Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 214, Decatur, Adams County, 11 September 1933 — Page 6
Page Six
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GIANTS KEEP LONG MARGIN - New York Maintains Seven And Half Game Lead Over Chicago New York. Sept. 11. — (U.R) —As eavb succeeding day brings the New York Giants and Washington Senators closer to a world series basehall fans look forward to the feature of such a meeting a pitching duel between Carl Hubbell and Earl Whitehill. Os course, there would be plenty : other pitching tireworks in such a series, with the (iiants possessing, in addition to Hubbell, such niast-| ers as Parmelee, Schumacher and I Fitzsimmons, and the Senators' boasting of Stewart, Russell and Crowder, in addition to Whitehill. The big thrill, however, would; be in a Hubbell-Whitehill clash. | These two veterans stand out as the best southpaws in the majors' this season, both having reached their peak at about the same time. an?t both backed with excellent; support afield. Hubbell registered I 21 wins and 10 losses so far this, season, and Whitehill turned in 20i wins against seven defeats. Although Hubbell was not cred-' ited with yesterday’s victory, he saved the first game of the Giants'l doubledieader with Cincinnati, I which the New Yorkers won 6 toADAMS THEATRE Tonight and Tuesday 10-20 c “THE STRANGER’S RETURN” with Lionel Barrymore. Miriam Hopkins, Franchot Tone. Stuart Erwin. The picture that has the whole country talking! - Added - Colortone Musical Revue. Coming “Three Cornered Moon'*
- -— Buy Fence AT OUR LOW SELLING PRICES AND SAVE BECAUSE YOU ARE GETTING THE VERY HIGHEST QUALITY AT THE LOWEST (OST. ***'“*' * '* —L * fence . GOOD THRU _ &I’—- . " ANDTHRU Z7jßr\ . . ' In spite of the fact that Fence has made two advances in price within the last six weeks, we are still selling fence at pre-war prices. Our Zinc Coated Fence is drawn true to gauge and is heavily and uniformly coated with zinc and copper by a process that has been perfected after years of intensive study. The wire is then woven into various specifications of fences. Every joint of w hich is hinged together making if flexible and easily straightened should it ever be mashed or trampled to the ground. Remember, it is only because of our exceptionally large purchase that we are able to offer you this price on Field Fence. Our Sterling Fence will gauge full size and for this fact weighs more. The Schafer \nja Store W1 00 OUR *A*f Hardware and Home Furnishings Store Hours: 7:15 a.m. to 5 p.m.—Saturday, 7:15 a.m. to 10 p.m.
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1. and 2 to 1. In the seventh inning Freddie Fitzsimmons got Into ii hole bases loaded, nobody out and the top of the batt life order I coming up. Hubbell retired . the -side. In the nightcap, Lefty O' Doni's pinch lly in the 11th en [abled Mel Ott to come home with 'the winning run. giving Hal Schu-1 j mat lier a victory over Ray Kolp. ' This double victory enabled the I Giants to maintain their first-place | National league lead of seven and ' a halt games over the Chicago j [Cubs, who replaced Pittsburgh at second position. The Cubs downed the Phillies twice, taking the opener. 4 to 0. behind Bud Tinning's six-hit dinging and the second game. 4 to 2. when Lyn Nelson al- ' lowed only four hits. — o Local Tennis Team Is Defeated Sunday I The Decatur tennis team was de- ; seated by the Van Wert. Ohio, team I at Van Wert Sunday, four match s Jto three. Five singles and two i doubles matches. Tow nsend was I forced to forfeit his singles match I when he severely injured his right I foot. Other members of the local I team were Parrish, Stoneburner. Ham her and Strickler. — o Decatur A. C.’s Beat Tocsin Team Sunday The Decatur A. C.'s nos d out the Tocsin Independents at To sin Suni day afternoon. 6 to 5. Decatur was ' leading, 3 to 0, going into the eighth i inning by Tocsin tied the score. ■ i The A. C.'s came back with thr I in the ninth while Tocsin scored ■ twice in the last half of the final) ' inning. Insect Gave Houstonian First Hole-in-One Houston. Tex. — (U.R) — A yellow- ; jacket, or maybe it was a bumble- ! bee, caused Dick Franklin to score ! I his first hole-in-one. | First it bit Franklin on his ankle.! i Then it hovereu near his ball. I I “Drat those things!” saTd Franklin, swinging at it with his driver. He missed it. but struck his teed-; - up ball a mighty blow. I The ball rolled into the cup, 193 I I yards away. l Franklin's ace. scored on the • I Houston Country Club course, won 1 ! him a pair of shoes and a case of j ; beer.
