The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 133, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 23, 1962 Page: 3 of 6
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fCoupIand
Takes Over
Church Loop
Coupland s ran over Granger 14-
2 Tuesday night to take first place
in the Church League.
The Baptists edged Walburg 13
11 in the other game in the dou-
ble header.
The Coupland-Granger battle
was tied at 2-2 at the end of the
first inning.
M. Poldrack slammed out a
home run for Coupland with his
brother, L. Poldraek, on base.
Scoring for the Granger team
were Junior Kaderka and Albert
Repa.
That was all for Granger, but
Coupland went wild in the third
inning, scoring seven runs. Cross-
ing the plate were Hanson, L.
Poldrack, M. Poldrack, Welch,
Wernli, Dalgenner and Speckles.
They collected five. more runs
in the fourth. Heinze, Wernli,
^Dalgenner,Hardi and Bill Pflu-
^^kr crossed home plate.
^^The game was called after four
complete innings because of the
10-run rule.
Jodie Svehlak pitched for Gran-
ger, giving up three hits. L. Poid-
rack was on the mound for Coup
land and he allowed only one hit.
Walburg started off like a house
afire in the first inning before
finally being beaten 13-11 by the
Baptists.
Scoring four runs for Walburg
in the first were Marburger, John
Kasperick, Walter Domel and
Arnold Schultz. They scored four
more in fhe second inning, three
of the runs coming on a home
run by James Domel with two on
base, Marburger and John Kas-
perick. Ronnie Kasperick scored
the other run.
The Baptists tied it up with a
big second inning in which they
scored eight runs. Scoring were
Kucifer, Parker, Powell, Ivicic,
Green, Coffman, Autrey and Ivi-
cic again. Ivicic got a two base
hit.
Walburg went out front 9-8 with
one run in the third, scored by
R. Kasperick. They kept the one-
run lead in the fourth as both
teams scored two runs. For Wai-
burg, those who scored were
Frank Herzog and Harlen Buck-
horn, and for the Baptists, Park-
er and Powell. Powell got a
home run with Parker on.
The Baptists held Walburg in
Ihe fifth inning while scoring
^^^ree runs themselves to win the
^|p.me. Doing the scoring were
Parker (who got a double), Zim-
merhanzel and Stewart.
The game was called after five
complete innings because of the
9 p.m. time limit. This was the
first game of the double header.
Pitching for the Baptists were
Zimmerhanzel and Stewart. They
gave up 9 hits. On the mound for
Walburg was Walter Domel. He
allowed six hits.
THE STANDINGS
n
illli®
ISP
Si
m
■
-V J
iiii
■ill
I
MANTLE OUT OF ACTION — Yankee baseball slugging star Mickey Mantle
seems cheerful enough as he takes the whirlpool bath treatment in Lenox
Hill Hospital in New York City, for a torn .groin Imuscle suffered in game
against the Twins. Other Yankee players were in no smiling mood because it
will be at least three weeks before Mantle is back in action. — NEA Teiephoto
Team
Won
Lost
Coupland ........
...... 2
0
Baptists .........
...... 1
1
St. Paul .........
...... 1
0
St. Mary’s ......
...... 1
0
West Taylor ....
...... 1
0
Thrall ...........
..... 0
1
Granger .........
...... 0
2
Walburg .........
...... 0
2
OMAHA TAKES LEAD
By THE ASSOCIATED DRESS
Omaha weathered a 4-0 Indian-
apolis third inning lead and out-
slugged the Indians for a 6-4 vic-
tory and the American Associa-
tion lead Tuesday night. Louis-
ville dropped Dallas-Fort Worth
6-3 and Oklahoma City smothered
Denver 16-7.
H 0 WAR o
Today & Thursday
A WORLD OF A LOT OF SEX
...AND NOT ENOUGH LOVE!
