Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 111, Decatur, Adams County, 8 May 1936 — Page 8
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SPARTANS PLAY AT OHIO CITY Pleasant Mills Team To Play In League Game Sunday The Pleasant MUN S-partans will play the Ohio City Red Birds at Ohio City Sunday aternoon The Spartans were originally scheduled l> play Convoy at Palm, r'u field, southeast of Decatur, but the schedule was changed with Hicksville re-|,'a<-Ing Paulding in the northwestern (Mu-Indiana league Sunday's game with Delphos was postponed be ause of wet grounds and will be played at a later date, probably August 8 The Spartans will play Van Wert at PaJjner's field Sunday, May 17. in the find home game of the seai.on. The Pleasant Mills team will C>e decked out in new suits for Sunday's game. LEADING batters Player Club GAB R H B.Av Terry. Giants 12 27 4 15 .556 Sullivan. Indians 11 35 5 16 .457 Chapman, Yanks _ 11 37 5 16 .432 Stone, Senators 10 26 811 .423 R.Ferrell, Red Sox 22 74 18 31 .419 COMPLETE OPEN (CONTINUED FROM e.-,GE ONE) enue asked by the president." Harrison said as he ended the hearings at which industrial and busiuess representatives decried the measure as unworkable and unfair and destructive of recovery progress. “There certainly have been constructive and worthwhile suggestions made and they will be given very serious consideration,” Harrison said. "There will undoubtedly be some revisions which will be important but I am not in a posi-
SUN - MON - Tl FS - *• A W Continuous Sun from 1:15 r — * 10c —25c TO EVERY GIRL j. WHO YEARNS J? FOR THE BRIGHT LIGHTS! Here's the drama of one ME ~0. JfeigL country girl who decided z *W#s£ she'd get to the big city. V, /It** / Kay Brannan .. . young, 'JMwS [ ' J charming, clever... is out V| t¥ to get all that life holds . . . and she's forgetting > all the rules to win the man she wants! ilsSW’ J. ! V ' — sZ 'ALA .a A J JANET 77!7 ROBERT Zs Kl Jwfl k" 1 \mE3 fe.. Jan«f Gaynor /oohj /ovefy »« The orerntfhf jtar o< "BroadBob Tay/ar'j arms. Here’s the way Adelody" in another tnmoil ogothngrolt iktovrhod! u*nph! Gosh, he’s good looking! OMM Millions read Ben Ames Williams’ romance... more millions will find it the most exciting entertainment of this screen season! '•rith Binnie BARNES • Lewis STONE • Andy DEVINE Elizabeth PATTERSON • Frank CRAVEN • James STEWART Directed by Produced by jVILLIAM A. WELLMAN AM»u*-4t*MwyaM*y.r p.ctur. HUNT STROMBERG ALSO— POPEYE Cartoon “Bridge Ahoy.” Tonight & Saturday Peter B. Kyne’s Great Saturday Evening Post romance—now a Big Special Attraction! “THREE GODFATHERS” Chester Morris, Lewis Stone, Irene Harvey Three men who found romance— only when they courted danger and death. ALSO— Hilarious OUR GANG Comedv and VOICE OF EXPERIENCE 10c—20c Coming— The all-color epic “TRAIL OF THE LONESOME PINE” Sylvia Sidney, Fred Mac Murray. Sunday, Mav 24—- Charlie Chaplin. “Modern Times” Sunday, May 31— “13 HOURS BY AIR”
I Hon to say just what the commit'tee will decide.' 1 I Harrison declined to comment on , President Roosevelt’s remarks at his press conference today that ,all provisions of the bill are not yet settled. Attacks Bill i Wasington. May 8. <U.P’ As Re ' publicans roared their applause, Rep. Andrew J. May, D.. Ky.. today attacked the $2,364.000,000 deficiency bill on the house floor and demanded that the new deal call a halt on “unnecessary” expenditures. i May's bitter outburst came as bouse leaders struggled to bring the bill to the stage of a motion to recommit It to committee tonight. They said they would hold the house in session until 7 p. tn.. | but that if unexpected opposition arose, they would call a Saturday session. The roll call vote will be put over until Monday under an agreement between leaders of both parties. • “This government must live w ithin its revenues." May shouted, I thumping the table. “There ought to be an immediate stoppage of appropriations and expenditures for unnecessary activities.” He warned against impairing the national credit by piling up a huge deficit. o Chester Kessler Appointed Coach Hammond, Ind.. May 8- (U.R) — Chester Kessler, basketball coach at Hammond Technical high school for the last seren years, today was named to a similar posi-. tion at Hammond high school. He succeeds William E. "Spud" Campbell, who was killed in an automobile accident March 20. Technical teams won 86 per cent of their games under Kessler. Kessler in a graduate of Monroe high school, and played with the Monroe team which won the sectional tourney at Bluffton in 1921. ' Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
