Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 161, Decatur, Adams County, 9 July 1960 — Page 4
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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT"'" me. 1 **"*S* *“ - TT.py Wm G. Hißt’ .—..._. ~~™ Vice-President CbM. Holthouqe Secretary-Treasurer WbMrtßttai Bates By Mail in Adam* and Adjoining Counties: One year $8 00 Six months. 84.25: 3 U ’. be3rood AdM »Tfi’Adjoining Cbunttes: One year 6 $4.75; 3 By Oarrier, » cents per week. Single copiea, 8 cento. ' ".'~ Attention On Democrats With the Democratic national convention starting Monday in Los Angeles, public attention is again focusing on the oldest political party in the world. Founded in the early 1790’s by Thomas Jefferson to protect the freedom of the recent immigrants to the United States, and the rights of all the citizens from the callous attempts of John Adams' Federalist administration to impose a strong central authority on a rapidly expanding agricu’itiftai nation, the Democratic party has weathered every storm and stress period of our country’s history. The Democratic party has traditionally appealed to the underdogs, the downtrodden, those needing help. It has consistently favored a reciprocal tariff policy to lower the cost of living; fair bargaining power for labor to help them meet the demands of big business; a banking and fiscal system that favors the borrower, builder and “small op It was the Democratic party that placed in the present state constitution the limits on bonded indebtedness, and the pay - as - you - go state policy, which makes our state one of the few in the nation that is always serfvent. And next week the Democratic party will choose from a group of some two dozen men its choice for president and vice-president. No one now knows who it wHI be, but everyone may be well assured that all Democrats in the nation will support the convention’s choice, because they well know that all of the Democratic candidates are better qualified, better able to operate our national and international policy, than the single choiceless candidate of the oppossing party.
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WANE-TV L Channel 15 UTUWAT Kin* HSrfelSF Ad ’ entur< ’ Pony Learue Baseball 4:00—Colonel Flack a • :B ®—Fiction Theater 7:00— s *“ Francisco Beat 7:3o—Perry Mason B:3o—Wanted Dead or Alive •: J:00 —Mr. Lucky 9:lo—Hava Oua ffUl Travel 10:00—Gunsmoke w .10:09—Miao Universe Contest OTO JJ:oo—Ellery Queen „ BUNDAY For Today • :80—This Is The Life .-*-0$ —Lamp Unto My Feet Dp And Live *® : 22 —Frontiers ot Science -<9:Bo—Camera 1 10:55—News ILOO—Arixoua Kid — W-'OO—Star Performance i^?s=^U°all AttVe " tUre * Performance ,-4:30 —Charlie Chan a:oo—Science Fiction Theater s:3o—Eyewitness Report B:oo—Convention Preview 8:80—30th Century 7:oo—Lassie 7:3o—Dennis The Menace ttoo—Ed Sullivan 9:OO—G.E. Theater 9:Bo—Alfred Hitchcock J? ; 2®~Lucy in Connecticut! 10:30—What e My Line 11:00—Sunday News Special 11:15—Khyber Patrol MONDAV Theatre Wonderful 3:OO—CBS Newn B:lß—Captain Kan rar oo ,*:00 —Coffee Cup Theater 10:15—Passport To Beauty - 1 10:30—Video Video Village 11:00—1 Love Lucy 11:30—Far Horixons •» Afternooa 13:00—Love of Life 12:30—Search For Tomorrow 12:40—Guiding Light I:oo—Anne Colone Show I:3*—-Aa the World Turn* 2:00—Full Circle 3:3o—Houaeparty B:oo—The Millionaire 3:3o—Verdict Is Yours 4:oo—Brighter Day 4:l6—Secret Storm 4:3o—Edge Os Night 6:oo—Dance Date of Riley O:2S—NOW m Tell One o:3o—Tom Calenberg News »:«—Doug Kdwarde-Newa 7:oo—Democratic Convention 7:3o—kale Smith Show B:oo—Texan B:3o—Father Knows Best 9:oo—Danny Thomas 9:3o—Ann Southern 10:00—Hennesey 10:80—June Allyson 11:00—Phil Wilson News 11:15—Nancy Steele is Missing WKJG-TV Channel 33 OATUKDAY IftertMi 13:00—True Story 12:30—Baseball : 3:oo—Adventure Parade 3:4s—Men Toward the Light 4:00—Roller Derby s:oo—Detective’s Diary s:3o—Wrestling Bvcalu 4:3o—Football 7:3o'—Bananka •I®—®J an th * Challenge 9:oo—The Deputy :30—Democratic Convention 11:00—The Saturday Edition 11:15—The SailorTakcs a Wife _ SUWBAt 0:0?