Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 232, Decatur, Adams County, 1 October 1935 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

YOUNGSTERS ON CHICAGO CUBS HOLO ANSWER IJ. P. Writer Says Series Outcome Depends On “Kids” Detroit, Oct. 1 <U.R) Are the Chicago Cubs hot or cold? That's the world series in a nutshell. It doesn't make much difference whether Hank Greenberg comes out of his dismal batting slump, whether Schoolboy Rowe s fast hall has the old 'zip on it. whether the Detroit Tigers, one ami all, regain the form which won them the American league title. World series gold and glory hinges on the answer to that theory—are the Cubs hot or cold? If the Cubs soil are imbued with that flaming spirit which swept them to 21 straight victories in the drive down the National league stretch, they'll win another worlds champ ionship to place alongside of thofce two titlee captured by Frank Chance “the peerless leader." back in 1907 and 1908. If the Cubs have cooled off after their dazzling September finish, the Tigers will breeze into their first world's championship. If luck, the invisible player, refuses to take sides in this series, the Tigers should win. On the cold dope, they have the better ball club. They won the pennant two years in succession, battled the Cardinals for seven games in last year's

Public Auction THURSDAY EVENING, OCT. 3.. 7P. M. HORSES, CATTLE, SHEEP AND HOGS 20 Good Milch Cows, Heifers. Bulls and Feeding Cattle. Brood Sows, Feeding Shoates, Two Young Chester White Boars (Immuned). Two Ponies. ( bestnut Fence Posts. Miscellaneous articles. DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALES E. J. AHR and FRED C. AHR—Managers. Johnson & Doehrman—Auctioneers. PUBLIC SALE Grocery Stock, Hardware Stock, Equipment and Fixtures The undersigned trustee will sell at public auction, at 135 North Second St.. Decatur. Ind., on FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4th Commencing at 10 o’clock A. M. All of the stock of staple groceries and can goods, hardware, office and store equipment, formerly owned and operated by Fisher 4 Harris. The equipment consists of 4 large computing scales: 2 three Tb. scales: National Cash Register: 2 ceiling electric fans: 1 small electric fan: New typewriter and desk: electric coffee mill and electric meat slicer: large refrigerator and refrigerator display case with icing unit and compressor; steel filing cabinet; safe: check protector; 2 electric heaters: counters; display cases: shelving: cookie rack. NOTE: The stock of groceries, hardware and aluminum ware will be sold in lots. Merchants and dealers should attend this sale. TERMS —Cash or certified check. Ralph Clark, Trustee Arthur E. Voglewede, Atty. Roy S. Johnson—Auct. IjUIR JKM II ! Wl|| ■r ■ II nots t r II Quiet A- 7 pleas?/ SB N fy? R □ t H n n U -TtW u ■ thf y»2e of 7 the bßaim does WOTH INDICATE A PCRJOAjT/IUTEK/GEAiffl S fi| Use the little ol’ bean (brain to you!) and get ready for 11 an fall by having your Radiator work done at the |m Riverside Garage. O| Do not put this off until the last minute—soon you will have to put anti-freeze in it. RIVERSIDE SUPER SERVICE When You Think of Brakes—Think of Us.

world series before they finally lost, and proved they were a great ball club. The Cubs have a young ami resourceful leant, uttd are unbeatable when Imk Urns up on their side In a short series hick plays I the major role, calls the winning | i ) *II " i mediocre players ami bums out of season campaigners. Luck has 4 been riding with the Cubs for a long stretch, and has shown no Inclination to desert them now The Cubs are imbued with the spirit the Cardinals had last year, the ’ spirit the Boston Braves had in | 1914. the spirit the New York Yankees had in 1927 28-32. They think ■ they can't be licked. : “These kids are the greatest . ! bunch of mgney players I ever • saw." says Charlie Grimm. "The . • tougher the going, the better they : 1 play." 1 Gabby Hartnett, denn of the 1 Cubs, thinks it is the greatest in- I ’ spirational team he ever saw as ' sembled in his baseball time. 1 "You'd think a young team like I this would tighten up in a clutch." j 1 says Hartnett. "Every time they: ' knew they had to win a game, they j • won it. 1 think we won the > world's championship when we, ' beat the Cardinals three straight.! ‘ We had to win. and every player j was at his best. Beating the Deans ' with the pennant at stake is as i big a task as any team could be up I . against. We did it. and I don't . think the Tigers can put any more ■ heat on us than the Cardinals did." ■ • The “kids” of the Cubs - Angie ! i Galan, greatest first year outfield ; • er in the majors the past season: ’ ■ Phil CavarrLtta. 19-year-old first i baseman: Frank DeMaree, who got I i his baptism of world series action ’ i in the 1932 rout of the Cubs by the'

