Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 128, Decatur, Adams County, 29 May 1964 — Page 7

FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1964 * *

I Chicken Barbecue | At New Golf Club Approximately 125 members and friends of the Wabash Valley Recreation, Inc. met Thursday evening at the new golf club Rainbow Lake for a chicken barbecue. The chicken was prepared by the staff of the Globe Hatchery, Berne. The Wabash Valley entertainers provided the dinner music. Followfhg the supper a film of golfing, ‘Royal Singapore’ was shown and a business meeting was held.' President of the group, which has 130 members, is Carl Luginbill of Berne. The new golf course is nearing completion and willl open June 13. Playing memberships are now available. The pro-manager of the course is Hank Culp.

CARRY OUT • BAKED BEANS • Potato Salad • Cole Slaw • Bean Salad • Corn Relish • Chicken In The Coop • Bar-B-Q Ribs Always Available at FAIRWAY each one a culinary triumph. "hne LAKE OPENING Saturday, May 30 Memorial Day SWIMMING CONCESSIONS PICNIC GROUND Registered Life Guards POOL HOURS 12 to 9 p. m. Daily and Sunday 3% Miles West off Berne on 118 Glenn M. Scholer, Mgr. > Phone 5-5140

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| Varied Types Os Equipment In 500-Mile —Every racing bug will have a rooting interest Saturday in the annual 500-mile auto race, with the most varied types of equipment in history to offer something this year for every fan. Races within the race will match more rear engine cars than ever against the almost standard roadsters, and there will be three types of engines, the Offenhauser, pacemaker at the Speedway for more than 20 years. Fords and three supercharged Novis. Die Fords, however, will be targets for both rear engine machines as well as the roadsters. Seven rear engine cars, including all three in the front row, boast Ford engines. Other Cars Against them will be five rear engine cars powered by the four-cylinder Offenhauser motors, three front engine Novis, and 18 Offenhauser roadsters. There was support among the fans for each type of car, although there was doubt that the Novis could last the distance. Rarely in the years that these machines have been at the track has one managed to finish. But their super power has built up a following as large as that of the Ossie and the Ford. Die race could develop rapidly into a battle between the Fords and the roadsters. Jimmy Clark of Scotland starts on the pole, the inside of the first of 11 rows of three cars each in the racing lineup, with Bobby Marshman and Rodger Ward beside him, each in fear engine Ford machines. Right Behind But immediately behind Clark will be Parnelli Jones, who won last year with record speed of 143.137 miles per hour after setting both one and four lap qualifying records. Another former winner, A. J. Foyt, will be beside Jones. Both will drive standard roadsters and both rejected rear engine machines in favor of their present rides. Thus it was expected the front row of rear engine jobs and the two top standard-breds along with Dan Gurney, in the second row in another rear engine Ford, would blast off with the starting bomb to try for the $l5O per lap prize to the leader. A record crowd of more than 300,000 was expected. even though the event will be on closed circuit television to theaters and arenas from coast to coast.

Mays Homers ToPutGiants Back In Lead By GEORGE C. LANGFORD UPI Sports Writer Just exactly what’s in those sleeping pills Willie Mays is taking? Whatever the Ingredients, they’re giving the rest of the National League insomnia, and they have “relaxed” Willie on a home run course which will reach a fantastic total of 75 this season, if maintained. Willie began taking the little capsules this spring to cure an insomnia problem of his own. Now he’s a continuous bad dream for opposing pitchers. For example, take the nightmare Curt Simmons had Thursday night. The St. Louis Cardinal southpaw was cruising along toward a five - hit shutout with two outs in the eighth inning and a 1-0 lead. Hits 18th Homer Enter Willie with a teammate on first base and exit the ball into the leftfield bleachers for a two- run homer, his 18th of the season. Three Giant relievers struggled over the final two innings tb protect the 2-1 victory for starter Bob Hendley (4-3), which reinstated San Francisco in first place. Currently, Mays is 13 games ahead of the pace Roger Maris set when he hit a record 61home runs in 1961, and he is nine games ahead of Babe Ruth’s 1927 clip, when the Babe stroked 60. The NL record is 56 established by Jack Wilson of the Cubs in 1930. Pittsburgh bumped Philadelphia out of first place with a 6-5 victory over the Phillies; Houston upset Milwaukee, 4-2; the Chicago Cubs blanked the New York Mets, 2-0, and the Cincinnati Reds and Los Angeles Dodgers struggled to a 2-2 tie in a 17 "- inning marathon halted after four hours and 58 minutes by the NL curfew. One AL Game Kansas City stopped the Chicago White Sox, 4-1, in the lone American League game scheduled. Dick Schofield singled with two out in the ninth inning to score Jim Pagliaroni with the winning run for the Pirates, who tagged five Phillie hurlers for 15 hits. Jack Baldschun (2-1) was the loser and Al McBean, fifth Pirate pitcher, won his second game without a loss. Danny Cater and Gus Diandos each drove in two runs for Philadelphia and Manny Mota accounted for two Pittsburgh tallies., Hal Woodeshick of the Colts registered his ninth save of the season, and no - hit loser Ken Johnson picked up his fifth victory, outpitching the Braves’ Warren Spahn (4-4). Johnson and Spahn were locked in—a 1-1 duel until the Colts erupted . for three runs in the eighth on a walk, bunt and three singles. Walt Bond of the Colts hit the only homer, hi s eighth. Jackson Blanks M ets Larry Jackson (6-4) allowed three hits — all to Joe Christopher — while shutting out the Mets, 2-0. Billy Williams hit his 11th home run to raise his league - leading batting average to .397. Galen Cisco <2-4) gave up only one earned run in defeat. Wayne Causey drove in three runs and Orlando Pena scattered six hits to give Kansas City its first win in the last five games. Juan Pizarro (5-1) absorbed his first loss but the White Sox managed to retain their grip on first place by .030 percentage points. Pena has won six of Kansas City’s 13

