Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 108, Decatur, Adams County, 5 May 1936 — Page 5
r*% r\ T“< M\ J ' 2 _.
Kell loses 11 ON FOUR HITS l jnl C Ve Hurler 1 ai,s Get Hitting Help ■ From Mates v ace of <he New soik n.ennd sI..H. was headed r. <1 l^^r,, | ,n today. Wil < 'li. elleclive j; „ |^K'., K t ~| «i.d i" 1911. This h.. n lost two of his games. K j, ling llubl" II vuiih. an 1 inning luck fiawned again on Bihl ,. 1 yesterday, lie allowed ■ gdl i iimaii He.! ■ i ,; ,1. ■tai- one run. ~, KeXc: ' ’I ’he Gi.mis • k ■ . < a :n ■ to i .... ■ -• o 'l' railed "fl !>•', jHr nl < "111 biu Ann ricc ti ea 11 left moulin-- umiftectml. ■, inK !«<■ dr. ti sU BBanrr Wednesday Sunset.
I ' — o K 'B — Last Time Tonight — I I ROBERT MONTGOMERY I j and MYRNA LOY in | ’ "PETTICOAT FEVER" |M<-SO-Our Gang Comedy and EH Pete Smith Comic. 10c 25c H'VED.& TIII RS. " Cuckoos roamed the MH lands when the West ME* young . . and FOOLISH I ■Bert WHEELER (Bob WOOLSEY [■“SILLY BILLIES” ®jPE( I Al. NOTE — This* Fp’anie Picture and same Entire program wiH be ■ihown Wednesday night | B?,- at the Madisonl ■heater. ■■ > * I —— i | r 4. Sat.-—Pete r B» Kyne’s thrill- ‘ eJ^ deß,rt romance “THREE Chester Morris, ,s Stone, Irene Hervey. ■ m 'ng Sunday—Handsome RobK Taylor, Lovely Janet Gaynor—gE?. ew love te am —in “SMALL ■»>WN GIRL. 1 ' I <o> ■hi-iv'i sl *' nie T°night — GET PERSON At;’ I mmy Dunn, Sally Eilers J hod “WE LIVE AGAIN” | Fredric March, Anna Sten Only 10c-20c -O-O-O---jL,.,. J>3t — Another Hop A Long |L’ ir S, D Thrll,er ' “Call of the Bui ci 8111 Boyd ’ Jim my Ellison FLASH GORDON." HL > o—o—o—- —, ng ri Suilda y~ J inTmy Gleason, Sndi roder ick in "Murder on the Erie n T’ 3nd Leslie H ‘>^ rd ' “ The ScaHet 110 r r?, 0 " ‘ For O e < th e pi LNT SUNDAY MATINEE
STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pet. I St. Louis p 6 .GUO' i New York 9 7 .563 Chicago ii 7 ,sg:j! ; Pittsburgh 8 7 .633 ; Cincinnati .. • 9 9 .500 Philadelphia 9 10 .471 I Boston 7 9 .438 Brooklyn G 11 .353 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct.. Boston 13 li .884 New York 12 ti ,titi7 i Cleveland 11 7 .611 I Detroit 9 7 .6631 Washington 11 10 .521 Chicago U 9 .4001 Philadelphia 8 11 .267 St. Louis 3 15 .167 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. Pct. Kansas City 12 3 .800 St. Paul 14 4 .778 Minneapolis 10 5 .6671 Milwaukee 9 7 .563: Louisville 7 12 .368 1 Indianapolis .. 4 9 .308 Toledo 1 11 467 Columbus 4 13 .2351 YESTERDAY’S RESULTS National League Cincinnati, 1; New York, 0. 1’ Idhhpealaii ETAOIN KF UM Philadelphia at Chicago, cold. Brooklyn at Pittsburgh, cold. Boston, 7; St. Louis, 6. American League Cleveland, 6; Washington, 3. Chicago at Philadelphia, rain. . 1 St. Louis at New York. rain. Detroit at Boston, rain. American Association Kansas City, 9; Toledo. 8. St. Paul. 3; Columbia, 0. Indianapolis, 8; Minneapolis, 6. Milwaukee, 9; Louisville, 5. 0 ALL STAR Ahr 186 193 184 146 169—878 I Mbs 173 151 169 2'H 161 866 Gl"<’i, 161 99 119 219 16" 788 Ghllogly 182 183 179 189 110 -833 Mclntosh 157 184 189 172 176- 878 j Briedc 199 183 2111127 168 8871 Stump 207 176 224 206 180—993 ! O.Lankenau 118 231 212 151 178 923. Brown 185 153 161 158 154—811 , I Marshall (Forfeit) Fr. Hennes 225 175 158 223 159 —939 I). Cage 150 iso 148 211168 837 Hoagland 188 129 157 165 181 820 | Bath 161 155 161 168 168—814 Mutschler. (won by forfeit) Olympics Basketball Director Resigns Lawrence. Kan-. May S—(UPI5 —(UPI Dr. Forrest ('• (Phog) Ailen, alhk> tic director and basketball coach at Kansas University, today resigned I as director of the American Olympics basketball team "because of the ‘'unsportsmanlike attitude of the memuers of the A. A. U. cv uimittee”
