like that Monday night when 6-2. 210-pound Sandy yielded a single in the second inning to pi trier Bennv Daniels and then jusd "bombed” the Pirates with his last balLs. He walked six but he struck out 10 and there wasn t, a semblance of a hit after the second frame.’ ■ But. then, there's the other Koufax — the Koufax who has a 29-31 career record, including 1-4 this season and who didn t win a game all last September or in the | first five weeks* of this season Pirates’ Lead Shaved The Dodgers victory cut~ the, first-place Pirates’ lead over Idle San Francisco to! one game and, moved Los Angeles past the St. | Louis Cardinals into fifth place. The Chicago Cubs topped the Cini cinnati Reds. 7-6. in 13 innings and the New York Yankees, shaded the Kansas City Athletics, 4-3, in the only other major league Club House Chatter City League W L Decatur Industries 16% 3% Kelly Cleaners -------- 14 6 Vigortones 9% Fortney Shoe Shop —— 10 10 Schafer Hardware 9% 5% Holthouse on Highway . 6% 131*2 Leland Smith Ins. 5% 9% First State Bank 5 10 Sherwin-Williams 2% 12 Vz Low scores: K. Gaunt 39, B. Helm 40, J-. Bauman 41, R. Kelly 42, N. Highland 43. H. Engle 43, J. Irwin 43, T. Haubold 43, B Kuhnle 43, J. Smith 43. ' Friday, June 3 schedule — Schafer vs Fortney, First State Bank vs' Kelly Cleaners, Holthouse vs Leland Smith, SherwinWilliams vs Vigortones, Decatur | Industries bye. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want i Ads! They get Big results.

Commodores And Anderson Divide Games The Decatur Commodores rtoaIrd out their ba»rbull wummi Munday afternoon, dividing a double header with St Mary * of Andrr’on in a Central Indiana CatbI olic conference twin bill at Anderson. * * The Commodores edged the Gaels in the opener. 2-1. but Anderson came hock to win the , nightcap. 4-3 A pair of first inning runs held ;up for the Commodores for the 'opening game triumph Hits by ! Steve Omlor. Steve Htythe andI John Kohne were g.-rs for the ! two nns. but the Commodores ’ were blanked the rest of the way on only two hits Jerry Gillig had a shutout i thnaigh the first aix innings but Anderson nearly pulled the game I out in the final inning. An error. I walk and a single accounted for one run. and a hit batsman then loaded the bases with only one lout. But Gillig forced WuUe to 1 bounce one back to the mound and the Commodores ended the game with a double play, Gillig to Fred Kauffman to Tom Kohne. In the five-inning nightcap, Anderson tallied twice in the second inning, but the Commodores took the lead with three in the third on | a walk, two errors, and hits by j Kauffman and Tom Kohne St. I Mary’s won the game with two in the fourth on two hits, an inI field out and a wild pitch. Decatur AB R H E Lose. 3b 2 0 2 1 Omlor, If 3 1 2 0 Blythe, cf - 3 12 0 J Kohne. ss 3 0 11, Gillig. p— - 2 0 0 0 T. Kohne. lb .—— 3 0 0 1 Kauffman, c — 3 0 0 0 Reed, rs 1 0 ° 1 Mulligan, 2b ----- 3 0 0 0 TOTALS — — 23 2 5 4 Anderson ‘AB R H E Wulle, 2b — 3 0 0 0; Brose c ■—-- 3 0 0 0 Broderick, ss - 3 0 0 0 J. Snyder, If 3 0 0 0 Williams, lb 3 1 0 0| Grisson, 3b 2 0 0 1 McKinney, rs 3 0 2 0 j Harber, p 3 0 1 0. T. Snyder, cf-2 0 1 0 TOTALS 25 1 4 1 Score by innings: Decatur -200 000 o—2 Second Game RHE Decatur 003 00—3 4 0 Anderson 020 2x—4 3 2 Baker and Kauffman: Grissom and Brose. Power Failure At Indiana University BLOOMINGTON, Ind. iUPI> - A transformer burned out at Indiana University early today, plunging part of the campus into darkness. The transformer was located in Smithwood Hall, a women’s dormitory. and furnished power to a student housing section. The power failure touched off an impromptu demonstration on the streets lasting nearly two hours. Firecrackers were set off, but one observer said it was orderly, although noisy. Rowling Scores MINOR LEAGUE Final Standing W L Pts. Holthouse on Hiway 35 19 47 Wolffs —— 34 20 46 M. O. C. Puptent 23 31M> 22Mj 44% Fagers Sfiort Goods 31 23 40 Spud & Jims —— 25 29 36 Moose 26 28 32 Walts Stand. Serv. 24 30 30 Smiths Pure Milk- 22% 31% 29% Downtown Texaco— 19 35 27 600 series: L. Miller 602. 200 games: L. Miller, 235, 207: E. Wolff, 205, 203; H. Hoffman, 216; G. Giemer, 205; D. House, 219.