BOtSilY B&itiN
STELLA STEVENS I
A Paramtftmt Release
jmm
Today & Thursday
ON/Ei Tames cagney
Ti*tyn HORST BUCHHOLZ
* PAMELA TIFFIN
TAIkES ARLENE FRANCIS
Texas leads'
Afl-Sfar Squad
DALLAS ® — The University
of Texas furnished nearly half
the personnel for the 1962 NCAA
Dist. 6 all-star baseball team.
Texas put five men on the li-
man squad.
The district coach of the year
is the Longhorns’ Bibb Falk.
Texas A&M and Arizona, which
lost the district playoff to Tex-
as, placed two men each on the
first team. Arkansas and Rice
placed one man apiece.
First team selections, with sea-
son batting averages or pitching
records, are: Gary London, Texas
(.302), catcher; Frank Stark, Tex-
as A&M (.338), first base; Pat
Rigby, Texas (.392), second base;
Bill Hancock, Texas A&M (.368),
third base; Jerry Carlton, Arkan-
sas (.382), shortstop; Chuck Knut-
son, Texas (.321), Joe Shaisgir,
Arizona (.361) and Jim Fox, Rice
(.419), outfield; Don Schn ider,
Arizona (13-1), and Tom Belcher,
Texas (11-1), pitchers; Ed Kas-
per, Texas (.348), utility.
The second team: Bill Puckett,
Texas A&M, catcher; Paul Runge,
Arizona State, first base; Leo
Tosto, Arizona, second base;
Charles Harrison, Texas Tech,
third base; David Johnson, Texas
A&M shortstop, Bob Bigley of
TCU, Danny Ik’eda of Arizona
State and Bobby Peters of Hous-
ton, outfield; Chuck McGuire of
Texas A&M, Frank Charton of
Baylor and Sterling Slaughter of
Arizona State, pitchers; Pete
Stonestreet of Houston, utility.
-o-
Mr. and Mrs. Taylorite: Back
your Chamber of Commerce, it
backs you.
Davis Bats
.500 Against'
SF Giants
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tommy Davis can’t break the
habit. But then nobody’s send-
ing him for a cure.
The 23-year-old Los Angeles out-
fielder, who has gotten into the
habit of gorging himself on San
Francisco pitching, belted a de-
cisive tyo-run homer against the
Giants for the second game in
succession as the third - place
Dodgers knocked off the National
League leaders 5-1 Tuesday night.
Davis hit a two-run shot for a
3-0 lead Monday night, driving in
the runs that proved to be all
the Dodgers needed in an 8-1
triumph. Tuesday night he tag-
ged a two-run blast in the fourth
inning that snapped a 1-1 tie
and sent the- Dodgers out front to
stay.
Davis now has eight hits in 16
at-bats against San Francisco this
year-a neat .500 average—and 11
runs batted in for the four games
with the Giants.
The defeat, fifth in seven games
for the Giants, cut their edge
over the Dodgers and second-
place St. Louis ito 21A games.
The Cardinals remained percent-
age points ahead of Los Angel-
es, extending their winning streak
to six games by whipping Phila-
delphia 6-2 behind Bob Gibson’s
four-hitter.
Fourth-place Cincinnati nipped
Milwaukee 3-2 in 11 innings, Chi-
cago’s Cubs defeated Pittsburgh
3-1 and Houston beat the New
York Mets 3-2 in other games.
In the American League, the
HsusIm leafs
Mels Again
HOUSTON ® — Norm Larker’s
two-run triple in the eighth inning
carried Houston to a 3-2 decision
over the New York Mets Tuesday
night for the Colts’ third victory
in three meetings between the
two new National League clubs.
Fast-balling Dick Farrell, the
former relief specialist, went
the distance for the Colts and
weathered a Met comeback in
the ninth.
Veteran Billy Goodman trig-
gered Houston’s rally with two
out in the eighth and Roman
Mejias, who homered in the fourth
for the Colts’ first run, followed
with another single. Larker than
lashed his triple to deep right
Farrell, now 4-3, withstood the-
Mets’ closing threat, which start-
ed^ when Charlie Neal and Felix
Mantilla beat out infield hits with
none out. The Colt right-hander
retired Sammy Taylor on a fly
and struck out pitcher Jay Hook
before Richie Ashbum scored
Neal with a single. Elio Chacon
then grounded into the final out
--o-
Taylor Merchants are your
friends — shop with them and
save money.
