Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 260, Decatur, Adams County, 3 November 1933 — Page 6
Page Six
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LEADINGTEAMS MEET SATURDAY Michigan Is Favored To Beat Illinois For Big Ten Lead Chicago. Nov. 3. (U.R) Michigan.' marching toward its fourth straight ' Big Ten title, and Illinois, beating' hack toward the top after three; disastrous years, will battle for the western conference lead tomorrow as the championship race swings' into the last half of the season. The Michigan-Illinois game will bring together the only two undefeated, untied teams in conference I competition, and will leave the; Mfnner in undisputed possession of fjjst place. A crowd of 30.000 is : eapected at Chamfaign. Minnesota, battling to get back in the title race despite two ties.! will match its bone-crushing attack ' against Northwestern at Evanston' in the day's second most important* gjme which is expected to draw i 35,000. In the other two conference games Ohio State, with a new of-! fanse supplanting the double wingback formation, will meet Indiana.j hick in action after two weeks rest, at Columbus, and Wisconsin, beaten thrice, and Chicago, beaten twice, will clash at Chicago. -Two conference teams go outside the league for competition.; Purdue, unbeaten but tied, will attempt to hand Carnegie Tech s un- 1 scored team its first defeat at I.a- (
SPRAGUE FURNITURE Specials for Saturday Beautiful Kitchen Cabinet $25.00 Kitchen Table, porcelain top $6.00 Bed Springs $3.00 Bridge Lamps, complete Ig. selection 98c Still h<*ve few 9x12 Axminster rugs at very low prices. Sprague Furniture Co. 152 S. 2nd st. • Phone 199
TRYING OUT A NEW IDEA ON SELLING MERCHANDISE. SET YOUR OWN PRICE ON THE FOLLOWING ITEMS. NOW ON DISPLAY IN OUR NORTH SHOW WINDOW: I—LIVING ROOM SUITE I—“FREE” SEWING MACHINE I—I.X.L. LARGE KITCHEN CABINET EVERY DAY WE REDUCE THE SELLING PRICE SI.OO ON EACH ITEM. COME IN. LOOK THEM OVER AND PUT YOUR BID ON SAME — EACH ITEM SOLD SEPARATELY. The Schafer Store HARDW ARE and HOME FURNISHINGS
fayette, and lowa will resume footi bull relations with lowa State at i lowa City after a lapse of 13 years Michigan Is favored over Illinois, but Bob Zuppke has pointed his I heant for this game for two weeks, (scouted Michigan personally and | has designed a special defense to ' halt the Wolverines' wide sweeps j and lateral passes. I — Mickey V\ alker Fights Rosenbloom Tonight New York. Nov. 3. (U.R) Mickey j l Walker, after slinging leather for' 13 long years, engages in the "big ' tight" of his career tonight when Ihe tries to wrest the world lightI heavyweight championship from I Maxie Rosenbloom in a 15-rotinder I at Madison Square Garden. Thirty-two years old and broke.* I the Rumson bulldog has a chance' to win his third world title, an as-’ set which could be turned into quick J I money for the wife and baby. DeI feat may plunge him into oblivion < and poverty. o Navajos Spurned Kraut GALLUP, N. M. (U.R)—Decentri- ' cities of the Navajo Indians' appetite have left Indian Conservation ’ Corps cooks wondering what to do I with 108.000 eggs, several hundred I cases of sauerkraut and gallons of | pickles. The*Navajo palate does* not relish sauerkraut and pickles. ' and the stomach that readily ' holds prairie dog meat will not stand for the eggs. Officials are endeavoring to find a suitable market for eggs while they are saleable. I o Get the Habit — Trade Homa
DECATUR G. E. TO HAVE TEAM General Electric Company Will Sponsor SemiPro Net Team , i Decatur will be represented In i i semi-pro basketball circles during J the coming season by the General I; Electric team, which will return to , I action again this year. ; Carl Smith, who acted as coach I and manager of the team in past seasons, will again be in active . charge. The first cull for candi- . dates was issued Thursday and ■ was answered by 20 to 25 prosperI tive members of the team. Many former stars of ls>th Yeli low Jacket and Commodore teams reported for the opening practice. Included among the candidates are iGerber. Deßolt, Steele. Krick, Hill and Gass. . From the material available, one J of the strongest independent teams I in this section of the state should Ihe built. The team has been newlyoutfitted. A number of tentative ; games have been booked and a complete schedule will be announced soon. MAJOR ISSUES UP TO VOTERS NEXT TUESDAY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ' Company, which now enjoys a vir- | tual monopoly. I Cincinnati will vote on an ordinI ance authorizing a bond issue for ! the city to buy the existing manufacturing and distributing system. Observers thought the project doomed as both parties and the press opposed it. Knoxville and Salt Lake City vote on a similar project. The New York mayoralty campaign was drawn strictly on the issue of "bossism" in politics. Fiorello H. LaGuardia, former coni gressman and Fusion candidate, land Joseph V McKee, "recovery” I candidate, opposed the Tammany I incumbent. John P. O'Brien. In addition there were various other elections, including: New York state will elect state j legislators. Boston and Detroit will select , mayors anti Detroit will pass on a subway project. Municipal and judicial elections will be held throughout PennsylI vania. JAMES FARLEY HITS CRITICS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I peared indifferent to the tragedy of men. women and children visible I on every side of them.” he said. "They may think it good Amer- ' icanism for them to talk a lot of stuff and nonsense about ours bej ing a program of state socialism. "They seem to forget that their* (policies of indecision and indirect-1 ion and of timidness were doing i more than anything else to encour-. age radicalism and soap box ora-1 tory in this country. I “They fail to realize also that' (complete cooperation with the! President's great recovery program i is lacking today in two quarters* ! only—on the one hand, the extreme■ reactionaries and intensely selfishi I interests who fail to recognize, I their responsibilities to the American public and the American work- i 'er, men who think only in terms I of profit and property rights and j never in terms of human rights. “On the other hand we have the extreme radicals who would tear down the whole economic structure
As Lindberghs Hopped to Erin I——— -3 ..... s '■ ''V.k || & j Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh, pictured as he gave instructions from the top of his plane in Southampton Harbor, England, just before he hopped off with Mrs. Lindbergh for their visit to Ireland. After a whirlwind tour of the Emerald Isle, the famous flying pair went to Paris to visit the scene of Lindy’s first triumph.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1933.
