Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 115, Decatur, Adams County, 13 May 1936 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
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DECATUR NINE BEATS BERNE BEARS, 7-6 Yellow .Jackets Sco r e First Victory Os Season Tuesday Decatur'a Yellow Jackets scored their first victory of ’he season Tuesday afternoon, nosing out a 7-4 J victory over the Berne Bears at Berne. Decatur held a 7-3 lead going into the last half of the seventh. Berne scored three runs and had the bases filled when the final out was registered. Four Berne errors and a hit by Ritter gave Decatur three runs in I the fourth inning. A walk, error! and a hit by Hitchcock accounted for two more Decatur runs in the sixth. The Yellow Jackets’ final two tallies crossed the plate in the i seventh on an error and a triple by Highland. Two walks and a hit gave Berne , one run in the third. Dro’s home run accounted for a tally in the’ fourth. A hit and two errors gave I
Flower and Vegetable Treatment Vacuum Cleaned Peat Moss in bulk. Hammond's Slugshot Insecticide per can... Calcium Arsenate Insecticide, in 40 pound bags. A sure death for bugs and beetles. Price’s Vegetable Fertilizer in 50 pound bags. Cash Coal & Supply R. A. STUCKEY HOME OF STUCKEY’S HOG-GLAD 111 I JI Morris Pet Week MAY 11 to 16 This is PET WEEK at the MORRIS STORE and during this week only we are featuring a large number of CANARIES Guaranteed Singers, 2 to 10 months old Choppers • Rollers - Warblers $3.50 to $4.50 •W-JJ A $6.75 RADIO WARBLER Vl* CO — SATURDAY — C” pn awav absolutely FREE to some customer visit-;-<r nnr pet department this week. Ask us for particulars. IT WILL PAY YOU TO VISIT OUR PET DEPT. GOLD FISH Beautiful New' j „ T BIRD CAGES Fan Tails (Common Gold Fish), Telescopes, New Color Shubunkins Combinations 10c toice sl-00 ch I Snails 5c each Standardssl.oo FREE —FISH FOOD —FREE Saturday only we will give free of charge one box of wafer fish food with every purchase of 2 or more Fish. AMERICAN BIRD PRODUCTS Dog 3 v '*' 9 oz - Dug 6 Balanced Diet ... 15c Collars American Junior and Seed 10c and American Song Cat Restorer 10c Leads 3Ws Song Food 10c Harness • Cuttie Bone 5c 10c American Bird 15c i Crau! 10c to American Bird Grit 15c to American Bird 20c Tonic 10c 39c Treat Cups 5c »
Berne another run in the sixth. In the last of the seventh, the first Berne batter walked and was forced ut second. Schindler, a pinch hitter, funned. Llechty ami' Baumgartner singled and Neuensehwander walked. Dio drove out his third straight hit and three I runs had scored Fuhrman replaced (1. Huffman on the mound and after Felber walked. Winteregg , popped to Ritter for tite game-end-ing out. Decatur AB R H PO A K Heller. 2b 3 0 0 1 0 1 Hitchcock, c 4 2 1110 0, Reynolds. 3b 3 110 11 Ritter, ss 3 2 1 2 3 0 ' Fuhrman, lb. p 3 0 0 6 0 0 j I Brodbeck, If 2 0 0 0 0 1' ; Beery. If O 0 0 0 0 2 Smith, If 0 0 0 0 0 0 Worthman, rs. lb 3 0 0 0 0 0 1, Huffman. cf . 2 S • 1 • 0 ’ Macklin, cf 0 0 0 0 0 0' ■ Highland, cf 11 1 0 0 V t G. Huffman, p 3 1 0 0 3 0, Totals 27 7 4 21 7 5' Berne AB R H PO A E i Llechty, rs 4 1 2 2 0 0 Baumgartner. 3b 4 11 2 0 1 , N'euensehwander.p 3 0 ts 0 2 1 Dro, c 4 2 3 10 2 2 , i Felber, ss 3 0 0 11 0.Winteregg. lb 4003 01! ' Lehman, If 2 0 0 0 0 0 I R. Sprunger, 2b 2 2 0 2 11, I Rg. Sprunger, cf 1 0 0 1 0 1 j
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, MAY 13 , 1936.
c-r .t ” w . < mcth.aj - • . . r V V, V <f ( '<»• s \\\ » fDPD CM TM CIMTCM. YOU-MS K AV GOOSE WAS Th« • W I HER-O OF Th£ LACr I o—rv.s< -r v ' v. I sre es wtn m.s - '*■>/ WiMMtAiG HiT tm/jlaV \ w fiajal gamf 7*V£ WAAAj \—- - Goocr fS cod’ . — •• i ll OLO B6y /5 4.’ W4V«7 /Al AT THf £UD OA J .>•* / . The season w* t.t * s ( £ll6S MA. , The ‘ B£NCH‘ /J * .fi n ~~ —**■ Our lb SET A MEuJ MAkK BY PLAYING M'S 4 M STRA'GMT WORLD S£-Rifi.S.
