Coleman Daily Democrat-Voice (Coleman, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 163, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 1, 1949 Page: 4 of 6
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p\rr Torn mr mnv ivrwont \t voice, rmrMw, ttt
Todays Sport Parades’
* the scoreboard *
Klieman Mystery Deepens as
Yanks' Pitching Bubble Bursts
BY HARRY GRAYSON
NBA Sports Editor
VF'.V YORK- N"
to parrile! Pm’
1 You recall the
Yankees to n touf
factory in the shoe
bait anywhere Ion;
of a week, he was
Anyway now v.
right-hdiKier last
champion Indians
•ther pitcher on th
Cleveland record.
His 2 59 earncrl-
But despite K icrr
Boudreau repeated;
hotel profnma n rr
Senators.
Clark Griffith w
Eddie Robinson wl
he gave them pay.
tunity in Wash me
the waiver price f
r f
A)—Tire ?■ ange Care ! Eddie Klismanpromises
of Babettehlgren ^
•ah lire. -.taation. of course After helping the
championships In 1928-39. and being satis-
he grot Leu Gehrig, Dahlgren roiildn't first
enough i get acquainted. Once, within a period
hr pe t> the Cubs Brow*- • and Dodgers.
* " Klieman mystery The bespectacled
ease:: wa the tar rebel worker of the world
He totted in 53 games in 194" more than any
Amcr an Lea le. only five short of the all-time
Bv Oscar Fraley
Fulled f’r ss Sports Writer
RICHMOND Vi. June 1, •-iUJh
j~P:G.A officials in the wake cf
j their annual iournameni today
stormed to the defense ofJEciJDud-
lev, honomrv rapt up cf the Ryder
. Cup • team, and
jwcm putting a
,;nent golf players.
’ A number of pres questioned
Dudley’s appointment to the pest
I during the course of the tourna-
! ment. which at times assumed n
; lAssable simltarity to a champion-
ship fight card These pros inti-
mated that Dudley rigged the deni
when it should have gone to Gene
Sarazvn or- Ben'Hogan
'There i nb'trulh v thnt said
George Scimeiter. PGA tourmi-
ment manager "Thirty sections
each were represented by two'dele-
gates at the annual meeting m
Dunedin Fin , aha they unanimous-
Dudley
course- on winch we play
But lie '.insisted again till
called gag-rule' in tli-.*
ment players’ agreement
intended to ke p the prf
the sn-
trutna-
vas net
frnir.
Australia's Blue Laws Threaten
To Dampen Olympic festivities
Itv FiMORGE M< <ADDEN of Sunday iii Melbour
Sf'NTUY MAY M, 1949
Witmah and Stilt Champeefi
r.
■talking t, th«lr heart.; eontent
Arid he revealed that plan. ratted
, I —lie. <:.M th.", complete ttavelltip Unit ill hr
ga?" on tavirni- near future. Wlh'P.GA fracking.
its complete layout of 'takes, tope-,
sound system, scoreboards, • pla•
carets and tents,
Which would make it even.more
MCCADDEN
I’. Staff Correapoiutent
of the 1956 Olympic Games un-
corked neon trover sy in Austra-
lia over Melbourne’s "wowser''
liquor Inv.-s and her prim, Vie-
nne e groups sav they will fight
Powerful church and tempor-
Sundav in Melbourne-nn awe-
some study in suspended anima-
tion. Life does not stand still on
a Melbourne Sunday; it fulls
down into a torpor."
The high point of Sundny ip
Mesbnurne is the arriv;ijjtf news
papers'frnm Sydney, bearing tid-
tike h {'iron.,which this one surely
Baseball Calendar
"he eir ait’s third be" last trip,
i srtown in ihe averages, Lou
' tv m'.denee in the Cleveland
sen-v.n s end traded him to the
^ voted.!he honor u
Schnetier, the Ogden. Juih, rat-
io land Klieman and first b:.«emnn
Manager Boudreau’s doghouse, that
alte: -iemg given iitUe or no oppor-
wj: puked up by the Yankees for
J^LUMAN vc,
Jong cnouci
Con-isted of a b
the Claes C Ca>
tingle Araerii ar
The next 'to-
ll a White S' -
Questions wi
ielphia debacle
.'undies Mars] .
