Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 223, Decatur, Adams County, 20 September 1935 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
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CHICAGO GUBS RUN WINNING STREAK TOl6 Dizzy Dean Hurls H in To Keep Cardinals In Battle New York, Sept. 20—<U.R>— The Chicago Cubs get a well-earned rest from their 1935 record-setting pace of 16 straight victories today as the National leagues eastern teams head home with the pennant already the property of the west. Headed by the Cubs, who dTcln't lose a single game against four eastern opponents, the western teams won 48 an* lost 19 in their last stand of the season against the invaders. The Cards gathered 12 victories and Pittsburgh and Cincinnati accounted for 10 each. The Giants turned in the best eastern record with eight victories and eight defeats. Major league interest until the season ends Sept. 29 will center on the Cubs and Cards, who still have to decide which of them is going to play Detroit in the world eeriee. The Cards definitely are on the spot in their battle to retain The title they won a year ago. The Cubs are riding the crest of a 16game winning streak with no apparent weakness developing in any department. Pitching is holding up well. Charlie Grimm is rotating his five-man staff so precisely | that each gets at least three days rest between games. i The Cubs are functioning well at
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bat and one needs to look no further than Wednesday's game witli the Giants, wherein the Cubs scored 14 runs in two innings, to see that they are getting more than' their quota of hits. The Cards, hanging on grimly only 2>. 2 games behind, have been I forced to depend on the Dean I Brothers, who havd'appeared in 16 of the last 19 games. The loss of i Terry Moore because of an injured leg has crippled them defensively , and offensively. The schedule also favors the Cubs. They have two games with Pittsburgh, one each tomorrow and Sunday, and then are idle until Wednesday, when they open the final five games of the season at St. Louis. The Cards have In ] games left and need to win their next five if they are to have a fighting chance against Chicago in the "showdown” series. The Cubs defeated the Giants yesterday 6 1. sending the Giants to games behind Chicago. Dizzy Dean, who lost his last three games, won his 27th of the season as the Cards defeated Brooklyn, 9-1. to < remain 2*4 games la-hind Chicago. ; Pittsburgh defeated Boston. 76. and Cincinnati beat Philadelphia, • 6-1. I In the only American league < game Boston defeated Detroit, 4-1 1 No games were scheduled in i either league today. 1 1 Yesterday's hero: Paul Derringer. ’ i Cincinnati pitcher, who joined the ranks of the 25-game winners for ! the first time in his big league career when he yielded only four hits against Philadelpl 'a. o > 1 Dick Schacks Orchestra, i Sundav dance, Sun Set Park.
MICHIGAN TEAM IS AGAIN WEAK Wolverines Likely To Finish Last Again This Season Ann Arbor. Mich., Sept. 20. <U.R) I- There's a rung ut the bottom of i the Big Ten football ladder reserved for the University of Michigan this fall. It's the same rung that the Wolverines were grasping at the close j of the 1934 campaign, when they lost all six of their western confer j ence games. | Coach Harry Kipke's team is bound to be improved, but so are I all the others in the league. Losing football games Is a new experience for Michigan, where championship teams are the rule rather than the exception. The Wolverines got panicky after failing to will their early games last year and were badly demoral- j ized when the season ended. If, that same attitude prevails this 1 fall even the most loyal Maize and Bine supporters foresee disaster. Michigan has one of the hardest schedules in the conference and is the only team besides Northwest- . ern which plays both Minnesota and Ohio State. Fourteen lettermen ami 15 reserves reported to Coach Kipke for the opening practice blit the burd- - en of regaining Michigan's lost prestige probably will fall on the 25 sophomores who turned out. Captain Bill Renner, a superb passer who was kept out of competition in 1934 with injuries, will I direct the team. Cedric Sweet is i back at full and has an efficient! substitute in Harry T.utomrki. The best halfback prospects are , three sophomores. Bob Cooper. De- ’ troit; Stark Richey. Battle Creek, i and John Smither, Elkhart. Ind. Chris Everhardus, who showed great promise periodically in 1934. Whitey Aug. Joe Ellis. Dave Bar-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 193 d:
