Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 228, Decatur, Adams County, 26 September 1932 — Page 3
fellow Jackets Defeated At Fort Wayne Saturday
111 - — .■ITHSIDEIS iO TOUGH FOR Becaturjm K,. score Twice ln BndQ li;ir, ' r Vn<l * >nte K Third I '"’ ' ictory n. tin 'i■ H"" ■’■“*' ' ,1 lie ’ ■ " l " i l l '- th- South Un' " i' 111 ll,sl ! unei^K H , ■ "I'T ! lU \ hf! a ' i- 1 ■ " "" ,l - !„ rs ,1. v \ulxirii -i I"" 1 ■ . : w /. I. '■ j . ... k- - . : B ■ ■ ■ I. ’ «K B - . i i - ''HHb - I 1 :■• 1 ■". si 'ii'H-.i . ... 13? V iii’0 this final
Sf simply because I did last Friday took care of themselves. Howat you are going to do tomorrow, •r. will be delighted with and sugges. all 32 for the Coal Doctor. oal Yard Stuckey Store iTwHERt ECONOMY RUltfj kMHMHBfIHiBBMSrUfIV •ade YELLOW ONS or lid Heads of I CABBAGE 150 ’** |Wf©O© STOKES
I after thia first touchdown. Garrett Saturday Decatnr is scheduled to meet | another of the tough ones this week. The Yellow Jackets will meet the Garrett Railroaders at Garrett Saturday afternoon. Gar rett last week easily trounced th. Huntington Vikings, 27 to 12 Lineups and summary: South Side Decatur Powell LE Cloud Smith I.T Roop Heaveraon LT Butler Laubenstein C . Allyine I Muring RG Conrad I | DeHaven RT Beery IRE Eease Pettit Q Buffenbarger 1 >■ ..hl i.H Saunders ’ LaPointe RH Ehinger' Springer Eli Eady Score by periods: South Side 0 13 6 o—l 9 Decatur 0 0 0 6 6j Substitutions: South Side Banct for Pettit; Bevington for Heald, Benz for LaPointe. Ensley for' Springer. Nelson for Beery. Rob inette for Moring, Carter for Smith. Ellenwood for LaußensteinJ Golden for LaPointe. Reif for Pow-I ell. Starley for DeHaven. Bleigh [ for Ellenwood, Miller for Alton. I Decatur- Baker for Eady. Schei i man for Coni ad. Hill for Saunders Conrad for Butler. Elzey for Eli linger. Smith for Cloud. Strickler! i for Hill. Saunders for Cloud. Touchdowns: South Side BevI ington. LaPointe. Golden. Decatur j [ —Feasel. Points after touchdown . South Side Bevington (pass). Officials- Bauer (Fort Wayne) J referee; Catterton (Eort Wayne) I umpire; Wilkins. (Fort Wayne) j head linesman. • o THE BIG FIVE ♦ (UP)- ♦ [ Jimmy Foxx made his 58th home run of the season tfnd two singles >in three tries, accounting for one : run. Babe Ruth went hitless in three i tries. Lou Gehrig singled in two attempts. Al Simmons singled in four times up. Bill Terry njade four singles in eight times at bat, accounting tor two runs. o * LEADING BATTERS * —— (u.pj—— ♦ Player. Club G AB R H Pct. O’Doul, Dodg. 148 596 119 218 .366 Foxx. Athlet. 154 553 150 213 .365 Alexander.RS. 121 392 59 113 .264 Gehrig. Yanks 156 595 13S 2uS .350 Terry, Giants 154 614 124 225 .349 Get the Habit — Trade at Hor-e
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1932.
