Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 164, Decatur, Adams County, 13 July 1963 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
■•. iv. ■■- .■■HL . • Lisi More Results In Wildcat League The Aarons and Foxs were winners in the McMillen Kitty League play Friday morning, defeating the Colavitos, 14-9, and the Banks, 8-5, respectively. Brad Butler homered for the Banks. In the Northwest Kitty league, the As folders edged the Porters, 3- and the Steiners swamped the Soldners, 21-6. In Kat play at McMillen, the Bears edged the Panthers 5-4, and ‘he Leopards whipped the Cubs 7 5. Line scores: ® McMillen Kitty R H Aarons .. 53 0 1 o—9 4 Colavitos:. 6 3 5 0 x—l 4 12 Kaehr, Myers, Stevens and Burkhart; Franz, J. Kuhnle and Eash. R H Banks ... 0020 3— 5 5 Foxs -07 0 0 I—B 9 Dickerson afid Butler, Eichhorn and Patch. Northwest Kitty ' RHE Porters 00 11 o—2 5 6 Affolders 00 3 0 x—3 1 0 Gage and Butcher; Affolder and Razo. RHE Soldners ... 0 2 1 3— 6 5 5 Steiners 7 8 1 5—21 9 3 Mankey, Johnson and Soldner; Blythe and Huss. McMillen Kats Panthers 1 2 1 0 0 o—4 4 Bears ... 1 0 3 0 0 I—s 7 Keller, Niblick and Borchers; Kenney, Hower and Weldy. R H Leopards 00 3 3 I—< 7 5 Cubs 4001 0— 5 3 Inskeep and Mcßride; Ogg and Birch. Bears And Bobcats Are Winners Friday The Bears edged the Cubs by 4- score and the Bobcats whipped the Lions, 11-4, in a pair of McMillen Kat league games Friday. Lines scores: R H Bears 0201 1— 4 7 Cubs 10 0 11—3 4 Kenney, Hower and Weldy; Martin, Inskeep and Meßride. \ ~ ’ R H Bobcats 071 3 0 —ll 5 Lions 10102 — 4 4 Zwick, Lehman and Bracey; Magsamen, Rickord and Rickord Magsamen. Trade in a pood town — Decatur. JOIN THE REST BUILD WITH THE BEST! JUST CALL 3-3114>• FOR Y 0 S T READYMIX CONCRETE 10% Discount ON ALL READYMIX CONCRETE YOST GRAVEL READYMIX, INC. R.R. 1, Decatur, Ind.
Cardinals Win Shutout Over Geneva Friday Righthander Tom Lose tossed a five-inning no-hitter as the Decatur Cardinals walloped Geneva 11-0 in an Adams county Pony loop contest at Worthman Field Friday night. The contest was halted after five innings due to the league’s tenrun rule, after the Cardinals had bombed two Geneva pitchers for 11 runs and nine hits in four turns at bat. - , „ . Lose struck out 11 and walked only two in hurling the no-hitter, the first in Pany eague ploy this season. He struck out the side in the second and fifth innings. Geneva didn’t get a man on base until the fourth inning, when Lose walked Butcher. Lose doubled and scored in the first inning to give his team a onerun lead, which Ron Smith boosted to two runs in the second inning when he poked a long home run to right field with the bases empty. The Cards then erupted for s<x tallies in the third frame on three walks, a Geneva eror, singles by Rick Hullinger and Dave Baughn, and Steve Burger’s two-base hit. Lose’s triple, a walk to Burger, Gary Busse’s single and singles by Smith and Rich Caciano produced the final Cardinal runs in the fourth. Now standing at 5-5 for* the season, the Cardinals play host to Monmouth in the second game of a doubleheader at Worthman Field Monday evening. GENEVA AB R H E Butcher, ss, p 1 0 0 1 Armstrong, 3b 2 0 0 0 1 Buckingham, lb, If .... 2 0 0 0 Dubach, 2b, ss 2 0 0 0 Moser, c 2 0 0 0 Ziegler, cf 2 0 0 0 Habegger, p, lb 2 0 0 1 Thorton, rs, 2b ...J 0 0 0 Von Emon, If, rs 2 0 0 0 Totals 16 0 0 2 CARDINALS AB R H E Borror, 2b 2 10 0 Thomas, 2b 0 0 0 0 Lose, p 2 3 2 0 Burger, 3b .... 