Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 27, Number 194, Decatur, Adams County, 15 August 1929 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

YELLOW JACKETS GRID SCHEDULE IS ANNOUNCED Coach Max Kidd Will Call Team Together Week Before School Opens A nine-game football schedule for | the Decatur high school eleven was | announced today by Coach Max Kidd.' The opening gams of the season will j be a practice game, September 7, with | Decatur high school Alumni forming ' the opposition. The regular season's schedule opens I September 14. with the Auburn high school aggregation forming the oppo- : sition. Coach Kidd stated today that I no decision had l>een reached as to where the athletic field would be located. Three fields are under consideration The probable sites include the South . Ward atheltic ffeld; the Decatur f'oun-I tty Club field and the Niblick field. The decision will be reached in the next few days and workmen will start then to put the playing field into condition. With several veterans around which to form a nucleus. Coach Kidd predicted that the local team this year would be the best in several seasons. A call for first practice will be Issued In the next few days and all gridiron candidates will begin the grind a week before school starts. Practices will be held in Decatur and there will be no lake trip this year, it was announced. The complete schedule follows: Sept. 7, Alumni, here. Sept 14. Auburn, here. Sept. 20, Columbia City, here. Sept, 28. open. Oct. 4. North Side < Fort Wayne), there. Oct. 11, Portland. there. Oct. 16. Central (Fort Wayne) there. Oct. 19. Kendallville, here. Oct. 26. Bluffton, here. Nov. 2, Garrett, there. o HOME RUN CLUB —(U.R> - Leaders: Klein, Phillies 2.3 Ruth, Yankes 31 L. Wilson. Cubs3o Ott, Giants 30 Foxx. Athletics .28 Gehrig, Yankees 27 Simmons, Athletics 27 Bottoniley, Cards 25 Hornsby. Cubs 25 Hurst, Phillies 25 Yesterday’s homers: Hurst, Phillies: Johnson and Gehringer, Tigers; Cronin, Senators, and Foxx, Athletics, one each. National League -. 594 American League 458 Totalslos2 o Get the Habit—Trade at Home, it Pav» Konjola Banished Neuritis Trouble This Man States Happy Man Says This New Medicine Ended Years of Awful Suffering. ' -J y I MR. EDWIN H. CHAPMAN “Besides suffering from neuritis my j kidneys were also in a disordered j sta'e,” said Mr. Edwin H. Chapman, 20 South Carroll street, South Bend, Indiana. "The neuritis pains seemed to settle in my shoulders and work their way down my arms. At times i even my limbs were affected. Be- 1 cause of my kidneys there was al-1 ways a dull pain across the small of my back and I was subject to con-I s'.ant night rising. , "But now I have taken Konjola and i every one of my health troubles have 1 disappeared, and years of dreaded I suffering have been ended. Neuritis pains have vanished and my shoul- < ders and limbs are free and active | once more. It also strengthened my i kidneys so that I can sleep through the entire night without rising a sin-1 gle time. Konjola has improved my; health wonderfully and I shall always indorse it to others." Konjola is sold in Decatur, Indiana, at Smith. Yager and Falk drugg store and by all the best druggists in all towns throughout this entire section.

