Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 170, Decatur, Adams County, 18 July 1936 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
SMB®
TIGERS DROP INTO FOURTH Yankees Hammer Detroit Into Fourth Place; Cards Gain New York. July 18 — The Yun k,eex came out of their butt Inc doldrums with a loud blast, slug-] King homo run bulls all over their. home lot, eqiiullltiK an American league homer record and walloping the Detroit Tigers 9 to 4 The victory, third out of four ' .-tarts for the Yanks in the cur-: rent series, sent the Tigers down to fourth place, us the Boston Red Sox moved up to third by defeat ing the Browns. The Yankee record equalling i stunt ctinie in the third inning. | when Red Rolfe. Lou Gelirtig an.l | Bill Dickey smashed out circuit < < louts, equalling the mark first net by Washington in 1902 and re- ; jieated by various clubs since. It 1 was the eighth time the Yanks ■ have done tile trick, with Gehrig , figuring in the barrage on seven • occasions. Jimmy Fbxx boosted the wobbly I Red Sox buck into third place by | whacking out a ninth inning single with the bases loaded and driving in all of the rum needed for a 2-1 triumph over the St. Louis Browns 1 in the series finale. The Chicago White Sox Wasted J three Washington pitchers for 19. hits and an easy 16 to 5 decision over th" Senators for their third straight triumph. It wan the fourth consecutive series the Chi-' caeo team has won and its tenth victory in 14 starts over Washing-■ ton this season. The Cleveland Indians kept par” with the league-leading Yankees, hewting the Athletics. 5 to 1. for their seventh consecutive triumph. I Denny Galehouse held the A’s to
Townsend Plan Faces Revision - - ■. jKMKjp if.x', i. - *Sk < ii » < jk .... *' ♦■ ■f ; I & < T-* HL/ » & CX^..' v s t > / /V I W Revision of the Townsend old age pension organization to transfer some of the personal power now held by Dr. Francis E. Townsend to members of the OARP loomed as delegates united at the national convention in Cleveland to demand more, power. At the same time, it appeared that Dr. Townsend and the Rev. Gerald K. Smith, inheritor of the late Huey Long s share-the-wealth machine, shown in conference, above, would be defeated in attempts to swing the convention to support of the Union party.
Detroiters “Sleep Out” as Heat Kills 400 ' t§|i'" '" 1 WHIkJb? ■• B z- - - 3 » ,z 7 •"■ ? - f * * 5 / t .“ ■>• z? J <?V "s fifii - <. ? W
Hospital; and morgues in Detroit and other sections of Michigan were jammed to capacity as the state’s heat death toll climbed past the 400 mark
| six hits. , Dizzy Dean won his fifteenth victory of the season and the 5 to I'4 win of the Cardinals over the 'l’hilllie prevented a sweep of tlf r thris-giime series by Jimmy Wil Lson's crew The great hurler. rej covering front it blow on the head /received hist Saturday when L'nrIgess Whitehead of the Guvnts sei.t In line drive off Denn's skull. I knocking him unconscious, went I in as n relief hurleren the sixth. ! He didn't allow u hit and in the i ninth struck out three Philadelphia batsmen in a row Wally Berger'S fourteenth home i run ot the season and a six-hit game by Bob Smith enabled the : Boston Bees to overcome the 'Cubs, 6 to 1, in the final game of ■the series. Van Lingle Mungo received perfect fielding and batting support t’rotn the Ikxlgers and won his ' ninth game of the season with a I sto 3 edge over the slipping Cincinnati Reds. The New York Giants tied a 'National league slugging record and shut out the Pirates 6 to o as | Carl Hubbell, in top flight pitehl ing form for the firot time in I more than a month, let the Biles i down with five hits — Nine Persons Killed As Train Hits Auto Dundee, Mich.. July IS (U.R) * i Nine members of two Farrell. ' Pennsylvania families were killed instantly when the west bound ' Ann Arbor railroad passenger, ' train No. 51 crashed into their " Kuick sedan at a grade crossing near here. j Five of the victims were identi- | fied an Harry Schuster, his wife, and their three children, of Far-: rell. Pa. The other victims were report-] |ed to be Schuster's sister, her. husband and their two children. ! j Bettv. 8. and Mary. 6. I , I Trade in a Good Town —Decatur.
