Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 50, Number 200, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 8 October 1948 — Page 1
WEATHER WARMER SATURDAY Indiana: Partly cloudy tonight and Saturday. A little warmer Saturday. r - ?;VOL. 50-No. 200 UNITED PRESS SERVICE SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES FRIDAY, OCT. 8, 1948. INTERNATIONAL PICTURE SERVICE PRICE THREE CENT3
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TopPoliticos Ask Questions, Don't Answer
INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 8 (UP) It appeared today that Hoosier politicians like to .ask questions much better than they like to answer them. Spokesmen for both parties 'left queries hanging, in the air and then watched each other squirm, as the'election campaign grew warmer. Governor Gates started the interrogation Wednesday night at South Bend. He asked Democratic Nominee Henry Schricker several rather pointed questions. State Democratic Chairman Ira Haymaker said Schricker would get around to "some good anrwer" in a day or two. He said Gates' questions gave the Democrats a "fine opportunity" to bring forth a few questions of their own. Meanwhile, Gates let it be known that he had more questions in mind for Schricker. He said he might blast away again at Lagrange tonight at a GOP rally. Not to be outdone, Democratic Secretary cf State Candidate Charles Fleming sought the answers to a few sticklers himself last night in a speech at Seymour. "I think it is high time that you either affirm or deny, Mr. Creighton, that you are Governor Gates' protege," said Fleming. "And it is not true, Mr. Creighton, that Senator Jenner Wned ' to, Governor Gjjtes , at the Republican convention and said: 'To 'the victor belohg "the spoils?' Didn't Senator Jenner mean, Governor Gates, that you are running again for Governor and that Creighton is oniy a figurehead " Today's Markets INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 8. (UP) Hogs 6,000; moderately active, barrows and gilts steady to weak; sows steady to strong; bulk good and choice barrows and gilts 180260 lbs., $25.50 $25.75, about one -i : oio mo 5fif)(): odd
oa." '"J.r.: :tviH.n there Thursday afternoon
Xines $25 50 heav er wehTs'ihe was a member of the MethSSMoSw'uSTLrSnd $20.50 jodist church, Mother. f!$23 50 few $24.00; bulk all club, and the Rebekah lodge, all
weight sows $22.00 324.UU, cnoice,ui u....
lightweights $24.25 $24.du spar ingly. Cattle 600, calves " 500; not enoueh steers and yearlings of - fered to test market, nominally steadv: three loads cnoice ana prime 1300 lbs. steers $41.00 and four loads choice 1375 lbs., $40.00. all bought to arrive; very little action on beef cows, few good $19.00; vealers mostly steady, j j u: eoo 1 Rfl Sheep 1,000; about steady, good and choice native lambs mixed medium and good $22.00 $23.50. odd lightweights at $19.00 $20.00; slaughter ewes steady, good and choice $7.00 $9.00. INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 8. (UP) Cash grain: Wheat: firm; receipts 1 car; No. 1 red $2.15; No. 1 hard $2.15; No. 2 red $2.14; No. 2 hard $2.14. Corn: firm; receipts 21 cars; No 2 yellow $1.50; No. 3 yellow $1.48; No. 2 white $1.60; No. 3 white $1.58. , Oats: firm; receipts 3 cars; No. 2 white .73; No. 2 red .73. Soybeans: firm; receipts 82 cars; $2.46 carload lots F-O-B Indiana and Illinois points. MAN KILLED BY TRUCK PVAWSVTT.T.'E ClM 7 rTTPl Vernon Burdge, 68-year-old uerDurg county nignway w a was killed yesterday wr by! truck was backed into b Chester Fark. He is surv'' 10 children. " by GOVERNOR DEDICj NEW MAIN STREE' 8 (UP) WINSLOW, Ind.,p0ij.e jjere -uuvernur udiejory pprptodav durine d 7 monip for Win C- i " a new ivieiiii J u s new Main Street, a sectiq pike County, way complete1 , cppf . MHft,'ueLT"
National BPW Week Starts Here Sunday The membership ' of the Sullivan Business & Professional