PURDUE STARTS GRIND FRIDAY Boilermaker F o o t b a 11 Team Will Begin Practice September 15 — J Lafayette. Ind.. S pt. 11 (UP)— I Purdue's gridiron athletes, seventyi six strong, looking forward to an i unusually strenuous schedule and , looking back on a brilliant four i years record that has netted thirty i victories agaftist only three defeats I ami one time, are anxiously awaitI Ing Friday afternoon when the 801 - I erinakers, along with the rest of the Rig Ten hopefuls, will launch th ir I practice season. With Ohio Vnlvoi'.-.lry's 'riant killer’’ elevon, conqueror of the Navy last season, scheduled for the opener on October 7. and five Big Ten games along with tilts with Notre Dame and Carnegie Tech to follow on successiv. ■ Saturdays, Coach Noble Kiz r has made plans so that no time will bo lost in launching the initial drill Friday afternoon. Lockers for each of the prospective candidates have already been assigned ami Trainer lain Mann already has the practice uniforms ready for the squad to swing into its initial action. Inasmuch as classes at Purdue start Thursday morning, the Boilermak rs will not have the advantage of both morning and afternoon drills in the early part of the season which wili he enjoyed at most conference s hools. and coasequent- ! ly the coaching staff must utilize every minute of drill time in rapid conditioning. Purdue's prospect of maintaining the fast pace it has set in collegiate gridiron circles se m to hinge 'on the development of th forward I wall, which will have Capt. Dutch I Fehring and Ed Ungers, regular tackles from last season, as th j nucleus. While the coach s draft their tentative plans for rebuilding the line, I the possibilities for "a backfi id with a dozen threats” are promising, with a wealth of vet. ran ball I carrying talent available, including : such outstanding performers as Paul Pardomier. quarterback; Fr d Hecker, fullbatk; Duane Purvis, : halfback, and -Jim Carter, halfback. STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct. ! New York 82 51 617 Chicago 77 61 .558 Pittsburgh 76 61 .555 Ist. Louis 76 65 .543 Boston 71 64 * 526 Brooklyn 56 77 .421 Philadelphia 52 79 .397 Cincinnati 52 85 .380 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct. Washington .90 46 .633 New York 80 53 .602 Cleveland 72 68 .514 Philadelphia 68 65 .511 Detroit 68 71 .489 Chicago 61 75 .449 Boston 57 82 .410 ; St. Louis 51 87 .370 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Final Standing W. L Pct. Columbus 101 51 .664 Minneapolis 86 67 .562 Indianapolis . 82 72 .532 St. Paul 78 75 .510 Ixmisvtille . 70 82 .461 Toledo . ... 70 83 .458 Milwaukee . .. 67 87 .435 Kansas City 56 83 .376 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS National League New York, 6-2; Cincinnati, 1-1. Pittsburgh, 2-2; Brooklyn. 1-3. Philadelphia. 0-2: Chicago, 4-4. Boston. 0-5; St. Louis, 7-10. American League Detroit, 11; New Y’ork, 2-9. St. Louis, 3-4; Boston. 2-0. Cleveland, 3; Washington, 7. Only games scheduled. American Association Toledo. 3; Columbus, 6. Louisville, 3-5; Indianapoljs, 4-4. Mi waukee. 4; St. Paul, 3. Kansas City at Minneapolis, wet grounds. o Former Purdue Athlete Injured Tipton. Ind., Sept. 11. — (U.R) — George Spradling, Marion, former Purdue University basketball star, suffered the loss of his left arm yesterday in an automobile accident. His car was believed to have sideswiped a truck. Amputation of the arm was necessary because it was so badly mangled. He was resting it on the window ledge when the accident occurred at the I intersections of U. S. road 31 and state road 28. Two companions, Harl Ahl, Indianapolis, and. Miss Goldie Wines, Kokomo, were slightly cut and bruised. Spradling starred at Frankfort high school as an athlete before I entering Purdue.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 11, 1933.