DISFIGURING PIMPLES,ITCHING new SCIENTIFIC HELP W X T OT n mrrp cosmetic! Hydmsal In iS* ■ IN « scientific treatment tpw.l by F'lortors and hospitals for 2; t''arg. Here now Is real relief frotn the ttrhins. burntnc Irritation <»f niHhrg.rrZf’tn’t. pimpl** and similar «k - n ontbreaks S'«nthrequickly. nett ,f » ' —'t refine cos raennd Irritated skin! !»■>•>« ino’R’nln Liquid and ointment 1 \ forms Get Hv 1 1 rt’owt Mid CPt re- f & N Uef—Boc and 60c. KOHNE DRUG CO. | CORTI - Last Time Tonight - The Dionne Quintuplets “THE COUNTRY DOCTOR” Jean Hersholt - .June Lang Slim Summerville Michael W halen. Plus--Kabin Kids Comedy and Fox News. * News Shots of Nova Scotia Mine Rescue. 10c-25c Coming— Al Jolson “THE SINGING KID Sybil Jason - Edw. E. Horton Lyle Talbot - Allen Jenkins Claire Dodd • Win! Shaw Beverly Roberts Mitchell & Durant Cab Calloway and Orchestra Yacht Club Boys
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, MAY 5,193 G.
REDS' HUBLER MAYBETRADEO — Paul Derringer Suspend-! ed; May Quit Major Leagues Cincinnati, <)., May 5—4U,R>- It appeared increasingly certain today that Paul Derringer, star right handed pitcher of the Cincinnati | chib, had hurled his last game In a Red uniform and it was reported he might never again don the uniform of a major league team. Derringer, suspended by Manager Charley Dressen and General Manager Larry McPhail Sunday for his failure to slide on a close play at home plate in a contest with the New York Giants, may j retire from baseball and take a 'position with a southern manufacI turing company, it was said here I today, Derringer declined to discuss his suspension or his future here 1 last night. “I have no comment to make," was his terse reply to all questions. The big hurler, who won 22 games for the sixth place Reds last season, played goii yesterday! while his ex-teammates were defeating the New York Giants, 1 to! p. MacPhall would make no definite commitment relative to the! disposal of Derringer, but he ihdi-| ! cated he would be traded or sent ito another team by May 15, the deadline for making the player limit of 23 men. To make the limit the Reds imftt cut adrift two players and Mac-, I’hail said one of them would be a pitcher. o * Today’s Sport Parade (By Henry McLemore) Louisville. Ky., May 5 —(ll.R> — Final derby notes (written on the back of grandslamto-win pari-j muteul pasteboards I: Having a cup of coffee with Maxie Hirsch. trainer of Bold Venture, early der■by day morning and listening to I him carefully explain that ho sin- 1 | cerely believed he had the winer iand that Brevity was the only i horse he had to beat—Leaving Mr. ! Hirsch to walk directly to the betting mart and playing Grand Slain, j win. place, and show —The wail of 'a fellow sportswriter in the press [box as the field hit the head of the stretch, "where's my Teufel, 'ain't he awful; where’s my Tuet'el, 'ain’t he awful? —The lack of coini mon sense in the fellow w iio arI ranged the arrival of the horses from theii stables just as a blaring band paraded down the track •in front of the grandstand —to reach the gate leading to the paddock the high-strung thoroughbred actually had to weave in and out among the musicians, who were playing a martial air. It was 'jenough io excite a two-headed calf. | much less an animal as taut and i keen as a racehorse. Our inability to agree with the general belief that Granville, had 1 he not unseated his rider, would i have made a good showing—after all, Teufel beat Granville in the Wood Memorial, and Teufel, for all
THE DERBY WINNER $ if * E •Ml ■' 43 I ? feife 1 w Sw- ''T■ . ; *A-tXv;» otSS “■•■' <IW Kk a •*Y%. . jmiuv y JBmF&. RSI X ■ . ' ... .vy , 4 , 'fK ■'• "■ r s-v’T-v. «*• Ki F**' •■,../• W-iw ’*■■• ’ V '■• ‘ ■ f .-Ssi' Photo shows Bold Venture with Ira ("Babe") Hanford, the jockey, in the. saddle after winning the sixtysecond running of the Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs in Louisville (Saturday (before a record crowd of 62,000. Bold Venture negotiated the mile and a quarter in 2; 03 3-5.
