The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 August 1964 — Page 6
Page 6 FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1964
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
THE DAILY BANNER
Brazil Downs Buis Feeds In Extra Inning Contest
Canton To Make Pro Grid Debut
CANTON. Ohio UPI — Professional football returns to its birthplace Saturday night when the modern edition of the legendary Canton Bulldogs makes its United Football League de-
but.
The pre - season exhibition game with the Toledo Tornathe six-six tie until the eighth . b | does marks the first
-
The Brazil Merchants won bringing in Hughes and Dorsett. j Hughes scored the second markthe battle for second place in The lead was very shot lived er on a ground-out by Pettit, the summer softball league last as the fired up Brazil club tying the game, night by edging Buis Feeds battled back with three runs in Neither team could break
in the bottom of the eighth, in the bottom of the inning on 7-6. The tie breaking blow was a run scoring sacrifice fly a single to center by Mike by Buck and a two run single McShanog, scoring Withers. by Withers which brought home
Brazil started the game being D. Douglas and Barr with the single, went to second on a sac literally “in the hole;” it was fifth and sLxth runs. rifice by B. Douglas, and came' ^ a replay of a protest match be- Buis Feeds which scored its home on McShanog’s game
tween the two clubs way back runs in groups of two in the winning blow. I Massillon Tigers which brought
on July 17. The game start- first and third continued the The victory left Brazil with
J
BANNER
UTILE LEAGUE ENDS SATURDAY Little League play draws to a close tomorrow at 5:30 when the Yankees and White Sox play a playoff for first place. It will mark only the second time in local League history that two clubs finished with identical records to necessitate the extra game to determine the league championship. Also, Bo Lear, head of the Little League program, announces that all Little League ballplayers are to meet at their park tomorrow morning at 8:45 to distribute the floor wax donated to them by IGA for the fund drive for buying new lights., a badly needed addition to their facilities.
■ appear-
when Brazil came up with their ance q{ g pro _ , eague in Canton
winning run Withers opened since 192g
the inning with a wrong field ^ v. ** j 6 6 1 Many fans who attend the
game at Central Catholic Stacan remember the bloody Stark County rivalries with the
ed from the point of protest pattern in the fifth by adding a 7-3 mark — good for second
together such names as
man on
with Buis Feeds run in and a
with one out. They added by Dorsett, whose blast hit the loss left Buis Feeds at 3-6 with another run in the first canto light wires within the playing one make-up game to play, last night when Dorsett hit area and allowed Jones to BRAZIL MERCHANTS 7 8 2 a bloop single, scoring Hughes walk home with the run. BUIS FEEDS 6 5 4 who was the runner on third.! ——
A pair of errors paved the way to Brazils first two runs in the bottom of the first. Hood. Brazil's lead of' man reached first on a miscue by Partin at short and scored when the Buis Feeds left fielder bobbled an attempted shoe string catch. Buck, the big center fielder who was an AllState football player for Brazil while in high school, then blast-
ed an RBI triple to center.
Brazil went ahead in the
second on a home run to right by Pell the bases e m p t y. Feeds, however, came
Jim Pop
Chicago Bears Favored To i wo Softball Tilts Scheduled Defeat College All - Stars At Park Sunday Evening
. , , .. . , Thorpe, Willie Heston, - „ , .
having one a ground-rule double to left place and a seeded position a . cago Bears, losers only once in
third another pair. The first came on in the post-season playoffs. The ..Q ub »* Buck Pete “Fats’' Hen S1X Tnatc * ies a & amst P lck ’" ■ ^ *■* --* ... > collegiate football heroes, were
CHICAGO UPI — The Chi-: players, and I hope they’ll be
rv and Charlie Brickley repre- _ , , , senting the Bulldogs, and other ^ ore J 5
top stars of the era, including
Tons Dump Cville For 3rd Place Finish
Torrs’ Restaurant grabbed off the third place position in the local softball league final standings by downing Crawfordsville Jaycees, 8-4. The vic-
blast tor y le ft Torr’s with a 6-4
with record for the season.