:h"t they had
r>o- terfic-t.l and
aatlford ii th)
onur • C. --ey Stengel hardly
■ hands All tnc pitching ho did
; the Ar, "c : N Y farm t'.uh of
a.c Leagm (Into H' did not j ;uch to a
tel lor tin Yanks
. .' -■■■ ... K; omr. . • •: peer id •
m * .nybody
el. ; ( 'he Yank- ran inn the Phils-
, ■ ' . ■ ,i. fa- • t.i.T <{“ve Eli Lopat ar.d
i ' tec came- He Met! wild
ut :: ■ oi dei ■ a men wet ■ R;isi...
'.Mire By • nc Shea, Page Hillei an
K ■ r turf "Id Saul.' rd ar.d Pace
tlenuin who set the opening round ,
pact wr cetirsi record Sii„ said
ithat thue were there cr four pm.
who don’t take tnc time to find I
out tile score ’’
He als- took a pot she t ut Vic
Oezz: tile Englewood. N J pro
who charged thnt the P.G.A of- ;
f minis would hold the championship
ion a drivins range1 "if the fttler was
nvlit.’
"Gtjpzzt would be one of the ,
first to -.-mi i.nn ;f the puree fell .
:: Schueitec! said <
But thf dark-featured Stlmeiter
Y bteri.av t; It rsu Its
Tevil* league
Dallas 6. Oklahoma City 3
Shreveport 4. Sail Antonio
Tulsa io. Pert worth 3
Houston 6, Beaumont 2
Big Sstate league
Austin 3- Sherman 2
Waco 5, Gainesville 1
Temple 7. Texarkana if
Wicvhitn Falls f*. Greetivilk
Vmeriran l eague
• No Games Scheduled'
National I eaguei
Boston 7, Philadelphia 6
Brcklyn 6, New York
mgs i
Only Games SeheduF
mice groups say they willfight- mgs of the great world beyond,
all-out any attempt to change Melborne newspapers, of cottr-
the city's un-continental drinking se. do not appear on the Snb-
ami entertainment restrictions. bath.
Throughout the country there "One shudders at the thought
is .i suspicion now that fast-talk- of breezy, free-spending Wester-
ing Melbourne spokesmen at Ro- jners from the U. S.on the town
me did not emphasize the city’s j tn Melbourne of an evening and
liquor laws when they won the deprived of their drink. The
games site from Buenos Aires', I dripk waiter who reaches an nrm
Detroit, and other aspirants. .to remove a half-finished bottle
Puns in Melbourne (an(J also;from a Texan's table is going
4 inis?
wud th^re
ievied v'irQj
■pla?'
01^f*77. f'!'. Mich
eju‘. and‘Lew Wor-
ked'the Hermitage
the chnmpionshir
u “Pit’ll and putt*
Babbs Decision
Booed By Crowd
t }•,,
Ofthar
■ ifessiot;;
fire, man
TecM
- r ot Eddie Kher
ni£ buubic bursi.
Banker Turns Clergyman
Frees Church of Debt
GAYS MILLS W t'P Th.
