Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 247, Ed. 1 Monday, July 30, 1962 Page: 5 of 10
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THIS OUGHTA WAKE HIM UP’
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Spahn Reports
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By JIM HACKLEMAN
Loa
San
arrangement giving them rights
42
. 37
76
New
RESULTS
his three inning effort.
last week when Coach Tom Lan-
and
Canadian Meet
61
Robinson smacked a pair of
61
Manager Says
are Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Swinney,
"Then on the 15th I hit a drive -
Walking Man
Out Of Games
National
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
.544
two-under-par 70 Sunday.
gave him a 72-hole total of 278.
Ends Playing
two strokes better than Charlie
SUNDAY’S RESULTS
Oklahoma City 7-1. Dallas-Fort Worth 4-2
Louisville 3
Omaha 3.
Louisville at Indianapolis
»
7
Tommy Butler allowed six scat-
of the Army.
York Yankee pitchers forgot to I homer. The White Sox took the
seven
i
g"
2 FLIGHTS Daily
DALLAS
2 NON-STOPS Daily
8900
SAN ANGELO
!►
r
admZAa.
A
Dodgers Master Pursuers
With Wild First Inning
Maxwell Homers Three Times For Sox
In Leading Chicagoans To Yank Split
DickMoegle
Trips Home
. 49ers‘ No. 1 draft choice in 1955.
led the club in pass interceptions
IM record, is the White Sox’
leading pitcher
20% pound yellow cat on trot
line; Bill McNamee. 5% pound
black bass on rod and reel; J.
W. Dawson, 20 pound yellow cat
and two five-pound channel cats;
Mrs. L. S. Mullin, 25 pound cat.
Also, Earnest Doss of Owens
Minnesota also split with Cleve-
land, winning 7-5 in 11 innings
through three innings in the sec-
ond 1960 game but was tagged
with the first game loss this year.
Louts clipped New York twice, 6-5
and 5-1, and Chicago split with
Houston., the Cubs winning the
Kroll captured the *30.000 Cana-
dian Open with a blistering 32 on
the back nine for a final round
any other team in the NFL."
Moegle said. "Then he told me
the Oilers • of the American Foot-
47
si
284
Arnold Palmer passed up the
tournament, which he won in 1955.
and Gary Player was disqualified
| 18 since regaining the lead three
weeks ago, got off winging in the
HOUSTON (AP» — Dicky Moe-
gle. an All-American halfback at
Rice and a seven-year National
Football League safetyman, has
secured his release from the Dal-
las Cowboys and come home hop-
47
u
that year and was one of three
rookies to play in the Pro Bowl
Denver
Louisville
Oklahoma
Dallas Ft
s
. 87
u
.. SI
*2
talking him home.
"I was trying too hard and my
caddy told me to cool down a bit.
control by not issuing a walk,
making it 37 consecutive tunings
without allowing a base on balls.
He lost his chance for a shutout
in the seventh when Willie Mays
tsi
.471
Ml
after Bog Sadowski’s three-runner
in the third inning.
Of Maxwell’s 67 homers since
Angeles
Francisco
second providing the clincher. He
doubled twice and scored both the
Reds’ runs in the second game
> many
that is
t cous-
far yen
u had
fore it
1959. he has hit 24 on Sunday.
He’s had 17 against the Yankees,
nine on Sunday.
Mickey Mantle came up limping
in the eighth inning of the second
game He sat out the ninth. First
Sifford, who was playing In the
threesome in front, by the 14th
hole.
Indianapolis
Omaha
5
10
10
11%
12
16
10
22
a six-hitter.
Elsewhere.
Los Angeles
Minnesota
Baltimore
Cleveland
Chicago
Detroit
Boston
Kansas City
Washington
ball League) were interested In
me, and that’s all I needed to
know."
The Oakland Raiders get first
chance at Moegle under a new
bert of Brownwood. 15 pound
yellow cat on trotline.
n
67
st
41
the first two runs with a single,
then singled to another in the sec-
ond. banged his 20th homer in the
seventh, and had another RBI
single in the eighth.
Drysdale. 19-4. struck out five
Cincinnau
Pittsburgh
St Louis
Milwaukee
Phfllade Iphia
i Chicago
Houston
after the first round when he dis- Yost rejoined the Senators late in day Frazier Low gave up
The Angels cracked six homers ■ - ... • I- . ----.— • — ..— I-------•• ---
Ing to play some more football.