Women's Club will join the clubs of Indiana and the nation Sunday in a week-long observance of National Business Women's Week with the theme "Use Your Vote in '48" as their watchword. The week's activities will begin Sunday with BPW attendance at the various churches of the individual preference and President Edith Harmon has issued a directive to all Sullivan B. & P. W. club members fo total membership attendance at religious services. , Highlight of the week was to have been the address of Honorable Curtis G. Shake, former judge of the Indiana Supreme & Appellate Court, member of the Knox County Bar Associa tion and practicing attorney in Vincennes. Mr. Shake has recently returned from the Nurenberg War Crimes trials where he acted as one of the presiding judges. However, due to a late summon to Federal court proceedings in Washington, D. C, Mr. Shake was forced to postpone his Sullivan appearance, but planns to make his "Observation -of the Nurenberg Trials" speech here r.oon. Tuesdav an entire list of the local BPW membership and their professions or occupations will be presented to the Senior girls of Sullivan High School and should any of them desire information on a particular career, the BPW they choose will call to answer questions and ve them an Inside picture on the work the student is choostti - tor - -her -sti;jknra iron career. Activities of BPW week in Sullivan are being directed by Public Affairs Chairman xeua Haines and her assistants, Rose Self, Fayette McKinley, Etta Logan, Abbie Faught, . Marie Ward Yaw,, and Euleta Slover. Mrs. Frances Sutch Dies Thursday Mrs. Frances Sutch, age 61, of tw Haute, died at the resicvo io survived by the hus band, Harry; a daughter, Mrs. Rachel Dill of Terre Haute; two ; sons, Horace ana uuu. both of Terre tj:ii ttKpcs nf California Dili iuiv.- j father, Andrey Forbes of Si van, and six grandchildren. The body was taken tc H. P. Martin Funeral Ho' will Terre Haute where sem be neia at claude 1 afternoon with the tie bg Young ouiu" -";etery at in Little Shelburn. Harold Bro , DiesW,al Oks, age 30, of Harold .'ed at the Marv Shelburn, Hospital Thursday anernicu 7i 0.clock. morningirvjved by the wid0w, , on, Robert Joe; a dau Nell; lary Frances; the parehterA!Ir. and Mrs. Robert entS, CV.olWnrrr Q hrnthpr a :t Brooks Jr. of IndianaRf, and the grandfather, Ben 3es of Shelburn. fhe body was taken to the icHugh Funeral Home in Shelourn where funeral services will be held at 2 o'clock Sunday aftBurial will be in Little Flock Cemetery. PLEDGED AT FRANKLIN COLLEGE Dorvin Olson, son of Mr. and I Mrs. Bernard uison 01 k. k. o, naa just been pledged to membership in Franklin College chapter of Kappa Delta Rho, national social fraternity. Olson is a member of thp class of 1952 and a frarlnntp ion- I C 7 --- ui iiuu Vdr niri ni iiitii wifrH nf Sullivan Hifh Srhnnl whprp hp 1. . ."T V, was acuve m lootoan and oasKeiball
French Poli
Communist-Led Strikers Battle
PARIS, Oct. 8 (UP) Thou-, er , reports that the total number fsands of Communist-led strikers of jcb-seekers currently register--
and 500 troops and Republican security guards battled furious!y for hours today at the Micheville steel works near Nancy in the first serious clash .of a na'.ionwide coal strike. , The strikers, Hurling bricks' snd swinein? hinritrpnn fmH troops , and security guards to .iii,.i, 4i1Q tk, knj evacuate the plant they had stormed at dawn with tear ind guns at the ready. gas Early reports said at least 12 strikers and security guards were injured and eight security ouards were taken prir.oner in the outbreak of violence at the olant in Lorraine which had been tied up for two weeks. Two hundred trpops in full battle kit and 300 security guards captured the strikebound plant earlier. The government if the plant and the operation of its coKe ovens, Dy iorce u necessary. Gates Urqes Check On Reckless Driving INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 8 (UP) Governor Gates said today that last month was one of the worst on record for traffic deaths in Indiana and urged State Po lice to "cra:k down on reckless drivers." "-crates- 1 issubu me sxarei nftpr rereivina reports that 122 D w in Hoosier traffic uvea vsn. --- - Cmtomtar Hp cart " .. ' viioH in mmi B.i uerauiia wci
accidents and 39 H urban mis-j"".