'c*HPs aKfwjgy. f ! toughest . rgwec , mF Li •/'. JOB or fighting - xaiz BIG Ou- TO Be A Bh> j LEAGUE PiloT fbamkihsiwn r' V ZJAIMAMAGfABcr. i —- - - 'cJan frank Play ms CARDS Right T X q ■ , TEapiric if D/ssstis/OA oocsnrattsp iai--U« NraAuM, Im. w«m <wm>
'anybody knows, may be running 1 yet. The amazing accuracy of the . 'unknown gentleman in the hotel 1 ' window, derby night who, using a 1 sidearm motion, threw ice cubes 1 on pedestrian five stories below in the ten throws we watched, he ( 'scored four direct hits all on Kentucky colonels, of course, the helpfulness of the cab drivers in offering to take you to the derby and , wait for you until it was over for [the ridiculously low sum of |25 failing to understand why the stewards set a rider down for rough riding, and yet never colisid- , er disqualifying him or his horse for the wild west tactics The' beauty of Brevity when he minced : out on the track for the parade to i the post. The near-perfect call of the races through the track loudspeaker The refusal of the men | 'make the call for the racing charts! ito bet on the derby, for fear they I would be too busy watching the | horse they backed to see the field as a whole The never failing good humor of the crowd, and the poor quality of the mint juleps Juleps never were, and never will be, a mass production drink Hut your derby visitor wants ’em, even if they're warm and the mint’sags like sad parsley. The souveneir-mad spectator who reached out and grabbed the whip from the hand of Holl Image’s jockey when that horse, hug- : ging the rail, came around the turn i into the stretch Maybe the fellow j had a bet on Grand Slam and want- : l ed to give it to Sonny Workman so he’d have two whips with which to crack the lagging Bomar colt. But it would have taken a motor- : cycle sidecar to get Grand Slam into the money. • The amazing number of people, who after the race, said they had figured on Bold Venlure all along and had a nice bet on him The , grin on George Kirksey, United I Press sports writer, when the bold : one and Brevity ran one-two, just ,
as he had picked them on Friday George uses the Chinese system, an involved business in which the letters of of the alphabet, numerology, and the "eenie-meenie-mo" poem play a great part We plan to adopt it next year, and abandon ' 1( lhe I em. (Copyright 1936 by United Press) o White Sox, Browns Exchange Hurlers Chicago May s—(UP)—Lee Tietje right handed pitcher, has been traded to the St Louis Browno for pitch-1 tr Merrit (Sugar) Cain, the Chica-j go White Sox ofice said today. Cain, a!;-.- a right hander, was to report to the White sox in Philadelphia today while Tietge joined the Browns in New York. Tietje appeared in 30 gamee for the sox last season and had a record of nine victories and J 5 defeats. Cain, who played the finst part of the season with the Philadelphia Athletics, appeared in six games for the 'Athletics and 31 L.-.r the Browns. He won nine and lost 13. Q Household Scrapbook By Roberta Lee Pineapple Plant Cut. off the top of a pineapple and place in a glass Jar, with water.. It will soon take root. Then place it in a flower pot, and the result will be a pretty, inexpensive ' plant. Water Spots Water spots can be removed from varnished furniture by rubbing the surface with a cloth or feather dipped in camphor. Milk If the bottle of milk is wrapped in a thick wet towel and then placed in a current of air. the milk will keep sweet and cool.. Q Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