OPEN DAILY 11 A.M. to MIDNIGHT ENJOY A COOL REFRESHING LUNCH DELICIOUS - ECONOMICAL - DELICIOUS JOT’S B-K DRIVE-IN

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Jackets Beat Angola Monday By 6-3 Score J The Dreatur Yrltow Jacket* scored f<>ur run* in the flrat in- ' ning, and then combined aftnir ' good pitching and tight dcfenalvv I play the r**t of the way to dedeat ibe Angola H<>rnrta 6-3 in an NFI I cunfereoev game at Pleasant Lake Monday. "Hooker” Walter*, the fir*! man ’up for Decatur, singled and wa* 1 -larriftred to second by Turn Cra | lull After Jim Reidenbach walked Harley Wolfe banged out • Bingle [to acoer Walter* Reidsmbach then I stole third and when the catcher * I throw got away. Red scored. Mar- ' t>ach walked and freshman Bill ! Conrad smashed a clean single through the box, scoring Wolfe and i making it 3-0 Charley Marbach I then pmerded to steal third and on the next pitch be and Conrad worked the double steal with Mar- . barh scoring. Decatur scored its fifth run in I the fifth when Grabill reached base <*n a fielder's choice, went to second on Rvidcnbach’* single and ' stole third. Then Reidenbach, when the pitcher took his stance, lit out I for second and stopped. The pitcher threw to second and Angola thought they were out of the inning. but while they were running ■ Red down, they forgot Grabill. who waltzed home. The Jackets added I their final tallv 0 the sixth on sin- ! gles by Marbach. Nellie Clark, a walk and an error. Angola scored its three runs in ' the sixth, when big Harley Wolfe. I who had been breezing along with i a two-hit shutout, walked two and > gave up two hits. Decatur's only error came in the inning also. I Wolfe made up for any wrongs in | the sixth though by striking out I the aide in the last inning. Decatur is now 10 and 5 for the ' season and 3 and 2 in the confer-, ence. The Jackets travel to Willshire today for a non-conference I [game; — DECATUR AB R H Walters, cf 2 1 11 Grabill. 2b — 3 1 0 Reidenbach. 3b 3 11 Wolfe, p —- 4 1 2 Marbach. lb 2 1 11 Conrad, c 3 1 I* Bleeke, If ...- 3 0 11 Cowan, ss 2 0 0 Rambo, rs 2 0 0, Clark, rs 1 0 1' Totals 27 6 8' ANGOLA AB R H Lovejoy, rs 3 0 01 Boyer, rs 1 0 0 Berlien, 2b3 10 Cable, ss 3 12 Powers, c 2 11 Butler, p. rs -. —.2 1 0 DeLong, 3b 3 0 0 Owens, lb 3 0 1 Presley, cf 3 0 0 Haley, If —- 2 0 0 Totals 25 3 4 RBls—Wolfe, Marbach, Conrad, Bleeke, Butler; Bases on balls — Wolfe 4, Butler 5; Struck out — Wolfe 11, Butler 7, Lovejoy 1: Hits —off Wolfe 4, Butler 5: runs — off Wolfe 3, Butler 6; Winner — Wolfe • 6-2>; Loser — Butler.

