Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 238, Decatur, Adams County, 9 October 1933 — Page 6

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DECATUR LOSES TO FORT WAYNE CENTRAL. 32-12 Yellow Jackets Lose To Tigers Saturday; Play Portland Next After battling valiantlv for three periods, the Decatur Yellow Jackets bowed to superior man power in the fourth quarter Saturday', losing to the Central Tigers at Fort Wayne. 32 to 12. Three of Central’s touchdowns were scored in the final quarter. Fort Wayne held a scant 7-6 margin at the half, adding one touchdown in the third period. Central scored in the first few minutes of the game. Decatur fumbled a punt, Central recovering on the Yellow Jackets’ 20-yard Tine. Stubbs carried the ball over for the touchdown and also added the extra point on a line plunge. Late in the second quarter Decatur took the hall in midfield On the second play. Strickler dropped back, tossed a long 40yard pass to Red Schultz, the Decatur end romping across the goal for a touchdown. An attempted kick for the extra point was blocked. Central scored again in the third period, after a power drive carried the ball down the field. Stubbs again going over the touchdown. Grimme place-kicked for the extra point. Hawkins tallied Central’s first fourth-period touchdown on a 30yard end run. Warfield blocked a Decatur punt for a touchdown and Stubbs then broke loose for i the longest run of the game. 00 yards, for the final Central touchdown. The Yellow Jackets opened up another passing attack in the final minutes of the game. Strickler tossing one to Ehinger for the touchdown. Try for the point failed. Decatur plays the Portland Panthers at Portland in their first night game of the season, Friday nieht. October 13. Lineup and summary: Central Decatur Rittenhouse .... LE Dickerson F01tz..... LT Barker McDonald LG Myers Hart . C Hurst Juillard RG Conrad Smith RT ... Saunders Warfield RE Schultz Winegard Q Strickler

Ashbaucher’s MAJESTIC FURNACES ASBESTOS SHINGLE ROOFING SPOUTING LIGHTNING RODS Phone 765 or 739

Closing Out OUR STOCK OF Shubbery Evergreens & Fruit Trees A WONDERFUL TIME TO SET OUT. We have a Fine, Big Stock of Fruit Trees and Shrubs, which we will sell at house wrecking prices. Closing out our complete stock as we are going out of the Shrub and Tree business. The Schaferj Store Hardware and Home Furnishings do oua

lairlmer LH Blythe Kerns RH Eady Stubbs FB Butler Score by periods: Central 7 0 7 IS 32 Decatur 0 6 0 6 12 , Touchdowns: Central —Stubbs 3. I Hawkins, Warfield. Points after touchdown — Stubbs (plunge), i ' Grimme (placekick). Decatur — Schultz. Ehinger. ( Bubal ituttom <'• in ral Reed for Rittenhouse, Sauer for Hart, j Stanton for Stubbs, Rhoades for Winegard, Stubbs for Stanton, j Grimme for Rittenhouse. Stubbs , for Hawkins. Winegard for Rhoads Millikan for Stubbs, Blessing for ; Foltz. Hughes for Smith. Sitko for j McDonald. Decatur—Ehinger for j Blythe. Scheiman for Myers. Myers < for Scheiman. Kolter for Barker. I Freidt for Myers Elzey for Eh- , inger, Thieme for Barker. Referee. Jolly. Umpire. Bills. Head linesman. Ferris. o ‘ Facts Os The Game • ♦ First Downs ! Decatur 0 5 3 5—13 Central 5 15 3 14 Completed Passes Decatur 034 s—l2| i Central 0 0 0 0— 0 Incompleted Passes Decatur 0 5 1 6 —12 ■ ' Central 0 0 0 2 — 2 : Yardage Decatur, 285 yards; Central 380. Gains made on Decatur passes, j 20, 50. 10, 22, 15, 20. 5. 12, 8. 5. 8. I ' 10 yards. Total yards gained on i passes—lßs yards. Penalties Decatur 001 2— 3,■ Central 0 3 11 —5 • | O--4 H COLLEGE FOOTBALL Kansas, 0; Notre Dame, 0. Indiana. 6; Minnesota, 6. Purdue, 13; Ohio U.. 6. I Wisconsin, 19; Marquette. 0. Ohio State, 75; Virginia. 0. < Chicago. 32; Cornell College. 0. Illinois. 21; Washington U.. 6. ] lowa, 38; Bradley Tech. 9. Del’auw. 9; Ball State. 0. Michigan, 20; Michigan State, 6.1 Yale. 14; Maine. 7. | Harvard. 33; Bates, 0. Miami, 14; Hanover. 0. California, 14; St. Marys, 13. Stanford. 7; Santa Clara. 0. Earlham. 8; Haverford, 0. Wabash. 7: Franklin, 6. Georgia. 26; Tulane. 13. o CODE HEARINGS Oct. 9—Construction industry. 9 —Furniture manufacturing. . 9 —Construction machinery distributing. 9 —Cast-iron pressure pipe. 9—Cotton textiles (proposed modification). 9—Garter, suspender, belt. 10 —Envelop industry. 10—Medium and low priced jewelry manufacturing. 10 — Ladder manufacturing. 11 — Packing machinery. 11 —Button manufacturing. 11 —Metal window. 11 — Canning and packing machinery. 12— Paper-making machine builders. 12 —Endgrain strip-wood block. 12 —Jewelry-watch manufacturing.