INSPIRED CUBS MAY BE TOUGH Yankees Are Overwhelming Favorites But Cubs Are Hard to Figure (Editor's note: This is the last of a series comparing the New York I | Yankees and Chicago Cubs.) Chicago. Sept. 26— (U.R) — The New York Yankees are overwhelming favorites to win the world J series, but the task of beating an inspirational tram like the Chicago Cubs is quite likely to prove more difficult on the ball field than with , statistics, comparisons, and betting odds. The Yankees hare a collection jof mighty hitters, and once they! j get a team on the run they keep it there as they did t]ye Pirates in . 1927 and the Cardinals in ,1928. But good pitching can stop a, hitting team, even if it boasts slug-i g< rs like Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig Powerful attacks have been, I bottled up and rendered useless by | high class pitching In many pre-' .'vious work; series. That seems to i I he the Cubs' main hope against the i ■ Yankees in the series opening Wed-i Inesday in New York. • The Cults are going to depend on i Guy Bush. Chai ley Root and Ijon [Warneke to stop the Yankees. Burleigh Grimes, Pat Malone. Bud i Tinning and Bob Smith are not I likely to figure in a starting role I unless those three prove unequal | Ito the task. H A great deal rests on Guy Bush.' picked to open the series. Bush is ,[a stout-hearted pitcher. He beat the Athletics in the 1929 seris, and lis now finishing his best year in baseball. If he should happen to beat the Yankees in the opener, the ('ubs are apt to believe themselves ' I a super-team. Even if the Cubs lose both games , |in New York, they are going to I prove tough customers for the Yan- ; l;ees at Wrigley Field. During the I season the Cubs were about 25'per, cent stronger at home than on the road. The Yankees' pitching staff, aid-1 ed by a better attack, is better than ’ the Cubs in the matter of games i won and lost daring the season, and ; may even prove better in a short [series. Red Ruffing. Ixifty Gomez 1 [and George Pipgras are great pitch- [ [.■rs. Johnny Allen, the youngster | with 17 victories and three defeats to his credit, may even pr ve in-j vincible. Walter Brown might also i prove a series star. During the last several weeks the Yankees’ staff, however, seems to have slowed up. while the Cubs'l pitchers seem to have reached their peak, especially Bushs, Root [and Warneke. The Cubs have no hitters to I match Ruth. Gehrig, and Combs. I But their baiting order is not made lai of weak hitters. Any man in ■■■■■■MraMMaHßißMsnMaa Drug Needs SAVE AT THESE PRICES $1.1)0 Dr. Miles Nervine tlt/V SI.OO Cod Liver Oil, standardized fine 7Qp quality 4 «7V 50c Rubbing 1 Qj* Alcohol Ac/V ,SI.OO Ovaltine 74;C $1.20 S. M. A. Baby O(|., 30c Hills or Groves 1(k Bromo Quinine A*/V 35c Vicks Vapo 07/• Fail) 50c Caldwell’s Syrup I’epsin OtzV 25c Feenamint 10C 35c Modess 15C See our beautiful line ot GREETING ( ARDS for all occasions. ( ALLOW & KOIINE Cut Rate Drug Store on east s'tie of street.