' Detroit was one of the hardest hit cities in the nation Thousands slept in the parks, above, while temperatures hovered above 100.
STANDINGS IN SOFTBALL LOOP • First Game To Start Halt Hour Later. Beginning Monday Night STANDINGS Church League W. L. Pct. U. B. 2 0 l.m><> St. Mary's 1 0 1.4100 Luth-Bapt. 1 o 1.000 Reformed o 1 000 Union Chapel 0 1 .000 Pr.-Chr. 0 2 .000 ( Industrial : Castings 1 o 1.000 G. E. 1 0 1.000 Schafer «o .000 Cloverleaf 0 1 .000 Central Sugar 0 1 .000 Sylvester Everhart, president nf the Decatur softball association, announced today that the first game each night in the softball leagues will be started at 7:30, instead of 7, as formerly. The change was made to accommodate players living in the country, unable to get to the diamond : in time for the 7 o’clock start. The first game will be started promptly on time. Managers of teams playing in the second game as ask ed to give starting lineups to the -st orekeeper before conclusion ot the first game, in order that the nightcap may lie started promptly on time. The schedule for next week follows: Monday: St. Mary’s vs. Zion Reformed: Union Chapel vs, M. E.Evangelical. Tuesday: Presbyterian-Christian vs. Zion Reformed: St. Mary's vs. Lutheran-Baptist. Thursday: Central Sugar vs. Decatur Castings; Schafer vs. General Electric. CITY TO BE MECCA iCONTINUEDFROM PAGE ONE) formally open the midway. Third street was chosen as the parade ground because it was believed that too few people would lie able to see the parade if marched down the midway, because of .'the concessions lining the streets. Some of the marching bands require more than the space available on the midway for their formations. o CLAIM OFFICER : (CONTINUED FROM PAGE , 500 for another St. Paul Man.’’ Six piles of $7,800 each were set aside for members of the kidnap gang, Bo'ton added, and SSOO for Edward Bartholmey, former Bensenville, 111., postmaster in whose home Hamm was Held. The reet of the money was alloted for "expenses,” he added. o SPANISH RIOTS (CONTINUED FROM. ' crack, well disciplined force which has been brought to Spain in past i umes to suppress disorders. After withholding the news from the public for many hours the government announced that some army units had revolted in Morocco but asserted that most of the army remained loyal, there as in Spain proper, and expressed confidence of the early end of the movement. Melilla seemed to be the center. 0 ; Writing Upsets Golf New Bedford, Mass. <U.R) — Massachusetts’ oldest mayor had to give up hiis golf game the other i day because he had signed 30(5 | diplomas. Seventy-eight-year-old ' Mayor Charles St Ashley said he had gripped a pen for several hours and was afraid it would interfere with the proper gripping of his clubs. o — Trade ,n a Good Town — Decatur
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATI'HDAY, JULY IK- nl3li '
