Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 265, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 2, 1952 Page: 4 of 8
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4—- Gainesville (Texas) Daily Register
Wed., July 2, 1952
i
8
i
88
F. E. SCHMITZ
a
MOTOR CO.
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8)
>
_2
and tired of all these
rumors,”
S CLOSED FRIDAY, JULY 4
WITH THESE
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9 "
33c
A
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.000 the Dead Sea.
0 11
Rath’s Luncheon Meat
45c
4
5
Eor
Sunshine Vanilla Wafers
29c
Supreme Ginger Snaps
49c
$
H
SPECIALS FOR
THURSDAY
AND SATURDAY, JULY 3-5
1
LOANS
81c
FINANCING
f
E
REFINANCING
C
25c
E-
31c
55c
Gainesville
Phone 7
Classified Ads Bring Results!
Detroit
__23
31c
I
Get Ready for the Fourth
1
I
fill up with a new
TEXAS LEAGUE
63c
Pct. GB
PANHANDLE SPECIAL
Tulsa
__42
GASOLINE
89c
Lb.
46 , .471
65c
NOTICE
9
4
AND MARKET
West Side Courthouse Square
Phone 84
I. J. Armstrong
Sterling McCool
EC
Other Sizes Proportionately Low
Russia's Top Woman Athlete
Threat in '52 Olympic Games
By The Associated Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
.606
.545
.543
.536
.721
.700
.661
.535 412
.457 10
.443 10
.333 18%
4
4
4%
26
30
32
32
33
38
34
46
the
ball
.558
.517
.506
.494
.488
.483
.482
3 12
412
512
6
6%
612
7%
Fresh Fryers
Pork Chops
‘807
FACE
8
7
8
Prompt, Courteous
DRIVE-IN SERVICE
10-Oz.
Box
CLOTH
•eeeeesesee
ECONOMY SIZE
33c
IN
3383a
35 F
:-22
2 Lb.
Beg
12-Oz.
Can
u 43c
1
1
L.
38
42
42
43
44
46
43
106 North Chestnut
TELEPHONE 2400
LARGE SIZE
WITH
3
3
4
Tuesday’s Results
Detroit 6, Chicago 4.
New York 3, Boston 2, night.
Washington 6, Philadelphia 5,
night.
Cleveland 4, St. Louis 3, night.
19 innings.
L.
18
22
31
34
37
31
43
53
Tuesday’s Results
Dallas 3, Fort Worth 0.
Houston 3, Shreveport 6.
San Antonio 7, Beaumont 0.
Oklahoma City at Tulsa, rain.
Major League Reliefers
Shine in Tuesday Games
innings and gave up only three
hits and the single run. Mosman
finished on the mound for
Owls Stop Nocona, 6-1
Tuesday Night, 2 More
Games Slated This Week
CHOICE
S555- MEATS
Beginning July 5th, all
Barber Shops
in Gainesville
WILL CLOSE AT 7 P.M.
ON SATURDAYS
Briscoe _______
Allco _________
Waples-Painter
Optimists _____
Extra Special for 4th of July
Picnic!
TRY SUPREME
SALAD DRESSING
S
FN*
Corn
WASHES EVERYTHING’
Dirty Clothes, Dishes,
Fine Things!
32332333333
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Team— ' W. L. Pct. GB
Domino
Pure Cane
SUGAR
10 95c
Authorized
DODGE
and
PLYMOUTH
DEALER
.'5
1
Home
Grown
Tuesday’s Results
Brooklyn 4, Philadelphia 3.
New York 6, Boston 3, night.
St. Louis 8, Cincinnati 3, night.
Pittsburgh 3, Chicago 2.
(•A ME
-2202
The Liberty bell cracked on
July 8, 1835 when it was tolled
upon the death of Chief Justice
Marshall.