-5fhe Christophers » :30—Amartcwne est work 9:4s—How Christian Science Heal 10:00—Sacred Heart Program 10:15—Industry onParad* —. 10:30—This Is the Ufa e. 11:00—Cartoon Time — - '
Central Daylight Tima Aftenwon 12:30—Inside Sports On-beck Circle 12:9.>—Baseball 4:oo—Hopalong Cassidy 4:3o—Sunday TV Theater s:oo—Summer Incident s:39—The Silent Voice Bvenlag B:oo—Sfeet The Press B:Bo—Edwin Newman Reporting 7:oo—Overland Trail 8100—Music On Ice 9:9o—Chevy Show 10:00—Loretta Young Show Border Patrol 11:00—The Sunday Edition 11:15—Bewitched w MONDAY <>9:oo—Engineer John 9:3o—Editor's Desk * : “s—E aith to Give By 10:00—Dough Re Ml 10:30—Play Your Hunch }} : 22~I h * Prlce !• Rtoht 11:30 —Concentration After Men 13:00—John Siemer 13:10—The Weather 12:15—Farms and Farming Ul2— It Could Be You * I:oo—Truth Or Consequences 1:30 —Burns And Allen 2:oo—Queen For A Day S° retta T°“"K Theatre 3:oo—Young Dr. Malone B:3o—From These Roots 4:oo—The Thin Man 4:30—Boso Show To • —Yesterday’s Newsreel •=4*—Huntley-Brinkley Report 7:oo—Democratic Convention l? ; 90—-To Be Announced 11:00—News A Weather 11:15—Sports - , 11:30—Jack Paar WPTA-TV Channel 21 1 SATUBDA.Y AfterMea 11:30—Pro Football 12:00—Little Western 2:00-—Racing From 21 3:oo—Baseball , Evening «:00—Ptt’o Western 1 : 22 —I? Bengel Lancers 7:3o—Dick Clark B:oo—High Road • It", aV * U 12 89AY83 9:oo—Lawrence Welk 10:00—Jubilee U.S.A 10:80—Convention City 11:00—Club 21 13:00—Confidential File ■UND4.I AftenMnn 12:00—Herald of Truth 12:80—Oral Roberts 1:00—Baseball *:3o—Campaign Roundup 4:oo—Hopalong Cassidy I : !t~J* att F'* Funday FunaiM s:3o—Lone Ranger Evening B:oo—Comedy Time B:3o—Cisco Kid 7:oo—These Are The Men 7:Bo—Maverick lasr 9:3o—Alaskans 10:30—Johnny Staccato 11;00—-Affair in Ke no — B MONDAY Modern Almanac 12:00—Restless Gun V° Te That Bob I:o9—About Faces lil- Sherlock Holmes i ! 22~~ a X lB Owt B:M—Gale Storm 3 ,00 —Beef the Clock ?dt"Y h 0 You Trust — I s *® - Au’erfcaa Bandstgad Gallant i : ?2~A o P e Z®J* nd B*»cals Club T-M^&bye 1 ?:* ?:30“< T h”etn k e tM Rex>ort *-« ‘PuHHcal Convention I'l XM—Make Haste To Live MOVIES DIWB4N Is 'Yarxan’s Greatest Advenfvt JZL’ # ha !; 8:93 “Tonka" 10:00 « Midnite “Young As We Are" "Darby CGill A Little Peopl & „ Mon at 8:33 "Becai They re Young" at 10:15
Cardinals Win Over Monroe Friday Night The Decatur Cardinals blanked Monroe, 5-0, in an Adams county Pony League game Friday evening at the Adams Central diamond. The Cardinals scored the only run they needed la the fourth Inning on hits by Bob Mies, Tom Cowans and Terry Conrad. Another tallied in the fifth on a hit by Dave Anspaugh,*- a walk to Willie Putteet and Gred Ladd’s single. The Cardinals ived the game with three in the seventh on a single by Putteet, a double by Ladd and three bases on balls. Monroe obtained seven hits off Ed Minch, but the Decatur hurler kept them well scattered. Cardinals AB R H E McGill, lb 4 0 0 ! 0 Anspaugh, 2b 4 110 Putteet, If 2 110 Ladd, c 4 110 ?6S — 4 0 10 Mies, 3b — 3 .2 2 1 Cowans, cf 2 0 1 0 Schultz, cf .... 