The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 62, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 16, 1958 Page: 5 of 12
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Sunday. March 1«. IMS. TITK PATTY NEWS-TELEGRAM Section 1 — 6
Wildcat Gridders Display
Good Morale in Practice
Moral* waa tabbed m tbo m***( Btonwt «n pa#*lng. *n»F the-entire | .... . J.
•Sulphur Spring*Wildcat* tjhu*. for ’‘The pn** receiver* or# drop. —*— ' •
North Hopkins Advances
To Finals in State Meet
Sports Laugh
Atutin, Mar. 1ft — North Hop-
i kin* and Coliin*vill* ware arhedul-
1 *d to play for th* Slate Claw B
! Ctrl* baaketball championship ini
Austin Saturday night.
Mary i*ari*h fired in 42 point*
to par* North Mopkin* to an 80
to 70 win over Sugar (.and and
a crack at the state crown Satur-
day morning. Her point produc-
tion waa the top total of th* 3-day
girl* state basketball tourney and
waa ju*t a a h a d e over Melva
Kelton's 40 point* for Sugar i
Land.
Mary, daughter of Coach and
Mr*. Freeman Pariah, suffered
an ankle injury in the fourth
period and war removed from the
game. After *h* left. Sugar land
pulled within three point*. 78 to!
76, before Lou Jane Jones sank
two free throw* to cushion the
winning margin- with only eight
second* remaining in the gam*.
Mary hit 41 point* in FridayV
Sal Maglie Hopes
To Gel Another
Series Paycheck
Camilo Raarual and Fere l!a
mew it w o a*hiiigton Senator
pi tv her* --a.'* pailncr* in an auto-
mobile. t
!’»». uai drive* it most of the
time hut Kamo* take* the wheel
to g« m revere* I’m owl can’t
hack it up.
North Hopkin* won, 8.1 to SB, and
tied the *tate’» htgh-*coring mark
In th* Sugar land game.
North Hopkin* led all the way,I
enjoying a 42 to .15 nflaigin at
half-time j
Other North Hopkin* scorer* '
«am*t Sugar land were June*
3so ASIAN CVi
St. Peterburg, Fla., Uh Life
didn’t exactly begin at 40 for Sal
Maglie but it didn’t get any worse.
It was at 40 last summer that
the somber-eyed right-hander was
dealt off by the Dodger* to the
New York Yankees.
The deal wan made a day too
late for Sal to be eligible for the
World Sene*. But he still got cut
in for a healthy check by the al-
ways generous New Yorkers.
Maglie will he 41 on April 2flth,
a couple of weeks after the state
of the season
22, Kdith Kste* 14 and Patsy Orr
Th* Entire* maching staff of
the Chicago t ub* I* mail* up of
former New Yuik (iiant ball play
era- Freddie Fitzsimmons, Kay
Mueller, Roger* Hornsby and
George Myatt,
to 78, in a first-round game, and ^ r • da y and Satuiday,
then dumped Comfort, 66 to 67,1 Jon*" wW- ",f w" *•* **«» k‘»4 of
in a.semi-final tilt Saturday morn- j bUM*,n* »*> »h* »#condaiy next
tng. year, we will have some long
Marsha Scroggina acored 37 run*'
point* tiy lead Collinsville past Plan Came
previously unbeateri Comfort. Local grid fan* m*v ,-*t a
There'* a raltwr well named
filly racing at (hilf.tream park
called "Min* it M«* Five."
.Bhe’» by a *ir* n*me,t "My Re-
quest” oul of aware named
"Flee Spar.’’
That’s real old in j
a baseball sense. Must players long
since have departed from the big |
NO ROCKINC CHAIR NEEDED—At 36, Andy Phillip of the Bos-
ton Celtics is the oldest “player in the National Basketball Asso-
ciation. Ilut for 10 minutes or so at n stretch Phillip, a 10-year
veteran in the league, can stay with the best. (NFA).
JAPAN8.1F ISSUES — Thwae
*ie two' of the colorful enn*-
menmi atlve stamp* to be issu-
ed by the Japan?** postal xer-
,vi;a* sin the uvr**fon of the
opening *»f the Asian flame*
Jp Tokyo in Mav of thla year.
league scene by the time they
touch 41.
Hut the unsmiling barber from
Niagra Falls has no intention of
calling it a day. He likes the game,
he likes the hours and he certain-
ly like* those fat paychecks.
He Is carefully going about the
business of getting ready at the
Yankee camp in St. Petersburg.
