Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 178, Decatur, Adams County, 29 July 1960 — Page 7

FRIDAY, JULY W, 10ft

jtfSPORTS'lfe —u. ~.

- Yankees Beat Indians Twice To Regain Lead W GABY KALE IWUrFrem International . The decisive home run punch of the New York Yankees’ secondary power hitters may provide the difference in their bid to regain the American League pennant. ’ - In Mickey Mantle. Roger Maris, Bill Skowron and Yogi Berra, Casey Stengel has a recognized front-line unit that leads the major leagues in home runs. But its the so-called second-lin-ers such as Tony Kubek and Cletis Boyer that Stengel must depend upon to keep the Yankees rolling when the big guys falter. Kubek and .Boyer connected in a first game surge against Cleveland Thursday night to give New York a 4-0 victory. The Yankees then completed the sweep of a twi-night doubleheader with a 9-2 nightcap triumph that enabled them to take the lead by three percentage points over the Chicago White Sox. Boston Beats Chicago Boston ousted. Chicago from first place, 4-2, Steve Barber issued a lone hit to Hank Bauer in the sixth inning as Baltimore beat Kansas City, 5-0, and Washington rallied in the ninth to defeat Detroit, 6-5, in other American' League games. In the National League, San Francisco edged Milwaukee, 3-2, in 10 innings, Philadelphia whipped Chicago, 3-2, and Los Angeles defeaterf Cincinnati, 8-6, on Frank Howard’s grand slam homer. Kubck’s two-run homer in the third inning of the opener, his ninth, provided Whitey Ford with •' his seventh win of the season. Ford had to depart after five innings because of a stomach disorder and Bobby Shantz mopped up with sluit-out relief pitching. Boyre beltea his eighth and Mantle powered his 26th on back to back drives in the sixth inning. Turley Wins Seventh Bob Turley also, picked up his ’ seventh triumph, although .he needed help from Ryne Duren over the last two innings of the ----- nightcap. Mantle. Berra and Bobby Richardson each had two hits {is the ’ Yahjcees extended their winning streak m Jour games. Haywood* Sullivan's two-run homer broke Chicago's wne-game vipjory hold over the Red Sox as Ibm Brower received the help of four douljle plays, in recording his i seventh win. Billy Pierce lost his sixth game although the White Sox outhit Boston. 10-7. Barber struck out IQ Kansas City batters in pitching his first major league shutout and winning his first game since May 29. Brooks Robinson and Roy Hansen provided Barber with his sixth success with, two-run homers in the first inning. Gene Woodling contributed another in the fifth. Bases-Loaded Error Washington scored three times in the ninth against Detroit, the final run coming across as Frank Bolling allowed Pete Whisenant's grounder to go through his legs for an error with the bases loaded. Harmon Killebrew hit his 10th homer for the Senators and Jim Lemon walloped his 26th to give reliever Chuck Stobbs his eighth victory. Felipe Alou and Juan Marichal, San Francisco's imports fronrtthe