I 1 ' /TH- - ‘LLANO kid" -frA T FROM TEXAS. WHOSE 3 ’X* // SENSATIONAL Play r3* ■ VL 11 // THIS YEAR MAY 1 ■ // EARN HIM A V7 . •« 'flSk 10-GOAL •A/A * POLO P RATING/ Wa7 / hHK v J/ ' swth is vwi pla/ing - va,./ ? jQR.*».I vagsjCTTU — — in the s 9- 11 --•F* 1 -' "YtRuS *,r. NATIONAL £ j?' polo OP£ N JwlWv Ar W£sr —< BURyy, I W « MM Kat »«*■ -" < * r * l -
Englishman Wins National Tourney New York. Sept. 11 —(UP) —The United States passed out of the I World tennis picture over the week- . nd. After a disastrous European ; season. American players were shut I out of their own National Cham- 1 pionship, by Frederick J. Perry of] England, who blii>| d Davis Cup hopes at Paris. To the Americans, it mattered little who won yesterday’s final at the Forest Hills west side club. It j was an all-foreign final for the second time in the championships’ 52-j y ar history, between Perry and Jack Crawford of Australia. Crawford was favored because of tri- ' umphs in the French Wimbledon and Australian championships. ' : When Perry defeat d Crawford in five sets, 6-3. 11-13. 4-6. 6-0. 6-1, ; it was a great triumph for British ; t unis enthusiasts, following Britain's Davis Cup victory this year. ,t was the first time an Englishman won the United States till- since! 1903 when Hugh L. Doug? : iy lift-i ed the cup. MAKE PROGRESS ON COAL CODE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) after w eks of n gotiation had failed to bring agreement, said: “Statements offering objections amendments etc., ware invit.d. tn some of that have been received then- is a good d al of language of a professional legal nature and a few rather extreme' statem nts not unusual in highly adv rsary briefs. "In the meantime, however, conferences have be. 11 carried forward on the basis of the substance of these sugg stions with most of the I parties in inter st in the code, and negotiations between the United Mine work rs and the Appalachian ! operators have been practically uninterrupted. From the cooperative, eoncilliatory and r asonable attitude now governing both sets of negotiations, 1 feel justified in saying that my confidence in our ability to get a proper agreed and a satisfactory settlement has not been shaken." John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, likewise said progress was being made toward an agT -enrent. Senator Wagner in his appeal for industrial peace urged employers and workers to submit their disputes to the n w National labor board which he h ads. The board was establish a by President Roosevelt in an effort to prevent labor strit. during the recovery drive. The geystone of the program is good will and united effort and the desire to epen and k ep open as many factories as possible,” Wagner said. MORE DEATHS IN ST. LOUIS ET ’ PROM PAGR 'T*E) person was reported to be suffering from effects of the strange I malady. The latest victim of the disease, Tom T. D. Frazer, 47. a war r veteran, was reported seriously ill at his home here. He said that ; physicians at the veterans hos- . pital in Indianapolis two weeks ago told him that his ailment was 5 the result, of encephalitis which f ho contracted and apparently ret covered from 10 years ago. Frazg er is troubled by a constant cough a and loss of weight. 8 The home of Mr. and Mrs. M. 1 C. Snyder, at f'rystal Lake, near here, has been quarantined bei- cause a son, Howard. 22. is suf1, sering from sleeping sickness. :i The quarantine was ordered by local authorities and sanctioned t by state officials after Dale Kelly, e Mentone school principal, refused to permit the other Snyder chil-
I dren to attend classes. Howard, ' however, has regained consciousi ness and is expected to recover. The first fatality from the disease here came two weeks ago when Mrs. Edward Troup, 60, died I in a hospital. Woman. Daughter Hacked To Death Chicago Sept. 11 —(IIP) — The bodies of a bride of a few weeks ' and her nine y ar old daughter, I brutally hacked to death, were ' found in their home here today. The victims were Mrs Lillian Kowalyshyn. 40. and her daughter, Anina Nicholas. Th ir bodies were ' severed in several places and were ■ cruelly mangled. Police said Peter Wowaiyshyn, 42, husband and step-father of the victims, was in a nearby room. Poi lice said h apparently had been in- ) toxicated. They believed he attacked his wif and step-daughter in a ■ fit of jealousy. Fort Wayne Man Is Robbed Os $2,000 ! Fort Wayne. Sept 11 (UP) —Bur- ' glare stole 82,'OtM) in currency from i the horn -of Louis Kelpin here last night, be r ported to police today. . The money was hidden in a metal box in an upstairs room. Keipin said the burglars overlooked sev ral hundred dollars in currency hidden in a draw r. Entrance to the house was gained through a basement window. o Get the Habit — Trade at Home
m—ir ,■, mmawuMi jwwbwhu— i i micmuwn i mi 1 1. | Tired Muscles! AFTER A HARD DAY S WORK DO YOU FEEL TIRED AND WORN i&sr „ wow out? !*&- i - vou do. -i ust ru b k v th° se paining arms and 4 Rgs w ’ t * l KLINIC rubbing alcohol. We are offering a 16 N \ oz - bottle for only 25c. k The Quality of this Rubbing Alcohol and the Price make more expensive lotions seem extravagant. Why pay more when you can secure the same results by using this efficient Rubbing Alcohol. KLINIC RUBBING ALCOHOL 16 oz. Bottle 6 oz. Bottle 25c I lOc — ' Prove to yourself, by us- WR ▲ ing this Regal product, 1 that it pays to take advantage of our bargains. w,eoou ’ MOT ILw—— BWMasMMwawa ; The Schafer Store '• HARDWARE and HOME FURNISHINGS 1 .
