Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 198, Decatur, Adams County, 22 August 1963 — Page 7

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Football Jamboree Tuesday, Sept. 3 The draw for the four-team Bluffton jamboree will be held within the next few days, according to an announcement from Bluffton high •” school principal Fred Park this morning. Park has attempted to get together principals from the other three competing schools, Decatur, Berne and Hartford City high principal. Park explained, however, that if not the principal, a Hartford City representative will be secured in the next few days, and together with Park, Hugh J. Andrews of Decatur and Bryon Bunker of Berne, will hold the drawing for opponents in the jamboree. The four-team affair, which will kick off the season for all four schools entered, will begin at 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, Sept. 3, according to Park. The first two clubs drawn will square off at 7:30 in a 12-mlnute, “game,” with the other two teams ♦ playing the second quarter. Opponents will be switched for the final two quarters of the jamboree, in order that fans will see a regulation 48 minutes of football. Park explained that all tickets will be sl, for both adults and students, and that there will be an advance ticket sale, opening some time next week. International League Northern Division W. L. Pct. GB Syracuse 73 62 .541 — Buffalo 69 67 .507 4*4 Rochester ... 68 68 .500 5*4 Toronto 69 70 .493 6% Richmond ... 59 73 .447 12V4 Southern Division W. L. Pct. GB Atlanta 75 58 .564 — Indianapolis 74 59 .556 1 Arkansas 71 65 .522 5% Columbus 66 67, .496 B*4 Jacksonville.. 49 83 .371 25*4 Wednesday’s Results Columbus 4-0, Jacksonville 3-2. Atlanta 7, Indianapolis 3. Buffalo 6, Arkansas 4. Richmond 4-8, Rochester 3-3. Toronto 3, Syracuse 0.

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NBA To Televise 11 Season Games NEW YORK (UPD— The National Basketball Association NBA will televise 11 regular season games and its annual AllStar game on a special coast-to-coast network next season. The announcement of the planned “Game of the Week’’ television series was made today at the conclusion of the NBC’s annual summer meeting. The games will be telecast on 11 consecutive Thursday nights starting Jan. 2, 1964. They will be televised 'into all nine league cities, with the local site blacked out, and will be made available ( to television stations in other areas. The annual NBA All-Star game at Boston on Tuesday, Jan. 14, will be shown on the same special network. “Indications are good for a network approximating 60 cities,” said Fred Podesta, assistant to president Ned Irish of Madison Square Garden, who will be managing director of the NBA network. The appointment of a threeman committee to study the prospect of adding another NBA team for the 1964-65 season featured Wednesday’s meeting. “There has been some sentiment in . favor of adding another club to balance the league’s two divisions at five teams each,” said league president Maurice Podoloff, who retires Sept. 1 and will be successed by Walter Kennedy. Named by Podoloff to the expansion study committee (were owners Ben Kerner of the St. Louis Hawks and Bob Short of the Los Angeles Lakers and general manager Eddie Gottlieb of the San Francisco Warriors. Bowell Heads Youth Conservation Camp INDIANAPOLIS (UPD —David Bowell, Carmel, was named today as education and guidance director of Indiana’s first youth conservation camp, to be in operation at Harrison State Forest for two months starting Sept. 3. The camp is being sponsored by Governor Welsh and five state agencies as a project to help unemployed youths obtain work, somewhat in the manner of the old Civilian Conservation Corps of the 1930. Bowell is a former school principal and recently was discharged from military duty as a first lieutenant. He has been director of a Youth for Christ camp at Muscatatuck State Park and will be gin new duties with the conservation camp August 26. Jacques Leßoy, Indiana Youth Council director, announced the selection of Bowell. The council is one of several sponsoring agencies for the camp. Openings Remain In 9 Mixed Doubles League Anyone interested in a Sunday evening mixed doubles league is asked to call 3-2789, as several openings remain open for the league.

