Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 215, Decatur, Adams County, 12 September 1933 — Page 6
Page Six
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AUBURN PLAYS HERE SATURDAY Yellow .Jackets Meet Dave Williams & Co. Here Saturday Afternoon Tiny Horton's Yellow Jackets will tackle an old rival Saturday afternoon on the new high school athletic field, when Zeke Young brings his Auburn Red Devils to Decatur. Great rivalry has been manifest between Decatur and Auburn for a number of years, particularly since Young hats been coaching at the Anto City. Dave Williams, one of the outstanding high school athletes in the state, will again lead the Auburn team. Williams, a powerful fullback, is one of the toughest football players around to stop, and Young usually builds a strong team around Williams. Auburn played its first game of the season last Saturday, defeating Columbia City, 18 to 14. Auburn touchdowns were made by Williams. Kreider and Myers. Little could be told of the strength of the Yellow Jackets from their opening game last week, which they lost to Central | Catholic of Fort Wayne, 13. to 0. | Unseasonably hot weather made, good football impossible. Decatur's line, from tackle to i tackle, looked fairly good despite a lack of weight and apparently can hold its own against a line which does not outweigh the locals by too large a margin. Most of the gains made by C. C. w re on end runs or forward passes Fort Wayne gaining little yardage through the Decatur line. 23 New Business Courses Boston —(UP) — Keeping pace with today's rapidly changing world of business, Dean Everett W. Lord of Boston University's College of
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I Business (Administration has ani nouncvd the addition of 23 n* w courses to the curriculum. Covering I virtually every phase of modern business, the new courses stress adv rtlsing and mark ting. o Bodies Os Plane Victims Are Found Gary. Ind. Sept. 12 —(UP) —Bodies of the pilot and two passengers i of an autogyro which fall into Lake Michigan last week were washed ashore here late yesterday. Victims of the crash were Herbert (Spud) Manning, champion parachute juniper; Miss Majenta Gerard, 22, Chicago, and Charles Otto. Philadelphia the pilot. The trio took off from a South Bend airport the morning of Sept. 6. They header! out over Lake Michigan en route to Chicago. It is believed that strong head wind xhausted the fuel supply before Otto could turn ba.*k to land. Two Men Are Killed By Poisonous Gas Birmingham. Ala., Sept. 12 —(UP) Two men were killed and several others injured here today when poisonous gas from an undetermined source spread over a portion of the | Sloss-Sheffield steel company's downtown furnace. r Q— - u ii High School \outh Commits Suicide Plymouth, 4nd.. Sept. 12 —(UP) —| i Leaving a note addressed to his I sweetheart in South Bend Hugh] Silveus. 16. Burbon high school | I pupil, committed suicide today by , drinking poison. His body was found in his bed 1 1 room by his mother. He was said ' ] by friends to have been discouraged I because he had little money, and was unable to buy school books. The note hinted he may have been morose because of the girl, whose name was withheld and whom he visited Monday.