Schindler, cf 1 o o o o 0 Totals 2S G 6 21 G 7 0 INFLATIONISTS i (CONTINUED EttOM PAGE ONE, ——*——— — ’was written apparentfy last night after chairman William P. Connery of the house labor committee had denied that the federation was on record against the bill. The letter referred to the fact the executive council of the federation was now meeting here and expressed “the sincere hope and trust that the bill will be defeated.” ‘‘We rely on the friends of labor to vote against it." the letter concluded. The letter brought consternation to champions of the bill who had been in an optimistic frame of
■ HIW.WVVI TONIGHT ONLY W Doors Open (i;.’?() Come Early F ■ IMiW.IW® (I 10c -20 c Due to the engagement of “Little Lord Fauntelroy” we can show this great show one night only.—See it! A human, home - folks rT"TT story of an lowa farmer LLxx ho became a movie * star —by Phil Strong, famous author of “State jS "* , I J | Fair.” Grand entertain- Ifega&iiagS ment you’!! be sorry if you miss! ** — * * ALSO " ’ Cartoon. Sport Reel 1. and Traveltalk. «— • Frank Albertson, big cast. SPECIAL NOTE —— This SAME PICTURE and entire SAME PROGRAM will be shown TONIGHT ONLY also at the MADISON Theater. Doors Open at Come Early! — THURSDAY AND FRIDAY — Special Bargain Matinee 3 o'clock Friday — 10c-15c A Screen Achievement We Are Proud to Present! ' s ' uus i ust a ,ou^ 1 kid from Brooklyn . .. happy-go-lucky, courageous and lovable . . b ut the Y mad 6 h * m r^e 'WS* Vr Lord of a vast estate and 5 saddled ’ boyish shoulders * wit h 1 •‘ffairs of *. manhood... O®K f . ItIZNICK INfttNATiONAt : FAUNTLEROY V Alt ING FREDDIE BARTHOLOMEW (Sfor of "David Copperfield I DOLORES COSTELLO BARRYMORE Guv Kibbee, Mickey Rooney, C. Aubrey Smith o 0 o o SATURDAY ONLY — “MOONLIGHT MURDER” Chester Morris, Madge Evans, Leo Carillo, Frank McHugh. o 0 o o SUN. MON. TUES.—For the first time —a great outdoor romance filmed entirely in NATURAL COLOR! "TRAIL OF THE LONESOME PINE” Fred Mac Murray, Sylvia Sidney, Henry Fonda, Spanky MacFarland. AMATEURS WANTED — For Stage Performances 1 Cash Prizes to winners. Apply Bob’s Amateur Frolic f < Adams Theater
I j mind as the bill approached final I action. ’ ! Grer n's letter asserted the fed- ! eration was "in thorough accord with practical legislation" designed to aid farmers but that the executive council was against the 1 Frazier-Lemke bill because of its . I "inflationary feature.” The letter asserted inflation of the Frazier-Lemke bill type would injure buying power and “the best 1 interests of the wage earners of the nation." o I Texas History Enriched I . Austin, Tex. (U.R) —Two years 1 translation of the Bexar archives, j records of Texas during Spanish and Mexican days, for the Uni- ’ versity of Texas, have resulted in i 4.000 pages of finished work. OrigII Inal Spanish documents to be f I translated total 203.920 pages..
