The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 September 1966 — Page 4

4 The Dally Banner, Greeneastle, Indian*

Saturday, September 10, 1966

CUBS CRUSH LINTON MINERS FOR SECONB WIN

Churchill Leads 32-13 Romp With Five Touchdowns

Who said lightning doesn’t strike twice in the same place? For the Tiger Cubs it does. After 12 seconds in the first quarter, the Tiger Cubs were ahead 7 to 0 and then went on to crush the Linton Miners by a convincing 32 to 13 score, Fri-

day night at Linton.

See of Greeneastle received the opening kickoff, handed the ball to Churchill on the 15, and Churchill streaked down the field 85 yards for the 6 points. Norris kicked and the Cubs

were on their way.

Linton came right back with fire in their eyes. Norris kicked to the Linton 35. After several running plays for no gain, Linton kicked. Greeneastle couldn’t move the ball and with 3:57 left in the first quarter, Linton had the ball on the Greeneastle 35 yard marker. Lovelace completed a pass to Turchi for 9 yards, then with 2nd down and 2 yards to go, Lovelace hit AllConference halfback Gaither for the 6 points. Earle’s kick was good and the score was tied, 7 to 7, and it looked like a barnburner was in store for the fans. After receiving the kick, the Tiger Cubs shifted their ground game into high gear. Monnett took the kick to the Cub 31. Churchill moved forward for 9. Luzar cracked up the middle for the first down on the Cub 46. See picked up 5 more, Churchill broke loose to the Linton 23 before Ball stopped him. Luzar and See carried the ball to the Linton 10 yard line. Churchill lost 4 but on the next play, skirted the end for the touchdown with 4:20 left in the second quarter. On the extra point try, Norris missed but Linton was offside and the sec-

ond effort was good.

Linton received the kick on their own 40. Turchi carried for no gain and the Cubs declined on off-side penalty. Hammond threw Gaither for 2 yard loss, and Linton kicked from their own 23 to Bruce Brackney, on the Cubs 27. Luzar and See teamed again for 1st down. Churchill moved the ball to the Cub 47 yard marker. See picked up 6 more yards and as the first quarter ended the Cubs were moving steadily down field with their crushing ground game. Moving into the second quarter, Luzar gained 2, Churchill broke loose for 20 but it was called back for holding. See on a double reverse hand off carried the ball to the Linton 18. Luzar picked up 3, Churchill was thrown for 2 yard loss as Thomas hit him behind the scrimmage line. Churchill again picks up 1st down on 7 yard line. Then with ball on 1 yard line, an off-side penalty moved the ball back to the 6 where Churchill carried it in with 3:45 gone in 2nd quarter. The try for extra point hit the cross bar. Score: Cubs 20, Linton 7.1 The kick-off was put in play on the Linton 40, after going out of bounds. Lovelace fained

plays that were incomplete, Linton kicked to Cub 29. The Cubs could only move the ball to their 40 and were forced to punt. Allen booted the ball to the Linton 28 and Gaither returned it 4 yards to the Miners

32.

Linton moved the ball to their own 45 when a clipping penalty set them back to their own 24. Norris intercepts a pass on the 50 yard line and returns it 16 yards to the Linton 34. Church- i ill on 2 tries gains 7, but on next play, Norris fumbles and Linton recovers on their 30 yard line. Then in the next minute, both teams utilizing the remaining time outs, tried desperately to score. The second half was all Cubs after Linton took the 2nd half kick-off in for a score. With a 2nd and 8 from the Cub 47, Gaither broke over left guard, shook Cub tacklers and raced 43 yards to pay dirt with 9 minutes and 30 seconds left in 3rd quarter. Kick was wide and the Cubs’ lead was 7 points. From this point on it was all Greeneastle. Luzar returned the kick 10 yards to the 40. Churchill moved for 3, and Norris on a

keeper swept to the Linton 38. Luzar gained 15 going straight up the middle to Linton’s 23. Churchill bounced the ball for 9 more. Luzar picked up first down yardage on the 15. A clipping penalty moved the ball back to the 35 with a 1st and 25 situation. A screen pass over the middle to Churchill, who had

a wall of blockers in front of him, was good for the 35 yards and the fourth Greeneastle touchdown. Linton, not to be denied, took the ball on their 40 yard line, and moved to the Cub 27 yard line before their drive stalls on a 4th and 1, and the 3rd quarter ended with the Tiger Cubs on

their own 36 yard line. ~ (blocking back’s position; he re--Starting the fourth quarter,' ceived the direct snap and gain-

Luzar drove through the middle for first down on Cubs 38. Norris and Churchill combine for 7, and Luzar picks up another first down on Cub 49. Staying on the ground Greencastle went into punt formation with Churchill lined up in a

ed a 1st down to the 18 yard stripe. A personal foul on Linton moved the ball to the Linton 9 and in two plays Churchill scored from 4 yards out for the final touchdown of the night and the second Tiger Cub victory in two outings.