DECATUR A. C.’S BEAT PORTLAND Long Pass Brings Victory To Locais Sunday, 6 To 0 Scoring a touchdown late in the third quarter, the Decatur A. C.'s pounded out a 6-0 victory over the Portland A. C 'a in the second game lof the season on the local Held Sunday afternoon. A long forward pass from Engle Ito Schnepp. who caught the ball ; across the goal line, accounted for j the Decatur touchdown. Decatur had taken the ball in midfield afi ter a series of punts. Engle passed to Schnepp and the pass was ruled i complete on interference at the | Portland 25-yard line. A line play land two attempted passes gained only two yards but Engle dropped ' back and tossed a long oue to I Schnepp who received in the end , zone. Decatur clearly outplayed the visitors, netting five first downs to Portland's one. The locals net gain on line plays was 110 yards while Portland bad a net gain of I only two yards. Decatur completed three out of seven passes while I Portland failed to make a forward j pass during the entire game. The game was largely a punting I duel, with Bell and Engle being i slightly worsted in this phase of ithe game by Baggs of Portland. It i was P.aggs' consistent punting that I kept Decatur from scoring. Lineup and summary: Decatur - Portland Schnepp LE Puckett Kiess LT Fry ' Hurst LG Clutter i Rex C Creighton Griffith RG Crowin I Dyer RT Hamlin Stoneburner RE Beard j Bell .... QB - Baggs I Gage LH Bray I Heller! RH O. Rhodes ' Brown FB McGriff Substitutions: Decatur. Gerber. Annebelle, Engle. Shoaff Portland. Engly. Hilty, Cummins, Kihendall, Gray and P. Rhodes. Officials: Horton and Beal, DeIcatur; Burdge. Portland. Score by quarters: Decatur ... 0 0 6 o—60 —6 Portland 0 0 0 11 —0 —o Softball League To Close Friday The Adame county high school softball league schedule will be completed next Friday afternoon. ' with Monroe playing at Monmouth and Kirkland at Pleasant Mills. Monmouth is leading the league at the present tli»e. Last week. Monmouth defeated Pleasant Mills. 8 to 6. and Monroe I downed Kirkland. 12 to 6. —o Pro Football Chicago Bears 10, Brooklyn 0. Green Bay Packers 17; Portsmouth 0. Boston 21. New York 20. Chicago Cards 3. Cincinnati 0. o Choice Hogs Hit New High Levels Chicago. Oct. B—(UP8 —(UP) —The highest price in more than a year was paid for choice hogs here today. A top of $5.55 was recorded as prices responded to the incluenee of cooler weather. Os the 25.000 receipts 12.000 went direct to packers leaving a shortage on the open market and contributing to the highest top since July 1932.