Yankees Sweep Double Header From Indians By MARTIN LADER UPI Sports Writer The New York Yankees are having a brawl as they merrily dance their way to another American League pennant. As for those skeptics who have protested the lack of fight in the junior circuit, they vyould have had a ball themselves hs/d they 'been at Yankee Stadium Wednesday night. In the best extra-mural scuffle of the season, New York first baseman Joe Pepitone precipitated a general melee between members of the Yankees and Cleveland Indians after being hit by a pitch thrown by Gary Bell in the eighth inning of the second game of a twi-night doubleheader. The ensuing scene somewhat resembled a barnyard dance as players grappled with anyone in teach. Pepitone, who earlier in the game had been hit by starter Barry Latman and then was brushed back by Bell before being hit again, was tossed out of the game when the umpires finally restored order. Bell received a warning from plate umpire •Loti Dimuro, which automatically calls for a SSO fine. Yanks Win Two Regarding the fight the Yankees are paid to win, they took both ends of the doubleheader by identical 3-1 scores. The sweep, engineered behind the fine pitching of Al Downing and Stan Williams, boosted New York into a 10-game lead over the - secondplace Chicago White Sox. In other American League contests, the Los Angeles Angels edged Baltimore, 3-2, in the second game of a twi-night doubleheader after the Orioles had taken the opener, 7-4; the White Sox topped the Boston Red Sox, 7-1; the Washington Senators beat the Kansas City Athletics, 5-1; and in a day contest the Minnesota Twins routed the Detroit Tigers, 12-1. ’’ ' The Los Angeles Dodgers extended their National League lead to 7*4 games over St. Louis by nipping the Cardinals, 2-1, in 16 innings: the Houston Colts tripped Cincinnati, 1-0; and in afternoon games Milwaukee defeated San Francisco, 6-2, and Pittsburgh edged Chicago, 7-6. New York and Philadelphia were postponed by rain. . .Provides Winning Margin Pepitone had better luck with his bat than with his fists since it was his two-run double in the first inning of the nightcap that provided Williams with his winning margin. Tom Tresh banged two doubles to figure in all the Yankee scoring in the opener. Steve Barber went only 5 2-3 innings in the first game for Baltimore but still received credit for his 18th victory, top figure in the league. The Orioles broke the game open with six runs in the second inning. A seventh-inning pinch-hit single by Bob Rodgers drove in the winning Los Angeles run in the second contest. \ Rookie Gary Peters won his ninth straight game for the White Sox. He received ample support from Tom McCraw with four hits and .Pete Ward, who had a homerun. Don Lock and Don Zimmer each blasted home runs and Ron Moeller picked up his - first win of the year for Washington although he needed relief help from veteran Ed Roebuck. The Twins scored eight runs in the fourth inning and added four more in the fifth to make it a downhill job for Camilo Pascual to gain his 16th victory against six defeats.

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Dodgers Beat Cardinals In . 16th Inning By MILTON RICHMAN UPI Sport# Writer Start icing up that champagne because -the pennant-bound Dodgers should be putting in their order any day now. They had to drown their sorrow in beer a year ago but times have changed and barring some unforeseen catastrophe they should appear in their first World Series since 1959 six weeks from now. To all intents and purposes, the Dodgers disposed of their last serious challengers Wednesday night when they beat the St. Louis Cardinals, 2-1, in a 16-in-ning thriller for their seventh straight victory. The triumph took them three hours and 43 minutes to achieve but it was worth it because they are now 7% games in front with little chance of being headed off again. A crowd of 54,125, largest of the year at*Chavez Ravine, saw the Dodgers prevail when rookie Ken McMullen doubled off Ron Taylor iff the 16th and came home on John Roseboro’s single along the left field line. Misses 20th Win Southpaw Sandy Koufax failed ir. his bid to become the majors’ first 20-game winner when he left after 12 innings with the score tied at 1-all. But he struck out 10 batters to raise his season total to 233, tops in the major leagues. St. Louis starter Curt Simmons departed’ after pitching 13 innings. Elsewhere in the National League, the skidding San Francisco Giants dropped their fifth straight and tumbled to within a half game of fourth place when they were beaten by the Milwaukee Braves, 6-2, Houston blanked Cincinnati, 1-0, and Pittsburgh topped Chicago, 7-6. The game between the Phillies and Mets was rained out. The Yankees went 10 games up in the American League with a pair of 3-1 victories over the Indians, the White Sox ripped the Red Sox, 7-1, the Twins crushed the Tigers, 12-1, the Senators beat the Athletics, 5-1, and the Orioles scored a 7-4 win over the Angels in their opener but lost the nighto cap, 3-2. Mathews Hits iKvo Eddie Mathews’ 17th and 18th homers off Giant starter Gaylora Perry paced a 14-hit attack that brought the Braves their fifth straight victory. Don Nottebart tossed the first shutout of his major league career and held the Reds to four hits in registering his eighth victory for the Colts. Jerry Lynch set a major league record for pinch,homers with the 15th of his career in the ninth inning to break a 6-aIl tie between the Pirates and Cubs. Horseshoe Pitching Contest At Paulding A horseshoe pitching contest, sponsored by the Paulding county agricultural society, will be held at the fairgrounds at Paulding, 0., Sunday, starting at 1 p.m. A free-for-all (round robin) contest will be held, With 32 to qualify, 16 in class A and 16 in class B. Entry fee will be $3. Qualifying rounds will be from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and from 8 a.m. to 12 noon Sunday. Yankee Hurler Out Balance Os Season NEW YORK (UPI) — LeftHander Bud Daley, on the disabled list since April 26, has been sent home for the remainder of the season by the New York Yankees. Daley, who had undergone surgery on his left shoulder, came up with a sore elbow after an exhibition appearance Monday night.