Namath Starting

Grabs Role

MIAMI UPI — If they can keep their knees patched up, New York’s Joe Namath and Miami rookie Rick Norton, the American’ FootbaU League’s two richest quarterbacks, have their jobs nailed down for the season. The $700,000 worth of passers matched their talents before 34,401 fans in the Orange Bowl and a national television audience Friday night with the

Clay Is 10-1 Favorite Over German Pugilist

FRANKFURT, Germany UPI —Cassius Clay was an overwhelming 10-1 favorite over West Germany’s Karl Mildenberger tonight in his fourth defense this year of the world

heavyweight title.

Clay, whose confidence has allowed him to dictate the name of his next opponent even before meeting the current challenger, was expected to weigh 204 pounds for the scheduled 15round bout in Frankfurt’s Forest Stadium. Mildenberger

should scale 194.

The American Broadcasting Company (ABC) will televise live the title fight via the Early Bird satellite, beginning about

2:30 p.m., EDT.

Mildenberger is the first

denberger’s southpaw style. Mildenberger, 28, has ’not been beaten by an American fighter in 21 bouts and has not lost a fight in four and a half years. Since turning professional six years ago, after winning the National Golden Glove heavyweight championship and a gold medal in the 1960 Olympics in Rome, Clay has won 24 fights, 19 via the knockout route. Earlier this year, Clay won a 15-round decision over George Chuvalo of Toronto, scored a technical knockout over Britain’s Henry Cooper in the sixth round, and Kayoed Brian Lon-

Bellamy Signs 66-67 Contract With Nicks NEW YORK UPI — Former Indiana star Walt Bellamy Thursday signed his 1966-67 contract with the New York j Knickerbockers of the National Basketball Association. Bellamy, a 6-foot, 11-inch center, played eight games last season with the Baltimore Bullets before being traded to New York where he led the Knicks in scoring with a 22.8 point average. Bellamy, entering his sixth season in the NBA, also was the Knicks’ leading rebounder and free throw per-

centage shooter.

New Ross Clips Cardinals, 8-2

NBA Starts 21st Season Oct. 21; New Coaches Galore

BOWLING

NEWS

IBM MIXED LEAGUE

New Ross clobbered Fillmore m i “ ^ “ w W Thursday evening 8 to 2 and NEW YORK UPI — The Na-, all 10 teams in action to start Team No. 1 12 handed the Cardinals their sec- tional Basketball Association, the 405-game schedule. | Team No. 4 (Adacos) 10 ond Big Four Conference loss. w jth four new coaches and a ■ Team No - 2 10 i If the second inning could have new franchise, starts its 21st T* 16 defendin S champion Bos- Team No. 3 6 J been eliminated, the Cardinals se ason Saturday, Oct. 15, with ^ on C f ltlc ® ho ® t S f n ^ r ^ n ^ lsco ’ Team No. 6 (Oiky-Dots 6

would be quite happy and a

New York Jets topping Miami Dolphins 19-14 in a game that kicked off the first full weekend of play for the AFL title. Oakland invades Houston and Boston takes on San Diego there tonight with Kansas City scheduled at Buffalo Sunday. Namath and Norton flopped as offensive spectacles when the defensive platoons decided the outcome of the JetsDolphins game. But Namath earned his old job back from Mike Taliaferro, who guided New York to four exhibition

victories recently.

And Norton, who collected a $300,000 bonus to sign with the AFL’s new Miami club, looked better than veteran Dick Wood, who had two passes intercept-

ed.

The third-period interception by John Sample set up a 59yard touchdown march guided by Namath and a 45-yard field goal by Jim Turner to give New York victory in a game it was supposed to win by 16 points. New York coach W e e b Ewbank confirmed later Namath had regained the job as No. 1 quarterback and said he would start the former Alabama star against Houston in the Jets’ next game Sept. 18.

