Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 245, Decatur, Adams County, 17 October 1933 — Page 6
Page Six
DECATUR WILL PLAY REDSKINS IN NIGHT GAME Yellow Jackets Play North Side At Port Wayne Wednesday Night Decatur's Yellow Jackets will play their final road game of the I season Wednesday night under the lights at North Side field r j Fort Wayne, meeting the North Side Redskins. The opening kick- < off is scheduled for 8 o'clock. The Redskins apparently aro not as strong this year as in previous season, having won only one j game so far, that from the Bluff ton Tigers. North Side was de-1 seated last week by Fort Wayne ) Central. 18 to 0. the same team I which recently defeated the Yellow .Jackets, 32-12. Coach Horton’s charges scored) their first victory of the season ' last Friday night at Portland, but I fai'ed to look very impressive in, doing so. The Yellow Jackets showed flashes of real driving power during the first half and sor 1 one short burst during the final period, hnt the locals' defense bogged down badly during the second half, particularly against the Panthers’ forward passing gttack. North Side has a small but l speedy backfield and once past the line of scrimmage the Redskins] can pick them up and lay themi down Coach Bills apparently has, found a solution for one of his worst early season weaknesses. , poor punting. Last week against Central. Shilts. an end. averaged nearly 45 yards on punts. Probable starting lineups: Decatur North Side , Elzey LB Schilts Barker LT .Comment Walther LG Ehrman Hurst C Crance Conrad RG Schlatter i Saunders RT Vachon Schultz RE Day S’rickler QB Greenwood Ehinger LH £-1 |oans El Need extra money? You can get It here—quickly and confidentially on your own signature and security. Call. Write or Phone Us. FRANKLIN SECURITY COMPANY Over Schafer Hdw. Co. Phone 237 Decatur Ind
i Public Sale i • COMMUNITY AUCTION SALE J Decatur, Indiana $ $ SATURDAY, October 21st • LIVE STOCK, FARM TOOLS. HOUSEHOLD GOODS. Etc. O • Bring in what you have to sell. Come here and buy what A you need. Grusso's Nursery will sell Trees and Shrubs; A Row Bros, will have new Sorghum Molasses. Load of Potatoes. Many other articles. 1 Decatur Community Sales • Roy Johnson, auct. Public Auction 80—ACRE FARM—BO 1 will sell to the highest bidder, without reserve, on the premises, located miles South of Decatur. Ind., 3 miles East and 2V> miles North of Monroe, on THURSDAY. October 26th at 1:00 P. M. SO Acre Farm all good, high, producing soil; 7 Room House; Hip Roof Barn, 30x60; drove well; cement watering tank; poultry house; garage. Electric lights available. This is a good farm, well tiled; 20 acres in grass. Come and see the corn on it now. TERMS 1-4 cash day of sale. 1-4 on or before March 1, 1934. Balance long time, low rate of interest. There is no mortgage on this farm. DAVID FUHRMAN, Owner Roy S. Johnson, auct.
i Eady RH . Waterline i Butler FB Poorman Ex-President Os C üba Outlawed Havanna. Oct. 17 —(VP) — Fortner President Garardo Machado, : twt> of his principal cabinet officers ] and 24 of his aides were proclaimed ! outlaws today, then faced formal harges of murder and malfeasance. ; Uroperty valued at $25,090,000 beI lieved by the government t > he .held in Cuba by the 27 defendants, was ordered seized as bonds for their i civil responsibility for ai ts charged against them. The order was tantamount to ! . onfisvatlon of their entire fortunes ; unless they returned to face ! charges. To Shorten 1934 Baseball Season Chicago. Oct. 17 — (UP) — The i major League baseball season for ) 1934 has been shortened six days i but the regulation 154-games will ' be played. The 1934 season will open Tues-' i day. April 17, and close Sunday. I I Sept. 30. President William Har- ’ ) ridge of the American League announced. The 1933 season opened April 12 and closed Oct. 1. The Oct. 17 opening was a com-1 promise as the National League wanted to open again on April 12 and play a 168-game schedule, but the American League fa"ored an i i opening as late as April 24. Tennis Queen Back On Her Feet Again San Francisco, Oct. 17 —(UP)—' Helen Wills Moody, the Little pok- j !er face” of international Tennis.! took faltering steps today in front' I of her home, testing the legs which 1 she hopes will carry her into the' National championships next cummer. i, “It's slow business, getting on i your feet again.” Mrs. Moody said ; after spending four weeks in a hos--1 pital and three* in her home, re-1 ■ covering from back injuries. | The pain from the vertebrae ] sprains caused her default in the final match of the title tournament j this year. “I feel confident I will be able to ! play r again and regain my National i championships.” the vanquished . tennis Queen said. o ; —< Indiana Has Sport Tabloid INDIANAPOLIS. Ind. (U.R) — A new tabloid, known as'the Hoosier) Sports Week, is being published weekly at Vincennes. Ind. The magazine deals entirely with Indiana sports. Pete Ellis, formerly i with the Vincennes Sun-Commer- , I cial. is editor.
