Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 91, Decatur, Adams County, 16 April 1930 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

FOH T S

NEW FACES IN TEAM LINE-UPS New York, April 16 (U.R) —Major league lineups this Beason present many now names ami old names in unfamiliar surroundings, while numerous favorites of other years are absent. At the Polo Grounds yesterday 45.000 fans watched Eddie Marshall. rookie second baseman, make hie debut with the New York Giants. Few gave a thought to a sad-eyed young man in the press box — intent on Marshall's every move. He didn't count. He was only Andy Cohen. Giants' opening day hero of two years ago who attempted to fill Roger Hornsby's shoes and now has pa-wed out. of the majors. Eddie Roush, another Giants hero of the past, remained on his Indiana farm while Wallie RoeitIxtuis patrolled center field, ger. a recent acquisition from St. George Sisler. one of the greatest hitters of all times, warmed the bench —unable now to win a regular place with even the Boston Braves —as the rookie Johnny Neun covered first. Gus Suhr played first base for l the Pirates and Clarence Blair third base for the Cubs in place of Earl Sheely and Norman Me- - Millan, respectively, who have I

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I Smashing Proof - °f g rea^ value As established in Continent-wide tests, by 5,000 New Essex Challengers »3rS> i / iaa * fe wjak < I' All motordom saw the amazing results of Challenger Week. The New Essex Challenger set outstanding marks in every locality. It climbed hills seldom attempted by any car. It set new marks for acceleration. It established economy results never before associated with such performance. It made inter-city reliability and endurance runs that take place with the industry’s great marks. These feats were established— Ride—Ride —Ride! Know from not by just a few hand-picked personal experience what this specially tuned cars —but 5,000 brilliant New Essex Challenger Essex Challengers in all parts of Then no lesser car can the country, many of them satisfy. owner-driven. The results speak for what any and every New S E* For the Coupe Essex (. halienger can do. £ k**' as attractively priced. f. o. b. Detroit With color choice at W. our inviutton to I P. KIRSCH & SON Corner Second and Jackson Sts. Phone 33a Berne Hudson Co. W. D. Cross Ed. F. Koenemann Berne Geneva Hoagland i

-lipped back to the minors. Hob Meusel and Harry Hellmann made their National league debut iwith the Cincinnati Reds. Four stars. Outfielder Lloyd Waner and Third Baseman Pie Traynor of the Pirates. Outfielder Ernest Orsatti of the Cards and Third Baseman PinkeV Whitney of the Phillies were kept out of th" opening day lineups by illness and Injuries. Phil Todt failed to clinch the ' first base berth with the Boston , Red Sox despite his four hits in | the opening game Monday and | made way yesterday for the favored rookie. Bill Sweeney. Sparky Adams, former Chicago, and Pittsburgh infielder, replaced | the veteran Andy High in the St. Louis Cardinals infield. Harry ; Davis opened the season as regular .catcher for the Phils —a task he! shared last season "with the' popular "Peck" Lerfan, who was killed last fall in an automobile accident. .—-—a - * SPORT SHORTS * ♦--- — — ♦ By United Press South Bend. Ind.. April 16—(U.R) .—Seventeen Notre Dame baseball players left here today for their 1 annual southern spring training trip into Florida and Georgia. Six games will be played by the Irish’ | on the tour. Chicago. April 16—(U.R) —Chicago I will be repesented by two relay teams at the Kansas relays at I Lawrence Saturday, Coach Ned . 'Merriman, lias announced. The Maroon entries are the 880-yard . quartet and the four mile relay i I combination. | Chicago. April 16 —(U.R)— Bob Macdonald, Chicago golf pro who I along with Johnny Farell is being i i considered for the position of golf pro at the Westchester-Biltmore i Club at Rye. N. Y„ left here today to confer with officials of the club. ! ~ I Chicago, April 16 —(U.R) — The | marriage of Bert Demby, United ’ | Press sports writer, and Miss ( Lois E. Stone of Indianapolis, was announced here today. The ceremony was performed Sunday. i . 0 f Dick Sutton is at Ossian spend- j ing a few days of his Spring vaca- j tion with his grandmother, Mrs. ' White.