STANDINGS Central League W I Pct. Canton 63 4'l .5631 i Erie . ... 61 50 .550 i i Fort Wayne • 56 52 .5191 Akron 54 52 .509 ■ I Dayton 49 58 .458 {Springfield 43 65 .398 National League W L Pct. I Chicago 71 33 .683 Pittsburgh 64 42 .604 ■ New York 60 50 .545 St. Louis 55 53 .509 | Brooklyn 47 60 .439 ■Cineinati 46 62 .426 I Boston 44 65 .404 Philadelphia 42 64 .396 American League W L Pct. I Philadelphia 81 31 .7211! New York 65 42 .607 {Cleveland ... 58 52 .527 ; St. Louis 57 54 .514 ! Detroit 53 57 .482; Washtagton 46 61 .430 Chicago 43 68 .387 i Boston 35 73 .324 American Association W I. Pct. ■ Kansas City 80 37 .684 I St. Paul 71 46 .607 1 Minneapolis 67 48 .583 Indianapolis . 55 62 .470 Ixmisville 53 63 .457 Columbus 50 69 .420 Milwaukee 49 68 .410 Toledo 41 72 .363, YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Central League Fort Wayne 6: Erie 5. Canton 7-5; Springfield 2-2 Akron 9; Dayton 8. National League Philadelphia 2; Cincinnati 1. Pittsburgh 1; Boston 0. St. Louis-New York, rain. Chicago-Brooklyn, rain. American League Detroit 17; New York 13. Philadelphia 5; Cleveland 3. 17 innings. Washington 11; Chicago 3. Boston 10; St. Louis 1. American Association Kansas City 5; Indianapolis 4. St. Paul 13; Columbus 2. Minneapolis 8; Toledo 3. Louisvile 4; Milwaukee 3. o Anderson —Like the little hoy who loses his toothache when he goes to the dentist. Beverly Jo, 20-months-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Brown, oughed and dislodged a beauty pin from his throat while a spo- ■ cialist stood by with a bronchoscope' ready to operate.

————————————————— r— > — —————————— — ! I See the Style and Value $2.98 and $3.98 will buy here Tomorrow and Saturday Sale Closes Saturday Night Charlie Voglewede '/zCa r FITS FEET / 7 ; ■ —

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY. AUGUST 15, 1929.

YANKEES NEAR “ END OF REIGN By George Kirksey, I'P Staff Correspondent New York, Aug. 15.— (U.R) Deeply i lodged in second place and broken In { spirit, the New York Yankees are Hearing the end of their two-year reign as world baseball champions. Four straight defeats In the west have dealt a staggering blow to the I lust faint hopes of the Yankees and nothing less than the most astound- : Ing reversal of form In the history of {the gnnxf came keep the Philadlephia Athletics from winning the American I league pennant. Mathematically tb« Yankees have ' an outside chance to win the pennant; 'actually they do not. If the Yankees win all of their remaining 47 games which is inconceivable, the Athletics have only to win 32 out of their 42 games, which I!s quite possible. The A's have played .723 per cent baseball in their tirst 92 games, and taking 32 out of 42 is only .762 per | cent. If the Yankees win 37 out of 47 games which is highly unlikely, the Athletics will have to win only 22 out of 42 games to win the pennant. Tlte standing in that event would be: W. L. Pct. Athletics 163 51 .6691 ■ Yankees 102 52 .662 I The Yankees are displaying all the traits of a beaten and broken team. Miller Huggins is frantically juggling tlte lineup, changing pitchers frequently and generally acting like the proverbial drowning man grasping for the last straw. Bol» Meusel has been benched after his failure to hit in the pinches in the last game at Cleveland on Tuesday when he hit into a double play, popped up and hit into two force plays in four times at bat. Cedric Durst, a great ball player who has been worn out riding the bench, has taken Meusel's place and injected into the leadoff position in die batting order. Echoes of dissatisfatcion among the Yankee players over Huggins' judgment are being heard in the east. Huggins’ failure to use a pinch-hitter for Wiley Moore in the eighth inning of yesterday’s game at Detroit has drawn criticism. , Perhaps some of the criticism of Huggins is unfair but it shows which , I way the wind is blowing and bears ' I the age-old baseball theory that you | must win or take the consequences, j ———

SPORT TABS Chicago, Aug. 15. (U.R) l-"Ug hllo ’ players were given n thrill when rllf Ruff won the Hawthorne truck. In the $2 mutuals the winner paid $115.2<t. 849.40, and $22.48, — Lafayette, Ind. Purdue already has begun the mailing Os tickets for Its home football games. Approximately 1 23.000 appllctalons have been receiv- ■ ed. I Chicago. — Answering thousands of applications for worlds’ series tickets. William Veeck. president of the Chi- ' cago Culis lias replied that no tickets "will lie printed for six »wee)rf regardless of the progress of the pennant tight. The Culis are not assured of being in the series although we expect them to be. of course," Veeck said. Indianapolis. —John Hennessey, one of America's best tennis players, may not compete in the singles or doubles of tlte national tennis tournament. Poor physical condition was given as t the reason. o Watching The Scorehoard Yesterday's heroes: Robert Mose | Grove, lanky southpaw, and Jimmy Foxx, cherubic first baseman, who played the leading roles in the Philadelphia Athletics’ 17-inning victory over Cleveland, 5 to 3. Grove pitched the entire game, allowing 20 hits, but keeping them | scattered and pulling himself out of frequent holes untff Foxx hit his 28th home run of the season in the 17th. Foxx's homer broke a 3 to 3 tie and won the game, but the A’s added another run for good measure. It was Grove’s 18th victory of the season. Combined with the Yankees’ defeat at the hands of the Tigers, the Athletics' victory widened their lead to 13 1-2 games — their longest of the season. Scoring 14 of their 17 runs after two men were out, the Detroit Tigers beat .the Yankees. 17 t(T 13. The Tigers made five errors andMhc Yankees collected 18 hits lint the Hugmen allow-