lit from Herman, the lead off man, Ml II If 1111111 FDO Ho Mark Koenig, batting in eighth I fl N K HII K I iKA ) niiii 11v11k11v Defensively the Cubs' .infield is ... ft zs vs n FAHRI ; lmtt“r the Yankees Either 111 U||||U L||U|M Koenig or Jurgi. at shortstop is 111 I UUil I UlilVl tar ssuperlor to Croaetti or Lary, | [while Herman at second and Eng-| Gish at third ar. better fielders than Rutting, GomeZ and Alien I azzerl and Sewell, respectively n....„ 1....1V. The Yankees have th), stronger HaXl Been Ineffective outfield, offensively or defensively, In Recent Starts and Dickey is a better catcher than Hartnett, but the Cubs are by no New York, Sept 26.—(U.R) —Lefty 'means weak In either place. In a Gomez, Charley Ruffing and John short series any one of the Cubs Allen have given poor pitching peroutfielders, Stephenson. Johnny formances in world series tune-up Moore, or Cuyler, might prove theigames, Allen turning in a disapmost valuable man on the field, pointing performance when he was, Stephenson is the Cubs' most dead knocked out of the box in the sixth ly hitter, and Cuyler, if he contln- inning yesterday as the last place ues his play of the last few weeks, Boston Rod Sox downed the champis once more at the top of his game, ion Yankeess. S to 3. So the series resolves itself to Philadelphia Athletics finished in hitting against pitching. For the second place, barely nosing out the Cubs to win they will have to have Washington Senators, who defeated I pitching of tlie highest calibre to tbem. 2to 1. This left the A s only sonither the Yankees' big guns onP gume ahead. Jimmy b oxx made from the very first pitch until the h ' s ■ ,s,h home run of the season {finish. giving the A's a new club record 0 of 172 homers for a season. Norm Greenev Should Th - I’,a'" 1 ’ ,a '" " .. dians won the first game or a twin I><? All-AniPriCan |,jn from the Chicago White Sox. 6 to 4. and battled to a 5-5 tie in South Bend . Ind., Sept. -6 (UP) tfi e nfght-cap. called at the end of Norm Greeney should be .All- || )p Hftlv inning because of darkAmerican this year if tradition aI mong Notre Dame football players r . [is indicative. Thp IMro,t J‘ K a erB T took “ 5 t °- 4 1 Greeney, whose home is in Cleve- dec sl °" «> ver ? he St ' Lou ‘ s Br °™' land, occupies locker No. 133 that a " ssis,ed home rune froni Dol- , has held equipment . f six AU-Amer- j a< k and Walker ,n the e,ghth i,b lean plavers in the past eight vears ni,lK - ... captain Adam Walsh, of the Four Th " Chicago Cubs ' tampions of Horsemen .in 1924. first used the the National league also lost their iceker. Another center. Arthur Boe- flnß ‘ game a _' Hll f ‘ nd ' lub ' "7 . ringer used it in 1926. Capt ,in Cim innati Reds, 5 to ,k Guy Bush [John "Clipper" Smith kept his uni- and Pat Malone - two of the '' lndy form there in 1927. Jack Cannon ‘’“y hurlers who may pitch the took it over in 1929; Marty Brill' B ™ bad in 1930 and Nordy Hoffman in 1931. [ rhp SPCond >’ la< ’ p 1 i»«’’urgh I irJoe Kurth. All-American tackle a,es S ” IU a with the last ear. put in a bid for the 1 ck- SL Ix » uis Cardinals. Pittsburgh er f r this seasm but it already took ‘he-opener. 7 to 1. but drophad be n assigned to Greeney. ' ,pd ,bp nigbt cap ' 7to 4 a* I T . tlie Phillies, sto :t. bat dropped Nt. .IOC terrors ( | )e n j K | lt ,. al , t; to 3. The Giants W in I'OOthall Game and Cards each won 72 and lost 32 [ games. Tiie St. Joe Terrors defeated Joe j In the Phillies-Gianls double-head-M. C -nnels’ so thall team Saturday [er. neither Mel Ott nOr Chuck Klein 24 to 18. Bud Hines scored three i made home runs so they finished {touchdowns ,nd Ed Teeple one for I the season tied tor National league | the Terrors. Bobby Worthmai sc ir- home run honors with 38 each. ed the touchdowns for the McCon-j The fifth place Boston Braves [ nel team. .downed Brooklyn's third place o I Dodgers. 