2 2 10 Busse, c ,2 2 10 Hullinger, ss 3 110 Smith, cf .... 3 111 Caciarfe, lb ... 3 111 Anderson, rs k. 2 0 0 0 Baughn, If ..2 0 10 — — ..Totals.2l 11 9 1 Score by Innings Geneva ... 000 00— 0 Cardinals .... 116 3x—ll Races Tonight At Karting Speedway Races will be held this evening at the Decatur Karting Association’s speedway, it was announced this morning. Time trials will begins at 7 o’clock. The track is located three and one-half miles south of Decatur on U.S. 27, and one-half mile west. Fred Hutchinson Is Given New Contract CINCINNATI, Ohio (UPD — Hatchet-faced Fred Hutchinson, armed with his second tWo-year contract to manage the Cincinnati Reds, hoped today for a repeat of the 1961 season when he and the Reds brought home the National League pennant. Hutchinson, 43, signed a twoyear contract on Aug. 23, 1961, and his Reds responded with the pennant, the first baseball championship in Cincinnati in two dec-> ades. . A
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Braves Score 11-8 Victory Over Monmouth £> "■ Home runs by Dave Alberding and Nick Smitley led a 12-hit attack which powered the Decatur Braves to an 11-8 win over Monmouth at the latter’s diatnond Friday evening in a county Pony League game. The victory was the fifth against four losses for the Braves, and Monmouth suffered its sixth loss against a pair of victories. The host tea mtook a three-run lead in the first inning on singles by Spiegel and Fuelling, a triple by Whitman, and a single by Schnepf. The Braves scored a run in the second inning and tied the contest in the third on singles by Kip Lutes, John August and Steve Magsmen, and a Monmouth error, and then erupted for four tallies in the fourth. - • Alberding Homers The first three runs of the inning scored on Alberding’s homer, scoring Tony Conrad and Gary Hammond,, who had singled, ahead of him. Monmouth cut the margin to 7-4 with a run in the fifth, but the Braves came back with two tallies in the sixth bn a two-run circuit clout by Smitley. Monmouth cut the margin again, to 9-7, in their half of the sixth with three runs on an error, a single by Whitman and a triple by Berning, but the Braves iced the win when they scored twice in the top of the seventh. Alberding’s triple and Jim Cass’ single brought home the final two Brave runs. BRAVES AB R H E Lutes, lb 5 119 Cass, 3b —— 5 111 Smitley, lf,p 4 2 1 0 Magsamen, rs 4 13 1 August, c 3 12 1 ■ Blythe, 2b 3 0 0 0 Haggerty, 2b 10 0 0 Conrad, p 3 110 Baker, If 0 0 0 0 Hammond, cf .... 3 2 10 Alberding, ss .... 4 2 2 1 Totals 35 11 12 4 MONMOUTH AB R H E D. Reintaing, 2b 4 2 2 0 Spiegel, cf 4 112 Fuelling, If 3 110 R. Reinking, lb 4, 0 1. 0 Aumann, If 1 0 0' 0 Schnepf, ss 2 0 10 Whitman, p 4 2 2 0 Fuhrman, ss 110 2 , Berning, 3b 3 110 Rice, c ........... 3 0 0 1 Scheumann, rs 2 0 0 1 Bertch, rflo 0 0 TotaJ; 32 8 9 6 .. .... Score by Innings .... ’ Braves ....... 012 402 2—ll ■ Monmouth 300 013 1— 8 I International League Northern Division W L Pct. GB i Syracuse .. 54 38 .587 — Buffalo 50 40 .556 3 Rochester 48 43 .527 6 Richmond 42 45 .483 4% Toronto ....i... 39 51 .433 15 Southern Division W L Pct. GB Atlanta 48 38 .558 — Indianapolis .... 47 41 .534 2 Arkansas 47 46 .506 4% ’ Columbus 38 49 .437 9% I Jacksonville .... 33 55 .375 16 Friday’s Results Richmond 5, Jacksonville 2 (19 innings). Atlanta 3, Arkansas 1. J Indianapolis 4, Syracuse 0. Buffalo 5, Toronto 2. , Columbus 7, Rochester 5.
* THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA ■■l .