I of American business. . . The man | you placed in the White House Is not disturbed by such sniping.” 1 53.036 Pigs Bought by U. S DENVER, Col. (U.R) A total of .' 53.036 pigs and sows have passed through the Denver stockyards in ! the government's hog buying proI gram. A ratio short of the gov- ! erntnent's original plan of buying ' one sow to every four or five pigs. I fulled, however, with the total t’' number of animals’ having passed g Into the government's hands lull I eluding 1.083 sows. o I o 6 Denver Homes Spurned NRA 111 DENVER. Col. (U.R) —In a houset ’ to house drive for NRA, six Den- j !■ ver homes failed to meet with the] i "spirit” of the NRA. The drive I was sponsored by the 4i)o Club of . ■ ; Denver, composed solely of women. I . The movement covered practical- j . ily the whole city, which now has s a population of approximately , i 250,000. »I o i Spinning Wheel 200 Years Old Platteville, Wis. (U.R) -A spinn- , ! ing wheel, 200 years old. Is being used here to instruct members of I tile Hazel Dell Home Economics I ’ I Club in the art of spnning. The owner, Mrs Earl Palmer, inherit-1 Jed it from her grandmother. It was brought to this country from i Switzerland. The club uses the ! yarn made to knit sweaters. PROPOSITION IS DISCUSSED BY GOVERNORS 1 (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) tioiW "of holding an umbrella over the other states.” Wallace later returned directly to IHnt own offices to resume conferences with the governors and! • his aides in the tarm relief admin1 istratjon. Nine Negroes Die In Tenement Fire New York. Nov. 3.— (U.R)—Nine negroes were burned to death early today when they were trapped in bed by a fire of suspicious origin I that swept a three-story dwelling in a crowded tenement section of Brooklyn. The house was a roaring furnace from top to bottom when firemen arrived. Three families occupied i the structure and out of 12 persons who lived there, only three escap- ( ed. They were seriously burned. and one was not expected to live. — n .. Man Murdered While Getting Manicure Chicago, Nov. 3 —(UP) — Four , : pistol shots fired at close range in- ' to the ; rad < * Harry Teuber, 32, led 1 Federal agents to renew their in- . I vestigation today into the 1225.000 ( mail robbery here last December.! “I The slaying of Teuber. as he sat . having his nails manicured in a i ■ barbershop, was as much a mystery ’ as was his possible connection with the robbery. The shots were fired i from a door behind him. No one ; saw the gunman. •j o Teachers Tenure Law Again Upheld Indianapolis. Ind.. Nov. 3—(UP) ,| Constitutionality of the teacher ten- , tire law was upheld again today by ,' the state supreme court. At the sitnie time the court de- ,, Hared invalid a rule of many school - corporations which automatically discharges women teachers when ■ i they are married. i] The opinion, written by Judge I Walter E. Treanor. upheld a Mont- I gomery county crcuit .court deci- ■ sion in a sdit brought against the • Crawfordsville City Schools by Mrs. ■ Mary C. Ramsey, tenure teacher.
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REPORT RIOTS IN FARM EREA (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I to repel advances of the pickets; who were armed with clubs and , rocks. The pickets were dis- ■ persed. In another part of Racine coun-1 j ty. the deputies shot the tires off | an automobile tn which strikers | were escaping from the. Charles ! Heyer farm where they sought to cut telephone wires. A cheese factory in the village ' of Belgium. Wis.. was destroyed 1 by explosion of a dynamite bomb I and the resultant fire. It was the fourth bombing of the present strike. Damage was estimated at $15,000. None saw the men who placed the bomb. The county is said to be in the control of strik-; ers. Highways leading to lowa's two i ; principal farm markets were' blockaded. Western lowa trucking to Oma- , ha livestock marts was halted by holiday supporters who threw railroad ties and farm equipment over the road to halt trucks, and ; then persuaded the drivers to re-1 turn home. All highways leading to Sioux City. la., also were under guard, and railroad stations were being
!CHICK*S Roadside Inn • x On U. S. Road 27. 1 mile south of Decatur. DANCING SATURDAY AND SUNDAY NIGHTS I HOT ORCHESTR A Barbecue sandwiches, fish. pork, and ham sandwiches and chili soup. Plenty of room. Conte and visit.