L 4 6 6 10

winner, as New Ross bunched

2 walks, ar

i error, 2 singles,

a

triple, and

a

home run for

8

big runs.

FILLMORE

NEW ROSS

AB H R1 AB

H

R

D. Puckett 2

0

0|Ebaugh ... 4

1

1

Custis .... 4

0

OjM. Needhm 3

2

1

Tharp 2

0

0|Evans 3

1

1

Williamson 2

1

l|Walty 3

0

0

Walton .... 4

1

l|Elliott 3

1

1

R. Cash ... 3

0

ojerumm 3

1

1

G. Puckett 0

0

0|H. Reynolds 1

0

0

T. Simmns 2

0

1|J. Walters . 3

0

1

Robinson . 0

0

0|G. Needhm 1

1

Luttrell .. 1

0

0|L. Walter . 1

0

0

Goodpastre 2

0

0|Gten 1

0

X

Clark 2

0

l|Durbln .... 1

0

0

B. Simmns 0

0

01

Totals . 24

2

3j Total* .. 26

6

8

Fillmore .....

020 000 1—3 2

2

10

I Los Angeles meets Baltimore, Team No 5 (The Kids) 4 12 j Detroit is at Cincinnati, New Hi team game: The Kids 826. i York takes on Philadelphia and I H i team series: Team No. 1

the Chicago Bulls, the league’s j 2350.

newest addition, opens against: Men over 4 50: w Alderfer St. Louis. i 591; L. Conyers 591; M. JackMaking their coaching debuts son 497; M. Kloor 476; W. will be Bill Russell as player- | Miller 474; K. Johnson 468; W. coach at Boston, Johnny Kerr Bitzer 462; W. Porter 459. as player-coach at Chicago, Bill Women over 350: B. Alderfer Sharman at San Francisco and 423; E. Porter 411: P. Jackson

OPEN FRI., SAT., SUN. Sat., Sun. from 2:00

. 080 000 0—8 6 4

and Walton;

don in the third round.

Clay will receive 50 per cent; New Ross

of the gross gate against a

southpaw in modern-day boxing guarantee of $150,000. He also ; Tharp (6), history to fight for the title. \' wm receive the ancillary rights Needham, Evans (7), and

Despite the odds, former ! for the United States exclusive- liot t heavyweight champs Joe Louis | ^ plus 50 per cent of the and Max Schmeling have warn- ■ Euro P ean anciliary rights.

ed that the American could be Mildenberger will receive 14 (jAypr TpAITI K beaten by Mildenberger of Clay | P er cent of the S ross gate and V1V ▼ VI ■ vmiii

becomes too careless or over- ^ P er cen ^ European

confident. j ancillary right.

Mildenberger vowed to give

the 24-year-old undefeated STRETCH RUN

champion “the fight of his life.’

Pietrosante Inked

By Cleveland

CLEVELAND UPI — Nick Pietrosante, former Notre Dame star and 1959 rookie of the year in the National Football League, said Friday he signed with the Cleveland Browns in

order to play with a contender, j pion Celtics from Red Auer-

bach, the winningest coach in

Pietrosante, who was released NBA his t 0 ry, who retired fol-

Mike Farmer at Baltimore. Russell takes over the cham-

387; G. Conyers 387; M. Hendrich 384; S. Birt 372; H. Livernoche 350.

by the Detroit Lions, signed a one-year contract with Cleve-

Williamson, Goodpasture (2), land Thursday ni g ht and will

play in the season opener at

Washington Sunday.

N. El-

The only two losses Clay has suffered in his ring career came at the hands of southpaw’s when

he was an amateur.

Clay, meanwhile, was supremely confident that his faster speed and three-inch

reach advantage would

Ready To Go

lowing the 1965-66 campaign. Kerr assumes command of the neophyte Bulls while Sharman, a star under Auerbach at Boston, moves into the top spot at

“I talked with several other | San Francisco replacing Alex teams, but after spending most I Hannum, of the afternoon with Art Mo- ' as head coach.

who moved to Phil-

dell and coach Blanton Collier, I’m convinced I made the right move.”

Pietrosante, who gained 3,933

Look out County Cross Coun-: yards rushing with the Lions in try Coaches. Coach A1 Tucker; seven seasons, said he had of-

Farmer, a former assistant > coach at St, Louis, replaces the retired Paul Seymour at Baltimore.

clubhouse turn.