Boys To Report For Yankees' Practice The following boys will report for practice of the Little League Yankees Wednesday at 6 p.m. at McMillen field; S. Johnson, D. Meyer, J. Kenney, K. Wolfe,TT Strickler, R. Sommers, A. Sprunger, T. Hakes, D. Spaulding, P. Hess, R. Painter, S. Speigel, J. Keller, B. Murray, E. Cravens, J. Rich. Over 2.60 U uaiiy Democrats are sold and delivered in Decatur each day. 4 ~ Tamiib Fever New Cases Reported Here It is evident that many cases of Tamub fever will be reported here again this spring. Symptoms are restlessness: worry; irritable attitude: uneasiness. That’s Tamub Fever — Too-AwM-Many-Urgent-Bills. IMMEDIATE RELIEF A auick cure for Tamub fever has been developed by Budget Loans. You simply let Budget pay the urgent bills for you, then make one easy monthly payment. With that peace of mind, you’re cured . . . just like that! Don’t put it off — see Budget Loans, 164 S. Second Street, Decatur. . Adv.

Observe Anniversary Os Night Baseball CINCINNATI. Ohio iUPY»—Tto last major league holdout against ■tight games Bud Ito first profs » itoMl hßiatoll loam to play under tto U«t»t rombUie tomght to -rirtxato Ito 25th anniversary at night toassdsaU. It was May M. 1183. when PreswScni Franklin D Hewwevvit threw t switcdt la to< White House that illummatad Croocly Field torr for tto firat night game between tto Cincinnati Re«h and (hr Phlladeliihia Phil* Tonight. tto Reda and Chicago <‘uto. a team which does not have lights Ut US honjf Wigley Field. wiU meet to celebrate tto silver anniversary of that first contest Big Paul Derringer, one of tto 1 alhttfne Cincinnati greats, will inas out the first pitch. He pitched 23 years ago when the Reds (Mealed tto Philadelphia ■ Phils. 1-1. in the first arc light I cotitpsl. Cincinnati played seven night games that first year and followed with seven more in each of the next two years. Although , night contests caught on here, it wasn't until 1938 that Brooklyn became the >econd National league team to play night games. Philadelphia followed suit in <1939. and New York. Pittsburgh and St. Louis installed lights in I their parks in 1940 With the exception of tto Cubs, the old Bos- ■ ton Braves were the last National League team to install lights at their park when they were ; erected in 1946 , Since this beginning, night base- ' ball has increased steadily through the years. Last year the National League i recorded an all-time night game I attendance when a total of 5.401.,142 spectators paid their way in to see the NL clubs perform under the lights In 1959. 298 games