PLAY-OFFS IN FIVE LEAGUES Leading Minor League Clubs Onen Champion* v ship Series Today ' t N. w York. Sept. 12 'U.R) s Leading minor league clubs were ready today for playoffs on four fronts to determine pennant winners in the International and ■ Texas leagues, and in the American and Southern Association*. In the International league, winners of first and second plate ’ | berths in the northern and south- ( ern divisions were to open fivegame series today. Newark, southern leader, and Rochester, first In the northern group, were 1 to clash at Newark, while BaltiI j more and Buffalo, second in the '(south and north respectively, ' were to open at Baltimore. I I Winners of these two series i will meet later for the league I championship in a final series, and ■ the champion will clash with the American Association pennant winner later In the ‘‘Little World Series." Meanwhile Meninhis and New | Orleans, first and second half ; 1 winners of the Southern Association's halved season, were preparing for their play off, the winner to meet the champion of the Texas league in the Dixie series. The Texas league champion will be determined by a play-off between Son Antonio and Galveston. Association Columbus. 0., Sept. 12 —<lI.R) — . The first play-off series for the I American Association baseba’l j championship began here today. | with Minneapolis, the 1932 chain- ' pion, and Columbus, league-leader |at the end of the regular 1933 ’ season, battling for the pennant. — 0 May Restore Part Os Federal Pay Cut Washington. Sept. 12 — (UJB — President Roosevelt is taking steps looking for restoration of part of the 15 per cent pay cut given federal employes in the gov- ■ ernment economic program. William Green, head of the American Federation of said today as ho left the White House. o Deputy Sheriff Killed In Battle Los Angeles. Sept. 12 —(UP) — Deputy sheriff John Hedge was killed and a warehouse checker was wounded probably fatally’ today in ' a gun battle that apparently flared ■ when each thought the other was ' a bandit. Frank Chavez, shot six times be- . fore Hedge fell dead, was expected to die. .—o Hundred Thousand Sign Agreements Washington. Sent. 12 —(UP) — Th» agricultural adjustment administratior today reported thousands of farmers were signing agreements to reduce wheat and thbacco giroTHE CORT - Last Time Tonight - “I COVER THE WATERFRONT’ C’audeite ( olhert. i Ben Lyon. Ernest Torrence. ALSO—Andy Clyde. Mickey Mouse and Fox News. 10-25 c WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY “HELLO SISTER" James Dunn, Boots MaHary, Zasu Pitts, Minna Gombe!. 10-15 c - Sunday - “Gold Diggers of 1933.” ADAMS THEATRE - Last Time Tonight - “THE STRANGER’S RETURN” with Lionel Barrvmore, Miriam Hopkins, Franchot Tone. Stuart Erwin. Added - - Colortone Musical Revue with Ted Healv. 10-20 c WED. & THURS.—“DISGRACED” , with Helen Twelvetrees, Bruce Cabot. Added-Century of Progress, Organlogue and Traveltalk. —lO-15c. Coming — “THREE CORNERED MOON.” The screwiest comedy of the year!
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1933.
''' if * Po *UL*» f SS V’ JI o ' ON' •••—■ ' ‘ Helen Xv/J JACOBSCOAIQUEfIOrt OF j I ~ XA 7h£ GKEAr MOODY' I I Sr* v Y \ J / Queen Helen 1 \ . 4EMI / **- ' Sr HER SUCCESSOR. 'fT"' ' '■> I QUE&J HELEH T *« 2** z-N I .
duction. Advices from the field showed that more than 10x1,000 pledges had been signed for a 15 per cent reduction of rtext year's wheat acreage in nine states. About 1.200.000 signatures were expect -d by §ept. 25, the deadline for wheat allotment applications. North Dakota led with 85 to 95 per cent of its growers already pledg-d. STANDINGS National League W L Pct New York 83 51 .619 Chicago 77 61 .558 Pittsburgh - 76 61 .555 St. Louis 76 65 .539 Boston 72 64 .529 | Brooklyn 56 77 .421 1 Philadelphia 52 79 .397 j I Cincinnati 52 86 .377: American League W L Pct. 1 l Washington 91 46 .664 . I New York 80 54 .597 i Philadelphia 70 65 .519 Cleveland Z 2 69 .511 j Detroit 69 71 .493 > Chicago 61 77 .442 Boston 57 82 .4101 St. Louis 51 81 .370 — Yesterday's Results National League Brooklyn at Pittsburgh, rain. Philadelphia at Chicago, rain. New York, 3; Cincinnati, 1. Boston. 3; St. Louis. 0. I American League Chicago 3-0, Philadelphia 5-8 Detroit 5, New York 1 Cleveland 1, Washington 5 Only games scheduled. Melville Miller Dies At Lafayette 2 —(UP) I Melville W. Miller. 77. assistant sec- I retary of the interior under president Theodore Roosevelt di d yes- I terday from pneumonia. I He f 11 w’hile playing golf Day and contracted pneumonia a few days later. Golf was his hobby and on his 73rd birthday he play-d 73 holes. Miller was born in Lafayette. Survivors include three daughters. Mrs. I Ruth Bixler and Mrs. Joseph A. Andrew of Lafayette, and Mrs. Tho- I mas H. Beck. Wilston, Conn., wife | of the managing editor of Colliers magazine. o | Sandlot To Train Quarter Os Million Chicago, Ill.—(U.R) —A quarter of a million prospective big league baseball players will be in training on Chicago sandlots this summer John H. Witer, superintendent of the Chicago Boy’s Club, said recently. As a part of a definite program, a juvenile baseball army is being enlisted, composed mostly of underprivileged boys, who will organize into teams which will play a series lasting all summer. • —; —-o- : j .Hitler Knows Roads by Heart Berlin —(UP)—Who knows the German highways best? Adolf Hitler, says Dr. Todt, the director of the newly founded Federal Automobily Highway Company. Hitler covered in the past 14 years 1,300,000 kilometers in his motorcar, a dls tance equal to 33 times around the earth. —o -. Erfurt Bans Women Smoking j Erfurt, Germany—(UP)—The police chief here has decreed that all hotels, restaurants and cases must display a placard announcing: “Women are requested not to smoke.” Um the same decree the police chief asked all citizens for their help and declared that “A German woman doss not smoke In the streets and public rooms.”