TEAMS SQUARE OFF FOR LEADS Realizing the value of a big early season lead, the world champion Philadelphia Athletics were primed to make it two straight over the New York Yankees today in the second contest at Philadelphia. Manager Connie Mack was pleas!e<l with the Athletics victory in Iy< sterday's American league opener and sires e<i the fact that his • veterans inive an opportunity to get away to a fast start before rlv|a) teams work rookies into smooth | combinations. "April victories are the eas'est, won of the season," he said, "and tiny count just as much in the : final standings ns any others." The Yankees played badly in yest<;day'- 6 to 2(b leat. Al Simmons iaccounted for the A's first two runs with, a homer in the first but I errors aided in the making of other scores. Chicago's slugging Cubs batter 1 ed the lid off the National league | season with 15 hits, including six j doubles and a triple, for a 9 to 8 win over the St. Louis Cardinals. Lester Sweetland bettered Lefty i Clark in a brilliant pitching duel ito g ve the Phillies a 1 to 0 win lover the Brooklyn Robins. ’ Joe Cronin's first inning homer | ! with Goslin and Myer on base en-' : abled the Washington Senators tol even their series with the Boston Red Sox. .1 to 0. Fred Leach doubled in the ninth with two down and Eddie Marshall [ ’on base to give the New York I 'Giants a 3 to 2 win over the Bos- ! ton Braves. Scoring five runs off Sam Gray in the first five innings, the De-! troit Tigeis defeated the St. Louis; Browns. 6 to 3. Kress, Schulte and Cullic hit homers off Uhle. The Pittsburgh Pirates were outhit by the Cincinnati Reds but bunched their blows off Lucas in three innings to take a 7 to 6 vic-, tory. I. Rain prevented the Chicago , Wh.te Sox and Cleveland Indians! from playing the American leaguej inaugural at Chicago. ■, -

DECATUR Daily DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY. APRIL 16, 1930.

