Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
Third Straioht Loss
Jols Pennant
Hopes 0f Lookouts
'ATLANTA, July 10—(AP)—
~ 'Their third loss in a row to the
rampaging Atlanta Crackers gave
Caattanooga Lookout pennant
hopes a further jolt today and
made their hold on their place
precarious.
With Shelby Kenney scattering
sevent hits, the Crackers aanded
the skidding lookouts a 7-4 de
feat last night. ¢
New Orleans’ second place Pels
fell another half game behind the
pace-setting crackers by splitting
a double bill with Memphis. The
Chicks swampd the Pels 17-2 in
the seven-inning ‘nightcap after
New Orleans had taken the open
er 5-4.
" The Pels now are three and half
games back of Atlanta.
«+ Nashville divided a doubehead
er with Birmingham’s Barons, the
Vols coming back for a triump
ing 12-2 win in the second game
after losing the first 3-2 on cat
cher Dick Wentworth’s homer. |
- A sdieduled twin bill between
Mobile’s fourtu place Bears and
the Little Rock Travelers was!
postponed because of rain. The
Bears now are only one and a
half games behid Chattanooga..
+ Tomgnt’ games and probable l
startes:
° Birminham (Broussard) at‘
Nashville (Hennessey)
- Atlanta (Cook) at Chattanooga,
(Brunke). :
Mempajs at New Orleans (un
announced)..
~ Little Rock (Triechel and unan
nounced at Mobile (White and
unannounced) (2).
HOUSING PROBLEM
£ CHBINAGO, July 10 — (AP)--
Traveling Secretary Frank Mce-
Mahon of the Chicago White Sox
had a problem today, and unless
he is able to solve it, there may
be no Thursday night game .n
Washington’s Griffith Stadium.
McMahon has been able to imnd
accomodations for but four of the
party of 35 traveling to Washing
fon with the sox - including
players, trainer, coaches and
newspapermen.
s - MONTGOMERY WINS
PHILADELPHIA, July 10---
(AP) — Lightweight Champion
Bob Montgomery gained a split
10-round decision ove- Nick Mc
ran at Shibe Park last night, but
a deluge of chairs and seat cov
ers into the ring indicated that
the verdict was unpopular.
A crowd of 13,035 (grosg gate
$43,627.95) saw the Philadelphia
Bobeat, making his first homec
fown appearance in a year and
a half, win the nod of referec
Charley Daggerty, 6-3-1, and
Judge Hary Lasky, 5-4-1, in his
return non-title scrap with the
Mexico City scrapper who beat
him at Los Angeles back in May.
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A 7 4. @. PEYNEY? €O., ING, i
Talmadge Brothers
Down Jefferson;
Chonco, Jordan Star
..A home run by Chonco and
three hits by C. Jordan were ma-
Ijor factors in winning - second
game for Jeffersen, 6-2 for the
‘Talmadge Brothers baseball team.
The team goes to Wuitehall
Saturday and to Eouston on Sun
day to meet their stiffest opposi
tion of the season. So far, the
Wholesalers have won five games
out of five starts.
July 21 Winder will come to
Athens to try to down the local
team in what promises to be one
of the best games of %ie season.
New uniforms are expected this
week for the Wholesalers. |
PGA Golfers Ask
Two Questions
As Play Confinues
DAYTON, 0.. July 10—(AP)—
The country’s top-drawer “play
for pay” golfers were asking each
other two questions today as they
breezed into the second 18-hole
qualifying round of the PGA
championship over Moraine coun
try club’s rolling, ruged terrain..
The questions were:
“Can we catch Denny Shute?”
and “how is Byron . Nelson’s
back?”
Shute, gray-haired and 40,
posed %ae first question yesterday
as he riped the layout apart with
a 32-35-67, five under par, to
pace the pack at the halfway
mark. The Akron star, winner of
the ‘Onio amateur in 1927, the
British open in 1933 and the PGA
in 1936 and 1937, one-putted the
first seven greens, had only 27
shots on the putting surfaces, and
had five birdies and 13 pars as®ae
sauntered into the lead.
