Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 276, Decatur, Adams County, 20 November 1934 — Page 6
Page Six
wise
PLAYER TRADES MAY BE FEATURE OFANNUALMEET Baseball Leaders Gather At Annual Minor League Meeting Louisville, Ky„ Nov. 2'l (U.R> Arrival of the Chlcagb Cubs' delegation, headed by Charles J Grimm, with a frte rein on the Wrigley money bags and the power to act, promised to stir up interest today on the eve of the 33rd annual j c nve'ition of the National Association. The meeting ruu3 through ; Friday. The National Association is a minor league gathering, but prac tically all the major 'eague clubs are represented here and several I of them are talking trade and : transfer in a large way. Frequently the managers and magnates never get beyond the talking stage at i this annual conclave. That's where Grimm, manager I and vice-president of the Cults, comes in. Grimm, under the new I’. K. Wrigley regime, has more authority than any other major league manager. Wrigley's only orders to Grimm are to get togeth-; er the strongest club possible. Grimm covets several players. ■ m’adTso'n THEATRE - Last Time Tonight - Paul Lukas Wynne Gibson Vicki Baum’s “I GIVE MY LOVE” Cornodv, “P’easine Grandpa” Football Reel, Couch Alonzo Ptop-ff of the University of Chicago gives his ideas of the game. News. 10 & 15c Wednesday & Thursday—Edward Everett Horton. Genevieve Tobin “UNCERTAIN LADY." Vaudeville Parade. Goofytone News. 10 & 15c ISmWBSHWSISSWWBS’’*’ - Last Time Tonight - FRFD ASTAIRE and GINGFR POCFPst in “THE GAY DIVORCEE” with Edward E’" r e“ Horton] and Alice Bradv, Added - - “TULIP TIME IN HOT.LAN’V’ in the RemHiful NEW Colortone. 10c-25c Wed. & Thurs.—Chester Morris & Marion Nixon in “EMBARRASSING MOMENTS." You’ll never know just HOW EMBARRASSING embarrassment can be until you see this Hilarious picture! 10-15 c — Sun. Mon. Tues. — Cecil B. DeMille’s — “CLEOPATRA" — with!
C'audette Colbert, Warren William, Henry Wilcoxon. ANOTHER BIG SPECIAL! I CORT Tonight, Wed., Thurs. A Woman in a thousand—a thousand women in one. She’s Exotic . . . Enticing . . . Alluring. The shadiest lady in his’ory. Delores Del Rio as “MADAME DU BARRY” Victor Jorv, Veree Teasdale. Reginald Ow*n. Anita Louise PlusBen Blue “All Sealed Up” and a Pepper Pot Noveltv. 10-15 c Sun. - Mon. • Tues. Spencer Tracy in “MARIE GALONTE” with Ned Sparks, Stepin Fetchit, Helen Morgan and that seriaationai new screen find Ketti Gallian.