Lb. Can. . 79c
3333
823332
! 1
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".9
HALLIBURTON DIVIDEND
DALLAS, July 2 (A) — Direc-
tors of the Halliburton Oil Well
Cementing company yesterday
declared a dividend of 75 cents
a share payable Sept. 10 to stock-
holders of record Aug. 25. All
company officers were re-elect-
ed.
J
Cs 12 oz
FIRESTONE
Home and Auto Supply
52203.85 217,25
PACE BROTHERS
109 North Red River
Back of Tanner Furniture
Pint—1 7c
Quart
A"Acd,
ager will be for the rest of the
year is a matter we will decide
at the meeting.”
Briggs said that Tiger Coach
Ted Lyons definitely will be con-
sidered for interim manager. He
added, “There also are several
other men whose names will be
submitted for consideration.”
Rolfe appeared ready to yield
to the inevitable.
“All I know is that I am sick
Owls and hurled shutout
Pleads Innocent
To Baring Secrets
LONDON, July 2 (P) —Wil-
liam Martin Marshall, 24-year-
old foreign office radio operator,
pleaded innocent today to
charges of slipping state secrets
to a Russian diplomat. His trial
was set for July 9,
The tall, sallow-faced Marshall
entered his plea at a brief hear-
ing in the Central Criminal court
—London’s famous Old Bailey.
He was accused on five counts.
Three charged him with giving
information “useful to an
enemy” about the British diplo-
matic wireless service to Pavel
Kuznetsov, second secretary of
I the Soviet embassy in London.
The fourth accused him of ob-
taining such information and the
fifth of recording similar state
secrets.
Marshall was arrested June 13
in company with Kuznetsov. The
Soviet diplomat was released on
diplomatic immunity.
PHONE 1802
Shreveport Plays
Winning Ball But
Still in TL Cellar
By CHARLEY ESKEW
Associated Press Sports Writer
Move over, Dr. Einstein,
Shreveport also has a complicat-
ed theory. The Sports say you
just can’t get ahead in the Texas
league. And it’s proving true,
for them.
Shreveport, in the cellar of
this goofy league, tumbled into
its present position 16 days ago
and since has been playing at a
.571 clip. That’s 12 victories in
21 attempts.
What’s more, last night the
Sports, who haven’t been behind
the seventh place club over three
games in that span, nabbed their
sixth game in the last seven by
stopping Houston, 6-3. It pulled
the Sports within a game of the
Buffs, in a sixth place tie with
Oklahoma City.
The other games in the loop
were easy to figure: Dallas
topped Fort Worth, 3-0 on Jose
Santiago’s uncomplicted three-
hitter, while Bill Black of San
Antonio put down Beaumont, 7-0
with a like amount of hits.
Shreveport pulled its game out
of the fire like champions, al-
though outhit by Houston 10-7.
Grant Dunlap provided the spark
when his clutch singe, the only
rap he got, came with the bases
loaded and provided the Sports
a 4-3 lead in the eighth.
The River Jordan flows into
gs
Frog mound staff for the past
three years. The 20-year-old 180-
pounder will be sent to Joplin uu ..
for the remainder of the season, he said.
TECLAREYOURINDEPENDENC
E cROMYOURKITCNEN
First choice of champion race drivers — first choice of car
manufacturers. It’s the same high quality tire that’s given
phenomenal mileage as original factory equipment on mil-
lions of America’s new cars. It’s the tire with every safety
feature — the tire that gives most miles per dollar. Save__
Save — Buy America’s greatest tire NOW at these MONEY-
SAVING SALE PRICES’
Texas Flag Brings
Whoops in Chicago
CHICAGO, July 2 (AP) — Ap-
plause and war-whoops greeted
appearance of a Texas flag be-
fore the Republican credentials
committee yesterday.
The Texas delegate case did
not come up, but Jim Stickler of
Corpus Christi, an Eisenhower
supporter, walked into the com-
mittee meeting with a large
Lone Star flag.
The committee, hearing dele-
gate disputes, is expected to get
to Texas tomorrow.
