Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 196, Decatur, Adams County, 19 August 1935 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
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TIGERS LEAD BY 8 GAMES Schoolboy Rowe Holds Yanks To Three Hits To Score Shutout - New York, Aur. 19 —(U.R)—Detroit's Jlgers have Jlinched- themselves a second ehampionship. * In less than a month since they look the lead from the New York Yankees the Tigers have fashioned a commanding eight game lead. At this time a year ago they led the league by 3% games. With the Yankees in a dismal slump, winding only nine of IS starts this month, it will be almost Impossible for the New Yorkers to catch them. If the Tigers win 30 of the remaining 45 games they will have a final standing of 100 won. 54 lost. A year ago they won the pennant with 101 victories. At their present rate, 'the Tigers oan reasonably be expected to gather those necessary triumphs. If the Tigers win 30, which will mean playing around a .660 clip, the Yankees must capture 39 of their next 47 to gain a tie and jrin 40 while losing 7 to take the pennant. For a team that has (>een shut out nine times and lost 23 games by one run margins it seems a hopeless task. The Tigers made it 'two in a row in their current series with the New Yorkers by capturing the second game yesterday, 6-0. That brought 'the Yankees' total lickings on their present western swing to four against two victories. Schoolboy Rowe was the star as he held the New Yorkers to three hits and sipped out a homer. The third place Boston Red Sox. five games behind the Yankees, split a doubJeheader with St. Louis. Boston won the opener. 5-2, and lost >the second, 4-3. The Washington Senators beat Cleveland's Indians, 4-2. in a 10-inning opener and dropped the nightcap 13-4. Philadelphia and Chicago • were rained out. In the National league the leading New York Giants gained ground ! with an 8-4 victory over the Cincinnati Reds. The second place St. LoffTs Cardinals lost a half game and dropped to 2*4 games behind the Giants by splitting a double header with Boston. The Braves won the opener, 2-1, and the Cards took the nightcap, 9-4 in 10 innings. The •third place Chicago Cubs
Bv The Eighty-Third Annual Indiana State Fair I World’s Second Largest Agriculture Exposition M. CLIFFORD TOWNSEND .I_ , , , | Commitiioner of Agriculture EVERETT 3. PRIDDY, -•/, I President s-i j ■ UWVWWWMMMVWWWVWMMVWWWWVWWWUWW I Tomorrow FINAL DAY :! for Paying July ;! City Light Bills All bills are due and payable at the City Hall ,not later ' than tomorrow—August 20. ]i Your cooperation in making payment will be greatly appreciated. ] il All past due accounts I[l should be paid as soon as 111 possible. Arrange for payment today at the City Hall nrrrrririririnnnniwnnnfijuuuuiJuuuuuituuuvwinnnnnAnrinj
dropped to three games in the rear of New York defeating Phllade’phia, 8-3, and losing the second, I 6-5. ? Brooklyn defeated Pittsburgh, 3 ) 0 and 9-3. Yesterday's hero: Fred Frank--6 house, Boston pitcher, who held the St. Louis Cardinals to tlx hits in the opener and batted in both his team’s runs. o LEADING BATTERS 1 Player Club GAB R H Pct. , Vaughan, Pirates 103 376 89 153.407 Medwick, Cards 110 448 95 165.368 Myer. Senators 109 443 85 153.345 Cramer, Athletis 103 459 73 158.344 Greenberg. Tiger 110 458 93 157.343 O *- HOME RUNS 1 Greenberg. Tigers 31 Berger, Braves 26 Ott. Giants 24| Foxx. Athletics Johnson. Athletes 21. , Camilli. Phillies 21 — _o HOUSE PASSES CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE leaders with President Roosevelt that congress could adjourn this , week, others were not so hopeful. , After the three-hour discussion the president's legislative adjutants had the following list of -must" bills to enact into law ( I before adjournment: j 1. The public utility holding , •company bill. I 2. The Guffey coal bill 3. The tax bill 1 4. The banking bill E 5. TV A