I including pitchers Hui Schumacher Lind Carl Hubbell of the Giants, Van Mungo of Brooklyn and Larry I French. Fttisburgh southpaw. He I has more cash to spend than any I other National league manager, and plenty of trading material j When Grimm was elevated recent, ly to the vice presidency he was ; empowered to make his own deals ] as he saw tit. The first major league news there was the announcement tha‘ hhe Cincinnati Reds have signed i "Long George" Kelly, former tlrst 1 ‘baseman of the Giants and Reds. I and Tommy Sheehan, pitcher with the Hollywood Pacific coast league club last season, as Cincinnati coaches. Burt Shotton. Beds coach last year, was dropped. Shotton. who formerly managed the Phil | i lies, still is being paid his full . salary, said to be 115.000 a year. I |by the Phillies. That contract does | not expire until the end of the 1835 season. It is believed Shotion will line up with the Cardinals’) 'chain system in some capacity. o—- * KNOCK ’EM OVER * & SET ’EM UP * —— ■ — ♦ GENERAL ELECTRIC Flang Heim 95 99 1271 Steele 112 133 121 Mclntosh 140 131 120. Real 112 110 141 I Stan 129 90. 901 1 588 554 599 i Assembly I Busse 144 134 130 j Shackley 90 156 120] I Chronister 95 115 107 'Gage 120 99 115 i Lankenau 135 124 116 554 628 588 Starter Beal 147 147 106. I Lister 136 105 9, ’ Aeh son 142 135 125 I Stanley . 113 142 1431 Schultz 128 158 177 766 687 648 1 Rotor |M. C 11" 112 >•> Hoag 1-50 169 129 i ■ Gallager 171 157 155 Keller 143 172 132 • 604 640 547 ! — K- of P. — Chevrolet ! Thompson 121 125 124 ißantz z. . .... 105 98 131 Waters 108 S 3 82 Cline .... 109 137 138] ■ White 105 58 53 548 501 528' Goodyear I Burton 120 146 94 I Murphy 103 120 131 Heiman I's 107 112 | Bush 101 147 112 M Frisinger 151 167 151 j 480 687 6110 o j Academy Gets Gift Flags WAYNE. Pa. (U.R) —Gift flags., ' from the Presidents of Mexico and ■ Guatemala, to complete an extenj sive Pan-American collection, have been received by the Valley Forge ! Military Academy. —e Owns Ancient Wooden Chest BOONVILLE. Mo. (U.R) — W. W. Gott owns a wooden chest dating I back to the 15th Century, when it belonged to the McGervey family ) in Ireland.
j — i A Loan 'WhenYou Need It Sudden and unexpected needs Ox money hit all of us at times. I At such times you can get ( money from us quickly, easily, confidentially. Our company ■will lend you up to S3OO on | your own signature and secu- , rity, at lawful interest rates. You can pay us back in small | ■weekly, or monthly payments. ©FRANKLIN SECURITY CO ! Decatur Indiana Phone 237 ■— -IM F~ —TTTTTI —■ SPECIAL ALL WEEK SUITS. TOPCOATS, O'COATS, LADIES' PLAIN COATS, LADIES' pr •| WOOL DRESSES. Call for and Deliver. i - I i iony l umhieson g 318 Maple St. Phone 185
C. E. CLUB TO PLAY TONIGHT Local Independent Team ’I Will Play Fort Wayne Five Tonight The Decatur G. E. club will open • its batiketball season tonight at the , ] Yellow Jacket gym. meeting the ! Fort Wuyne Paper Box company . 1 quintet. ] The local team has loomed strong in practice sessions held in the past 'two we ke anl the Fort Wayne team is one of the strongest among tb- industrial fives ot that city. Former Yellow Jacket und Commodore players are .included in the Decatur lineup. The starting five will b j selected from Chalnwr Dell 4t, Dick Steele. Bill Gass. Carl Gerber. Voyle. Robert and Vernon Hill. Carl 'Smith is acting as trainager and coa h of the team. | The preliminary gome tonight . will start at 7:30 o’clock. The G. E. ! I second team will meet the Pleasant Mills independents in the opener, with the feature game scheduled to start »it 8:30. j Low admission prices of 15 cents I for adults and 10 cents for school students will he charged. The door will open nt 7 o’clock. Former Basketball Star’s Wife Is Dead I«oganeport. Ind.. Nov. 20—(UP) . - Mrs. Ann Stonebraker. 