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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA

Major Leagues

AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct GB Chicago 20 11 .645 — Baltimore —— 24 15 .615 — New York 20 14 .588 1% Minnesota 22 18 .550 2% Cleveland 18 15 .545 3 Boston 20 19 .513 4 Detroit 18 20 . 474 Washington .... 18 26 .409 8% Los Angeles 16 26 .381 9% Kansas City ... 13 25 .361 10% Thursday’s Results Kansas City 4, Chicago 1. Only game scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB San Francisco.. 24 15 .615 — Philadelphia — 22 15 .595 1 Pittsburgh 23 18 .561 2 Milwaukeeu. 22 18 .?50 2% St. Louis 22 19 .537 3 Cincinnati 20 18 .526 3% Houston 21 23 .477 5% Los Angeles 18 23 .439 7 Chicago 16 21 .432 7 New York 12 20 .286 13% Thursday’s Results Pittsburgh 6, Philadelphia 5. San Francisco 2, St. Louis 1. Chicago 2, New York 0. Houston 4, Milwaukee 2. Cincinnati 2, Los Angeles 2 called 17 innings, tie, curfew.

Major League Leaders By United Preu International

National League G. AB R. H. Pct. Williams, Chi 37 141 28 56 .397 Mays, SF 38 142 38 55 .387 Clmnte, Pitts 40 168 30 63 .375 Torre, Mil 39 151 29 56 .371 Stargell, Pitts 25 101 19 35 .347 Boyer, St.L 41 157 24 54 .344 Chrstpher, NY 34 77 12 25 .325 Johnson, Cin 28 77 14 25 .325 Cardenas, Cin 39 142 21 46 .324 Bailey, Pitts 34113 12 36 .319 Freese, , Pitts 30 91 14 29 .319 American League Oliva, Minn 39 168 34 64 .381 Hinton, Wash 42 161 21 57 .354 Bressoud, Bos 39 156 26 55 .353 Freehan, Det 32110 17 37 .336 Fregosi, LA 33 107 22 36 .336 Maintle, NY 33 99 19 32 .323 Maris, NY 22 82 15 26 .317 Howard, NY 33114 15 36 .316 Robnsn, Balt 39 147 22 45 .306 Rchrdson, NY 35 152 21 46 .303 Home Runs National League — Mays, Giants 18; Howard, Dodgers 13; Williams, Cubs' 11; Torre, Brave's 10; Allen, Phils 9. American League Killebrew, Twins 13; Colavito, Athletics 12; Allison, Twins 11; Hall, Twins 10; Oliva, Twins 10. Runs Batted In National League — Mays, Giants 42; Boyer, Cards 33; Torre, Braves 31; Howard, Dodgers 29; Stargell, Pirates 28. American League — Stuart, Red Sox 32; Wagner, Indians 32; Cash, Tigers 31; Colavito, Athletics; Hall Twins; Oliva, Twins; Killebrew, Twins all 29. Pitching National League — Farrell, Colts .7-1; Marichal, Giants 7-1; Bruce, Colts 6-1; Gibson, cards 4-1; Gibbon, Pirates; O’Toole, Reds; Ellis, Reds all 3-1. American League — Bunker, Orioles 5-0; Hall, Orioles 4-0; Hamilton,, Yanks 3-0; Pizarro, White Sox 5-1; Lamabe, Red Sox 5-1. • . victories. The Dodgers broke a scoreless deadlock in the 12th with three hits, a walk; and a throwing error by starter Jim Maloney. But the Reds bounced back in the last of the 12th to tie the game on Vada Pinson’s double and singles by Frank Robinson, Leo Cardenas and John Edwards. Each team used five pitchers in the longest game of the season.

