Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 238, Decatur, Adams County, 8 October 1935 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Mie-
DETROIT TEAM CHAMPIONS OF ALL BASEBALL Breaks Decide World Scries Title In Favor Os Tigers Detroit, Oct. 8. (U.R) The worlds baseball championship was In custody ot the Detroit Tigers tor the first time in history today hilt the 1935 world series produced abundant fuel for the hot stove league throughout the winter. The Tigers won the title in one of the most dramatic finishes in 30 years of world series pTay by , defeating the Chicago Cubs in tho ( sixth game yesterday. 4-3. Detroit's edge was four games to two. , but three ot their four victories were by one run and two on unearned runs. The Tigers perhaps had the bet- , ter ball club and deserved to win. j hut it seems a pity the American , league champions had to have their , triumph clouded with doubt because of close decisions at critical , moments which proved the turn- 1 frig point of the series in the third ( game, and which decided the final game. The Cubs lost to the Tigers, but , the issue hinged on sour decis- , ions, fluky hits, and bad breaks , such an few t ams ever were as- , dieted with in world series play. A veteran team might have stood I up under bad breaks and misfor- I tunes that descended on the Cubs, i but Charlie Grimms "kid team" i wasn't quite good enough to win i
fl | iXx»* -e \ J I - v4< Y> lli L k A* M Si? fi t W of *£*Hi Ms UK. INC i F PfD doevMoTaiadd£W A fun/ ,'S mH When you are in trouble call Riverside Super Service, i Ml We are open day and night for any kind of service. J Twenty-four hour wrecking service. I*B Call 741 for speedy service. RIVERSIDE SUPER SERVICE When You Think of Brakes—Think of Us. I | White Oak Kegs 9 Made of Fine Quality White Oak. Kiln Dried and Each Keg Steam Tested Before Leaving Factory. We have a splendid assortment of charred and uncharred kegs in stock. i uese Kegs are suitable for all Beverages. Crocks and Jars All Sizes 1/2 Gal. to 20 Gal. and All Kinds at Extremely Low Prices. HARDWARE and HOME FURNISHINGS
in the face of these handicaps. Il seemed that every time the Cubs played the red, the black turned up. Several times in a clinch it was a man In blue who called the play which meant the difference between victory and defeat. Alibis: the Cubs have none. But they have one complaint on which I commissioner K. M. laindis, base--1 bull czur. will rule now that the series Is over. The Cubs charged empire Moriurily of profane abuse, i ans their testimony Is backed up | by unimpeachable witnesses. "Tough decisions go against all ball dubs sometime or another,' said Manager Grimm. "But never in all tny baseball experience have I heard some of the language used In this series by an umpire.” I Ford Frick, National league I presiilent. believes that the Cubs mental equilibrium was disturbed by Moriarity. and that they allow ed him to get their "gout.” “Instead of worrying about how to stop the (tigars," eaid Frick, "the Cubs were thinking about an umpire. It was disheartening to a young dub. However, the National league has no alibis. We fought them to the last out, and I don't think anyone will say that the Cubs didn't keep battling all the time.” Some of the tensest drama any world series game ever produced was packed into the last ten min utes of play in the sixth and de I elding game. Tennessee Tommy Bridges, a frail 155-pound pitcher: from Dixie, and Leon Allen Oos ! Un. the old Red Goose of the New ■ Jersey swamplands, were the Do troit heroes. There was nothing fluky about Bridges' laurels. He won two games in the series, and in five thrilled-packed minutes in the ninth inning yesterday, gave as game an exhibition of httrfng as
any pitcher ever summoned in n dutch in the blue riband of the diamond. With the score tied, 33, Stun Hack tripled to deep center, with none out Bridges cut down I the Cubs on ten pitched balls. He . fanned Billy Jurges on three I pilches. He got two strikes over on Larry French, the Cubs pitcher, and then French lapped weak 1 ly to the box. Augie Galan wits re ■> tired on four pitches, hitting a • weilk fly to Goslln. 1 Inspired by Bridges' great effort. ' the Tigers won in their hah* of ' the ninth. With one out, "Mickey , Cochrane hit a single off Herman s L glove. Gehringer was retired on 1 a slashing grounder to Cavarotta. This play just missed being a ■ double kii.