HURRY—Sale Ends Midnight July 5TH
Tire sfo ri e
SZASWESRCS
DURING BIG
First Line—First Quality
VBBaFirestone
--""Oupes
Pct. GB
.727 ___
.672 3%
.551 1112
.534 121
.448 18%
.443 19
.386 23
.264 32
CLIFF GARDNER
332 N. Commerce
phur team is winless in three
league starts.
A local July 4 tilt at Locke
field will see a team composed of
the Gainesville Owls and Tigers
meet an all-colored club from
Lawton, Okla. The Lawton team
edged the Tigers last Sunday by
a 4 to 3 score. Game time for the
Friday contest is 4 p. m.
Owls starting the game will be
Bob Felker, third base; Winford
Baker, second base; Jack King,
left field, and Max Calhoun,
right field.
Tigers in the starting lineup
will be Raymond Wilford, short-
stop; Frio Johnson, first base,
and a center fielder to be named.
Cordell Martin of the Owls
and Billy Williams will split
catching chores and pitchers
available for the game will be
Strawberry Moore of the Tigers
and Rudd and Mosman of the
Owls.
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DISH
TOWEL
Pork & Beans ""eNis
Pet Milk :
Pure Lard Minror’ sc Blue Bomnet
hurling 11 scoreless relief rounds.
The Browns had broken through
Brissie’s serves in the top of the
19th, taking a 3-2 lead when Dick
Kryhaski walked, advanced to
second a sacrifice and scored on
Jim Delsing’s single.
Bobby Avila, however, opened
the last half of the 19th with a
single and scored the tying run
on Al Rosen’s one-out- double.
After Larry Doby made the sec-
ond out, pinch hitter Hank Ma-
jeski singled to score Rosen with
the payoff run. The victory
moved the Indians into third
place.
2 OS
ROLFE AND POSSIBLE SUCCESSOR — Detroit Tiger Man-
ager Red Rolfe mops his neck and walks glumly off the field
after batting practice in Detroit with Coach Red Lyons.
Detroit sports editors were saying that Lyons will replace
Rolfe after a meeting of the board of directors of the De-
troit Baseball Club next Saturday. The rumor also says
Coach Dick Bartell will be asked to take a "vacation" along
with Rolfe until the end of the season when their connection
with the club will be terminated. At present, the Detroit
club is deep in the American League cellar. — (AP Wire-
photo.)
in Moscow, then entered a Mos-
cow war factory.
For years she drove a three-
ton truck. In 1944 her athletic
prowess was recognized, and she
was put on the swing shift so
she could work at night and train
in the daytime. She became an
immediate sensation.
The Russians, however, are ex-
pected to do their best in the
Olympics in the discus, shot put
and javelin throw. Their running
remains a question mark.
There are four events on the
women’s running program: 100-
meter prospect is Natalya Khny-
kina, whose best time is 11.7 sec-
onds.
Evegenia Sechenova has the
best time in the 200 meters with
:24.7. Miss Chudina is the Rus-
sian champion in the 80-meter
hurdles, and she is a member of
the 400-meter relay team which
did 47.5 seconds in 1950.
X°—
Coffee
Admiration, 1
5mOnssun,,
""mmm Ozen
The Gainesville Owls clipped
the Nocona Indians 6 to 1 Tues-
day night at Locke field in one
of the best played games of the
season here.
Brilliant pitching by Billy
Mack Rudd and Richard Mos-
man was the key to the Owl vic-
tory.
Rudd worked the first seven
Allco Moves into
Second Spot With
Tuesday Victory
Allco moved into second place
in the Pee Wee league standings
Tuesday by handing the Opti-
mists a 13 to 7 setback behind
the steady hurling of Floyd Pet-
tigrew.
The victory moved the gassers
ahead of the second place Wa-
ples-Painter club, and the loss
dropped the Optimists deeper
into the loop cellar.
Pettigrew limited the Opti-
mists to 8 scattered safeties,
while his team mates were col-
lecting 12 hits off Dennis Mur-
phy and Billy Joe Nichols.
