Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 259, Ed. 1 Friday, August 12, 1960 Page: 4 of 8
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Carpenter Fires
All-Star
Trackdown
LAUNCHING PAD
mhin88!
■ A Tilt Set
Blanks At Dyess
3
By BIUL STOVALL
*
Floral. riding the wings of Carpenter’s stingy hurling
w
3 9
TOI
Sherman Lumber at 1140. and
of Midland
stre
(S
I
f
E
HARRELL REGISTERS 16 STRIKEOUTS
Hard chunking
showed signs that he might be
This was the total scoring un-,
til the 12th.
Lumbermen broke
then added two more markers
when Smith
and Neil Guthrie
Angeloans tied things up in the
sixth to send the game into the
Orioles Gain Ground
the Killeen game in the Dis-
re 11.
Trample Tigers By 6-1
a top notch flinger.
the American League pennant
team.
Musial's Homer Nips
Pirates In 3-2 Tilt
Leach Gains
In City Golf
By WHITNEY MARTIN
He had a pair of doubles earlier
in other AL games. The Yankees
Associated Press Sports Writer as a warmup.
and Chicago had an open date.
game on the idle Yankees and
at
ed in the annual city golf tour-
The home run binge the Orioles
LOCKETTE
REFG. SERVICE
Main at Lee
Ml 3-5232
der Jr.
son, 2-1.
In National Tussle
BUILD
| loss philosophically.
BROWNWOOD
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siderable service last fall in his first season, should fill in
well for Lackey. Lee has switched to guard from end
.‘9
$ Jj
Frigi King
Sales & Service
with two hits. He was the only
San Angelo batter who got to
Harrell for more than one hit.
effort, as indicated by the betting
averages Last year the club was
hitting .236 at this time. Thia year
trict 3 final. but had to receive
help from Barker and Harrell.
Barker is leading hitter on the
Lumbermen's roster as well as
games — is a little misleading
when given as. the cause of the
Lumbermen jumped into a
quick 1-0 lead at the end of
the fifth.
Carpenter had the Key City
team eating out of his hands all
Mark Lowrance advanced in
second flight action with a 4-3
win over Tom Spore.
downed Cleveland 5-2 in the other
AL games. Chicago had an open
date along with New York.
2
1
r
Tigers 6-1, to run their victory
string to six games
Baltimore. which now has won
11 of its last 12, gained a half-
one so he can go home
The old man 1* Stan
He's only 39, but that's
as ball players go.
The personable fellow
J
Howard Payne
and
Leach being the only member of
the championship flight to ad-
vance.
Leach whipped past Raymond
treg
it M
By BILL STOVALL
Bulletan OperU Writer
200 E. Up—MI 5-2488
FREE DELIVERY
DEVELOPING
• PRINTING
Texans, considered by many ob-
servers as the tourney favorites,
broke a 1-1 tie with three big
. runs in the third, then added one
I in the fourth, three in the fifth
and two in the sixth to complete
the rout.
Randell Rieger, one-half of the
touted Odessa mound staff, pick-
! ed up the pitching win, allowing
but two hits.
prolonging the game. In the 12th
inning Stan the man smacked a
Roosevelt signed the law provid-
The winner of the Brownwood- ing for Philippine independence
Bay City game will meet the in 1934.
As one of Brown County's four basic industries, Howard
Payne College reflects in its progress the economic well-being
of the county. Help Brown County invest in the proposed
science building at Howard Payne. Fill out the following
pledge card and mail to Dr. C. E. McCarver, Development
Vice President, Howard Payne College.
BROWNWOOD BULLETIN Friday, August 11 1900 mum ■ m m m mma
eFloral Advances In Tourney
WRDAe
ULVERMA
1
1.
the seventh.
OILERS RALLY
The Oilers ended matters in
the ninth on an error and singles
by Tommy Alexander, Gene Ste-
phens and winning pitcher Roy
Weeks.
By GIB STALEY
PrTTSBURGH (AP) — "I Mid
in
< i
“Roos Tough
NEW WEATHERFORD High School Coach H W. Wil-
son certainly isn’t going out on the limb in his first year
at the helm of the Kangaroos.
Wilson, with 16 returning lettermen and a host of
starters off last year's better than average team, picks his
Roos well down the list in pre-season ratings of the Dis-
trict 4-AAA flag race.
The Stephen F. Austin graduate picks Graham, Brown-
wood and Breckenridge as the favorites this fall.
Most 4-AAA coaches have expressed a great deal of
confidence in Brownwood, despite the fact that the Lions
will be small and return only six lettermen, far fewer
than any other team.