44. wife of ] ! Sheriff IHomer Ston braker of j ' C»iss : ounty died here today after) a short illness. The huh ban i and ! one <lau£ht<T survive. O . Cloverleaf Team Will Open Season Wednesday The Cloverleaf Creameries inde- ] rendent basketball team will open: its senson Wednesday night, meeting the Kendallville independents at the Yellow Ja k t gym. Admission prices will be five cents for children and 15 cents for adults. o ——— Mob Threatens Life Os Negro; Richmond. Va„ Nov. 20 —(U.R) — 1 A giant negro laborer, alleged conI fessor of the murder of two young white girls, was lodged in the I Richmond jail today for safekeeping after being threatened twice with mob violence. The negro, Phiilip Jones, was brought here by officers shortly after midnight. Mobs had threatened the prisoner at Roanoke and i < linton Forge, scene of the nurd-1 I ers. - ' .... —■- Milk Price War Threatens State Indianapolis. Nov. 20. — (U.R) — faced with the threat of a milk J price war which would lower the cost of a quart to three cents, milk producers and distributors of the Indiana area will meet tomorrow with Lieut. Gov M Clifford Townsend. special mediator. Retail price of milk already has dropped from nine to seven cents j a quart as result of the dispute and independent operators are I threatening to cut the price four cents more. o Melody Brings Fame Anderson. S. C — (U.R) —Virginia Todd. 16-year-old high school sen , ior. has officially crashed into the! ranks of song writers. Attracted ■by an advertisement, Virginia said,] I she dashed off a song, “You Broke My Heart,” in 40 minutes—2o for | the words and 20 for the melody. I A New York publishing house ac- 1 cepted it. Virginia will receive $125 besides ten per cent royalties. o
NEW LANGUAGE METHOD TRIED Omaha. Neb.—<U.R>~Education in ; foreign languages is having a new Ideal in the classes of Dr V. Royce ‘west ate Omaha Municipal University. As pioneer in the field Dr. West is testing the ground for a I newer and simpler method of teach- ' ing strange tongues. j Instituted a year ago, the system employed by Dr. West utilizes dictaphones and foreign newspapers in addition to text books. With the old fashioned system reduced to a minimum In classroom work, the students use their spare time in learning pronunciation from phonograph records in foreign languages, or by checking their own speech ;by playing back dictaphone records. Practical phraseology and usage are obtained from the daily foreign newspapers. "We are highly pleased,” said Dr W. E. Sealock, president of Municipal University, who with Dr West originated the system. "Our students are receiving untold benefits. This policy is being followed by some of the larger universities. As an adjunct of the program,
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 20, 1»34.
\O - Z 1 Leading .. AH I Il e/G' rev r* In j >•• W S4CMX I / JwrißPb-' v aw* 1 |up / JjpF’fr rAT / LUND \ j| KOSTKA \ iBP' _ I BfSWANGCR I |U, r- ■ z CIMDBC«G z" ““W > JiffS eevNON I I v 5 Puevis susoue xcf. PuRVS 1 'a .J I*-, a , won Ail AHcricam rARTEO. / (j A \ "ONCKS LAsr VTAR. I \ AMP MAY (iAld a hEIK'N.. 1 Place oa, me If X mythical. TE.AHS Amp cwo If I an. again rkis rrA« S ta res IK. v ecAsxY I ?
the students publish an illustrated monthly, "Babel.” which as the names implies, is published In four or five different languages.. Dr. Sealock has found students learn to converse faster in foreign tongues under the new system and that it keeps them more absorbed in their subject o Talked Four Days KANSAS CITY, Mo. (U.R) — A nervous ailment caused Lloyd Hus-
High Court Scans Moonev Case IpMilre-uPii •Or W»f~*** < “ f Tom Moon- g j right, Chief I J ice Charles I > ■ ant Hughes; ’ L ~ J San Fran- >’» Prepared- . Day parade, w indicates MMI JbL claimed e Mooney and - I I Granting permission for the filing of a writ of habeas corpus, the United States supreme court has revealed it will review the case of Tom Mooney, noted labor prisoner, now serving a life term in San Quentin prison, California. Mooney, convicted for alleged cony plicity in the fatal San Francisco Preparedness Day parade bombing in 1916, contended in his petition he was convicted on perjured testimony. He asserts he was watching the parade some distance from the scene of the blast, and has a photograph of his position purporting to prove his assertion.
Motorists, Attention! DRIVE OUT AND FILL YOUR TANK While this price is in effect. 7 Gal. MOBILGAS $1 As Another Special we offer a comp’ete GREASE JOB—using only good products— /fl for only Convenient Driveways and a Courteous and Prompt Service to all. Strickler Service Station Corner Bth and Monroe Sts.