Indians Hand White Sox Loss In Little League The Indians rallied for three runs in the last of the seventh inning Friday evening, to hand the White Sox a 3-2 defeat in the local Little League, snapping the Sox winning streak at 10 games. The loss cut the White Sox lead to one fuH game over the Indians, as the Sox now stand at 10-2 for the season and the Indians at 9-3. Singled by Jim Cochran, Mike Schnepf'and Dan Pierce, coupled with four Sox errors, produced the winning rally in the seventh, and spoiled a fine pitching job by Lefty Brett Lutes. - The contest was a duel between Lutes and righthander Mike Schnepf of the Indians. Schnepf gave up only two hits, striking out 11 and walking five in going the route for the win. Lutes had a two-hit shutout going into the seventh, when the Indians tallied their three runs, two of which were unearned. Whiffs 10 Lutes struck out 10 and didn’t issue a base on balls, while giving up five hits. Rick Archer broke up a scoreless contest in the fourth when he doubled and scored on an error, giving the Sox a one-run lead. Tyler Hill walked and eventually score din the fifth to boost the Sox lead to 2-0. Cochran started the winning ral- 1 ly with a single. After one out, Schnepf singled. Lutes fanned the next hitter but Pierce singled and then scored on an error on a ball hit by Mack Jones to score the winning run. WHITE SOX AB R H E Tester, c 2 0 0 1 F. Schultz, c 0 0 0 0 R. Fisher, ss 2 0 0 0 Winteregg ,cf 3 0 0 2 T. Schultz, rs— 2 0 10 Ro. Archer, If 3 0 0 0 Ri. Archer, lb 3 1 11 Smith, 3b .... 3 0 0 0 Hill, 2b 110 0 Mendez, 2b 1 0 0 0 '. Lutes, p .’ 1 0 0 0 1 __ _ 1 Totals 21 2 2*4 ( INDIANS AB R H E ‘ Curtin, c 3 0 0 0 > Schnepf, p 3 112' Pierce, ss 3 110 Jones, 3b3 0 0 0 Koenig, 2b - 2 0 10 Call, rs 10 0 0 M. Cochran, rfl 0 0 0 Steelei cf .. 2 0 0 0 Hower, If 10 0 0 J. Cochran, If 10 10 Knape, pr. 0 10 0 Totals 23 3 5 2 Score by Innings White Sox '. 000 110-2 Indians., 000 003—3 I . Sandy Koufax ; Pitches 15th • ! Win Os Season • -- By FRED DOWN - - DPI Sports Writer Sandy Koufax, the Los Angeles I Dodgers’ amazing fireballer, is enroute to becoming the first hurler in a quarter of a century to wear pitching’s triple crown. The feat—leading the league in ■ victories, won-lost percentage and earned run average—hasn’t been accomplished in the National League since 1938 and in the American League since 1934. Only 1 eight pitchers in modern history hive done it and they read like a page from baseball’s Hall of 1 Fame: Walter Johnson, Lefty ' Grove, Lefty Gomez, Carl Hubbell, Grover Cleveland Alexander, i Adolph Luque, Lon Warneke and i Bill Lee. Koufax, however, now leads the NL’s pitchers with 15 victories, ) an .833 percentage and a 1.63 earned run average and is on a hot streak of three consecutive shutouts and eight straight wins. The 27-year-old left-hander added another brilliant game ’to his 1963 collection Friday night when he beat the New York Mets, 6-0, ’ with a three-hitter. It was his ninth shutout of the season—more than any NL pitcher since Mort Cooper had 10 in 1942 and seven short of the league mark set by Alexander in 1916. Strikes Out 13 In addition to firing his third straight three - hitter, Koufax struck-out 13 batters to raise his league-leading total to 163. He thus leads NL pitchers in five key departments—shutouts and strikeouts plus the three that would qualify him for the rare triple crown. The Dodgers salted away Koufax’ latest triumph, increasing their first-place lead to five games and dealing the Mets their 13th straight loss, with a three-run burst in the first inning. Tommy Davis started the rally with a single and therew ere key doubles by Frank Howard and Ron Fairly in addition to an error and a walk. The Philadelphia Phillies enabled the Dodgers to pick ppg
■■ 1 ■ r- • Major Leagues National League * W L Pct. GB Los Angeles .... 53 33 .616 — San Francisco ... 49 W .557 5 St. Louis 48 39 .552 5% Chicago 47 39 .547 6 Cincinnati 47 42 .528 7% Milwaukee 44 42 .512 9 Pittsburgh 43 43 .500 10 Philadelphia 42 45 ,483 11% Houston 34 56 .378 21 New York 29 58 .333 24% Friday’s Results Los Angeles 6, New York 0. Philadelphia 7, San Francisco 5. Pittsburgh 2, Houston I. Chicago 4, Cincinnati 1. St. Louis 5, Milwaukee 3. American League W L Pct. GB New York 52 31 .627 — Boston 47 37 .560 5% Chicago ......—. 48 39 .552 6 Baltimore 49 40 .551 6 Cleveland 45 40 .529 8 Minnesota 45 41 .523 8% Los Angeles 41 48 .461 14 Kansas City .... 36 47 .434 16 Detroit .... 