Nelson, the Toledo umbrella
man the year’s big money win
ner and considered the man to
beat in this wartime clash, was
another wieadache to his rivals.
A week ago, in Chicago, he pulled
a muscle in his back ,in winning
a SIOO driving contest.
Yesterday he scored a 70, bu’
immediately after his round he
submitted to a massabge and a
heat treatment, and then sought
an osteopath in an attempt to
eradicate a “misery which both
ered my back.’ wihether thetreat
ment was a success meant quite
a bit to the rivals as well as to
Nelson.
CHAMPS WILL CLASH
ST. LOUIS, Mo., Julylo—(AP)
—Baseball’s championg of 1944
the St. Louis Cardinals of the Na
tional league and the St. Louis
Browns of the American league
will clash Wednesday night in the
Missouri version of the National
wa~ relief and service fund game.
Manager Billy Southworth and
Luke Sewell have annourced
they intend to use at least nine
pitchers in the game and a huge
program of sfage, screen, radio
and athletic stars is scheduled
for pre-game ceremonies.
ZIVIC TO FIGHT
NEW ORLEANS, July 10—
(AP)—Boxing Promoter Louis
Messina announced today that
Cpl. Fritzie Zivic of Pittsburgh,
Pa., former world’s welterweight
chapmion, will meet “Wild Bill”
McDowell, Houston,, Tex in a
'lO-round bout here Monday
night. . ;
Interleague Games
Net Red Cross
Fund SIIO,OOO
By JACK HAND
Associated Press Sports Writer.
American League 2, National
League 1 and American Red
Cross-National War Fund Chari
ties SIIO,OOO. That’s the score to
day after the first of a two-day
series of interleague exhibitions
subbing for the 1945 all-star
game which was called off upon
ODT suggestion.
Four more tilts -will be played
today, the day baseball would be
staging its annual mid-season
festival in Boston if wartime tra
vel conditions had not made it
necessary to cancel the extrava
ganza. Last year the all-star con
test in Pittsburgh npetted $106,~
275, including $25,000 for radio
rights.
Baseball’s total for relief con
tribution over four seasons was |
nan= the 22 000.000 mark and al
most certain to hit that total
when all returns are counted. |
Chicago showed the way with
the biggest crowd to see a ball |
game in the Windy City since |
July 13, 1941, as 47,144 watched |
the White Sox edge out their'
cross-town rivals, the Cubs, 5-4,
in 10 innings. {
Single Scores Moses
Johnny Dickshot’s single to‘
center scored Wally Moses with
the winning score off Paul Der
ringer in the extra frame after
Bill Nicholson hit a disputed\
drive which the Cubs claimed
entered the stands and had been
knocked out by a fan. The White‘
Sox played the ball, holding
Nicholson to a double and the‘
umpires held them.
Vice-President Harry Grabiner
of the White Sox said the offl-1
cial Chicago receipts couldn’t be‘
calculated for a few days but he
was sure the proceeds, to be di-‘
vided between the National War
Fund and the Red Cross, would
exceed $50,000.
New York turned out 41,267
paying $50,518 in a game played
in a continuous drizzle that final
ly caused the game to be called
at the end of the seventh with
the Yankees leading the Giants,
7-1. |
Senator A. B. (Happy) Chan
dler, elected commissioner of
baseball, watched the game from
a field box and threw out the
first ball to Catcher Ernie Lom
bardi but the Yanks did all the
starring after that.
Hersh Martin’s grand slam
homer in the six-run third in
ning was the big blow in the
Yanks’' cause, routing starter
Swede Hansen.
Cincinnati Takes Indinas
Three Cincinnati hurlers shut
out the Indians, 6-0, at Cleveland,
before a slim crowd of 6,006
fans.
Real drama is promised for to
night when Bert Shepard, who
lost his right leg after his Army
plane was shot down over Ger
many, makes his formal pitching
‘debut for Washington against
Brooklyn. Shepard, now a coach,
worked in spring training-camps,
Lamazing baseball men with his
dexterity.
Boston will see the Dave Fer
riss vs. Tommy Holmes duel it
has been awaiting as the Red Sox
hurler takes the hill against the
Braves outfielder who has hit
safely in his last 37 games.
