Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 258, Decatur, Adams County, 1 November 1933 — Page 6
Page Six
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CARNEGIE TECH MEETS PURDUE Two Undefeated Elevens Meet In Purdue Homecoming Game Saturday Lafayette. Ind., Nov. 1 (Special) Otte of the most spectacular battles ol'the I*B3 gridiron season is expected in the Ross-Ade Stadium here Saturday afternoon when Purdue and Carnegie Tech, both undefeated. clash in an outstanding intersectional battle that will claim a big hare of the nation’s gridiron spotlight. The game will mark Purdue's first home appearance in three weeks and will be the octaston of a. big Homecoming celebratu>n marked by ceremonies in honor of members of the 1903 Purdue gjtdiron squad, which figured in the tragic Purdue wreck. ‘Playing what the experts term ••unorthodox" football, with an attack that depends on the unexpected and daring for a great part of its effectiveness, the invading Tartans are expected to provide the toughest ’hurdle that the colorful Bbllermaker eleven has attenpted to clear so far this season. On the whole Carnegie has been depending upon a wide open style of offense, . which mq)tes full use of the forward passing ability of Angelo Bevevino. brilliant sophomore quarterback. In the hope of being able to ac- ! vompltsh a task that was too much for Notre Dame. Temple. Washington and Jefferson and Xavier, the Boilermakers will throw against the Carnegie defense that has yet to yield a touchdown its hard running and passing offensive. With such performers as Fred Hecker, Paul Pardonner. Duane Purvfe. Jim
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Carter. Hntcli Keegan. Doxls Moore. !et al., Purdue Is hopeful of rosging | the Tartan. .'..al line for tile first i time thl . season. i i Although tile se ison's r>-. ords of i the two teams, coupled with the | prospect for a spectacular battle, lias aroused a brisk demand for i tickets. Ticket Manager C. S Doan I announced that there will undonliti edly. be seats available at game I time including both the $2.2() reserved seats, and the special bargain 11.00 .reserved seats in the 1 north curve. However, the best' ’ | seats are being strapped up rapidly 1 by mail order, wire and direct sale, and he advised fans to secure their ' j seats at once. o— Prosecutor Studies Company’s Records Crown Point. Ind.. Nov. 1 (UP) Records of the Northern Indiana Public Service company were studied today by Robert G. Estill, Lake county prosecutor, in his intestiga- ; tion of charges that funds of the ' company were diverted illegally to 1 Insull holding companies. The charges were made by Howard Duncan, confessed embezzler, who admitted stealing $132,0 at from the company during his six years employment as assistant treasurer. A special grand jury investigation of Duncan's charges is underway. Duncan sat with Estill today in the study of tiie records. The two men worked in the Hammond o’fices of the company. ——o Idaho Auto Fatalities Up Boise. Idaho. (U.R) Automobile fatalities in Idaho'increased five times during the first nine months of 19”. compared with the saintperiod last year, according to a report of the department -of law enforcement. During the period, 62 were killed and 13S injured, com pared with 11 killed in 1932 and 123 injured.
ILLINOIS WILL MEET MICHIGAN Wolverines Favored To Win But Illinois Given Fighting Chance Chicago. Nov. 1 (U.R) An ol I Illinois slogan Is helm' dusted oft I find polished up down at Cham-, I ptiipn this week as Bob Zuppke ( I prepares his team for Michigan's ' invasion Saturday. It's Michigan, champions of ; the west-rcrown 'em." That's the old slogan that rej verherated across the Illinois camI pus hack in 1924 before the great I 39-14 victory over Mchigan. in j which Red Grange ran wild for 5 four touchdowns in the first per- i 4od. Memories of this and other famI ous games wi h Michigan will in- ' spire the young Illinois team as it i moves' 1 into action against the tinI beaten, untied Wolverines in the j outstanding Big Ten bfit'le of the I week. Michigan, because of its decisive : victories over Michigan State. ! Cornell. Ohio Slate and Chicago. I will be favored, but Illinois, beatI en on'v by Army, 6-0. mns‘ be ac- | i corded a chance, even though It is a slim one. to upset the Wolver Ines. Illinois’ aerial attack, which almost drove the Army to cover, is Boh Zuppke’s biggest hofle for vic'ory. Against Army, the Illini. with Jack Beynon passing, com- ] pleted 12 out of 17 passes for 153 j I yards, eleven of them in sncces- , ; sion. Illinois twice lost the ball i on fumbles inside Army's 20-yard | line. ( Michigan has yet to face a team with a competent passing attack. . Ohio State's passing was feeble.' and Chicago’s passes weren't intricate enough or accurate enoneh to give the Wolverines any trouble at all. I Is doubtful if Illinois can I muster a strong enough running game to dent Michigan's hig. alert i i line, but the Illini may loosen up I I the defense with its passes ’o slip Ix-s (Flying) Lindberg, no ' another Red Grange but a good i all-around back and a dangerous • runner in the open, through for a i : few gains. Beynon, the Illinois quarterback i is one of the best tactical quarterbacks in the Big Ten. He hasn't made an error in judgment in any i game this year, and if Michigan has a weakness he'll find it in Saturday's battle.
