Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 255, Decatur, Adams County, 28 October 1931 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

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DECATUR GRID TEAM TO MEET BLUFFTON HERE Last Ga m e Os Season Scheduled For Friday Afternoon. 2:30 P.M. The Decatur high school Yellow Jackets and the Bluffton high school Tigers, rivals in all lines of competitive -ports will assemble on Niblick field Friday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock to do football battle. Neither team has had a sue-’ cessful season ami neither) team has won a game. That makes no difference when these two schools meet and there is crapping up just as much interest! in the Friday game as if both' teams had won all their games. Coach Tiny Horton is spending i a lot of time this week drilling his I reserves and training up his cripples in an effort to put some | strength on the field Friday. The j old jinx in person has followed' Coach Horton this season "and in-, juries have weakened the Yellow, Jacket team on every occasion. The local team has suffered everything in the way of injuries from broken arms to fractured : ankles, and all points-between, but' most of the players are ready to go against Bluffton. As to predicting the outcome, it would be difficult. Coach Horton believes that barring injuries the Jackets will win -Bluffton has fail-1 ed to make an impression this seas-, on at any time. The game is scheduled to start | at 2:30 o'clock on the East grid-! iron. Tickets are selling for 501 cents and season cards are good. I It will be the last grid game of the season and Saturday morning j Coach Horton will turn the play-1 ets over to-Coach Curtis for has-j ketball drill. CRSMSON-OHIO GAME SATURDAY Bloomington. Ind. Oct. 28 —The. Indiana Homecom'.ng with great >lor and vaiety will form a back- I ground for the great traditional . jotball battle which will tak- place I l.et.ween Ohio State and Indiana I attirday in the Indiana memorial .adium. Monday, Coach Hayes and his I itlmen greatly encouraged by j ,eir smashing 32-8 victory over hicago on th- Mslwa; lasi Satur-' iy. turn I their uiiention to the I nckeyj s as the third Big Ten op-I ponent of the season and one of the I ... st t-uc al o the .am s this sea- i on for the Crimson. Not a single Indiana man received a scratch in . he Chicago encounter. DriH’this wv k is consisting,in the main of developing the offens--1 'at in Saturday's game scored ■ ally as much a t Indiana had , mad? in two p evians seasons. The most noticeable improvement in | 1 ■ Chicago game was the flashy | ■ r and ,jid run offense that swept ■ Mar’ms ofth ir feet in the | closing stages of the game. Coach l Hayes has been drilling into his | < .. for son. • time but Saturday