-g. m Cavaretta's throw I hit Cochrane in the back going to - second Then Goslln came through 1 with the deciding hit a single lover Herman's head Herman, who was playing in short right on the grass, just missed catching Goslin's hit for the third out. Umpire Moriarity. who worked at third, had two close playa to I call in the final game, and both of ' the decisions went against the Cubs. He called Galan out lit third, after Herman's single in the third, which cost the Cubs a run. j Witnesses claim that Clifton. TigI er third baseman has never yet touched Galan. Then In the eighth he called Ha k out trying for third Clifton never touched Hack, but Moriarity ruled that Hack ran out of the base lino. Twice dating the series after the third game and yesterday before the final game Moriarity was I called before Commissioner lamdis. It is understood that iaindls will announce his decision on the case tomorrow. o ALONG THE SIDELINES —r Columbus, 0., Oct. 8. — (U.R) Four weeks before the game. ; 77.000 seats have been sold for ! the Notre Dame-Ohio Slate clash and no more orders will lie ac- i cepted. ticket officials said today. Coach Francis Schmidt drilled his -quad on fundamentals yesterday in preparation for Saturday s game , w ith Drake, Chicago, Oct. S —(U.R)—The I nlversity of Chicago expects another breather against Western Stare ; Teachers Saturday but has started intensive drill for the Purdue game Oct. 19. Defensive play was, emphasized yesterday. Bloomington, Ind.. Oct. B—(U.R)8 —(U.R) - | Defense against passes occupied Indiana's varsity squad in prepar- ; ation for the Michigan game Sat-1 | urday. Leg injuries suffered in i the Centre game kept Eads, halfback, and Norton, quarterback, on , i the sidelines. — lowa City, la., Oct. S (U.R) — j i Oze Simmons had a try at the i fullback position as the lowa var- i sity ran signals for Coach Solem. I Rollie Willism-. who watched : Colgate play Saturday, instructed i freshmen in Colgate plays in preparation for scrimmage against i the regulars. — Madison. Wis.. Oct. 8 — (U.R) Reserves scrimmagfd while Wis-!■ consin regulars who lost to MarI quette Saturday were excused I after a light drill. Len Lovshin. regular end in 1933 who was out | all last season, because of illness, i returned to the squad. — Minneapolis. Oct. S—(U.R) Babe | Lavoir, senior, will replace Julie 1 Alfonse. star halfback declared ineligible last week. Coach Bierman announced. Practice was re- ' sumed for the Nabraska game Saturday. Lafayette. Ind., Oct. 8— (U.R) — I Coach Kizer lectured the Purdue squad on errors displayed in the Northwestern game and pointed out that only two days of practice remain before the Fordham game. Signal practice ended the light workout. j Ann Arbor. Mich.. Oct. B—(U.R) — Tiny Wright, 240 pound center, replaced Bob Amrinc on the first team during signal practice for the Indiana game. Fred Ziera, sophomore guard, joined the Injured list and will be out indefinitely. Evanston. 111.. Oct. 8 — (U.R) — , With two weeks of practice before the Ohio Stale game, Coach Waldorf excused all players who - started against Purdue. Scrim- | mage was held for reserves. South Bend, Ind.. Oct. B—(U.R8 —(U.R) — > Notre Dame players were warned against overconfidence in their . game with Wisconsin Saturday by i Chet Grant, scout who saw Mar , quette trounce the Badgers. Grant I said Marquette played in mid-: season form and gave an exhibition of near-perfect football. —o * Preble To Play Fort Wayne Nine The Preble baseball team will play the Fort Wayne A. C. SevenUps Sunday afternoon at Preble.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. OCTOBERS. 1935
' ft ' 11 -1 I I , ▼ 'Bear \ I » . 1 G* VT CuAV&W BA ALAtAnAs FtAHMC • A _ . I fV* .* i.,( v A Sc-Wis ih a < ' I — mH i I : ’ . ©Sswp, '
O’Mahoney Again Defeats Savoldi New York. Oct. 8. (U.R) Danno O'Mahoney of Ireland retained his world heavyweight championship by throwing Joe Savoldi, former Notre Dame football star, last night in Madison Square Garden. He used a body slam after 26 minutes and two seconds of wrestling o ‘ COUNTY AGENT’S * COLUMN * • On October 25 and 26 Indiana will take the initial step in official herd classification work. coKucted by the American Jersey Cattle Club. While these will not be the first herds to be classified in the state, it will be the first classification of farm herds. The Purdue University herd was classified last June, at which time Pride's Disign Oxford qualified as a superior sire. Readers of the Bulletin recall the report of this work and the splendid records made by the daughters of "Pride.” On October 25 the herd of Oliver Steed. Portland, will be classified with Professor S. M. Salisbury, Ohio State University, in charge. The Steed herd is one of the old and well established herds in eastern Indiana. This herd first attained prominence in Indiana Jersey circles when Steel purchased the old bull. Mabel's Sybil Gamboge. a veteran of Indiana parish shows with daughters scattered all over northeastern Indiana. He followed this bull with Gamboge Sybil Warrior, a very able and fit companion for old “Syb" in the Steed herd. Warrior was a silver medal of the American Jersey Cattle Club at the time ot his purchase. Both bulls have qualified ’for the Silver medal award, given by the Indiana State Dairy Association. The Steed herd is now made up almost entirely of daughters from these two bulls and is rated as one of the outstanding breeding herds in the state. A meeting will he held at the Steed farm, located at the northwest edge of Portland, starting at onethirty. Breeders will be given an opportunity to inspect the herd
' ■ ■ ■ ■ ... - The Winning Run ■-'WOr ’ * * 3 fl l • • • f n. * • A- - '"A L I Mickey Cochrane, manager of Detroit Tigers, is shown scoring the winning run that ended the world series, in the last half of the ninth inning of the sixth series game at Detroit. Goose Goslin singled, ( driving Cochrane from second base to home plate.