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STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct. Chicago 51 30 ,630 St. Louis 51 32 .614 Pittsburgh 44 39 .530 Cincinnati .., 41 39 .513; New York 43 41 .512: Boston 40 44 .476 Philadelphia 32 50 .390 Brooklyn 28 55 .337 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct. X,'iv York 56 28 .667 Cleveland 47 38 .553 Boston 47 40 .540 Detroit 45 39 .536 Washington 44 40 .524 < 'llii ago 42 40 , .512 Philadelphia 28 53 .346 St. Louis .25 56 .309 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. Pct. St. Paul 57 39 .594 Milwaukee 53 39 .576 Minneapolis . 50 45 .526, Columbus 50 46 .521 Kansas City 48 45 .516 Indianapolis 43 50 .462 Toledo .40 56 .417 Louisville 36 58 .383 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS — National League New York, 6; Pittsburgh, 0. • Brooklyn. 5: Cincinnati, 3. Boston, 5; Chicago, 1. St. Louis, 5; Philadelphia. 4. American League New York, 9; Detroit, 4. Cleveland. 5; Philadelphia. 1. Boston, 2; St. Louis, 1. Chicago, 16; Washington, 5. American Association Louisville, 4; St. Paul, 3. Minneapolis. 6; Toledo, 5. Indianapolis at Milwaukee, rain. o COOLING RAIN ‘ page one> benefit to seared crops and pastures, were reported in Marion and Indianapolis today and additional scattered showers were predicted for other sections of the state over the week end. Ag Hie temperatures dropped, so did the frequency of heat deaths decrease. Nearly 300 lives have been taken by prostrations and drownings during the extreme heat wave which began July 4. Only six additional fatalities in the state were reported today. They were: Thomas W. Jackson, 58, Indianapolis, negro: Mrs. Mary De Mar, 55, Indianapolis, negro; Arthur D. Halstead. 86, Elkhart: Mrs. Jeanette Spray. 86, Seymour; James H. Shirley, 79, Shelbyville, all heat prostrations, and Walter Shirley, 40, Glencoe, Ky„ drowned at Vevay. Benefit of the overhanging clouds was shown at Indianapolis Imlay when mercury started its
I OPENING Saturday, July 18 GLEN STONE I and his orchestra. Two Weeks Only CJlen Gray Monday Nite Tri-Lake Resort
climb at the rate of two degrees an hour early in the morning but dropped back down again as a light rain fell. A cooling breeze accompanied the precipitation. o Heat-Crazed Clerk Kills Wife And Son Erie. Pa., July 18—(U.R>— Samuel C. Weed. 40, a heat-crazed clerk at the Erie works of the General Electric company, hammered his wife, Irene, land son, David, 4, to death today, and inflicted critical wounds on hiu other son. Charles. 2. Weed, a Sunday school superintendent, was apprehended on the Buffalo road after two unsuccessful attempts to commit suicide by throwing himself beneath the wheels of trucks. Weed had been acting' minister of the Church of the Nazarene in Wesleyville, Erie suburb, during the pastor's vacation. Friends said he had been acting strangely since a heat attack last Sunday. Three Kendallville Firemen Injured Kendallville, Ind., July IS—<U.P) —Three men suffered burns and 100 acres of farm land was burned over here yesterday when a rubbish fire got out of control. The injured, all members of the Kendallville fire department, were: Milo Williams and Gerald Haynes, burns on the arms and shoulders, and Clyde Bennett, overcome by heat and smoke.
