Coleman Daily Democrat-Voice (Coleman, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 111, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 22, 1949 Page: 4 of 6
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‘‘age four
a
THE OA!LYnEMOCRAT-VOICE,COLEMAN,TEX. LQCa] B0yS Attend
’ Track and Field Meet
I Three boys from Coleman—Billy j
Clifford, Chuck Turner : atid Leo- J
i^rd Ehrler- were amongthose I Beautiful suits -ONE HALF
,who participated in the , 26»h;'PRicE on sale-- grand fabrics, all
Southwestern Rteregttoh .....Track;/] gabardines, etc.
j and Field Meet at Furl WortlijSat- i* otBBS.
urriay, when a record field «£. l‘,S2Si ' "" ’ ___
contestants performed before an es- Dr ^ flnd {amj!y of BalUpg-
Mrs. Will Klapper returned Satr
Lurday from a visit at Heerne with; [V
[Mr. and Mrs: Fred KJapper, and
j Brownwood with Mr. and Mrs.
| Charles Klapper.
TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 1949
★' THE SCOREBOARD
haLfs;
STl’ROES fPRICE' On .sale— grand fabric?, Ml
Beautiful suits - ONE
-wool gabardines, etc.
& GIBBS.
STURGES
I
Importance of Base-Steaiiuv,
Underestimated, Says Milan
BY HARRY GRAYSON
NEA Sports Editor
ARLANDO, Fla.—(NEA)— Clyde Milan Is drilling the'Senators In
base-running
Manager Joe Kuhel wishes the old American League base-stealing
champu n could teach the Nationals to swipe first base. Too many
of them <
Milan.
88 bases
Tyros Ra
best He
the Athle
“Base-:
“and it's
timated crowd Of 3,500. AH three
J boys represented Decatur Baptist
I Junior College at Decatur.
Brownsville captured the junior ________
j-college crown, 39 2 5, points to 27 !•' ,
j 2-5 for San Antonio. John Tarleton I VVlU Pa|!< 01 NoVlt’e
i cUemon Saturday.
ei- visited In (.he. J. M. Barnett
heme Sunday with Mrs Bailey’s
parents
vLsttetl in
scored 26 1-3 and Kilgore 18 1-2.
191
id 74 in
Arm
base-rur
“Whet
managlv
at tl
“Too many to i
-‘‘The bulk ■ th
only, and are afrai
slewing up. and th
by sliding It’s tin
“MIGHTY V. 1
* jump on the
full -peed with the
“When I marked
take, they wouldn
ing on the pitcher,
to, fearful that the
pressed doubt. I to
man, and ask him
than mine, ar.d «■
“An average lor
Stealer usually is
understand the
“And any sucke:
position the more
lacking a real t.'.'i)
Clyde Milan t
tribe of old-time 1
A new crop v;ou
Let ’em run.
with any degree of frequency any other way
Yashihgton outfielder and ex-manager, swiped
13 tn show the way. when the immortal
■ Collins and Tris Speaker were at their
chout a 12-vear stretch. Chief Bender,
called him Dee: foot,
integral part of baseball,” says Milan,
rossly neglected. 1
tting so popular today, the superlative
ran still win dose games,
tr the Washington club as a coach after
-tation for eight years, I was amazed
lept-' jcle en the bases,
icnt in.sliding.
Hide properly can fall away to one side
■> other They .can't hit the dut without
irectly into the tag. You don't gain time
y you can stop suddenly.
: th-'1 knack c
nd finishing.
gton players the lead I used to
It averaged 10 feet or more, depend-
t the mark out that far I was afraid
so far off base But when they ex-
1 over Joe Judge, thi-old first base-
mark out a step and a half farther
t was where 1 started.
■re than six feet The aspiring basc-
no more than two, so you can readily
People on Low Salt
Diet Offered
Varied Menu
1
W. W. Goiter returned Saturday
from Tulin, where he was for .seve-
ral days on business.