[and the judge will explain his . classifications. H On October 24 the Sol Mosser I herd, located five miles east of Geneva, will be classified. Professor Salisbury in charge. The Mosser herd was founded about twenty years ago and is entirely descended from two foundation cows. Mr. Mosser, like Mr. Steed, has been a regular and continuous member of u testing association and has ' used good bulls from.the begining. I Recently. Mr. Mosser. in partnerI ship with T. M. I e. Mt. Summitt. ' purchased the Superior Sire. ( Pride's Design Oxford, former sen ior herd sire at Purdue University, to head these two herds. The female picture in the Mosser herd, tracing to one great old cow, one of the outstanding breeding stores in Indiana, regardlees of breed, should certainly give old "Pride" a wonderful opportunity to carry on. The Ice nerd is one of the old established herds of Indiana ami carries equal strength of breeding. Both herds are now in the official herd test; Mosser for the second year. His average last year was 41S pounds butter fat. test records made under ordinary farm conditions with a large num her ot young cows. Breeders wilt be given an opportunity to inspect! the Mosser herd at 1:00 p. m.. October 26. nt which time Professor Salisbury will go over the herd and discuss his platings. Breeders of Jerseys are urged to attend these two meetings, the first of their kind ever held in Indiana. A story in constructive ! breeding is available at both herds and should be helpful to any breed er of dairy cattle. o Corn Grows Like Bananas — Wordsworth, Sask.— (U.R) —"Banana corn" is the latest in farm products being grown here. One farmer found a cornstalk with 25 cobs on it. Another found several with eight cobs. Port of Memphis Booms Memphis. Tenn.—(U.R)—Business i at the Port of Memphis increased I almost 30.000 tons the past six months Officials say the rise re--suited from heavy shipments of beverages ajid alcoholic liquors.
I HIGHLIGHTS OF I WORLD SERIES I United Press Writer Records World Scries Hijihlights By Henry McLemore, C< P Staff t’orrespondent) Detroit, Oct. 7. (U.R) The world series for 1935 is over and. ns your correspondent thawed out today, here are a few of the highlights ho remembered: I Best pitched game: Lonnie Warneke's fotir-hit shutout in the opening game. Greatest bit of "spot" pitching Tommy Bridges' work after Hack had <>|»tied the Cubs half of the ninth of the last game with u triple. Bridges threw only ten balls —seven of them strikes—to retire Judges. French, and Galan, and kept Hack mailed to third. "Six of those seven strikes." Mickey Cochrane Mid after the game, "were th<* best curves I ever caught in my life. They broke off I like a pane of glass." j Best catch: Augie Gallin's twisting. leaping stab of Goose Goslftl's i line drive in the third game at Chiurge. Made on the dead run, after a sprint of 50 yards, ft overshadowed every other catch in the series. Best piece of infielding: Jurges' “Frank Merriwell" — one-handeil catch of Clifton's scorching Ifffer in the fourth. With the bases loaded Jurges went up that apiteared to be six feet in the air and brought down the ball. Best throw: Pete Fox's "strike from right field to caltch Jurges at the plate in the thil'u game. And Pete's whip to third base to catch Galan at third yesterday, was the ' second best throw. Worst bit of fielding: Jurges again, this time on Crowder's soft roller in the fourth game. With two out, and a man on tnird. Jurges let it go through his legs without touching it. Dumbest play: This one belongs . to Phil Cavaretta. young first base- ' man of the Cubs. He earned tne honor in the third game when, on an attempted double stead, he became so interested in running down Rogell bcT.T cn second and first, that he allowed Fox to score from third with the winning run. In short, he ran Fox in with the score that whipped the Cubs. Sorriest bit of strategy: Charley Grimm's decision to let Jurges, a weak right-handed hitter, bat in the ninth inning of the final game. Jurges swung at three, missed, and sat down. Why didn't Grimm call on Jimmy O'Dea to hit for Jurges? i Jimmy is a left-hander and a righthanded