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was the first time they have had j a chance to show it. Indiana, in the midst of learning an entirely new system, has been developing steadily from game to ) game. In the lowa game the Crim- ) son defense was satisfactory. In the Maroon game the offense was added. Coach Hayes looks for his men to improve in' this fashion gradually as the season carries on In the the Chicago game the Crim- | son put on a fine air attack with- ' out Sabik who was held until the ; Ohio game when he will see plenty ) ' of activity. ——o WILDCATS ARE FAVORED:FOUR TEAMS IN TIE Writers Believe Two Big Ten Teams Will Be Eliminated Soon — Chicago, Oct. 28 <U.R) There 1 I Rre four Big Ten teams that ' haven't yet lost a conference game, but two of this group prob-1 sbly will drop from the select) ! circle after Saturday's games. The four unbeaten leaders are i I Northwestern. Minnesota. Wisconsin and Indiana, the latter held to j a scoreless tie by lowa. Minne-I i sota and Wisconsin meet in a’ homecoming battle at Minneapolis i which, barring a tie, will elimin- i ate one or the other from the run-; ning. Ohio State invades Bloom ) ) ington for a homecoining game against Indiana and that should be the last of the. Hoosiers' Big i Ten title aspirations. A combination of results Satur- ; day could just about clinch the j ! title for Northwestern the follow-' I ing week. If Ohio State defeats Indiana ami Minnesota beats Wis-I consin. Northwestern can virtually annex • the championship by. ) conquering Minnesota at Evanston November 7. The Wildcats, however, will i hive to trim Illinois in Saturday's | game, Hit that should not be such; : • difficult assignment in view of | Northwestern's 10-0 victory- over I Ohm State and Michigan's 35-h i triumph over Illinois last week. I Ohio |>eat Michigan two weeks I ! ago. After the Minnesota game.' Northwestern has only to defeat.) j Indiana and low a to complete its. , e-ond lonsecntive season without! ) lose" a conference game. Oddly es'.uigh. no Big Ten team | has an undefeated, untied record.' I Northwestern has the only undefeated record against all opnos ! - ; "ci but has ths o-i tie a-rainst I , Notre 1 .line -- which, however, i . doe -n’t m-r but adds prestige to I the Wildcats' claims to on" of the gn at'st football teams in tho| eonntrv this season. Stan >rd defeated Minnesota.) 13-11. Wfscnns'n lost tn Pennsylvania. 27-13, and was tied h-| Auburn. 7-7. In Ilana has lost to| Notre Damm 28-0, and played ai h tie with lowa. All other con-’ ferenco have lost games in-' I side the Bi- Tin. The B’e Ton has its best chance 1 •of the sensor this Saturday to! j make a clean fiweep of ilr intcrI seet’orr’ program M’chican’s . powe "ul team, which four,! itself, Lagainst Illinois last week, should | win from Princeton in Palmer s*adittrt an 1 avenge a defeat of ) -it vo-i-o standing. Ba kin 1881 Mich’c'" invaded the e n st and I niayod rt-r -o-d. Yale and Prince- ) ton w’thin the mace of 5 days,' I losing al] three games. Princeton won. 13-4. lowa, which hasn't scored a no’t'f in four games, losing three and tying the other, has an even | -h-ince to turn back George Washington of Washington, D. ('.. at I lowa City. The eastern e’even. i however, has lost only one game.' winning from Shenandoah, Elon and Boston University. In the other conference game, I Purdue plays Chicago and the| Boilermakers, near full strengthj for the first time this season.' should eclipse their 40-0 victory] over the Maroons in 1928 if Coach) Noble Kizer wishes to heap more 1 discredit on A. A. Stagg's 40th I anniversary football aggregation. — o——— Room for Expansion i The addition of numerals to tht old telephone designations In New lork city win allow for expansion Os I.M years without milking anv chance In the cntulognlna system.' ~ r>.— , BARGAINS — Bargains m llvlaa room, dining room suite, mit- • r esses and rues. St ""key an( j Monro*), our Phcro number f s 14 ts Halloween Festival Friday niirht. Pleasant Mills High School. — o—— M. H. M. S. Rummage Sale. M. E. church. Oct. 31. Nov. 7, Nov. 14. 253t3 eod

- “Butch” Nowack Toughens I. U. Line • Against Charging Ohio State Backs 6- — — — I —. -**“s*n, nn a j-t a 1 i niFnm v s\ / I wL/ \ / Hr / vuy / \ \ Im- * | ' 1 iir ;Z; y ! ***** I ( /i I | mAnoula ? / •Cw'O W—_ / xY V- « / Mt* jSffaaJWMBMMKSjT •far- - nf I —- * « vucsiNiGd v s W If \,f CMM£R- Bucket ’ li ' & ' Q<//ieTE-« -Fullback- , Ur- 1 aZ i L* irw., ' x | A-J I . ... ... . .. "Y.Y Jk. I'l WELEAteia-cW/oJnurE • "DIQ IN I" '/ELLS ABOARD CtMtXiIHG MACHINE,4S INDIANA Back. fqR Nome coming Oct. 3| I’ "D'g In tl re!" yells “Butch" Nowack. Indiana's line coach as he d:ills his men against the coming < ' oasl-.iuglil of Chio States offense which scored 18 ton -hdowns in its first three games. The Ohio State 11 team is"o be Indiana's Homecoming attraction Satn day (Oct. 31) at Bloomington. /.stride the charging machine shown in the lower uart of the above picture sits “Butch" Nowack. ~ Pr.ivid ng motive power are: left to right: Dickey. Rasch . Nylec, -Beeson. Zeller, Anglemyer and I Hansen. Al>cve is the pile-driving Buckeye quartet of Welever, ManJula, Vuchinich, and Cramer The latter ' ’ ' i< Ohio State's crafty quarterback. Vuchinich is a 190 pound fullback who possesses not only an almost-' nvincible forward dive but also a side wiggle which takes him places where a big man would hardly be ' ; cxner-nj to go. Mandula is a junior lettermkn while Welever is Ohio State s sophomore "find."

