The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 155, Ed. 1 Friday, July 1, 1960 Page: 20 of 20
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Orange Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Lamar State College – Orange.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
-e“9!
b
b
A,
/
A
f
*9
>K
% ■ \
PAGE SEVEN
THE ORANGE LEADER
At Wimbledon
$
Salt Is Off Orioles' Tail Feathers
V
Don Buddin eluded catcher Red
ilans at Wimbtedae Mo MBed to
wilson in a run-down for the de-
in as Boston scored six in
re-
roit
ling all
The Orioles, who had nst’f
White Sox agai
Clevenger (1-5).
Dick Stuart Ties
Kiner's HR Mark
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
i
2 ’
came the second Pirate ever to
Willa did it for the Dodgers
h.. K- c-- L.L:.a ..X.1 ।
as
6-3.
In P - A Series Givs Expert Tips
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
I. and 11 th home
—hi* ninth.
ST. ANDREWS. Scotland (AP)can citizen. returned to his. home
the Philadelphia Phillies 10-6
three pitchers He hit a three-run
\
—23 5
544
34
opener
.358.
at Bolttmore (Pappos
BOSTON (AP)
1
.585
career. He was the nation's lead-
.536
.485
»
409
(LOSE
Athletes
Came, Fish Fines
Seek Rome
____
1
Trip Today
24 INCH
A number of persons were
7
POWER-O-MATIC
race won by" fsvbred Praise U*.
€
JULY 2nd - 3rd - 4th
BREAK THE BANK
0
3 Games per Person per Event.. 70% Handicap
*u
<0
DOUBLES
SINGLES
$
525°
A"
nn
ir Event. . 70% Handicap
t
d
0Q
$
Bowl Any Hour
or Night
ORANGE BOWLING
Diql TU 3-8129
1103 W. 0
Aces Frem Trein Depot
1
h,},‘
1 s .
V
-- j,” -
■ i ■
»: -
V
1
1
POWER MOWER
oF-0
Hammtt
pram a Stanford win places on
the squad with two exceptions.
The fourth man in the 100 and
Texas League
Breaks Even
six hits, struck out six and didn't
walk a man in 7 24 innings of
Guaranteed
Men or Women
JULY 4th BENEFIT
BAR-B-Q
9V
11
■ 12
Hank Willing
To Wait Now
For Title Go
Old British Open Champ Says
Palmer Will Lose on Greens
Life - Saving Feat May
Win Jockey Top Honor
Mew York
Bomimore
PRESS
ILTS
V
32
35
35
35
39
crowding
("nobody’s
Pmsburgh
MiIwoukee
ing jockey in 1952.
Wajda's heroics were performed
in the five-furiong, third race wen
Oriole Boss
Says Birds
Won't Win
28
35
37
39
12
17%
11%
/ 4
EETm. _
St. -------
Houston —
Minneopolis
Dollas-Ft, Worth
Charieten p
drove in three, two with a. homer.
Ed Roebuck (6-1) won his fifth in
a row in relief.
e (W
3
ea
s50 Guaranteed
TOOAY’S
Detrett (Lary +• et >
mi
37
su
392
knocked Despirito from the sad-
dle. his left foot entangled in the
The Cubs escaping the cellar,
swung for 19 hits and handed
Tom Sturdivant (1-2) was the win-
ner in relief. • ' •
30
467
455
eight bad spis and twice before
> near death in his f0-year
in fines on 272 game and fish law
violations in May.
Despirito’s feet were out of the
iron and he coasted home, ninth
in a 10-horse field. Wajda finished
,‘n
about?" th* gray-haired. 50-year:
old Salt Lake City financier, said
today "We’re not as bad off as
it 16oks.
89
} i
61
FRIDAY’S GAMES
Cherieston at st pout
Lovisville at Kouston.