-o-
Shop the ads in the Taylor Dai-
ly Press and save money.
New York Yankees moved into
first place by edging Los Ange-
les 2-1 in 12 innings after Whitey
Ford and Jim Coates held the
Angels hitless for 8 1-3 innings.
Minnesota took over second place
by edging Washington 6-5. Cleve-
land dropped to third after losing
to Baltimore 4-1 and Kansas City
belted Boston 5-1. Detroit and
Chicago were not scheduled.
C.R. ANTHONY cc, J , -
;:-40th
Birthday Bonanza
Full Bolts—Combed Cotton
"DAN RIVER"
VIRGINIA CHECK
GINGHAMS
5H‘ ,d.
You will want to cash in on these
smart gingham checks. Famous Dan
River quality, all ■dombed cotton ging-
ham. 35/36 inches wide, doubled and
rolled. Ideal for dresses, skirts,
blouses, shirts, sportswear, pillow cov-
ers, etc. Choose from all of the most
wanted colors. Special Birthday Bon-
anza priced.
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Men’s & Boy’s White
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Ladies, S-M-L
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Reg. 2.98 — EACH
Little Boy’s, Sizes 2-6x
BOXER
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KTAE Radio tog
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6:55—Farm News
7:00—News
7:05—Weather
7:10—Sports
7:15—Morning Music jgUf?
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7:45—Morning Music
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SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK!
Yankees Wiit12-lnning
Four-Man One-Hitter
Taylor Daily Press, Wednesday, May 23, 1962, Page 3
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Even for the New York Yan-
kees, who have scored victories
of all kinds in their long parade
of success, a 12-inning, four-man
one-hitter is a new way to win.
The Yankees staged that dra-
matic little gem Tuesday night,
edging the Los Angeles Angels 2-1
and recapturing a slender lead in
the American League race.
Whitey Ford, the stylish left-
hander, played the leading pitch-
ing role with seven hitless inn-
ings before he was forced to re-
tire with a strained back muscle.
Jim Coates kept it going until
one was out in the1 ninth when
Bob Rodgers singled for the lone
Angel hit, then Bud Daley went
two and Bob Turley pitched the
12th.
The Yanks got eight hits and
10 walks—seven of them inten-
tional — off four Los Angeles
pitchers but had to squeeze out
their runs, both of them which
scored on sacrifice flies by Els-
ton Howard. Rookie Joe Pepitone
had three of the New York hits
and set up both runs while Rog-
er Maris, the Yankees’ walking
man in the abasence of the ailing
Mickey Mantle, drew five passes
—four of them intentional for a
one-game major league record.
By winning the Yanks took
over first by 13 percentage points
over the Minnesota Twins, who
outlasted Washington 6-5. Balti-
more, with pitcher Milt Pappas
and slugger Jim Gentile supply-
ing the power, beat Cleveland
4- 1 and dropped the Indians from
first to third, y2 game off the
pace. Kansas City pinned the
eighgh straight loss on Boston,
5- 1 in the only other AL game
scheduled.
In the National League, Los
Angeles clipped San Francisco’s
first-place Giants for the second
Philadelphia 6-2; Cincinnati got
by Milwaukee in 11 innings, 3-2;
Chicago downed Pittsburgh 3-1;
and Houston shaded New York
3-2.
The Angels jumped ahead of
Ford and the Yanks in the first
when Albie Pearson walked, stole
second, took third on a ground
out and scored on Steve Bilko’s
fly. Dean Chance blanked the
Yankes until the sixth, then Tom
Tresh walked and came around
on a single by Pepitone, an in-
tentional walk to Maris and How-
ard’s first scoring fly.