INDIANS SEEK SEVEN IN ROW 1 Cleveland Invades Detroit Saturday; Cubs Stay On Top t New York. Muy 8 —(UP) — Big chief Steve O'Neill and his muurading Cleveland Indiaim donned war paint and feathers today as they made final preparations for scalp- • ing their seventh .straight victim a crlppleil Tiger in Detroit tomorrow. It the Cleveland Club can walk sway from Navin field with a victory dangling from its belt. O'Neill will have accccmpliahed something . ' no recent Indian manager has been able to do. and that is convince the' Cleve'and players that they are a , good road teamAfter getting off to a bad start on their eastern road trip, dropping their/irst four encounters, the Indians have compiled an enviable rec- 1 ord in dusting off their last «dx opponents using only six different pitchers. i Tit se six pitchers have allowed ; only 14 runs, an average of 2'a per; I game. If they ontinue to anything' like that rate, there is no dsibt about the Indians being a serious { contender for the American League, pennant- . Yesterday Mel Harder itched the] Indians I.; a 4 to 3 victory over the Philadelphia Athletics, enabling ] Cleveland to stay a game and a half j behind the leading Boston Red Sox who handed the St. Louie Browns their 11th consecutive defeat. 9 to 6. Jimmy Foxx led the way for] Wes FarreV to chalk up his fourth * victory by blasting out two hornet runs. The New York yankees kept right up with the Red Sox by triumphing 6 to 5 for their second straight over Detroit. In a sl'ppily played game with each team making three errors, the Chicago White Sox made it two straight over the Washington Senators, 11 to 6. The Chicago Cubs maintained their top position in the National | their to posit* n in the National League by edging out the Boston , Beee 9 to S in a HA-inning struggle. Bill Herman's 10th inning double ' brought home the winning run. Demaree and Klein of the Cubs and Moore of the Bees hit for the cuitSingles by Medwicck and Martin coupled with a sacrifice and two walks gave the St. Lcufs Cardinals j two runs in the eighth Drought a 3 { | to 2 victory over the Philadelphia I !' . 1 J r SUN. MON. TUES. L 10 CENT BARGAIN MATINEE 1:45 SUNDAY 2 Features One Dime . ♦ ♦ The dis-and-dat detective and the “Top Hat” funny gal in a crime story fit to 161,1 t\ -9$ M ' > .J HUI* —FEATURE NO. 2— Cunning sharper than the blade of the guillotine he robbed! Who is he—what is his strange power? LESLIE HOWARD and MERLE OBERON in •THE SCARLET PIMPERNEL’’ Evenings 10c—20c TONIGHT & SATURDAY— Another Great H o p-A-L on g Cassidy Thriller — the Best of the West- • erns “CALL OF THE PRAIRIE” j William Boyd, Jimmy Ellison. • ALSO— 2nd Chapter, FLASH GOR- [ DON, “Tunnel of Terror” and SCREEN VAUDEVILLE, starring Arm'da. TONITE ONLY ONE DIME Saturday 10c—15c
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, MAY 8,1936.
u game in the rear of the Cubs. The New York Giants were dinlodged from, third place by dropping I ~ | to 2 decision to the Pittsburgh Pirates Van Mungo chalked up his third victory of the season as the Brooklyn Dodgers won their second straight. 7 to 3, over the Cincinnati ' Reds. Yesterday’s hero: Billy Herman. Chicago Cub ae.ond baseman, who hit u two-bagger In the tenth to drive home the winning run against , the I", nton Bees. STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct. : Chicago 12 7 .632 'St. Louis 11 7 -®H ' Plttsbur :' 1" 8 New York 10 9 .526 | Cincinnati 10 11 -476 Boston fi 11 -421 Philadelphia 9 13 .409 Brooklyn 8 12 .400 i • | AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct. Boston 16 6 .727 New York 15 6 .714 Cleveland 14 7 .667 Detroit • lo “4 Washington 11 13 .458 | Chicago 8 10 .444 j Philadelphia 7 13 .350 I St. Louis 3 18 .143 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. Pct. St. Paul ■ 17 4 .bio Kansas City 13 5 .722 Minneapolis 12 6 .667 Milwaukee 12 7 .643 i Louisville 9 13 .409 ’ Indianapolis 4 12 .250 I Columbus ... 5 15 .250 'Toiodo 4 14 222YESTERDAY'S RESULTS i National League Pittsburgh. 6, New York, 2. Brooklyn. 7; Cincinnati, 4. Chicago, 9; Boston. 8. St. Louis. 3; Philadelphia, 2. American League Boston. 9; St. Louis, 6. New York, 6; Detroit, 5. Cleveland. 4; Philadelphia. 3. Chicago, 11; Washington. 6. American Association St. Paul, 9; Indianapolis, 8. Milwaukee, 10; Toledo. 4. Minneapolis. 7; Columbus. 4. Kansas City. 13; Louisville, 12. r . o Today’s Sport Parade (By Henry McLemore) i ♦- —— ♦ Chicago, May B.