Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 51, Number 137, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 12 July 1949 — Page 4
1 Terre Haute Splits nWith Davenport : 1 By United Press U Davenport split a double--"header with Terre Haute last night, but second-place Evansville muffed a chance to gain on "the league leaders as they bowed to Springfield, 10 to 5. Davenport won its opener, 1 to 0, but dropped the nightcap, 7 to 1. In other Three-I games Quincy beat Decatur, 8 to 5, and Danville whipped Waterloo, 5 to 2. -
" ' Davenport's league pacesetters got one run in the first inning of "-their opener against Terre rrUaute, and that was the game.
SUEIJVAN DAILY TIMES TUESDAY, JULY 12, 1949,
BULLIVAN, INDIANA
DR. A. C. McPHAIL Will be in our store WEDNESDAY MAXWELL-BEVIS SHOE CO.
Each team fcot only four hits. The nightcap was quite different. Terre Haute got to Davenport's Lathrope for 15 hits and and the Pirates were charged with four errors. A three-run outburst in the fifth inning gave Danville all the
runs it needed against Waterloo, but the Dodgers added tallies in the sixth and eighth just to make sure. Decatur went ahead of Quincy, 5 to 3, with four runs in the sixth including three on Starasata's homer but the Gems came back with four runs in the eighth and one in the ninth to take the game. Evansville scored four runs in the final Inning, but the Indiana club was so far behind Springfield by then that the case was hopeless. Seltzer and Pawlick got homers for the winners; and Vital and Edwards homered for Evansville. Tonight's slate puts Waterloo at Danville, Davenport at Terre Haute, Quincy at Decatur and Evansville at Springfield.
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SI. Paul Takes Lead In Association By United Press The St. Paul Saints drove five runs across with two eighth inning homers to beat Columbus 8 to 5 last night while Milwaukee drubbed the Indianapolis Indians, 11 to 3, to give the Saints the American Association lead all to themselves. In other Association games Minneapolis outhit Louisville and won 12 to 8 at Minneapolis, and Toledo swamped Kansas City 7 to 2 at Kansas City. Playing at home, the Saints came from behind to tie the Redbirds 2 to 2 in the fourth inning. A Redbird homer by Don Lang gave Columbus another run. Then Kurt - Krieger, Redbird moundsman, gave the Saints' Earl Naylor a fat pitch with two men on. Naylor homered. Minutes later, Krieger did the same thing to Pitcher George Brown with one on for another round-' tripper. The Indians tied the Brewers 3 to 3 in the fourth and were) waiting the right time to smash
a winning run across. But instead the Brewers opened up on Mel Queen for one run in the seventh. Seven more runners tallied in the eighth as Bob Klinger replaced Queen. Minneapolis' Bob Hofman homered in the first and second innings to spark his teammates to their win over Louisville. Homers in the first by George Wilson and Tom Wright had scored three runs to give the Colonels an initial edge. A 16hit attack on Ewald Pyle and Reliefer J. G. Mueller helped the Millers recapture the lead when they later lost it in the nip and tuck fight. Toledo seized the lead from Kansas City after a second inning tally put the Blues ahead by one run. A homer by Austin Knickerbocker gave the Mudhens two runs in the fifth. Another made it 3 to 1. Then the Hens stayed ahead. ! Today's games in the Associa
tion are doubleheaders" with .Indianapolis at Milwaukee, Toledo at Kansas City, Columbus i at St. Paul and Louisville at'
Minneapolis.
Bosox Catcher Says Feller On Way Back By Oscar Fraley United Press Sports Writer NEW YORK, July 12 (UP) Getting "too cute" developing a new pitch caused the ' downfall of Bobby Feller, Ail-Star Catcher Birdie Tebbetts asserted today, but the Boston Red Sox backstop insisted that Bullet Bob still had his fast one and was on the way back. The blocky Birdie, who still
thinks that his Red Sox mates
will come on to win the American League pennant, doesn't hold with the critics who believe that Feller is through as a star pitcher. "Trying to throw a slider, being too cute, hurt Feller," Tebbetts explained. "And, while his fast one may not have the old time hop. it still is plenty fast enough." '
Birdie's theory was that Feller hurt his arm using the slider when he didn't need it. .... "The slider is a resistance pitch," he argued. "Where a curve takes only the wrist or the elbow, a slider puts a strain both there and on the shoulder. Feller had all he needed in a curve, a fast ball and a change of pace. That slider put a strain on his shoulder and hurt his fast ball." Tebbetts said that in one game against the Red Sox last season Feller didn't throw a single fast ball. I "This season he used it and beat us twice," Tebbetts said. Feller withdrew from the AllStar game last year after being chosen and wasn't named this
season, but Birdie said that such antics won't '"be tolerated from now on. . "This is a real honor," said the 34-year-old redhead who is the starting American League catcher today, the fourth time he has been selected for the interleague game. "The players should be proud to be selected and, if they den t show up without a good reason, the other guys are really set to get on them."