legislation < 6. Alcohol control bill [ 7. Government contract bill 8. Railroad reorganization 1 , 9. Oil compact ratification 10. Gold clause bill 11. Third deficiency bill. Congress is in an impatient mood and will not relish any great i amount of additional work. < To prevent a stampede of legis- ’ lators away from Washington lead- t ers planned to hold the tax bill conference report in abeyance y until after most of their "must" , list had been accomplished. ( Most of the bills on the list . ’ can be put through easily. The , ! holding company and Guffey bills ( offserious, pnotlins fol* new ] deal leadens, however. , — o 1 Bullet Removed After 40 Years ( Miles City, Mont.—(U.Rl—A bul- f let lodged in his hand 40 years ago t whi’e he was a boy in Virginia was removed recently from the hand |
of John Laney, park superintend dent. It was lodged under the base of the thumb where it joins the palm. J DOUBLES TEAMS ; OPENTOURNEY National Doubles Tourney Opens At Chestnut Hill Today I Ches’nut Hills, Mass., Aug. 19. 1 , — <U.R)—The flags of five nations ( fluttered over the historic Longwood tennis courts today as the crack doubles teams of rhe world began a week-long drive toward ' the American tandem championships.
f Top-ranking pairs from the UnitI ed States, Great Britain. France, i Czechoslovakia, and Spain, are en- , 'tered in the Longwood fixture, sec- ; ond in importance in this country only to the national singles at Forest Hills. Two new championship pairs are certain to be crowned because George Lot, who shared in both I the men's and mixed titles last i year, has turned professional. FavI ored to succeed Lott and his partner, Lester S'oefen, in the men's division, are the top-seig'ed American pair, Johnny Van Ryu and Wi'mer Allison. The Philadelphian and the Texan, who represented the United States in the Davis cup this year, are expected to meet their heaviest opposition from the l Czecho-lovakian giant. Roderich Menzel, and Enrique Maier of Spain. In the mixed doubles. Helen Ja- j cobs, who teamed with Ix>tt co win . in 1934, has chosen Allison as a running made, and is liked over field which includes Mrs. Sarah . Palfrey Fabyan and Maier. Carolin Babcock and Wilmer Hines, I , and Dorothy Andi us of Stamford. , Conn., and Martin Legeay of ( France. o Twenty-Five Boys Go To 1-H Camp 11 Tw. nty-five boys left this morn-, ing for toe Adams county 4 H club j ■ camp at Boyville, Epworth Forest, , 1 North Webster. They will remain i 1 until Friday afternoon. Those who went are Robert Fuhr-; man. Dal * Fuhrman. Russell Freidt; J ( Paul Kiess, Richnrd Moses, Glen Griffiths. Doyle Sheets, Raymond | Sheets, Robert Sheets. Roger Ar-1 1 nold. Donald Arnold, Arthur Poling. •' Guy Koos. Leonard Rogers. Vernon , Huffman. Harold Hitchcock. War- ! ren Harden. Jack Mahon. Ralph ' Hawkins. Lewis Brown, Lewis Koldewey. Jr.. Lloyd Mohan. Lloyd Kitson. Fred Harden and Earl Fuhr-1 j man. I < Fay Gunder donated tire use of , i his truck and biw time to take the ' r boys to the camp. r
Those Driving Tigers” Who Can Stop Them? • — 5 fl ' ** -< Jr x M; W . JmhS fit zX ‘ *** igg '' Jflfi r<>** < "**- H JfiJßi LJK* IK J IMF WWI \ > Hraw 1 >® w a flßr Ik jrj l|*3'WMKßr- -'■ as • Jr ; K iwil * * I*xgJV W? *W ■ . ' Hfl rl &s^\.-., 1«2&J MB '.s.-—- -|B r~ Fv| N - ' ; Okss* «wJwi Pret,y fit i \ i ■W'- EV *A\ ■ *fi \ J , 1 * -/" Bl ' ! 'Ji ' < Y Y's Crowder Jifl ■' fiflc fl w - i SSF* 1 B Pyl* / ? I - ® W .■ 'W l Btv i V I \ -Jki " Uit pml Will 1 ■‘■ i Niggr j -e^lfiawWS M % Cochrane, Gehringer and Goaliu """“—“■^—• Hay worth — The bell fen. ere asking "Who can stop the Tiger. ’” lin, Fox and Hayworth. And with good pitching b •nd the answer apparently is "Nobody." For th.' Auker, Crowder, Rowe and Bridges it looks hke «i Detroit aggregation boast six sluggers of the .300 or other American League pennant for the Uetroiter more class in Greenberg, Cochrane. Gehringer, Gos- at least the Tiger fans are claiming it.