THE CORT WED. - THI R. She knew tbe «cience of love —but all her “science" couldn't save her when she met a man who ' knew its arts! Again the Cort brines you a revelation in pictures —baring the secrets, loves, confidences and mistakes of a woman doctor. KAY FRANCIS “MARY STFVENS, M. D.” Lyle Talhot. Glenda Farrell. Thelma Todd. M,So—Lita Grev Chanlin in “Seasoned Greetings.” and Mickev Mouse. 10-15 c ■ SUN—“THE BOWERY.” Wallace Beery. Jackie Coooer, Geo. Raft. Fay Wray. Pert Kelton. Liberty Gives It 4 Stars.
Cheers for Only Red U. S. Mayor asOOOWiBir % JvWf /’btH" As A- *• JBr .- v iff iKff ogny fiT ißwt w fl? flj& ' 4jl/ IF W' ■< An enthusiastic reception is staged by his admirers for Emil Nygard, i Mayor of Crosby, Minn., only Communist mayor in the United States, pn his arrival at New York to employ his eloquence in the interests of 1 Robert Minor, Communist candidate for mayor of the metropolis. Here is Mayor Nygard being chaired and cheered by his greeters.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1. 1933.
-JARRinG FULL- ~ back of tbe /y Ormand ■ jv ■ —«SF ’ [ Os KANSAS' Kansas played V f'T* 7 A.IOTRE DAME OFF ITS % I — *. 7 / FEET EARLY TRiS - " I rPBKw W SEASOAJ- >■-»— Wk it (' ■ /twsis^— s r ■ 7 \ v 7 J EMBA«RASSiN ’ ' M -J- - F \ ' f - V“/i x fan \ I iW i j_ .jibj wr w ' f .A ■ - one of the: I k I r coun rv>s S 1- A| f fz HALFBACKS /S ■•. t&fcX 1\ ’ ■ J I I X ■ ■ GEORGE J \ B
Admit Women Free to Game Corvallis, Wash.—<UJD—A break ; for the women At all football | games Oregon State college plays 1 here this year, women will be admitted free. The move was taken as a panacea for depression, bent 1 poiketbooks of football fatpt who can't afford to Laue their best girls. o Jail Saves $19,000 I’ontiac, Mich.—(U.R) Peter Vernon discovered an advantage in j having to serve a jail term, when he fell heir to $19,000 while serving his fourth term this year for drunk ettness. The usual flood of advice I on "good" invesinteiils had to come I by mail, which was easier to dis pose of than persistent callers, he explained. —__— o — ■■ ■ _ I Gold Nugget Pays School Fee Salt Lake City, Utah. — (U.R) — A gold nugget worth $25 was accepted by University of Utah authorities as tuition fees for Mary Nesbit. high school graduate, of a remote Utah mining region. Miss Nesbit wrote to the University that i she had no money, but offered the nugget, which she sent, as payment. Slump Blamed for Malaga NEW ORLEANS (U.R) — The de-' pression has another crime at its 1 door. The Louisiana State Board i of Health reported an increase in malaria cases caused by mosquiI toes breeding in gutters and other I places not kept as clean as usual. : due to the economic depression. o l Coast Wines in New Orleans New Orleans.— (U.R) —The first | shipment, 99 cases, of California ! wines, ranging from 14 to 22 per i cent alcohol, has arrived here. The consignment w ill be stored in bonded warehouses until the repeal of the 18th amondment. Louisiana has no state dry law prohibiting the sale of alcoholic beverages. o j Owl Hid In Stove Walla Walla, Wash —(U.R) — Imagine the surprise of W. K. Jen- ' kins when the stove in which he ’ had lighted a fire hooted at him. iHe lifted the lid. Out walked a ! small owl, somewhat singed, but ! angry. n e Clam Fishing Boon to Jobless Janesvilld, Wis. —(U.R) - Hundreds of unemployed men of Rock county found clam fishing for shell a lucr- ' trade this summer. After a i closed season of 12 years, the waters of a number of streams were . opened for clam fishermen. Unj employed men transported their ! families to the scene of operation and spent the summer there. The
[ clams were taken to shore, where : they were boiled in vats. The meat | was sold to farmers for hog feed, ! while the shells sold to button manufacturers for prices ranging from $35 to $65 a ton, depending on the quality. -p— o Charge Fee to Hunt Chickens Stevens Point. Wis. —(U.R)—Farmers are regulating prairie chicken hunting In the Stockton district of Portage county by charging a 50cent daily fee. It is the first such organized movement in the state.
ladamstheatre Tonight & Thursday Sponsored by Delta Theta Tau A Liberty Four Star picture. “BED OF ROSES” with Constance Bennett. Joel McCrea, Pert Kelton. John HaHiday. CONSTANCE BENNETT as the girl who took a short-cot down the primrose path ... to make herself 3 "BED OF ROSES.” Added-Comedy and Organlogue. 10-15 c Sun., Mon., Tue. — “MORNING GLORY” with Katherine Hepburn. Douglas Fairbanks. Jr.. Mary Duncan.