Sal has his own way of g*tr
ting ready and Manager Casey
Stengel—a wise head—recognise*
another wise old head when he
seen one. Casey lets Magile alone.
For the first couple of weeks
Attend Chunk Sunday
★ GRAYSON'S SCORKBOARD *
tNKAt
to resort to a harrbile cliche,
over this Los Angeles team. .
It is Wtter than, say, the Cin-
cinnati club and it might give
the Cardinals trouble for second
place. But if there is beyond
normal reasoning powers.
ally.
Stengel took’the wrap* off Mag-
lie on Thursday and the Barber
proved to be sharp. He worked
.1 scoreless innings against the
Red Sox. Maglie kept his curve
low and biting at the corners.
He was satisfied and so was Sten-
gel.
Of course, 8 innings in spring
training does not mean much as
regards the regular season. But it
doe* indicate that the Bat bar still
knows how to pitch.
And that’s important.
Maglie’s ambition is to help
pitch the Yankees to flag over a
full season, not just a month as
he did last year. He points out
that he helped the Giants win a
couple of pennants and the Dod-
gers one also. Doing the same
for the Yankees would give him
something of a baseball grand
slam.
Now, you can Insure your
•*ntiri* family —- under one
policy, at one low premium I
• Family Group I,If*
• Income Dnlla^a for
HkkiiexM or Accident*.
• Hospitalisation Plan.
era, viewed
upon arrival. There i W a ' VJ a
-was Pee Wee Reese, one of the XlCOllGSIS Doll!
fine campaigners of our time,1 ,
but, hard as it is to believe, he U7uf|y pa||np(>An
is 38 and he hit only .224 last f» 111* * CII1C1 aJlIll
year and he is through.
Carl Furillo was there, but a ’New York, Mar. 15 <yi—Ton
heavy-legged, pleasant veteran, Anthony is looking for a titl
not the hard-running rifle arm hout with Heavyweight Champio
we’ve always seen. You must Floyd Patterson,
wonder about Duke Snider, too, He made the challenge inimet
particularly If he sulks about the '»tely after stopping Yvon Di
right field wall at the Coliseum, relle in 31 seconds of the 7t
Or if his knee doesn’t come ™«»n4 * scheduled 10-rounde
around. Gil Hodges might have >n New York,
the real big year, courtesy of the Anthony ia a normal Iigh
left field wall. i heavyweight. And he was knocke
“We got real good pitching,” out by Archie Moore, the ligh
Walter Alston reminds. Then he heavyweight champion, in a bh
goes into Don Drysdale and John-i for the crown 6 months ago.
ny Rod re- and Don Newcomhe and But Anthony believes he is gooi
the rest. | enough to step into the heavy
But all we were thinking about weight ranks and is ready t
was the big blackboard which meet all comers, including Patter
used to be in the Dodgers’ offices son.
on Montague Street in Brooklyn ........
and Arthur Mann, has voice ex-! — _
cited, pointing to name after■, Jlolsiliy I fDPlfC
name one afternoon, AJClCIUj U1OV&0
“Here,” he was saying, “New-1T 1 T) 1
port News, Va. Hodges. Gil XQQOOr £t6C0rfli
Hodges, a catcher. And here,;
Fort Worth, Tex. Duke Snider, j 17earn M[]]a Diim
a centerfiider. Montreal. K o y X Ul i'liiv XIUU
Campanelle, a catcher. Remember)
that name. There’s a pitcher at; Chicago, Mar. 15 UP — Ron
'Nashua, N. H. Don Newcomb*. Deiany of Villaneva and Ire*
Don’t forget this one, either.?’, land did his celebrating of St.
; This was late in the 1947 sea-1 Patrick's Day a little early,
son and Branch Rickey was runn-| Running last night in the Bank-
in# the Dodgers and he had a ers Milt in Chicago, the srast
farm system which was, as Mann runner cracked the worlds indoor
'kept insisting, going to pay off j record for the mile. Hew®8 clock-
in total domination of the Na- ^ «" * minutes, 8 and four-tenths
tional League. i *«or.dS., The previous record of
, .., , „. . , 4 minutes, 3 and six-tenths »*c-
It d.d, the same as Rickey s ondg h#d ^ ^ by Gun nar
chain operat on made the Cardi-j Nielsen of Denm,rk 3 ,re
nals baseball’s big team for a jn New York
styetch. Delany put the capacity crowd
But now Rickey is gone and jnt© a frenzy with his sped in
the Cardinals train at St. Peters-. tke fjnai quarter mile. Delany
burg with no new talent to speak sayg ^e heard the announcer give
of and the Brooklyn recuits out- a time 0f 3 minutes and 5 seconds
side of Don Demeter, could flop j jor thre-quarlers of a mile for
as they did last year. It remains tke pace-setter, Phil Coleman,
to be seen if Dick Gray, Bob \i tj,e time Delany was just a
Lillis and a couple of more can ; stride behind. Delany saya he de-
make it. 1 | cided then and there the record
Certainly, there isn’t a catcher j could be cracked if he put on a
in the Dodgers organization, burst of speed. And speed he
S«« Dirk Carpenter
^ I0« Clever H.