SPECI ALS Gillette Blue Blades | I at 25c Holthouse’s Jonnson's Gio-Coat Ambrosia Sets I and applier AQ n $1.50 Value 1 fin $1.50 value JOI tpl.vU G. E. Electric Lamps Johnson's Auto Cleaner ioc sit-?. sl.lO Woodbury's Dental C\r r Chocolate Covered Cream Cherries QQ . (1 Tube Free) 1 Ib. package Ot/C Nu-Way Shaving Cream One P’"* Johnson’s Kiser Jars tn nr Floor and 1 pint Liquid each IOC and 3dC Wax. $1.50 value — Lees Egg Maker and I - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Chick Grower Lees Vapo Spray for 40( , P.u..r, tiie $1 25 5 lb. pkg 90c Quart size 75c Holthouse Drug Co.
' watched for shipment of farm | commodities. .The picketing was ' not accompanied by violence. New Mexico Budget Balanced SANTA FE. N. M (U.R>— During | i the fiscal year 1932-33, for the i ‘ first time in three years. New j ' Mexico operated on a balanced j | budget, figures prepared by State ; Treasurer C. P. Anderson reveal I ed. Deficits were shown the two , previous years. State receipts | i were $12,400,792.61 for 1932-33 and ■ expenditures fell short of that I figure bt $291,399.08. Severe Winter Forecast MILTON, Pa. (U.R) — Farmers in ‘ this section predict an unusually ’ severe winter, because: bark on trees is thicker this year than In j years past, corn husks are unusu- 1 , ally thick, and several heavy fogs l I hung over the district in August. 1 O Oregon Plans Celebration MEDFORD. Ore. (U.R)— Celebration of the 75th anniversary of Oregon’s admission to the Union; will be observed here next year at the same time that Medford ob- i I serves the 75th anniversary of Its ' I founding. Oregon was admitted to ' I the Union Feb. 14. 1859. and is | sometimes known as the Valen- ■ tine State for that reason.
EIGHTEEN DIE IN CUBA STORM 11 Known Dead, Many Missing After Typhoon In Philippines Havanna. Nov. 3 (UP)— Eighteen persons were killed in eastern Cußu by floods resulting from cyclonic winds and torrential rains, dispat the* said today. The floods add t« ’•)*' choas fti tlte country wit era strikes have seriously endangered the sugar crop on which the nation's livelihood de|x»nds. In Havana the political situation remained static, with the government of provisional president Ramon Grau San Martin apparently disintegrating rapidly and a crisis threatened over the week-end The winds and rains struck Ori-
NOTICE I Factory Representative will be BY at our store K* SATURDAY I Be sure to see him for your furniture needs. Wj He will save ,vou money. & SPRAGUE FURNITURE CO. I 152 S. 2nd st. Phone 199 H Silk Dresses ] All the new fall styles are hue'll r All sizes . . . Also Wool Knit Dresses K •"> in sizes 11 to 20. Excellent value IB *3.98 other dresses <U||| FROM tPdtoVlJ I X<>" showing an unti'iialh lint I stock of High-grade Coats in the I ! new Fall shades and styles. I \ $22.50 1. $50.00 NEW AUTUMN HATS $1.98 and $2.98 Large selection of newest styles in crepes or felts. Black. Brown. v Green. Rust, Eel Grey, Turbins, 1 or Brims! Wonderful Quality! " S Blanket Sale These prices are for Saturday onb70x80 Cotton Plaid Blanket, absolute,y first ‘t ual ’*y- Low price! All f",ors(Limit two blankets 72x84 Plain Grey or Tan Cotton Blankets. XQ colored border. Ist grade, good weight, pi 70x80 Part Wool Blankets, good heavy weight, satejn hound edges, plaid designs in all colors CO *H) per pair DRY GOODS CURTAIN SALE SPECIALS Priscilla stv I e Unbleached Muslin, 36 in. Uftains. ni d<l • * light weight for many Width, 2*4 '* ’ uses. (20 yds. to a /» cream color with col<> r ’ customer) yard OC e( | ru ff| e s Outing Flannel, 36 inch pair weight, light or dark pat- Flowered Ruffled 1 11 terns, also white, pink or tains, beautiful new co* - blue, plain 1 r ors> 91/i yd. long. Bgcolors. yard LOL $1 00 value 3 tb. Comfort Batts, good pair . grade cotton, qq Marquisette Curtainsstitched, each hemme d style, with new 81u99 Wearwell Sheets, picot edges, cream or very best grade, 4 year ecru colors guaranteed wear! Regu- ni/ . . nr TI(J V lar pries $1.39; “ 4 ° <1 99 Sale price 2'/, yd. long pair Niblick &
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