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ed the game to trickle away in the eighth 'when Detroit scored five runs. A first-inning rally which netted i seven runs, enabled Washington to heat the Chicago White Sox, 11 to .1. Milt Gaston outpitched Sum Gray and the Boston Red Sox beat the St. Ismls Browns, 4 to 1. The Pittsburgh Pirates gained a half-game on the idle Chicago < übs when they beat the Bist'-il Braves. 1 to 0, on three lilts. Adams' sacrifice fly scored Paul Waner with the winning run. Don Durst's 25th home run of the season witlt a man on base enabled the Phillies to beat the Cincinnati Reds, 2 to 1. in a game halted at the end of tlte seventh Inning by rain. COURT HOUSE Real Estate Transfers Fay Sliitnp Ramseier et al. the undivided one fifth part of 100 acres in .Wabash Township to Ocie Shintp for I SI.OO, Marriage Licenses Alfred Grewe ts Ossian, R. R. 1. Farmer, to Emelle Butick, Decafur R. R. 1. Suit On Note Suit was filed in Adams Circuit court by Clarence Strickler against Adrian Coffee and Mary Coffee on tfete. The plaintiff asks' for $323.62 as the amount of the note and a reasonable attorney's fee. Ed Bos.ee is attorney for the plaintiff. Hunting and fishing licenses were Hunting and stilling licenses were issued to Walter Scherry. Decatur, route 4; Heiman Wolpert, Decatur, route 4; Fred Baker, Decatur route 5; B. J. Rice. Decatur; Mrs. B. J. Aice Decatur ami Albeit Steiner. Geneva. o Australian Dust Plague Australia hits plenty of dust,- to spare. It comes ou the northerly winds from the Central Australian desert. Sometimes it overwhelms Kalgoorlie's goldfields in duststorms which are not of gold dust. Lt has been known to interrupt a football game at Melbourne.

|ls WOMEN WILL ENTER HR RACE Will Ely Planes From California To Cleveland Sunday Santa Monica. Cdif.. Auk. 1" L’.P) ’ —At least 15 young women flying alone will take off from Clover Field { here Sunday In the first leg of their cross country race to Cleveland, <>.. in a feature of the annual national air r&cos. Women famous In aviation will be among those In the contest for the $25 000 in prises offered in the det by, one of the outstanding events of the Cleveland meet. Many of them have been here tor some time and others arrived within

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the Inst few days. All ground are busy wbh W| for the difficult Hight, whl . "‘‘"'■l made in nine days with night stops en route The V> entrants s„ j| today, ure: Marvel Crosson. Barnes, Amelia |(| Blanche Wilcox \'ov,. s . 1,, , •’■l Phetrldge Thaden, 'l.or |.; 'V| Phoobe Omlle, Robin. O'Donnell. Margaret |'„|. ly ' 1! sche, Mahelle Wnt>.|s, | {lU|) ols. ami NeVa Paris. VB Indiraliens point in lnnr ,, ... BW contestants. ” .. () . STRIKE ENDS ■ Manchester. Eng \n ; The deadlock in tin. I.;iiii; ls | l | r( .'“B| ton industry, which has tis<l Up mills and made .■>1)11.01,,, worker, was ended today wlnm ~ !ir . a| .W| of the employers ami t, rit . rali ' greed to the principle of arbimt 9