! •elphee Ifftap
TUS-flM
•tuflBrtsjar
MAN - ftl/.FD — Here’. Rtan
Muxiat at the work he dor*
best — .hitting pilt he* they
throw to the fit. l,ouls Cardi-
nal star, (NKAL
Danny McDevill
Finds Sidearm
Throw Puzzling
Dodgers in mid-season last year.
He was a flash for a while hut In
th* cloning weeks of the season
Air (.’omtil-osise - Msmemt**' ecu** rn stdmt-
(h* all wesiher ceel-iii 0*1 a dee-mlOolHMl
onds and he had set a new world
record indoors for the mile.
Delany says he wasn’t par-
[ ticularly slated by hi* time. But
he was happy because he wanted
to win the race for his coach at
Villanova — Jim Elliott.
Bays Delany:
“He has done so much for me
during my 4 years at Villanova.”
Delany will end hla indoor cam-
paign next Saturday when he
runs in the Knights of Columbus
games in Cleveland.
Phoenix, UN— The difference
between winning and losing In
the major heagues Is .often a small
thing.
A hatter ahifta his feet a littla
and turns from a .250 to s .800
hitter. A pitcher adds one pitch
to hi* repertoire and it gives him
enough variety to keep the hit-
ters off stride. And sometimes
it’s only a question of how he de-
0CEAN TO OCEAN ACROSS SOUTH
AMERICA-AND BACK-IN 41 HOURS!
CHEVY’S NEW V* LEVELS
THE HIGHEST, HARDEST
HIGHWAY OVER THE ANDESI
To prove the durability of Chev-
rolet’s radical new Turbo-Thrust
V8,” the treaendous flexibility of
the new Turboglide transmission,•
the incredible saoothneaa of Full
Coil suspension,* we tackled the aoet
challenging transcontinental road in
the world — the 1,000-eile General
San Martin Highway, To sake it
harder, the Automobile Club of
Argentina sealed the hood shut at
Buenos Aires — no ohance to add
oil or water or adjust carburetors
for high altitude.
So the run began — across the
blazing Argentine paspas, into the
rasparts qf the forbidding Andes.
Up and up the road olimbed, almost
2j miles in the akyl Drivers
gasped for oxygen at 12,572 feet -w
but the Turbo-Thrust V8 never •
slackened its torrent of power, the
Full Coll springs smothered every
bump, the Turboglide tranmmission
made play of grades up to 30
percent. Then a plunge to the
Pacific at Valparaiso, Chile, a
quick turn-around and back again.
Time for the round trip: 41 hours
14 minutes — and the engine was
never turned offI
•A’xfce-eoef option.
liven the bail.
The Lo* Angele* Dodger* are
of a mind that *omething like that
may make a big winner out of
Danny MeDevitt thi* year.
Danny 1* the tough little aouth-
paw who made a apectacjjlar ap-
pearanee on the mound fo> the
President Syngman Rhee of
Korea sent the following meavage
on his New Year’s cards: “There
ia no enemy to fear, if the power
of pen and aword ia uaed for jua-
Sensational mw Doves WONDER-1-COAT
Lk molutinizts house pilitlif I /
Neighborly SERVICE to Kelp
You Financially
Yon wfll feel at home here whether depositing or borrowing
money. Our financial services are for your convenience and
profit. 1
Take advantage of our many service* to handle all your money
matter* ... to help you progreaa.
Your buaineaa will be welcome.
* ■■sgagjgg 7.77
You’ll gtt th* beat buy &n the beet teller t
See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer
THOMAS
LUMBER COMPANY
MERRILL CHEVROLET CO
Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Membe^jof f ederal Reserve System f'
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 62, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 16, 1958, newspaper, March 16, 1958; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth827282/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.