I fey. 21. to talk four days, without , stopping to eat or sleep. He answered questions intelligently,and talked mostly of religion His condition was caused by a shock J o IPrize’Cow Mother of Twins Bucyrus, 0.-.(U.R) —The stork was I generous on a recent visit to the I Chuckwait dairy farms. It left twins to Observers Semiramide, a | prize cow of the widely known • Chuck wait herd.
GIVE CONTRACT FOR BUILDING I Modern Business BuildI injf Will Be Constructed At Bluffton * — —1« Bluffton. Nov. 20 —(SpediaH Hoyt H. Hartman, representative of a group «of Bluffton business men. who purchased the vacant lots on the northwest corner of Main and Market streets from the Leadler Realty company and the Morl row estate, announced today that. 1 Jesse Reiff was the low bidder for | ! the contract to construct a new all- | modern building on the site. . The new structure will be two stories high and will have a base- ! ment. The cost will be about $lB,1000. Construction will begin im- ] mediately. Three modern business rooms ] j will be located on the first floor, [two of them fronting on Market | street and one on Main street. The two fronting on .Market street will he 80 feet long and the one to the 1 west will have only a 24-foot front. ■ age. The one to the east will have ! a frontage on Market street of 34 | feet and window display space, of ] SO feet along Main street. The business room at the rear of those fronting on Market street . will have an 18 foot frontage on Main street and will be 62 feet ! de'ep. — o — i SENATOR SAYS HUGE WASTE IN RELIEF FUNDS (CtyNTTNUKn f-hom »-a«R ONSi I were $2.68 spent in administering • $3.47 of relief; $5,100 for admin- | istering $4,700; and $576 to administer $6.00. i "It is fair to say that some improvement has been made." he ! went on. “For instance, we find, according to the last report avail- | able, in one county relief cost I $912 80. administration cost $861.56. In another county relief cost $847.58. administration cos* $826 68. In another county the : relief cost $692.10, administration i cost $692.15.” Urge Spending By By Corporations Washington. Nov. 20 — (U.R) — I Spending by big corporations for plant modernization is a factor in I predictions here that business will pull upward. There is. also, the impetus for co-operation between i the White House and the U. S. ! chamber of commerce. Corporate spending is sought ns a shot-in-the-arm measure. It would serve to maintain the moderate bisiness upturn expected new to develop around a good Christmas retail business The advantages of the corporate spending plan are explained as including: 1. Quick large-scale re-emnloy-CANDY - C O D comes to DECATUR Each small bar of Delicious Chocolate contains Vitamines eouivalent to one teaspoonful of Pure Cod Liver Oil. Protects the health, builds strong bone and teeth. Start your children on Candy-Cod today! Convenient 25c and 75c packages available at B. J. SMITH DRUG CO.
ment. , t 2. Creation of nn outlet for durable goods. Debtor Nations Dunned By U. S. Washington. Nov. 20—<U.R) -The treasury dunned the war debtors today, pointing out that on Dee ’ 15 they will owfe $154,729,976 on account. The 12 nations to which the notices were sent and the total amount dne Dec. 15 follow: Belgium, $3,109,454; Czeeho-Slo-vakia, $1,682,813; Eathonla, $531. 3M»; Finland, $228,538; France $22,308,312; Great Britain, $117,. 670.765; Hungary, $50,211; Italy, $2,141,593; lauvie, $220,633; l,ithuania. $121,467; Poland. $6,616, 040; and Roumania, $48,750.