haps. "September was blackest montrs one of the since 1941," Gates said. He added, lowever, that 1948 traffic Hpathp up to Sept. 30
. 1 1 1 1 , . 1 Upon Offices Move om Indianapolis WASHINGTON, Oct. 8 (UP) The AFL International Team sters' Union took steps today to move its headquarters from Indianaoolis to Washington. President Daniel J. Tobin announced in the current issue of the union magazine that the transfer would be made "just as r.oon as we can rent our own national offices (in. Washington)." Publication of the magazine recently was moved to Washington from Indianapolis. The union's convention last year authorized transfer of headquarters, too. SULLIVAN COUNTY CORN LOAN RATE ANNOUNCED The 1948 corn support price has been set at $1.44 for Sullivan County for corn grading No. 3 or No. 4 on test weight only. Corn grading mixed will be 2 cents less. Every farmer should consider this program to the fullest extent as it is his program set up to protect the price he may receive or his year's work in producing the excellent corn crop now on hand. All necessary machinery is now set up so that any farmers decision of applying for a loan or signing- a purchase agreement may do so by reporting at the Triple "A" office as soon as his corn is harvested. For -those who have not become familiar with the requirements necessary to be eligible for taking advantage of one of these two types of programs should contact the Triple "A" office immediately. This year's
;till were . aignuy oeiow me aw nve DomDS explodfirst nine rionths of 1947. Gates inSsaid 746 traffic deaths wore j Today's Soviet warning ignorreported f or the f irst nine ed stTOnS protest against the months ,f this year as com-, maneuvers filed yesterday by pared rith 780 for the similar j American and "British authoriperiod lt year. ties I I he announcement said aeain
program is the most len'entiEarl Abell. aee.59. Prinretnn
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farmers program to protect his; own market.
i County Jobseekers Drop In September
Further improvement in the employment picture for this vicinity is revealed by the Indiana , 1 State Employment Service. Joe H. -Petty, Terre Haute office manag-; ed in the six-county area dropped about 6E0 during September. At the beginning of October, 3.671 were still listed. This is the small-j est number since the mass return fit veterans at the end of the war. The decline was general thrnmrhnnf tho nff.Vo ara ,nw
Vigo County's drop of more than S0I1f ow?! up vat Bloomington Kim o 1 on v. .yesterday for a hearing to pro-
noleworthy. Vermillion County d'scontinuance of the sershowed a drop of about 70, t0 J vice. The PSC previously-order-369 current total. Parke County' f1 show aus! 1,-ctc i7 ., , .vwhy it violated a Supreme Court
lists 167. down nearly 60. Clay County has 338, down 40. Putnam County has 97, down 20. Sullivan County dropped only 11, to a 339 figure. The only increase was a doubling of the number residing outside the office area, where itinerant service was recently discontinued, to a total of 161. Nearly three-fourths of the de- i cline in job applicants was among male workers. Males now regis-: lereo total 2,764, of whom 1,518 .1.310 are in Vigo County. Females total S07, of whom 662 are in Vien County. - ; ' v. :' Russia Plans New Bombing In Berlin Area ' . notified the three Western " "wc,s lnal soviet air war maneiwum . u ,-- """" wuuiu De COntmilPH , today in the vicinity of thP Rpr. l corridors. . .. - I ....iiaj ooviei n.otification was g1Ven yesterday morning. British pilots later reported they saw a number of Soviet planes make practice bombing runs near the corridor and one Dilnt clH Vn li l . . that Soviet aircraft will engage in air to air gunnery practice, parachute jumping maneuvers, ground strafing, anti-aircraft fire and formation and individual flights in the corridor areas. Mrs. Lura Boyer Dies At Hospital Mrs. Lura B.oyer, age 81, of Shelburn, R. 2,' died at 11 o'clock Thursday night at the Mary Sherman Hospital. She is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Alfred Rathbun of Inverness, Montana; two grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at the McHugh Funeral Home ' in Shelburn at 10:30 o'clock Monday morning, with the Rev, Jack Anderson officiating, with burial in Little Flock Cemetery at Shelburn. Powell Trial Is Postooned BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Oct. 8 (UP) The trial of William J. Powell, Jasonville, on charges growing out of a disturbance in a radio station, was postponed today to Oct. 11. Powell's attorney, George E. Huntington of Bloomington, filed a m.otion for a change of judge in city court. Mayor Tom Lemon, who presides over the court, granted the motion and set the trial date. Powell ran for Congress in the Democratic primary last May but lost. MINER KILLED IN ACCIDENT 8 rUPI PRINCETON, Oct. : , i i ..., . King's Mine, near here. Abell i died en route to the hospital.
