Newspaper Page Text
Cubs 1; Dodgers 0
Ninth inning
hit wins it
By United Press International
Manny Trillo singled to
Centerfield with one out in the
ninth inning to score Jerry
Morales from third base
Monday night and give the
Chicago Cubs a 1-0 victory over
*0
I %
. *
&
«I||L
w
KING EDWARD
SPECIALS
All You Can Eat
$2 75
FRESH CATFISH
FRESH OCEAN PERCH
SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN
SHIP AHOY
RESTAURANT
371 North Expressway
If 'Hi Mi
W ■&
jb^^ s " - Ew&
? Bk— Bis
BMT
v < mt --XZ : jpl|B>< r¥- t
■R a w 1 t |yfgfe-fc
ihMaH
Oije 5x7
• All ages: Babies, children and adults.
• One sitting per subject
• Additional subjects—Groups or individuals in same family
— SI.OO per subject.
• No proofs—Choose from finished professional portraits
(poses—our selection).
• You may select additional portraits offered at low prices.
• Guaranteed to give complete satisfaction
or money cheerfully refunded.
• No handling charge.
I Illi V Wed., Thur., Fit, Sat., Sun
JULY 23, 24, 25, 26, 27
Photographer on duty
DAILY 10 A.M. *8 P.M.
Sunday 1-6
1433 GA. HIGHWAY NO. 16
the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Rick Reuschel, with ninth
inning relief help from Oscar
Zamora, limited the Dodgers to
five singles to outduel Andy
Messersmith, who suffered his
fourth straight defeat.
In other NL action, Cincinnati
pounded Philadelphia 10-4,
Houston defeated New York 6-2,
Atlanta downed Montreal 4-1,
St. Louis blanked San Diego 4-0,
and San Francisco beat Pitts
burgh 7-2.
The Reds batted 11 men
during a five-run second inning
and went on to defeat the
Phillies. Pat Darcy, 5-5, went
five innings for the victory. Ron
Schueler, 3-2, took the loss.
Wilbur Howard had three hits
and the Astros turned four
double plays on grounders by
Joe Torre to give Ken Forsch a
victory over the Mets. Torre’s
double play grounders set a NL
record. Dave Kingman hit his
eighth homer of the month for
the Mets.
Vic Correll and Dusty Baker
each drove in a run in the
eighth inning and Earl Williams
belted a two-run homer in the
ninth to give the Braves a
victory over the Expos. Reliev
er Mike Beard worked just two
innings for his third win.
The Cards trimmed the
Padres in a game protested by
the winners from the fourth
inning when plate umpire Art
Williams disallowed a homer by
Ted Simmons because the
hitter had used an apparently
illegal bat. Rookie Harry
Rasmussen, making his major
league debut, stymied the
Padres on seven hits as the
Padres swept the three-game
series.
Jim Barr won his first
decison in nearly two months
and Chris Speier stroked a
three-run double to give the
Giants a victory over the
Pirates. Barr, 7-8, who had not
won since May 24, scattered 10
hits. The Giants had scored
only eight runs in Barr’s last
eight outings.
Baker
succeeds
Carson
CHESTER, Pa. (UPI) - The
Philadelphia Eagles have
named Bill Baker, 47, of
Tucson, Ariz., as assistant
director of player personnel, it
was announced Monday.
Baker, a 47-year-old native of
Knoxville, Tenn., spent the last
two years as an area scout in
Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma
and Arizona with CETO. He
will replace John Carson who
resigned recently from the post
to return to his native Atlanta,
Ga.
BATTERS
By United Press International
National League
g. ab r. h. pct.
Madlck,Chß4 341 47 119 .349
Morgn,Cn 88 303 67 105 .347
Sanglln.Pt 81 295 37 101 .342
Parker, Pit 83 308 48 103 .334
Watson,Hoß9 335 46 111 .331
Simmons, St.L
89 315 44 104 .330
Bowa, Phil 68 294 38 95 .323
Rose, Cin 95 399 63 128 .321
Brock, St.L 85 332 56 106 .319
Cash, Phil 94 397 68 125 .315
American League
g. ab r. h. pct.