Russians Deny Knowledge Of Truck Delays BERLIN, July 12. (UP) With 300 trucks lined up at the barrier awaiting clearance, the Russians denied any knowledge today of truck delays at their Helmstedt zonal border checkpoint, 120 miles west of Berlin. In a phone' conversation, with a. t i. : i t- 1 : J
line on Lisa, xvussiau mnuiais saiu
the autobahn from Helmstedt was the only recognized four-power highway to Berlin. To that highway the Russians were admitting only four trucks an hour from western Germany. They were subjecting those four to minute inspection. All other highways to Berlin were sealed. The British disputed Russia's contention that the Helmstedt route was the only one recognized by the four powers.
i The Russian stand was made I known in a letter read over the 'telephone to British authorities.
In their official newspaper, Taegliche Rundschau, the Russians this morning blamed black market truck drivers for the restrictions which have cut truck traffic from western Germany by 80 per cent.
Hoosier Farmers Shipping Vegetables LAFAYETTE, Ind., July 12.
(UP) The Purdue University , horticultural marketing service .
reported today that midsummer vegetables and fruits were being shipped from Hoosier farms. J. S. Vandemark, marketing assistant, said 20,000 dozen ears of pre-iced and bagged sweet corn were shipped last week from Gibson, Knox and Jackson counties. He said corn still was being
shipped at a rate of 2,000 dozen, ears' a day this week. (
Cantaloupe will be available in i
the Gibson-Knox County area next week, and in Jackson County during the week of July 26. The Vincennes harvest of Dutchess apples was scheduled to begin , this week. Vincennes peaches will be marketed during the week of July 17. Head lettuce, dry onions, carrots, turnips and cabbage are be
ing exported in mixed truckload1
quantities from Lake County this week, the marketing service said. Slicing cucumbers were being shipped from the Vincennes area
U.S. Airlift Plane Crashed In Red Zone BERLIN, July 12 (UP) A Berlin bound American C-5C airlift plane crashed in the Soviet zone of Germany early today. There was no immediate word as to the fate of the crew, believed to total three. A ground search party left Potsdam for the scene .of the crash, two miles east of Klaitz and 53 miles west of Berlin, just outside the Hamburg-Berlin airlift corridor. The plane radioed it was hav
ing engine trouble just befo the crash. There have been fatal crashes in little more thi a year that the airlift has be operating, killing 52 persoi Nine of the crashes involved Ai erican planes, and 29 Americ fliers have been killed. For the third straight day, t
Russians were slowing Berli bound Western trucks on t Helmstedt-Berlin super-highw to four an hour. They have ; ready closed the other 11 zoi border crossings which the J ; lied trucks had been using ; bring food and other supplies 'Western Berlin.
WISHING WELL
Refugee Vessel
Believed Sunk
HALIFAX. N. S.. Julv 12. U.R)
A refugee official said today that he believed the tiny Swedish vessel Briljantin, en route to Canada with 60 political refugees, had sunk without trace in the Atlantic. J Ilmars Andrejsons, secretary of the Latvian Relief Association,1 said the tiny, overcrowded vessel 1 left Sweden June 9 on a trip that I normally would have taken a! fortnight. It was carrying three
times the normal number of passengers. Andrejsons said the last he
heard of the Briljantin was a' press report that police had boarded it in Swedish territorial'
waters.
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NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Notice is hereby given that the undersigned haa been appointed Administrator of the estate of Blanche Cartwright. deceased late of Sullivan County, Indiana. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. FRANK LEACH, Administrator. Joe W. Lowdermllk, Attorney. 1st ins 7-5-49 3t..
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT notice is nereby given that the un-
Hi)i;i)ed F-Xfcuior ol ine estate ol
George G. Billman has this day filed iu onicu oj. tue ciem of lue oullivan Circuit Court his final report of j his account with said estate, and that the same will be heard by the Sullivan Ciicuit Count on the 6th day of September, the same being the 2nd jjuuiuial day ot the September term ! 1949 of said court craitois, heirs and legatees of said decedent therefore are hereby notified , to appear in said court on said day , and show cause why ' said report should not be approved. I DALE C. BILLMAN, ' . Executor. ! Witness my hand and seal of said court at Sullivan this 12th day of July, 1949. EARL A. ' ENGLE, Clerk of Sullivan Circuit Court. Telia C. Haines, Attorney. 1st ins 7-12-49 2t.
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HERE is a pleasant little game that will give you a message every day. It is a numerical puzzle designed to spell out your fortune. Count the letters in your first name. If the number of letters is 6 or more, subtract 4. If the number is less than 6, add 3. The result IS your key number. Start at the upper left-hand corner of wjejf6 tangle and check every one of your key numbers, left to right. Then read the message the letters under the checked figures give you. Copyrht 14. by Wlllitm J. Miller. Dtotri6uted by Kin Fetur, Ine "H 2
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT Notice is nereoy given mat tne undersigned Administrator of the estate 01 Hai-ley N. Hardin has this day tiled in the office of the clerk of the Sullivan Circuit Court his linal report of his account with said estate, and that the same will be hparii hv Hip Sulli
van Circuit Court on the 6th day of ! September, the same being the 2nd
judicial day or the September term 1949 of said court. Crditors, heirs and legatees of said decedent therefore are hereby notified to appear in said count on said day and show cause why said report should not be approved. CHARLES H. HARDIN. Administrator. Witness my hand and seal of said court at Sullivan this 12th day of July, 1949. EARL A. ENGLE, Clerk of Sullivan Circuit Court. Telia C. Haines, Attorney. 1st ins 7-12-49 2t.
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