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*-’~~- I * l iuui. 4 i mi '■..l'.'.'rtjgfe, j Littler Leading In Eastern Open BALTIMORE (UPI) — History was repeating itself today as Gene Littler led the field into the second round of the Eastern Open golf tournament with a seven-un-der-par 65. A’ year ago, the veteran pro from Singing Bids, Calif., led this tournament with the same first ' round score over the same Pine ■ Ridge municipal course. Littler, however, is hopeful that ' this year’s tournament will have . a different ending. In the 1959 Eastern Open, Gene led for three [ rounds but succumbed to a strong . stretch rally by Dave Ragan of , Orlando, Fla. Juan Rodriguez, a 24-year-old • newcomer from Puerto Rico, and ■ Jackie Burke of Kiamesha, Lake, , ■ N.Y., shared the runnerup spot > going into today’s second round i 1 with 67’s. Doug Ford and Lionel Hebert, a pair of former PGA champions, i were bracketed with George Bay- i , er and Bob Goalby at 68 while 1 i Ragan opened the defense of his I , title with a 71. Fifty players broke par on the 6,900-yard course in the first round. 1 No action has been taken as yet against Open champion Arnold Palmer, Sam Snead and Art Wall 1 Jr., who skipped the tournament ! to play exhibition matches in nearby PensjdVania areas this week- ! ■ end. — 1 "My protest still stands,” said * Irv Kovens, the tournament chairman. "It will be up to the PGA ! to take action against those in- ' volved.” Normal Weafher To Continue In State United Press International Forecasters indicated today that . the normal warm, summer weather which has been featured in Inj diana for the past week will stretch ; into the middle of next, week. The five-day outlook called for ' temperatures averaging near nor- ' mal highs of 83 to 90 and .normal ' lows of » to 72. with ‘'only small ■ fKunderhowers also were expect- ' changes.” Vjrdelyv scattered almost daily ed, just like the situation cJurjQg the past week. But rainfall will average only one-fourth of an inch I and scattered localities will get | more and some places will get little or no rain, the outlook said- . The forecast for the next couple of days was a revision of earlier i forecasts which called for a little j cooler weather today and possibly Saturday. Now the forecasters expect ' highs today ranging from the up- i per 80s to near 90, lows tonight . ranging from the mid 60s' to the low 70s, and highs Saturday ! around 90. Sunday will be con- , tinued humid. •— — * A.. . . . . Dominican Republic, combined to , drop Milwaukee two games be- ' hind thfc idle first place Pittsburgh Pirates. Alou’s third hit of the game bases loaded drove in ‘the winning run and I Marichal won his third straight. I He has allowed only three runs I since coming up to the Giants. ] Del Greco, Herrera Homer ] Bobby Del Greco and Pancho ; Herrera of the Phils homered for j the second straight game against > the Cubs and Dallas Green went the route for his second win. Southpaw Dick Ellsworth was tagged with his eighth loss. j Howard accounted for six Dodg- , er runs with his 16th homer and ! a bases-loaded single. Chuck Es- . segian also homered for Los An- 1 geles. Frank Robinson hit his 20th • while rookie Chico Cardenas belt- * ed his first major league homer 1 and Gordy Coleman his ’second 1 for the Reds. Larry Sherry took I over, for starter Roger Craig in S the fifth and won his eighth 1 game. \

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Second No*Hit Little League Game Thursday Team Standings W. L. Pct. Tigers ...... 10 3 .769 Indians 9 4 .692 Red Sox 7 5 .583 Senators 5 9 .357 White Sox 5 9 .357 Yankees ... 4 10 .286 The second* no-hitter in as many nights featured Thursday night’s double header in the Little League at Worthman field. And the no-hit game was turned in by another member of the Senators’ staff, which hurled Wednesday’s no-hitter. Last night it was Feasel, who held the White Sox without a safety and had a perfect game going until walking the second batter in the sixth inning. Wednesday night. Baker tossed a hitless game at the Indians. Last night’s opener saw the Tigers increase their league lead with an 8-2 victory over the Yankees, followed by the Senators’ 11-0 blanking of the White Sox. The Tigers jumped off to a fourrun lead in the first inning on three wlaks, three errors and a- double by Thomas. The Tigers scored three more in the third on hits by an infield out. The Yankees tallied both their runs m the fourth on J. Lose and T. Lose, an error and 1 hits- by Hakes, Kenny, Strickler and Spiegel. The Tigers counted their final run in the fifth on a single by J. Lose, who stole third and home. The Senators scored all the runs Feasel needed in the first inning of the nightcap on a walk, hits by Feasel and Meeks and an error. The Senators scored in every inning, climaxirig their big night with five runs in the fifth. The Senators had 13 hits, including three by Vian, and two each by August, Feasel and Baker. Seven doubles were included in their blows. Yankees AB R H E Keller, lb 2 0 0 2 Spiegel, rf’_... 2 0 1 Oi Sprunger, 2b 3 0 0 0 Spaulding, 3b 3 0 10 Hakes, ss 3 0 1„ 1 Sommer, c i Kenny, If ----- 3 110 Murray, cf 6 0 0 ()i Strickler, p 0 11 Milled, rs, lb (Pl 0| TOTALS 24 2 6 4 Tigers AB R H E Brown, ss .. 2 10 0 Zimmerman, rs 3 0 0 0 B. Bolinger, lb .... 2 V 1 0 0 J. Lose, 3b ...1 3 3 2 0 Halikowski, cf 2 2 0 0 Litchfield, cf 10 0 0 T. Lose, p ....3 1 1.0 T, Bolinger. If .... 10 0 0 J. Baker. If. 1. 0 0 0 Thomas, 2b 2 0 10 Hutker, If 0 0 0 0 Halberstadt, c .... 2 0 0 0 TOTALS 22 8 4 0 Score by innings: Yankees .....4...... 0 0 0.2 0 o—2 Tigers 4 0 3 0 1 x—B Runs batted in, Spiegel, T. Lose 2, T. Bolinger, Thomas. Two-base hits, J, Lose, Thomas. Three-base hits, T. Lose. Stolen bases, Strickler, J. Lose 2. Bases on balls, T. Lose 4, Strickler 3. Strikeouts, T. Lose 8, StricklerX Winder, T. Lose. Loser, Strickler. Umpires, Carey, Daniels. White Sox Ab R H E Myers, ss 3-001 Putteet, 3b 2 0 0 2 Greene, lb 2 0 0 0 Kable, c ... 2 0 0 0 J. Conrad, cf 2 0 0 0 Baker, 2b ■. 2 0 0 11 T. Miler,. If 1 0 0 0 < Kuhnle, If . 0 0 0 0 Fisher, rs 1..-. 1 0 0 0 Summers, rs ....’.... 0 0 0 0. T. Conrad, p 2 0 0 0 Winteregg, If 1 0 0 0' J. Miller, rs 0 .0 0 0 ’ TOTALS 18 0 0 4 < Senators AB R H E I August, c —... 4 1 2 0 Feasel, p 4 3 2 0: Baker, ss 3 12 0' Meeks, lb 4 0 10: Kohne, 3b . r .. 2 2 1 0 ( G; Pettibone, 2b 3 1 . 1- 0 : Knittie. cf'....2 0 JO -6 ' Catt.T 0-® 1 Vian, IT > 0 ' I 1