As Mollisons Poised Iraq Hop ■ % i • • ■" ' ■■ - ’ " >,I ■ > " *■ t i ,/* Seafarer, 11, the new plane of Captain and Mrs James A. Mollison, British flying couple, is shown at Toronto, Can., just before it left for I Wasaga Beach, the hopping-off spot for their new long-distance flight to Bagdad. Iraq. The Mollisons, shown below, said they hoped to beat the 6.653 mile non-stop record held by the French fliers Codos and Rossi,

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. OCTOBER 9. 1933.

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NEW YORK WINS ! WORLD SERIES — Pitching. Defense And Courage Winning Factors For Giants New York, Oct. 9.— (U.PJ —The New York Giants, baseball's ugly ducklings, consigned to nowhere in the National league pennant race, j were world champions today and i everybody knows why. In winning four out of five from! Washington, the Giants came I through with that unbeatable com-1 bination of great pitching, airtight defense and flaming will to win. The three are so closely bound together that it is difficult to say : which item was most responsible, j History, however, probably will give pitching the nod. And that will be' all right, for the Giants ■ never would have won had not the mighty Carl Hubbell and his mates shackled the Senator" batsmen. i For that matter ,ne pitching of Earl Whitehill in the one game ; won by ihe Senators may be sub-, mitted in evidence. His five-hit , masterpiece in the third ser-, ies meeting only emphasizers how I little progress a club can make without dependable mound work. The Giant infield, even with the ; truck-kneed Travis Jackson, unable to cover as much ground as a i I thirdbaseman should, played magI nificently. Particularly brilliant i ' was Hughie Critz. second baseman. I Critz made half a dozen stops that I cut off hits and choked Washington rallies. In the outfield. Moore. Davis and Ott defied Washington batters to drive one past them. Those who scoff at spirit on a professional team must have learned their lesson. Because it was i spirit that made the Giants a great ' team instead of merely a good one. Blondy Ryan whose now famous j telegram to Manager Bill Terry in midseason lifted the Giants from what threatened to be a fatal j 1 slump, is a fine example of what , a will to win can do. Ryan at best U only an ordinary shortstop and a weak hitter. Vet he wentsthrough ' the series with only one error in . 30 chances, many difficult. He batt- 1

led 278, many points better than | Gdslin. and some of the other high- : ly rated Washington sluggers could do. The New York victory offered ! new proof that baseball, purely a 1 business venture though it lie, is more sporting than many amateur 'games. If they really wanted to,! and the players would join in on the play, they could make the world series a hippodrome. For example.: they could have allowed the Sen-: Jators towin Saturday's game. Then the clubs would have moved onto New York, where a crowd of 55.0001 i would have poured something like) $200,000 into the treasuries of the i rival clubs and leagues. o Grain Futures Act Upheld By Court Washington, Oct. 9—(UP)—An attack by member brokers of th:* I Chicago grain market on the con-1 i stitutionality of the grain futu-es act was rejected today by the Sup- ' : rene court. Although the suit was instituted in 1928 the court's decision was re-! j garded as highly significant in view of the fact that secretary of agri- i | culture Wallace has invoked the | I powers of the act to curb specula-: 1 tion in commodities. Unasked Tonsil Operation GONZALES. Tex. (U.R) — Guadalupe Martinez, 22. got a tonsil op-1 eration which he didn’t order. - The knife, wielded by another i Mexican, who intended it for his, jugular vein, missed its mark. I but made a clean job of removing j one of Martinez's tonsils.

