Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 99, Decatur, Adams County, 24 April 1936 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

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CENTRAL WINS ANNUAL SERIES FROM ST. JOE Wins City Grade School Softball Championship, 17 To 6 The Central school retained its city grade school softball champ] ionship Thursday afternoon, de-; (eating the St. Joe teain in the, second game of the annual series.i 17 to 6. Central had won the first game' of the series Monday, 8 to 1. The winners drove out a total of IS hits in piling up their win-1 ning margin, tallying eight runs ■ in the fourth inning to take a big | had. St. Joe lashed out 13 safe hits, but failed to bunch their blows as well as Central and scored only, six runs. By virtue of winning the championship again. Central will retain i the Rotary club trophy for another] year. The Central team will play a] team composed of members of the local Rotary club, in a special challenge game next Tuesday evening. April 28. The game will be played at the South Ward diamond at a p. m. The Central-Rotary game was tentatively scheduled for Wednesday but was moved up one day to avoid interference with other plans

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for the hoys and girls weeks observance. Score by innings: Central 231 800 2 17 18 3 St. Joe 102 SOO 0— fi 13 7 Moyer Walters anti Johnson, Gase. Hess anil Baker. oLEADING BATTERS Player, Club GABR II Pct. .Terry, Giants 7 15 4 8 .533 Gehringer, Tigers 7 31 9 15 .484 Lombardi, Reds 7 27 6 13 .481 Moore. Cardinals 7 30 8 14 .467 Averill, Indians 7 26 10 12 .4621 ■ - ■ -O HOME RUNS ] Klein, Cubs 4 ! Dickey. Yankees 3 I I Trosky. Indians 3 ' 'Goodman, Reds 3] | Foxx, Red Sox 3 I iOtt, Giants 3| STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct. i New York 7 2 .778' I Cincinnati 5 4 .556 I Pittsburgh 3 3 .500 i Philadelphia 5 5 .500 Chicago 4 4 .500 ISt. Louis 3 4 .428 Brooklyn 4 5 .444 Boston 2 6 .250 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct. 1 Cleveland 5 2 .714 Boston 7 3 .700 Chicago 4 2 .667 New York 5 4 .556 Washington ...... 4 5 .444 Detroit 3 4 .42S St. Louis 2 6 .250 Philadelphia 2 6 .250 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. Pct I Kansas City 6 1 .857 Minneapolis 5 2 .714 Louisville 6 4 .600 St. Paul 5 4 .556 Milwaukee 4 4 .500 Toledo 2 5 .286' Columbus 2 7 .222 Indianapolis 1 4 .200. YESTERDAYS RESULTS , National League Chicago, 2; Pittsburgh. 1. , Cincinnati, 8; St. Louis, 6. Philadelphia, 5; Boston. 3. Brooklyn. 4; New York. 3. American League Philadelphia, 9. Boston, 1 ( Cleveland, 6: Chicago, 0. j. New York, 10; Washington, 6. i Detroit. 10; at. Louis, 0. American Association Columbus. 3; Milwaukee, 0. Kansas City. 7; Toledo, 4. Louisville, 4: Minneapolis. 3. !i Indianapolis, 3; St. Paul. 2. t New Mexico Governor Protesting Patrol Denver. April 24 —(UP)—A New t Mexico I. :der patrol in retaliation t to that of Colorado was threatened t today because, Gov. Clyde Tingley J of New Mexico complained, "Our citizens are being treated like fore signers by Colorado * Formal complaint gainst Colora-’ do's 260-mile border patrol of na- * tional guardsmen was expected to 1 rta.h Gov. Edwin C. Johnson today.'« and a telephonic conference pro- 1 bably will follow. i I "The pc.-.pie of New Mexico are ■ net aliens any more than the .people I of Colorado." Governor Tingley ; said.

’"Prepping” for Derby Try

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“Dnieper,” get of “Kiev"-“Nerva," and owned by Mrs. P. A. B. Widener, is being primed for the Kentucky Derby to be run at Louisville, Ky. He is quoted at less than 20-1 in the winter books on the race.

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Quadruplets Are Baseball Fans

W r* ;/V,,'W JS, li. | Shlk| I 1 <•». ■ — -- v — Texas league matcota ——————

Aident baseball fans, these four, the only living boy quadruplets, are mascots of the Beaumont Exporters of the Texas league, and will compose the team’s 1948 infield. Rube Stuart, owner of the Exporters, asserts. The boys, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Pliil Perricone of Beaumont. Tex., are conveniently known as A, B, C and D. Tbei: i- ai names, reading from left to right, are Anthony, Bernard, Carl and Donald.

SCHOOL TENNIS TEAM DEFEATED I Dunkirk Defeats Decatur Tennisers Thursday, 3 To 2 The Decatur high school tennis ■ team, playing its second match of < the season Thursday afternoon on I the local courts, was defeated by i Dunkirk, three matches to two. Decatur lost two of the three 1 singles matches and split even in the two doubles encounters. Results of the singles matches follow: Faulkner (Dun.) defeated Affolder. 8-6, 3-6, 6-3; Batsell (Dun.) defeated Sundermann. 6-0, 6-2; Heller (Dee.) defeated Everhart, 7-5, 3-6, 6-3. The doubles matches resulted as follows: Sundermann-Affolder (Dec.) de-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY. APRIL 24. 1936.