Dglas-Ft Worth at Minneopolis
idionopolis dt Denver
PAN-AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
THURSDAY‘$ RE$ULTS
WIMBLEDON, Engiand (AP)-
Collapse of the American bennis
foroes and sucoess of the Austra-
the champ" after a convincing
knockout victors Thursday night
over Victor Zalazar of Buenos
Aires. Hank kavoed the Argentine
fighter at 2:11 of the fourth round
to a scheduled I0-rounder. It was
hander Billy Loes in the third and
a winning, solo jolt off losing right
hander Stu Miller (24) in the
fifth.
of his mount. Color Bearer.
Had he fallen he could have
been tramped by horses pressing
from behind or dragged by his
mount running at about 35 miles
an hour.
place tie with St. Louis. It marked
the first time the Dodgers were
in the first division since May 7.
loped two homers for five runs
as the Birds ended their losing
string at three. --
But the Yankees. crashing fve
FREE!
TRIP TO HAWAII
REGISTER NOW!
STATE PAINT (0.
$2.504per Pei
Hank s fight all the way.
Th* Detroit fighter, one of the
middie-]
21
A remarkable 25-vear-old Despirito who has had
#.3
Mixed Doubles
‘25"
Guaranteed
Men or Women
a weekend series. . row.
“You’ve got to win more than | Mays’ second game homer. with
three in a row.” Alston declared J none on in the eighth, was the
"Hot I’m happy the boys started lonly run allowed by lefty rookie
to mov*.” _ 1 Joe Gibbon (44). He gave up just
FRIDAY, JULY 1, IRAQ
Bombers Blast Five Home Runs
•r IWE*oU
THURSDAT i
Alpine S. Albuquerqve '
Corisbod 8. Odessa 0
in the .fifth against loser Jim
Owens (3-9). Charlie Neal also
=‘
2
Lew Burdette (8-4) his second
straight defeat. Ernie Banks, who
hit his 22nd home run. Richie Ash-
burn and Frank Thomas each
drove in three runs. Don Cardwell
(4-5) won it.
A three-run triple by Maury
1.
ImE
-- waf "**a
last Friday night, drove in seven
runs in the nightcap. He sat out
the first contest. The homers were
his first at Forbes Field this year J
-"I don’t like to sit on the
bench.” the big first, basemen re-!
(nigrn
Cig “rr
Cievelandecroni
‘panic Qalid Freed, the new Unit-
ed States Davis Cup captain. -
"What s there to get excited
B •A 171
L
U.S. Tennis Collapse ‘
Fails to Panic Freed
—Jock Hutchison, first American town to win the British title in
to win the British Open golf title. ’ 1921 and now is retired in Evan-
today gave reigning wmerican ston. III.
champion Arnold Palmer a few . Still bronzed and fit looking, he
avro +ine A. A- a, +. conM- c, +te E-cL h:. -ti.- cit. . Wav At...
Kaeg3c, “200 s» at Boston csuiven
A). (niohn). ■
NaTIONAL LEAOUE
thuxsoavs KESULTS
Cmc0oo II. miouk* 5
S"nFARencisc 112 Pnisburgh 6-11, Ctwt
☆ Finger tip Remote Controls.
☆ Durable Chrome Handle -
☆ Removable Lef Mulcher
☆ Heavy Gauge Steel Deck
☆ Offset Steel Wheels
run single for seven RBI as the
Bucs beat San Francisco 114 and
salvaged a split in ’ a twi-night
doubleheader.
The nightcap victory. after a
! three-hit pitching performance by
Jack Sanford, had giveh the Gi-
ants an H-0 decision in the first
game, was the Pirates’ first suc-
cess in six games, but padded
their National League lead to
three games again.
Second place Milwaukee lost 11-
5 *t Chicago.
The world champion Los Ange-
les Dodger* returned to the first
division for the first time since
May 7. tying idle St. Louis for
fourth place with a 10-6 victory at
Philadelphia that dropped the
Phils back to the bottom. I . .
Stuart socked his homers off
The victory wasqthe.Dodgers
third straight over ihe" Phillies as
they closed out. the Airrent series
and moved them into a fourth-
——- - „
Ti rest one I
uaammmamuamaaammmummuaauE
burgh's Forbes Field. That was
long ago. and the right-handed bel-
__ter was shooting at a short left
at field fence. Kiner’s Korner, they
thoroughbred rider.
