Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 230, Decatur, Adams County, 29 September 1933 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

SPoRTSS

SERIES MISSES MASTER MINDS Playing Managers of Both Teams Run (James From Playing Field Now fork. Sept. 29. (U.R) The hooey about master minding in world series warfare will be pleasantly missed this year and it s because the managers of the Senators and the Giants lead by actions in the field, and not by programs waved from dugouts. Memphis Hill Terry of the Giants and Joe Cronin of the Senators are p'aying managers in every sense. Terry Is not only a topflight hitter. but a lighting leader. Cronin, who directs from the shortstop • position, falls a few notches short of the .MS hitting mark of his rival, but gives no quarter as a fiery leader This Is the first series since 1906 i that each of the managers is a player. Back 28 years ago Frank Chance and Fielder Jones led their Cubs and White Sox into the allChicago world series. Storybook sportsmen, both of them Hat h succeeded in piloting his club into its league champion- ' ship during his first full year as manager. They are the youngest I world serie* pilots on record, and ■ their club records are all the more i remarkable wh'“n it is recalled that 1 managerial duties in no way marred their play. Baseball men generally regard Cronin as the finer player of the two. rating him tops at his position In either league. Among those he contacts away from the ball park he's the hail fellow. we'Lmet, who

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' has the happy faculty of never f rgetting a name ot a face. He's I baseball's most eligible bachelor, ' 26, well fixed financial y uni) handI some. Basehull fam; like Cronin fur his ' tendency to try w hatever seems ■ best ut the moment, no matter whether there's precedent for it or I not. Terry, who may not be the one i best first baseman today, certainly ' ranks with the first three in the • game, Unlike Cr .nin lie has no happy faculty for making quick friendships. Possibly the "best guy In the world'' at heart. Terry is not always diplomatic. During the early part of the season Terry was on the high road to downright i unpopularity among baseball writers. but somebody "got to him. and Terry saw the light. He gets along okeh. now If there really is something to dub managing, and to baseball men | its heresy to think otherwise, then Terry's 1933 accomp ishtnents to date must overshadow those of Joe . Cronin. o_ Berlenbach Beaten Atlanta. Sept. 29.— (U.R) — Paul Berlenbach. Astoria. N. Y.. former lightheavyweight champion was decisively beaten in a la-round match here last night with 19-year-old Carl Knowles. Rome. Ga. Berlenbach. now 32. showed all the gamness of old, but could not stand the pace set by the young southerner, in the tenth the ref- | eree called a halt to the slaughter, but Berlenbach. half blinded, protested and was allowed to finish. I Opening of Chick’s Roadside Inn, U. S. road 27, 1 mile south of Decatur. Saturday eve., 6 o'clock. Chicken dinner. 25c. Dancing.