CLEARANCE BALE i f 1 ‘all new
spring coats.' and suits. Pick your-
qairk! Ewansdown - Printzess -
Junior Deb - Lilli Aim - Betty
Rose, and other famous brands.
STURGES & GIBBS.
it taking a lead, getting the
The good base-runner is in
tkt W,
Must
Hub puts in scoring
Tha' is esp< ally tryc pf a club
tlWashington team.”
s member of the rapidly-vanishing,
nent to the game.
STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Cal. I
u.Fh—Hospital dietitians here have j
come up with some good news for j
j people with high blood'pressure. |
If they are on a low salt diet I
there is no reason why ' the food j
cannot hr tasty and varied, say I
1 diet it lai'N Nancy L. Hooper and
Esther L, Sippel.
The diet offered by the two wo-
men contains ns little as 100. mill! -
‘ grams of sodium—the approximate
amount in a pinch of salt. Recipes
(cover a wide range of foods, jn-
i eluding soup, custard, pudding, co-
coa. cottage cheese pie, pecan pie. ,
pastry, a nut and rice casserole j ®,h^.
dish, cookies, tomato aspic, stuffed
I peppers, and even chop suey.
No salt is used in the food pre-
partition or seasoning, and all ,ob- j D:lllas sP‘‘nt thc wef'lceml her
yinusly salted foods, such gs gravies j parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. r. Blah,
ar.d meat stock soups, are omitted.
Dried raisins, dried figs, beets, ,
Upinach. turnips carrots and some \ ^ San Auuelo for a visit with her
other vegetables are avoided be- p011- Henson, and Mi Henoob.
uiuse of high sal,! conteik.-
Sait substitutes, such as potas- j
I slum chlordie • crystls, are now j
I commercially available, tlie dieti-.j
! tians point out., but the secret of |
i their_use is to use them sparingly. \
Me, and Mrs. H L. Markin nri.
Mr: W. P. iltobaugh and Mrs.
Elmer sDnpstn left Saturday on aj
trip to Mexico City, D. F,
Mrs. Mteks Byers returned on
Thursday from Abilene where she
vi iied with her mother. Mrs. Jana |
Reese.
Mr,’ and Mr: Jihmu Grecnwfiy
| oi Georgetown visited ever the
| weekend with her mother. Mrs:
Meek r
CLEARANCE SALE rf all new
(spring coats and suits. Pick-yours
: quick! SwansdoWii - Frintzess -
Junior Deb - Lilli Ann - Betty
famous brands.
| STURGES & GIBBS,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Y’oung of
Mrs Mable Henson left Friday
Mr. nnd Mrs. Mike Wright and
ren Mickey were Brwnwodo visit-)
or:. Saturday.
Vi itors in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. A. A, Jarrell over the week
end were Mr. and Mrs. A, A. Jar-
rell, Jr., and children. -Peggy and
Billy,'of Firt Wortii, nnd Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Webb and daughter,
Linda, of Sun Ango.i.
,apd Mrs. O. 8. Kriskill, visit- j
eci Sunday in Lubbock with their.
ro;i and. daughter-in-law, Mr. nnd 1
Mrr Bob DrUkttl. ...........-.........uj
Robert Thorpe of Seattle, Wash.,
has moved i> Coleman and is
supei intendent of the Garment
Factory here. Mrs, Thorpe will join I V _ '
him in June. [---—----■------—,-—,—^_
CLeTranS.....SALE~of~dresses.j Mrs, V. B Curl left Monday fort Mrs. B. B Hill of Brownwood
One rack — ONE HALF PRICE j Concordia, Kane, aftei a,two weeks j v isited over llic weekend with her
All well-known brands. RtyRGESj visit'. with her i ter. Mrs. Lamar) daughter. Mrs Charles Wilson and
& GIBBS. Evans and Mr. Evans . j family,
WHV MOTHERS GET >'»■
Mr. and Mrs. John Warren and
Mr. and Mrs. II. M. Collins visltgd
with Mr and Mrs. Joe Bowen in
Sweetwater, Sunday.