Public AucfiJi I the undersigned having sold my farm will ..a on the farm located miles mu-1, „f |,;. ia , llr 1 /' Monmouth, across the road from I<uk,.'i lun , Thursday. Nov. 22,1934 Commencing At 1:00 O'clock P M I CATTLE j Black cow. 9 years old. due to be fresh in Feb - ir.,..,., . j. .7W bred giving good flow of milk; Spotted heller a 5 months old. w4liisß (). HOGS j II Head of Shoats. weighing up to 100 lbs. 1 W POULTRY | Some Rock Pullets; 2 geese; 1 gander ■ Si HAY —GRAIN I <l>.i 5 Ton of good clover hay in mow; 200 shocks of corn I.sal i corn fodder. IMPLEMENTS I j 1 Turnbull wagon and beet rack; Moline mower; Olirer I ing plow; Riding cultivator: 7 shovel cultivator, double SI [ shovel. 2 section spring tooth harrow; tools and otheTERMS:—CASH. | FRED LINIGER, Owner CHRIS BOHNKE—Auctioneer. I PubHc Sok |1 I. the undersigned will sell at public auction, at my re-.. ■ miles north and one mile east of Berne, or two miles half mile east of Monroe, on I Thursday. November 22 s Commencing at 9:00 O’clock A, M. the following prcpeity-H ' NINE HEAD HORSES—One matched team sorrel mares. three years old. weight 2,400 lbs., one dapple gr-v. six 1.300 lbs.: one bay mare, seven years old 1.1'") lbs.; years old. weight 3.200 lbs.; one blind grey horse, 13 vests 1.650; one roan mare colt. 18 months old: on» roan colt.six one chestnut srrel colt, four months old I > TWENTY HEAD CATTLE—One threeyear old cow, cal!i one Holstein cow. 3 yrs. old. to ba fresh soon: one Holstein 1 old. giving a good flow of milk; one Holstein cow. 6 yrs stein cow. 5 yrs. old. one Holstein cow 4 yrs. old; one HolswSgs yrs. old. to be fresh soon: one Holstein cow. 4 yrs. old; cow. 5 yrs. o'd: one Holstein cow. 4 yrs. old. to be ■ Holstein cow. 3 yrs. old; one Holstein cow. 3 yrs, old: "ow. 3 yrs. old; one Guernsey cow. 8 yrs old: five steers, 600 lbs. each: ore roan Durham bull, coming 3 yrs. old, weight 60 HEAD OF HOGS—Four sows, two with nigs bv four nigs and one with six nigs; 15 shoats. vuighinz 120lbs.«(M shoats weighing 60 lbs., each; one Poland China male hog jB SHEEP—Seven ewes. ~1 GPAIN—SSO shocks of corn in the field; some corn field; five tons good mixed hay in mow. I IMPLEMENTS—One McCormick-Deerinz binder, eight Mr Corm lek-Deering mnwer; on° McCormick-Deering. drill; one good double McCormick-Deering disc, seven d'scstolj lone good McCormick-Deering hav loader: one cod (side rake; one ha.v rake: one corn nlcnter one cultiMf roller: three ridine plows; six walking plows; tun - 1 'tooth borrow: one 3-section snike tooth harrow: on 1 new r ) two cultivators: one good John Deere corn binder, oy - V 'manure «weader: one mod Weber wagon' one low w w '’va-*on beds* o n e s*one bed: one corn sled: one mud oa , 1 one set of log hunks; one sleigh; one concrete tnixer “D ’'arrows; one coinnlete s«* of blacksmith tools, one gas | I cream separator: shop tools; iron'kettles. S | HARNFSS—Five sets of farm harness some er collars; forks and shovels; some timothy and alia f ’ ■ (trailer' some hueeies; many other articles not mention ■ TERMS—Cash. j JOHN J SCHWARTZ. Sr. Owner ■
Specials For Wednesday Nice Fresh Ground Beef • M Good Beef to Boil or Stew -J Neck Bones of Pork ’’ Fresh Pork jj. Bulk Sauer Kraut£ Fresh Picnic Hams jju Smoked Picnics J Fresh Oysters Today Only •• P Fresh Eggs, not storageft,, Sit Creamery Butter Pilot Coffee, Good One Tender Steak Nice Veal Steak, Nice Beef Roasts • • Include 1 can of Cadet Peaches $ with Meat order, for Mutschler’s Meat Nadj Phone 106 or 107
" tON’DON J * IH “MM bjJj *"‘l Frirn.,, u, M families when Princw, ar . M mmsttt I ” *1)» by ruw ‘ J T ''c other ht, J *" , * r 'I" i rtUwi and denthi r °^ l »re 2J Oorgs and N ‘J: ,r ‘he record of th, J J I Pn| oß of Prl hfM ,T* ,/;wrgCs_b»by I