Yanks; Stanley Huck, with the Impish grin and schoolboy complexion -regard the world serleir as another chance t<T prove their right to recognition in the baseball : world. "Some people regard the Cubs as lucky to beat out the Giants I and Cardinals," says Stanley Hack, i spokesman for the younger group. ■ “This is our chance to prove that iwe were lucky because we were igood, better than a lot of people. including the Giants ami Cardinals. thought.” The Cubs' slogan Ih "four straight." If the Cuba win the opening game, who < an stop them from winning four straight? If they beat Schoolboy Rowe, they'll , have to roll back the calender and | call out Ty Cobb. Babe Ruth. Herb ; Pennock. Cy Young. Rube Waddell, ; Sam Crawford, home run Baker | and a gang of other baseball Im'mortals to cool off the Cubs. All aboard for those wno want to ride a winner. The (jpbs are , ■ hot. o HIGH SCHOOL SCORES I Noblesville, 37: Cathedral (In ’ ! dianapolisL 0. Shortridge (Indianapolis), 12; ' Southport. 0. Broad Ripple (Indianapolis). 31; I Plainfield. 6. | Wabash. 44; transport, 0. Marion. 0: Frankfort. 0 (tie). North Side (Fort Wayne), 19; Auburn. 7. WOMAN FIRST IN CUB LINE Young Housewife First In Line To Buy World Series Tickets Chicago, Oct. 1-H’P)—A pretty' • young housewife outmaneuvered a ' Swedish bartender to win the hon- I ' >r of purchasing the first w rid series ticket at Wrigley Field today. j , The young matron headed a line that at 7 a. m. totaled more than I l 12. 00 baseball fans who awaited the ' I opening of public eale of the tick- | • ts. Special poli.e squads were call- ■ 1 out to maintain order. i Gus Swanson, the barkeeper who Lioee a bit of wrestling in his spare 1 time, settled down beside th- tick- .' et window at 3 a. m. yesterday, with i | a -J-hour wait ahead of him. Time hung heavily on ':iis hands, however I and he dozed off. When he awoke two hours later the housewife and 1 her husband wer abe,al ot him. and • nearly 50 others were behind. The young couple in first place! proved that they were simon-pure ' amateur “waitena-in-line’’ by refusing to divulge their identity or sell > their positions. Robert Sinclair, a steel-worker I from Chesterton, Ind., held the (fourth position, and Edwin Brum- | inett. who has a chicken farm in I Arlington heights, was next. (Behind the.n .stretched a line of ; baseball fans and "stooges" who I were holding spots for someone i else. Late yesterday afternoon I threatening clouds appeared and ! a few drees of rain fell. Undaunted, the ti ket seekers constructed rude shelters from pieces of canvas, linoleum, cardboard, or sheet iron supported by barrel staves and I box.s. Youngsters of the neighborhood : did a boom-time business in old ’ lumber and bite of canvas. T e crowd was quiet and orderly. o WITH THE TEAMS * ♦ ♦ Chicago. Oct. I—(UP)—Correction ot mistakes made in last Saturday’-.; garnrs and preparation for tougher opponents this week occupied Big Ten ( inference football squads today. Yesterday's activities; Illinois—Lowell Spurgeon groomed to supplant Les Lindberg, star back injured in the Ohio University game. Coach Zuppke urged his play- ' ers to forget Saturday's Upset and : point for Washington University. Michigan— Capt. Renner did most of the throwing during a long passing drill, indicating Michigan will take to the air against Michigan state Saturday. Northwestern — Drill on fundamentals ordered by Coach Waldorf w o described blocking and tackling in the De Paul game “terrible". Purdue —Halfbacks punted, fullbacks drilled on running plays, and linemen attempted to correct faulty blocking displayed in Saturday's vansity-Freshmen game. Ohio State- Four players injured last week were back in condition as coach Schmidt and his assistants described Kentucky and Notre : Dame plays they witnessed in scouting trips over the week-end. Indiana—Reserves using Centre college plays were stopped by the varsity. Kelso. Zoll. Cecil and Sasso assigned to drills on kickoff and :return. Minnesota—Coach Bierman indi- ' cated he contemplated line changes :as the result of ragged playing in Minnesota's victory over North Dakota State Saturday. Lew Midler, Sophomore guard, may be advanced

