Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 134, Decatur, Adams County, 7 June 1933 — Page 6
Page Six
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LEGION TEAMS PLAY 2 GAMES Decatur Teams Will Battle At High School Field Wednesday P. M. (1, i slur's Junior \iiu>ri(Uii 1. 1 pin. teams Will swim; Into n Ihm i III: < Week With tWO I’.'lUll' I 'ilhl'Jlll ' ed for \Y <lm« dai aft, rtioon. Thu senior team. whirl! is sp> sor d this year by Hie lot || Mint-*' lodge. will moot the Legion Ilin.or , team, coached by (h r.ihl Strickler, i In the fealuie game at 4 o'clock. , Teams (oaeh'tl by Buff nhu-tor BMlin ninßlMil. m l I liras ■— run nit r —II
Barton Quality is not a J f —, —' / ' Question '"wMl/ of Price ' - rWM . •» "** $ 49 5 ° ■ Cks&fe i.s One important reason we handle : I'arton Washers is that quality of ' «UKCo*U materials and workmanship is al* . ■ ways the highest possible. Same ■■■ h’ l '' l 1 1 11 -dit\ in lowest priced as in the highest. Hence, year after ? OM at only $49.50. j It has improved high-blade agitator which assures fast cleaning at surface of tub as well as at bottom. _ Big > 4 hp. motor. Lovell wringer with balloon rolls, and complete Nc" High Blade . Agiiau* safety release* The Schafer Store 11 \RD\\ AKE and HOME 11 KMSHINGS
>«■■■■■■■■■* .MMMWIMNaMaUK.iII ~~ _~M IIH ' " nIT K~ ? Green Waters X Opens Tomorrow '' ~ -* Ju— It's Bathing Time—and you’ll be in lhe •swim’ if you wear a Bradley or Munsingwear Bathing Suit We have a stock of new numbers that are the ven latest as to style and quality. l You may purchase either the new style trunks j or the complete suit. We have them both ways I and you will be pleaded with the wonderful I seteeiioa we haie to offer. $1 to $3 Holthouse Schulte & Co. I
I and Koller will moot In th* first I mime :il 2 p. in. i A regutal schedule for I .<■ hmaJ ■ tennis will be drawn within the i xt few days. with pl ly In the I si h< ilule startl the first part of . next WlW'k. Between 30 and 35 Iroy., h-V« re | ported to date during prmilco ses- ■ sloits forth junior teams Twenty I two boj i ar:' listed oil the Moose team, and ns the rules for the la'giotl teams prove.t more than 15 i boys be ! ng carried on thes unml dur- ; ins; elimination piny, seven of these I boy* will bo transferred to the junior teams, making a total of 35 Io tn boys available for the t iixe . teams. A heavy sch. dale is bw| g planned foi the Moose teini. sevena! same.: having bon tentatively
booked but no definite dates set. The Moose team will go to Monroeville Saturday afternoon, meeting th junior legion toon of that i lly. Decatur won Its first start of the season Saturday, defeating the h Bluffton team at Bluffton, 10 to 2. STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE e W. L. Pct. ,f New York 2ii 17 .6ii:> st. Louis 27 IS .KOO Pittsburgh 25 IS' .SXI ('hie co ' 21 22 .522 Cincinnati 23 22 .511 ' Brooklyn IS 21 .521* Boston 21 2S .42'1 '' Philadelphia 10 31 .340 AMERICAN LEAGUE W L. Pct. '' New York 29 13 .6!>o Washington 27 20 .5.1 I'hlcir.o 21 20 .515 Cleveland 26 22 .542 1 Philadelphia 22 20 .524 ' Detroit 20 25 .444 St. Louis 17 31 .351. Boston It 2S .333 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION \\. L. Pet. Columbus 27 15 .643 i Indianapo’is 23 17 .575 i Minneapolis 24 20 .545 St Paul 23 24 .489 Toledo 22 24 .478, | .Milwaukee 20 22 .476 i Louisville 20 24 .455 t Kansas City IS 31 .367 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS National League St. Louis at Cincinnati, rain. No other games scheduled. — American League Washington. 4; Philadelphia, 7. Detroit. S; Cleveland. 7. Chicago. 14: St lands. 7. On y games scheduled. American Association Minneapolis. I: Toledo. 9, st Paul. 3. Columbus. 10. Kansas City at Indianapolis; I night game. Milwaukee at Louisville: night game. THE CORT Wednesday Thursday “HA RD TO HANDLE” A siuippv. zit»pv storv vx itb a worb! of kick. James Dunn. Kouts Mallory. El Brendel. TOXICHT — Clara Bow in "4 \ i I HER SAX AGE." Vtiled—Torvhv Comedy and \ e" s. i i •MING SI’NDAY Wheeler and Wo< - J "SO THIS IS AFRU A'
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JUNE 6. 1933.