Lack Depth
NEW COACH Gordon Wood may be able to put a good
first team on the field this fall, but after that, the former
Stamford and Victoria mentor will have to depend on some
talented but untried sophs.
An interesting angle on the Lions and Kangaroos is the
fact that the two teams play three mutual opponents dur-
ing the year.
DOCTOR
MOLLIE W. ARMSTRONG
Optometrist
Dial Mi s-5539 tor an
appointment
otfiee 1309 Center
SOUTHERN
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
fl Center Ave. Dial M 3-4571
Bob Friend pitch into the stands
with a man on base to give the
Cards a 3-2 decision and cut
Pittsburgh'!' lead to four games.
(
season
Baltimore is only one ahead of second round against Ned
its home run output at a similar -
• -4* X
g2
- "" 77
aa" "9264
the fastest hurler in this part of _ ..., - -____________ _ _________________
the state as he whiffed 16 San the first inning of play, and the nearly four hour long game
Angelo batters to face him. The then added two more markers when Smith and Neil Guthrie
, ---"After all.” he Mid. "it was a
before the game that we’ll be in real tight game and Bob Friend
the thick of the pennant race all certainly pitched an outstanding
the way and now that the game’s game So did Ernie Broglso for the I
over I m still saying the same Cards."
credit. He was the winner at centerfield fence with one out in
medalist Joe Carl
Jeff Harrell
IN APPRECIATION for the fine work Howard Payne College is doing for
the youth of our times and because of the urgent need of a new Science
Building at the college,
k*
jwnE (-3
(22 '1
) SoRe,
a47
air offensive rather than a ground
attack.
Quarterbacks Don Meredith of
of Southern Methodist George Izo
of Notre Dame and Pete Hall of
Marquette may spray the atmo-
sphere with more passes than
ever before in the series.
There even could be more aerial
action than in last year's 29-0
Colt triumph in which the col-
legians tried 41 tosses, completed
15 for 186 yards, and Baltimore
catapulted 28 for 14 hits and 211
yards.
Despite the potential passing
power of the All-Stars and a group
Franks 5-4 to advance to the
1
1
«
a double-tough San .Angelo team
Thursday afternoon in Katy
Park. The win by the Lumber-
men gains them the right to
meet Bay City in the semi-
final match of State Teenage
Tournament to unreel at • p.m.
where he was an all -conference performer.
Texas will play a not-so-tough non-conference slate, I now trails b only one same
but will once again meet traditional rival Oklahoma in ! have been on—15 in the last seven
Dallas. The Steers have downed Sooners two straight years,
bothwithgreat come-from-behind efforts that have'been surprising showing of the club this
typical of Royal-coached teams in Austin.
walked. and then Murray lifted
out his single to ice the game
away for the Lumbermen.
Isaia
the Lo
but he:
in all
He he
power
book’d
He san
much
faith I
been J
theref
the gq
his dal
ii. a
record
a timd
tory ol
preced
be a I
peoplel
ed Gul
by a I
went I
unfait
TThe
and tl
they I
obey I
Of t
Isaiah!
Israeli
laden I
evil I
corrur
cv: th!
they H
of Isr
gone •
head •
countiI
cern•
ceptai
Tbe r•
prave•
time •
in ■
"In 1•
dind. •
line ■
lifted ■
A. ■
to th
saw. •
the e•
go1/•
B. ■
•
saw •
the b•
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( •
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heep •
is •
regar•
which
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the team average is .255. A good
pitching staff is getting a little
help.
Thursday. Ron Hansen, Walt
Dropo, Dave Nicholson and Jim
Gentile all hit for the circuit
against the hapless Tigers, mak-
ing the job of pitcher Jack Fisher
a breeze.
Washington beat Kansas City
5-4 and the Boston Red Sox'
r AEE Sprinkled in the mixture of
I OD V* rense creaky veterans and callow youths
THE STEERS should have a brilliant offense, built Ps swhas piseablor ane
around the fine running of junior Jack Collins, who is defi- Canadian, club last year. Three
night. The burly righthander
1 faced only 23 men, issuing single
|walks in the first two frames.
' Carpenter set 15 Dyess batters
1 down on strikes.
Shamrock had to go pine in-
nings to beat Sherman Lumber
after losing hurler Billy Biddle
had sent the game into overtime
with a booming homer over the
of fine receivers, odds-makers
have installed Baltimore about a
20-point favorite. Gail Cogdill of
Washington State and Carroll Dale
of Virginia Tech are regarded as
two of the best pass-catching ends
ever to make an All-Star roster.