In 1928 and 1961, the U. S.

over- Walker Cup golf team won by

3 to the 43. After trying 2 pass come any difficulties from Mil- an 11-1 score.

FOOTBALLyiSPECTlVE

Miami’s Problems Total Up to Eight

BALTIMORE UPI—A stretch , ,

run of 1,152 feet resulted when. 1 of Cloverdale has his runners fers to sign with four American in the rebuilding of the Pirn- in top form again this year. League teams and two m the lico track in 1959, the finish At a triangular meet held at NFL but “I wanted to stay in line was moved closer to the Edgewood with Worthington, | the National League and also'

the Clovers finished seven men play with a contender.” in the first ten. Truax finished

second with S. Brown, 3; Me' Kamey 5; R. Barker 6; Nees 7; Coon 8 and B. Terry 10. Scoring was Cloverdale 23; Edgewood 50, and Worthington

66.

Maplecroft Theatre R.R. I, Clayton SAT., SUN. BORN FREE

AND

Treasure of Silver Lake

By WALTER L. JOHNS Central Press Sports Editor GEORGE WILSON, the former Detroit Lions’ oach who has the task of putting together < the new Miami Dolphins in the AFL this year, best accents the team’s prospects with one sentence ... “As for our biggest problems . . . they’ll be coming at us from eight different directions . . . Buffalo, Boston, New York, Houston, Kansas City, Denver, Oakland and San Diego.” Strength lies in receivers and defensive backs. There are Bo Roberson, pass receiver, from Buffalo; Frank Jackson, a good flanker, from Kansas City and Dave Kocourek, tight end from San Diego. The offense centers on thev quarterbacks and they include f Dick Wood, from Oakland; Eddie Wilson, from the Patriots, and two rookies, Rick Norton, the Kentucky ace, and George Wilson Jr., the son of the coach, from Xavier. Billy Joe, from Buffalo, and Sam Price, rookie from Illinois, are the runners. Gene Mingo, drafted from Oakland, is the field-goal kicker. Offensive line is anchored by Billy Neighbors, from Boston, and the defense is headed by Wahoo McDaniel, linebacker from the Jeta.

AMERICAN LEAGUE Night Games Not Included

W L Pet.

Baltimore

89

51

.636

lOVs

Detroit

79

62

.560

Minnesota

65

.542

13

Chicago

73

70

.510

17ya

Cleveland

72

71

.503

18*/2

California

70

70

.500

19 1 2

Washington

81

.441

27>/ 2

Kansas City ....

63

80

.441

27 1 /a

Boston

82

.438

28

New York

62

81

.434

28!£

Route 40 Riders Hold Horse Show

Waveland Downs Roachdale, 12-2 Waveland downed Roachdale, 12-2, in a Big Four Conference baseball game at Roachdale Fri-

day.

Roachdale scored their two | runs in the third inning. Ron Simpson and Bob Blaydes formed the Hawk battery while Mitchell was the winning Wave-

land pitcher.

Roachdale’s record is now 1-1 in conference competition.

heaveyweight champion-

NATIONAL LEAGUE

N’irht Gaines Not Included

Pittsburgh 82 San Francisco 81 Los Angeles T9 Philadelphia 76 St. Louis 72 Atlanta 71

GB .582

.579 Va .572 1% .535 6Vi

.511 10 .504 11

.500 ll'/a

.441 20 .426 22 .353 32

Cincinnati 70 70 Houston 63 80 New York 60 81 Chicago 49 90 YESTERDAY’S RESULTS

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Atlanta 8. New York 3 Philadelphia 7. Cincinnati 6 Pittsburgh 3, St. Louis 2 (12 Innings) Houston at Los Angeles (night) Chicago at San Francisco (night)

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Kansas City 2. Detroit 1 <10 innings) Minnesota 6, Baltimore 1 Chicago 1, Washington 0 Cleveland 8, Caliiornia 7 (10 innings)

New York 2. Boston 1 TODAY’S SCHEDULE NATIONAL LEAGUE

Atlanta at New York (night)—Cloninger (12-9) vs. Fisher (9-13) Cincinnati at Philadelphia (night) — Ellis (11-16) vs. Sunning (16-9) St. Louis at Pittsburgh—Gibson (18-

10) vs. Law- (10-7)

Houston at Los Angeles—Dierker (8-6)

vs. Drysdale (9-16)