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“ffiUOR American League W L Pct. GB New York 52 37 .584 — Chicago 54 39 .581 — Baltimore 52 44 .542 3ft Cleveland 47 43 .522 sft Washington 45 45 .500 7ft Detroit ... 43 47 .478 9ft Boston Kansas City .... 34 55 .382 10 National League W L Pct. GB Pittsburgh 56 37 .598 — Milwaukee 53 38 .582 2 Los Angeles .... 50 41 .549 5 St. Louis 49 44 .527 7 San Francisco .. 47 43 .522 7ft Cincinnati 42 51 .452 14 Philadelphia .... 38 55 .409 18 Chicago 33 59 .359 22ft THURSDAY’S RESULTS American League Boston 4, Chicago 2. New York 4-9, Cleveland 0-2. Washington 6, Detroit 5. Baltimore 5, Kansas City 0. National League Philadelphia 3, Chicago 2. San Francisco 3, Milwaukee 2 (10 innings.) Los Angeles 8, Cincinnati 6. Only games scheduled. Ma Leqauc Leaders By United Press International National League Player A Club G. AB R. H. Pct. Mays, S. F. 91 349 72 120 .344 Larker, L. A. 74 222 31 75 .338 Ashburn, Chi. 92 343 66 111 .324 Groat, Pitts. 94 404 60 128 .317 Clmente, Pitts. 90 354 58 112 .316 Bruton, Mil. 89 386 67 .117 .303 White, St. L. 92 360 57 109 .303 Taylor, Phil. 87 351 41 106 .302 Skiner, Pitts. 90 349 64 105 .301 Cngham, Stl. 87 336 48 101 .301 American League Skwrn. N.Y. - 82_317-37.103_.325 Smith, Chi. 92 352 53 114 .324 Sievers, Chi. 73 247 56 79 .320 Minoso, Chi. 93 359 58 114 .318 Runnels, Bos. 87 331 55 104 .314 Asprmnte, Cle. 60 218 31 68 .312 Power, Clev. 84 328 42 102 .311 Gentile, Bal. 86 217 36 SI .309 Marris. N.Y. 86 317 71 97 .306 Geiger, Bos. 77 246 32 74 .301 Runs Batted In American League—Maris, Yankees 81; Skowron, Yankees 67;, Minoso, White Sojc 65; Mantle, Yankees 63; Lemon, Senators 62 National League — Banks. Cubs 81; Aarbn, Braves 73; Mays, Giants 73; Cepeda. Giants 64; Mathews, Braves 62. Home Runs - American League—Maxis, .Yankees 31; Mantle, Yankees 26; i Lemon, Senators 26: Colavito, ISggrs’2l; Skowron. Yankees 18. ! National League — Banks, Cubs 28; Aarbn. Braves 28: Mathews. BraVes 21; Mays. Giants 21; Boyer, Cards 20; Robinson, Reds 20. * Pitching American League—Coates, Yankees 9-2; Stobbs, Senators 8-2; Turley, Yankees 7-2; Staley, White Sox 9-4; Perry, Indians 11-5. National League — Williams, Dodgers 10-2; Roebuck, Dodgers 8-2; Farrell, Phils ,7-2; Buhl, Braves 10-3; Pizarro, Braves 6-2. Two Pitchers Are Recalled .By Phils ST. LOUIS (UPI) — Buffalo pitchers Al Neiger and Art Mahaffey donned Philadelphia Phililes uniforms today after being called up from the International League clnb. The Phillies, at the same time, released outright to Buffalo pitchers Humberto Robinson and Taylor Phillips. Robinson had an 0-4 record this season while Phillips, a southpaw, was 0-1. Kid Paret Signs To Fight Denny Moyer NEW YORK (UPI) — World welterweight champion Bennie (Kid> Paret of Cuba has signed for a non-title fight against Denny Moyer of Portland, Ore., Aug. 16. The 10-round bout will take at Madison Square Garden and will not be televised. Jauregui, rs 2 11 0 Caciano, rs 10 0 0 TOTALS td 11 13 0 Score by Innings: White Sox '.. 0 0 0 0 0 0-0 Senators 2 112 5 x—ll Runs batted in, Feasel 2, Baker, Meeks 2, Knittie, Vian, Jauregui. Two-base hits, August, Feasel 2, Baker, G. Pettibone, Vian, Jauregui. Double plays, Baker, Greene. Kuhnle. Bases on balls, Feasel 1, T. Conrad 2. Strikeouts, eFasel 12. T. Conlad 3. Winner, Feasel. Loser X. Cdnrad. Umpires, Daniels, Carey. 1