Major Leagues . I'j-iw I!'I 111 , I. u ■ American League „ W. L. Pct. GB New York 80 44 .645 Chicago 70 54 .565 10 Minnesota 69 55 .557 11 Baltimore 69 58 .543 12*4 Cleveland 61 66 .480 20*4 Boston 59 65 .476 21 Detroit 56 66 .459 23 Kansas City 56 67 .455 23*4 Los Angeles 58 70 .453 24 Washington 46 79 .368 Wednesday's Results Baltimore 7-2, Los Angeles 4-3. Minnesota 12, Detroit 1. New York 3-3, Cleveland 1-1. Chicago 7, Boston 1. Washington 5, Kansas City 1. National League W. L. Pct. GB Los Angeles 76 48 .613 — St. Louis .- 69 56 .552 San Francisco .... 68 57 .544 B\4 Philadelphia 69 59 .539 9 Milwaukee 66 60 .524 11 Cincinnati 68 62 .523 11 Chicago 64 61 .512 Pittsburgh 63 61 .508 13 Houston 47 80 .370 30*4 New York 40 86 .317 37 Wednesday's Results Pittsburgh 7, Chicago 6. Malwaukee 6, San Francisco 2. Los Angeles 2, St. Louis 1 (16 innings). Houston 1, Cincinnati 0. New York at Philadelphia, postponed, rain. Freshman Gridders To Practice Friday AU freshmen football players are asked to report for practice Friday, head coach Wally Yeoman said today. Freshmen should be dressed and on the field by 10 o’clock Friday morning, according to Yeoman. The same pratice time will be used throughout next week. Trap Shoots Planned Friday and Sunday The St. Mary’s and Blue Creek Conseravtion club wiU have a night trap shoot Friday evening. An afternoon shoot, beginning at 1 o’clock, will be held Sunday at the club grounds, located a mile west of Willshire. Five Leagues Will f Meet This Evening ■ Organization meetings are scheduled tonight at Villa Lanes for five [bowling leagues. The Major league will meet at 7:30 o'clock. Four • leagues scheduled to meet at 8 o’i clock at the Minor, Gold Crown, Classic, and Jack & JiU mixed league. There are still openings available in most leagues. AU team captains and league officers are asked to attend, also bowlers interested in joining any of these leagues. >

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White Sox Win Opening Game In Tournament The Decatur White Sox Little League team edged Uniondale in their first engagement in the Monroeville tournament, being held ; durnig Monroeville Days. Dave Knittie’s single brought home the game's only run in the second inning, as the Sox downed Uniondale by a 1-0 score behind the combined two-hit hurling of Rick Archer and Alan Hutker. The Sox scored the game’s only run in the second from when Ron Archer singled with one out. Rick Eloph walked, moving Archer to second, from where he scored on Knittie’s game-winning single. Archer started the game, and fanned nine and walked two. Hutker, who relieved when Uniondale threatened in the fifth struck out the five batters he faced. The White Sox now move into the second round of the tourney, playing Convoy, 0., at 6 o’clock Friday evening. Uniondale AB R H E Powell, 3b 3 0 2 0 Gould, 2b 1 0 0 0 Shutt, ss ..... 10 0 0 Netherlands, p 2 0 0 0 Rabbee, lb 2 0 0 0 Goffield, cf 2 0 0 0 K. Gould, c 2 0 0 0 Parr, If 2 0 0 0 Hunnicut, rs 2 0 0 0 TOTALS — 17 0 2 0 White Sox AB R H E ! Tester, c, 3b 2 0 0 0 Fisher, ss ... 2 0 0 0' Hutker, 3b, p 2 0 10 T. Schultz, cf 2 0 0 0 Ro. Arcrer, 1f,2 110 F. Schultz, If 0 0 0 0 Elaph, rs, c1 0 0 0 Knittie, 2b 2 0 10 Lutes, lb, rs 2 0 0 0 Ri. Archer, p, lb 2 0 0 0 TOTALS 17 1 3 0 Score by Innings: Uniondale 000 000—0 White Sox .... 010 OOx—l Urge Fans Pick Up Football Tickets Persons who held season tickets in the reserved section last season, are asked to pick up their tickets for this season within the next few days at Holthouse-on-the-Highway. Football season tickets went on sale last week for both students and adults. Persons who had reserved tickets last year may secure them again for this season, if they purchase them within the next few days. The tickets, for four games at Worthman Field, are priced at $2.50 for adults and $2 for students. The field scoreboard has been moved to the south for the season, as it was not easily seen from the reserved section in the past.