START RACING AT Fl WAYNE t — First Auto Race Os Season At Fort Wayne Track Sunday Fort Wayne. May 13. — (U.P> Automobile racing will be resumed again at the Fort Wayne motor speedway, located north of the city on the five-elghtlis mile oval next Sunday under the sanction of the Central states Racing Association. Six events are planned for the first program which will start at 2:15 p. m. (CSTI with time trials In the morning at 11 o'clock The first event will be the handicap race of ten laps, the drivers turning in the beet time in the trials taking position in the back row and not in the first row as they have done in the past. This will , force them to fight tor the prize j money instead of grabbing an i early lead and holding it well in front all of the wa> The balance of the program consists of fourten lap elimination races aud the grand final of thirty laps. Among the leading drivers of the C.S.A.R.. will be Red Campbell of Indianapolis, driving the MillerMorgan Special, winner of the last three feature races in as many starts this season; but Sunday he will be pressed to the floor board with other leading drivers such as Al Hammon and Gale Lower of j Fort Wayne, driving the Hissos, Specials, one of the outstanding 1 dirt track racing teams on the I tracks today. Chas. Engles of i Dayton, Ohio, driving the Vance. Special, who needs no introduction.' Joe Kotz of South Bend. Bud Henderson of Akron. Ohio, and Clay Corliett of Columbus. Ohio, are just a few of the leading drivers that will appear in the six event program. Workmen are improving the seating arrangements and reconditioning the track which has been oiled for dustless racing. Last year the track record was shattered twice and the surface is now | so much faster that a new track record may be set. STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct. St. Louis 14 8 .636 Pittsburgh 12 9 .57-J New' York 13 10 .565 Chicago 12 11 .522 ’ Cincinnati , 72 13 ,480 Boston 10 12 .455 Brooklyn 10 14 ,41Z Philadelphialo 16 .385 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct. New York 17 8 .680 Boston 17 9 .654 Cleveland 15 9 .625 Detroit 12 11 .522 Chicago 10 10 .500 Washington 13 14 .481 Philadelphia 8 15 .348 St. Louis 4 20 .167 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION — W. L. Pct. St. Paul 21 5 .808 Kansas City 14 7 .667 ■ Milwaukee 15 8 .652 Minneapolis 15 8 .652 Louisville 11 16 .407 1 Columbus 7 17 .292 Indianapolis 5 14 .263 Toledo 8 18 .217 YESTERDAY’S RESULTS National League St. Louis. 2; Brooklyn, 5. Cincinnati, 6; Philadelphia, 4. New York. 5; Chicago. 4. Pittsburgh. 6; Boston, 6 (tie. called 10th, dark.) American League Washington at Chicago, rain. Philadelphia at Cleveland, rain. Detroit, 5; Boston, 0. St. Louis, 7; New York, 0. American Association Minneapolis, 11; Toledo, 6. Louisville, 6; St. Paul, 5 (11 innings.) Indianapolis at Milwaukee, rain. FIFTH DISTRICT QNB) clerk, that he was reaedy to certify Towneendite a vote of 3,596, wiping out his previously reported two-vote margin over the youthful Portland SIGNATURE ONLY LOANS No One Else Need Sign The SniPIJEST and EASIEST WAY to barow up to S3OO. Prkn'is, relatives or employer WILL NCT KNOW of your loan. Loans also arranged on furniture, auto, livostooY. etc. Call and learn BrSueW €••» «u Loam U *3M Local Loan Co ' Over Schafer store Phone 2-3-7 Decatur, Ind.
I attroney Regardless of the outc.ime of the official tabulation, a recount of ull! the votes In the district wax predicted. James P Fulton. Hartford City District chairman, haa ueked that all votes be preserved. James, who hud the backing of the district organization In the race is the only 'person having the author:ty to ask fir a recount. Fulton pointed out. THREE BANKERS (CONTINI'ED EHOM rA«E ONK) purchased some of their bank's > own stock and had carried the transaction on the books as loan collateral. The three were found guilty on three counts of the fed eral indictment which charged the making of false entries in the banks’ books, false entries in reports to the federal reserve, nnd conspiracy to make false entries. o ■ -- EXPERTS ARGUE j (CONTINUED FROM FACIE ONE) would I ive ?aJd nr Lix. ■ at all un-’ dvr the new bill because they wou’d , have distributed all of their earn-| inge. That, In addition, there would have been others that would get smaller than 5u per cent reduclloue, in taxes. But that data, according to a later statement by chairman Pat Harrison. D. Miss,, showed only part of the picture. Harrison Mid the j treasury experts told the o.unmittee i that—ln answer to Byrd — there ' would be at least an equal number I of corporations whose taxes under | the new bill would be increased • more than 50 per cent. o — Methodists Name Two New Bishops Columbus. 0., May 13 — (UP) — The genera l conference of the Methodist Episcopal church set ah .ut choosing a third new bishop today, having elected Dr. Wilbur B. Hammaker of Youngstown. 0.. and Dr. I Charles W. Flint, Chancellor of ' Syracuse University, on the fourth ■ ballot. The strongest candidates, as indicated by the ballot which resulted In election late yesterday, were DrHarry W. McPherson, president •. T LUinoio Wesleyan University, with 214 votes, and Dr. John B. Magee of Seattle, Wash, with 133. Dr. Hammaker received 431 and Dr. Flint 408, well over the two-thirds required for election.