The San Angelo crew was
paced at the plate by starting
and losing pitcher Franklin
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righthander only let the San
Angelo team get to him for three
in the sixth frame during the 12
inning contest. Harrell outlast-
ed two Angelo pitchers in going
squad of 47 college graduates un-
doubtedly will be thinking of an
Richard Barker and Joe Loud-
ermilk led the hitting array for
the Lumbermen with each pound-
ing out two hits. Other Lum- j
bermen bingles were distributed
by Murray, Jerry Head and Har- I
In first flight action Fred
I .Here,s ‘ warning to.other Na- Los Angeles blanked Cincinnati
Four matches have been play- tional League dub*: When play- 3-0 and San Francisco nipped MI-
• h* "ha -"--1 “it- m* - ing the St. Louis Cardinals don't waukee 8-7 in other NL games
go into extra innings. The old Chicago’s Cubs and Philadelphia
man in left field to lable to get were not scheduled
tired standing around and blast The sizzling Baltimore Orioles
beat Detroit 6-1 and pulled within
1 and th big bats of Dan Owen and Aaron Long, shot down
! Dyess Air Force Base of Abilene by 3-0. In the other
matches, Coors smashed highly-regarded; Reynolds Metal
of Corpus Christi, 10-2, while Shamrock went nipe innings
to nudge Sherman Lumber of Beaumont, 5-3. 9
A full slate is on tap for, 40; and Reynolds Metal against
Daniel Baker and Sportsman loser ofCookAppliance-Bay City.
Parks tonight, with action Kels 066sainst Aufines at
getting underway at 5 p.m. 6:20, Corpus Christi Raiders vs.
The first game at Daniel Baker Austin Merchant* at 7:40. Coors
will pit Big Spring Cook Appli- against winner of Cook Appliance
ance against Bay City, while -Bay City at 9, winner Hutto-
Brotherton White of Wichita Holts against Kelley’s-Huffines
Falls tangles with A&J Electric winner at 10 20. Dyess against
nite all-American material. He was all-conference as a 01 them - Marv Breeding. Ron
soph last fall „ i, Wenegnnand SreupRonndanas
ToP bets for stardom this fall are Collins, quarterback the Orioles whipped the Detroit
Mike Cotton and guard Monte Lee. Cotton, who saw con- ~
BEHIND EVERY SAVINGS ACCOUNT
BIG 4% DIVIDEND
COMPOUNDED SEMI-ANNUALLY
„ . . .. .. Odessa had too many big bats
President Franklin Delano for Reynold* Metal. The West
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5 a/TEnTO~ iaj
ta ART~G WE
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FOoTBALL ... ■
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HIT... 1 -
I ' Bullet Bill Carpenter’s third np-hitter of the season
highlighted action in the state ASA softball tournament at
Daniel Baker Park Thursday night as Brownwood Floral,
I Odessa Coors and Abilene Shamrock posted opening night
; wins.
rbcm
w-e iT •H
-4wa AKIG 12
a-e Mss
M,
Bee-.
E-."
thing" . .. Fnend, now 12-9 for the year.
Thats what Manager Solly He- Mid:
mu* of the second-place St. Louis TOUGH LOKS
Cardinal, said early today in the "I simply pitched just about as
dressing room after the Cards good as I ever had and it was a
'■•me through with a 3-2 victory tough one to lose I tried to keep
over the frstplace Pittsburgh Pi- the ball away from Musial, but it
rates The Redbuds won the game came into him and he really hit it
on veteran Stan Musial's two-run He’s a great hitter."
homer in thetl2thinning. rTinA Tn'ra] 18 men in
_ . CTs LEAD / ( and had allowed, only one hit until
The..victory cut the B*} led the eighth When he gave up a
pyerthe Cards to four games and triple 10 Walt Moryn andarun
ranthe."Cardinal winning streak scoring single to car Sawatski.
1ofve. J™"* aIt also snapped Musal, ». al« swatted two
Asepen.game winning skein for doubles Talking tongue-in-cheek
v irate , But Manager Danny to sports writer, Musial smiled
Murtaugh of the Pirate, took the and commented:
mn ■ m stage of the race last year. The
(“eumaple ««aa Rmanaaa club has 85 for 109 games. Last Pierson defeated Allen Beadel
“05 23TOD W^|h was M i-up in 19 holes, and Port Blud-
" "T- " "" The real reason for the Balti- worth turned back John Thoma-
more boom is that it is a team son. 2-1.
Musial one game of the first place Yan-
antique kees in the American League.