=3Bl=A-i=LJaE
5=] BE
=301=
r-rr-JnKrr-
=1BF3
rtCttr
P.G.C. FEEDS
TIRES &/TUBES
SEEDS
, Ao arc E.ccking Seeds for Spring Delivery
COLEMAN COMMUNITY GIN ASS N
For The Best
j Wei. and Dry Wash f
* V,:: i’K’K I P AND DELIVER” \
* Dial 4.176
J
511 ’San’ Marcos
SMITTY’S WASHATERIA
i
HIEKE YOl’R CLOTHES ARE
WELL TREATED
Wallace McKee
700,(Jimmereial
4/
'f&X
OFFICES
■ I.
hr.
ALL STANDARD SIZES LEDGERS
2.00 6.00
Ledger Sheets and Indexes
• • • •
GASH BOOKS AND JOURNALS
*
• For all.purpose-. Permanent bindings, lasting.
papers. Lighl day-lo-day journals.
EXFANDING BANK-CASE FILE
• Handy fer heme or office. Alphabet sections—
Casy to reach. Keep your papers filed I
' FILE CABINET INDEXES
• Sturdy manila fcca'rd, reinforced eyelois, heavier *
piyboard mefal eyelets.
MERCURY, SWINGLINE, TOT
STAPLERS • :a
• Mon-clogging standard staplers. See the new
Swingline in Modem Colors.
1.50 6.50
METAL FILING CABINETS
• One-drawer with center-lock For indexes. Three
drawer Security file, roller beying*. Heavy steel.
CARD FILE AND TRANSFER FILES
• Heavy ply-board, reinforced corners. Sizes 3x5,
4xG. Other letter sixes.
Coleman Daily Democrat-Voice
T
Complete Office Supply Store
The Beautiful
NOW ON DISPLAY at Chrysler dealers every-
where. The new Silver
Anniversary Chrysler. With more room—greater
comfort—greater safety and performance: Completely
new in its well-bred beauty! Advanced again in its
inspired engineering.
Like every Chrysler for 25 years, our Silver Anni-
versary car is beautiful because it reflects the common
sense and the imagination of the engineering under-
rf.dh. Your greater safety . . . your greater comfort
... your greater satisfaction in your car’s performance
. : . these come first in tlie Chrysler way oi-buildjng
cars. And once again, with more than 50 important
improvements, you are gelling/nM from Chrysler the
advances that ready! count.
The full beauty of the Silver Anniversary Chrysler
goes far beyond all that is exciting to (lie eye. Tailored
to taste, with ample headroom—with plenty of
shoulder room and legroom—with wider chair-height
seats. This is a car perfect in every detail right to its
jewel-like ash tray. There’s more horsepower from^
the foremost^high compression engine, the mighty
Drive
with
Chrysler Spitfire! With Prestomatic Fluid
Transmission '. . . with Safety-Level-Ride . .
exclusive Safety-Rim wheels that make it almost
impossible to. throw a tire . . . with more than 50
advances in safety, comfort, convenience, and per-
formance—this is the car you’ll talk about for years
to come. We cordially invito you to see and ride in
it . . . by far the greatest value offered!
AGAIN YOU GET THE GOOD THINGS FIRST
FROM CHRYSLER
New Chrysler
WE AIM TO TAKE CARE OF OIR OWN—WITH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH SERVICE THAT MATCHES CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH ENGINEERINl
Coleman Motor Company
o
.
A,:.
215 W. Live Oak
V
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Coleman, Texas
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Reavis, Dick. Coleman Daily Democrat-Voice (Coleman, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 111, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 22, 1949, newspaper, March 22, 1949; Coleman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth746500/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Coleman Public Library.