13 to 7, despite the Dodg — 4 I .0 aita.k in the aecond in ■ HOME RUNS T » -)K ♦ (U.PJ ♦ I Foxx. Athletics 58 ; Yesterday's hero: Jitnmy Foxx Ruth. Yankees 41 of the Athletics who made his 58th K'ein. Phillies 38 [home run in tlie final game, only Ott, Giants 38 two less than Babe Ruth’s all-time Simmons. Athletics 35 [record of 69. o I American League ROOSEX ELT AT Umpires Are Named ARIZON A RANC H Chicago, Sept. 26 (UP) Will- f yrfoM PAOB f ONH_ liam Dineen and Roy Van Graflin Artz., and then motoring to the have been named by President Wil Greenway home. She made he liam llarridge as the American Lea-[ fj rß t stage of the journey by train, guc's umpires f rhe world ser-1 on the trip to Williams, the ies between tlie New Y’ork Yankees i cam p a ign special made several and Chicago Ciubs. [ stops, the longest being at PhoeDineen, deal of the staff, has been | n j Xi where the nominee drove n 4m rii tn L agu< umpire through the city anfl addressed 1910. while Van Graflan. who be- briefly an audience of several cam am ij r 1 ague umpire in 1926 thousand persons who crowded is the youngest man on the staff. the grounds of the state <apitol. • o I Rear platform appearances were ZOERCHERSAYS mad** at small towns, tho last tiv i TVfI’T being Skull Valley, where several * 1-‘***l* * A 1 ItJiN hundi i ’l ranchers heard Roosevelt IS VIOLATION express his pleasure at being in CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE i „„„ Fix it so we can sell our cows, only 3.9 cents remain, whereas Frank." a cattleman called out to $4,000,000 is needed to operate the! him. Tlie governor nodded to him institutions outlined in the consti- and smiled. tution and $20,000,000 for all state [ Roosevelt and his followers departments, penal and benevolent; visibly were elated at the attitude institution. ' of Senator Hiram Johnson, of Zoercher said he believed the | California, leader of the state's state could operate at a minimum [ liberal Republican bloc, toward . levy of 24 cents. 1 the Democratic nominee's camWMraBHBMMBRMBaBMMMaKAfiMMMaHBaiMMaW Eat Breakfast at the Green Kettle Stop in any morning for your bite to eat! Our doors arc open every morning at 6:30 o'clock ready to serve you with sandwiches, cakes, rolls, doughnuts or whatever you wish. W e also serve a complete confectionery line and invite you to stop in for refreshments any hour of the day. Green Kettle
paign. The governor believes the California liberals will swing President Hoover's home state to I [the Democratic cause in the NoI vember elections. I Tills week Roosevelt will confer with Senator George Norris, of Nebraska, another who has dlsenI ' gaged himself from tlie Republican ranks. The meteing will be held at McCook, Neb., and Roosevelt hopes to swing Norris followers into the Democratic lineup. ' Then the Demcratic nominee i hopes to have the LaFolh'tte group, still powerful tn Wisconsin i despite their recent defeat, behind ■ him. )[ It was believed this scheduled i address at Sioux City. la., would • be prepared with a view toward - “signing and sealing" the votes of the farm belt liberals. i Saturday night the governor ■ spoke to an enthusiastic gathering I of 5U.000 California Democrats in • Hollywood. > He reiterated his Portland stand i on water power, asking that the | crowd “judge me by the enemies 1 have made." and promising to push hydro-electric power work l should he be elected. He devoted a portion of his adi dress to naval subjects, mentions ing the importance of the navy to California, where the greater part of the United States fleet is based the year-around. The governor pledged himself . to a policy of an adequate navy. Roosevelt will head into New Mexico when he leaves Arizona ' tomorrow. He will stop at Albu- • querque and from there proceed ■ to Colorado Springs, Colo. From i Colorado the party will enter Nebraska. where he will enter with . Senator Norris. Frequent revisions have been made in the Roosevelt schedule ' since tlie departure from AlHrny. i Sept. 13. This was done in order that he might get back to Albany Oct. 3 in time to speak at the i Democratic state convention, preI sumably in the interests of the ; gubernatorial candidacy of Lieu : tenant Governor Herbert H. Lehman. ' United States Senator John S. i I Cohen of Georgia joined the Roose I ! velt party today and will accom- : pany it part of the way east. i BARGAINS — Bargains In Living Room, Dining Room Suits* Mat tresses and Rugs. Stuckey and Co. Monroe,.our Phone number Is 44 ct.