Buis ■ Crawfordsville jumped out to back an ear ly lead in the top of
with two runs in the top of the the first as they collected third for a 4-3 lead. The mark- three runs a pair of singles, a
ers came on a double by Pettit.
markers with a single to left. Torr's came back with two .. ... , hospital
runs in the third on run scor-. __ ,
ing singles by Clark and Greenlee and went ahead to stay in the fifth when they scored five markers. The key blow was a two-run homer to deep
left by Hammond.
The winning pitcher was
the famed Notre Dame passing combination of Gus Dorais and Knute Rockne. The frist game between the Bulldogs and Tigers resulted from a challenge issued to Bill Day of Canton by his long time friend Eddie Stewart of Massil-
lon.
The game, won by the Tigers 14-4, was played on the frozen
turf of the Massillon
an-
other win in tonight’s 31st renewal of the College All - Star
grid game.
The Bears, their moral jolted by the deaths of teammates Willie Galimore and John Farrington in a training camp auto crash, had the added incentive of revenge to prod them toward another win. The All - Stars won last year’s game against the
enough.” The game will be nationally televised and broadcast, but
In the event that it does not rain between now and this Sunday at 7:00 p.m. there will be two softball games at Robe-
still will pull a sellout crowd of Ann Park. The first contest about 75.000. with local interest w ill see Torr's Restaurant pit-
Hoffa, Buis Feeds; Youngpeter, Shetrone; Monnett, Brazil.
boosted by the appearance of
the home town Bears.
Minnesota Beats Boston 6 - 5
Jackson; the loser was Fulwalk, and two errors. Milam wider, w-alked with the bases loaded
to force in the first run and TORR S RESTAURANT 8 9 4 Carlisle Indians.
Fulwider brought in a pair of CVILLE JAYCEES 4 7 2
mental National Football League I champion Green Bay Packers
Extreme betting, a threaten- 20-17, and they also won the ed libel suit by Bloody Wallace, j last time the Bears were in first Bulldog coach, and several the game, in 1947 w'hen Frank dismal performances wrote an Leahy coached the collegians to
end to the pro sport in Canton = a 16-0 decision,
for about five years. This was added ammunition When the play for pay sport for Bears ow r ner - Coach
returned to the Canton scene George Halas to give his behe- Dark had been the subject of in 1915 it brought with it the moths, and he reminded them rampant rumor and speculation most famous of the fabled frequently during training that following a report by a New
“we can’t afford to lose two in York sports - writer who quot-
ted against Indianapolis Link Belt and the second will feature the All-Star team which was to have performed earlier going against the Indianapolis club.
The All-Star squad is com-
posed of at least one member from each of the six teams in the league. All-Star squad members are as follows: Sims, Buis Feeds; Komgenick. Shetrone; Chance, Shetrone; Jones, Buis Feeds: Clark. Torr's; England, Shetrone; Hood, Brazil;
the San Francisco Giants, gave Buck, Brazil; Sharp. Shetrone; Dark a vote of confidence p e ttit, Buis Feeds; Spencer, Old Thursday and announced that Topper; Hurst, Crawfordsville;
he had no intention of replac-
ing the Giant manager. For three unhappy days,
Dark Is Backed
By Giants Owner SAN FRANCISCO UPI —All those rumors about Alvin Dark are just so much bilgewater, says the one man in the w r orld
who ought to know.
Horace Stoneham, owner of
OPEN TOMORROW
BILL GRIMES Service STATION
INDIANAPOLIS RD. at FRANKLIN ST.
San Diego Portland
By United Press International If American League managers continue to throw righthanded pitchers at Minnesota Harmon Killebrew might go all
the w'ay.