Sherwood agree'
L-U'w.C'
me: I
r.j vi the
neitcr
■For It
rvonsor
) and
•Play
ing a
Gay Mills
club
he exp
ave
biiined
oi.ferei
they ar< liable to
suppose said Sch-
Lv our job to kevp th
the host clubs happv
tcurnament at a gcll
gupsts of these club- "
'It ls like going to-
t ineon»‘.n home and then
it to rant about the
HOUSTON. Jun<
Fans booed for l."»
hurled pqp bottles .
into the ring* 1
Johnny Dahb: -if U
awarded a derisio!
do Gallardo .of
i a 10-round figh*
* Dabbs. 142. was
fight as alast-iTiirir
st1':' into tile!
le si.tnAiUlto !’
j for Juste Fontaine of Pittsburgh, j
I who withdrew'yesterday because
tif a cut lip. Gallurdu weighed in
at 136
' iken on !•""
Harvey H ST
of the Bank ■
now the Rev
!
ueen
regul,
tin: sal church O’
an*; Lyipcville
The banker n
pastor for the j
H. recent off
m: ie the posit
1* beear. eir h.‘
New York is the
* fence to home
the major league
It fS 257 feet
Braves' (onalser
>s Hitting ftage
Of The Moment
1 at but to sky-rocket his batting
i average to .342.
After clubbing Philadelphia pit
I chers for five.hits on mem'driai
day, clouting Clint hcmrft efeii
three more blows against, the
' Phillies yesterday, one »f his hits
Sydney) close at 6:00 p in. textile
ace imp; niment of a bull-voiced
cbucker-out" who bellows ’tiriie
gentlemen...hurry,' time, -ghntie-
; men-time-hurry-time.
In licensed eating places in
Melbourne all liquors must be
nil tables by 8 pm. Sydney drink
it; <n ink -at'leisure.
Campaign Started
! There is an increasing degree,
of soul-searching not only in Mel-
bourne but. in Sydney, which al-
so hopes to ensh in on nn untici-
| patud influx of 50,000 overseas
j visitors.
Some newspapers and
I |(.„dcrs are calling far-stern ac-
!infi t.i water down the stringent
wowser" or blue-nose liquor
laws a ad Sunday blue-sky regu-
lations which keep theaters elo-
r.ed and'bar paid admittance to
-porting events, dances etc.
Tt.e Marquess of Queensberry,
i adsott of the originator of the
lamed rules for boxing, intorduc-
i ■ -p.. firs', note of outside mi-
tn..lily in the controversy.
Ti.r ltWi marquess since erra-
•; n- of the title in 1682 took a
unified poke at Melbourne’s li-
iuor setup, prompting the Syd-
iic , Sunday Sun to observe that
■i ,. makes reasonable criticism
of our archaic drinking laws...
•»,e thousands of visitors Who
a,,me here for the Melbourne
! Olympic Games will find our
drinking laws ridiculous and ir-
i ritating,"
Hotels Inadequate
Clive ’Durnbull, Melbourne Her-
, olumnist, charged that "ho-
tel accomodation as we know it
i. hopelessly inadequate....a lux-
to lose the, arm.
Diz Had Modest
But Sure Start
As Celebrity
Uloioji
being a botnet . . - he paced Bos- ury hotel according to the pre-
tor, to , '. ii ' .The Australian 'definition is one
victore kept the luavos in ,, first- wdiicti gives about the same level
plac tie With toe Dodgers, of ervice as a 60-year-old coffee
who beat the Nev. York giants, palace in some minor European
6 to 4. in a ;4-imiing tug!,’ game eit;. ..there is no reason why Aus.
Efforts Combined should °J the few.pla-
ce.s m the world where it is 1m-
The Brooklyn triumph came Ssible l() have u drink in a
about, through the combined ef- (ugh, club without breaking the
law.”