Sports Roundup
By HUGH FULLERTON, JR.
NEW YORK, July 10.—(AP)—
Look for Shoemaker, the big na
val distribution base near San
Francisco, to be up near the top
of the service football heap next
fall . . . They're already work
ing on a schedule and scuttle
butt (to be nautical about it)
says the players will be there
when the time comes. . . . Swedish
sportsmen have asked E. J. Vi
berg, the Polo Grounds superin
tendent, to try to bring a soccer
and ice hockey team across to
tour Sweden. . . . Gus Tebell has
decided to drop baseball at the
University of Virginia this sum
mer to concentrate vn a special
basketball section of his gymn
class. . . . Pondering the football
travel situation, Otis Wile of
Oklahoma A. and M. suggests:
“Perhaps most of the race meet
ings will be over and the athletic
directors figure they can borrow
horse cars to ship the griddevs
around.”
SHORT SAND SHEI LS
Dubuque, lowa, has set aside
the week of July 29 as “Dubuque
Amateur Baseball Week” and
will put on a special program for
the kid teams and their backers
each day . . . The idea might be
worth cgpying. . . . Ralph Ven
tresco, who returned to the Penn
State football team wearing stars
denoting major action at North
Africa, Sicily, Anzio, southern
France and Germany, accumulat
ed 122 points in three years of
war. . . . Coach Bob Higgins
hopes he'll get as many points
next fall. . . . Since Monk Dubiel
made good with the Yankees,
major league .scouts who had
been passing up Cennecticut as
an unfertile field have decided to
look for a few jewels among the
nutmegs.
MAX SMACKS .
Sergeant Dan Polier. of Yank
passes along the story of how
Max Schmeling was injured in
Crete with the information that it
was told to him by a wounded
Kraut paratropoer, who swore it
was true . . . Before the takeoff,
Dan relates, Schmeling tried to
beg off the trip. The CO insisted
he would have to jump because
Goebbels was sending photogra
phers to take pictures of his leap.
HN BANRER.NPRALD ATHENS QRORGIx
Mrs. G. T. Moore
Died Yesterday;
Funeral Tomorrow
Mrs. George Thomas Moore
Union Point, Ga., 27-year old wifé
of Pvt. George Thomas Moore,
died yesterday afternoon in a lo
cal hospital.
Funeral services will be con
ducted tomorrow morning st el
even o’clock Central War Time
at the ®nion Point Holiness
Church, Rev. C. I. Whitley, pastor
of the Holiness Church officiat
ing. Interment w 1 be in the
Greensboro, Georgia, cemetery.
McDorman-Bridges is in charge
of the arrangements.
~ Surviving Mrs. Moore, besides
‘her husband, are her father, C. P.
Smith, Athens; a daughter, Yir
ey Ann Moore; two sisters, Mrs.
ohnnie Lou Rainey, and Mrs.
Marion Brown, Union Point; a
brother, W C Smith, Athens; a
half brother, David Smith, Athens
four step sisters, Mrs. L. W.. Mc-
Burney, Taompson, and Miss Sara
Armour and Miss Louise Armour,
Atlanta, and Mrs. Fred Healan,
Miami, Fla.; and two step broth
ers, .Alonzo Armour, Macon, and
Billie Armour, Thompson.
Mrs. Moore formerly lived in
Athens. Her husband was a resi
dent of Greensboro™ and Union
Point their only child was born
in an Athens Hospital. Mrs Moore
was well known hre where her
fataer has resided and where she
at one time lived. She was a
member and active worker in the
Holiness church in Union Point.
She had been here din the Hospita!
since the birth of sher daughter
six weeks ago. :
So Schmeling sweated out the
jump and as soon as he hit the
ground he made for the nearest
first aid station.
SERVICE DEPT. . |
Paratrooper Al Hostak, former
NBA middleweight champ, tells
fight fans in Manila that the best
service boxing prospect he has
seen is Gerald Chandler, 21-year
old, 180-pound brother of Spud,
the former Yankee pitcher. “I
never saw’'a man with such abil
ity as Chandler. He can really go
to town,” Hostak says. . . . Ma
rine Corps Combat Correspond
ent Sergeant Red O’Donnell tells
about a ball game on a Pacific
island that was called because of
sunshine. The glare from center
field was so strong no one could
see the ball.