Mel Triplett Is Released By Cleveland By United Press International Met Trinlett. a veteran of eight National Football League seasons and once one of the game’s best ground-gainers, apparently has reached the end of his professional career. Only tftc rrfth draft choice of the New York Giants in 1955, Triplett went on to become the fifth leading rusher in team history before he was traded to the Minnesota Viking? in 1961. Earlier this year he was traded from the Vikings to the Cleveland Browns. It was the Browns who dropped the final axe on the aggressive, 31-year-old fullback, handing him his release Wednesday only two days before the squad was due to leave for a series of West Coast exhibition games. Released along with Triplett were Jim Bobbitt, George Thomas, Don Mullins, Stan Sczurek, Bob Butts and Walter Beach, thereby reducing the Cleveland roster to 44 players. In other National League camps: Buddy Parker gave his defensive backfield an extensive workout in preparation for Pittsburgh's game with the Baltimore Colts on Saturday ... rookie quarterback Gkynn Griffing worked out in the defensive backfield for the Giants although he will return to his regular position ! for Sunday’s game against Minnesota ... Green Bay quarter- | back Bart Starr connected on nine straight passes during a Packer exercise in which he was instructed to “score” from the 20yard line within two minutes . . . The San Francisco Forty Niners concentrated on their offense in preparing for Sunday’s meeting with Cleveland. In the American League camps: The San Diego Chargers and Houston Oilers both got in workouts for tonight’s, exhibition in Houston . . Denver coach Jack Faulkner said he was awaiting “further word’’ from the Buffalo officials in regard to a segregation problem in their proposed game in Winston-Salem, N.C., Aug. 31. . The New York Jets cut four players and placed fullback Merrill Douglas on the deferred list.

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Major league Leaders By United Press International National League Player A Club G.AB R. H. Pct. Groat, StL 125 505 66 171 .339 TDavis, LA 110 416 53 138 .387 Clmente, Pitt 115 450 64 146 Finson, Cin 130 524 78 168 .321 Gonzalz, Phil 126 462 69 148 .320 Aaron, Mil 125 489 91 154 .314 Wiliams, Chi 125 485 76 149 .307 Kuenn. SF 87 303 45 92 .304 Santo, Chi 125 491 62 148 .301 White, StL 125 510 88 153 .300 Wills, LA 102 414 84 134 .300 American League Player A Club G.AB R. H. Pct. Ystzmski, Bos 118 448 76 147 .328 Kaline, Det 116 449 75 143 .318 Rolins, Min 107 406 66 126 .310 Pearson, LA 121 452 66 137 .303 Wagner, LA 122 448 62 133 .297 Malzone, Bos 118 456 54 135 .296 Howard, NY 105 382 60 111 .291 Ward, Chi 124 486 63 138 .284 Hrshbergr, Chi 103 366 51 104 .284 Geiger. Bos 90 305 58 86 .282 Home Runs National League — McCovey, Giants 34; Aaron, Braves 32; Mays, Giants 30; White, Cards 22; Santo, Cubs 22. American League — Stuart, Red Sox 32; Killebrew, Twins 28; i Allison, Twins 26; Howard, Yanks 24; Wagner, Angels 23. Runs Batted In National League — Aaron, Braves. 104; White, Cards 91; Boyer, Cards 86; Pinson, Reds 83; Santo, Cubs 81. American League — Stuart, Red Sox 91; Kaline, Tigers 80; Wagner, Angels 75; Howard, Yanks 69; Ward, White Sox 69. Pitching National League — Perranoski, Dodgers 13-2; Mcßean, Pirates 13- Koufax, Dodgers 19-5; Maloney. Reds 18-5; Marichal, Giants 18-6; Spahn, Braves 15-5. American League — Radatz, Red Sox 12-4; Peters, White Sox 14- Bouton, Yanks 16-6; Pascual, Twins 16-6; Ford, Yanks I>7. DON'T SCRATCH THAT ITChT IN JUST 15 MINUTES, If the ttch needs scratching, ' your ««<• back at any drug store. You {■T 1 < i u V'. k ’ d , rv !'! K ITCH-ME-NOT ’ Bk ® hold. Itching quiets down. Antiseptic action kills germs to , help Rpcvd healing. Fine day or i I night for eczema, insect bites, j rirtgworm, foot Itch, other ziirface Store'*’ (Kohne Drug