Publisher Dies Os Heart Attack Chicago Sept. 12 —(UP) — William J. Parrett, publisher of the Commercial News at Danville, 411., died at the Union League Club here today. (An acute heart attack that began yesterday afternoon was blamed for the publisher's death. Parrett had come to Chicago Sunday and had attended a baseball game. Yesterday morning he attended a business conference and then returned to his room at the dub where he became ill. Mrs. Parrett was summoned from Danville today. Funeral services will be held Thursday afternoon. Q Herrian Dynasty Recognized Berlin —(UP) —The Hessian dynasty lias occupied another position in tb? Prussian administration, Prince Wolfgang having been appoint d sheriff of the county of Upper Taunus. It will be recalled that his brother Prince Phillip, was appointed prefect of police of Hes-sen-Nassau. o Dental Collection Good Bait Fr eport Tex.. —(UP) — When a bait bites the fish, that's news, i Dr. Joe Simmons, Dallas dentist, went after kingfish off his port and i used a collection of old molars, artificial gums, studded with hooks the whole moulded together, to make several catches. H MW I I I JUlll in S The three fluted towers of H the Federal building symH bolize the three branches ■I of our government: execuH five,legislative and judicial. B The Morrison Hotel has only IS one tower, but every floor B in it symbolizes hospitality. 8 Bright, Inviting Rooms IB Home of Terrace Garden S In the Heart of the Loop If Only $2.50 up with Bath 3 LEONARD HICKS. Mosavins IMrtctar I iisOMasMfe. ■ DRIVE UP!...We park your car. aft rates. No other charges.
I.H.S.A.A. POWER IS QUESTIONED Fathers of Suspended Athletes File Suit Against Association Indianapolis. Sept. 12. (U.R), Power of the Indiana High School Athletic Asaoclation to set up ami enforce arbitrary rules for prep athletes was challenged today in a suit on file in Marion county superior court. Plaintiffs In the case include Dr. Henry F. Nolting, father of Henry Nolting Jr., center on tho Short ridge high school football team: Ott Birr, father of James Birr, right end on the team, and George B. Gannon, father of Millard Gannon, a utility player last year. The three football players were among several Shortridge. Arsenal Tech. Southport. Emmerick Training and Cathedral high school athletes who were declared ineligible for high school athletics until Jan. 1, 1934. because they participated: in independent basketliall games after the close of the regular, gchool basketball season last spring. The I. H. S. A. A. rule alleged to have been violated says: ‘ All students who participate in basketball after the state final tourney or after the season has closed in their high school, on teams other than their own high school teams within the school, lose their eligibility in all athletics until Jan 1 of next year and also jeapordize the standing of their school in the I H S. A. A. ” The suit asks for immediate reinstatement of Birr. Gannon and; Nolting. It demands that a temp-1 orary restraining order against Arthur L. Trester, commissioner of I the 1. H S. A. A., and members of the board of control of the association. be granted immediately to prevent them from enforcing the disbarments. The complaint asks that upon final hearing of the case a permanent injunction against the enforcement of the rule be granted against the I. H. 8. A. A. Birr. Nolting and Gannon were said to have played .basketball in the gymnasium of the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church “solely for pleasure exercise and community interest and to keep in good physical condition, unaware that they were violating a rule of the I H. 8. A. A.” None was a regular player on the Shortridge basketball team. Trester declared that he did not