SAILORS DEFEAT ATHLETICS
GREAT LAKES, 111. July 10- -
(AP)— Bob Feller’s Great Lakes
baseball team maintained a 1.900
rating against major league op
position today.
Feller and Max Marshall, for
mer Cincinnata Reds outfieide:,
led the Sailors to a 10 to 6 win
lover the Philadelphia Athletics
yesterday, their third straight
'win over big league clubs. She
[forme:' Cleveland picher stiuck
out 12 O’s while Marshall baited
in five runs with two singles
\and a homer. The Sailors also
have defeated the Phillies and
the Boston Red Sox. ’
Funeral Notice
MOORE. — The relatives and
friends. of. Private. and. Mrs.
..George Thomas Moore of Un
ion Point, Ga. (Private Moore
now stationed in France); Shir
ley Ann Moore; Mr. C. P. Smith
of Athens; Mrs. Johnnie Lou
Rainey of Union Point, Ga;
Mr. and Mrs. Narion Brown of
Union Point, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs.
W. C. Smith of Athens; Mr. and
Mrs. L. W. Mcßurney of Thom
son, Ga.; Miss Sara Armour and
Miss Louise Armour of Atlanta,
Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lealan
of Miami, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs.
Alonzo Armour of Macon, Ga.;
Mr. Bilie Armour of Thomson,
Ga.; and Mr. David Smith of
Athens, are invited to attend
the funeral of Mrs. George
Thomas Moore, Wednesday
afternoon, July 11th, 1945, fromn
the Union Point Holiness
church at eleven . o'clock
(CWT). Rev. C. 1. Whitley of
the Holiness church will offi
ciate. Gentlemen selected to
serve as pallbearers will meet
at the residence of Mrs. John
nie Lou Rainey in Union Point
at ten-thirty o’clock. Interment
will be in the Greensboro cem
etery. McDorman-Bridges.
THAXTON. — The relatives and
friends of Mr. James Allen
Thaxton, Mr. and Mrs. H. E.
Thaxton, Miss Bettie Jo Thax
ton of the Danielsville road,
Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Thaxton, Athens; Br. and Mrs.
J. S. Whitehead, Mrs. J. H.
Thaxton, Mr. and Mrs. L. S.
Whitehead of Athens; Mr. and
Mrs. W. H. Whitehead, Dan
ielsville, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. C.
C. Whitehead, Atlanta; Mr. and
Mrs. .Alvin Thaxton, Tallahas
see, Fla.; Miss Grace White
head, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
George Wilson, jr., Mr. and
Mrs. H. A. Snyder, Milledge
ville, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. C. C.
Wilson,. Griffin, Ga.; Mr. and
Mrs. F. L. White, Meridian,
_Miss.; Mr. and Mrs. Fred El
lard, Macon, Ga.; and Mrs. W.
B. Winn of Houston, Texas, are
invited to attend the funeral of
Mr. James Allen Thaxton,
Wednesday afternoon, July
11th, 1945, at three (3:00)
o'clock p. m., from the Penti
costal Holiness church, Nanta
hala avenue. Rev. A. O. Hood
will officiate, assisted “by Rev.
D. H. Kesler and Rev. J. L.
Jordan. The- following uncles
will serve as pallbearers: Mr. L.
S. Whitehead, Mr. W. H. White
head, Mr. C. C. Whitehead, Mr.
R. C. Wilson, Mr. George W.
Wilson, jr., and Mr. Fred El
lard. Place of interment will be
. announced later. Clyde McDor-l
man Funeral Home, 220 Prince
avenue.
Negro Southern
League Team
Will Play Here
Knoxville Grays, one of the
stronger member of the negro
Southerp League, will meet the
Athens Red Sox Wednesday af
ternoon at 4 o'clock ats West
Park. Admission will be seventy
five cents for grown-ups and 40
cents for children. Special seats
are provided for white fans.