RUBBER DOLLARS HOW OFTEN have you and friend wife wondered how “the Joneses” seemed to do so much on their income? From remarks dropped by Jones, you’re almost certain you earn as much as he. You’re dead certain you and your wife are not extravagant or wasteful. Yet the Joneses do little things you can’t afford —and have little things for which you can’t spare the money. How come? The truth is that the Joneses have a secret. They have discovered away of putting rubber into dollars. Through the knowledge of this secret they have learned that a dollar can be stretched beyond its ordinary buying limits. ' What is this secret? They read the advertisements! 11 In the advertisements in this newspaper, reliable merchants and manufacturers offer you their finest values. Before going to the stores to buy, shop here first Compare products until you’ve found just what you want. Compare prices until you’ve pleased your purse. You’ll save endless hours of weary walking. And you’ll buy with the comforting assurance that every dollar has done its duty!

NOTRE DAME IS ! TIED BY KANSAS Irish Held To Scoreless 1 Tie By Fighting Team From Kansas Chicago Oct. »- (UP)—Football In the corn belt hit new high today with Kansas, lowa and Nebraska up among the nation's gridiron leaders. A Kansas t-am that refused to be frightened by Notre Dame's mighty football array, its heralded Sophomores and its talk in winning back the National championship this year tied the Irish at South Bend Saturday. Neither team scored, but it was Kansas that came closest to scoring and Notre Dame that was lucky to get away with a 0-0 tie. Two weeks ago lowa marched over Northwestern with a 7-0 triumph. Nebraska joined its neighboring states in the rush to footItall's summit by crushing the U. | of Texas Saturday, 26-0. It was a badly demoralized Notre I Dame tea mthat left the field after 1 its sad showing against Kansas. ' j The Irish were panicky in the fin-1' al period, and at times on the run | worse than they were two years j ago when Southern California put , on its great fourth period rally to win. 16-14. The lack of a good field general handicapped the Notre Dame offense. Coach Heartly Anderson used | five quarterbacks against Kansas, and all of them made blunders which caused the Irish offense to bog down. I In the last period the alert KanI sas line broke up four attempted 1 passes in succession, tossing the , passer for losses totaling 30 yards. Ernie Casini. end: Pete Mehringer 1 tackle and Zvonimir Kvatemik, guard, were the stars of the hardI hitting Kansas line. Notre Dame’s N». 1 quarterback, 1 Tony Mazziotti. the White Plains. N. Y . Sophomore, who was unable to play because of a bruised leg, i | will be out of action for ten days 1 more. He had his leg placed in a | I cast Sunday and will be out of j I this week’s game against Indiana I ‘at Bloomington. lowa continues to top the Big: I Ten with its one triumph over; Northwestern, as the second conference game between Minnesota! : and Indiana ended in a 6-6 tie. j . o Governors Urged To Hurry Program Washington. Oct. 9—<U.R) —Pub-1 i lie Works Administrator Ickes j telegraphed all state governors I I today to expedite construction and I ; employment under the $400,000,-1 J 000 allotment made from the pubj lie works fund for highway construction under state supervision. Although 2,100 projects have

Wall Street Back ‘On the Spot’ Jlil ■L eMME y 1 w\\ v \ x --<1 Senator Duncan Fletcher (left) chairman of the Senate Banking Currency Committee, confers with Ferdinand Pecora. counsel to tk, committee, before the resumption of the Senate investigation into Wall Street practices. Pecora spent the last three months delving into to, books of private banking firms in preparation for his new probe.

been approved, contracts have been awarded for only 1.359, and actual construction started on only 757. Ickes said at least 1,000 more should be underway. Figures released include: Indiana. $10,037,843 approved; $2,274.000 contracted. o Steel Industry Leader Is Dead Cleveland, Oct. 9 —(UP) —Stew-' art Henry Chisholm, one of the |

The pick of the mines NO SOOT. NO CLINKERS. LITTLE ASH. LOW IN PRICE. PLENTY OF HEAT. Burk Elevator Co. Telephone 25

nation’s leading figures in thesteol Industry, died at hie home hers last night. He was 86 years old. Chisholm was instruments h founding and directing several panics including American StM and Wire company, the ClerehaJ Rolling Mill company, the M andPJ nail company, the long arm caj pany and the American Grw Twine company. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Tyndall 4 ' Bluffton vfsited r latives h»re ow 1 Sunday.