DECATUR DARY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. AUGUST 19, 1935.
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DEMANDS NAZIS HALT EXCESSES Germany’s Leading Banker Takes Hand In Persecutions — B rlin. Aug. 19—(UP)—Dr. Hjal-j mar Schacht. Germany’s leading fin-1 i and r. is about to cons lidate himself as an economic dictator res- i ponsible only to Adolf Hitler, it was indi" tej today and on a platform I that demands the cessation cf anti- ( J wish and Anti Catholic excesses. I N ws that Schacht’s ministry of, economics was to absorb the powers i of Carl Goerdeler. Nazi price com-1 mDenr, and that he was bidding for ' effective control of the most ini-1 •portant functions of th.- labor and, agriculture departments came ini-j mediately after a speech in which , e roundly denounced those Nazis' who went outside the strict letter I of the law in opposing jews and Cnth elics. Schacht, president of th* Rieichobank and minister of economics, spoke at Koeniflsberg yesterday. He attacked directly tin? methods! advocated by Julius Streicher, No. 1 • jew ’baiter" and said: "Point 4 of the Natl, nal Socialist (Nazi) platform jirovides that a jew can b- neither a citizen nor a comrade. But roint 5 of tiie same: pkitform provides that a legislative' program must be worked out. This means that a jew can not b? made ‘
' a victim of high hand.d proceedings ! but is only subject to law. "Such laws are now being worked ' out. Until then the present laws must be observed. I “The come appli.s to the religious question, which for Germtany is vastly more important than the ' Jewish question." Acts such as window breaking and pcstlng of placards to pers. cute ‘ en mies" of Nazism. Schacht said, were unworthy of Gerntuny. He ended wit'i a word on the currency situation: “Prom time to time a psychosis for buying up goods appears in ! Germany. P.ople think that they , can thus avoid the effect of infla- | tion which they fear might come. But we at' .ill in one boat. None j can get out."
The laws of which Schacht spoke for regulation of >?wo and others seemed ini i.inent. The first important i't j; to regulate Jewish cultural life came in Saturday's decree stipulating that all Jewish cultural groups must Join a central association by September 15. It means tihat in the coming tl» atrical season thet" will be a sharp contrast from the i:st on?, when Jewish artists , were permitted, it means cultural | isolation -for Ji. ws. On Saturday also came a decree diss. lving the anti-Nazi Evangelical church in Silesia, and another finally dissolving all Fre.‘ Masonic lodges and confiscating their property. o Becoming Venerable The British museum was opened to the public on .lanunry 15. 1759 i
STANDINGS national league W. L. Pct New York St. LOUIS «7 « « Chicago '{j ‘ ’’ Pittsburgh 63 Brooklyn 53 J] Philadelphia M 6 3 Cincinnati 4 » ‘J ' Boston 3 “ 81 " ' AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct. Detroit 70 3 » "«« New York « Boston 58 53 .523 Chicago 54 51 .514 deve'and 56 54 .509 Philadelphia 47 56 .456 Washington 47 64 .423 St. Louis 39 69 - 4 * ll AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. Pct. Minneapolis 72 49 .595 Indianapolis 65 53 .551 Columbus ’ 65 54 .546 Kansas City 66 56 .541 Milwaukee 63 58 .521 St. Paul 58 55 .513 Toledo 46 71 393 Louisville 39 33 - 3 - 3 THREE-I LEAGUE W. L. Pct. Bloomington 30 18 .625 Springfield 26 21 .553 Fort Wayne 23 24 .489 Decatur 4 Jill. > 21 25 .457 Peoria I 9 25 .432 Terre Haute 20 26 .435 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS National League Boston, 2-4; St. Louis, 1-9 (Second game 10 innings). Chicago, 8-5; Philadelphia* 3-6. Brooklyn. 3-9; Pittsburgh. 0-3. New York, 8; Cincinnati, 4. American League Washington. 4-4; Cleveland, 2-13 (First game 10 innings). Philadelphia at Chicago (both games postponed, rain). Boston. 5-3; St. Louis. 2-4. Detroit. 6; New York, 0.