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TCESDAY OCTOBER 1 1935

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to the varsity. lowa Skipping rope occupied lowa's husky football (andidates at th- start of practice Blacking and passing drills w< re ordered after t.ie rope skipping warm up. Wisconsin Coach S. ears announced that ('apt. Ray Davis, who suffered a wrenched knee on the opening play against South Dakota State, would be lost for the season, j Players were shifted in an attempt j to strengthen the lineup for Marquette Saturday. Chicago Preparing for the open-: ing home game against Carroll col-1 lege Saturday, coach Shaughnessy ordered intensive tackling practice to correct errors in the 28 7 defeat by Nebraska. Notre Dame-Light work on fundamentals kept the lris,'.i busy with 'quad members reporting no ser-, ions injuries from Saturdays game with Kansas. Notre Dame meets Carnegie Tech at Pittsburgh Saturday. HIGHWAY TOLL IN CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE county coroner, had not returned a formal verdict this afternoon, ho indicated his finding would bo • accidental death. The body was taken to the Wells brothers funeral parlors at Geneva. Sheriff Dallas Brown was informed today by Canton officials that Dixon left no known survivors. He probably will be buried out of county funds. Rites Thursday Triple funeral services will be 1 held at 2:30 p. tn. Thursday at Fort Wayne for the victims of : the Sunday Monmouth crossing 1 tragedy. Coroner Zlwii| has also indk cated that his verdict in this case will be accidental death, although ' no formal report has yet beet, ' filed. o PRESIDENT ON . 1 CONTINUED FROM 1 AOE ONE orous moments, brought gray hairs to the president's intimate follow- I ers. The president s car stalled on a rocky, narrow newly built road. 1 was forced to make a perilous turn, much to the disturbance of 1 others of his party. The president seemed undisturbed by the incident and smoked a cigarette, chatting happily the meanwhile, as his aides attempted to extricate the car. Mr. Roosevelt, driving with Mrs. Roosevelt and Harry Hopkins, works administrator, headed a string of 20 machines that went into the Charleston mountains to inspect road work done by CCC workers around and through Charleston Park, 27 miles from I-as Vegas, the gateway to Boulder Dam. The road of shale, rock, gravel and dirt was narrow and contained many almost impossible grades. Covered with dust, the party followed the president 10 miles up the mountainside. Signs warned that the road was dangerous. The third time the president's car stalled, overheated by t,he long climb, it was determined that it was necessary to turn back. A slight narrowing of the "road offered a not too promising possibility. His car was backed to the widening road whiTe other machines went on preparing to back into it and turn later one at a time. His naval and military aides and the secret service and his secretarial staff all offered suggestions. It took half an hour of bickering and maneuvering until it finally was decided to make a trip io turn the car. A steep precipice, more than 100 feet drop and covered with boulders and scrub mountain growth, fell away from the soft shoulder of the strip of road. As the car