SIMMONS LEADS JUNIOR LEAGUE New York. June 6. — (U.R) The I sage who remarked that clothes niake the man. must have had Moyslus H. Simmons In mind. Garbed in a new uniform and a pair of pale hose, the big Polish pellet pounder has snapped out of his 1932 hatting slump and walloped his w tv to the top of major league hitters. Imu Cumiskey gave the Philadelphia Vtliletics about $60.1100 last September in order to shove Simmons into a Chicago White Sox uniform, and he’s paying the 30yearold outfielder about $33,000 I for playing this season. But It seems money well spent because Al is proving a dynamic spark plug for the erstwhile "hitless wonders", ers." With Simmorts setting the pace for Ivar Swanson, Luke Appling. Minter Hayes and Ralph Kress, the Cids-’X have developed a punch that would make them formidable pennant contenders were it not for comparatively poor pitching. As it I is. they'll probably give Cleveland la hard tight for fourth position. Simmons displaced Johnny Hoilapp of Boston's lied Sox as leading batsman in the majors yesterday when he boosted his percentage to .374 This Is much better than the average of .3223 to which he sank last season. Simmons drove in fo'ir runs yesterday w ith a triple and two singles as Chicago trounced St. Louis 14 ;to 7. enabling the Chisox to displace Cleveland at third position iin the American league. Every i (White Sox batsman got at least two! i hits, including home runs by Carl 'Reynolds and Debs Ranns. Cleveland dropped to fourth i when repulsed S to 7 by Detroit. ' The Tigers pulled the game out of • I the tire with a two-run spurt in the! jninth. Gehringer made a homer 1 in the seventh. I.efty Grove, quitting his role as I | relief pitcher, started his first game ; s nee May 6 and turned in his ■ season's eighth victory as Phils-« delphia snapped out of its four- 1 game losing stre k and beat Washington. 7to 4 He allowed the Senators 11 hits, but was effective in! pinches, and also made a homer in the fourth. Fred Schulte made a . homer for Washington. They were the only games sched-1 Ailed in the American circuit Only one game was slated in the 1 National league, but rain caused I cancellation of that contest at the I end of the third frame with St. Louis leading Cincinnati, 2 to 1. It* wi I t»e played later. INTENSE HEAT OVER COUNTRY <CY>NTIN-VKD FROM CAGE ONE! belt, there was a rush to beaches ' and swimming pools. Country folks took dips in streams and ( rivers. The blistering heat in the southwest brought reports of four deaths and a number of prostra- ' ihms. 94 At Indianapolis 1 dia-'.ipolis, June 6- AURI— The temperature at Indianapolis at 1 o'clock this afternoon was only 1 degree under the all time heat rec. ni for June 6 when It reached 94. The highest record ever reported for the day was 95 in 1925. ILLINOIS VOTE FAVORS REPEAL • 'NTINCED FliOM PAGE ONK> to one The repeal victory, which was held in conjunction with a state judicial election, brought out the highest vote on record for election of Judges, it being estimated that approximately l.sdh.iW were cast. Ordinarily around a million votes are cast in state judicial elections Swept along with the huge off year vote was election of a large majority of Democratic candidates tor judicial offh.es. Democrats named five nen sapreme court justices giving them Bx of seven pUoas ou the ADAMS THEATRE • Last Time Tonight - • RASPUTIN and the EMPRESS* with Lionel. John. Ethel Barrymore. Diana Wy nyard. Added—F p the Frog Cartoon. 10-20 c *EO A THL’RS. — “THE VAMPIRE BAT- with Lionel AtaMM, Fay Wray. Melvyn Oougiac. Yon 11 shudder with delicious fear, youll gasp In terror-stricken awe ever the font blood - drinkers crimen tn “The Vaawirw Bat-“ 10-15 c FOMINC- THK M HITK SISTER” with Heiea Hayes t'iark Gabte. Le«U Stone. May Robeon.
