Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 96, Decatur, Adams County, 21 April 1936 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

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LATE RALLIES FEATURE LOOP GAMES MONDAY ■ Tigers And Cubs Blow Good Leads To l-ose New York, Apr. 21 — (U.S) Mickey CochHUte and Charley j Grimm might derive a lot of bene- i fit from calling their athletes together today and reminding them ' of a baseball proverb that Harry i C. Pullium, president of the Na-1 tionul league from 1903-09. had on | his deek. It read: “No bajl game ie over until the lust man is out." The Detroit Tigers and Chicago j Cubs, world series rivals last i October. were in second division today In their respective leagues - because they forgot that. The, twci favorites to re|>eat in the major league races blwe a, couple of games they thought they had won. The Tigers blew theirs in the i eighth and the Cubs tossed theirs

- Last Time Tonight • Clark Gable. Myrna Loy Jean Harlow in ‘ WIFE vs. SECRETARY" Also—Charley Chase Comedy 10c-25c Wed. & Thurs. Grand Entertainment— The Year’s Surprise Picture! When love dies, and parents part, what about the kids? ‘TO MANY PARENTS’ with Frances Farmer. Billy Lee and a big cast of remarkable youngsters. NOTE—This same picture and entire same program will be shown Wednesday night only at the Madison theater. ♦ 4 Fri. & Sat.—Two Swell Pictures on one Program! “F MAN” comedy howl with Jack Haley. Grace Bradley and Zane Grey's •DESERT GOLD" Buster Crabbe, Tom Keene. Bob Cummings. —O—O—O— Coming Sunday — The “Top Hat" stars in the greatest picture! Fred . Astaire, Ginger Rogers in “FOLLOW THE FLEET” - Last Time Tonight - Maurice Chevalier in “FOLIES BERGERE" with Merle Oberon & "Don't Gamble with Love" Bruce Cabot, Ann Sothern. Only 10c-20c —o—o—o— Fri. & Sat. — Big Double Feature Show! Bob Steele in "Oklahoma Cyclone" and "Bars of Hate" prison thriller. O o—o—- — Sunday — The star of | “Frankenstein,” Boris Karloff, in a wierd, amazing shocker “The Invisible Ray” with Bela Lugosi.

* X-v z"\ ’ll — Last Time Tonight — 1 f f 1D I James pat f ill IIX I CAGNEY O BRIEN F J X % X “CEILING ZERO" k Plus-News & Little Jack Little Jk O 10c-25c » J —Wednesday - Thursday — 1 YOU LAUGHED HIM L 1 INTO STARDOM F J YOU CHORTLED AT HIS STORIES! k W YOU ROARED AT HIS SCREEN DEBI T! V I NOW HOWL YOUR HEADS OFF AS HE F J GIVES YOU MORE OF WHAT YOU A ASKED FOR-- - k 1 IRVINS. COBB F 1 “EVERYBODY’S OLD MAN” [ £ ROCHELLE HUDSON - JOHNNY DOWNS Bk W NORMAN FOSTER - WARREN HYMER. V | 1 PLUS—HAL LEROY COMEDY and PEPPER POT. F A Coming Sunday— K 4 GEO. ARLISS “MR. HOBO.” A

