Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 60, Number 194, Decatur, Adams County, 17 August 1962 — Page 7
FRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 1962
WU NEWS ———■ I I I IIM I I'll — Young Decatur Hurler Going Good At Selma
“Now pitching for Selma — Wolfe," is the announcement being heard more and more each day around the class D AlabamaFlorida league. The Wolfe heard on the announcement is the same Bill (Harley) Wolfe who graduated from Decatur high school in 1960— now doing hurling chores for the Selma, Ala., Cloverleafs, a farm club of the Cleveland Indians. After a sore arm curtailed him last season in the early weeks, and a disappointing first-half season this year, Wolfe received one of those badly needed •‘breaks'* that make ball players, and now may be headed for bigger and better leagues. After spending the past season and a half with Dubuque, Ia„ in the class D Midwest League, Wolfe
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DANCING — Featuring — ‘THE TEMPOS’ • Jerry Zimmerman—Trumpet • Johnny Hoffman—Piano • Kenny Wolfe — Guitar • Lloyd Spichiger — Drums SATURDAYS 9:30 P.M. -1:30 A.M. Victory Bar RAY and AL CONRAD
l S et Form No. 3 (Revised 19S9> NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES in the matter of determining the Tax Rates for the School Purposes of the School Corporation of Adams Central Community Schools, BUDGET CLASSIFICATION FOR. SCHOOL CORPORATION H.KC.AL •»•<». ™"> S Sm; r ?, l S’«r A “' , ' ,, “ - ’■ c ”“ ' “■ Tou 1 s Sl~» F.m„33,.;;: A. General Administration J. ud Plant 19 100 School Fund .. $187,855 BOND-FUND I M? d, nrs“ rr ’ & t 2 085 E Maintenance IW« TUITION FUND H. Debt Services23,o6B o S< /Arri Of k F Q * 2 ‘ 81 p Fixed Chartres 0,710 B. Instruction $328,6;>1 Total Bond Fund $23,068 2v Office of Supt. K Fixed (ha Activities 4,350 F. Fixed Charges 2,000 LEASE .FUND of Schools 15,160 G Auxiliary Activities «, G AuxHl Activities 300 F. Fixed Charges $31,000 11. Instruction 17,400 11. Debt Service 4 u Total bease Fund $31,000 ESTIMATE OF FUNDS TO BE RAISED FUNDS FOR EXPENSES TO Special Tuition Bond Lease DECEMBER Slat OF INCOMING TEARt Fun(l Fulld Fund Fund 1 ’ l T to a be? Ü Bi ret l9?3 Bt, ™chlßive r enBU $187,855 $331,151 $ 23,068 $ 31,000 2. Necessary expenditures, July 1 to Dec. 31 of present , year, to be made from appropriations 102,612 135 710 11 211 15 500 unexpended — ■— . > > , 3. Additional appropriations necessary to be made . 00 „ „ 8 July 1 to Dec 31 of present year 4. Outstanding Temporary Loans to be paid before Dec. 31 of present year—not included In line 2 or 3- ”■* 6 ' ?and tlmat6d EXPend ' tU . re . B . (Add „. nne . B . 295,167 ~ 504,861 34,279 46,500 FUNDS ON HANDS AND TO BE RECEIVED FROM SOURCES OTHER THAN PROPOSED TAX LEVYi rn-sn . ■ 6. Actual Balance, June 30th of present year — . 51, >bo 5J,<80 12,<06 1<,4J1 7. Taxes to be collected, present year (December , r Settlement),-- • - TP, UH if,l7a 14,200 8. Miscellaneous revenue to be received July 1 of present year to Dee. 31 of incoming year .. .. ...7" (Schedule on file) a. Special Taxes - nfr „ ,-L. * d ' b. All Other oi’Ju 9. Total Funds (Add lines 6,7, Ba, and 8b) 181,1,,4 418,414 23,.,J0 31,736 10. NET AMOUNT-REQUIRED TO BE RAISED FOR EXPENSES TO DEC. 31st OF ENSUING YEAR (Deduct line 9 from line 5)..... ? . — 114,333 86,447 10,889 14,761 — - 11. Operating balance (Not In exCess of expenses ;,... .... . .— . from Jan. 1 to Jupe 30, less miscellaneousrevenue for the «»me jmri nd ) : —~r: c 7777.7.7 42,548 44,475 11,684 16,838 13. AMOUNT TO BE RAISEL BY TAX LEVY (Add lines 10 and 11). ....- -156,8 M 130,922 22,573 “ 31,602 PROPOSED LEVIES , COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF TAXES COLLECTED ~ Not Taxable Property .r.■. 