That would be with the Houston
Oilers and they're interested.
"We’d like to have him." Oilers
Coach Frank Ivy said.
Moegle, who has business in-
terests in Houston, got his re-
lease from the Dallas NFL team
words," Kroll said. "He just told
me to take it easy.”
Kroll battled back to even with
get out of his way again.
Maxwell hafhmered three hom-
ers in a doubleheader Sunday as
the White Sox ended a five-game
Yankee winning streak in the sec-
ond game for a split with the
league leaders.
The Yankees won the first game
7-4. despite a three-run Maxwell
leagues.
A Wrigley Field crowd of be-
tween 38,000 and 40.000 was ex-
pected to be on hand, despite the
weatherman's partly cloudy with
chances of showers" forecast.
The Nationals won 3-1 at Wash-
ington D.C. last July 10.
seek to-
wa trees
ras week
opera bie
seles to-
. a drop
e peev-
tor the
5 favorite.
Podres’ starttag nomination was
romp that gave them an 8-3 sea-
son mark against the Giants.
They sent 11 men to the plate
in the first inning, rapping out
•IS
MS
U
MS
MS
495
490
U1
433
390
STS
632
392
Ml
357
World championship at Chicago in
1956.
The 42-year-old Fort Lauder-1
lank of
second
bess »
acting
ally do
ceca
and a four iron, and my caddy
told me Charlie had bogied the
hole. So I thought I could sneak
one in." ,
Kroll knocked in a 35-foot putt
for a birdie and the two-stroke
lead he carried in.
“I don’t know how my caddy
knew what Charlie was doing—he
must be psychic,” Kroll said.
Actually, young Witt had friends
shuttling back and forth to keep
tabs on Sifford and run the re-
sults back to him. He fed the in-
formation to Kroll when he felt
It was timely.
The victory was worth *4.300 to
Kroll.
safetyman and third in the league
in pass interceptions. He led the
Pittsburgh Steelers in intercep-
tions in 1960.
m has
neon
I to do
■ back.
cator—
ng type
35 mi-
miion
a June
371
254
1
Denver 2
TONIGHT'S GAMES
porting to camp.
"I told him I wouldn’t play for
community, 8% pound cat with rod
and reel; Bucky Johnson of Odes-
11 innings
Detroit 7-4. Los Angeles 4-12.
Kansas City 7. Baltimore 3
Boston 4. Washington 2
TODAY’S GAME
with 281 for *2,000 third-place
money.
Bruce Crampton of Australia
closed with a 67 for 282 and fourth
place. U.S. Open champion Jack
Nicklaus and Bob Shave Jr., of
York 24
SUNDAY’S
American League All-Stars vs
League All-Stars at Chicago
oper-
ent the
work
ned to
• called
0uced
cooomny
ractices
dential
8%
942
12
17
22%
31's
32
43
of Brownwood, 4 pound channel Indianapolis -10
cat on throw line and Blain Lam-
i stock-
aid for
tax dok
ayer is
gai to
coun-
: sworn
i make
Won Leat Pet. Behind
6045-71-
sa. 14 pound yellow cat and limit
in white bass; Mrs. H. G. Hair
M
«
knocking out southpaw Billy O’Dell
in the process. Howard delivered
with a homer and three singles.
Manager Ralph Houk also made over the San Francisco Giants and Drysdale breezed to his 19th
3
« .
*,
10*
i35
DETROIT (AP) - Eddie Yost i sons with the Detroit Tigers, who
struck out his first and last at let him go to the Angels in the
bats in the major leagues—but in expansion draft before last sea-
18 season in between he walked son.
By JIM BECKER
Associated Press Sports Writer
it is a good idea to get out of
the way of Sunday drivers.
The same goes for Sunday hit-
ters.
Charlie Maxwell of the Chicago
White Sox is a prize example of
a Sunday hitter, and the New
covered he bad turned in the 1946 and remained with them 1 hits and fanned ten Abilene bat-
wrong score. 1 through 195*. He played two sea- | ten. Houston noted.