LEAGUE STANDINGS
W. L. Pct.
Tigers May
Fire Rolfe
On Saturday
DETROIT, July 2 (/P)—It ap-
peared pretty certain today that
Red Rolfe is going to be fired
as manager of the Detroit Tig-
ers. Still undecided was the
choice of a new manager for the
last-place American league club.
Rolfe, nearly everybody
agreed, is going to get the axe
Saturday. And he appeared re-
signed to his fate.
Walter Spike Briggs, president
of the Detroit club, has called a
meeting of his board of directors
for 5 p. m. Saturday. Briggs said
last night he will go before the
directors and recommend a
change in managers for the rest
of the 1952 season.
Briggs said he also will recom-
mend that third base coach Dick
Bartell be released. But he said
he did not know who the new
manager will be.
“I have decided to ask for a
change,” Briggs said. “I am cer-
tain that the remainder of the
board will go along with me. I
feel that something must be
done. Just who the new man-
meter hurdle race, her best time
being 11.4 seconds. She is Rus-
sia’s fourth best javelin thrower
with a heave of 162 feet to her
credit. She is a member of Rus-
sia’s 400-meter women’s relay
team, which established a
world’s record during the past
year.
Sasha holds Soviet records in
the triathlon for women and in
the pentathlon’s No. 2 and No. 3.
She is the nation’s outstanding
volleyball player.
Now in her late 20s, the gifted
Russian athlete developed her
skills the hard way.
She was graduated from high
school the day before the Ger-
mans poured their legions into
Russia. She dug bomb shelters
c * B; v,
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ib. 53c
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g"" ’ —2
TCU Ace Signed
By Yankee Chain
BEAUMONT, July 2 (P) — A
contract with Kansas City has
been signed by Norris Knobby
Graves, ace righthander from
Texas Christian university.
He was signed by Atley Don-
ald, New York Yankees scout.
The Yankees own the Kansas
City team.
Donald said Graves had re-
ceived a “sizeable” bonus but de-
clined to cite the amount. The
scout is recovering here from an
appendectomy.
Graves hails from Fort Worth
and has starred on the Horned
Eropes,- _
—1.25c
IF ■
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11
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Coffee Maryland Club
] Lb. Can.
By JOE REICHLER
AP Sports Writer
Baseball’s unsung minute men
—the relief pitchers—should feel
mighty proud of themselves
today.
Rarely, if ever, have the hur-
ryup hurlers performed as bril-
liantly as they did yesterday
throughout the major leagues.
Ranging from the superlative
11 and 10-inning chores of
Satchel Paige and Lou Brissie to
the two-inning tenure of Ted
Wilks, the performances of no
fewer than seven rescue work-
ers were magnificent.
Here is a rundown of how the
reliefers shone under the sun as
well as under the stars yester-
day.
Only two of the 16 starters
went the distance:
1. Brissie and Paige hooked up
in a spectacular pitching duel
from the 10th inning on with
Brissie and Cleveland finally de-
feating the St. Louis Browns in
a record-tying 19-inning night
game, 4-3. Brissie relieved Bob
Feller in the 10th and hurled
nine scoreless innings before
yielding a tally in the top of the
19th. Paige pitched 10 runless
frames after replacing Ned Gar-
ver in the ninth but weakened
in the 19th as the Indians scored
twice. Brissie allowed six hits
and Paige eight.
2. Clem Labine worked four
scoreless innings for Brooklyn
after relieving Ralph Branca and
was credited with the victory
when the Dodgers . came from
behind to nip the Philadelphia
Phillies, 4-3. .
3. Hoyt Wilhelm stopped a
Boston threat in the fifth and
Went on to yield two runs in the
next four innings as the Giants-
handed the Braves their sixth
straight loss, 6-3, to remain on
the heels of the league-leading
Dodgers.
4. Don Johnson handcuffed the
Philadelphia Athletics with two
hits and no runs in four innings
after Washington had tallied four
limes in the sixth to preserve the
Senators’ 6-5 victory. Washington
thus moved into second place,
3% games behind the Yankees.