11,286,435 AND TO BE COLLECTED To Be Levy on Amount to FUNDS Collected Collected Collected Collected FUNDS • • Property Be Raised 1959 1960 1961 1962 Special ... :. ' ', $1.39 $156,881 Special $126,363 $134,290 $138,049 $141,247 Tuition 1.16 130,922 Tuition 121.291 104,249 112,153 115.891 Bond . .20 22.573 Bond 13,682 11,937 21,142 17,535 Lease 1 ’ .28 31,602 Lease 81,809 31,222 31,25 1 30,456 Total $341,978 —“ Veteran Memorial 21,8441 26,262 -20,222 ‘ (-19.152 N < Total $314,910 $301,900 $322,821 $315,281 Taxpayers appearing shall have a right to be heard thereon. After the tax levies have been determined and presented to the county auditor not later than two days prior to the second Monday in September, and the levy fixed by the county tax adjustment board, or on their failure so to do. by H»e county auditor, ten or more taxpayers feeling themselves aggrieved by such levies, may appeal to the state board of tax commissioners for further and final hearing thereon by filing a petition with the county auditor on or before the fourth Monday of September or on or before the tenth day after publication by the county auditor .of tax rates charged, whichever date is later, and the’state board of tax commissioners wi/l f.x a date for hearing in this county. — .._■ v.e . . - * Clark W. Smith, President Ed'Vin E. Coil. Secretary Martin Steiner, Treasurer Fred Kaehr , i ", ' J , Dan Habegger Elmer Inch , . » t ■ . Dated this 7 day of August, 1962 Elisha Merriman August 10’17 «> . ..D ■ Board of School Trustees
was transferred to the Alabama ’ team. Apparently, a change of transfer is now paying handsome dividends for both Wolfe and the climate did a lot of good and the - Selma Cloverleafs. ! Slow Start After posting a 2-0 record at . Dubuque in his tenure there, the ’ big righthander was transferred to Selma. He lost his first two ( starts there, before copping a 9-2 win in which he pitched the full ' nine innings and allowed only six ’ hits, and his fortunes have con- , tinued to rise since then. r After another route-going perI formance, in which he hurled another sixhitter, walked two and struck out six, the big fastballer 1 suddenly became the class of the J league’s bullpen crew. ' In one game, he came on in the seventh inning with two outs and the bases loaded, fanned the next hitter, and gave up only an infield hit in the last two frames, striking out four and protecting Selma’s lead. Reliever Deluxe In another contest, Wolfe came on with a runner on second and two out, struck out the next batter, and struck out the side in the ninth with only 10 pitches, preserving an 8-7 win. In this relief stint, the “flamethrowing righthander,” as the Selma newspapers describe him, did not throw a ball, throwing 12 strikes and having one pitch fouled off. The Decatur lad relieved in another game with the tying run on first and two out, and struck out the next batter to save another win for his team. At last report, he had won two and saved two of his team's last eight games. The Selma nine is last in a sixteam league, but was only four and one-half games out of second place Aug. 9. The club has 47 wins against 59 losses, for a .443 per-
Bill (Harley) Wolfe centage. In Local League Wolfe began his pitching career in Decatur, moved to the Pony with the Little League Yankees League Cardinals and pitched three years of Junior Legion baseball and four years of high school baseball. After facing a season and a half of disappointment and discouragement, the “flamethrower” now appears to be on the right track and on his way. Decatur has never had a hometown product in the major leagues, but who knows? There is an old saying that “there is a first time for everything.” Gold Crown League Will Meet Monday Another meeting of the Monday evening Gold Crown league will be held Monday. Again, all team captains and other men interested are asked to attend. At the present time, there are severalteam openings and a number of individual openings for this league. Time of the meeting has been scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Women Bowlers To Meet August 27 The Decatur women’s bowling association will hold its annual fall meeting Monday evening at 8 o’clock, August 27, at Villa Lanes, man, announced. league president, Mrs. Isabel BowAll league secretaries may get their supplies at this time. This meeting is open to all women bowlers in the Decatur association.