Macklins Have The Cars.... .... and The Prices ONE OWNERS and LOCAL OWNED! Come In And Save! Prices You Can Afford! Bank Rates! 1959 PLYMOUTH 4-Dr. FURY 1969 PLYMOUTH 2-Dr. V-B—Push Button Transmission Sold By Us Naw. Locall Car. Sport Deck - Only 12,000 Miles Clean and Ready To Go. 1957 FCISO JEEP PICK-UP 21.000 Miles. Same Chassis as Universal Jeep. Ca.n't Wear 'em Out. 1958 FORD FAIRLANE 2-Dr. 1958 CHEVROLET 4-Dr. Has The Works. Local Owned. Fully Automatic Radio. Heater. Sharp Color. Like New Power Glide. 8-Cylinder. One Owner. 1958 CHRYSLER WINDSOR STATION WAGON. One Owner. 1957 CHRYSLER SARATOGA 4-DOOR. A Honey. 1957 CHRYSLER WINDSOR 4-DOOR HARDTOP. Red and White. 1957 FORD 4-DOOR. Two-Tone Blue Finish. A Nice One. 1956 PLYMOUTH SAVOY 4-DOOR. Low mileage. 1956 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 4-DOOR HARDTOP. A beauty. 1956 DODGE 2-DOOR HARDTOP. Light Blue and White. 1956 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 4-DOOR HARDTOP. Rbal Nice. 1956 OLDSMOBILE 2-DOOR. Blue Finish. Not A Scratch. 1956 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR. Local Car. Very Nice. 1956 CHEVROLET BELAIRE. Low Mileage. One Owner. 1955 DODGE 2-DOOR HARDTOP. Blue and White. 1955 DODGE 2-DOOR. Local Car. Black and White. 1955 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR. New Paint. A Honey. 1954 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 4-DOOR. Has the Works. 1954 DODGE 4-DOOR. Automatic Transmission. Clean. 1954 FORD 2-DOOR. 6-Cy finders. Blue. Extra Nice. THE ABOVE ARE ALL QUALITY CARS AND ARE REAL BARGAINS ! WE ALSO HAVE SEVERAL FISHERMAN’S SPECIALS 1 PHIL L. MACKLIN CO. CHRYSLER — DODGE — DODGE TRUCKS “OUR USED CARS MAKE GOOD OR WE DO.”

"7 i:^ a I%&*S£.l? l sSttßßßgjg r J p a<*7 —-nr 'T'thereSthe ■U, we stop Mfefe u A s Tl * sPBEDiNa j V A RAILROAD MBK|±tl I *\ engine? /\ \

were ptarod At Wight Ut tto Na ttoMl League This year. MU games Bro srtodulod under tto light ib tto seatar etrcuK MAJOR NATIONAL LKAGt'K W. L. Pct. 0 B I 1 Pittsburgh 23 12 857 ■“ i ton Francisco tl 12 CM 1 MilwaukeelS 11 STY 4H Cincinnati ..... 18 19 500 SS Loa Angeles ... IS 1* 441 Ttfc fit Louis 14 I* <34 I I Chicago 11 17 393 S*n Philadelphia ... 13 31 384 10 AMERICAN I.KAGIE W L. Pet C. B I Chicago 18 12 «» •- | Baltimore 18 13 581 H’ 1 [CIUVtUuMI 1« 12 STI 1 FNcw York .. a. IS 12 554 1H ‘ Detroit 13 14 481 3tfc Washington .... 13 16 429 5 Kansas City .. 13 19 387 SV> j I Boston 10 16 385 8 MONDAY'S RESCLTR National League ' lx>s Angeles 1. Pittsburgh 0. 'Chicago 7. Cincinnati 6 <l3 innings)i Only games scheduled American League i New York 4. Kansas City 3. Only game scheduled. Chicago Cubs Give Jim Hegan Tryout I CHICAGO iUPD — Veteran catcher Jim Hegan will receive a 10 - day tryont with the Chicago I Cubs, it was announced Monday. I Hegan. who has a 228 lifetime batting average for 16 years in tto majors, was a teammate of < i Cub manager Lou Boudreau on'

Rte Cto' iiiato Indians Ho alto formerly caught tor tto PhrtasUV phta PtUitos and tto New York fUatos U. S. Oil Contracts Dissolved Bv Cuba HAVANA <UPI> — Tto Cuban government has dlatolvod exclusive distribution ensrtracta between American oil companies and Cuban filling stations and fuel dealers and has notified tto American companies they will have to< refine Huaaian oil la large

For Father's Day - June 19 DAD Want* . . . summer's ■ ynE* coolest { convertible r* Pl IV Al / - 81 - Way aA • / Caavertlble two-way collar [/*'\ may t>« worn open Or closed. M Open-wea»e lightweight fabI* wash ond wear, Soa--9/1 ■ forised" far lostofl fit- Sto»* > Ru sleeves far added comfort, g 1 White and caal colors. PRICE MEN'S WEAR OPEN FRIDAY and SATURDAY til 9:00 P. M.

TV EADA Y. MAY 96. IM®

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