GROVE IS MOST VALUABLE MAN New York, Oct. 2S—<U.R> Rob- ' 1 ert Moses Grove. left-handed pitcher of the Philadelphia Ath-I i letics. was the most valuablej player of the American League! during the 1931 season, according 1 to a vote of the bageba'l writers association. announced today hy , ; William Slocum of New York l ’hrough the United Press. Prove won 31 games and lost , , four during the season. He re- ‘ reived a total of 78 out of a po - ■ sible 80 points in the poll held by I the baseball writers. Votin'- was conducted along the! line followed 'it clioesing Frankie. Fris' h of the St. Ixmis Cardinals.; as the most valuab’e National! : 'eaiue player. One writer in each Amer’-an League city indicated! n’s r” : ng of the highest 10 nlav-j Tb-> first rymod received 10 points, the second nine, and so on. I Lou G. hr -, first baseman and; home run star of the New York Yankees, w-*.s sec end. w’th 59 st S’mmons. Athletics n-t-f’eid nnri batting star, was j th'r ’. w’»h J»l. * Six of the op ht wr'tors ! ! s»ed Grove at the top of rheir ba’lo* ■ The o'hc- two rooked him second, i Oro of these lifter 'wo G“hric rs mos> valuable, and the other named Al Simmons. Grove and Gehr'g wore the only! n’avers to score points on every I .illot. A total of 25 plaverr. scored I points in the poll and 23 others , drew honorable mention for wh'chl no points were scored. Following is the committee which voted this year: Boston. Burt Whitman. Herald; Chicago, John Hoffman. Daily News. Cleve-i land. Stuart Bell. PrAs; Detroit, i Harry Bullion. Free Press; New i York, Charles M. Segar. Daily Mirror; Philadelphia. John J. ■Nolan, Bulletin; St. Louis. Janies M. Gould. Post-Dispatch; Washington. John B. Keller. Star. The point score follows: Grove. Philadelphia ...78 Gehrig. New York 59 Simmons. Philadelphia ... 51 Averill. Cleveland . 43 Ruth. New York 40 Webb, Boston .... 22 Cronin, Washington 18 Melillo. St. Louis 17 West. Washington 16 Cochrane. Philadelphia 16 Earnshaw, Philadelphia .... 12 Ferrell, Cleveland 12 Marberry. Washington 11 ' Rhyne. Boston 10 Chapman. New York 7 Stone. Detroit 6 Gehringer, Detroit 4

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1931.