Denver at Omaha
' Oklahoma City at Dallas-Fort Worth
fresh off the New York University > homered in the sixth inning of
campus. After a year in service, that game with a man on. Sun-
il
1.
it
1
L
h
>
of Chicago.
McBride 's plagued by
aching-
country
I to be
riser,
ly what
ses out
N,
,12)7:
tory, nearly 2.100. ager Bennie Houston. The ‘Stars
Yost was released to make won over the Hawks. 18-4. Satur-
room for George Thomas, just out ‘ day at Cordell Park.
SUXDAY’S RESULIS
New York 7-2, Chicage 46
Cleveland 3-6. Minnesota 2-7. second game
• § 3
* -0 2ie
53
31
56
....... 41
. 40
City 50
Worth 46
HUP!—Wallace Gullahorn of Abilene draws down on an imaginary target at the
Brown County Sportsman Club invitational skeet shoot Saturday and Sunday.
Gullahorn was the top 4-10 shooter in Saturday's shoot, held at the Peaceful Valley
Shooting Resort near Bangs. John Guitar shot close to Gullahorn with a 45 score.
By JOE REICHLER
4 Iwwi.tw Press Sporta Writer
CHICAGO (AP)—Los Angeles left-hander Johnny
Podres. an 11th hour replacement’for teammate Don Drys-
dale, and Minnesota right-hander Camilo Pascual were
the opposing pitchers today in the 33 rd All-Star game,
' second of the season between the National and American
flyamways
MONTREAL (AP— K wax six
years between victories for veter-
an golfer Ted Kroll, and it took
a 35-foot putt and a caddy with
lots of friends to help end the long
drought.
TODAY’S BASEBALL
By The Associated Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Won Lost Pet.Behind
STT DOWN STRIKE—This wild horse, brought to the Cali-
fornia Rodeo in Salinas from the hills of Nevada, didn’t like
what was going on. so he Mt down on the job. That spelled
the end for rider Joe Green, one of the West * top hands.
P
• cor-
bricht-
• Thu
■ boom-
where
aryset
xounced
s ovet
Sifford.
It was Kroll’s first tournament
victory since the Tam O’Shanter
7
1
Serving the Great Southwest Reglon Besti
reports were that he
setiously hurt.
New York
PodresGoesForNats
after a 3 2 loss. Kansas City
downed Baltimore 7-3 and Boston
beat Washington 4-2.
dale. Fla., veteran started the
third round tied with Sifford, 39-
year-old cigar-smoking Los An-
Seles pro who was five times
U.S. Negro champion.
a couple of late changes on his
American League squad. He add-
ed pitcher Ray Herbert of the Chi-
cago White Sox and outfielder Al
Kaline of Detroit in place of
pitcher Ken McBride of Los An-
geles and outfielder Jim Landis
Willoughby. Ohio, were tied at
three-game sweep
hind another superlative pitching
performance of whip-armed right-
yielding four hits an dtwo runs in hander Don Drysdale, the Dodgers
Staring time for the game, to
be telecast and broadcast nation- McBride is plagued by a case
ally by NBC, was set for 2 p.m. of pleurisy in his back. He has
lESTi The Nationals ruled a 6 to an 11-3 record Herbert, with a
completed a
two-run homers in Cincinnati’s
opening game victory. with the
Kroll dropped three strokes to
Sifford on the first nine.
mat Then his caddy. Russel Witt. 17,
of suburban St. Lambert, began
Associated Press Sports Writer
Are the Los Angeles Dodgers
primed to make a shambles of an
old National League tradition—the
down-to-the-wire pennant chase?
Fired again by the hitting of
massive Frank Howard and be-
Catfish Anyone?
LAKE BROWNWOOD (BBC-
Residents of Lake Brownwood
area reporting "good catches”
was not
a satis-
ed the
a the
ear was
xmmenal"
> shbown
again exhibited masterful
ton. - No-hit pitcher Earl Wilson won
A two-run single by Hector Lo- his second straight for the Red
per and Bill Skowron’s two-run Sox However, a big relief job by
homer were the major blows for Dick Radatz saved it for him.
the Yanks in th opener. - Radatz came on, with two or and
Maxwell hit • bases-empty none out. and struck out three
homer in the second inning of the Senators in the eighth inning and
nightcap, and another solo shot j two more in the ninth.