BASEBALL STANDING National League W L Pct. Chicago I tt 10(10 Pittsburgh 1•• 1000 New Yoik 1 0 l(>o<> Philadelphia 1 <> 1000 Brooklyn ” 1 000 St. Louis 0 1 .000 Cincinnati .01 .000 Boston 0 1 .000 American League W I, Pet. Philadelphia 1 0 1000 Detroit . ......... 1 0 1000 Washington 11 .500 Boston 11 .500 Chicago o 11 "00 ' Cleveland 0 0 .000 New York 0 1 .000 St. Louis ............ 0 1 .000 American Association W I. Pct. Indianapolis 1 0 1000 Columbus 1 0 1000 Toledo 10 1000 Ixmisville 1 0 1000 Kansas City 0 1 .000 St. Paul «1 .000 Minneapolis . 0 1 .000 Milwaukee ..... 0 1 .000 Yesterday's Results National League Chicago. 9; St. Louis 8 New York 3; Boston 2 Philadelphia 1. Brooklyn 0 Pittsburgh 7, Cincinnati 6 American League Philadelphia 6. New York 2 Detroit 6, St Louis .3 Washington 6. Boston 1 Cleveland at Chicago, rain American Association Indianapolis 3, Kansas City 2 Columbus 8. St. Paul 2 Toledo 9. Minneapolis 1 Louisville 11. Milwaukee 2. o COLLEGE BASEBALL RESULTS By United Press I'linoiH 9: Mississippi A. & M. 1 Texas Aggies 9. lowa 0 Ohio State 10; Kentucky 5 Vanderbilt 6; Michigan 5 Indiana 19; Ball Teachers 0 Spring Till 5; Wisconsin 4. I ° Ruth Has Poor Day Philadelphia. April 16.—(U.R) - Babe Ruth, baseball's highest salaried did little toward earning his SBO,OOO salary in yesterday’s opening game. ! The babe got a double in four times up. Babe's complete record for the day was: First inning—Lined out to Haas Second inning—Doubled to right ‘center, scoring on Foxx's error. Fifth inning—Struck out. Eighth inning—Fouled to Miller. o Baseball Pools Barred | Gary. Ind.. April 16. —'U.R) —Baseball season no sooner was opened than ('apt. Frank Roach, of the Gary police department, warned “there will be no baseball pools in Gary this season." Captain Roach ordered two detecUves to notify properietors of poolrooms barber shops ami other places where pool tickets have been sold, that the order will be enforced strictly. "This is the only warning that will he issued. After today anyone caught selling pool t'ckets will be arrested and forced to tell his story to the court.” Roach said. YOUNG MAN IS SUGAR CHAMP (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the same sugar content. Both used 2-9-18 fertilizer as planting time and 100 pounds of Chilean Nitrate. Their father, Andrew Fuelling, Allen County Farm Bureau President who grew his beets in the usual wav harvested 12.84 tons per acre and •heir sugar content was 14 9 percent. An interim ing story was brought air about the Fuelling children. “On t’.ie sugar beet tour last summer, hey obse.ved that the beet tracts wheih had received the nitrate of soda top dressing were larger and greener and looked better generally •han those that had not. Th? youngsters purchasesl 400 pounds of this material, divided it that ! evening and applied it the next ! day to their respective acres. As a result of the records of last year recommendations are going out to all growers this year that the best me hods of thinning and blocking and hoeing and cultivation be used, and that all growers use 300 pounds per acre of a 3-9-18 fertilizer at planting time and from 100 to 150 pounds of nitrate of soda as a side dressing immediately after blocking. Chaplin Says Silent Should be Discontinued Baltimore. April 16. —(U.R)— Although criticized by the pastor in whose pulpit he gave it. Dr. Peter! Ainslie today stood by h:s statement that a minister is as out of place as an army or navy chaplain as he would be in a speakeasy. Ainslie made this assertion first’ in the Washington pulpit of Dr. I Jason Noble Pierce, pastor of the’ First Congregational church. Yesterday Dr. Pierce publicly criticised Dr. Ainslie. saying his statement, "maligns the United States and the churches.” "War, through the Kellogg pact, 'has been outlawed just as surely

ins the speakeasy," Dr. Ainslie doj (dared in answering the Washington minister. "The chaplain should exist no longer." LEGGE AGAINST HOME TARHT ON U. S. WHEAT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ; should be found so Unit the world , market price would apply only (o tlie surplus production mid have , (lie tariff effective on the wheat I Hold at home. To my mind this Is inpracHrsl. At the present time you see tho situation of France paying u bounty of 20 ci nts a bushel on Hie export of certain grades of wheat of which they have an excess supply and Great Britain taking measures to retaliate. "A few weeks ago in parliament Lloyd Geoig' made th» statement that if the United States tried to ship wheat to England at a price! lower than domestic price levels he would not lie satisfied witli a duty, lint that the remedy snoulii an embargo prohibiting th? importation of any wheat from this country.” No magic revolts are expected I by tlie faun board in its effort to curtail production, but this can be brought about slowly by education, tlie farm board chairman said. — o Wheat Production Less Lafayette, Ind.. April 16- (U.R) The condition of wheat on April 1 , indicated the 1930 production in ‘ ndiana will lie 23,7t>0.0u(l bushels I compared to 27.659,000 bushels in 1 1929, and the 10-year average of i 27.945,000 bushels, according to a report of the U. S. Department of j Agriculture and the Purdue Uni 1 entity Agricultuial expexriment station. Police Dog Runs Amuck Hinsdale, Mont . - (UP) —lmpell<l by the strain of wolf idood iu his I veins, 'a large police dog "ran a nuck” in the M. J. Welton band of heep, slashed many animals and inaly stampeeded them over a cut tank. Two sheep were killed out•ight while three others were so badly wounded they had to lie slain ’ Window Display Odd Berlin. —(UP) —One of the most! popular show windows in Berlin is 1 hat of an "anatomical museum,"' ust off Unter den Linden, in which i life-sized figuie of a nr.n lias been <et up. The man is looking into a mirror, he has a pistol placed against his head and lie is very ob i viosly on the point of committing rnii ide.