vestments OF taken from the '<«"»• “” d g l sl tileced together; Hl ll°> •** scums are so cleverly hidden az to v ,. en te the impression of a <<>n lIOUB piece of cloth. Theae ve« ments, however, have been d< sign ed ns Individual and Integnil units. and almost endless is. th* variety of decoration with which th y have been enriched. | ■■On a background of dark rui silk the hundreds of figures have been executed in hulf relief by the use of gold thread, with here und there a touch of silver. Long yars of work were required for the production of this masterpiece, the loom card from which it was executed measuring thirty-six feet by twenty feet. Because of the many figures of angles that surround and etnbe.'llsh the chief themes ot the vestments, they are known as the ’Angel Ornament Design.’ • The ability of the artist is seen to best advantage in the cope because of the vast expanse of the picture he could there present. But even in the smaller pieces—the stoles, the maniples, the burse, the chalice veil—his artistry is in : evidence. "The major pieces of the set, besides the cope, -are the Benediction veil, the chasuble, and the dalmatics for deacon and subdeacon. (The Cathedral set has an extra pair of dalmatics for pontifical ceremonies.) “Angel ornament is the theme of the Benediction veil, with its recurrent groups of angels; in its ■center the emblem IHS is emblazoned on a field of silver. "On the front of the chasuble the artist has portrayed a Madonna and Child entitled ‘Moffier of Our Saviour,’ and on the back he has shown the departure of Christ from Mother and Apostles in the
Ascension: both pictures are surrounded by angel figures playing musical instruments in celestial I concert. “Angels are seen again hovering over the gospel scenes that . the artist has designed for the dalmatics of deacon and subdeacon. The youth of Christ furnishes the topics for the one dalmatic, the ac- . five ministry for the other. “The Infancy at Bethlehem is portrayed with star overhead, with the Magi and shepherds come to adore. "Then there is the scene at Jerusalem showing the twelve year old Lad in the temple, found by Mary and Joseph in the midst of ' the Jewish doctors. I “Another picture presents Christ I in the midst of his Apostles, prom .! ising to Peter the keys of the king- ; dom of heaven. And the final one depicts Christ receiving the ac- . claim of the people as he makes his triumphal entry into Jerusal- . em. “On the facings of the cope the i angel ornament is seen again, but I j now the figures surround emblems • j of the titles under which Mary is •addressed in her litany: Morning
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zi t «f Heaven, Ark of the SX m!™ TO ” ft-’SS; ,ur 11 day when Christ iprnaalem on *nf» <•**/ ' send his Htigels un<l s 1 •• his elect from the C r wX St Os th 10 ,h " u “ ermost | part of heaven. , ..over three hundred fu<:*« Ito be fount! in the panoramic pictun, which has un expanse of. fourteen feel lta ' lr ‘ n ..rance. Michue! h-ading them on sewn ange)s with spears an I fluming swords gather the standard bezrera «.f -inthood before . the throne of God. .. ThprP is animation, there la: happiness on the faces of these. X of ; two face, are alike; tlra name of i each is emblazoned on ha o; and many of them may be dlstingulsht ed by proper symbol., "There is Lazarus, the friend . whom Christ awoke from the dead, he bears aloft a scroll with the Inscription ‘Vlvent in Aeternum’ — 'They shall live forever.’ Before ; him kneels Mary Magdalene, and Martha stands at his side. "There is Veronica with the veil, i Longinus with the spear, Helen ■ with the cross. Martin cutting his . cloak, Joan of Arc on the funeral 1 pyre. Vincent de Paul with his orI phans, Elizabeth with her apron •of roses. ’’ Above loizarus are grouped the * Apostles and Evangelists, uhiong ’ them Peter with his keys, Paul ■ with his sword. Mat'hew with the child. John with the eagle, Mark ’ with the lion. Luke witi: the ox. "And In groups spread out unf der the angel wings are tl.“ marR tyrs, the pontiffs, the confessors, t tli> doctors, the virgins of the e Christian centuries. Still higher, half hidden by the
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fringe of Hi.. <■.,«!. saints of the oi <| There are Adam,: ;ll||| pntriarehH amt |.i l ,|, h ,, < and Aiimi. Ellzab.n, . llil) z Joseph mid .Inhn 11,, h I \ .■ven tin- holy th,,. r ( ry his cross in ■ puny. SM "This heav.-nlv vanguard of th;.: * *>'leh no man „ all nations ami i..... . , ilH| mid tongues, Siarni . iL , throne.’ The thr.m. picted on th.. eherub faces. Th.,,. t| lr Trinity. Fatln i . illhl Ghost, unite ti,,. I|lU scene of Mary s H.„y nation :.s Qum n , z- S;p ■ — ~ . ||B Lodge Initiate i s M Loveland. Colo .jp, Grant waited a long n me finally joined tH. h„| L .„ a member of the I n o y in tills town at th. ~t , . is believed to b.. of the order. M
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