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nett, and Ferris Jennings also are fighting for the halfback jobs. STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct. , Chicago 95 52 .646 St. Louis 91 53 632 , New York 84 56 .600 , Pittsburgh .84 63 .571 j Cincinnati 66 82 .446 Brooklyn 62 80 .437 Philadelphia 60 83 .420 ' Boston 34 107 .241 : . i AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct. Detroit 90 52 .634 I New York 82 59 .582 1 Cleveland Y 3 69 .521 I Boston 74 71 .521 1 Chicago 70 72 .493 Washington 63 80 .441 ! St. Louis 60 82 .423 Philadelphia 55 84 .396' YESTERDAY'S RESULTS National League Chicago. 6; New York, 1. Cincinnati. 6; Philadelphia. 1. Pittsurgh, 7; Boston. 6. St. Louis. 9; Brooklbyn. 1. American League Boston, 4; Detroit. 1. St. Louis at New York, played former date. Cleveland at Philadelphia, play- ' ed former date. o Babe Risko Beats .Middleweight Champ Pittaburgh. Sept. 20 —(UP)—As far as this country is concerned Babe Risko. handsome ex-gob from Syracuse, is world middleweight' champion. i Rtako wen the title last night with a 15-round decision at Forbes field over Teddy Yarcez, of Monaca, Pa., who only this we?k had been listed as et ampion by the national boxing association. Yarosz. knocked out by Risko last New Year's at Scranton In a nontitle bout, severely injured the second cartlaige of his right knee after At The Last I^7’■Kfe Dance As She Was At Cocktails (I j Do you want to v . 7 / A avoid shiny \ AhA nose .. or cak- v, \ ed powder ap- \ pearance? gjK U s e Ca r a ES Nome, the long I ME clinging face powder, that I Kjg coaxes your / I Kg* skin into / 1 amazing new / beauty. / / | Fine and silk- / / | en soft. Cara /; Nome does not i/ i | cake or look pasty. Cara Nome is sold only at Rexall Drug Stores. CARA NOME FACE POWDER $2 B. J. SMITH DRUG CO.
being floored In the fourth round. H > was knocked down twi e for counts of . ight afterward and managed only by gameness to last the I distance. o SCOUTS SPEAK — CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE scouts visited the White House, Arlington Cemetery, Mt. Vernon, the Lincoln Memorial. Washington Monument and the Aircraft building. Returning to New York, the I party spent several hours at Radio City. The scouts were also taken | on atrip down the Hudton river, j spending most of the day on boat. I Monday morning, they left New j York for Fort Wayne. H. P. Schmitt had charge of the program. o Two Corporations Announce Merger Pittsburgh, S -,t. 20 —(UP) —The ; Carn gle Steel company and the American Sheet and Tin Plate com* ; ;>any announced here today that I they w uld file merger articles next Thursday, bringing into each of ’hem several smaller subsidiaries of the United States Steel corporai tion. The Carnegie Company will bring into it the Clairton Steel company, the Clah-ton by-product coke company. the Uni:n Steel company all ‘ of Pittsburgh, and the Lorain si -el j company of Johnstown, Pa. The American sheet and tin plate i com,-any will bring into it the SharI on tin plate company of Sharon. Pa. : o , New Liquor Ruling Announced By Fry Indianapolis. Ind., Sept. 20 —(UP) j Dance balM and ball ro ms will not be permitted to sell liquor or beer under a ruling announced today by the state alcoholic beverages commission. Such establishments, where sale of food is incidental, will be deni. d permits, Paul P. Fry. state excise administrator, said. The ruling however, docs not apply to night clubs where meats are s rved. Fry said. ; 7 THIS SCIENTIFIC ( OUCH DROP GIVES YOU THE ACTION OF ASPIRIN! Get the benefits of an aspirin gargle with this new, scientific cough drop that Rexall Chemists have just developed. ENDORSED BY HOSPITALS Already it has been endorsed by physicians and nurses in leading hospitals for its action. NO ASPIRIN TASTE Aspirex is delicious tasting — no aspirin taste. And you get real cough relief. Try Aspirex. ASPIREX 10c B. J. SMITH DRUG CO.