5. Ted Wilks relieved Forrest
Main with the bases loaded and
none out in the eighth and
stopped the Chicago Cubs cold
for two innings as Pittsburgh
emerged with a 3-2 victory.
6. Fred Hutchinson stopped a
Chicago three-run uprising in
the second inning and pitched
seven scoreless frames until he
tired in the ninth as Detroit ral-
lied to down the White Sox, 6-4.
The defeat dropped the White
Sox into fifth place.
In the two games where the
starter went the route, Vic Ras-
chi pitched the Yankees to a 3-2
triumph over the Boston Red
Sox and Wilmer (Vinegar Bend)
Mizell hurled the St. Louis Car-
dinals to an 8-3 decision over the
Cincinnati Reds.
Bobby Brown, notified before
the game to report for duty as a
doctor in the Army on July 19,
produced the payoff hit for the
Yankees. He doubled Mickey
Mantle home from first in the
eighth to snap a 2-2 tie and hand
Boston’s Dizzy Trout his seventh
defeat.
Paige, who had won six and
saved nine of the Browns’ 32 vic-
tories, came within inches of
rv 1
k
8886563
during his stint.
The Owls jumped off to a fast
lead by pushing over three runs
in the first inning. Winford
Baker was hit by a pitched ball,
Max Calhoun and Bob Felker
drew successive walks and Jack
King drove in the first two with
a hard single. Jamie Monroe
grounded out but Felker scored
on the putout.
The Owls scored one run each
in the second, fourth and fifth
frames.
The visitors were unable to get
a hit until the sixth inning when
they bunched three for their
only score of the game.
Cordell Martin and Jack King
led the Owls at the plate with
two bits each. Calhoun, Baker
and Felker got the other three
Owl safeties.
The Owls return to action
Thursday night in a Texoma
league game in Sulphur, Okla.
It will be the first meeting of
the season between the two
clubs. The Owls are currently in
third place in the league stand-
ings with a 3-2 record. The Sul-
Team— W.
Dallas ________48
Beaumont ____45
Fort Worth ___43
New York ____40
Washington 36
Cleveland _____38
Boston ________37
Chicago -------38
St. Louis______32
Philadelphia __27
Team— W.
Brooklyn _____48
New York _____45
Chicago _______38
St. Louis______39
Philadelphia__30
Cincinnati ____31
Boston ________27
Pittsburgh ____19
CRISCO
3 Can 77C
Co TOc
Round Steak
Sliced Bacon
Chuck Roast..........L5.
Pork Roast lb 49c
Fresh Ground Meat L 59c
Sausage Lb. 39c
DELUXE
CHAMPIONS
1% REG, nero
717 PRICE 4**
^U$<rie Price
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M 6.00-16
1288 V6y EXCHANGE
E "EV PLUS TAX
By TOM WHITNEY
(For Gayle Talbot)
MOSCOW (/P)—The Babe Did-
rikson of Soviet Russia is a
lanky, angular truck driver
named Alexandra Chudina.
Russians are looking to this
lean, strong girl to win individ-
ual honors in the Olympic games
at Helsinki, starting July 19.
They hope she will surpass the
deeds of the Babe at Los Angel-
es and of Holland’s Fanny Blank-
ers-Koen, a triple winner four
years ago in London.
Alexandra—nicknamed “Sasha”
— holds the Soviet records in
both the high jump and broad
jump and her performances are
only slightly off the world’s best
marks.
She runs a formidable 80-
San Antonio __42
Houston ______43
Okla. City ____40
Shreveport ____41
PICKLES
Sour or Dill om.
Quart ............. L•6
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Economy Size . ... 63c
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•-8
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. • 383:3 333 :: 3:38888888888888888/83588888888858888888888888888888888888888888888888
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256
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 265, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 2, 1952, newspaper, July 2, 1952; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1559532/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.