Come As You Are! I 4 SEASONS DINING ROOM at VILLA LANES U. S. 224 West SATURDAY—“Happy Hour” in Lounge 5:30 - 6:30 p. m. Billie Fisher at Piano Bar OPEN SUNDAY 11:00 a.m. - 8:00 p. m.
THE BBCATCT DAILt BUttfICRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Reds Staging Comeback To Get In Race By MILTON RICHMAN UPI Sports Writer Elated Fred Hutchinson had one word for Frank Robinson today: "Fantastic!” And since a word to the wise is sufficient, one Cincinnati hotel already has started accepting World Series reservations. Too premature? Don’t be so sure. The revitalized Reds, written off by everyone a month ago, have won 25 of their last 31 games. They’re within 5% games of the league-leading Los Angeles Dodgers and only three in back of the second-place San Francisco Giants. Robinson is the man behind the stick. He drove in four runs with his 30th and 31st homers Thursday night in a 7-1 victory over the Milwaukee Braves. His first homer with two on off loser Lew Burdette climaxed a six-run fifth inning rally and his second one at the expense of rookie Denny LeMaster in the eighth was his 15th in the last 22 games. Lead League In Hitting Along with everything else, Robinson leads the National League in hitting with a .344 average and he’s second in the circuit with 109 runs batted in. Jim Maloney registered Thursday night’s victory for Cincinnati, the only run off him coming on Lee Maye’s second inning homer. The Dodgers snapped their fivegame losing streak and upped their lead to games with a 7-3 triumph over the Pittsburgh Pirates after the Chicago Cubs blanked the Giants, 6-0. The St. Louis Cardinals beat the Houston Colts, 3-1, in the only other NL contest. In the American League, the Minnesota Twins defeated the New York Yankees, 9-8, in 10 innings, the Chicago White Sox clipped the Cleveland Indians, 116, and the Kansas City A’s scored their 13th consecutive victory over the Washington Senators, 4-2. Wills Stole Two Maury Wills and Doug Camilli formed a two-man wrecking crew for the Dodgers against the Pirates. Wills stole two bases, increas-: _ tofchis Jptal .to 62... collected three singles, scored one run and drove in another. Camilli, making his first start since June 24, knocked in four runs with a homer, single and sacrifice fly. Stan Williams, tagged for three runs in the first inning, settled down quickly to gain his 12th victory although Ron Perranoski relieved him in the eighth. Joe Gibbon was the loser. Don Cardwell stopped the Giants on six hits while the Cubs hopped on loser Billy Pierce and two relievers for 15 safeties, including three apiece by Ken Hubbs, George Altman and Dick Bertell. In addition to a triple and two singles, Hubbs appeared in his 59th consecutive game at second base without an error to add to the NL record he set Wednes-
Major Leagues National League W L Pct. GB Los Angeles 80 42 .556 — San Francisco — 77 44 .636 2% Cincinnati 74 47 .612 5% Pittsburgh 67 51 .568 11 St. Louis 66 55 .545 13% Milwaukee 64 58 .525 16 Philadelphia .... 57 66 .463 23% Chicago 45 76 .372 34% Houston 43 75 .364 35 New York .i..... 30 89 .252 48% Thursday’s Results Chicago 6, San Francisco 0. Los Angeles 7, Pittsburgh 3. Cincinnati 7, Milwaukee 1. St. Louis 3, Houston 1. Only games cheduled. American League W L Pct. GB New York 72 46 .610 — Los Angeles .... 