Carew, Mn 85 318 59 120 .377
Hargrv,Txß4 292 51 98 .336
Lynn, Bos 85 307 62 102 .332
Munsn,NY9o 345 49 112 .325
McRa.KC 92 356 44 114 .320
Hisle.Min 65 227 36 71 .313
Washington, Oak
89 353 52 109 .309
Orta, Chi 82 311 42 94 .302
Yastrzemski, Bos
91 329 61 99 .301
White, NY 81 295 54 88 .298
Home Runs
National League: Luzinski,
Phil 25; Bench, Cin, Kingman,
NY and Schmidt, Phil 19;
Stargell, Pitt 18.
American League: Bonds, NY
21; Mayberry, KC and Jackson,
Oak 20; Burroughs, Tex 19;
Scott, Mil 18.
Runs Batted In
National League: Luzinski,
Phil 81; Bench, Cin 75; Watson,
Hou 70; Morgan, Cin and Staub,
NY 64.
American League: Lynn, Bos
74; May, Balt 68; Horton, Det
64; Rice, Bos 63; Scott, Mil 60.
Stolen Bases
National League: Morgan,
Cin and Brock, St.L 42; Lopes,
LA 39; Cedeno, Hou 36;
Concepcion, Cin and Mangual,
Mtl2l.
American League: Rivers,
Cal 50; Washington, Oak 32;
Otis, KC 30; Remy, Cal 27;
North, Oak 26.
Pitching
National League: Seaver, NY
14-5; Sutton, LA 13-8; Messers
mith, LA 12-8; Jones, SD 11-6;
Morton, Atl 11-9.
American League: Kaat, Chi
14-6; Palmer, Balt 13-6; Tiant,
Bos 13-9; Wise, Bos 12-6; Blue
and Holtzman, Oak 12-8;
Hunter, NY 12-9; Jenkins, Tex
12-10.
I STANDINGS ||
By United Press International
National League
East
w. 1. pct. g.b.
Pittsburgh 58 36 .617 —
Philadelphia 53 41 .564 5
New York 46 44 .511 10
St. Louis 46 46 .500 11
Chicago 44 51 .463 14%
Montreal 38 51 .427 17%
West
w. 1. pct. g.b.
Cincinnati 63 32 .663 —
Los Angeles 51 45 .531 12%
San Francisco 45 49 .479 17%
San Diego 43 53 .448 20%
Atlanta 42 52 .447 20%
Houston 34 63 .351 30
Monday’s Results
Houston 6 New York 2, n
Atlanta 4 Montreal 1, n
St. Louis 4 San Diego 0, n
Chicago 1 Los Angeles 0, n
Cincinnati 10 Philadelphia 4, n
San Francisco 7 Pittsburgh 2, n
Tuesday’s Games
Atlanta (Niekro 9-7) at
Philadelphia (Carlton 8-7), 7:35
p.m.
Houston (Konieczny 4-10) at
Montreal (Rogers 6-7), 8:05
p.m.
Cincinnati (Billingham 104)
at New York (Koosman 8-7),
8:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Kison 9-4) at San
Diego (Jones 11-6), 10 p.m.
St. Louis (Denny 4-3) at Los
Angeles (Rau 8-7), 10:30 p.m.
Chicago (Burris 8-6) at San
Francisco (Falcone 7-6), 11:05
p.m.
American League
East
w. 1. pct. g.b.
Boston 54 39 .581 —
New York 48 45 .516 6
Milwaukee 48 46 .511 6%
Baltimore 46 45 .505 7
Detroit 42 50 .457 11%
Cleveland 42 50 .457 11%
West
w. 1. pct. g.b.
Oakland 58 35 .624 —
Kansas City 48 45 .516 10
Chicago 45 47 .489 12%
Texas 45 51 .469 14%
California 43 54 .443 17
Minnesota 41 53 .436 17%
Monday’s Results
Texas 6 Boston 0, n
Baltimore 6 Oakland 2, n
Milwaukee 7 Chicago 4, n
Minnesota 3 New York 0, n
Kansas City 3 Detroit 2, n
Tuesday’s Games
Oakland (Bahnsen 5-8 and
Abbott 4-2) at Detroit (Walker
3-6 and LaGrow 7-8), 2, 5:30
p.m.