Monmouth's Summer Recreation Program

Don Elder, head coach at the Monmouth high school, and director of the Monmouth summer recreation program, today announced schedules for the high school team, the Pony League team and the Youth League, Rosters of the Pony and Youth teams were also announced by Elder. \ The Eagles will play in the eastern division of the Eastern Indiana high school summer league. Other teams in this division are Adams Central, Berne, Geneva, Madison Twp., Pennville and Portland. At the close of the season, the champion will meet the western division champ, with the league winner then competing against other summer league champs. Western division teams are Dunkirk, Hartford City, Jefferson Twp., Marion Bennett, Mississinewa, Montpelier, Redkey and Van Buren. The high school team will play all its home games at Worthman field, with one exception. The high school schedule follows: June 3 — Madison Twp., double header at Worthman, 6 and 8 p.m. June 6 — Pennvillel at Monmounth (1 p.m.) June 10 — Adams Central at Worthman (8 p.m.) June 13 — Portland at Worthman, double header (1 and 3 p. m.) June 19 — at Berne. June 24 — Geneva at Worthman field (8 p.m.) June 29 — At Adams Central (8 p.m.) July 1— at Pennville (3 p.m.) July 15 — Berne at Worthman (8 p.m.) July 17 — at Geneva. Pony League The Monmouth Pony league will be coached by Ralph Berning. The team roster is: team will be coached by Ralph Ned Nuerge, Dave Meyers, Jerry Hakes, Larry Fuhrman, Ron Journay, Brennan Miller and Kim Krueckeberg (13 years old); Dennis Erxleben, Don i Scheumann, Rick Bertsch, John Fuelling, -Dennis ERttgttj Jerry Moses, Leon Berning and Tim Irwin (14 years old). The league schedule (home games at 6 p.m.): June I—Berne at Monmouth. June s—Cubs at Decatur. June 12—at Geneva. June 15—Braves at Decatur— June 19—Decatur Cardinals at Monmouth. June 22—Adams Central at Monmouth. June 26—at Berne. June 29—Decatur Cubs at Monmouth. July 6—Geneva at Monmouth. July 10—Decatur Braves at Monmouth. July 13—Cardinals at Decatur. July 17—at Adams Central. Youth League Four teams have been organiz-

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ed for the Youth League, which will play on Tuesday and Thursday evenings at 6 o’clock. The team rosters are: Yanks — G. Luginbill, R. Adams, Braun, M. Boerger, Spiegel, R. Mahan, M. Mahan, B. Daniels, S. Luginbiß, Lynn Boerger, Phil Kolter, Dan Garwood, Rich Johnson, Rex Breiner, Kirk Daniels, Lonnie Cassey. Braves — M. Werling, C. Durr, Jerry Fuelling, Greg Fuelling, Arbold Hlrschy, Roger Hirschy, Dan Shoaf, D. DeLong, Kyle Foreman, Mike Geyer, R. Spencer, Steve Schott, Fred Sauer, Ken Sauer, Kevin Geyer, Rich Winteregg. Cards—R. Roahrig, M. Brown, Steve Schrock, Korban Schrock, Mike Strouse, Kenny Strouse, Ronnie Irwin, S. Whitman, Ronnie Dixon, Tim Maxwell, Mike Selking, David Lehrman, Jim Reinking, Randy Wefel, Dan Meyers, Steve Gilbert, Brad Schrock. Tigers — R. Joumay, K. Wigger, B. Berning, K. Elder, D. Blume, Brice Miller, Mark Brown, T. Strahm, Jerry Hosier, Chuck Schnepf, John Nidlinger, Gary Getting, Ron Getting, Tim Auman, Joe Garner. The league schedule: June 2, Braves vs Yanks; June 4, Cards vs Tigers; June 9, Braves vs Tigers; June 11, Cards vs Yanks; June 16, Yanks vs Tigers; June 18, Cards- vs Braves; June 23, Braves vs Yanks; June 25, Cards vs Tigers; June 30, Braves vs Tigers; July 2, Cards vs Yanks; July 7, Yanks vs Tigers; July 9, Cards vs Braves; July 14, Tourney (team 1 vs team 3: July 16, Tourney team 2 vs team 4); July 21, Tourney, losers; July 23, Tourney, winners.

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Two Brothers Loses To Hoagland Team Three Kings’of Hoagland scored three times in the opening inning and went on to post a 5-2 victory over Two Brothers of Decatur in a Vim softball league game at Hoagland Thursday evening. The loss was the second in three outings for Two Brothers in Vim league play. Errors played a big part in the victory for Three Kings as the normally strong defensive local team contributed seven miscues to aid the Hoagland scoring. The winners jumped into a three-run lead in the initial frame on three Decatur errors, after a pair of singles by the first two hitters. Two singles and an error added their final two runs in the third. Two Brothers broke into the scoring column in the fifth 1 when Clase walked and Conrad reached base on a fielder’s choice. Both rode home on a single’ by Gibbons. Line score: RHE Two Brothers 000 020 o—2 3 7 Three Kings „ 302 000 x—s 6 2 Lin and Huston; Laisure and Kirchofer. Q Jani Lyn Winner In League Roll-off The women’s Uptown league held its season roll-off Monday at Eddie’s Recreation, with Jani Lyn defeating the G. E. Rollettes, 2029-1979. Virginia Merriman had high series with a 450. White Sox, Tigers To Play Saturday The White Sox and the Tigers of the Decatur Little League will stage a practice game at 9 o’clock Saturday morning at the Homestead diamond. All members of both teams are asked to be present.

PAGE SEVEN

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