Wajda’s spectacular effort in
saving Tony Despirito from possi-
Me death Thursday at Suffolk
Downs brought a nomination for
the George Woolf Memorial Tro-
phy for xalr, according to New
England Jockey Guild representa-
tive Martin O’Neill
“There’s ro doubt about it.
Wajda saved my life." said the
.eemi.sic "a
THIS WAY PLEASE—Apparently Mon and Dad took the boys to
see the ballgame between the Los Angeles Dodgers and Phillies
in Philadelphia, But look .who’s wearing the glove and anxious
expression as all foNgw the flight of a foul ball hit by Duke Snider
of the Dodgers This appealing tableau was caught by the long-
lens camera during the 6th inning of the game. Unfortunately all
are unidentiffed?^. _____,7 ________
P
Son Froncisce---V
Ln Angeis-----2
V. Loul - ——— 2
cincirneti —--------»
ebleaas -----—2
Pnnodeiphio yodays"aames
74)6 Pitaburga
a unique man among prize fight-
tn. rte wants a chance at the
championship as badly as th*
next fellow, but he is willing to
wait until he deserves a chance.
Hank made no cries of “I want
Thursday, Ralston of Bakers-
field. Calif.. teamed with young
Raphael Osuna, a Mexican who
attends Southern California in a
sensational march to th* men’s
doubles finals. They beat Italian
pings: Boston belted Detroit 11-7.
While the Yankees were club-
bing the A's to a seventh straight
defeat, right-hander Ralph Terry
(44) hung up his first complete
game in seven tries since May 19.
He allowed seven hits, two of
them homers by Ahdy, Carey and
Jerry Lumpe, but blanked the A’s
r i
L J
_____ . __________________________ "When I sit around three
cautious Alston. He remembered bat lead at .361 with a 6-for-7 or four days and then I do get
in. it makes me bear down all
and Swedish Davi* Cup teams
Rod Laver and Bob Markwho
were second seeded, in gruel-
ling marathon 44, 308, 15-13, 44,
The United-States reached the
woridaz ^"fetne^^^^^^S^nd^^
with Hank Casey-before anything "Hentze, San Diogo, whipped En-
else The unranked Casey won alfainis Shiela Armstrong and De
split decision over Hank tost: dre Catt in the quarterfinals 84.
month. • ... 6-3.
Total Price
49”
rested for killing game out of sea-1
son and 176 paid fines for failure
to buy their $2.15 fishing license.
The commission said Thursday! m a iu-norse neia. waus xnbicu
1 new hunting and fishing licenses lciehth aboard Lusty Andy in a
! will be required Sept. 1. 1 race won by' favored Praise Us.
THROAY$ KESULTS
Mingeopofis, i. Daitos an wortn • ri’
r. newer « n Innings). .
Leonville 5 Mouston •
». Pou * La ve sehine
ROTARY
MOWER
:______a •_____________
The horse’ ran about 50 yards
ribeforerwajda lifted Despirito safe-
ea- ly back on top of his mount. Both
in 51 years.- Ralph Kiner was
the Only Pirate ever to hit three relief,
home runs in one game at Pitts-
as Bob
. ■' "
Rv, with a 4-2 decision in 1o.in-cIhdrsday with the ralse
fence long gone. Dick Stuart be-
400-meter races qualifies as a
. member of relay teams.
A decision may come quickly on
which three of America’s big four I
in the shot, put will survive. Two- !
time Otmpic champion Parry
O’Brien, Bill Nieder, Dallas Long,
and Dave Davis all have const*-'
w tently thrown further-than 60‘feet.
_ Nieder has the best toss at 65 feet
"NLjnches.
Generally considered. the four |
best in theworid. They start com- l
" peting hi omeqthe opening field!