Turned back by relievers Ryne
Duren, Jack Spring and Tom
Morgan through the 11th, the Yan-
kees finally broke it open in the
12 th with Pepitone again the
key. The reserve outfielder trip-
led with one out and after inten-
tional walks to Maris and Hector
Lopez, Howard lofted a fly to
right. Lee Thomas made the
catch near the foul line, wheeled
and made a good peg home—but
too late to head off Pepitone.
The Twins packed their six
runs into the second and third
innings, then had to stand off the
Senators down to the wire. Min-
nesota starter Georges Maranda,
who doubled twice and drove in
the deciding run, had to be bail-
ed out by Lee Strange in the
fifth and Dick Stigman was ned-
ed to quell another uprising in the
seventh. Ray Moore stymied the
final Washington rally in the
eighth and was credited with the
victory, his third in four deci-
sions.
Lennie Green hit a two-run
homer for the Twins in the sec-
ond and they routed Joe McClain
in the third with a four-run clus-
ter highlighted by singles by Bob
Allison and Je'rry Zimmerman
and Maranda’s first double.
Chick Cottier whacked a two-run
homer in the Senators’ seventh,
making it 6-5, but Stigman and
Moore kept the opposition at bay
the rest of the way.
Pappas, now 5-2, provided all
the margin the Orioles needed
when he homered with one aboard
in the fifth inning against Cleve-
land starter Jim Perry and Gen-
tile conneeted for a pair, giving
him 12 for the year and a tie for
the major league lead. Pappas
has three hits this season—'all
homers.
After surviving several jams,
the youthful right-hander gave
way to Hoyt Wilhelm in the sev-
enth following a double by Bubba
Phillips. The knuckleballing re-
liever uncorked a wild pitch and
was tagged for Jerry Kindall’s
run-scoring double, bqt held the
Indians hitless thereafter.
Cleveland went without a hom-
er for the first time in 10 games,
managing only five hits.
Dave Wickersham was the win-
ner over the Red)Sox in his first
TELEPHONE !
TALK!
j by C L Carson, Manager
Kid Pare!
Tax Records
Are Probed
NEW YORK ® — An air of
mystery hung over the committee
room today as the joint legislative
probe into the death of Benny
(Kid) Paret entered is theird and
final session.
Two questions are foremost in
the minds of the investigators:
1. Where are the income tax
records of Paret’s manager, Man-
uel Alfaro?
2. What happened to $35,000
Paret was alleged to have been
carrying when h'e left Las Vegas
last year after a fight with Gene
Fullmer?
“We must have those tax rec-
ords to show us whether Alfaro
is indeed the benevolent patron
of fighters who claims he never
made any money out of boxers
until Paret became champion,”
said commitee chairman Hay-
ward Plumadore.
Observed Joseph F. Soviero,
committee counsel:
“We want to know what hap-
pened to the $260,000 Paret earn-
ed betv/een 1958 and 1962.”
Alfaro testified Tuesday that he
understood Paret carried $35,000
in cash when he headed for Mi-
ami after the Fullmer fight.
“Benny didn’t want to put the
money in the bank and so I told
him to hide it behind the end of a
drawer in his wardrobe,” Alfaro
testified. ‘Whether he did or not,
I don’t know.”
Paret died on April 2 of injuries
he sustained in a middleweight
championship bout with Emile
Griffith in Madison Square Gar-
den. The committee is holding the
hearings to determine if boxing as
a sport should be outlawed in New
Yoik State.
Alfaro had been asked to bring
his tax records with him. When
he appeared empty-handed, he1
was ordered to produce the rec-
ords at an executive committee
meeting on June 13.
big league start with able support
from Kansas City rookies Diego
Segui, Manny Jiminez, George
Alusik and Jose Azcue. Wiicker-
sham, a relief specialist up to
now, gave up five hits and no
walks in eight innings, then Segui
retired Boston in order in the
ninth.
Hitting flash Jimenez swatted
a two-run homer off Galen Cisco
in the first, later added a single
for a 2-for-2 day that increased his
average to .383. Alusi'k had a
triple and double, and Azcue a
run-scoring double.