68 53 .562 5% Minnesota *7 54 .554 6% Chicago 63 59 .516 11 Boston - 56 63 .471 16% Baltimore 58 62 .483 15 Cleveland 58 63 .479 15% Kansas City .... 55 66 .455 18% Washington 45 75 .375 28 Thursday’s Results Minnesota 9, New York 8 (10 innings) . Chicago 11, Cleveland 6. Kansas City 4, Washington 2. Only games scheduled. day. Jackson Won 10th Larry Jackson posted his 10th triumph for the Cardinals with a five-hitter o ver the Colts. Bill White paced the Cards’ six-hit attack with three singles and scored twice. Dick Farrell, ejected from the game in the eighth for disputing a call by rookie umpire Lee Weyer, suffered his 15th setback. Bernie Allen’s 10th inning single earned the Twins a split of their four-game series with the Yankees after Rich Rollins’ ninth inning single tied the score. Prior to Rollins’ blow, the Yanks had taken an 8-7 lead in the top of the ninth on Bobby Richardson’s grand-slam homer off starter Dick Stigman. Bob Allison and Clete Boyer also hit homers. Big Frank Sullivan, who hurled
Something you should think about I if you're about to buy a truck: j If all trucks were built the same way,. Value such as this has induced more B cost the same to keep up, were worth the ' people to invest in Chevrolet trucks every B same at trade-in .. . then probably the year since 1937. B price tag would be your only concern. T ,. , , . , B It can’t be, of course, because some trucks ” 1S can a ? 00< * * ime “ u y have more quality than others. And marks a modern new Chevrolet truck of quality are the real keys to low cost. T . . .... Chevrolet trucks, for example, have ate summer traditionally is the season double-wall construction, which gives £fj“Jground savings on a new Chev- B bodies and cabs „. re strength Cabs are | insulated against heat, cold and noise. A dealers are doubly anxious to put you B big part of road shock, which shortens j n t 0 a new vehicle in order to make way B truck life, is damped out by Chevrolet s for next year’s models. Coupled with the B suspension system; it also makes riding efficient performance a new Chevrolet S in the truck a pleasure. Pickup bodies , truck will give you, it seems evident that E and cabs are separated to eliminate stress you couldn’t buy at a better time, between them. Come in and take full advantage of it! 8 l-Z'g',/ CHEVROLET TRUCKS ’ Quality trucks always costless! | L-L...V 'iasr A n Chevrolet %-Ton Fleetside Pickup Chevrolet 2-Ton Platform See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer BILL ZOSS Chevrolet - Buick, Inc. 305 N. 13th Street DECATUR, INDIANA Phon. 3-3143 ’ — —,—__ „ , , „ . — „ C EMBREY okayJbut oowt here 1 it- ) okay you X msnsijinß| wors this all Tpm down. you sift- 1; AfOTL. ME r NOWnIETs ,Zs YOU'RE COMIN') HIM QUIET TH* G’.JYS I SAW IN I HIS 80AT OVER ANP SHOVE I P I '\WITH USL TOWN YESTERDAY! IXJT OUT IN DEEP WATER! J L Li ' YL." Z N a finally recalled A W- ZfeWf v MjHßyl N BE mTWi Mtl Ku iff W<£B