JOE LOUIS IS | BET FAVORITE Joe Louis Likely To Enter Ring Tuesday A 2-1 Favorite New Y rk. Sept. 20 (Ul’i Jo* Louis probably will enter the ring a 2-1 favorite to d« frat Max Baer according to odd., quot 1 today. The fight promised to be one of; the bigg .It lietting affairs in history Despite hales of Baer money, which show d throughout tM nation in the iaot w ek. and thousands of beta made at odds ranging from 9-5 to 7-5, there was such a flood of Louis money . n the market today that the quotations must I lengthen in favor of Louie. That's the opinion of Ja k Doyle. : v- teran Broadway commissi-n .r, and Diwald Newton, big ehot Harlem betting man. Newton claimed he can't get Baer money unless he offers more than 3-2 "and Louis man y is just pouring In there isn’t anything will stop Joe going into that ring less : an a 2-1 favorite." Doyle, who has handled fight he is since 1892. when Corbett upm t Sullivan. said he'd never s nso much betting. He ;redi ted the odds would lengthen, favoring Louis, especially on Tuesday "when a wagon load of smart mon y will be bet on Joe." the "big boys." he said, "are waiting to make certain that Joe, will enter the ring without any cuts-or hand Injuries.” Doyle’s book showed the follow- j ing odds: 1- against Irnuis winning. 8-5 against Ba r winning. 2- against L uis knocking out Baer. Even money against bout going' limit. 10-1 against either man s oring a one-round knockout. 5-1 against either man scoring] a two-round knockout. The preliminary tard for the i fight Tuesday has been completed.] DEFENSE WILL CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE defense. Dr. Northrup stated that he had treated Mr. Ratliff once after the amputation. This time he was suffeting from a lump under his arm. ; Dr. Northrup sent him to a vet-, erans' hospital where the lump was cut out. He assumed tha» it was caused by a cancerous lymp.h gland. He said that it was possible for the iymptli streams to have carried cancer cells from the infected hands before the amputation to the concentrated lymptl
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. glamds in the arm pits. This he 'assumed did not make itself evildent un’ll some time after the HinputalionThe plaintiff was able to read into the record the expectancy of j Mr. Ratliff This is 27.61 years ' which as he now 40 would give him an expectancy to live until 67.61 years of age. The figures ] were taken from life insurance tables. The establishment of the 1 expectancy is necessary in fixing the extent of damages. The def, ns« objected to the introduction ; of these figures on the basis' that they wore given for healthy individual and they assumed that Mr. Ratliff was not of average ‘hc-a’th. This motion was overI ruled. HISTORY SHOWS SCALPED INFANT LIVED IN FAME Prairie du Chien. Wis. —lU.P.) Time was when life at Sugar Loaf Hill near here wasn't so sweet. It was at Sugar Loaf Hill that the shot was fired that started the bloody Winnebago War 107 years ago and nearly ended the life of a woman who was destined to lie a famous frontier mother, a recent survey by Dr. J. P. Scanlan, local historian, revealed. Mary Gagnier was a few months old when Chief Red Bird of the Winnebagos, seeking revenge on
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the erroneous rep (>r . his hostages had been ,ta. ’ W | Snelling, killed her r d her throat antl ” M niother and brother her for dead H 1 "»| Sutlers found the | nr , w 1 ■ and nursed her b Wk h( ‘« I ; Series Os Blasts Kills One WoJ , Laf.tllette, Tenn., Se P! . —A series of dynaiui te "aid by re,id nts to nombTl > sho.k this area today, ki'ijn,] wotan and injuring h/rtaJj . ran. * 4 The blasts partially » rw J lusinoss building. Mr*. p erf ord was killed inwtantly M j was hurled from an up er nJ the building. J Her children were le» v ; s , building and es aped with . juries, according to witness FOR SALE Used farm machin 1 rebuilt McCormick 30; 17-. ft. tractor disk; 1 horse disk and tandem: 1 ;.(• 1 disk and tandem: 1 12-in. twol 1 tom Oliver tractor plow; 5 « ■ seperators; 2 spreaders; 3 » ' plows. McCormick Deering st, 220 N. Third St Decatur I I a 1 Tr»de in a Good Town _ Q e ,,