Kansas City (Busby 11-8 and
Fitzmorris 9-7) at Milwaukee
(Travers 4-4 and Slaton 9-8), 2,
7 p.m.
California (Ryan 10-10) at
Baltimore (Cuellar 8-6), 7:30
p.m.
Boston (Lee 11-6) at Min
nesota (Goltz 7-7), 9 p.m.
Cleveland (Raich 5-4) at
Texas (Perry 8-14), 9 p.m.
New York (Hunter 12-9) at
Chicago (Kaat 14-6), 9 p.m.
Randall & Blakely Is Pleased To Announce
The Appointment of Tommy Jones
as Service Manager.
I■ME9 Complete Time Up FWW AUTOMATIC ||
I lywiwi Inclurtes-plugs, points.cond. MOM' TRANSMISSION SERVICE I
LUBRICATION I ■*/£rajKl| Set timing and rah. w Gastet -
With Purchase I itSSSWII < A
Os Any IBMBSaI R -«* 3BS « BJgm Reg. ,38.50
l|Advertlsed 9 5 ° BB *2B” |l
II COMPLETE SERVICE M| FRONT END II
I UNDERCOATING Rn| AIR-CONDITIONING ■■ ALIGNMENT I
Reg. $39.95 BWnMM Includes Freon - Labor Reg. $14.50 I
| Eliminate Road Noise & Rust Check For Leaks -
SlftW iWPa Tighten Belt. ’ PE _ CI * L
II I ~J>24” IBM .. .‘11 50 I
I RANDALL & BLAKELY FORD»LINCOLN»MERCURY
1000 West Taylor Street; Griffin, Ga. - Phone 228-1335 - Atlanta Phone 521-1550 • Wrecker Service Day: 228-1335 - Night: 228-3441
I•SERVICE & PARTS DEPT. OPEN MONDAY - FRIDAY S AJA.-6 P.M. SATURDAY S A.M.-12 NOON. ■
' - ' ji
■th’ ■ ’VT.x
•'di* J Sah 1
* *7 J
X *1 i,
/; ■ ‘JW* x V#
j k a— • ~>■** -
Politics and baseball
BALTIMORE—Pete McCloskey (D-Calif., No. 10) tags
out Don Riegle (R-Mich) at third base in the last inning of
the annual congressional game. The Democrats pulled it
Braves win
MONTREAL (UPI) - The
Atlanta Braves’s pennant hopes
are virtually dead and buried,
but they still get paid to win as
many ball games as they can.
Take 25-year old rookie
pitcher Mike Beard, for instan
ce. Beard worked two innings
of relief Monday, but it was
enough for him to earn his
third victory against no defeats
as the Braves beat the
Montreal Expos 4-1.
Bake,Broil,Surface Units and
Pans for 75 Different Makes
MILLER’S GRIFFIN APPLIANCE
612 W. Taylor St. Phone 227-5122
“My job is to come in and
relieve and try to hold the other
teams to no runs. The victory
comes if you’re lucky enough to
be pitching when your own
team starts scoring,” Beard
said.
“It’s my job to do the best I
can, no matter what the
circumstances.”
First baseman Earl Williams
agreed with Beard. “I try to do
my best to help the team, no
— Griffin Daily News Tuesday, July 22, 1975
Page 7
out for the first time in the last 12 games by a score of 3-2.
(UPI)
matter what,” said Williams,
who hit a two-run homer in the
ninth inning.
“I have not been playing too
much lately, but I do my best
whenever I’m called upon.”
Hours: PM' 10 ®
Tues.-Thurs. Sat. 10:00
IBJf ’til 2:00 P.M.
■ GRIFFIN HEALTH I
I SPfl I
Offers You An I
Introductory Month I
I « F ? r n SO % ,eß,lar I
I 1 72 triu
During July Only.
Offer Valid For New
Members Only
\ ■ Call Today
Lead
NEW YORK (UPI) — Frank
Tanana of the California Angels
struck out eight men in an 8-0
shutout over the Cleveland
Indians to take over the major
league lead in strikeouts with
151 and capture the American
League Player of the Week
award, the AL office announced
Monday.