M rn»T—~| r-rim Tn~r«»a i - - ■— . — mw"*, “ ’ =-■ L.. ——k’—TJCXZZ=7.•-■„ ■ "■■- ■ .- ■ ■ -rx: : 4 This Furnace Radiates All The Heat f^S 23 " The Majestic Down-Draft furnace ; rt is especially designed to utilize al! 4 the heat of the smoke and gases. i ■ A' j I Thus the heating capacity of the fur- ' I ;t ■ \ y'\ I I nace is increased without burning 1■ ksl' fII Till Mi - more coal. 8' The extra long distance the smoke 1 m '!• travels—22 feet instead of 8 or 10 1O in the ordinary furnace—allows the furnace to radiate all the heat. The radiator, through which the smoke ,1 ",,. passes, has proved itself one of the |i ; most economical features in furnace construction. Majestic Down-Draft Furnace A light weight furnace is short lived. The Majestic Down Draft Furnace will give many years of service beyond the limit of the ordinary cast or steel furnace. Only the highest grade iron mixture is used. Each casting is proportioned for the service at that point. Weight is put where it is needed to give durability to the furnace as a whole. 9 a The Majestic Down-Draft Furnace is made particularly for the discriminating buyer, who wants the highest and most efficient type of furnace construction. Economical, Cleanly, Durable The Majestic Down-Draft furnace embodies such feaa^V;’Z« lures as economy, cleanliness, increased heating capacity Sb? ' and durability. Isl It has an unusually high and deep ash pit; grates which can be readily dropped and cleaned; heavily conM ' structed fire bowl m two sections; large and roomy combI bustion chamber; gas and dust-proof joints. wJ The square casing is large. An inner lining prevents loss of heat by radiation. Se -' '''KMMSBa 's.-- Examine this super-fumace. You will save money k# ' li x"* if it is installed in your home. / Ashbaucher’s Tin Shop Phone 739 First Street Majestic Down-Draft Furnace =====-. J
< COUNTY BOARD TO MEET OCT. 5 ’’ CONTINUED FROM PAGD ONE r tlie appropriati uh in the budgets I f and confer with the officers reliv-[ i- tive to the levies. I) Final action ot the budgets and tl levies will not be take nuntil the | t meeting of October 10, tlie last day a on which the local tax adjustment shall meet and determine wliat the , b levies will not be taken until the b shall be. 3 0 EIGHT AGENTS i HUNT SLAYER i I CoNTINI Kg 1 11' >M I'AGI-? ONE s will be buried in Calvary cemetery at Cloquet, after funeral services at Sacred Heart Catholic church at ? 10 a. m. Tuesday, it _ o _ i 'Judge McNabb Gives 20-Year Sentences s o Fort Wayne, Ind., Sept. 26—(UP) . k —William C. Jap and Fred Morgan,
old friend return/ HAVANA » OOMBSTIC r, lLpc , fSSfil Blunt SUMATFA WRATO< W fl e “ ■■mu i mi Notice to Depositors !- | Please bring in your old bank book at once so we can balance them. This is important and we will appreciate your cooperation. 1LE () YAG ER , 3 Liquidating Agent. I. ! . omwc bii mi iiiimm mu mu iihii
PAGE THREE
I l> th of Michigan City, lnd.„ were I under sentence of 20 years each | today on charges ot hoidflig up a | lilltng station here April 24. Circuit j Judge C. R. McNabb pronoun<»d sentence. — o—Get the Habit — Trade at Home
I WG /fe/ PART Iffest OF IT IS W. H. Zwick & Son Mrs. Zwick, Lady Attendant Phones 61 and 303. Phone 1041