Todays Baseball
AMERICAN EE AGEE
New York .....
W L
.. . 21 13
I ct.
.618
GB.
Minnesota ......
.. . 23 15
605
—
Cleveland .....
. . 21 14
.600
%
Los Angeles . ..
... 18 16
529
3
Baltimore .....
..... 19 17
.528
3
Chicago .......
.. . 20 18
.526
3
Detroit ....... .
. .. 16 17
.485
4%
Kansas City . ..
... 18 21
462
5%
Boston .........
... 13 22
.371
8%
Washington . ..
. . 9 25
.265
12
Tuesday’s Results
Kansas City 5, Boston 1.
New York 2, Los Angeles 1, (12
innings), night.
Minnesota 6, Washington 5, night.
Baltimore 4, Cleveland 1, right.
Today’s Games
Kansas Cir.v (Pfister 0-4) at New
York (Terry 5-4).
Cleveland (Donovan 7-0) at Chicago
(Pizarro 2-4), night.
Los Angeles (Bowsfield 1-2) at Wash-
ington (Burnside 3-3), night.
Detroit (Mossi 3-4) at Baltimore
(Fisher 0-0), night.
Minnesota (Bonikowski 3-2) at Bos-
ton (Wilson 0-1), night.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L
Pet.
GB.
San Francisco ....
28 13
.683
—
St. Louis..........
23 13
.639
2Vz
Los Angeles ......
25 15
(25
2%
Cincinnati ........
20 15
571
5
Pittsburgh .......
18 17
.514
7
Milwaukee ........
16 22
.421
10%
Philadelphia . ......
15 21
.417
10%
Houston ..........
15 23
‘ 95
11%
New York ........
12 21
.364
12
Chicago ..........
13 25
.342
13%
Tuesday’s
lie suits
Los Angeles 5,
S'an Francisco 1,
night.
Chicago 3,
Pittsburgh 1, night.
St. Louis 6, Philadelphia 2, night.
Cincinnati 3, Milwaukee 2, (11 inn-
ings), night.
Houston 3. New York 2, night.
Today’s Games
Philadelphia (Mahaffey 3-5) at San
Francisco (McCormick 1-1 or Perry
(2-1), night.
New York < Craig 2-4) at Los Angeles
(Drysd'ale 5-3), night.
Cincinnati (Purkey 7-0) at Houston
(Johnson 1-5), night.
Chicago (Hobbie 0-5) at Milwaukee
(Spahn 4-4), night.
. Pittsburgh (Haddix 2-2)
at
St.
Louis (Jackson 4-4), night.
TEXAS LEAGUEl
W L
Pet.
GB.
Tulsa ............. 21 15
.583
—
Albuquerque ...... 20 16
556
1
San Antonio ...... 21 17
.553
1
Austin ........... 20 19
.513
2%
El Paso .......... 19 19
.500
3
Amarillo ........... 10 25
286
10%
Tuesday’s Results
Tulsa 10, El Paso 8.
Albuquerque 5, Austin 1.
San Antonio 5 , Amarillo
2.
Tonight’s Games
Tulsa at El Paso.
Amarillo at San Antonio.
Austin at Albuquerque.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
W L Pet.
GB.
Omaha ..........
20 14
.588
—
Denver ........
18 14
.563
1
Indianapolis ......
18 14
.563
1
Oklahoma City . ..
. 16 8
471
4%
Louisville .......
16 19
.457
4%
Dallas-Fbrt Worth
12 21
.364
7%
Tuesday’s Results
Louisville 6, Dallas-Fort Worth 3.
Oklahoma City 16, Denver 7.
Omaha 6, Indianapolis 4.
T. P. & L.
BILLS MAY
BE PAID AT THE
RED & WHITE
GROCERY
IN HUTTO.
Business Directory
THE PREFIX
The other day Miss Ora Dettenhaim, Chief Opera-
tor, and I were discussing the right and wrong way to
place long distance calls. In our discussion, the question
came up about the use of the prefix in your telephone
number.