'TERRY AND MEN | ARE CONFIDENT Giant*’ Confidence !n---creases A f t e r Seeing Yanks Beat Senators X w York. Si pl 29 I UP) Bill Teirv' Xew York Giants looked I forw.l d lo the World Serie;: today with la leased vonfldene 1 after w.Ucltktg th. Wellington Senators how to the Xew York Yankees, 11 I Io 9 y sterday. Amei i< an la agua live ball reflect-1 Ing the opinion of Giant bat <men ■ manager Terry said, "It’s no won- j der a lot of tho-e Senators are I hittCg What mean - It travels.” The Yanks hammered two of Washington's world series pitchers, j Walter Stewart and Alvin Crowder i for 14 hits, including home runs I by Sam Byrd and Babe Ruth. While ; Russell Van At;a and Wiley Moore, yielded 15 safeties to the Senators | hut bore down with men on bases. I n the only other American Lea gue contist. Boston's Red Sox | shaded the Philadelphia Athletics. : 4 to 3. The Sox bun lied some of I their 12 hits for four runs during | the s.xth and seventh. Jimmy Foxx i ■ of the A s made two doubles in four I tries bringing his total of hits fori I the s.ason to 2tki. In the National League, the. Bos- | ton Braves advanced to within one | game of the fourth place St. Louis i Cardinals by taking the first game of a double-header. 5 to 4. when i I Brandt and Frankhouse held the Dodgers to four hits. The nightcap I I was called at the end of the 10th ; because of darkness with the i count deadlocked 2-2. They were the only Xational lea- I gue games scheduled. Columbus Takes Lead In Series i Columbus. ().. Sept 29 (U.PJ —| The Columbus Red Birds took a. i two to one lead in the junior world i | series by defeating the Buffalo Bis ; ons. 8 to 5. here last night. The fourth game of the series! was to be played tonight, with j ' Clarence Heise of Columbus and ’ j Charley Perkins of Huffto the prob-, I able pitchers. After tonight's game | i the teams will go to Buffalo to | complete the series. | Paul Dean. 20-year-old Columbus 1 speed ball slinger, faced Buffalo for . the second time last night and took • his second victory from the Inter- | national champions; Dean held Buffalo t-.- seven hits and he'd them scoreless except in the first and ; ninth innings. STANDINGS — AMERICAN LEAGUE » W. L. Pct. Washington 97 52 .651 Xew York 90 57 .612 1 Philadelphia 78 70 .527 I Cleveland 75 74 .503 | Detroit 73 79 ,4M> Chicago 65 83 .439• 11.-t.m til 8-> .418 j St. Louis 55 94 .369 NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct. > Xew Yrk 90 CO .600 Pittsburgh 85 67 .5591 Chicago 84 68 .5531 St. Louis 82 69 .543; Boston 81 70 .536' Brook yn .64 86 .427 j Philadelphia 59 91 .393 Cincinnati 58 92 .387 — YESTERDAY'S RESULTS American League Xew York. 11; Washington, 9. Boston. 4; Philadelphia, 3 Only games scheduled. National League Boston, 5-2; Brooklyn,- 4-2 (sec--1 ond game. tie. called end of tenth ' inning, darkness >. Only games scheduled. Birdie Won For Golfer Upon Third Attempt Pittsburgh.—(U.PJ -For two successive Sundays. Bob Ottke, Pittsburgh Field Club, made birdie two's on the 16th hole of the course Each time a fellow golfer won the ho'e by an ace shot. The third Sunday. Ottke played I on a Louisville course, where he ; again made a birdie on a shy ; , par-three hole His opponent tniss- : ed making a hole-in-one by inches j and they halved the hole. o Salaries Paid Back Texas Holland. Mass., —(UP) —Tax Col- | lector Theodore E. Blodgett, of Holland, has discovered a new and effective means of dealing with delinquent taxpayers. He seized the wages of 28 town officials (there are only 150 inhabitants of Holland) . I arid applied them on back taxes. One of those whose wages were seized was Blodgett’s father, (Arthur Blodgett. ■ o—— 148,000 Fans Saw Series Boston —(UP)—The recent sixgame series between the Boston Braves and New York Giants drew a total of 148,000 fans, an average of 38,000 for each of the four days I the teams played.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1933.

Leaves Uncle Sam for II Duce G j hL —r w- 1 m•* x < . xxy z 'v '< ' y>. ’'A k iI I ■ .2 a / • W i .L. 1 .I 7 i to. jHBE; □ - Georgy- Nedsom P/xge Family « E3 His application for Italian citizenship already in the hands of Premier Benito Mussolini, George Nelson Page, scion of one of Amerca’s oldest I families and descendant of one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, has renounced his American citizenship and will shortly pave j i Uncle Sam's bed and board forever. Page's action, he says, is the result of his admiration for Fascism, as practiced by Mussolini, which he thinke is the ideal State and far in advance of the “Capitalistic Futility” which ' ] evails in America. Page’s wife, the former Marjorie Grace Stricker, of Ch,, ’go and their infant son, George Blunt Page, will accompany him to Italy and share his new life tn the cradle of Fascism.

Seven Birdies On NineHole Course End Dispute Dallas. Tex (U.R) When Peyton Slade, amate-ur Dallas golfer, beat I Gus Moreland. Trans Mississippi champion, and Dennis Davender, I former Tevas champion, in a municipal tournament, they said he was just "hot.” The champions admitted Slade I was still "hot” when he shot seven , birdies on a nine-hole round in which he had challenged Mooreland I and Lavender, just to show them , his previous playing was not acci-, dental. 0 Pitcher. With Paralyzed Arm, Won 13 Games Pawtucket. R. I.—(U.R) Normand Champagne. 13, right-handed pitch-. er. whose left arm is paralyzed, has 'wou 13 successive gamea for the Pawtucket Boys' Clubs. Despite his crippled arm. he is one of the best hitters on the team, having a record of 24 hits in 53 times at bat, for an average of .453.