pitcher was working. And in his previous trip up as a pinchhitter. O'Dea had (Sacked out a hot single. Most disputed bit of strategy— Hartnett's bunt in the tenth inning ! of the third game when the score i was tied 5-5. and Lindstrom was lon second with none out. Half I the experts argue that Manager Grimm was playing the percentages in calling for a bunt, which would have placed Lindy on third where he could score on a fly on an infield out. The other half of the experts insist that Hartnett, the best hitter on the club, was the logical man to knock Lindstrom | in. Gamest guy: Marvin Owen, who. hitless through five games and part of the sixth, refused to quit taking a man-sized cut “at the ball. His courage was rewarded, for in the final game he slapped a single (his only one of the world series) which tied the ball game up and i enabled the Tigers to come on to j win the game and the series in the .ninth inning. Hardest hit ball: Chuck Klein's homer in the fifth game. Best ball player in the series: Charley Gehringer, Tiger second baseman, by from here to yonder. The nearest thing to Gehringer: Billy Herman, young Cubs second baseman. who led all the hitters in total bases. Toughest luck guy: Larry French, Cubs pitcher, who losb two games through no fault of his own. Lindstrom kicked one away for him with a boot of an easy ball, and yesterday all the Cubs had to do to give him a victory was to score a man from third in three tries. i Best laugh: Heinie Schuble. De--1 troit utility infielder who didn't I play a minute of any game, being escorted from the park by three policemen, after it w r as all over, to protect him from worshipping fans. Biggest disappointment: School- : boy Rowe w’ho, as ace of the" Detroit staff, was expected to carry j the brunt of its pitching. The | Schoolboy flunked two times, and his only victory came as a relief hurler. (Copyright 1935 by UP.) o Heavy Weather Hits President’s Ship Aboard U. S. S. Houston, at eea. October B—(UP) —Heavy weather 1 today struck the cruiser Houston,
I Provident Roosevelt’ii vacation ship, and her rocort crulnor. the Portland, off the Central American Pacific, coast. Heavy seas forced reduction lot speed to 19 knots. 1 1.. Il Co MI- loud tomorrow where the Pr<«ii]«nt will | try some more fishing .—o ———— —— Crows Aid Crippled Gull Valdez, Aliiskit (U.R) Mike, a cripplcil seagull, has many friends I here, who see that ho does not 'starve. Crows find dams on the 1 Iteach and fiy over rocks and drop I them. Then Mike eats the < uims. -o < Joe Louis, the Second. Flops Covington, Ky. (U.R) William Atkinson. t!7 Columbus, O„ Negro. I boasted he was u "second Joe Louis" and dared Officer Harry Rose to lay aside his gun. A min-
. Z I OUR ABILITY fl I In Directing A Funeral Is Im porta n t \ » $ The ability of a funeral director in directing services plays a i lar;e part in determining his ' value to the family—and in de- ? BM. termining the impression recehed ? E by the family and friends. We L j try to excel in this phase of our ? £j*ir SWICK’S ® f FUNERAL phone DAY 61 NIG HT 303 Jar. - —— fNO SUIT IS A ■ HA&NWEAYII Without II This ■ Trade I Mark I 1 I 1 — - I v w?" 7 — r It's easy to recognize a ;■ genuine HARD!’ •] • W* WEAVE ... look fw 11| A 1 the exclusive sjmbol of the nail g» in t fct' A J through the fabric. / K / & V . J // A w Z|/ This amazing wearing gj '■'W V '/* demonstration d- l| V f lustrates hi «11 1 WEAI E can ' take it" I i’,/ I —cuff it. rough it. si‘(k |S WW /' 'i « nall ni:h ' thr " uthit ' Kha i — thv libr,,s are s 0 re ' * BL ' silient, so tough, that i r ,he> spring 'tf l ' 1 b,rt • w* i ■Mi'i'i into shape. I Come in and try tht || 1 «' nail test your-elf. B —V'V ] f Iff I ADLER-HOCHESTfIE ff Y% I : TAILORED It vk Into beautiful sintf* HF i Wk ,nd douhle bre ’ stfd HI / Wk styles. FuaturedJ" ■ WmL\ ’ plain colors. pl» lds ' h . W I * stripes and unusua ■p. \\ patternings. H wA\ ' I- W *55 Peters in & Everhart Co
i:-.. lVi "■'■’■ ■ l.; ' Church Mar , ' '• f " *'D- ) 'Ur< |, A'J A * ht " h± t’ h " ,rip '»- " WIF I ' k a < ImM '' fl Ei | ®r Oma. ~f lh( . ’ ' isi , ' h< " l '“'"v-r-d aßll ’ '"■< ;. yueb( ' Trade in a Gooa T " '
