Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 51, Number 172, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 30 August 1949 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES TUESDAY, AUG. SO. 1949.

SULLIVAN, INDIANA

Indians Beat

Cards, Bums Win By Stan Opotawsky United Press Sports Writer NEW YORK, Aug. 30 (UP "Pickups" gae Cleveland the pickup it needeu today, shoving the Indians back into the thick of the American League pennant fight.

Those pickups .players that were picked up frojfl other major league clubs during the past two seasons spurred the Tribesmen to a three game sweep over the clamoring Boston Red Sox. That hoisted them to within a game and a half out of second place in the standings, and five and a half games out of first. Jim Vernon started the comeback clatter Sunday. He is the anemia looking lad secured from Washington in a trade for Eddie R.obinson. His home run started the Tribe to its 2-1 win over the Bosox in the first game of the vital series.

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Vols Clash With Robeson Supporters.

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AT LEAST 13 PERSONS were injured, including three who were stabbed, when a group of veterans staged a parade to protest a scheduled concert by baritone Paul Robeson, in Peekskill, N. Y Shown above are the young veterans surrounding a car and preventing the occupants of the vehicle from, leaving the scene of the proposed concert. (International Soundphoto.)

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Bob Kennedy, picked up from the Chicago White Sox, continued the trend yesterday in the first game of a doubleheader is his three hits and two runs batted in topped a 5 to 2 conquest of Boston for Bob Feller. The second game was more of the same. With two out in the 10th inning, . Cleveland Manager Lou Boudreau walked. Kennedy doubled him to third and fnen Mike Tresh who also was picked up from the White Sox hit a single and scored Boudreau for a 5 to 4 triumph and the tnree game sweep. The Yankees remained station

ary because they, and the White Sox, were idle. The seventh St. Louis Browns got in a lfck for their cause with a 2 to 1 triumph over Washington. Dick Kokos' bases .loaded single in the ninth settled the issue. Detroit also got victory with a late game hit. Pat Mullin's sin

gle scored Eddie Lake from sec- J

ond in the 10th for a 4 to 3 win over Philadelphia the Tigers' eighth straight win. In the National League, both St. Louis and Brooklyn won and so the Cards remain two and one half game in front. Ron Northey's grand slam home run in the seventh headed a seven-run rally for an 8 to 2 win over the Boston Braves for St. Louis. TV. Dodgers continued its habitual lashing of Pittsburgh, this one a 5 to 1 triumph featuring 24-year-old Jack Banta's first complete game as a major league pitcher. It's apparent that the CardBrave and podger-Pirate series will decide nothing, for the pennant contenders can do no wrong against those clubs. The St. Louis win yesterday was the third consecutive win. Al Brazle allowed six hits for his 14th victory. Banta, likewise, gave only six hits.

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16-20 South Section

SEE

Telephone 39

The Giants are in no pennant

race, but Larry "Jansen proved he was "cousins" too when he licked the Reds for "Ihe fifth straight time, this one by 3 to 2.

Home runs by Stan Lopata and

Andy Seminick gave the Phils a 6 to 5 dicision over the Cubs. .

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Theyll Do It Every Time CJ

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DOCTOR, JERR-BUT WHAT ARE

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Three-I League

Clubs Won Lost Pet. Evansville ........ 68 48 .586

Waterloo 64 52

Terre Haute . . . . 63 Davenport .: . . 60 Quincy ........... 56 Danville . . . .". -... 54 Decatur 52 Snrinefield . . . . '. 49

: National League

Clubs-- '

EXLINE CORNER Mr. and Mrs. Fred Broshears of Wheatland, visited in Dugger Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Pigg of Carlisle, were in Sullivan recently. Mrs. Reel callerj on Mae Sweeney one day last week. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Giiliam and daughter were in Sullivan Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Robbinsand children of Carlisle, visited in

Dugger Sunday. I Jack Edmonson was in Dugc ' recently.

53 55 61 64 66 67

JL U. NAME VOCAL INSTRUCTOR

St. Louis 78, 47 Brooklyn . . . .:. 75 49 Boston 64 60 ' Philadelphia 64 62 New York'..... ... 62 62 Pittsburgh ........ 57 - 66 Cincinnati ... 50 74 Chicago ... . .... 49 79 American League

.552 .543

.522 1 BLOOMINGTON, Aug. 30 .479 (UP) Indiana University offi.458 cials announced today, that Anna .441 Kaskas, Bridgeport, Conn., a New .422 York Metropolitan Opera soprano, was added to the voice

Won Lost Pet. faculty of the University School

.624 of Music. She replaced another .605 former Met artist, Josephine .516 Antoine, who resigned last :508 spring. .500 .463 ' 403 STATE FAIR .383 OFFERS SERVICES

ClubsNew York . . Boston . . : . . Cleveland ... Detroit . , , Philadelphia Chicago St. Louis . . .

Washington

Won Lost Pet. . 77. 45 .631

51 52 56 58 74 82 82

75 73 ;72 66 51 45 41

American Association

' Clubs .' " Won Lost Pet.

St. Paul ....... Indianapolis . . . Milwaukee .... Louisville Minneapolis ... Columbus Kansas City . . . Toledo

INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 30 (U.R) Visitors at the Indiana State Fair will be offered free blood pressure readings said Dr. Malcolm" O. Scamahorn, Pittsboro, chairman of theUtate Fair Committee of the Indiana Medical As-

354 ' sociatin- Some 5,000 persons had 333 I tneir Dlod pressures taken at the 1948 fair, Scamahorn said.

.595 .584 .563 .532

408

86 54 .614 82 57 .590 71 65 .522 66 71 .482 65 72 .474 65 - 73 .471 63 74 .460 53 -85 .384 . ftp

Path of Hurricane.

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JOIN THE HAPPY DEKALB FAMILY, NOW!

DeKalb Agricultural Association

ROY JEWELL, FARMERSBURG, IND. WALTER ROUTT, SULLIVAN, IND.

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LOVELY actress Corlnne Calvet poses with some of her "subjects" R3 Gladiola Queen of New York florists. International)

THE POWERFUL hurricane which smashed into Florida followed the path (arrow) shown above. The area hardest hit was from Miami Beach to Palm Beach, with cities as far north as Titusville reporting high-velocity winds. The black area is the section where hurricane warnings have been flying. At West Palm Beach damage was estimated in the millions. International)

WISHING WELLJfl

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