Blue. Chicago 4 Kress, St. Louis ...' 3 Reynolds. Chicago; Stewart. St. Louis; Oliver, Boston: McFayden. Boston; and Goslin, St. Louis, 2 each! Foxx. Philadelphia. 1. O T S I I) E L IN E S » , « Evanston. 111.. Oct. 28—(UP) —I Two Northwestern regulars will be I on the sidel ties with injuries when , the undefeated Wildcats face Illi nois Saturday, Welding, cent r ha a dislocated shoulder and Ben Mee nan, left halfback has an injured side. McDonald and Frjberg will, alternate at center and Al Moore.: r: serve fullback will be shifted to j "le. nan’s position. id nneapolis, Minn . Get. 28 UP) Quentin B.irJick, veteran >l,a:. in back who has survived an . ' uttcc o appendicitis aud a xnee I injury this season, is making a : o..ragoOU3 effort to win back his j i egula. place in Minnesota's ba.-k- i rid for the Wisconsin game Saturday. He may alternate with Haas, j Chicago. Oct. 2S-—(UP) Stanley Hamberg, Chicago Guard, lias a dislocated shoulder, it was revealed today by an X ray. He will be lost I to the Ma oons for the rest of the ason. Wayne Rapp and Bill Eerg, . ho.ttorea, w ill attempt to fill' :e gap Sat irday against Purdue. — South Bend, Ind., Oct 22 —(UP) i Notre Dame's vara ty had a scrimmare planned today agairtat the ■ •'reshmen and another p.actice se.t---i sion tomorrow before departing ; Thursday night for Pittsburgh to | meet Ca negie Tech. Coach Ander>on expects Notre Dame to win but predicts a hard struggle. Madison, U'is.. Oct. 28 —(UP) — Quarterback buckets Goldenberg wi'l be unable to play in the Minne- | sota game Saturday, Bill Fallon, ; Wisconsin trainer, announced today. Goldenberg received numer- ' ous bruises and a cut eye in the ' Pennsylvania game. Schiller will rc--1 place him. with Mutulre continuing to call signals from halfback. »_ 'Ann Arbor, Mich., Oct. 28—(UP-) | —istil Tessmer's fine work against I Illinois last week and his kicking I ability probably will give him the call over Harry Newman at quarter-, back when Michigan maets princeton in the East Saturday. Michigan two best kickers, Jack Heston and Everhardus, are nursing injuries. Lafayette, Ind., Oct. 28—(UP)— Purdue probably will use two complete backfields against Chicago Saturday now that most of the Boilermaker stars have recovered from ailments. The young backfield of pardonner, Hecker, Moore and Rorsetman is ranked on par with

the veteran group of Whit. Risk, Purvis and Yunevich. Columbr.3. 0., Oct* 28 —(UP)- I Bill CarroH, sia- Ohio state half i back, probably will be out of Satl urday s game with Indiana because of an infected foot. He was on ■rutches yesterday. Bloomington Ind, Oct. 28—(UP) Coach E. C. Hay s is plainning a ’ surprise aerial attack for Ohio state i i in Indiana's homecoming game here Saturday. Rain drove the Hoosiers .udoors yesterday but they contih-1 ■ icd to d ill on passing. — ("aam;a ; gn. 111.. Oct 2£—(UP) h | Several i w shifty are expected in iihe Illinois team which takes the , ield again it Northwestern at Evi irisioa Saturday. CcMfeh Bob Zuppke tri -d Clark Roo4 at Quarterback ye te day. and O'Neill at Tackle. I >wa City, lowa, Oct. 28-—(UP) — T- > lowa players Dolly, cen.er. and Kriz halfback, who were injured ) were expected to return to practice today. K iz's strained back, hi.w---l ver. may keep him out of the' I George Washington Saturday same) i Saturday. University of Texas Students Use Old Rules Austin, Tex. — (UP) — When more rules are made, collegians . v. 11 break them, reason university | of Texas authorities. So the “eds” | I erew ill have to get under last I year’ > ru’ ?s. And the only oddity on the list] )f rul s is one forbidding girls in | the dormitories to bathe a.ter 11) p. m. Smoking by girls in the!- rooms which recently promoted revolts in several Middle Western universities, is permitted he.e( except at ' the Scottish Rite Dormitory. . o _ Philosophical Belief ) Empiricism Is the philosophical ■ view that ex)>erien -e is the Source nnd the criterion of all knowledge, tlie theory tlint nil knowledge I. derived from iiuiterlnl or data ex Isting in rhe form of p u rtlisila