Knoxville defeated the Athens
team three times 'this spring,
twice in Athens and oace in At
lanta, and last Sunday split a
double header with the Atlanta
Black Crackers.
The Athens team has been
strengthened since their previous
defeats by Knoxville and a hard
fought game is expected.
Manager Thomas is expected to
send BiglJim Mack to the mound
for the locals. Big Jim has won
pine straight games this season,
while his brother, George, has
won ten conflicts.
Senator Millikin Is
Emerging As Chief
Skeptic Of Charter
(Continued Irom page one.)
under whiclf he said this couniry
might quit the organization.
First the United States could
withdraw “at its own unrestric:
ed option.” stating its reasons.
The only penally,” Vandenberg
said, might be ‘“adverse public
opinion.” He added that if the
United States dig withdraw, it
would be subject tothe organiza
tion’s discipline if it threatened
world peace.
That satisfied . Millikin only
from the standpoint of what he
called an “arbitrary or caprici
ous” withdrawal. The Coloradoan
told Pasvolsky, who continued in
the witness chair today, to be
prepared later to explaip in de
tail how the United States could
withdraw as a matter of orde:ly
right‘ under established interna
tional law. .
The power of the Security
Council to make recommenda
tions about boundary chranges, its
authority regarding treaty revis -
sions and the methods of reach
ing disarmamentagreements oth
erwise occupied most of yester
day’s five hour hearing. Crowds
which overflowed the large hear
ing voom early in the day dwin
dled to a mere handful late in
thg afternoon.
2,000 Planes In
Sweep Virtually
Unchallenged . ~
(Continued trom page one.)
7th amphibious forces and the
world’s most experienced officer
in putting assault troops ashore.
Dutch troops from Java and the
West Indies joined the southeast
Borneo’ invasion with two am
phibious operations in the upper
reaches of Balikpapan Bay, solidi
fying Allied control over the oil
harbor. Australians who landed
at Balikpapan ten days ago probed
toward oil fields against Japanese
road blocks made of flaming oil
drumis and guarded by coastal
guns,
Chinese troops drove into the
heart 6f the Wolfram mining area,
vital to the Allied steel industry,
capturing Tayu approximately 175
miles northeast of Canton. They
pursued retreating Japanese to
ward the former U. S. air base at
Kanhsien. Other Nipponese were
reported. counterattacking in the
air.
| Isolate 200,000 7
- Chinese took two more towns
near Liuchow in the Broken Indo-
China corridor. Nipponese loss of
the corridor isviated 200,000 Japa
nese. Rail communications, their
favorite target of late, were swept
by U. S. planes, and Tokyo ad
mitted communications in Indo-
China were paralyzed.
They are withdrawing so rapidly
from southern territory that Asso
ciated Press Correspondent Pres
ton Grover in New Delhi reported
it appeared “that a hard-pressed
Allied campaign during the coming
fall and winter would recover the
entire area.”
YOU CAN GET
AV T
[ +( gfy@
: e i y/
AR
FOR YOUR CAR
Good news for Ford owners.
Genuine Ford Parts are available
again. We have a sufficient stock
to keep Ford cars and trucks roll
ing in this territory.
They Fit Right
Genuine Ford Parts are precision
built exclusively for your car to
the same high standards as orig
inal factory parts. They fit right
. . . require less time to install.
They Last Longer
Because Genuirie Ford Parts are
quality-controlled in manufac
ture, they last much longer than
ordinary parts. This means longer
car life and less maintenance ex
pense to the owner. To be sure
of getting Genuine Ford Parts
bring your car to us for service.
C. A. TRUSSELL
East Clayton Street
2 Phone 1097
Last Showing PALA ([ — Siarfing Wednesday — 4 Days
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ALMA KRUGER * MARIE BLAKE * KEYE LUKI
Original Screen Play by Harry Ruskin
i A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Picture
Directed by WILLIS GOLDBECK
ALSO — POPEYE CARTOON
“Pitchin’ Woo At The Zoo”
News — “And Now to Peace”
FEATURE STARTS —
1:23—3:25 -5:27—17:29—9:31
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