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make the rule but was responsible for its enforcement. —o — Germans Make Job Plana 1 Hamburg -(UP)—To make are i treat lit winter in the fight against I unemployment Impossible, a m sting of high government officials rei eently was c alled here They agreed | that the chief,means to multiply jobs for the unemployed are', the introduction of the 40 hour week; the avoidance of over time work; the elimination of double-earners; avoidance of dismissals, and replacement of young workers by married men. With these measures they hope to come through the winter safely. Madame Queen In Prisoner Modesto. Cal.. —(UP)—Madame Queen, a fox terrier, was booked at the county jail here as a regular prisoner. The dog. pet of Mrs Elizabeth Kvlnt, 67, and her daughter. Mrs. Vera Zukerman, 34. was found in the women's automobile when they were arrested on burglary charges. The dog refused to leave her mistress, and was permitted to remain with them. Couples Married For Life i Att boro, Mass. —(UP)—Soon after Judge Walter A. Briggs pointed out that of the 2<K) marital knots he had tied not one couple had been divorced, Stanley Banks and Mrs. Dorothy Gallant appeared at his’xgf fie- to be married. They explained they each had been divorced and wanted him to perform the ceremony because when he married people they stayed married. The, judge obliged. o Inhabitants Desert St. Helena Paris—<U.R>- Returning travelers : report that St. Helena, the island ’ where Napoleon died in exile, Is being deserted. Only eighty Eui ropean residents left. Life is so ! monotonous there that when the bi-monthly boats arrive, the women rush for the liners to spend hours with the hairdressers and talking with passengers. A silent-film Is operated on Saturday night in au effort to relieve the monotony. Scalding Springs Killed Boy Klamath Fails, Ore., — (UP) — Delmer Darnell, seven, fell in a ditch a foot deep with water. He ; was scalded to death before he could stand up. The water comes from a natural hot springs near the center of the city, which is used by many persons to heat their homes and by the local high school for athletes’ shower baths. o > Get the Habit — Trade at Home
jersey crab I farm UM Ocean City '"•'■i‘i” w . ~ .. "Mi <■»>>•! “ ... " v 11 , •», wh'JW ■ ■.,! „; d for mark* t K ””' 1 RalDiH H."l. . B| - A ...W into whi< h lug. oNu’.r . r.,1„ k “W l|,la > lh ‘ - ’, Jle ■ All tli.-s*. *-*|ii,:. a ..„ ■ bh:.- . to hidicaio the s 'aL‘.'-' ill.l : ... |. u \ 4 JI shelb d < tab- /• and when th y they are api,:,,., ■ stage. Thos*. « ~,„k , jnf W •'hedd.’rs” ar*. ! and when they , ii; , ()( shells they a' W for the next s or The newly eni. il- .| , r3b most as soft a- ).. ; , s prongs are all U) .B . and for a time the .tab dormant from s(n J , entailed in shedding. J The lAdams do n .n raise crß they explained It tak.> 1(l0 They simply go . : o|l B I the Tuckahoe Ri». r , bring B I their catch, am! f**..,| a,,,) .„, r , .(The Crustacea ar.- f.d ~n , e J I when bucketfuls of nnunowsj ~ dumped into the runways. ■ By next year th. Adams eipeß , have a graal of , rahs might have bad that many this jl J but a storm swept lu.oo# o f J I cCiarges out to sea. I e Triple-Yoked Eggs Founj i Aneaster, Ont — (U.R) -A Ma ■ I pullet which has produced thi II yolk eggs is owned by T. A. St (j art. Two such eggs recently v ; I found and the owner hopes 11 young producer will continue i , generous measure ikiubley i eggs are not uncommon, but triple variety is something to In about, Stewart believes. I Kitsing Beating Fatal > JUMILLA. Spain (U.R) — Ft • j cisco Perez Sanchez. 45. a wi i II er, believes that persons who t ' engaged to be married still do I ’ i have the right to kiss. Sancl i saw his 16-year-old daughter Ii • her fiance at a dance. He took I home and, according to relativ beat her. She died from the • juries. ■