I made its first outgoing for the turn Marvyn Mclntyre, secretary to the president, jumped in front ot it and pushed the radiator, fearful * that the president might l><- car i 1 ried over the bluff. On the next, secret service men gathered large rocks to throw un dec the wheels in eveht of any miscalculation. Finally the car was headed downward. The president cheerily answered : questions "Do you like mountain motor-1 ing?" "It's grand. I love it." Because of the delay due to the j motoring incident the presidents special train was almost two hours! late in leaving for la>s Angeles from I«is Vegas whefU-e he went after the dedication of Boulder Dam. Twenty thousand people applauded his dedication speech Mr. Roosevelt served notice that from now on privaiff"lndustry must I bear the lion's share of accelerating the re-employment initiated by 1 government spending. REVEAL OFFER TO HUEY LONG Reveal Ollers Made To Back Huey Long For President (Copyright 1935 by UP.) Washington. Oct. 1. —<U.R>—lnter- J ests seeking to block President Roosevelt’s re-election offered to finance Huey P. Long with at least $5,000,000 in a third party movement next year, it was revealed to- ■ day. From sources here and in Louis- ■ iana a story of midnight conferences in New York, secretive conclaves over campaign strategy, and promises of adequate financial support was pieced together. The plan, nurtured in the months preceding Long's assassination, died with the senator. The extent to which it would ■ have changed the American political situation in 193(1 will, of course, never be known. Last spring and during the summer Long spent frequent intervals in New York. The ostensible reason for the visits was to work in : seclusion on writings based on his imagined occupancy of the White House. On one occasion he delighted New York by showing how to make gin fizzes in the New Or-1 leans manner. But there was a serious phase to the trips which was not hitherto been revealed. Long was approached early in I the spring by a man claiming to represent “business interests." The visitor asserted that he could guarantee adequate financial backing for the presidential race. Long refused to talk to the intermediary. The lack of apparent interest seemed to excite greater activity among those who wanted Long’s co-operation. Finally Long named a third person to meet and negotiate with those who were tendering financial assistance. Long thus kept in touch with the offers T77TT could not be connected directly with them. It can not be said definitely even now, for instance, that Ixrng would have accepted the offers. He kept his own counsel, although it was believed among the few that knew of the negotiations that he intended at some later date td capitalize on them. The main interest of those w’ho said they were willing to finance a third-party movement was to encompass Mr. Roosevelt's defeat. There was some curiousity as to whether they would prefer Long > in the White House IT such an unexpected turn-over Thould result , from their backing. , Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

INDIANA PLANS FOR YOUTH AID Sectional Meetings Held Today To Speed NYA Program Indianapolis. Oct. 1 <U.P' Eleven sectional meetings to expedite the ptogram of the national youth administration in Indiana wen' h< -liftluh <1 today. School superintendents and principals met with members of th'' stat" staff of the -NYA to complete arrangements for accepting high school students for aid and for working out suitable projects on which they may be employed. School officials already hnve been authorized to employ all slu--1 dents who have been cettified an) I whose applications have been fori warded to the state offh e. accord- | ing to Edward E. Edwards, state I director. Problems which have arisen In j (he various counties of the state | were to be considered today and j every effort was to be made to have the a.'-siatanee rea< h every ' needy student in the state, so far I as possible. All applicants must be accepted and projects for high school aid in Indiana, approved by the dead ! line on Oct. 10. Indianapolis. Gary. South Bend. , Fori Wayne. Muncie, iaifayette. Bloomington. Connersville. Terre Haute. New Albany and Evansville entertained meetings today. To be eligible tor high school ' aid. studentri must b, between 16 i and 25 years of age- and members lof families which were on relief rolls as of May. 1935. A maximum of $6 a month is paid to the young 1 persons selected, for text books. I car fare, lunch and other necessiI ties. Selection of the students is I made on the Ix>-ds of need, char--1 acter and scholastic standing. ! Only students carrying threej fourths of a program will be eligible. Public school superintendents in ' each county, city, township, and : school district are se’~.ting the students who are to shar in the i benefits of the $27,960 to be allotied to Indiana each month for i high school aid. RENT A RADIO FOR THE WORLD SERIES. Call 244 Decatur Electric Shop. /

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(’uh Reserved Seats Sold In Three Hours Chicago. Oct. 1 (VP) Reaerv ed eeats tor th * world net'leu games I b. re were sold out three (hours after the ticket windows opened at Wrig- | 1 y field today a» 20.U00 disappointed Cub funa milled about the streets (lonely guarded by polite. ——o —— Greenberg, Vaughan Are Most Valuable St Ixtula, <•<■• 1 <U P> The j most valuable men in the major! ' league this season are Henry j Greenberg, flwt baseman of the ■ Detroit Tigers in the American league, ami Floyd Vaughan, shortstop of the Pittsburgh Pirates, in

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