UNBELIEVABLE, I But TRUE! DO YOU KNOW T that today—in this highly enlightened . world —there are millions of people who never heard of tooth-paste; millions M ho never saw’ a fountain pen and wouldn’t know what it was if they saw’ it; who never tasted ginger ale, or owned a flashlight; millions of < ' women w ho never heard of a permanent; boys and girls w ho wouldn’t know’ a tennis racket from a basketball? Unbelievable, but true! And why? Just because in the remote places where these people live there are no newspapers and folks seldom, if ever, see a magazine. Contrast this w ith your standards of living—an electric clock on your mantel, an electric refrigerator in your kitchen, a vacuum cleaner, colorful draperies, modish clothing of fine fabrics, foods carefully prepared for you by great manufacturers, shoes and hats in the latest style—and then say a great big “Thank you” for advertising. Without advertising you would be living in a past generation. Listening, open-mouthed, to the stories of some wayfarer with tales of radios, telephones, furniture, cosmetics, silk underthings he had seen in his travels. Read the advertisements. Always there is something new, always something of interest, always something to save you money, time, or trouble.
EXPECT MICK TO SELL STARS Connie Mack May Sell Grove. Cochrane And Bishop to Other Teams Philadelphia. Nov. I. — (U.R) Members of the Hot Stove league are expecting an announcement any . I day from Connie Mack he has sold 'Pitcher Lefty Grove, Catcher Mick ey Cochrane or Max Bishop, sec j mid baseman. In fact a sale of all three would . not be startling, despite the 70-year-old manager's insistence last night that he has made “no‘move, to dispose of them ” When asked if be would be will-' Ing to part with any of the three | men. Mack replied, "I don't want to put myself on the spot by answering that question. I'm not saying what we might do in the future. I'll make whatever moves I think best for the club.” Close followers of baseball believe that Mack and Frank J. Navin. president of the Detroit Tigers, | are close to an agreement to shift Mickey Cochrane to Detroit, where he is understood to be slated for the managerial post left vacant by the resignation of Bucky Harris. It is rumored that Connie Is asking $125,0110 and Catcher Ray Hay--1 worth, while Navin is offering SIOO,- '' 000 and a second-string backstop. ‘ I Mack is reported dickering with Üboth the Boston Red Sox and Chi- ’ cago White Sox regarding Grove, it's understood he offered ‘Grove and Bishop to Tom Yaw key, Boston owner, for about $200,000. Pitch- ■ ers George Earnshaw and Rube 1 Walberg also are expected to be wearing new uniforms in the spring. 1 Get the Habit — Trade a. Home
A Service Pledge We at all times pledge to the Chevrolet owners of Adams County:— Guaranteed Service Fair Prices Courteous Employees We will comply with the President’s Approved Automobile Dealers Code at all times. Thompson Chevrolet Company PHONE 170 SERVICE NEW CARS USEP CARS STORAGE
Whisky Destroying Mechanism Failed McPherson, Kan.— (U.R) —Failure of Vaughn Duncan's mechanism for I destroying liquor cost him $131.70 recently when his tilling station |wqs raided for liquor. Duncan had dug a foot-square shaft 12 feet into the ground inside his station. Over it he placed his
Charter No. 731 BANK STATEMENT I REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF I THE FIRST STATE RANK! at Decatur, in the State of Indiana. .■ at the cloae of Ito btral nets on October 25, 1933 I C. A. DUGAN. President T. F. GRALtKER Cash I J. W. VIZARD, Vice-President R. E. GLENDENING, At* J Resources | Liabilities I 1 Loans and discounts $553,484.49 Capital Stock, paid j n ! Overdrafts . 305.27 I ndlvided Pr«»ri!s Net 1 U. S. Govt. Securities.-.. 103,600.00, Deposits sub- I j Other Bonds. Securi- I * ct 11 $ I ties. etc. . . . 204.823.00 | <7 I tifloates of I ! Furniture and fixtures 7,500.00 Deposit 1748(1.94 I Certified I i Other Real Estate owned 32,100.00 c( lhl .k s I ID u e from _. „ . Trust Compan- T '"' e or , I i les, Banks and of , Bankers Tunc Sav- ’ Cash on Hand 166,679.43 ings Deposits 11h.16J.78 i Cash Items — 431.16 ' Other Assets not Due to Banks anil included in the above 58.81 Trust Compaims Total $1,068,982.19 Total IlMiq ' State of Indiana, County of Adams, ss I, T. F. Graliker, of the First State Bank of Decatur, Ind., $ solemnly swear that the above statement is true. 'I T. F. Graliker, cashkt I Subscribed and sworn to before mi' this Ist day of November, ISRI j (Seal) Earl B. Adams. Notary Public ! My commission expires Sept. 22, 1936.
pesk. will. ~ lummy..!! .■ < , ./’’MW and dnmpinv , the hoi... Police mt, t,,| t,„„ the trap d...- '"‘"-‘mJ The llqm.r . . ■ of the hob'. Ihh i,n| v , Th., f, .. follow!''» ■ Get the Habit - T f>l j, „ g