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TWO ATHLETIC CARDS PLANNED Fort Wayne, Ind.. Oct. 28. — A representative of the state athlqjic ' commission will present a belt, emblematic of the welterweight champ-, ionship of Canada to the winner of) a wrestling contest between Joe I Domar and Ernie Arthur at the Strand theater here Thursday i night. Arthur, the present welter king 1 of Canada, will defend his title against the threatening challenges of D nnar, stocky little German. The match features, of course, this week's mat presentation by Harry i Stoeff, veteran promoter. Critics all agree that Arthur, veteran of many strenuous ring campaigns with their accompanying victories and defeats, will meet a f tartar in the redoubtable Domar., If Domar isn't successful in tear-) ing the championship toga from the shoulders of his English opponent. it will mark the first time he has been defeated in a local ring over a period of a year and a 'half. The semi-windup brings togeth-) er Mustafa Pasha. Turkish light heavyweight champion, and Clyde Robinson, of Kansas. There promises to he plenty of action in this bout. also. The championship contest is tp be a three-fall affair with a twohour time limit, while the semiwindup will lie a 45-minute one-fall match. Fort Wayne, Ind., Oct. 28.—This city of Fort Wayne has seen fights of all discriptions goixl, bad and indifferent. But it has never witnessed a championship fight; especially a championship fight that bears every indication of being one of the hottest scraps presented here since the days of the famous Frankie Mason. On the night of November 3, Moan Baumgartner. Fort Wayne boy. will defend his Indiana junior welterweight championship against Otto Atterson, Terre Haute, over the 10-round route. It will be Baumgartner’s first defense 'of -his title since he won it by knocking out Johnny Fagg. Clinton coal miner, in the eighth round of a scheduled 10-round fracas at Muncie a

f-'hiii m ■ 11 mn Thursday, Friday & Saturdav thenends our OCTOBER FURNITURE SALE TREMENDOUS SAVINGS THROUGHOUT THE STORE Dll fin niture at the lowest prices in fifteen years. L-J Our g.eat sale makes these savings possible and you’re passing up a rare opportunity if you fail to buy this—the last week. Note the Savings! BED ROOM SUITES as low as $44.95 LIVING ROOM SUITES as low as $64.95 DINING ROOM SUITES as low as $59.50 OCCASIONAL CH AIRS as low as $6.95 OCCASIONAL TABLES as low as . $8.75 LAMPS as low as $1.19 and many other articles at like reductions. Beavers, Fryback & Beavers. REMEMBER! Sale Closes Next Saturday! OMF———————:

; little more than a month ago. The match is fully sanctioned by) I the state athletic commission. And a member of that body will be here on the night of the bout to 'present the championship belt to i the winner. Forfeit money was I posted by the managers of the ! fighters Tuesday. Four high class supporting bouts are being arranged by Henry Stoeff. promoter. 32 rounds of fighting ) making up the complete card. The 'other four bouts will include three) sixes and a four-round preliminary, j Atterson is considered by the j commission the most logical conI tender for Baumgartner's crown at present time. The southern Indi-, ana boy lias an excellent record in | shat section along the Ohio river, 1 and has defeated most of the good hoys in the state. He has a re- , markable record of victories dott-1 - ing hi s comparatively lengthy , career in the ring. ' Farmer Models In Clay And Works In Fields Fort Wayn", Ind.. H'P) Mo deling clay taken from a well at his 1 home is the hobby of Harold Rupel who lives near here. "After a day's work plowing or | ha. nesting I take time out for a few punches on the ;aw of Donatello's slave." said Rupel, referring to "The Slave of Donatello," his most pretentious work. Lack of money lias hindered ills work. "If 1 could sell some of the slock, or ;et a fair p ice for farm produce. I could get money to have the mold cast,' he explained. Despite his handicapped conditions, Rup 1 is an untiling student of art. He recalls that one book “actually cost $2." — ■ - Q —— — Princess Mary Plants Trees To Aid .Jobless Harev.ood House, Yorkshire (UP) — Extensive forestation schemes are be ng car led out in the nark surrounding the home of Ixtrd Hare wood and Princess Mary The program has been ih> ieriaken to help relieve unemployment. Approximately IO.OiIO trees are being planted. Lord Harewood has increased his usual p rmanent staff of 20 gardene.s by 200 men and boys. Prize Masquerade Dance SunSet_Tonight.

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