A survey of Killebnew's major league leading total of 39
home runs shows that 30 have | Spokane come at the expense of right- Tacoma handed hurlers. supposedly the Seattle antidote to batters who work Hawaii
from the right side of the plate. Hammerin’ Harmon, w’ho di- Eastern Division \ides his blows equally, 20 on W. L. Pet. GB. the road and 19 in Metropolitan Arkansas 67 44 .604 Stadium, poled No. 39 in Thurs- Oklahoma City 66 50 .569 3 day’s 6-5 Minnesota victory Indianapolis 58 54 .518 912 over Boston and in doing so Denver 59 58 .504 11 boosted his batting average to Salt Lake City 46 70 .397 23^ .300. a charmed circle he has Dallas 39 76 .339 30 failed to attain as a major
- l>lll ! mtltm| U | ) l l l j l i l - ll i | 1 ; 1 ) 1111 tHiiiiiiiiinmiiim 1111 m 11 imiiiimiiii i inTLEAGUESTANblNGSjrJl TirmnrmMiimiimmmiimiMiimmimiiiiiiimmmmiiimiiiiimiiih
FAC II IC COAST LEAGUE Western Division W. E. Pet. GB.
68 47 .591
67 50 .573 2 60 55 .522 8 58 54 .518 8’i 57 57 .500 11 43 73 .371 25 1 a
Houston New York
47 64 .423 18 34 75 .312 30
as a
the league RBI leadership at league regular, and gave him 88. one more than Boston’s Dick
Stuart.
The inevitable comparison to home run champions Babe Ruth and Roger Maris places killer nine games up on
Thursday's Results Oklahoma City 18.
AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pet. GB. New York 64 40 .615 Baltimore 66 42 .611 Chicago 64 43 .598 I’i Los Angeles 58 54 .518 10 Minnesota 53 55 .491 13 Detroit 54 57 .486 13% Boston 52 57 .477 14% Cleveland 49 59 .454 17 Kansas City 42 66 .389 24 Washington 42 71 .372 26%
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Chicago 001 000 011 St. Louis 202 000 10.x ■
11 1 5 1
Indian- Los Ang. 000 010 000 — 1
apolis 2; Arkansas 2, Dallas 0; Pitts.
Denver 3, Salt Lake City 2;
Spokane 2. Hawaii 1; Portland Houston 4, Seattle 3: San Deigo 4. Ta- Phila. the coma 0. 1st game; Tacoma 3,
the San Diego 2. 2nd game.
002 020 OOx
000 200 000 — 2 000 000 001 — 1
Bambino's pace and 13 behind
Maris 1961 clip.
The 28-year-old slugger's spe-
cialty has been felt by every Philadelphia 'team at least once. Boston hurl- San Francisco ers have been touched seven Cincinnati times, three from Jack Lamabe Pittsburgh .while the Cleveland staff has St. Louis •allowed only one. Milwaukee • Boston right fielder Lee Los Angeles
(Continued on Page 7) Chicago
NATIONAL LEAGUE
U. L. Pot. GB.
62 42 .590 62 46 .574 60 49 .550 57 48 .543 56 51 .523 55 52 .514 53 53 .500 50 55 .476
Milw. Cincy
000 003 000 — 3 401 000 40x — 9
7 2 15 0
AMERICAN LEAGUE
1% 4 5 8 9% 12
Boston Minn.
400 000 100 — 5 302 000 lOx — 6
N. K.
York City
000 010 220 001 000 020-
Detroit Chicago
002 020 100 — 5 000 000 002 — 2
12 0 10 2 120 7 0 11 0 11 1
Par Due In
Tourney
CHICAGO UPI — Par appeared due for another beating today with one of golf’s best fields in pursuit of pace-setters Chi-Chi Rodriguez and Billy Casper in the second round of the $50,000 Western Open tour-
nament at Tam O’Shanter.
Rodgriguez and Casper were the best of 28 players in the field of 140 pros who bettered par 71 on the 6,686 - yard course Thursday, each posting a seven under par 64. one stroke off the course record. Three players had 67’s, six! had 68’s another six were tied! at 69. 11 tallied 70 and 14
matched regulation figures.