FAVORED TEAMS UNABLE TO WIN A Favorite Has Yet To Win A Bisf Ten Football Game This Season Chicago. Oct. 17 <U.P> A favo< I ite has yet to win a Big Ton football game tlijj- season. In the four conference games played (o date the has either been beaten or tied — and ' that's why Big Ten coaches are doing their utmost this week to ! send their teams into Saturday's games as underdogs. Northwestern. Minnesota. Purdue and Wisconsin already have I I found out that Its dangerous business io wear the favorite s colors. lowa bumped off Northwestern I 7-0. to inaugurate wha' gives ' | every indication of being the big- ] gest season of upsets in years in western conference circles. Indiana tied Minnesota. 6-6, and i then Minnesota in turn tied Purdne. 7-7. pre-season favorite to , win the conference title. Illinois joined the parade of victorious i underdogs by crushing Wisconsin. ) 21-0. The following list of this week's Big Ten battles promises another topsy-turvy Saturday’ Ohio State at Michigan. Indiana at Northwestern. Purdue at Chicago. Wisconsin at lowa. , The Michigan-Ohio State game may decide the Big Ten football title, although it's the first conference game for both teams Michigan has conquered Michigan State. 20-6. and Cornell, 40-0. Ohio State has triumphed over Virginia | 75-0, and Vanderbilt. 20-0. Michigan is the favorite only because of the old adage that it’s ' best to string along with a winner until beaten. Michigan hasn't ■ lost a football game since 1931. I hnt it’s well to remember that it I was Ohio State which administer- | ed that defeat. North western’s surprising improvement over its lowa form in , hokling Stans rd to a scoreless tie makes the Wildcats favorites over Indiana. Neither team has ■ shown any offense. Northwestern | has yet to score, and Indiana’s 15 points were made on a safety, a touchdown on a sleeper pass in the las' minute, of play, against | Miami, and a fumble which bounded into the arms of Fitz Lyons, big negro end. who converted it, into a touchdown against MinneI so’a. On the theory that Purdue's "four flush" hackfield of pardonner. Hecker. Purvis and Carter has been held in check long j l enough, the Boilermakers are favj orites over Chicago. The Maroons have some fancy backs of their own tn Rerwanger. Nyquist. Zitn- ! mer and'SahPn. but they have yet to go in big time competition. lowa, with two weeks’ rest, is favored over Wisconsin, bnt the Badgers are due for a strong I comeback as Doc Spears’ teams : are always toughest to beat after I being beaten. In intersectional battles Minnesota meets Pittsburgh at Minne-: i apolis and Illinois engages army! lat Cleveland. The two Big Ten i teams do not concede anything to li the East's two unbeaten outfits and will go into Saturday’s games I on even terms with the invaders. o . GERMANY READY TO PREPARE FOR LEAGUE RETURN | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) j ment program that was loosely I phrased to allow for bargaining ii with Germany. This would erplain the precision ' and speed with which events piled )'on event Saturday after Chanceli lor Adolf Hitler announced with- | drawal. Baron Konstantin veil Neurath. German foreign minister, in a statement last night, charged that the German arms declaration was i misinterpreted by the allies, and Germany did not seek to rearm herself —but wanted other nations to disarm. Delegates left Geneva today and j will reassemble Oct. 26. They adjourned for 10 days after a onehour meeting yesterday. There were three possible developments during the 10-day adjournment and when the conference reconvenes: 1. Private negotiations with Germany in an effort to entice her i back into the conference and the i league. 2. Adoption by the conference | of a disarmament plan without Ger- ■ many’s participation, and submis- , sion of the completed, approved plan to Germany for approval or , rejection. 3. Final adjournment of the conference. as it is presently constituted as a failure. o Cathedral Home for Birds ROUEN, (U.R) —More than 1.400 birds make their home annually in the tower of the Rouen cathedral. according to the latest "bird census.” Os this number, 900 are pigeons, 300 bats, 90 hawks, 50 I owls and 35 ravens.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17.1933.