■ /t? ComnHee tfoussql OLDSMOBIL is More Comfort<ibli| L . , r w - I WHW*Ln77*Mff vririr gw • khJ H ; fl I’ —AI —— * — asfiß i ii v -==-p==. JJJ ~I I -*=j , g > A ' ,gg| • 1 T7 ITHER way, the result is the same. Wh \ 1 \ D take Oldsmobile’s famous glidmg \ \ rtilize that only Knee-Acuon \ V uce o^ lot \ restful comfort—Knee-Actio whenyo e . <ou’ d '*a <s* v '' e \ with the R ‘de Stabilize; oU see at a gif® Aouc" 008 *’ \ other cars ®B ainst O ldsmobl *’ y , g 9o f itso* U*VA ’ \ why Oldsmobile is in a comfort class o ° V \ It’s the same with Or; bile gives you the P r ° tectl ° „ f (y Glass 011 \ T °P” Bodles by Fisher l h Sul ‘ self- energy \ —the dependability of powerful. » decj(le( i CO^' r \ Super-Hydraulic Brakes. Befor VoarchoiC ei 1 A* 9 AW* * I,V na<- o ' t, * P 1 any car “Drive and Compare • 1 h * nd ’ .wl* - 1 chee^ 6 . AwnA'llNaA • THS SIX • \ 71-' J P. KIRSCH e SON PHONE 335
SHUTOUT HALTS I LOSING STREAK Browns Blank Yankees To Halt Losing Streak At 13 Straight New York, May 13.—(U.PJ -The St. Louis Browns just couldn't go on losing forever* and it probably gave manager Rogers Hornsby a lot more satisfaction to snap the I Brownies' 13 game losing streak at j the expense of the league leading New York Yankees than any other team in the circuit. Noted trouble makers in the past—the pennant contenders, the Browns stepped out of role on their j recent road trip, dropping a pair of tilts each to the Yankees, the Boston Red Sox, and the Cleveland Indians. Also the 7-0 shutout victory over the Yanks yesterday uncovered for the “Rajah” a new starting pitcher Al Thomas, who set Joe Me'Carthy’s new “murderer’s row' ! back with six hits. Thomas wks I with the Washington Senators and i the Philadelphia Phillies last year, ' and it was his first starting assign--1 rneut with the Browns. However, the defeat may have paved the way out for Put (Blubbefi Malone, who was finally given , his first start of the season. McCarthy apparently figured that if , Pat was good for any victories , this season, he could hardly miss .against the Browns who hadn't • won a game since April 25. . i But Pat was in hot water front !' the start, and was yanked in the 'second. Victor Sorrel, bespectacled vetI eran. gave up only three hits as ■ the Detroit Tigers shut out the . second place Boston Red Sox, 5 to 0. Goose Goslin led the Tiger attack against Wes Ferrell with a homer and a double. Washington at Chicago and ! Philadelphia at Cleveland were ' rained out. In the National the Brooklyn ' Dodgers climbed all over Dizzy r i Dean and pounded out a 5 to 2 I I victory over the St. Louis Cardini als which enabled them to climb ’' out of the cellar. Ed Brandt, the 1 winning pitcher, stopped the Cards’ winning streak at five straight. The New York Giants went into i a virtual tie with the Pittsburgh I Pirates for second place by scoring a 5 to 4 victory over the Chit eago Cubs. A potent single by Lew Riggs in tbs seventh which drove hi two
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Always Conforublypfl Tonight • ThiJ The fastest -teppipj (■ Corned) of the ytul I’nnce-s I’ersonaiily® JESSIE MATIJ "FIRST AG® Added Fun— I Ernest Truex Con® l.oonev Tune (at® 10t-2k I Sun. Mon. Ta ■ Wallace Beery ■ Bartmlfl John Bota ■ “MESSAGE TO Itffl