" event*.
home runs. clobbered Kansas
City 10-2. Those five homers, two
by Bill Skowron, gave the leaders
46, for the month and a season
total of 90. Roger Maris crashed
his 25th and Mickey Mantle hit
th*.Dodgers, now 6-4. on th* cur- night. Willie drove in the Giants’
rent road trip, meet the first- first three runs, two with his 91st
place Pittsburgh Pirates tonight hmerin th* —_______
at Forbes Field in the opener of'Friend (9-5) lost his second in a
help from our older players and
if the pitching continues to im-
prove. I'd say we have a chance,
I for the pennant~.. 7 9 «
H«Ma 7. Artwa 1 o p-y |b
Alpine * i-- - a 19 x -m,
bod----- » 9222 17
oome —-—32 2 482
X0005 - 3 37 1 N"
miau?s SChedUle, ’
Alpin •< Albuquerque
COMM at orisbga"
Are Hnsvv in Maw Pictures depict Wajda pulling
Are Heavy in May alongside Despirito and doing a
AUSTIN (AP)—The Game and' masterful job. guiding his horse
FiSh Commission collected $5,197 with his right(hand and reaching
- for Tony with his eft, '
J SPOT ADS
m are well read
jolt three home run* out of ___ ___—___ _
Forbes: The slumping, sometimes they came from behind with five
sluggish slugger did it inconsecu- • * "eu -i- - H-
live at-bats, then added a two-
si 3 , 40
as 4′441
5 41 444
5 • 37 : 1
vinced of it.” \ ' I
Freed said the United Suite*
had no reason for feeling, shame Ad
DETRorT(P2-Henry,Manpkisafun-“ameddonputoimn“n
.mm., man 7mon& Drize light the singies semitinals.
Did this mean the Dodgers,
world champions of 1959 who ha
Rio Grond• — •
San Antonig ------- 4
Vielorio --—---41
Austin ------2 -
Tulse « 2
amorIIIo .. -_____ 35 42
ERiDAYS gaes
in a row at horn*, got all they — — .
needed when Walt Dropo singled (4-4) won it in relief.
McCormick in the first inning, a
bases-empty home run off righty
“We have the finest young Un-
nis talent in the wor d—with fel-
lows such a* Earl Buchholz,
ChuckMEKimey and Dennis Ral-
ston—and I'll say another thing:
“If we get past Mexico City, we'll
win back the Davis Cup. I'm eon-
Rocky :
Russ Kemmerer Colavito, who drove in five runs,
and the other by Eddie Yost. Ted ‘ '
— Williams hit his 505th home run
7 for the Red Sox, his 13th this year.
LA Dodgers
May Have
Momentum
PHILADELPHIA (AP) —Mays
be the Los Angeles Dodgers final-
ly have that momentum Manager
Walt Alston has been .looking for.
“When you win you get momen-
tum and a little momentum can
pick up a club when things are
tough,” Alston said Thursday
night after his Dodgers defeated
STORES I
GREEN AVE. AT 10TH ST. — PHONETU 3-8485
E I1
Egg“3g ■ W' |
IF w - j
• Shsing
. fl
■
-
2SS% s >
Bostoe - 24
his I sth
Chicago’s fourth place White
Sox, 414 games behind, ended,
Washington’s winning streak L.
rm--amrhmmtum
They dropped the, first game 110 wn*-. -AGdine .n.
and stormed back to win the sec-1 you re reading one .
ond 114 1
Stuart, who hadn't played since'
Hank built up an eariv lead with
overhand rights and digging lefts
to the midsection. Hank finally
stageered Zalazar early ■ in the
fourth round as the two came off---------------- -----
♦he ropes. Aseries of four rights Thursday night in their six-game
end lefts to the head finished [Pan-Amertan schedule as the
Zalazar. Teagues continued their inter-cir-
. Hank weighed 159, Zalazar 1 curt rivalry,
160%. ______ . Puebla whipped Amarillo 6-3,
Tulsa edged Monterrey 74. the
the harder."
His home runs cam* in the 1
first, third and fifth innings, all |
off different pitchers. Stuart had)
two more cracks to become the■
ninth player in major league his-
tory to hit four home runs in one:
game. •
runs and a singie.