36 48 .429 16% Washington 30 58 .341 24% Friday's Results Boston 3, Minnesota 2 (12 innings). Detroit 7, Chicago 6 (12 innings). New York 4, Los Angeles 3. Baltimore 4, Washington 3. Cleveland at Kansas City, postponed, rain. Cardinals Play At Fort Wayne Sunday The Decatur Cardinals, members of the Adams County Pony League, will travel to Fort Wayne Sunday for an exhibition game with Post 148 of that city. The contest will be played at Weisser Park, starting at 2:30 p.m. The Cardinals defeated the same club by a 20-11 score at Decatur last week. full game when they beat the San Francisco Giants, 7-5, the St. Louis Cardinals defeated the Milwaukee Braves, 5-3, the Chicago Cubs topped the Cincinnati Reds, 4-1, and the Pittsburgh Pirates nipped the Houston Colts, 2-1, in other NL games. In the American League, New York edged out the Los Angeles Angels, 4-3, Boston downed Minneaota, 3-2, Detroit beat Chicago, 7-4; and Baltimore topped Washington, 4-3. Sievers Leads Attack Roy Sivers’ three-run double and two run-producing hits by Don Demeter helped the Phillies pin a ninth defeat on ex-team-mate Jack Sanford despite Willie McCovey’s 25th and 26th homers of the season for the Giants. Art Mahaffey, aided by Jack Baldschun’s relief, won his sixth victory. Harvey Kuenn also hit a homer for San Francisco. Gary Kolb's two-run homer keynoted a four-run third-inning rally which carried Bob Gibson to his ninth win for the Cardinals. Gene Oliver and Mack Jones homered for the Braves. Bob Buhl gained his first win over the Reds since 1957 behind a 13-hit Cub attack that included Ernie Banks’ 16th homer of the year and the 351st of his career. Steve Boros, Banks, Ken Hubbs and Dick Bertell had two hits each for the Cubs. Dick Schofield’s sixth-inning homer touched off a two-run rally which gave Don Schwall his fifth victory. Bob Bruce lost his 11th game for the Colts. It you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results. DRIVE IN THEATER SUN. & MON. 2 Technicolor Comedies! “LOVE IS A BALL” Glenn Ford, Hope Lange and Manrice Chevalier : & “FOLLOW THE BOYS” Connie Stevens, Russ Tamblyn -0 TONITE — “EL CID" — Color 1 Chariton Heaton, Sophia Loren Huge Cast—3 Hr. Version.
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Berra Homers To Lead Yanks To4-3Vfin By FRED DOWN DPI Sports Writer Yogi Berra is doing it from memory—but what a memory! He’s 38 years old and on his last legs as an active player but he’s still the pride of the modern New York Yankees when the team is in need. Like when $172,000 worth of sluggers like Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris are out of the lineup. Berra stepped in Friday night to show the young Yankee lions how the old pros do it when he exploded a three-run homer off Ken Bcßride that produced a 4-3 victory over the Los Angeles Angels and boosted their American League lead to 5% games. It was Yogi’s fifth homer of the seasoii and the 355th of his career and it enabled Ralph Terry to square his record at 9-9. It also sent the Angels down to their 10th straight loss and suggested to manager Bill Rigney that jumping off the nearest bridge might be preferable to pitching to Yogi with runners aboard and a game to be won. Two-Out Homer Berra’s homer came in the sixth inning with two out and Bobby Richardson and Tom Tresh aboard. Until then the young Yankees had been mesmerized by Mcßride, who had beaten them six straight times and held them to two singles in this game. The Angels rallied for two runs in the last of the ninth but relief pitcher Hal Reniff hung on to preserve the Yankees* third straight win and their 11th in their last 14 times. The Boston Red Sox edged the Minnesota Twins, 3-2, in 12 innings. The Detroit Tigers shaded the Chicago White Sox, 7-6, also in 12 innings, and the Baltimore Orioles topped the Washington Senators, 4-3, in other AL action. Cleveland at Kansas City was rained out. In the National League, Los Angeles defeated New York, 6-6, Philadelphia topped San Francisco, 7-5, Pittsburgh nipped Houston, 2-I,' Chicago beat Cincinnati, 4-1, and St. Louis won over Milwaukee, 5-3. “-Monster” Wins 10th “Monster” Dick Radatz shut out the Twins for the final four
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Dr. On Television Tuesday Dr. Frederick Shroyer, of California, son of Mr. and Mrs. B. F. - Shroyer of Decatur, will be interviewed on the Ann Cotone show on WANE-TV, Fort Wayne, Tuesinnings and won his 10th game of the season when Carl Yaetrzemski homered off Ray Moore in the Red Sox* 12th- Rich Rollins and Harmon Killebrew homered for the Twins. The win moved the Red Sox past the White Sox into second place. • The Tigers scored their 12-in-ning decision over the White Sox i when Rocky Colavito doubled and scored on a single by Bill Free- ! han. Terry Fox, who shut out the White Sox on two hits for the ; last four ihnings, received credit for his fourth win while Jim Bros- ■ nan suffered his fifth loss. Ron Hansen, Pete Ward and Jim Lan- ; dis homered for the White Sox. Johnny Orsino’s two-run pinthi inning homer gave the Orioles their eighth straight win over the . Senators and relief pitcher Wes Stock his seventh victory, of ■ the i season without a loss. Don Lock i homered for the Senators,
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