..33
\ Mvconjann
X a—-
He joined the Washington Sen- tered hits to the Hawks here
ators in 1944 as a 17-year-old, Saturday night. Doug Pierce
in the second game against De-
troit Al Kaline’s two-run double
provided the Tigers' winning mar-
gin in the opener.
Dick Donovan won his 14th,
against four losses, in the opener
against Minnesota. Vic Power
ruined his shutout bid with a two-
run homer in the ninth inning,
after Jerry Kindall dropped a pop
fly. Power dropped the ball in a
rundown play to allow the deciding
run to score for the Indians in the
eighth
Relief pitcher Bill Dailey threw
the ball away on a bunt to allow
the Twins to break the tie in the
11th inning of the second game.
Jerry Lumpe was the big gun for
Kansas City, rapping four straight
hits and driving in three runs.
Bill Fischer went all the way for
the victory; Chuck Estrada took
his 12th loss against five wins.
*13"
[ I don't remember his extra
A,u4,
$ ,
Frank Robinson’s
I first game 4-2 and the Colts
taking the second 3-1.
I as id-
a the
i recep-
Motors
re sec
Mta a
The romp increased the Dod-
gers’ lead to four games - a key hitting led Cincinnati to a
whopping margin in a National sweep over Milwaukee, 8-6 and
League race at this stage of the 2-1, that carried the Reds into third
season and the biggest edge the place—but stil 8* games behind
Dodgers have had in a pennant the Dodgers. . „ ... .__. ,, seven hits, scoring six runs and
derby since their runaway year of Philadelphia dealt Pittsburgh its
1955 eighth loss in nine games, 8-1.
Howard kept up his bristling dropping the to fourth. St
pace at bat, knocking in five runs
St. Mary’s A's baseball team
plays Abilene Hawks at Cordell
Park, 8 p.m. Friday, announced
manager Roy Martinez. The lo-
cals trip to Bertram Sunday.
Martinez reported three succes-
sive refusals of other teams to
play his nine. San Angelo's Colts'
turned down his offer after a
game had been set, as did Cle-
burne Sunday. Martinez said
Bennie Houston's All-Stars had
forfeited a planned three-out-of-
five series. The All-Stars defeat-
ed the A’s in the first series
Houston said his nine was di-
minished due to players falling
out to prep for the ASA state
softball tournament here August
9-12.
Martinez has added such local
standouts as Lawrence Elkins.
Lynn Davidson, Roy Chaney, Ro-
bert Chaney and James Scott to
his lineup. Other players will join
him after the area teen-age tour-
naments, Aug. 3 and 4 are over,
he said.
dry sought to trade him.
Landry was unhappy about
Moegle’s recurring foot troubles.
A pre-season injury made the
former Rice star 14 days late re-
Kaline recently returned to the
Tiger lineup after a seven-week
layoff with a shoulder separation.
He was considered a cinch for a'
right field berth on the All-Star
team before the injury. Landis, in
s batting slump, went 0 for 34 be-
fore hitting safely Saturday.
The Americans had picked
catcher Yogi Berra of New York,
first baseman Pete Runnels of
Boston and southpaw pitcher Jim
Kaat of Minnesota.
game. In 1957, he was all-pro
’ • ‛2,WHs",146«
-l, ‘
. -2--- E
■’ “f-t"2, mamusne "0
5843
m-asee
ar;”
second, 6-2.
Both of the other doublebeaders
in the American League were
divided, too.
The second-place Los Angeles
Angels dropped the first game to
the Detroit Tigers, 7-6, and won
the second' 12-8 to reman five
games back of the Yankees and a
half-game in front of the Minne-
sota Twins.
The Twins lost the opener to
Cleveland, 3-2, but won the night-
cap, 7-5, in 11 innings.
Kansas City salvaged the last
of a four-game set with Baltimore
7-3, and the Boston Red Sox beat
Washington 4-2.
In the National League, the Los
Angeles Dodgers stretched their
lead to four games by beating the
San Francisco Giants for the third
straight time. 11-1. Cincinnati
swept Milwaukee, 8-6 and 2-1. and
St. Louis trimmed the New York
Mets twice, 6-5 and 5-1. Chicago
beat Houston 4-2 in the first game,
with the Colts winning the second
3-1. Philadelphia beat the Pitts-
burgh Pirates 8-1.