Deadlocked three strokes behind at 67 were George Knudson. Toronto. Ont., Julius Boros, Southern Pines, N. C., and Jim Ferrier. San Francisco. At 68 were defending champ Arnold Palmer, Laurel Valley, Pa., National Open champ Ken Venturi, Crystal River, Fla., Tom Veech, Menomonee Falls, Wis., Bob Harrison, Palm Desert, Calif., Bruce Devlin, Hilton Head Island, S. C., and Pete Fleming, Hot Springs,
Ark.
Most of the players contend-
ed the course played
a row.
However, the Bears will be against a team which will equal them in size and speed, , but not in experience, and Otto Graham, tutoring the All-Stars for the seventh straight year, believed that with luck his
squad could win.
“We re not as big or as fast as we’ve been,” he said, “and we’ve had more injuries than usual to hamper our drills. But
we have some fine
Parnelli Jones Smacks Wall
TRENTON, N. J. UPI —Former Indianapolis 500-mile race winner Parnelli Jones, Torrance. Calif., had his second close call with fire in recent months Thursday when his car smacked the wall at the Trenton Speedway during tire tests. The badly damaged car burst into flames and Jones suffered burns on his arm. But he was released after treatment at a local hospital and said he would compete as scheduled in a US AC midget race tonight at
Old Bridge. N. J.
ed him as saying that Negro and Latin American players on his team lacked the intelligence of white players. After release of the interview, Dark called a press conference in New York two days ago and said he had been “gravely misquoted” and that the writer had apologized to
him.
The rumors that Dark would be fired continued, however,
football anc j stoneham said Thursday that he felt compelled to clear
them up.
“I want to take this occasion to deny all reports that a managerial change is contemplated,” Stoneham said in a statement released here. “We feel that the incident that grew out of Alvn’is reported interview . . . has been exaggerated and distorted and that his reply to it has been generally accepted,” Stoneham
said.
Tribe Belted By Oklahoma City
Jones suffered minor
INDIANAPOLIS UPI — The Indianapolis Indians suffered their worst defeat of the season Thursday night when Oklahoma City pounded out 21 hits and beat the Tribe 18-2 in a Pacific burns Coast League game.
May 30 when his roadster
shorter > caught fire as he left the pits
following a refueling stop in the “500’’ at Indianapolis. Two-time “500’’ winner Rodger Ward, Indianapolis, also hit
The 89ers, sparked by Johnny Bateman's three homers, pushed eight runs across in the first inning and then Bateman went to work. He whacked homers in the second, sixth and
while Ernie
Fazio added one in the second and Rusty Staub hit one in the
fifth.
George Brunet scattered six
The three - day test of tires hits in running his season pitch-
grum in 1948 and tied by Gene for the USAC 200-mile champi- ing record to 10-4. Littler in 1957, would be tied onship race here September 27 Jim Koranda belted an Indior even broken. , wound up today. anapolis homer.
and easier than during the 17 years in which the late George i S. May sponsored the “A11i American” and the 15 years in
| which the “world” tourney was t he W an durtag’a Test’ runhere * ighth held on the same links. ~ "
same
Thus it was likely that to-
day’s scoring would improve damaged
and that perhaps the course record of 63, set by Lloyd Man-
Thursday but he escaped injury and his car was only slightly
1 V i ~* * v ♦
"ALL THE KING'S MEN
“Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall . . . Humpty Dumpty had a great fall.” It wasn’t exactly a great fall that Greencastle High Sc hool Coach Dave McCracken had when he sat his turn in the Jaycee Dunking Booth, but it was a wet one. Dave appeared to be giving students and former students a last chance to express their “appreciation” for his good work before the school term begins. Photo by Martin Kruse
r SAVE A BUNDLE ^ ON ’64 CHRYSLERS
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See your Chrysler Dealer-The Hot Spot— for the Hottest Deal in Town!
PUTNAM MOTOR SALES 118 North Indiana St. GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