Boston beat Cleveland 5-2 and
blasted Washington took Kansas City 5-4 I
ney, with
Longhorn 11
THE TEXAS University football brochure is out and
Longhorn publicity man Wilbur Evans fails to see eye to
eye with the various experts around the nation who have j
tagged the Steers as the team to beat in the coming race.
“University of Texas football fans have little basis!
for optimism as the 1960 season approaches,” says Evans,'
“Fourteen lettermen from last year's co-championship
•quad have departed, among them seven starters.”
Included among the missing Steers are such clutch
performers as the Galloping Gaucho, Rene Ramirez, Mike
Dowdle, Maurice Doke and Bobby Lackey, the underrated
quarterback. It was Ramirez and Lackey who fueled many
of those great comeback victories fashioned by the Orange
during the past three years. By WHITNEY martin
Evans goes on to say that Texas expects another hard- Associated Press Sports Writer
hitting team, but Coach Darrell Royal may have to go roterrmighengsva “tteeimpitimare
with several graduates off last year's unbeaten freshmen Vancouver is threatening to win
ity was completed. For example, at the conclusion of foot- The 27th midsummer classic is
ball season the players would be permitted to sign and sSZ^FtetAt
still have competition left in the remaining sports, win be televised and broadcast
As was expected the league refused. The TIL has an over ABC starting at 10 p.m.
amateur rule that states that an athlete can not accept EpternDalight.Time.. .. ,1
valuable consideration. likes of 288-pound Gene’ < Big Dad-
The letter of intent is becoming a problem throughout dy Lipscomb and 270-pound Art
the nation. Coach Ben Schwartzwalder of national chain- Donoyan coach otto Graham s
pion Syracuse is in favor of a national letter of intent. Such
a letter would insure all colleges doing their recruiting at
the same time and dates would be set that would not inter-
fere with high school athlete's remaining eligibility.
one Thursday night when the
Pittsburgh Pirates persisted in
game in the final championship
game Saturday night. Fort
Worth gained the right to ad-
vance in the tourney when they
downed DeKalb, 2-1, and the
host for the tournament. Waco
whipped Corsicana 5-3.
Lawrence Elkins or Barker
1* expected to get the startins
nod for the Bay City game this
afternoon. Elkin, already has
one tournament win to his
Here is the remainder of the loser of Brotherton White-A&J
schedule for tonight. - Electric against loner of Hutto-
DANIEL BAKER PARK Holt Sporting Goods at 1 a m.
Hutto against Holt Sporting Saturday.
! Goods at 6:20 pm. Lake Jackson Floral backed Carpenter's su-
ss Charlie's Package Store at perb performance with an air-
j 7:40, Brownwood Floral against tight defense and some timely
j Shamrock at 9. Conn's of Orange hitting from Long and Owen.
i against Brotherton White-A&J Owen, who seems to hit his
Electric winner at 10:20. and peak hath year in the state tour.
Lake Jackson-Charlie's winner ney, slammed a two-run homer in
against winner of Corpus Christi the first to provide Carpenter
Raiders-Austin Merchants, at 11:- with all the cushion he needed.
---------------------- LONG SCORES
Long scored the other Floral
run in the fourth when he singl-
Other tilts are scheduled with Nebraska and Maryland.
The 'Roos open their slate against Waco University, waco, Auz. 11—Clark Mur-
catch Killeen during the third week and visit Stephenville raz’s cluteh sinzle.in the Lum-
en Sentmh- 30 bermen • half at the 12th gave
On September 30. the Lumbermen a 5-3 win ever
Quarterly ( ) Monthly ( )
the Science Building Fund.
Signed
SOUTHWEST Conference coaches are still bickering CHARLES CHAMBERLAPi'
■with the Texas Interscholastic League over the signing-of CHICAGO LAp; — The CoUega
high school athletes to letters of intent. All-Stars tonight will try to make
it seems that the cgaches wanted the league to allow agdanr“tnesnmbitngokemco.pays2
high school seniors to sign the letters before their eligibil- tional Football League champions.
, ed. went to third on a throwing
! error and came home on Owen's
Lumbermen Slip Past San Angelo a-
co Am 11—Clark Mur. .. ton „ .. only other Floral hit, a single In
, “ 11—Viarx mur | the full route. marathon extra inning affair, t winner of the Fort Worth-Waco
in the third. After that, the
Lumbermen had to hold on for
all they were worth. The
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Coppedge, Don L. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 259, Ed. 1 Friday, August 12, 1960, newspaper, August 12, 1960; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1488901/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.