CHILDHOODTOYS TAKE NEW TREND New York (U RL The NRA drive ' has boosted American ehihlr. it's enj thusiasms for toys that reproduce grownup busineaa activity. To meet this new industrial trend in play, a Tom Thumb business equipment show was staged at thej ■ Toy Association rm ently. present- ' ing workable reproductions of neat )y every adult trade from store keeping and carpentry to building I construction and cement mixing. Grocery stores for the playroom are offered in c ardboard with r<>al | I counters and a series of shelves where miniature canned goods are stored. Bargain signs, cash registers and tiny telephones that really ! work add to the realistic ensemble. Office equipment, too, has boom'ed in childhood popularity since the NRA drive. Rolltop desks and flattop executive desks with electric lamps. French telephones and tiny I typewriters are featured. Even ABC blocks come in wag | l ons. or autos, modeled after grown!up builder's equipment. Children | can build filling stations to service : toy autos and boats, skyscrapers and bridges. _o IGNITED DUST CAUSES BLAST THIS MORNING ' (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I sion. were casualties. That report lessemdl the anxiety ! of the scores of women, children and miners off-duty who had gath- . ered at the first word of the explosion. fearful for the safety of relatives and friends. POLISH BALLOON FOUND SUNDAY (CONTINUED FROM PAGR ONE) ist. Ward T. Van Orman, who was accompanied by Frank Trotter It was believed his log took a course somewhat similar to that of the Poles. He was reported sighted, near Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., a week ago today. • Officials believed Van Orman and Trot’er came down in a 1 sparsely settled region of Canada and had not yet iteen able to communicate with civilization. It was reported from Washington that the dirigible Macon would ' take off from Lakehurst today to aid the search. Threw Food Away Quebec, Sept. 11 (U.R) —Two i Polish balloonists who threw away I their food supplies over a desolate forest region arrived todav with what they believe f« a new i record of 1.050 miles in the Gordon Bennett cup races. They were safe after having been lost for five days in the forest, where they endured hunger i and hardships before reaching the
said they were ready to compete in the IM4 races It th® Polish government ordered It, The balloonists, Capt. Hynek j and Lieut. Burbynskl came here I with Poland's acting consul general. who went to Riviere A Pierre to them. The balloniet* carried a small bag and suede-lined coats, all that was left for them to travel with for five days in dense forests. Will Enforce State Barber License Law Indianapolis. Sept. 11—(Special) Sfrict enforcement of the barber ; law will be started on October 1.1 following the end ot the 30-day ex-, tension granted by tlw stale board • of Itarb. r examiners. Arthur C. Wil | son. president of the board, stated ' today. All barbers and haircutters; must have a state license to continue in business after that date. The Itoard granted a 30-day extension of time to allow all barbers to comply with the law, delaying enforcement from September 1 to October 1, but h re will be no further extension of time. —„a o Wheat Production Reported Lower Washington. Sept. 11.—(U.R) — The j agriculture department today esti- i mated total 1933 wheat production 1 at 506,557.000 bushels, compared to | 725.000.000 bushels last year and I an average annual production belt ween 1926 and 1930 inclusive, of 861,000,000 bushels. . , Two Youths Killed By Passenger Train Hammond. Ind.. Sept. 11—<U.R) - Authorities today arrested Nick Yrba, 22. Hammond, in their in vestiigation of a freak accident in which two younhs were killed by an Erie passenger train last night. Two automobiles collided on an Erie crossing. While four victims attempted to free themselves from
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