Expect Ruling On IC Petition
Within Month
INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. - The Indiana Public 8 (UP) Service -Commission said today it hoped to rule "within the next month" on whether the Illinois Central Railroad must resume passenger I service on its Indianapolis-tq-Effingham, IJI., line. I V Lrence.,E' Carlson, member, said only three PSC per ruling to revive the service after the war. Carlr.on said the hearing was adjourned vin no other witnesses showed up. Three farmers testified they needed the seryice jcet. ice to haul their goods to marT. I UIJ rUnSlQl flClU m m m m. TM f II I TP Nullm V JMUIIC JI""" ; funeral services for 'Otis Smith, well-known Squire miner rnnri farmpr of Sullivan. R. 3 jwho died suddenly at his home !londay night, were conducted jXliursday afternoon at 2 o'clock iat i the Railsback Funeral Home. i,The Rev. Jack Anderson of the UBullivan First Christian Church ifficiated assisted by the Rev. "iiR, E. Pavy of the Sullivan First , Baptist Komici i mi rf ri - Mrs. Vermont McCoskey with " Mrs. i-ue crown ai me piano. Pallbearers were Art Meyer, I I Charles Parks, and J. C, Green- . ..... berg, World War I veterans, and Keith Bean, Bob Wardell and Max Brewer, veterans of World War II. : Burial was in the Cemetery at Hymera. K. of P. Court Calendar The calendar for the Sullivan Circuit Court for the week beginning Monday, Oct. 11, is as follows: Monday, Oct. 11 Motions and rules; Worley vs. House et al: Allie T. Neal Estate, petition of Oral Neal; also petition for filing additional inventory. Tuesday, Oct. 12 Mary Sherman Hospital vs. Hixon; Muterspaugh vs. Anderson. Wednesday, Oct. 13 Miller vs. Shelton; Citizens National Bank of Linton vs. Jerrell. Thursday, Oct. 14 Landis vs. Alsman; Akers vs. Akers. . Friday, Oct. 16 Probate Matters Marte11 vs.Martell; Owings vs. Owings, GIRLS' SCHOOL TRUSTEE NAMED 1 .. INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 8 (UP) 1 Mrs. Leroy Portteus, Indiana-, I pclis, today was appointed by j Governor Gates to the Board of Trustees of the Indiana Girls' School at Clermont. Mrs. Port-1 teus will serve as the Democratic member, succeeding Mrs. Louis O'Donoghue of Indianapolis, who resigned. ARRIVES ON GUAM
Miles K. Curry, a Civil Service Shrine of Our Lady of the Rosary employee, arrived on Guam of Fatima, 70 miles north of LisSeptember 21. He is on special bon. duty for the Navy. His office and headquarters will be on FLAGPOLE SITTER Guam, but his duties include COiMES TO EARTH all the Navy ammunition depots SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 8 in the South Pacific. His address (UP) Milton (Shipwreck) Van
is: Box Guam. 4 E. Station 11, Guam, RALLY DAY SERVICES Rally Day held at the services will be Merom Methodist Church Sunday. Sunday School at 9:30 with short program, Basket dinner at noon. Special program and guest speaker at 2 o'clock. Everyone welcome. Bring basket and table service. ;hoosiers show .grajvd champion bull ,1 WATERLOO Ta fVt R.(MV Jrnf Tfonffnpr onvi w v . . - .... . '. ' ieep ot Lowell, ind.. exhibited . me grand . champion bull in the Brown Swiss show at the Dairv Cattle Congress here yesterday.
Lions Club Hears Edward Paine A hundred and fifty Lions and guests attended the zone meeting of the Lions Club last night at the Sullivan Methodist Church Annex. The local Lions Club acted as hosts to the meeting.