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DEAN'S BROTHER j SERVES 3.2 Houston. Tex. — (U.R) — Elmer (Brains) Dean, brother of Jerome (Dizzy) Dean, has taken another step, but whether it is upward, or ) downward, on the ladder of success he will not say. He is a bartender, now. having within the last six months been a rookie outfielder for the Houston Buffaloes, soda pop vendor, newsboy, cooperage clerk and publicity' man. Concerning his position as beer "draughtsman,” Elmer said: "I appreciate that in times of. economic duress we may be prone I to seek something less than our i ultimate or, as the Latins po aptly, put it. 'mix vomica e pluribus un-1 um.’ “And then, too.” he added. “I j can’t holler as lodd as I like to I holler when I’tn selling stuff That’s what I like about baseball—you get i to yell whenever you feel like it." Some day, he confided, he and. his younger brother Dizzy are go-1 1 ing to pool their resources in a venture as yet undetermined. “With my brains and Dizzy’s* money.” he said, .’’we ought to, clean up big." j Federal Relief Plan Extended To Wheat Washington Oct. 17 —(UP) —The administration’s dual effort to raice agricultural prices and ease the suffering of the poor reached another front today with announcement that the farm credit administration is buying large quantities of wheat for distribution this winter to the jobless. , Emergency relief administrator Hopkins’ office said that approximately one million bushels would be purchased under the program. o ANSWERS TO INQUIRIES (Note — “PRA” stands for President's Reemployment x Agreement) Q. WhaP is the rate of pay and I hours for helpers on wholesale milk trucks? A. Forty cents per hour and 40 ] hours per weeks, fixed in the fiuklmilk industry's modification of the 1 President's Reemployment Agreement. Q. What is the NRA pay for tail- i or’s pressers? A. Forty cents per hour, unless , the rate was less on July 15, 1929. i In that case it should not be less and in no case under 30 cents per, hour. Permanent code not yet ap proved. Q. Have boss painters signed i 1 up? How many hours shall journeymen painters work? A. The code submitted for the) 1 painting division of'the construction industry has not been approv-' I ed. Under PRA temporary modi- 1 ■ fication. hours for entire -conwtrucjtion industry, including painters, I 35 per week during 6 months per- ■ iod or 48 in any week in such per-1 ■ iod. • Q. Are retail and wholesale dry cleaning plants under the laundry ■ code? A. No; their separate code was > submitted and is now being con-1 sidered. ■ Q. Are firemen and engineers in • hotels to be paid according to, - terms of hotel code now pending? I I now ge.t abbut 17 cents per hour; i ’ what should it be under hotel code? i A.. Hotel code, not yet approv- -; ed. (lovers firemen and engineers ■ i and all other classes of hotel employees. Minimum wage in submitted code is 21.6 cents per hour in South. 9 Q. the duties of employees F of grocery stores defined in code - or agreement?? II A. No; the code submitted leaves “ 1 definition of duties to employers ) ]by not mentioning the subject. I Q. What must mechanics (ar-
itisans) in shops be paid under ttie i FRA? A. Not less than 40 cents per hour unless the hourly rate tor the same work was less on July 15. 1929. in which event absolute minimum cannot be less than 30 cents. Permanent code will cover case when PRA is scheduled to expire. December 31, 1933. Oppose City Tax On Alcoholic Drinks New York.. Oct. 17 —(UP> Cities should not be permitted to tax alcoholic beverages, the report of the John D Rockefeller. Jr.. Liquor control survey advised today. Recommending that manufacturers' taxes be levied by the feder- ) al government, and that the severi al states collect the retail or sales i taxes, the report suggested, muni- . eipalities might share in state rei venues. A specific <ax schedule for each type of beverage was included in the report, prepared by Raymond B. Fosdick and Albert L. Scott. Bears Cause 2 Damage Claims HARRISBURG, Pa. (U.R) — The State of Pennsylvania this year has paid two damage claims as the result of depredations of bears. | One claim was for the killing of two sheep by bears in Potter ’ County, the other for the killing of one sheep in McKean County. o —_ Will Orders Son to Save SALEM. Mass. (U.R) -Under the terms of the will of the late Dr. Jeremiah J. Corbett, of Lynn, his son. Francis. 16. will receive twice as much as he saves annually for 10 years, at the end of which time I he will receive the residue. The will disposed of an estate estimated at $1,000,000. ~~ f ADAMS THEATDE - Last Time Tonight - 10-20 c “BROADWAY TO HOLLYWOOD” with Alice Brady, Frank Morifan. Eddie Quillen, Madge Evans, Jackie ('ooper. Jimmy Durante, Bussell Hardie. May Robson, Fav Templeton — Albertina Rasch Dancing Girls. ADDED—Sidnev Toler in ‘ DUCKY DEAR.” WED. & THURS. — Ann Harding. Wm. Powell in "DOUBLE HARNESS” (under the auspices of Psi lota XI.) SUN, MON, TUE.—Arthur Somers Roche’s "PENTHOUSE." THE CORT - Last Time Tonight - “CAPTURED” Leslie Howard, Doug Fairbanks. Jr.. Paul Lukas, Margaret Lindley. ALSO—Silly Symphony, Fox News. Claude Hopkins in “Barber Shop Blues.” - WED. - THURS. - The picture sensation of the year. “EMPEROR JONES" A pullman porter becomes King. Don’t miss this sensational story of a roaring bunch from Harlem. Why go to Fort Wayne to see this picture when it will be shown at the Cort for only 10-15 c. SUNfIAV — "PILGRIMAGE.” Also ’ GENE and GLENN with Jake and Lena, Radio Favorites.