— (U.R) — Weary ■of operating at a loss in the sum- | tner months, the Madison Square I Garden corporation has launched a contest for a suggestion on howto fill the tremendous auditorium with something more profitable than empty seats in hot weather. The thinker-upper of the idea will receive first prize money of SSOO, and the undying gratitude of Colonel John Reed Kilpatrick, the old football "Y" man from Yale who is serving a stretch as the garden's president. The colonel played his football back in the days when, if the old-timers aren't i jesting, immortals were a dime a A New Collection of GRADUATION DRESSES 7-95 YCIA The o irl or»d--uate will thrill jfS at this assortmint of beautiful dresses. ißw® Y ° u , may 'Cz'-K choose from ■ f-v” I'h'f’'* Mesolene, OrI AC- ts V. I oandies or i Jf 1 Laces in past- \ els or white - Tailored or VA formal styles. Ws invit « you to ch oose you” (y-L A. Graduation Ad re »s from this br 'R' an t x> collection. SMART NEW COATS Pastels - Whites - Navies r in Swaggers, Fleeces, Worsteds. : $4.95 to $lO-95 I Mrs. Louisa Braden Phone 737 3rd 4 Monroe
■*lsr z : ■ « i s yzz“j iSBKF' ' An: - -z / z ; ■ r '-laa w ’KU ' I ijfeew* Cecil- I SLUeSIAIS Sr/UTOU w\- ' I A : - i 6MOBTSTOP--BUBDV BY T I Zrr,l.< tours- as B *—wl nnniLMts eo/* »a »*r r IAJ< ; chump !\ B \ or Thr A-A. — ! \ \ x V B 1 (U« r-o-woiWf, 1 fl Tai /BKs *Y \ I S<XZ. A J Xbv. T * >rr ■ V-\ p^ o< yr ■ \ YWyz* AAa-i/""'* 5 yVjHfc VXUGHA-l, V tl, CIP'V" \ A -v , -ar -jk a .al rV|4 si-- a: s t, naff Aj\r- ■„ • .n. u. hua.
dozen. There was thp immortal i Ham Fish, the immortal Poes, the immortal Hlnkey, and the immortal Dinkey, the immortal Parley, and thw immortal Voo. Yet they do say the colonel was so good there never was a field goal kicked around his end. The announcement of the prize contest reached me today, and all I’ve got to say is that Colonel Kilpatrick has his nerve about him in |
CO M F ORT AB L Y CO O L Cort SUN. MON. TUES. .. A THE SHOW THAT’S iMp* • A GOT EVERYTHING \ II —. FOR EVERYBODY ■ AL I t JDISDN »urraond*d with th* y*ar't I •« ” \y Igr*«t*st array of *nt*r- / a .toh»*r3 in Warn*r Bros.’ li »tar-j*mm»d fambor** JS’ t ' as tong and lavght*ri Alto—111EI JEHUS iriE ihwt and Fox News. Continuous show a i t 1 i k Sunday from 1:15 10c-25c TO NITE — “TAKA CHANCE NITE” JQ C SATURDAY ONLY ; Harry Carey “WILD MUSTANG” —PL U S — EXTRA—Chap. 6 “REX AND RINTY” Continuous show from 2 p. m. 10c -15 c ALWAYS REFRESHINGLY COOL AT THE CORT.
i offering a measly 1500 for an idea which will fill the garden. You might just as well offer Gutzlum Borglum two bits for carving tinstone Mountain. Gr an engineer] a ham on rye for a set of blue-1 prints of Boulder Dam. Filling the ; i garden, colonel, is a task. But I . need the SSOO. and here’s my sug l gestion: Kidnap that Joe lahHs. Get him ! | under the garden banners, and let;
him fight once a week. He'll pack!, the place so tight there won’t even 'I be room left for the nccoustlcs. As for Hie best plan for getting Louis, you’ll have to figure that out yourself, or else raise the prize money to a more respectable figtire It shouldn't be so difficult, tough.. The man who hus him, Mike Jacobs, is just around the corner from the garden on Broadway and 49th. and his defense precautions are negligible. Two or three press agents, a couple or I half-empty bottles of ginger ale,l and Joe Jacobs, that's all. Give Joe Jacobs a pair of half dollar! cigars and he'll not only snrrender. | but lay down a smoke screen for- - to op-rate behind. The kidnaping of Louis is my No. 1 suggestion. As I would ulso like to have the second prize money of 4260, here's another idea: Each Friday night place all the garden officials In the middle of the ring and allow their critics to come in and throw eggs at them. There will be no admission charge, hut the garden will make plenty of money off the egg concession. Even if the eggs are priced at $1 each, you'll have trouble In supply ing the demand. I wouldn’t be surprised, colonel, if you slipped down from the ring and enjoyed a little throwing, yourself. Os course, it will be difficult to limit the throwers to eggs. Some will insist on bricks, hut with a $5 tariff on them, the profit will more than make up for the damage. My third and final suggestion ila mammoth presentation of Uncle j Tom's Cabin. Yon could use the hockey rink for the frozen river, ! James Joy Johnson as Little Exa. {and all the boys who have been
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