I seated Stragand-Anderson, 6-1, 6-2; ISchumaker-Smilack iDun.) defeated Stalter-Cline, 8-6. 6-1. The Decatur team will meet the Huntington racquet wielders at . Huntington next Wednesday afterI noon.

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'ATHLETICS are SURPRISE TEAM Although In Last Place, Athletics Playing Good Basehall ~~ - New York. Apr. 24 —(UPJ-They laughed when old Connie Mack said his rookies would "fool many of the wise boys." Mack, who has fashioned nine pennant winners and won more world series titles than any other! baseball leader, did a little laugh-1 ing himself today >ver the show-] Ing of the boys who lime been re--named by many the "Philadelphia Esthetics." Gray-haired Connie has no vis- 1 ions of a pennant—"at least not this year.” But he was correct when he said “with so many young players around anything might happen." It has -sooner than expected. The A s arc tied for laat place today In the American with the St. Ixiuis Browns at two victories and six defeats. But Mack's club, with rookies in almost every posi-, tion. has played a hustling type of game that promises to make' • trouble for the contenders. Since the season started, the team which was reduced from a ] championship outfit to a cellar contender by sale of its stars, has Im-1 ; proved gradually. In thei first two games the A’s were soundly durbbeu by the Red Sox. From then on they played close baseball, losing two to Washington and one to Boston by the slim margin of one run. Monday, the A's unleashed a heavy hitting attack to win their first game of the season—a 12 to 11 victory over the New York Yankees. Tuesday they dropped another run decision, th htositet 7 other run decision, this to the Yanks. Yesterday, they turned in one of the best games of the new campaign. With Harry Kelley, a 29; year-old rookie from Atlanta holding the opposition to three hits, the Athletics whipped the Red Sox 91- the worst licking 8 awk>-y’s mil-

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lionaires have received this year. | Only iwo men got hits Jimmyi Foxx, who hit his third homer of I ■ the season and a single, and relief] 'pitcher Jim Henry who sinlged. . ' The A's battered Wes Ferrell, one of Boston s two ace pitchers. | for eight hits and ull their runs. It | J was the first defeat for Ferrell Ini three starts. The defeat, however, did not as-l fed Boston h runner-up position iu I | the league standings. The Cleveland Indiana took over first from ] the Chicago White Sox by beating them 6-0. The Sox went to third. The Indiana scored four runs in the first nnd two in the fifth as ex/Yankee Johnny Allen held the Sox I to seven hits. The Yankees took undisputed , I possession <>f fourth with , l>'-6 /victory Vivi Washington, which | had been tied for the berth with i New York. The world champion Detroit Tigers, after losing a pair to the St. Louis Browns, came back 1 with a 10-0 victory behind Eldon lAuker s six-hit pitching. National league warfare was tea-, ' tured by a pair of ten inning games. I The New York Giants, who tied ' the score with two runs in the ’ ninth and took the lead with an- < other in he tenh. lost. 43, when I the Brooklyn Dodgers pushed over 1 two in their half. The Giants held ion to first place, however. In the | other overtime game, the Cincin- ' nat! Reds crushed the St. Ixntis •Cardinals. 8 6. scoring three In the ] tenth after the Cards had tallied ] once in the same frame. Myer's home run with Campbell aboard scored the winning runs after Campbell's single had brought in I the tying score. The Chicago Cubs I whipped Pittsburgh. 2-1. while a homer by Watkins with Chiozza aboard in the ninth gave Philadelphia a 5-3 triumph over Boston. Yesterday's hero: Sidney Gautreaux. third string Brooklyn Catcher, whose first hit in the big lea-gues-a tenth inning pinch single with the bases loaded--brought in the run which defeated the New York Giants. o "The fool doth think he is wise, but the wise man knows himself to he a fool." —Shakespeare.

DISSENSION ON NEW TAX BILL — Ohio Democrat Aids Republicans In Fight On Measure Washington, April 24 <UP) Democratic dlssenxion spurred th* roputlican attack on the New Deal's 1803,000.000 fax bill today when Hep <Arthur P. Laanneck, I).. Ohio, assailed the nteaauro aa shaking "The foundation of the < >untry's business structure " Sitpportinr Republican (chargee that tUi measure Is ' .-utastlc," that it was given public .support during hearings chiefly by a communist and that it is in reality "an Industrial birth control measure." Um. ne k c. .nt*nded the bill would tend ■to destroy such "a business institution" us the Ford Motor Co. I-amnock asserted hearing on the measure were a "fare

DEMoiluJ j ( andidatcFori wS County I Recon H -■ I I Mrs. Ruth Hollingsworth I PoL Advt. ■

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