awuy in the ninth. Cochrane ami Grimm aren't the only major league pilots who should attorn their clubhouses today witli Pulliam's saw. Chuck I Dressen of the Cineinnajl Reds. I Jimmy Wilson of the Phillies, | Bucky Harris of the Washington j Senators, and Jot- M< t'arthy t:l the New York Yankees might, do tin same thing with beneficial results. I The Reds hail the Cardinals heat. 7-3. goU>g into the last half of the ninth anil lost. 8-7. The ' Phillies juef nosed out the Giants. 7-6, a/tcr the Terrymen bad put tin a 3-run rally in the last of the I ninth. Washington had the Red Sox beaten. 5 3. In> the last of the 'ninth but lost. 6-5. in the first I game of a twin bill. The Yankees j for times led the A's but wound !up losing in the ninth. 12-11. j Five of nine major league -games were won in the ninth yeeI terday. Detroit looked like a "shoo-in" I to neat St. Ixtuis, lending 4-0 at ; I the end of the sixth with Tommy Bridges on the mound. Bridges weakened in tho seventh anil I Schoolboy Rowe came to the r< si cue. He, too, couldn't hold the men of Hornsby reeking their ■ first major league victory. Driving Rowe to cover in the eighth ' inning and continuing their attack lon Hogeett and Phillips, the ] Browns piled up nine runs in two i innings to beat the Tigers. 9-6. The big inning was the eighth when the Browns made six runs, j The spell Roy Henshaw held ! over the Pittsburgh Pirated all i last season when he beat them seven out of eight times was fin- ■ ally broken the hard way. The Cubs had the Pirates licked, 6-0, I at the end of the third. 7-3 at the i ; end of the sixth and 8-5 at the end of the eighth, but wound up 'by losing. 9-S. Gika Suhr's homer I ! with two on and two out in the | ninth was the winning punch. j Dizzy Dean won his first game ■when he stuck out nine innings and finally saw the Cards put on a 5-run rally in the ninth to nose , i out the Reds. 8-7. The New York Giants lost their > first game, bowing to the Phillies. 7-6. The Giants just failed to nip the Phils when Mel Ott hit a j . homer with two on in the ninth. The Boston Bees blasted out 14 I hits to trim Brooklyn, 8-4. and plunge the Dodgers into the cellar. The Chicago White Sox. behind the 4-hP pitching of Vernon Kennedy. beat Cleveland 5-1. and moved into the American league lead. After beating Washington in the first game. 6-5, the Boston Red Sox lost the second game. 6-2. Lovill (Chubby) Dean’s pinch single in the ninth with the bases filled gave the Athletics their first victory of the sea-.-.on over I | the Yankees. 12-11. I Yesterday's hero: Vernon Ken-' j nedy. who let the Indians down | with 4 hits, and pitched the White] I Sox into first place in tihe Ameri-' i can league with a 5-1 triumph over i : Cleveland. ALL STAR LEAGUE — | Mutschler.. ISB 152 145 236 162—853 i Gage 11*6 137 174 149 152—SOS Briede . 189 160 202 19S 201—950 lamkeuau ITS 169 161 224 167—899 ! Gallogly 196 170 149 172 192—879 Hoagland . 145 194 209 161 179— SSS ! Mies . 143 180 201 215 137—576 Brown . 136 132 147 145 151—711 Stump 147 202 200 206 190—945 | Mclntosh .. 160 191 144 167 137—799 | Bath ... 204 163 IGO 149 142—SIS I Green 173 172 184 103 147—779 ] Ahr ... 203 192151 147 161—854] o High Curls Favored — Detroit — (UP) — Women will, wear their hair in curls high on the ; head this spring, according to 6 000 j 1 hair dressers and cosmeticians who I attended the eighth annual American Beauty Trades exposition here-

STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pit. ,n. w York 6 I • : Pittsburgh 3 2 .600 St. lamis 3 2 Goo Philadelphia 4 3 .571 ' Cincinnati 3 4 .428 ■ Chicago 3 4 428 Boston 2 4 .333 . Brooklyn 2 5 .286 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. I. Pet. Chidago I I sou Boston f» 2 .714 Cleveland 4 2 .667 Washington 5 3 .625 New York 3 4 .42.8 Detroit 2 3 .400 Philadelphia 1 5 .167 St. lamis I 5 .167 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. Pet. Minneapolis 5 o I.oo# Kansas City 5 1 .833 St. Paul 5 3 .625 Louisville 4 4 .500 Milwaukee 3 3 .500 Toledo 2 4 .33.3 Columbus 1 6 .143 Indianapolis o 4 .ooi) YESTERDAYS RESULTS National League Pittsburgh. 9; Chicago. 8. Boston. 8; Brooklyn, 4. Philadelphia, 7: New York, 6 St. Louis, 8; Cincinnati. 7. American League Chicago, 5; Cleveland. 1. Boston. 6-2; Washington. 56. Philadelphia. 12; New Yotk. 11. St. Louis. 9; Detroit. 6. American Association Toledo, 13; St. Paul. 1. Minneapolis. 21; Columbus. 5. Milwaukee, 4: Indianapolis. 2. Kansas City. 10; Louisville. 5. o Today’s Sport Parade (By Henry McLemore) New York. Apr. 21- -(U.PJ —A belief that the rather mediocre pitching the major leagues have pro- | duced to date is the result of a i new ailment the hurlers contract ]ed in Florida — “slot machine I shoulder" — was substantiated today by Doctor Franz McCarthy, a . Viennese surgeon whom you've seen in many four-color adds. The herr doktor. here on a shopping trip (he needs a new white coat for his next advertising photograph I was in complete agreement with the suggestion that constant yanking on the handle of a “muenzenhineinwer-maschine” — literally, a coin into-throw machine —was harmful. “This continual yanking.” the herr doktor said as he alternately tapped his knee and skull with a hammer, "is a tremendous strain ion the sarcolemma. not to mention ] the sarcoplasm and the nuclei — ' that's what you yank with, you ; know —and is very likely io induce a distinct ‘hexenschuss’." “A hexenschuss? What is that? ' I asked, German regrettably not i being one of the languages of i which 1 have command. "Is a (hexenschuss a headache?" | “No. it’s German for strained ' muscle. But those slot machines —ach! —they'll give you a headache, too. I haven't seen your American machines, but do they contain as many letpons as our Viennese bandits?” I assured the herr doktor that the only way the machines of his country could have more lemons than those of mine would be to be all lemons, as the American machines were completely citrus, save for one sad eyed plum, a few lonesome cherries, and an orange. And the orange, as far as I am concerned, is pure hearsay, for I've never been lucky enough to see it with my own eyes. Or, what is more | important, hear it with my own ; ears. I was glad the eminent surgeon ■ agreed with me in regard to the effect of slot machines on baseball pitchers, for it lias been a pet theory of mine ever since I saw the players ' training" on them in the spring camps in Florida. Walking around the baseball towns at night it was never hard to spot the major league players. The rookies would be at the nickel machines. the young veterans at the dime machines, and the high-sal-aried stars at the more ornate twobit and 50-cent devices. And behind the players, ready to pounce on the machines after they had been “warmed up" were the reporters. To the credit of Florida, let it be said that not one of the towns in which a baseball team trained was negligent in providing a sufficient number of’slot machines to accommodate the players. Some of tthe smaller cities must have been hard pressed to find so many, but find them they did. By the hundreds. They had them on the shady side of the street and the sunny side of the street; in drug stores, hardware stores, ladies’ ready-to-wear, and Alling stations; in hotels, lunch wagons, and hay and grain stores. In fact, everywhere. • And southern hospitality and

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 1936.

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I courtesy was never more clearly, 'shown than in the willingness of I : the slot machine operators to give la stranger change. They'd sit tthere and “ive you nickels and i dimes until your last dollar was i.one, without a murmur or com- | plaint. The player migh complain. I but the proprietor—never! ] (Copyright 1936 by United Pressl ! _ o Recommend Closed Season For Frogs Indianapolis, Apr. 21. — (U.R) —ln- , diana is planning to protect its frogs. The state conservation department today announced that a i group of northern Indiana residents have recommended that closed | seasons and bag limits be placed lon frogs. Gradual extinction of the amphibious animals is reported in several sections of the state. Frogs 1 are not given protection under i laws as are fish, animals and other

Screen Stars Attend Party 1 liyffijg;: ijS e : I .. ; Wi ai . Ann Shirley " £ '' G' n * er R 0 <* M Wi One of the few off-stage recent pictures taken of busy Ginger Rogers, right, shows her chatting with attractive Ann Shirley, left, another screen star, as the two attended a Hollywood night club. Miss Shir* ley is fast climbing to stardom and Ginger Rogers rates as one of the top box-office attractions as a member of the team of Rogers and Fred Astaire.. > Knox, Horner Win in Illinois [«*■> fl I J Col. Frank Knox Gov. Henry Horner In one of the most bitterly contested elections in Illinois history, Gov. Henry Homer won the Democratic nomination for governor and Col. Frank Knox, Chicago publisher, defeated Senator William E. Borah of Idaho for the Republican presidential preference endorsement. Horner’s victory was at the expense of Dr. Herman E. Dnndesen> choice of the strong Kelly-Nash machine in Chicago.

. wild game. The recommendations will he considered by the state conservation committee, composed of representative sportsmen, at its next meeting, Virgil Simmons, state department director, said. 0 Central Team Wins First Os Series The Central eighth grade team won the first game of the annual series for the city softball championship Monday evening. The Central team defeated St. Joe. 8 to 1, in a seven-inning game played on the South Ward diamond. The second game of the series will be played at the same field Thursday afternoon at 4 o’clock. The third game, if necessary, will be played next Monday. The winner of the series will meet the Rotary team in a challenge game Wednesday evening. April 29, as a part of the boys' and girls' week program.