The telephone operator wants to give you the best
possibe service. When the operator asks for your num-
ber, you can help her to give you the best service by
giving your complete number. It is important that you
give the prefix plus the number — example EL 2-5399
not 5399. The operators in Taylor handle the calls for
seven surrounding towns. Each of these towns have a
different prefix. These prefixes are Coupland UL 6,
Granger UL 9, Hutto FL 4, Milano GL 5, Thorndale
TW 8, Thrall UL 7, and Rockdale HI 6. So you can see
why it is important for the operator to have the prefix.
It Will help to avoid billing calls to the wrong telephone
numbers and to speed up your calls.
Another way to help speed up the completion of
your calls is to give the operator the area code of the
called number if you have it. You will find a list of
area codes in the front of the Taylor Telephone Direc-
tory.
TELEPHONE FILMS
Ever stumped for a program for your club, church
or civic group? Next time this happens, call us at the
telephone company.
More than 5 million Texans watched telephone
films at their organizations’ meetings last year.
These films cover a variety of informative and en-
tertaining subjects — from the award-winning televi-
sion Science Series to the tracking system in John
Glenn’s historic space flight. And, they’re available on
a free-loan basis.
Here’s a list of just a few of the more popular films:
Seconds for Survival — An enemy attacks the
United States and our defense system goes
in action.
Voice for Mercury — Be an eyewitness to John
Glenn’s flight into outer space and watch the
tracking system in operation.
Anatomy of an Accident — A top-notch film of
safe driving.
A Manner of Speaking — This film dramatically
shows how you can get the most effective use
from your business telephone.
Science Series — An award-winning TV series
covering such subjects as the sun, blood, gene-
tics, time, cosmic rays, the senses, weather and
language.
To order telephone films for your group, just pick
up your telephone and call the telephone business of-
fice, EL2-3601. Or write to Southwest Soundfilms, 1709
South Laipar, Dallas 15.
7 .
Cal! by number. Ifs twice as fast.
smumsmim bcll msmmc company vft*
Mrs. Agnes Kasparek
Hotel
Package Store
Gin — Rum
Whiskey — Wine
, Taylor’s Leading
Package Store
Just Across from Depot
WE SPECIALIZE IN:
• Trector Tire Repo ir
• Tube Repair
® Vulcanizing
We Are The Dealer For
Armstrong & Star Tires.
Mac's Tire Service
313 Elliott St. — EL2-S762
WE SPECIALIZE IN:
• Brakes
*. Motor Tune-Ups
® Major Overhauls
City Aufo 4 Body
WORKS
Alfred Cuba, Owner
300 E. 2nd EL2-3243
MELASKY
DRUG STORE
OFFICE SUPPLIES
We Specialize In
Prescriptions
Dial EL2-2113
LUKN & JOHNS
THE REXALL STORE
RUBBER STAMPS
EASTMAN DEALER
Dial EL2-3615 — Taylor
Dr. Malelzschk
DX., Ph.C.
For Better Health
Take Chiropractic
Health Service
Dial EL2-2318
S19 Vance St. — Taylor
FOR YOUR
ADVERTISING
PHONE
EL2-3621
The Taylor Daily Press
mms GARAGE
General Auto Repairing
Specializing in
MOTOR TUNE-UPS and
CARBURETOR REPAIR
114 E. 2nd EL2-2712
Schroeder Motors Bldg.
ADOLPH LALLA, Owner
TAYLOR MEAT COMPANY
Highest Prices Paid for Beef Hides
— QUALITY MEATS —
STONE
TRANSFER and STORAGE
- Bonded Warehouse Service -
LOCAL & LONG-DISTANCE MOVERS
Dial EL2-4933 — Night Dial EL2-3103
TAYLOR, TEXAS
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The Taylor Daily Press (Taylor, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 133, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 23, 1962, newspaper, May 23, 1962; Taylor, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth799870/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Taylor Public Library.