0 0 0 0 Conrad, rs 3 0 10 Bowman, rs 10 0 0 Minch, p 10 0 0 TOTALS 28 5 8 1 Monroe AB R H E Kaehr. If = 2 0 0 0 Ross, If 10 0 0 Egley, ss 4 0 2 0 Ehrsam, p 4 0 11 Shoaf, lb 3 0 0 0 Busse, c 3 0 10 Decker, 3b 2 0 2 0 Neuenschwaader, 2b 2 0 1 0 Brokaw, rs 10 0 0 Macy, rs >lO 0 0 Smith, rs 0 0 0 0 Minnich, cf 10 0 0 Blum, es ... 10 0 0 Welch, cf 1000 TOTALS 24 0 71 Score by Innings: Cardinals ...... 000 110 3—5 Monroe 000 000 o—o Runs batted in: Ladd, Lose, Conrad, Minch. Two-base hits: lose. Ladd. Sacrifice: Lose. Double plays: Ehrsam-Shoaf. Bases on balls: Minch 3, Ehrsam 7. Strikeouts: Minch 8, Ehrsam 5. Winner: Minch. Loser, Ehrsam. Fairway Will Play In Tourney Tonight The Fairway basketball team wiR play Fisher's of Columbia City in the Wolf Lake Merchant’s basketball tourney at 7:30 tonight. The team will leave from the Fairway at 6 o’clock. Fishers beat Decatur in the Mermaid festival by a 76-43 score. But since that time Decatur has added Bucky Walls, an outstanding basketball player. Walls did a fine all around job against Gouty’s of Fort Wayne, especially in holding Jimmy Rayl to 16 points. Fishers Is definitely one of the state’s best independent ball clubs, and it appears that Decatur has to play them the first game in every tourney or not play at all. However with the team members rounding into shape, the story should be a bit different than the last time.
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National League W L Pct. GB Pittsburgh 48 29 .623 — Milwaukee - 42 33 .560 5 1 Los Angeles .... 40 37 .519 8 St. Louis 40 38 .513 San Francisco .. 39 37 .313 8% Cincinnati 35 41 .461 12% Philadelphia ... 33 46 .418 18 Chicago 29 45 .392 17ft American League 4 W L Pot GB New York 45 28 .616 — Cleveland —... C 31 .575 3 Baltimore 45 36 .556 4 Chicago 42 34 .553 4ft Detroit 35 39 .473 10ft Washington ;... 35 39 .j<73loft Kansas City - 29 46 .387 17 Boston ... 28 48 .368 18ft FRIDAY’S RESULTS National League Philadelphia 6-3, Pittsburgh 5-8 (Ist game 10 innings) Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 3. St. Louis 7, San Francisco 1. Los Angeles 5, Chicago 3. American League Washington 9, Baltimore 5. Boston 8, New York 0. Chicago 4, Cleveland 1. Kansas City 5, Detroit 4 (13 innings). First AllSfar Game Monday In Kansas City KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPD—A cross section ot old veterans and new faces will make up the cast Monday when the All-Star baseball game makes its Kansas City debut in Municipal Stadium. For the first time in Kansas City’s long baseball history, first as a high-ranking minor league center and for the last six years the home of the American League Athletics, the game’s top stars will gather here for the drama which draws second billing only to the World Series. More than 31,000 are expected to see the game, which will begin at 3 p.m. e.d.t, when former American League President Will Harridge throws out the first ball. Millions more will watch it on nationwide television. The second All-Star game, an innovation last year, will ba played Wednesday in New York. Neither American League manager Al Lopez nor National League pilot Walt Alston, who managed last year’s pennant winners, has named his starting pitcher. But each has a 10-man mound staff that would have delighted any AllStar manager over the 27-year history of the game. Although the managers picked the pitchers and reserves for the All-Star team, the players themselves voted to select the starting lineup. Roger Maris, 25-year-old rightfielder for the New York Yankees, drew the mostt votes in bqth leagues with 198. Willie Mays, San Francisco’s centerfielder, was the leading choice in the National League with 193.