FIRES MENACE TO JERUSALEM Rioting Between .1 e w s And Arabs Leads I'o .More Violence (Copyright 1936. By United Press) . Jerusalem, April 21 (UP) -In cendinrism added its horr,r today to the tragic rioting between Jews and Arabs ut the adjoining cities of , Jaffa and Tel Aviv. | Flamra. vtaK’de mile* from the city, were r<»|H>rted roaring through the N*ue Shak tn Jewtoh and Arab quarter of Jaffa, the renult of Gres set l>y rioters. Earlier rep..r(s had said that Jewish shQ.:s were fired iK.'.h at Tel Aviv and Jaffa. Dispatches said today that the incendiarism continued and that Jewish shops and houses, and Arab houses and tenements were burned . in Jaffa and in Tel Aviv. The government here warned the I Jewish and Arab press not to pule Huh false articles or articles which might incite riting. Menacing crowds of Arabs, assent--1 bling here, were disc ersed by police and ringleaderes were arrested as bitterness grew all over the country Arabs continued to talk "J a general 'strike to force authorities to atop Jewish immigration. The death list at Jaffa and Tel Aviv reached 16 killed and 119 wounded Os the dead 12 were Jews and four Arabs, and of the woundleed 6.3 jews and 47 Arabs. Earlier Ireports said that 14 Jews were dead.; j but a checkup showed this figure was erroneous thr..igh it was feari ed several of the wounded might die. Jaffa and Tel Aviv continued under a strict 7 p. m. curfew, and violators who could not give good reasons for being on the streets were arrested O HOUSE ACTS TO (CONTINUED jFROM PAGE ONE>_ program. The bills provide for (11 increase in the army air corps from 1800 to 4000 planes over a five year period; (21 creation of an army air reserve training corps i under war department supervision; and (3) to permit calling 1350 reserve army fliers to active duty for a. three-year period. Chairman John J. McSwain of the house military affairs committee, and Rep. William N. Rogers. D.. N. IL. authors of tiie bills, said they believed an adequate air force essential to national defense and would press for action at tills session. o SCHOOL LEADER I (CONTINCEJTJFROM expense of the student.” he said. “A special training course for those students who are not so quick to grasp education largely , would include vocational instruci tion and individual guidance. "Five types of instruction could 'be offered the early graduate. They include citizenship and character education; general industrial aud vocational instruction; recreation and cultural subjects, physical education, safety and temper-ate-living instruction, aud requirement that all pupils be required ,to learn a useful trade. “Os course, exceptions must be made for those who are married . before 18. those who drop out of school from necessity and other reasons. However, the large major ity of the cases will over balance the exceptions,” McMurray concluded. o • Mongol Officials Sentenced To Die Hsinking, Mancukuo, Apr. 21.— (U.R) —Four high Mongol officials, long in the service of Manchukuo, have been sentenced by court martial to die before a firing squad for giving secret military information to Russia, Japanese army headquarters announced today. Two minor officials were given prison terms of 12 and 15 years. ! Those sentenced to die were: Lin Sheng, governor of northern Hsingan province; Cheng Teh. chief of provincial police; Gen. Ho Ling, chief of staff of the Hsingan provincial guards, and Hua LingChing, secretary to Gov. Sheng. o The average gasoline consumption of the average American motorist is said to be slightly over 600 gallons per year. Notice! Not responsible for any debts unless contracted by myself, and all bills outstand* ing must be presented in ten days, as I have sold all my properties in and around Decatur, Indiana. Frank Jovien, 8720 S. Carpenter St., Chicago, Illinois

Harry Stuhldreher Wisconsin Director Madison. Wte . April 21-(UP) — Harry Stuhldreher. Villa Nova, Pa, football coach and one ct the fa rnous four horsemen of Notre Dutn* was named by the university <>f Wisconsin ilw.trd of regentu today as athletic, director and head football coach. Stuhldreher will succeed Dr Waller E. Meanwell. Q. $15,000 Damage Caused By Fire Fort Wayne, Ind. April 21 (UP) —J. George Brundl suffered a fractured leg and waa badly burned during a fire which completely destroyed his farm home and barns nine

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