American Association Milwaukee. 8-4; Columbus. 4-3. Toledo. 9-5; Kansas City. 2-4. Minneapolis, 11-3; Louisville. 8-1.1 St. Paul at Indianapolis (both' games postponed, rain). Three-I League Bloomington. 54; Springfield, 0-2 Fort Wayne, 6; Decatur, 1. Terre Haute, 6; Peoria, 5. o Rare Gold Cross Found Erivan, Armenia. — <U.R> —A gold cross weighing 18 grams was discovered near the Dvin village, which was the capital of Armeria,
Lay-Away Sale! of BLANKETS 25c I DOWN (| 25c a week BUY YOUR BED BLANKETS NOW! | AND HAVE THEM WHEN COLD WEATHER ARRIVES. f Hundreds of New Warm Soft Fleecy Blankets to Select From. I Beautiful Patterns and Colors. f Quality Blankets At Low Prices I Singles and Doubles in Cottons and Part Wools. | We Invite You To Come In and Inspect Our Blankets. j HARDWARE nut HOME FURNISHINGS |l — ■—l
Huey Long Threatens to R U n||
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1 : ——■ —— J Senator Huey P. Long 2 ‘'lt looks like I'U have to run for president if things keep on way they are," was Senator Huey P Long’s statement to who interviewed him in New York. The Kingfish declared the try is being run "worse than Ethiopia” and that ”All you get Roosevelt or Hoover is a one-way ticket to hell.” If Roosevelt > Hoover will oppose each other. Long said, he would run an M 1 ticket. a • VI
2‘from the sth to the B’h centuries. ■ This cross, the only one of its kind. ’ is se' with a Sasanlde carved gem bearing the Image of a bird. o— Three Indianapolis Residents Missing Indianapolis. Aug. 19 — <U.R> — Governors of Colorado. Wyoming and Montana w> re asked by Indiana authorities today to search 1 for three Indianapolis residents missing in an airplane eince 1 Thursday. The trio. Burnside Smith, wealthy Indianapolis transfer company president; his pilot Dick Arnett, and the latter's bride of a few ! weeks, have not been heard from I since they took off from Helena, j Mont., municipal airport Thursday j afternoon. o Jefferson Townshin Youth Dies Sunday Harlev Baine Reef. 13 year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Adant J. Re f of Jeff?rson township died at 7:15 o'clcck Sundny evening at the Adams county memorial hospital.
' — Death was dur tn uLn bowels. The boy had ■ j; Wednesday and wa- . hospital Friday night. |H The deceased w s a r .tad-nt^B ir ' the e-venth grad* • : ■? school. He was born in j township March. 11. ix_. Adam and Ruth It,,' 1 parents, two broth ■- ; Ralph and two . •md Phyllis, survive. Fun ral |>rvicto win h, Wednesday afterno :i :„ clock <CST) at th- 1 Ohio. M. P churci and !• a l be at the Riv • Geo-vn.
JUST RECEIVED® LARGE SHIPMENT S of BEA I Till I . NEW fl WINTER I COATS I Mrs. M. Mover I 128 N. 4th st. fi ■'■fl ____