Red Sox Star Out For Year With Illness BOSTON (UPI) — The "help 1 wanted" sign was hanging in 1 right field at Fenway Park again i today after the Red Sox lost for the season the newest of their most promising young men. Outfielder Gary Geiger was i hospitalized Thursday with a col- ■ lapsed lung. The 24-year-old converted pitcher was stricken at the height of his campaign to become an entirely acceptable replacement for the retired Jackie Jengen, Geiger’s predecessor in right field. Search For Replacement The Red Sox were expected to stage a quiek beating of the bushes in search of another outfielder since Geiger’s loss slashed Boston's outer garden staff to just four, one of them the aging—nonetheless still powerful — Ted Williams. In addition, Geiger’s ailment deprived Manager Mike Higgins of perhaps his most promising young player, at least next to pitcher Bill Monbouquette. Geiger, who was in his second season with Boston after a year with Cleveland as both a pitcher and an outfielder, only Tuesday hiked his batting average to .301. But less than 24 hours after getting a home run and a single and drawing three walks to achieve > .300 for the first time, Geiger underwent surgery and was ruled out for the remainder of the sea--1 son. Doctors described his ailment as "spontaneous neumo--1 thorax” and said they could not ■ definitely determine what had caused the lung collapse. Hit By Wynn Speculation on the reason be--1 hind the ailment centered on a wayward pitch by the veteran 1 Chicago White Sox pitcher Early 1 Wynn in Tuesday night's game. Geiger was hit in the ribs by ' a Wynn pitch in the first inning, but shook off what appeared to ' be a minor injury and played the ' rest of the game, getting two hits, including a homer. Slater Martin Quits Pro Basketball Career ST. LOUIS (UPI) — Slater Martin, the smallest and oldest eager in the professiorfal basketball circuit, was off the players list to--day; Martin, sparkplug guard for the St. Louis Hawks, announced his ' retirement from the professional National Basketball Assn. Thursday. M RUDY FOR FUN WITH BUDGE-A-MATE CHECK CREDIT FOR YOUR holiday fling, or for that oxtro cash reserve, pack along Bvdge-A-Matle Checks. They’re the same as cash-and safer, too. Qualified persons may obtain up to SSOO worth of Budge-A-Matk Checks at our office. Just. j endorse and cash as ' Sat ewiS/B ■weTmlw •• JPxwWa only on the amount of money used. Slop In nowl St.

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Frederick Zwick Is Given Howe Award Frederick Zwick, son of Dr. and Mrs. Harold F. Zwick, 104 E. Rugg, Decatur, was among the members of the camp corps who recently received awards from Mr. Marx D. Merrell, camp director of the Howe Military school summer camp located at Cedar Lake near

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Howe. 2wick received a first-year speech award and a first-year campcraft award. The awards are based on the camper’s knowledge of the subject matter, his willingness to participate, and his ability to perform in the activity. The camp is of six weeks duration and is conducted each summer by personnel from the faculty of Howe Military School.

PAGE SEVEN

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