Visiting Lions from Carlisle, Oaktown, Vincennes, Dugger, Jasonville, Terre Haute, and Sandborn attended. The feature of the program was a talk by Edward Paine, of Michigan City, past president of the Lions International. He talked on philosophies and ideologies and brought out the history of the world's five major religions and their effect on mankind. Wilfred Perigo, Sullivan High School band director, provided the entertainment for the even ing. Maxine Burnett and Phyllis McRoberts played a flute duet, and Joe Elliott sang, accompanied by Pat Pirtle. Philip Crist played several selections on the piano during the dinner. The room was decorated in purple and gold, the Lions colors, with centerpieces of yellow chrysanthemums, donated by the Service Greenhouse. Special guests at the meeting included Tom Marshall of Terre Haute, a Lions International council member, and District Governor T. Perry Wesley, of Spencer, Ind. Ff. Wayne Publisher Dies Thursday FORT WAYNE, Ind., Oct. 8 (UP) William A. Kunkel, Jr., age 53, publisher of The Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette, died of T ,hrt-tayesteiay-Kunkel, who owned The Journal-Gazette since 1934, was also president of the Northeastern .Indiana Rrnadcastinff Cn. Tnc He was active in Dem0crtaic pc.Iitics and was a deiegate tc the Democratic national conirpntinn in 1 Q3fi Knf noiwr j sought public office. He also was a director of the Indiana State Chamber .of Commerce, and a member of the ! Indiana University Board of Trustees. Kunkel was born at Bluffton, Ind. He was graduated from the Indiana University in 1916 and from the Harvard University Law School in 1917. He served as a Naval ensign in World War I. Kunkel is survived by his wife, son, daughter, brother and sister. ILLINOIS U. STUDIES ATOM SMASHING i CHAMPAIGN, 111., Oct. 8. (UP) University of Illinois scientists reported today that they have solved some of the major problems in the construction of big atom - smashing machines. Prof. Donald W. Kerst, inventor of the betatron, said that many problems had been overcome with the successful operation here of a 75,000,000-volt betatron, HOOSIER PRIEST HEADS PILGRIMAGE NEW YORK, Oct. 8. (UP) Headed bv the Rev. Pascfial Bol and 0f Saint Meinrad Abbey of saint Mleinrad, Ind., 26 Pilgrims from 10 states left LaGuardia Airport today for Lisbon to offer prayers for world peace at the', Nolan, age 22, was down to earth today, the champion of the flagpole sitters. Van Nolan was lowered by a huge crane yesterday after spending 71 davs. 23 hours and 35 minutes astride a saddle atop a 50-foot pole. He earned $1,000 for his feat, equivalent to 70 cents an hour. He gained 20 pounds, BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Husarik of East Gary, announce the arrival of a son, Wayne Allen, born Sept. 30th at the St. Mary's Mercy Hospital in . uary, Indiana. Mrs. Husarik is the former Margaret Roberts, dauehter of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Roberts of North State Street.
learden
osion un levelan Cleveland; Oct. 8. (UP) Gene Bearden, the Arkansas giant who classed the Boston Braves as pushovers, made good his beast by pitching and batting the Cleveland Indians to a 2 to 0 triumph today in the third game of the World Series. The southpaw six footer, who won the first American League playoff in baseball history by beating the Boston Red Sox, put the Indians on top in the series, two games to one, by setting down the Braves with five scattered hits. And it was Bearden, who had said these anemic hitting Braves couldn't be as tough as those Red Sox sluggers, who came through with a double and then scored the only run he was to need. He added another hit later as his mates got him a second tally for insurance. The line-up: Boston Cleveland Holmes, rf Mitchell, If Dark, ss Doby, cf M. McCormick, If Boudreau, ss Elliott, 3b Gordon, 2b F. McCormick, lb Keltner, 3b Conatser, cf Judnich, rf Masi, c Robinson, lb Stanky, 2b Hegan, c Bickford, p ' Bearden. p A play by play description fol lows: Bcston First: , .... Holmes grounded Out, r- Bou dreau to Robinson. Dark struck out. M. McCormick went down swinging. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. Cleveland First: Mjitchell flied to M. McCormick. Doby walked on a three and one pitch to become the first base runner. Boudreau grounded into a double play, Dark to Stanky to F. McCormick. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. Boston Second: Elliott grounded out on the first pitch, Keltner to Robinson. F. McCormick rapped a single over second for the first hit of the game. Conatser grounded out Bearden to Robinson, F. McCor mick taking second. It was not a sacrifice. Masi flied to Mitchell in deep left. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left. Cleveland Second: Gordon flied to M. McCormick. Keltner grounded out to F. McCormick, unassisted. Judnich walked. Robinson flied to M. McCormick. j No runs, no hits, no errors, one left. i Boston Third: I Stanky hit a 2-2 pitch to short' right for a single. Bickford laid down a sacrifice bunt. Hegan scooped it up and tagged him out. The throw to Boudreau was too late to get Stanky at second. Holmes grounded out, Bearden to Robinson, Stanky going to third. I Dark flied to Judnich." No runs, one hit, no errors, one left. Cleveland Third: . Hegan popped foul to Masi. Bearden bounced a double off the j right field fence. Mitchell walked j on four straight balls. Doby grounded to Stanky, who threw to i second forcing Mitchell. In trying! to complete a double play Dark threw wild past first, and Bearden scored. Doby went to second J on the overthrow. Boudreau walked. Gordon flied to M; McCormick. i One run, one hit, one error, two left. , Boston Fourth: M. McCormick singled to cen ter. Elliott flied to Doby, M. McCormick holding first. F. McCor-. mick hit into a double-play, Bear-' den to Gordon to Robinson. No runs, one hit, no errors, none left. j Cleveland Fourth Keltner walked on four straight pitches. Judnich went down swinging. Robinson drove a single to left, Keltner stopping at second. Hegan singled to center,
Shuts lit ;
rive usis;
scoring Keltner, Robinson stopping at second. Bearden singled to left, filling the bases. Bickford was taken out and replaced by Bill Voiselle. Mitchell fouled to Elliott, the runners holding their 'bases. Doby grounded out F. McCormick to Voiselle, who covered first. One run, three hits, no errors, three left. Boston Fifth: Conatser grounded out, Keltner jto Robinson. Keltner made a nice j one-handed pickup to throw out Masi. Stanky, after hitting a ball into the left field stands which was foul by only a few feet, flied to Mitchell. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. Cleveland Fifth: Boudreau popped to Elliott. Gordon grounded out, Elliott to F. McCormick. M. McCormick made a running catch of Keltner's drive in deep left. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. Boston Sixth: Voiselle grounded out, Boudreau to Robinson. Holmes grounded out, Gordon to Robinson. Dark doubled off the left field wall, Mitchell just missing an attempt to catch it. Mj McCormick flied to Gordon in short left center. - - No runs, one hit, no errors, one left.' ' " " ' Cleveland Sixth: Judnich flied to Conatser in deep right center. Robinson flied . to Stanky, who caught the ball over his shoulder in short right field. Hegan flied to Holmes. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. Bcslon Seventh: Elliott singled to left. Klieman and Christopher started warming up in the Cleveland bullpen. F. McCormick struck out. Conatser hit into a double play, Keltner to Gordon to Robinson. No runs, one hit, no errors, none left. ' Cleveland Seventh: Bearden grounded out, Dark to F. McCormick. Citchell flied to Dark behind third base. : Doby laced a single into right. Boudreau fouled to Dark along the left field foul line. No runs, one hit, no errors, one . left. I Bcston Eighth: ' Masi bunted but was out, Bearden to Robinson. Stanky , was thrown out by Bearden. Barrett was warming up in the bullpen i as Ryan pinch hit for Voiselle and was called out on strikes, j No runs, no hits, no errors. I none left. Cleveland Eighth: i Barrett went in to pitch for Boston. Gordon greeted him with a long fly which M. McCormick caught up against the left field wall. Keltner flied deep to Holmes. Judnich grounded out, btanky to F. McCormick. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. Boston Ninth: Holmes grounded out, Bearden to Rcbinson. Dark grounded out, Gordon to Robinson. M. McCormick popped to Boudreau. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. FORMER DUOIGER RESIDENT IN VETS HOSPITAL Harvey Hummell, of Bloomington and formerly of Dugger, is receiving treatment of a hemorrhage condition in the Veteran's Hospital of Indianapolis. Mr. Hummell is a brother of Mrs. Hazel Spencer of Sullivan, R. 5, and a nephew of Mrs. Richard Parke of this city. CORONER REPORTS DEATH SUICIDE DELPHI. Oct. 7 (UP) Coroner C. W. Hunter today said the death of Ed Trent, age 68, whose body was found hanging in a barn yesterday was a suicide. Hunter said Trent left a note complaining of poor health.