Major league Leaders By United Press International American League Player & Club G. AB R. H. Pct. Runnels, Bos 116 427 59 142 .333 Jimenez, KC 113 415 43 134 .323 Rollins, Minn 121 479 73 149 .311 Robinson, Chi 116 448 68 138 .308 Hinton, Was 109 377 52 116 .308 Smith, Chi 107 385 50 117 .304 Lumpe, KC 118 484 66 146 .302 Siebern, KC 121 447 81 135 .302 Rchrdson, NY 117 502 68 150 .299 Cunghm, Chi 113 398 71 119 .299 National League Robinson, Cin 121 454 104 156 .344 H.Aaron, Mil 120 460 96 156 .339 T.Davis, LA 120 489 87 165 .337 Musial, StL 97 306 42 103 .337 Clmente, Pitt 109 405 77 134 .331 Altman, Chi 113 420 62 138 329 F.Alou, SF 111 411 71 133 .324 Skinner, Pitt 111 399 70 128 .321 Davnport, SF 111 395 70 124 .314 Kuenn, SF 89 328 51 103 .314 Hpme Runs American League — Cash, Tigers 32; Killebrew, Twins 30; Wagner, Angels 28; Maris, Yanks; Gentile, Orioles and Colavito, Tigers all 26. National League — Mays, Giants 37; Robinson, Reds 31; H. Aaron, Braves 31; Banks, Cubs 31; Thomas, Mets 28. Runs Batted In American League — Killebrew, Twins 85; Siebern, Athletics 84; Wagner, Angels 83; Colavito, Tii gers 82; Rollins, Twins 80. i National League — T. Davis, I Dodgers 118; Robinson, Reds 109; ■ Mays, Giants 107; H. Aaron, I Braves 101; Howard, Dodgers 85. i Pitching American League — Mc- : Bride, Angels 11-4; Moore, Twins • 8-3; Ford, Yanks 13-5; Donovan, Indians 15-6; Aguirre, Tigers 10-5. National League — Purkey, : Reds 18-4; Drysdale, Dodgers : 21-6; Koufax, Dodgers 14-5; i Pierce, Giants 11-4; Sanford, Giants 16-6; Face, Pirates 8-3. [ 1 ' the 10th for the Twins, gained his ‘ third win without a loss while ■ Marshall Bridges, the Yankees’ . fifth pitcher, absorbed his first loss of the season after six victories. The loss cut the Yanks’
Meeting Monday Os Mixed Leagues A reorganizatiqnal meeting of the two mixed leagues of Villa Lanes will be held Monday evening at the local lanes. All team captains of both the Jack and Jill and the King and Queen leagues are urged to attend this important meeting, which will begin promptly at 7:30. An effort has been made to contact at least one member of each of last year’s teams, but some may have been missed. Because of the large number of couples de- 1 siring to join these leagues, last year's team members are urgently requested to attend the meeting if they intend on bowling this year, or to contact their league secretary or call Villa Lanes. For those couples unable to participate in the Sunday mixed lea-1 gue, a new early Saturday even-1 ing league is being organized. As with the Sunday groups, there will J be two separate leagues bowling,' with each league rolling e v e r y j other Saturday evening. Each league will be limited to 20 coup-1 les, oi- 10 teams, so that at least I six of the lanes will be available | for open bowling. Couples or teams interested in either of the above mentioned leagues should contact Dick or Gwen Mies immediately. One of the Saturday leagues is almost filled to capacity. lead to 5 games over the idle-second-place Los Angeles Angels.
Simeon J. Hain REPRESENTATIVE Lincoln National Life Insurance Co. tS Life • Group • Annuity • Mortgage • Hospitalization • Health & Accident Phone 3-3832
PAGE SEVEN
Tony Kubek Will Return To Short KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPD — i Tony Kubek will be back at his old shortstop position tonight for the New York Yankees against Kansas City. Manager Ralph Houk said rookie Tom Tresh, who filed in at shortstop during Kubek’s Army tour, will play left field. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ada — they get BIG results.
I SEE ~ BASEBALL WKJG-TV Ch. 33 with.., Tune7n SATURDAY August 18 — 1:30 p. m. San Francisco vs Milwaukee SUNDAY August 19 — 1:30 p. m. San Francisco vs Milwaukee