w?a dTill Tv ' * ; T V 1 .. If I i I f 1 xfcA VN iV —5 V x Jr ) BAER w* C 1S rAsy ’w » l‘v To HIT AND \ ‘ the Slack BROWED (Qy BOMBER" SUAIAJ/NG y >. jMggCsvN FOR MAX BAER. ! Z.-'Rn A ■ SCHMELiMG IS KO N ‘ \ < IRON MAN- IF BAER THAT RiGHT HAND \ ' >- \> CLIPS h»m he may fflox.es best bet! 1/ R godown- V/ Y|
high court bench, elected 36 of 51 downstate circuit judges and placed in office by a tremendous majority a coalition slate of 20 candidates tor circuit Judge in Chicago and Cook county as v.ell electing two superior court judges and a probate judge in Chicago. Delegates elected in yesterday’s election will meet in Springfield ] July 10 to vote formally Illinois' repeal of prohibition. ADAMS COUNTY FAVORS REPEAL BY 275 VOTES I (CONTINVKD FROM PAGE ONE) ........................ I amendment to the federal constij tution. The election did not have any bearing on 'the Indiana alcoholic T'gulatory laws, passed by the recent session of the legislation. The 3.2 percent beer is held non-intoxi-j eating and beer could be sold in Indiana, despite unfavorable action on the repeal question in the state. o Jimmy Mattern Continues Flight Omsk. Siberia. June 6 —(VP) — Jimmy Mattern, American around 1 r.ve world flier, landed his plane ; here at 1:35 P, M. today. Mattern nude the 1.300 mile hop , from Moscow in 11 hours and 35 I minutes, faßsng short of the Post , and Gatty time for the same disI t slice by three hours ai d 30 miu:Ue<s. The hiss reduced his margin ■ of lead over the Post and Gatty record to one hour and 35 minutes.
THOUGHTS and THINGS THE business of living, when boiled down and all the froth skimmed off. is just a matter of thinking. Each of us is continually thinking ideas of our oWn and swapping them for the ideas of others. If there is a famine of outside ideas we shrivel up ourselves. Children with “nobody to play with” are unhappy and unmanageable. From thinking with our heads to doing with our hands is but a little step and then our thoughts become things. It is because men of America are so unfettered in iheir thinking and doing that this country is such a fine place to live in. It is also because these thoughts are freely radiated and spread broadcast, in the distribution of manufactured things and in the distribution of the facts about them (advertising), that this country is such a fine place to live in. The originator of an idea is not much better off than before he originated it till he gets some one else to absorb it and enjoy it and benefit by it. The man or woman surrounded by better thoughts and things but who pays not the slightest attention to them is not much better off than the one wih “nobodv to play with.” ’ wn The advertisements in the papers are thoughts—telling you about the things that other men and women have created for your happiness. Read the ads. They are the voices from hundreds of thousands of looms, shops, foundries, studios, laboratories, where millions of minds are turning pleasant thoughts into worth-while things for your comfort.
1 Hold Un Awarding County Contracts I The county commissioners indic- > • ated this afternoon that they would ■ ■ i hold up the awarding of the con- ( tract to install equipment in the <! woman's comfort station in the 1 basement of he court house. -; Three bids were submitted for the job, August Walters, Harold Sautter and A. J. Moser and Co. The bids ranged from $468 to $553.22. There was a difference in interpretating the specifications. > the commissioners stated. o — Decatur Youths Given High Grade ; Bloomington. Ind.. June 6. — (Special) — Janies Engeler and >' Richard Schug of Decatur are -i among the group of 372 Indiana i university students who were neithi ,er absent nor late for any military : classes during the school semester 'just closing. These students will | receive a grade of “A" for their military work, according to Col. O. l P. Robinson, commandant of the • university's R. O. T. C. unit. 1) Public Officials Meet At Statehouse ’ Indianapolis. June 6 — (VP) — > Mayors, county auditors, cornmist sioners and other public officials ; • will m et at the state house June i ■ 9 to discuss public work possibilii: tics under the Wagner relief bill. -1 o Get the Habit — Trade at Home
VOTE APPROVAL OF PEACE PACT French Cabinet Approves Four Power European Peace Pact Paris. June 6—(UP) The French cabinet approved today ( the text of tue proposed four power pact to guarantee the peace of Europe, ai d instructed ambassador DeJouvenel in Rome to initial the document. The Four Power pact proposed by Premier Benito Mussolini of Italy, establishes Gnftat Britain,
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■ France - b.trary g,,: lraiitors lH | armament eq llalUy I | revision of JB 8 the covenant of th, tions. ■'he cabinet ,l ( . j dp ,.L |t k bench .|<l, - a:il , n ’ 80m0t,,:. t,,,.. Georges , »“<«!.■ II Wi " of — ,1 Hold Sleeping de cllh | ■” | Bats tire awake h of the 24 hours •L.ily, ’