1,800 To Compete in Purdue Roundup Lafayette, Ind., Muy 5—<U.R> — Approximately J,BOO county and township winners will participate in the 18th annual 4 H club roundup which opens nt Purdue University tomorrow. The future farmers and homemakers will compete for state honors in a variety of agricultural and home economics contests. Forty five county championship tMUii of three youths each will compete in the corn judging; 241 in poultry and egg judging; 47 in livestock; and 40 in dairy judging. o— Plan Revision In Immigration Program i Indianapolis, Ind., May 5 (U.R) —Revisioii of the American Legion's immigration restrictions pro-' gram to facilitate early acceptance by congress was planned today by ' the national executive committee | of the organization. John Thomas Taylor, director > of the legion's national legislative j committee, was authorized yesterday to eliminate such demands as i were stalemating passage by congress of immigration legislation now pending. The immigration program mandated by the St. Louis convention, of the legion must be compromis,ed if the present congressional stalemate of immigration legislation is to be broken, J. Shaughnessy, deputy commissioner of immigration and naturalization of, the department of labor, told the I national committee. i , ° Church Officials To Meet Wednesday Wednesday evening will be: church officials night at the Deca-! fur Md.lwdist Episcopal chiurch. j according to the announcement of' the pastor. C. L. Walters will be pro- | grain leader and will continue the ' discussion of the textbeok “Know i Your Job.” All official members of
l N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135. LOANS $25-SSO-$75 SIOO-SISO-S2OO-S3OO Single or married couples can now borrow up to S3OO on their own signature. Loans also made on furniture, autos and other personal property. Libera! Terms As Long as 20 Months to Repay. Easy repayments. You pay interest only on unpaid balance. Payments arranged to suit you. * Deal in Confidence Promot, courteous service. Private consultation rooms. No inquiries mn-le of friends, neighbors, employer nr merchants. < «»Mtw to i uveal brute* ( nil. write or telephonespecial lime I'lnn tor I'arnierm. Local Loan Co Over Schafer store Phone 2-3-7 Decatur, lud.
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the church arc particularly urged to be present at 7:30 P M ' I‘ullowlag th.- mi,, ii" the monthly official hoard meeting will be held. This is an important ' meeting for at this time the organ ization for the new year wljl be effected All new members of the official family will be wckoined and the new lieutenants will bo assigned to their respective territories. Following organizaztion the pasu.r will (present a brief outline ot the for- ( ward program of the church. - 0 - Regular Meeting Os Lions Tonight The regular meeting of the Lion’s club will be held in the Rice hotel tonight. Dr. H. Fr. Jinafe! will have charge fthe program, and !s endea- ] voring to secure the services of an , outside speaker. Two Women Killed In Auto Accident I Linton, Ind., May s—(U.R) —Mrs. i Nora Salmon, 77, Vincennes, and her daughter, Mrs. W. M. Linn, 35,
IMMMWMHMMMMMMnKHMMBMmMMMMMBMMB 3 FREE GIFTS X Buy 1 pound of Johnson's Wax VOVO 69c —or one pint HO KO KO Glocoat for 69c and one 25c Bottle Johnson's Furniture Polish and 1 Jar Johnson’s Shi-nup Silver Polish. 30c size. Kohne Drug Store J I H AldM Do AJoT £4T CLOl'ti^/ 1 Your car will eat up the miles with i vta Riverside Super-Service! l I*l For a quick start and smooth get away, 8 let us tune up that slow motor. jlfl m U. 8. L. BATTERIES |M a complete line —20% more starting power Battery servicing and recharging. MOTOR OVERHAUL up-to-date equipment—expert mechanics. Riverside Super Service When You Think of Brakes —Think of Us. 1
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> were killed last night when an ambulance overturned on atatc road i no. 67 ten miles southwest of here. ; Mrs. Salmon, an invalid, was re- : turning home in the amoulanco after attending funerul services . for Joseph Paul Salmon, a son, at . Indianaiiotis, I W. R. Linn, driver of the amliiilI ance, and two Linn children, es- . caped serious Injury. I o-. Paul Frisch of route 5, npent Tuesday in Indiuuapolta looking utter business.
Get A Scientific Scalp or Facial MASSA GE at FRANK S BARBER Shop First & Monroe St.
