Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 115, Decatur, Adams County, 14 May 1930 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

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BIC TEN TEAMS GETTING READY Chicago, May II -(U.R)— Priming tlinlr nthlf’tt'H for the most Importuni romu'-titloo of the year ins >- tar as the big l a is concerned, western conferenc' conches were in tlie midst today of strenuous < training programs for the Until an-1 irffttT conference track ami field I meet at Evanston. .May 23 and 21. Tl,? me t not only promises to,

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bring out spirited individual fighting but every Indication Is tiiat four schoola will eontnjt hotly for team honors. Michigan, Illinois, Ohio and Wisconsin appear to have chances to win. 'I lie Wolverines In particular look good. Strong in tlie field they lire sure to pick up points In the dashes, til, y may score in eight events. For points they can look to Tolan. sprinter; Seymour, quarteritnler; Chapman, broad jumper; Pool man. shotput; I’otile. polevaulter; Dougall and Brubaker, Javelin throwers; nisi Campbell, ’lanuuer-ibruwer. in addition coacn

,Steve Hurts 11 has a fast mile reI lay team. I Sentman and Rodgers tire Ulin- | ids' point winners in the hurdles. I Mi'Derinoit will lie hard lo beat in I the pole vault. Carr ami Miller i have shown well In the high Jump ami Makeev r, us A. Miller, Hampden in tlie quarlernille and Ciitim1 hers, juvellin-thrower, look good. Ohio, ltd by George Simpson, tlie great sprinter, will make .trouble. Simpson is almost a sure ; winner in tlie lilt) yard and 200yard dash s although Tolnn habitually pushes him. Rockaway will In good for points in the hurdles and should win over Sent man and Hodgei s in tlie low liurdles in which lie holds the world's record. Wisconsin hus a well balanced outfit, led by Sam Behr, weight man and Ted Shaw, high juniper. ' Helir is tli» favorite to win the i shot pm and will be a point obtainI er iii the hammer and discus. Shaw should win tlie high jump. Thompson and Goldsworthy are expected |to score in the middle-distance ' races ami the Badgers have fairly ! good relay teams. Among th other schools Northwestern has two probable first place winners in Tom Warne, pobvaulter, and Rut Walter, qnarterimiler, and a strong mile relay team. Chicago has Hoot and East in the sprints. I.etts, middle-distance man. and Boesel in the weights. Gordon of lowa figures to win tlie broad jump. Canby is a good pol vaulter and Sailing is hard to beat in tlie liurdles. Orval Martin |o ' Purdue is looked upon as a i double winner in the half-mile ami mile and Indiana with Banks. Leas and Clapham. will make trouble in II lie middl ■ distances. Minnesota can present Haas in i tlie splints: Wi iseger in tlie half ! mile. Stiain in the mile, and Munn I | nt tlie shotput. o CAGLE ASKED TO QUIT ARMY — W st Point. N. Y . May 14.—(U.R) | ,—The stern code which forbids I ead ts at the United States military academy to marry during their student days, has forced tlie resignation of one of its most prominent students. Christian K. Cagle, red-haired' captain of the 1929 football team,! ’ whose gridiron ability has featured in almost every game in which the grey-dad cadet team lias figured in th.? past few years, admitted yesterday his marriage to Miss’ I .Marion Munford Haile, of New Riads, La., two years ago in Gretna, La. His resignation was asked ast 3 r .Major Gen. William R. Smith, sup-’ erintendent of the academy, found. Cagle had married while on fur-1 lough in 1925. Cagle at present is convalescing in the hospital after a tonsilectomy. Cagle admitted the marriage and i signed a certificate to that effect,; after which Gen. Smith asked for, his resignation. Tlie football star later filled out a resignation blank j ami forward d it to the war department. o—, CRUCIAL TEST ON TWO CHIEF POINTS OF BILL (CONTINUEDY’HOM PAGE ONE) The informal talk of abandoning ! the bill altogether is based on the conclusion that tlie debenture plan of farm relief will be eliminated from tlie measure. However, no way to do this lias yet been found. President Hoover might, it was ■ —

Keep a step ahead of the weeds by using a McCormick-Deering Rotary Hoe. .Just the thing for corn, sugar beets and soy beans. Ask your neighbor who has one.—Schafer Hardware Co. 2t

IB A IT M AN’S Golden Echo Orchestra A CALLINAN ATTRACTION Thursday Night Edgewater Park || Celina, Ohio Next SUNDAY HAYON and his SILVER SLIPPER ORCHESTRA ■ .

DECATUR DaiLY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, MAY 14. 1930.