* ft I/' R ernem bcr? I ■ I Remember ’way back when you were a little girl here in I Decatur and the boys of your acquaintance used to talk a®*-'’- ’ f .about what they’d be when they grew up? For a w hile, the y. w " I preferences would run to firemen, railway engineers, and V r I such . . . and then one lad would say, “Guess I'll run dad’s V I shoe store," and another would remark, “I’m gonna have a ; W* t drug store, just like pop!’’ S-V /. I i “These boys grew" up and stepped into their father’s Oj rhoes. They stayed here in Decatur. You probably mar- .. ’ tied one of them. \ / 4 I What about your boy? Will he have a shoe store or a U \ u I drug store or a dry goods store to run like his dad before A j, y " I him? Or will these stores ... when he reaches manhood . . B i-’< p [i be run by managers appointed by a home office a thousand B -'t ft | miles away ... will your boy be forced to migrate to New ■ tlfiO? dßi York or Chicago to look for a job .. AWAY FROM HOME? 1A i I, iP B \ w It all depends upon whether our independently man- £ JvtvlLjjA--- I aged stores remain. It all depends on you buyers .. . you ' >z ' I mothers. Ml L 5 Independent Merchants I OF DECATUR—OPERATING HOME OWNED STORES. j I I' _____________________________ || COOPERATION WILL BUILD A GREATER DECATUR [

BIGGEST FIRE IN YEARS; LOSS ABOUT $20,000 .i ilN'I'INl l'.ll I'it'iM PAGE C’NH) 'employes and business men grabbed hose and other firefighting equipment and joined Hie fire company. The smoko and flames attracted many from the country-side around and'at 2:45 o'clock this afternoon more than LOW people swarmed around the fire, doing what they . could to help extinguish the blaze. , It was believed that the flames I con'd be held within tlie elevator I property unless the wind became stronger and the spark* spread ! faster. Part of the building and i contents were insured, lint the I actual non-lnsnred loss will amount to several thousand dollars, it was | stated late today. o- — Hunger Isle Visible Wuerzburg, —(UP) — Water in 'he rlnve: Main is so low that th»* “hunger island” between Detteliiacli ami Maios! o< kiieioi Is now visahle for the first time sine 1893. The "island" Is a gravelly reef, alimit 165 feet long. Ancien tradition declares that its appearance forepells a year of di ought and poor liarve ts. 0 _ Siamses Twin Chickens York. Nel>. —(UP) - "Siamese' . win chickens were discovered at I he Lincoln hatchery here, accord- : ng o Manager (’. O Hudson. Th • 1 hickens were joined tbgether a’ ilhe wing tips. They later were sen'arated and lived. I * Riot for Movies Hamburg (UP) Forty youthful! inmates of a reform school near

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Kaltenkirchen rioted, partly wreck-] ing the building. After police until firemen had quieted them they explained that they had revolted be ! cause they wanted to lie transferred | o a nearby prison "where better! movies Were being shown" o — — Portuguese Emigration Lisbon, Portugal, ■ (t'P) Total emlgra ion from Portugal In 1929 amounted to 49.361 persons, of which 29.792 went Io Brazil. 3.871 to Aigeiitina. 1.121 to North America. —o Double License Rule Madison. Win, -(UP) — Wiscon j I sin roadhouse proprietors were I i warned hy Harry Klueter. chief! ! i hemist of tin* dairy commission

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