George McGann
IN CARS, TRUCKS,
TRACTORS
NEW YORK. June 1 - - (UP, —
I The Boston Braves were making
overtures at their second suc-
] cessjve, pennant today, thanks to
| melody-loving Clint Conatser, n
guy who dotes on Brahms, ' be-
bop and the tuneful tempo of
*" ■ ..... iforts of outfielder Carl EuftHo. i
Co: ats. r : urrentl.v oh -a one- |wh0 hl, , . .. , h,l|T)l,r
maif butting lam.ppge. is a mus-|of thp th< -,4th
ic lover whose umely hits these j ,teh(,r j.lCk thf
days are keeping the Braves at Iiiurlei
the top ot- the National League ! ■ '
sale along with Brooklvn. I Banta the fourth dodger pit-
' ' ('her-, relieve.-', Kfiipli Lrariea
, The 27-year-olu Conatser. up in the ninth ; - , ,he New.j
to now almost unnoticed m the Yorker inbes; the re > of the'1
! Boston outfield, has Pounded . , )0|. hi^ S(,(,,.(t|rl vi:,,on The
fout eiKtat hits in his last 10 times |ginnts h:i,. taken th ei -rim leads
off starter Moi ns Mai titi but
: Brooklyn ..tied the game with
three runs in the' fiftt
Gil Hodges of Brooklyn and
nnd
winning
an American
member of the New York staff
of the Sydney Daily Telegraph,
was sent to investigate condi-
tions in Sydney's rival metropo-
lis. McGann pronounced Melbour
lie Australia's finest city," but
shuddered to think of what would
happen to Olympic visitors un-
Duke is the runningest piece of plunder on the University of
Florida track. Duke reports for practice every day. runs in every
race, distances as well as dashes. The wire-haired terrier nevet
loses, and has been known to cut corners n little sharply to remain
undefeated, He does not participate in field events.
1
By Harman W. Nichols
WASHINGTON, May 3V— (u-
P)—It's ktndof hnrd tn define
a celebrity.
| For instance, way back yon-
c i vie der my friend wound up and
-bumped off a rabbit with n
round rock at 25 paces. To the
hill people, he wus a big shot.
My friend, listed in the base-
ball. record Hnnnn Dean, Alias
Dizzy, wiggled the dust from
between bis toes, put on shoes
and all of a sudden was pitching
for the St. Louis Cardinals.
He was n celebrity aguin.
Diz, a .great family , man, got
his brother into the majors nnd ; Up „u the tabs, including those kids," he told me over the
told the late Sum Breadon that transportation. Diz, who shoots phone from St Louis tin- other
the two of them could pitch the g,(jf jn the 70’s, qualifies us a night, "-You can. count me in.
cards to a pennant. They did. ; tto-le-Drity in more ways than one. | I'll lie there,
in 1934, Dizzy won 30 games nnd , Dean Is "Mellower "1 wtiz a llcrliii ment myself
Paul won 19. The old right-han- { q.)H, vears have mellowed the ) once."
great one. Time .was when he, _ • ■
cele- j Woqld on an assignment;
brines. Diz pitched a three-hit- j uke this just to get publicity. .....1 " ...
ter m.ihe opener and Paul came He once" jumped the St; Louis
up with a no-hitter in the after- j Cardinals , t o g i v e .a S t.
piece. Said Diz to Paul: ‘'-Why ! Roujs reporter a story—as a fa*
didn’t you tell me you were gon-; Vor
na pitch a no-hitter. We'd have i .
made it unnanermus ’’. I Hls fir;'ra^ar *s not »rr{flr,
Diz. probably would have, too. 11 warn t when he was n kid
He’s that kind -of celebrity. I cotton fjcker; :u’ri 11 d,dn 1 }m'
Has a Heart 1 pr<)Ve throukh lhe years when
Well, I know the great'one he WBS a bas<?ba" broadcaster:
almost! as well as the next one.
tier's comment after one double!
header is a classic for
• BARBS
BY HAL COCHRAN
4 HEN in Maryland laid n lav-'
•'Vender egg. What, nopid lace?
We note have the days when
the leather-lunged citizen can
pel a new deal by simply yelling l
i “take ’im out!"
He’s full of the old braggol But
underneath, he’s got a heart.
Diz isn’t out of a job right
now, but he’s the next thing to
it. Got in trouble last year—in St.
Louis, as usual. Lost hrs radio j
contract and now is doing per-
sonal appearances for a fee.