“It was a long "bime coming. I
. ,-----------.... ---------was'way overde, Stuart exud.
--- southpzw Mikefed after the Pirates split a dou- ■
t " .. - ... .. ..... bleheader with San Francisco:t
But Yanks Are Still Bustin' Loose
Ewuus w
s E, 03 was th toser,n^
doo^to. hUPYork inthat Ameri- The Orioles, who had native White- Sox Zagainst reliever Tex the.runs onhomers.twe hz.Rocky
can League race after the way
the Yankees buried loose in June.
The Orioles, still-within 1%
games of the Yanks, grabbed sec-
ond place back from Cleveland
with a 9-1 victory Thursday night.
Brown chopped down the Injuns
with a six-hitter and Gentile wal-
Texas League and Mexican)
League baseball Hams broke even]
A pitchers duel followed two
extra-inning games at Harlingen i
where the Eio Grande Valley
.team bowed to the Mexico City
Lo.'ZSm to Phuladetphia 6 (ntgm). Reds. Tommy Herrera outpitched
- omy gomes schngvted. Gaylord Perry for the victory and
• - *J" 1" $ _ a 2-1 edge in the three-game set. life-saving feat on horseback to-le-m —
— “ - - 2 Mexico City’s Tigers jumped on 1 day earned jockev Henry Vajda of has been
„ $, a trio of San Antonio pitchers for Newmarket. N. H.. a nomination----- 1
#: 2 17 hits to take their third straight for the highest honor awarded a
— 12, victory nt Mission expense.
i Victoria’s victory at Veracruz
. .__ 100.. 2 m pimsuren meant a four-game sweer- for the
,2.7* O"ROSebuds. Lefthander Dick Small-
mhwmw (Brne Mi ond Moteber*. 00 wood hurled a five-hitter to win
* »*• *7 ond (Sum and held Veracruz scoreless for
r---cmem (keE8mb 35 »■ Chicopo seven innings. Kal Segrist hom-
(Prgemon Ml. «»ui ilered in the first inning to provide
son Fncco (Jones an ri PAilocetphio . winnie marin
ceumnorg 15. <m*mi the winning margin.
' americaN AsOCIATION ----------------
1 1
Hmmrmamemm
—-
stirtup iron. Tony clung precart-
ously to the right side of the neck
mmnearmm"--TT
Heaviest than on th* Tjbwrit Ti-
ger roster is first baseman Stev
Bilko at 235 pounds.
MORE
’FOR ' X
LESS!
On Firt ond Auto Insurance
Allen E: Brown
- INSURANCE AGENCY
1611 Green — TU 6-3654
Stuart's -sluzgtng barely over-
___________ we I shadowed Willie Mays’ two-
been floundering around in the gam* show for the Giants. He h,
lover division most of the year, mered in each game, smacked
were on their way? - ’ 1 two doubles and a triple, drove
“You never know,"-replied Alin five runs and regained the NL
Stuart Back .
agfaa| aw through the season without major
With a Bang
PITTSBURGH (AP) —Contro- nominal success in one-run games
versial and colorful Dick Stuart thus far (19-62 has had much to '
returned to the Pittsburgh lineup, do with the Orioles, being on or
Thursday night with a bang. Innear the top. of the American
fact, with three bangs and a bing _
Hobbs at Artesio.. . .
internationol Leogve
Columbvs 1 Toront D
Hevana 6, Buffolo 5
Montregi 1, Richrond •
Rochester 1, Miami 3 ri»
Pecific Ceost Leogue
ten Late 4, Seottie ’ ,
scromente3,Portond•__
BALTIMORE (AP)—President-
General Manager Lee MacPhail of
the Baltimore Orioles tossed a
semantic slider when discussing
the pennant chances of the sur-
prising 1960 Birds.
“If you ask me if they will win,
I must honestly uy no,” Mac-
Phail said Thursday.
"But if you ask me if they can
win, the answer is definitely yes.”