HUNTINGTON TO BE HERE SUNDAY Huntington Amcos Will Play Decatur A. C.’s Here Sunday The Decatur (A. C. football team will play their third stame of the Htaaon at the high echool alhletic field Sunday afternoon, meeting the Amro Athletic Club eleven of Huntington The kickoff is vheduled for 2:30 o’clock. Huntington was originally ached uled to play here last Sunday, but a conflict In dates forced the postponement of the games to next Sunday. The Utnos were defeated by the St. Joseph A. C. as Fort Wayne Sunday. 2 to 0 after Huntington had threatened several times during the first quarter. The visitors will have a lineup of, former stare from the Wabash A. A. Huntington and Wabash high schools, in addition to Cook, former University of Michigan player, and the Bjzjack brothers, former Miami University stars. The locals likely will present a bolstered lineup Sunday, as some | , of last year's regulars who have not played this year, may be out for r action Sunday. s 0 WHEAT EMBARGO IN NORTH DAKOTA ' (CONTINUED FROM PAOE ONE) tana calling upon them to take similar action. Initial response of governors of the agricultural region was favorable to lunger's pro- > posal. Gov. Clyde Berring of lowa said i he would study it with interest. Milo Reno, head of the Farmers ■ Holiday Association, praised Lang er's courage. Washington. Oct. 17—<U.R> —The agricultural adjustment adminis- | tration belieyes that the North Dakota embargo on wheat has i emphasized the low prices of grains "in a most drastic way." The administration is watching the embargo with greatest of interest but with little hope that it can have any great effect upon the price of wheat either nationally or in North Dakota. It was pointed out that 45 per cent of all wheat this season already has been sold and that North Dako'a. meantime, does not have a large local wheat consuming market. The price of wheat has fallen 15 ■ per cent in three days. Administration officials attribute that simply to the increase in the value of the dollar, which was brought about by unsettled European con-
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j ditlons utter Germany withdrew from the league of nations. The possibility that the administration can make loans to fanners on wheat, slllniar to the 10 cents a pound cotton loans an- | nonneed recently, is being exploti ed thoroughly, but most officials I apparently frown on wheat loans | except as a last resort. They feel that any attempt to peg price". ' whether by loans or otherwise, is . bound to fall unless a coniprehen she crop control program is inaugurated simultaneously. Sncii a program was announced so" cotton. — o Squirrels Went to Bed Early Yellowstone Park, Wyo. -*(UP) —AU because they ate well, but not too wisely, eight ground squirrels went into winter hibernation two weeks early thia year. The squirrels
IF YOU CAN’T FIND 1 YOUR OLD KEG - -1 Come into our store | and see our stock of | the finest non-porous f | hr ”3 ■ White Oak Kegs. I No wonder yourr vinegar tastes so R; 11| much better when it n^**^** I has been kept in one I of these New Kegs. aii7«SSo7 They are well built, too. for the staves are carefully shaped and firmly hound with riveted steel hoops. 5 Gal. Plain Kegs as low as $1.50 Charred Kegs slightly higher. The Schafer hba Store Hardware and Home Furnishings wznoov*"’'
were fed d ~ ... , )1B wiiiis t S-, '“‘ harg.-.d , ~ M#l(n they ate , ht . v al "' f «"”i M August 1 Sn, d MM and tmiud ,'ftM winter. ‘ r *< Bike Tire Sho tage Topeka, K., , . age of bhi Sl ’""' a "' !: ' ' ' 'hr achool. otlie,girl and w . ■■ ( 1 = (J r? sport. Mor. i ; , ~ haVe during the p„t s , x mon « during any . ■ n, j.arativa elnce the founding of th. cil gJ J. A. Prive . business >iere this