Chicago at San Francisco—Hands IS-

IS) vs. Perry (20-51 AMERICAN LEAGUE

Detroit at Kansas City (twi-light) — McLain (18-11) vs. Nash (10-1) Baltimore at Minnesota—J. Miller (4-

7) vs. Merritt (4-13)

New York at Boston might)—Downing

(8-10) vs. Stange (7-8)

Washington at Chicago—Richert (IS-

IS) vs. Howard (7-6)

California at Cleveland (twi-llght) — 1 Newman 13-7) vs. Siebert 116-7)

The Route 40 Riders had their horse show July 31st at

Betty and Max Watts. The winners were:

Western Pleasure Pony, 56 inches and under, rider 17 years

and under—Dennis St. Johns. Jose Torres is the first Pole Bending Bill Gravy. Puerto Rican ever to hold the

Juvenile Pleasure, 17 years light

and under—Doris Hartman. g^jp.

Barrel Race — George Horn- —

mel.

Adult Western Pleasure, 18 years and under—Art McDole. Trail Class—Bill Gravy. Equitation Class, 17 years and under—Mary Ann St. Johns. Flag Race—John Hood. Equitation Class, 18 years and over—Darrel Elmore. Reining Class—Don Jeffiers. ! Flat Saddle Class — Earlene Wood. The high point trophy for the Action Class was won by Bill Gravy. The high point trophy for ; the Pleasure Class was won by 1 Earlene Wood. The next horse show will be! Sept. 18th at Clyde Stringer. Everyone is welcome to come. So come on out and enjoy the fun. At this time the Route 40 Riders Saddle Club would like to congratulate these 4-H members who won at the Indiana State Fair, Freddie Gravy, Gene Nichels, Rachel Webb, and Earlene Wood. We are very proud of these kids.

GREENCASTLE DRIVE-IN (Formerly Midway) let. 40 4 43 SAT., SUN. Mik* Hgnry—David Opatashu "TARZAN AND THE VALLEY OF GOLD" PLUS Nick Adams—Kumi Minina FRANKENSTEIN CONQUERS THE WORLD

America's Funniest Family in their FIRST FULL-LENGTH FEATURE

staffing m 6WYNNE YVONNE DtCARLO AUEttS BliTCH PATRICK»» DEB8E WUSQN .Iso Marring mWIHMS raME flMHI STARTS WED., SEPT. 14 "WHOSE AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF"

MEADOWBROOK DRIVE IN THEATRE Infer. U.S. 36 l Stafe Read 43 SAT., SUN. Monica Vitti, Taranc* Stamp 1 MODESTY BLAISE (COLOR) Jean Crawford, John Irtlend I SAW WHAT YOU DID

NOTICE

MONON GRILL

Closing for Redecorating

3 A.M. Sunday,

Sept. 11 and

reopen 11 P.M., Sunday, Sept. 11

EVERGREENS We are digging a lot of nice evergreens now from

$2.50 to $7.50.

We deliver and set.

MOORE’S ORCHARD

Stafe Read 43 at Racceen

Public Sale of Household Goods At I hova sold my farm, I will sail at public auction at my homo Viz milt south of Coafesvillt, on Stafe Read 75, an Wednesday, September 14, 1966 at 1:00 p. m., tha foiewing: Household Goods Mapla bad ream suite, iron bad and springs, brass bad and springs, day bad, thraa mattresses, bad spreads, quilts, pillows, library table, two end tables, small round table, antique hall mirrors, beak case, writing desk, cedar chest, metal clothes cabinet, chairs, 2 clothes hampers, dinette set, goad G.E. Frastguard refrigerator, alectric range, apartment size gat range, 9x12 rug and tome dishes. Miscellaneous Set of de-horners, hay rape, chains, pig feeder, hog fountain, hog troughs, IS-ft. ladder, 4 gallons rad barn paint, 2 gallons white paint, fence stretchers, hand corn sheller, 200 bales hay and other articles tee numerous to mantien. Ona eld fashioned clothes closet; 1 antique dresser with mirror; 1 antique walnut marble top chest, 3 drawers; I antique cherry chest, 4 drawers; 2 antique parlor chairs, newly refinished in red velvet; 1 marble top wash stand, 1 antique marble top iron base table; clocks, running good; antique churns in A-1 shape; antique flower stand; iron antique bed, walnut pastor; antique mirror. Terms—Cash, No property to be moved until settled for. Net re* sponsible in case of accidents. KENNY EDWARDS JIM VAUGHAN, Auctioneer