"I our young players continue
to hold their own, if we get more
'•When I beat hiro then I’ll
•tart thinktoe pf.the bigger
fghts," said Hak
A-slid over Casey would! •
• throw Hnk in line for a bout i
againt either NBA Champion
Fullmer or Paul Pender.
<who is recognized as champion in
New York and Massachusetts. . I
Zalazar spent most of-his-brief
time in the ring retreating, and
! STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — A
! trip to Rome and the 1960 Olym-
- pics are up for grabs today as 22)
M I a ~ athletes representing the best in
nuTu. cur Foen 't.w Antonio * the Unitsg States opened competi- w
Auatin 4.293410 2. c-~.m vann i tton for berths on the track and
SeropisurvEt’cuRierondvo" field team thatwil represent
futsa r. montertey 4^ Loo pa. sehinel America in fhe games
“ sat — Only the top three in each of
45 •2 the 17 events on the two-day pro-
mmzta-auc
M0fa=E4
Pibshe
<87 . •
Only I25 Weekly
mummmuu
Mexico CtyReds slipped.by Rio
Grande yaffey 2-1. Austin deci-
• sionedIPoza Pica 6-1 Mexico
Kts Tige rs.slappedsan.Antonip exper tips on- how to conquer St ’is back in his native city to’piay
A35-10.and Victom la won 4-1 overAdrews Old Course in next «i the centenary open.
veracruz. - week’s 100th playing of the open, i “1've ptayed the old course
Hanke Hemmerly. turned in "It would be wonderful if Palm- three times since I got here," he
, what was called his- best pitching [er coukd add the British crown to said. .
performance of the season in turn- hjs American open and masters! "But it gets longer and longer
iiwk ing backPoza Rica Jsheavy-hitting triumphs," Hutchinson said - for me. The other day I went out
+#UESIG", TNSs Oilers.with.a ourrhitterine in the! But I dont think he’lldoit m the teeth of a galepiayed one
ye u Koran, cav i Tulsa struck for fixe runssin the His work around the greens ma. hole, had a look at the next and
onon.n-.P"reu”a 1 min eighth inning *nd receivedifine re- let ham down. decided it was time I took a
craooo^. woShingom aInga mgk lief hurling from Norm Anderson - "rve my him he must play his, rest.” '
we ie* P. sehmne towin over Monterrey. The Tulsa pitches so thev bounce only once: Palmer, defending champion
2343 1 triyaph..: coupled with Amarilo’ and then sit dwon instead of run- Gary Player of South Africa and
5 #5: Jess, enabled -Tulsa to wriggle out ning them up. That way they'll! Peter Thomson, four-time winner
Aof the Texas League cellar, just roil on andon " from Australia, are the favorites
8 It was Tony Dichochea who Palmer admitted the hazard. for next week’s championship.
I’1'’, handcuffed. Amarillo's Gold Sox.; Hutchison, 76. a native of St Piayer and Thomson both shot
Dichochea was in trouble in the'Andrews, migrated to the United 70s in practice Thursday. Palmer
Yofk (Ford 49) third inning when Amarillo loaded: States in 1904, became an Ameri- had a 71.
the bases. The Parrots took ad-
vantage of nine bases on balls
and seven hits to win their first
game of the three-gam* series.
on the far turn
fault" — Despirito)
251
sGuaranteed
Men -or Women
/ ' 410 FRONT AVE r
Pora Rica at Rio Gronde Vai lay
or auarin
lonferrey at Amarillo
victdrigjat Mexico City Tigers
San Amfnio at Veracruz
SOPHeNORE LEAGUE STANDINGS
Adults $7 Children rA
Flat# I Under 13 •VS
Wesco Little League
IRVING Dark WEST
STREEI, rain otAMM
MONDAY, JULY 4th
NOON UNTIL 4 P.M.
’A'', -
52 at Washington (Fisch-
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 155, Ed. 1 Friday, July 1, 1960, newspaper, July 1, 1960; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1464503/m1/20/?rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.