Decatur A. C.’s To g Practice Saturday I Th? D - atur A. C.’s will hold a I I football practice at the high school I i field at 1:15 o'clock Saturday afternoon. in preparation for the opening game of the season with | St. Mary's Ohio, scheduled for Sunday at the local field. Blame Matt Leach In Failure To Get Man Indianapolis, Sept. 29 — U.R) —! I Gov. Paul V. McNutt this after- ! noon was expected to hear cherI ges that Capt. Ma’t Leach of the state police is to blame for failure of Marion county authorities to secure custody of John Dillinger at Dayton. Ohio. A conference with the governor was arranged by Chief Michael Morrisey of the Indianapolis police department and Prosecutor . Herbert E. Wilson *of Marion county. Although they had extradition papers signed by both the Ohio] and Indiana governors. Indianap-1 olis police failed to obtain custody I of Dillinger at Dayton yesterday instead he was turned over toi ■ Lima, Ohio, police on another • charge. . —o EXPECT TEST BETWEEN FORD AND NRA HEADS X - , .. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE! ' Ford was "out for the day.” Wag--5 ner said he would try again tomor-i row to get in touch directly with Ford. Strikers March Pittsburgh. Sept. 29 —<U.R> —Two • thousand striking coal miners ■ swung into Clairton, Pa., on foot • at dawn today to picket the Car- • negt? Steel company by-products 5 plant, a United States Steel comt pany subsidiary. Almost 100 county detectives, - deputy sheriffs, county police and r Clairton police were rushed to the outskirts of the steel town. The miners marched past them with-i out being halted. A similar march earlier this week t failed because only 450 of the exr pected 5,000 strikers appeared. ? Both marchers were due to reports s that the Clairton by-products, normally using coal from the H. C. ,g

I Frick Cokek company for coking 1 purposes, was importing coal from I I the southern fields, thereby weak-1 ■ < ning the effect of the Pennsyl- j ! vania soft coal strike. The march began from Walters- 1 I burg, near Uniontown, only a few ' hours after representatives of the United Mine Workers of America and the Coal Control Association l of western Pennsylvania signed wage agreements to become effee-; , five Monday, simultaneously with I the soft coal code.

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COACH HORTON SHIFTS LINEUP — | ( Changes Announced l or Yellow Jacket-Garrett Game Tomorrow In an effort to break into the winning column for the tirM this I season. Coach Tiny Horton con i t» mi laics some ( hunges in the Yel I low Jacket starting lineup for the Garrett game here Saturday after noon. Tha game is scheduled to ntart ■ at 2-30 o'clock. Officials for the game will be Gilbert, Jasper and Craney. a l of Fort Wayne. As an added feature tomorrow, a two-mile “cross country” run will' , l„. staged between the halves of i I the football game. Between 15 and j 20 freshmen and sophomores., ' members of Herb Curtis' physical 'training classes not engaged in | football, will compete in the run i i The race wi I all be run inside the I foothall field and will start immed I lately at th- ompletion of the first I half. The probable starting litteui* tor I both teams are as follows: Decatur Garrett Behi't* M xlb ' - Sanders RT A. Jacks tn j Conrad KG Houser ' Hurst C 111 " Scheintann LG Combs ■ Barker LT Tranter Dickerson LE E. Johnson ’ Strickler QB M,,ais Eady RH Doster BD'lk- LH Blake ' Butler FB .T Johnson .. . o— — o OFFICIALS AND CONVICTSWILL BE QUESTIONED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) prison officials and it was pointed out the men might have had accomplices who smuggled in the guns which aided their escape. Five Seen Des Moines, la., Sept. 29. —(U.R) — The trail ot five of the fugitive In ; diana prison inmates who escaped

early this week by kidnaping a| sheriff led across southern lowa | early today, it was believed Five roughly dressed, bearded; strangers stopped at FwiNleld, la., I at 3 a m today for coffee. Chief j Park Findley of the lowa bureau ‘ of investigation * as Informed. The men were driving a t’hrys- ; lor coupe bearing Nebraska license , plates They ‘left Fairfield east , ward. Nebraska officers late yesterday notified lowa authorities that six | m’on answering descriptions of the' Indiana convicts had commander-1 ed a family car near Lincoln. Neb , I and later abandoned it in a corn-1 field. ■ O' > Kidnap Case Jury Still Disagreed Edwardsvill,, ill., Sept. 29 (U R) A Madison county circuit court ! jury today sought to untangle a ’ complicated maze of evidence in 1 an effort to rea--h a verdict in the | case of five men and a woman

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| Liter. ag, d A1t,,,, m | dent. |3 After teivivlliß th( , ■ yusterdav, the jl rv '** isl | seven night b0f,„.,. th, v *''"l fl Discussions •he jurors a, ... "T? *4 tdday. ”* Dame Stindax s I Annual | , Reelin-Notice I The Mutual Fir,, ■ puny of Fren, h T.,»- Ilshi County. Indian;,. wlu annual busin, ss nieeting 9 j usual place „f meetinj, ,"I . election |„„ W ?■ , township. Adams , (WM , /?■ ' on Saturday, o, 0h,.,'! ~<l ' 10 o'clock a. m. | please take notice, W J. C. A tiqrsburger|