R. so happens that the biggest)
dean-in the brother act is a darn-
ed good golfer. The Washington-1
Post, which annually sponsors
a notional celebrities golf tour-,
(lament, asked Diz to coj^ in
for the contest which rmislrom
June 4th through Sunday the 5th, I
It's for the benefit of delinquent
He was criticized for such utter- j
1 anees over the radio-as "the run-
' ners went back to their respect- j A dietitian says no matter how
able bases, and he slud into y0li spinach kids are apt-to.
If he'improved his speech, he : 1*^ Jt. Just an old spinach
wouldn’t be Dizzy Dean. It’s not custom! *J
his stock in trade. "Slud into » ♦ * ,
third? Whut do you want iru'-ell There are more than 10,0001
to say — slidded”’ That's my. earthquakes 4- year in the world, j
boy. according to scientists. Shock-
"But if I can do anything for
Bandleader
iup, io say the least!
Answer to Previous Puzzlt
J ' John A aims was the first Pres-
j ident U- live in the White House.
‘less changes were made before , kids—and sets up a fund to help
j 1956. them.
I have suffered the full ex- . Sure, said Diz when the repre-
California has. more than onc-
i half of the: nation's Pacific coast--
: line
The earliest kno
once police was i
land in 1583
vn life ir.sur-
su.ed in Eng-
Juck Lohrke of tii
hit homers. L,.it)
! pitched 1-3 innit.c
lieved by. Dave Ko
lllo had home-red .
panel I a tripled jr;
the loser.
sentative of the post called. Why
not. Demi's money sack isa't ns
J at
who
tent of Melbourne's burbnric
drinking laws." he wrote. 'When
the 8:06 p m. closing hour tolls full us it used Ui be. He is digging
in the restaurants, waiters swoop j into his buck pocket. But he
• it down upon the tables and make j never turned a kid down For nn
Fur-1 off with every glass, every bot-1 autograph, or a dime for a pop-
Huy Cam- tie. empt yor full sickle.
No Sunday Fun j The rules of this tournament
. I also know the full horror lare: You are a celebrity, you
HORIZONTAL
1,8 Depicted
orchestra
leader
13 Antennae
14 Infirm
15 Rodent s
16 Conducts '
18 Companion
19 Medical
aft
director (ab.) 10 Tear
20 Emit 11 Beasts of
21 Pronoun
22 Dispatch ’
25 Cicatrix ,
27 Fish eggs'
28 Dance step
Only Chrysler Offers
29 Symbol for
thoron '
30 Within
31 Type of
butterfly
32 Egyptian'
sun god
•33 Torrid i
4 Symbol for
nickel
5 Type of
cabbage
6 Genus of
hollies
7 Brother of
I Jacob (Bib.)
8 Crate „
9 Any \
26 North
> American
burden - nation
12 Lamprey- 33 Set
catcher 35 One given to
17 Doctor of self eiteem
Divinity (ab.) 36Fits
23 Idea 38 Gaiters
24 Signify 40 Girl
25 Steeples
f 41Indir.n
irmlbeny
42 Knocks
,43 Sand
44 Persian ’
tent maker
47 Age (
49 Contend .
51 Notary public
fob;)
53 Compass point
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34 Dutch cit;
36 Rational
37 Droops ’
39 Abraham’s
| home (Bib.)
40 Very slow
, (music)
45 Opera (ab.)
46 Fish
48 Disquietude
49 By way of.
j 50 Gull-like
birds
j 82 He is a noted
; 54 Fillips
4 ation prolongs engine life. Kxclusive Full Flow Oil
Tiller keeps oil ‘so clean? that a change is necessary
only every 5,(XX) imios. Chemically treateal cyfinuers
reduce cylinder wall scoring, save on oil. Nev* Wide-
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in£
fuel. Superfumh reduces wear of moving
inertii
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a demonstration.
VERTICAL
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Reavis, Dick. Coleman Daily Democrat-Voice (Coleman, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 163, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 1, 1949, newspaper, June 1, 1949; Coleman, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth747309/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Coleman Public Library.