Juan Pizarro of the White Sox
was knocked out in the first inning
of the opener with the Yanks, to
take the loss, but he relieved Mike
Joyce, Chisox bonus pitcher mak-
his first start, in the fifth inning
of the nightcap and took the vic-
In the American League, New
York's front-running Yankees di-
vided with Chicago, winning 7-4
and then losing 6-2 Detroit and
Los Angeles divided a double-
header. the Tigers scoring a 7-6
der ision in the opener and the
Angels powering their way to a cracked home run No. 32.
12-8 victory in the second game.
1,614 times. ---------——
The playing career of "the All Ca-we C}
Walking Man" ended Sunday AII-»IdrS MPT
Sifford won $3,000, for his 280 when he was released by the LosHI •IM- Wl
total. He finished with a .[Angeles Angela. They quaickly
ZEisz Abilene Nine
around," said the 35-year-old Yost, i The Brown wood All-Stars touch*
who played more games at third ed Abilene's Hawks, 5-2. Sunday
base than any other player in his- at Abilene, reported All-Star man-
a distinct surprise; the 29-year-
old southpaw was placed on the
squad only Saturday night as a
late replacement for Drysdale,
who pitched three runless innings
in a starting role in the first
game. Podres' 7-7 season record
is drab compared to Dryadale's
19-4.
National League Manager Fred
Hutchinson originally had named
Warren Spahn, Milwaukee’s 41-
year-old left-hander. to start. But
when Warren complained his el-
bow had tightened up following
his victory over the New York
Mets last Thursday, Hutch
switched to Podres, who turned in
a sparkling 3-1 triumph over San
Francihco’s Giants Friday night,
j Podres in his previous All-Star
appearance, pitched two scoreless
innings in the second 1960 contest,
allowing one hit, walking three
and striking out one. He was hot
involved in the decision, a Nation-
victory and ninth in a row with i The Dodgers, who’ve won 14 of
■ May
72 b-
nt ft ueu
al League victory.
Pascual (15-6), the American
League's biggest winner, defeated
Cleveland Friday night. 2-1. The
28-year-old curve-ball artist
pitched in two previous All-Star
games. He hurled hitless bail
Conley is Sorry
For Running Out
FOXBORO. Mass (AP'-Weary
Gene Conley is sorry for his run-
out on the Boston Red Sox. But
he maintained "J didn't say I'd
quit. I hate the word.”
The restless "loner” told Bob
Holbrook of the Boston Globe at I
his trailer home Sunday night he
planned nothing when he stepped
off a team bin. in New York last
Thursday. The 6-foot-8 right-
hander had not been heard from
until Sunday and is under in-1
definite suspension by the ball
club.
Infielder Pumpsie Green, sub-
sequently fined an’estimated *500.
disappeared along with Conley but
showed up in a Washington hotel
Friday night.
"I'm tired, very tired,”' Conley
said. "Im not offering that as an
excuse."
A professional athlete in basket-
ball as well as baseball, Conley
has averaged less than two weeks
of relaxation per year since 1957.
Conley. in effect, said he was,
momentarily too exhausted to face
the music.
"I will contact the Red Sox.”
Conley said, "but right now I
don't fed like it. I'm too tired to
go through this right now."
Until a meeting of Conley and
Manager Mike Higgins, fines or
further punitive action will be de-
ferred.
Sunday, crushing their closest
pursuers 11-1.
Z12
Los Angeles 11, San Francisco 1
Cincinnati 8-2. Milwaukee 6-1
St Louis 6-5. New York 6-1
Philadelphia 6. Pittsburgh 1
Chicago r-L Houston 2-3
==- Veteran Takes
M lares **■ tan
For reservations and information call MI 2-2000
or see your travel agent
to players leaving the Cowboys.
( “We are certainly willing to
talk to Oakland about a trade for
Moegle," Ivy said Sunday.
Moegle was the San Francisco
BROWNWOOD BULLETIN, Monday, July 30. 19®---1
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Gage, Larry. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 247, Ed. 1 Monday, July 30, 1962, newspaper, July 30, 1962; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1489355/m1/5/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.