| reliably learned, accept a compro- ; niise on tlie flexible provision, i whereby the powi r of tlie tariff i commission to fix rates would lie I curbed, but lie would never accept , Die debenture. in view of Illis, Hie leaders believe tlie president might not lie seriously aroused If th- bill failed to pass. Chairman Smoot of tlie senate conferees is prepared to ask the senate tomorrow for a vote of conI fldence uiglng him and Ills fellow Iconlerees to stand by the debenture and the flexible repealer, even though lie p- rsonally is in syinputliy witli neither, hut tills would on'y tighten the deadlock. REVIEW BOARD MEETS .JUNE 2 ■ (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) [this year. The market price for | cattle, hogs and livestock, hay, grain, corn, and other farm produce Is lower than a year ago and these losses will reflect in the county total. Preliminary figures on the assessor's work are not available, .Mr. Cline stated. —o MERCURY DROPS TO LOWER MARK Predictions of Rain For Next Day or Two Made For County i Cool weather, which arrived in I Deeutur and Adam seounty in front of a storm that tailed to materialize pushed the temperature to tlie lowI est degree of tlie present mon h and | brought relief from tlie heat of the I first two weeks of May. Predictions today were tiiat the j cool weather would remain a day I or two and that rain probably would I fall and end the drought which has | caused some worry among farmers I and gardeners of the community. I Tiie general opinion is tiiat rain 1 is needed in most parts of tlie coun- ' ty. The rec ent showers were not suf ’ fieient to be of any great advan age land farmers would welcome a warm rain. Skies remained cloudy today and plate weather forecasters stated i hat showers and unsettled weather ’ would prevail for several hours. o Purdue Defeats I. U. — Bloomington, Ind.,* May 14—(U.R) , - Purdue took advantage of eight j Indiana errors to win 7 to 5 from Indiana, after allowing their adversaries five runs in the seventh. o Car 7'c White Hominy! came in todav. Telephone your orders. Burk Elevator Co., phone 25, 11 lt.'> Mineral Salts Give Her Tired Hubby New Pep ‘ My husband took 2 bottles of Vinol. Now he has good appetite and more strength, pep and rigor than ho ever had." Mrs. Ralph Starkey. Doctors have long known the value of mineral element iron, calcium with cod liver peptone, as contained in Vino], Nervous, easily tired people 3 are surprised how Vinol gives new strength, sound sleep and a BIG appetite. Gives you more PEP to enjoy life! Vinol tastes delicious. B. J. Smith Drug Co.

Come in and look over the No. 4 McCor-mick-Deering Cultivator. Sturdy in construction, and the easiest plow on the market to operate. Bring the boy along.— Schafer Hdw. Co. 2t

TWO STARS MAI QUIT BASEBAIL T New York. May 14.- (U.R)—Tw.i of the National league’s brightest stars Rogers Hornsby of tin- Cubs and Lloyd Waner of tlie Pirates tuny lie lost to baseball. Hornsby has heen troubled by a troublesome growth on ills heel and It Is r-portod that physicians have urged him to give up playing for the Hinson. Several operations have failed to aid the big slugger and Im already has admitted to Intimate friends that tlie heel will k ep him out of many games, if not for all time. Waner was stricken will) appendicitis curly this year and has not yet recovered from tlie effec ts of the operation. For tlie past two weeks b.e has he»n confined in a ! Baltimore hospital and it Is per - Ible tlinl lie may have to r tire permanently. Evansville College To Have New Head Coach Evansville. Ind.. May 14 (U.R) - William V. Slyker has been hired to direct athletics and coach nt Evansville College, commencing in September. For tlie past four years Slyker i lias been football coach in Cleveland Heights, O„ high school. He will succeed John M. Harmon, for seven years Evansville coach. o Notre Dame Winner Over Northwestern South Bend. Ind.. May 14—(UP) The third succef’ive Big Ten conference nine to go down before Notre Dame suffered a 10-6 defeat yesterday, with Northwestern on the losing end. o — * BASEBALL BRIEFS * t • By United Pre s < Although it is agreed tiiat tlie "ialibit hall" is no more lively than in the past, the scarcity of pitchers capable of working an , entire nine-inning game continues to be the chief problem for major 1 league managers. Yesterday 29 pitchers worked in the eeven major league games, allowing 97 runs and 157 hits, in- | I eluding 11 home runs, five triples j j and 33 doubles. Four teams used ’ three pitchers each, four others i were forced to call upon two eetch and one team needed four mounds-

HANDS Outstretched j I ITT^Q A fact that the in<!,,pvn( ' f ” i I merchant wants your ship - Ten 10 one he has ffrown up in *‘ 1 community, has known many of his cost* mers from childhood. And he plans# spend the rest of his life here in Decatur. Anything he can do to secure your perso®! K°°«J will, therefore, is not too much. ®l V AXs', hand is outstretched always in welconw.# V sincerity. And it’s ten to one again that the chain store manager is not a local man. He was transferred • here recently, and hopes for a promotion to a larger store territory as soon as he can “sell" the home office. To him customers are customers aid nothing more. Gross sales are his goal. His hand, too, is outstretched ... to count the change. Independent Merchants OF DECATUR — OPERATING HOME OWNED STORES COOPERATION WILL BUIL D A GREATER DE C A

men. The Philadelphia Athletics outslugged the Chicago White sox, 14 lo 7, and increased their American League lend to I’/j games. Luch

IrWOlr > I W! fe/i "I w r— '**l t 1 41144 ik CNAW«E HERE FOR ORAL STREET,” HflillßlV NOME UR HfWKSH “Before I do,” spoke Ingrid Desmoulins, eighteen and pretty as a I May morning, “may I suggest a change for you?” | “Be as suggestive as ye like, me Wild Rose,” answered the veteran r turfman. E “Change to OLD GOLDS and cease those rasping roars. Ease your I throat with honey-smooth, heart leaf tobacco and part forever with t those grunts and growls. Speech is silver, silence is golden ... and I OLD GOLD speech is e’en more golden .. . there’s not a bark in a ‘ billion.’” I OLD GOLD ! BETTER TOBACCOS...THAT'S WHYTIiEY WIN Not A ( ough In A Carload lljLcfrffiW M ■ j - I—HI, ’■HC’T———— -

laiim used three pltchera. Cleveland's Indfiuis piled up 11 runs in the first three innings to defeat tlie Washington Senators, 11 to 6. Lefty Miller was unnblo

10 mot. , t hta li 7' s k 2" : ( 'V” n?! lilt,