Dodgers Move Info Third By Win Over Cubs By JOE BAIGB United Presa International Who said the Dodgers and White Sox are dead? For a while it looked as if they were, but that hardly was the case today. Combining solid pitching and timely hitting, the Dodgers huffed and puffed their way to a 5-3 victory over the Chicago Cubs Friday night behind a nifty relief performance by Ed Hoebuck. And the White Sox, who lost out to the Dodgers in the World Series last fall, belted the Cleveland Indians, 4-1, with Frank Baumann, a former sore-arm case like Roebuck, tossing an impressive six-hitter. The Dodgers’ victory, their fifth in-a-row and 10th in the last 12 games, moved the defending world champions into third place in the National League race, eight games off Pittsburgh’s pace. They still have a long way to go to catch up, but there is a strong parallel in their recent surge to the drive they made at about this time last year after a similarily slow start. Beating Indians a Habit The White Sox, getting into a habit of beating the Cleveland Indians this season, found themselves in about the same spot in the American League race. Bogged down with both the pitching and hitting off, they finally got squared away and now have won three Straight and nine of their last 14. Today, they are only 4t4 games behind the league-leading New York Yankees and are running about two weeks ahead of last year’s pennant-winning pace. Ute Pirates, who suddenly have found the going a little rough, split a twi-night double-header with the Philadelphia Phillies, had gained a 6-5 victory in the opener: the second-place Milwaukee Braves defeated the Cincinnati Reds, 6-3, on a combined five-hittpr by Juan Pizarro and Don Piche, anti the St. Louis Cardinals routed the sagging San Francisco Giants, 7-1, in other National League games. The Boston Red Sox buried tile Yankees, 8-0, with Willie Tasby and Frank Malzone providing the hitting and Bill Monbouquette the pitching; the Washington Senators surprised the Baltimore Orioles, 9-5, and the Kansas City Athletics out-lasted the Detroit Tigers, 5-4, in 13 innings to round out the American League. Roebuck, who missed most of the 1959 season because of a sore arm, pitched six scoreless innings of relief after taking over for Roger Craig, and the Dodgers made sure his effort was not in vain. Farrell Wins Own Game With 36,057 fans — Philadelphia’s biggest crowd in three years—looking on, the Phils won the opener on relief pitcher Dick Farrell’s 10th inning single. The
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Results Are Listed In Softball League Ftebil Spouting upset second ptace Klenk’s Tuesday night by a 2-1 score to feature action in this week’s City softball league. Menter pitched a fine game for Preble with Wefel catching. Hoopengardner and Brown were the Klenks’ battery. In Friday's action Klenk’s defeated Tony's. 12-3. Hoopengardner and Rowden were Klenks’ battery. Lehrman and Beauchot hurled for Tony’s with Busse cataMng. . . > In the second game, McMillen defeated the Merchants by a 13-9 ecore. Harvey and Stevens did the chucking for McMillen with Grafton catching. Worden and Black were the- battery for the Merchants. Next week’s schedule finds Klenk’s playing the Merchants Tuesday night and the doubleheader Friday pits Klenk’s against McMillen in the first game and Preble against Tony’s in the nightcap. Standings: WL Pct. McMillen 71 .875 Klenk’s •_ 6 2 .750 Tony’s Tap 4 4 .500 Preble Spouting 2 6 .250 Merchants 17 .125 Man Arrested For Public Intoxication . Otto Johnson, 70, 1225 Patterson street, was arrested by city police on South 13th street at 8 p.m. Friday for public intoxication. No date has been set for trial as yet. nightcap was no contest as Friend (10-5) spaced seven hits and his mates pounded a trio of Philadelphia pitchers for 10 hits. Pizarro, sidelined for more than two weeks with a sore arm, had a two-hitter through eight innings when he suddenly lost his stuff in the ninth, but Piche bailed him out to choke off a ninth inning Cincinnati rally. Ray Sadecki, a rookie left-hand-er. doled (git just four hits to the Giants, who slipped into -fourth place, and Stan (The Man) Musial belted a two-run homer to lead the Cards to their victory. Baumann, who has suffered with arm miseries and wildness since coming up to the majors in 1955, had little trouble subduing the Indians, who didn’t help themselves by committing three errors. Monbouquette, named to the American League All-Star team, kept the Yankees off stride while Tasfoy and Malzone teed off with doubles in a big, six-run seventh inning rally. The Senators scored four unearned runs off starter and loser Jack Fisher to gain their fifth victory <in their last six games and hand the Orioles their third straight loss. Bill Tuttle belted a two-run single in the bottom of the 13th inningt o give the A’s a come-from-behind victory. The Tigers had moved ahead, 4-3, in the top of the frame on Charlie MakweU’s 13th homer.
Umpires Are Named On All-Star Games NEW YORK (DPI) — Jim Honochick, Nestor Cbylak, and John Stevens of the American League and Dusty Boggess, Tom Gorman and Vinnie Smith .of jthe National League today werefilmed to umpire the two All-Star baseball games next week. Honochick will start behind the plate in the first -game at Kansas City on Monday with Boggess switching behind the plate after four and a half innings. In the game at New York on Wednesday,
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Chylak and Gorman wifi divide the duties behind the plate, Chylak starting out there. * Stevens and Smith will be the foul lind umpires. Bill Veeck Released From Hospital Friday CHICAGO (UPI) — Bill Veeck, president of the Chicago White Sox, who underwent surgery on his right leg June 24, left today for a secret vacation spot. Veeck was released from Mercy Hospital Friday and doctors told the White Sox head “to stay away from the ball park.”
