Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 176, Decatur, Adams County, 25 July 1936 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Mutschlers Play Chattanooga,

SECOND GAME OFSERIESTO BE CONTESTED Large Crowd Expected To Attend Second Game Os Series Tomorrow The second of a three-game series between the Decatur Mutschlers and Chattanooga, Ohio, will be played at Worthman Field, Adams and Thirteenth streets. Sunday afternoon. •• St The game will start promptly at | 3 o'clock, with no advance In admission prices. Chattanoga won the opening game of the serie* last Sunday night at Chattanooga, nosing out the Mntßcliiers in an 11-inning game which developed into a free-scoring affair. • Chattanooga is reported bolstertag the lineup for tomorrow's tilt in an effort to take the series in two straight games. Molly Mies, manager of the MutB.hJara, likewise is making an effort to strengthen the local lineup, in hopes of running the series to the full limit of three games. Great rivalry has developed between these two team*. and the; largest crowd of the season is expected to turn out tomorrow afternoon. This will be the first home game played by the Mutechlers for several weeks and baseball hungry fans are expected to make the biggest crowd of the season Sunday. o Epitaph Stirs Sentiment MaMrysville, Cal., —(UP)— The neglected grave of an unknown girl bnt whose tombstone bears this inscription: "Clara—who died of a broken heart—aged 15 years.” here after will be kept in order by the Lions Club. “Perfectly Air Conditioned’’ SUN. MON. TI ES. Continuous Sunday from 1:15 The Mightiest Hit of Them All! “SAN FRANCISCO” Clark Gable, Jack Holt, Jeanette MacDonald, Spencer Tracy, Ted Healy. ALSO—Color Cartoon. 10c-25c o—o Last Time Tonight —"SUTTER'S GOLD" Edward Arnold, Lee Tracy, Binnie Barnes, huge cast. ALSO— Betty Boop Cartoon and Musical j Novelty. 10c-20c <®B> "Cool and Comfortable” SUN. MON. TUES. 10c Matinee 1:45 Sunday Thrilling story of crashing autos, from famous Readers’ Digest Article! “AND SUDDEN DEATH” Randolph Scott, Frances Drake, Tom Brown, Fuzzy Knight. ALSO—Comedy and Cartoon. Evenings 10c-20c —o Last Time Tonight—Tom Tyler in I "Coyote Trails.” ALSO — Last Chapter FLASH GORDON and Comedy. 10c-15c — — | I CORT SUN. MON. TUES. Robert Taylor, Loretta Young - Patsy Kelly, “PRIVATE NUMBER” Added — Sybil Jason featurette and Fox News. 10c-25c Continuous Sunday from 1:15. TONITE Gene Autry "THE SINGING VAGABOND" PLUS — Joe Palooka Comedy, Parky Cartoon and Chap. 5 "Fighting Marines” 10c-15c

Monroe Coach Takes Monroeville Position Jacob Smutz, coach and commercial teacher at the Monroe high school has accepted u p0.,1I tlon as teacher of commercial subject* at the Monroeville school. No successor has been named by Edwin Gillium, trustee of Monri" township. ' Two other vacancies will also have to be filled according to information received here. They are for Mrs. W. 11. Schwartz hnd for Mrs. Doyle Bauserman, the former relinquishing the post through marriage and the latter accepting a position in Illinois. o ALL-STARS LOSE TO FORT WAYNE Decatur Loses Exhibition Game Here Friday Night, 15-8 The Decatur All Stars were defeated by the Maumee theater team, in an exhibition game at the South Ward diamond Friday night. 15 to 8. The visitors drove out a total of 16 hits and benefited by six Deca-, tur errors. Each team scored five , I runs in the first inning but Fort ! Wayne came through with six in | the fourth to put the ball game i out of the All-Stars reach. RHE Fort Wayne ... 500 601 3—15 16 3 Decatur 5(10 102 0— 8 9 6 Storch.Sanxter and Kammer; L. Brokaw and F. Brokaw. STANDING Church League W. L. Pct. U. B 2 0 1.000 M E.-Evan. 1 0 1.000 1 St. Mary's 2 1 .667 Reformed 2 1 .667 Luth-Bapt 11 .500,' Union Chapel 0 2 .000 Pr.-Ch 0 3 .000 Industrial Castings 1 0 1.000 G. E 1 0 1.000 Schafer 0 0 .000 Cloverleaf 0 1 .000 Central Sugar 0 1 .000 Week's Schedule Monday: United Brethren vs. M. E.-Evangelical; Presbyterian-Chris-tian vs. Union Chapel. Tuesday: St. Mary's vs. United' Brethren; Lutheran-Baptist vs. M. E.-Evangelical. Thursday: Decatur Castings vs. I Schafer; Cloverleaf vs. Central Sugar. O BLOODY BATTLE IS | fCONTINUEE. FROM PAC-E pNE) I end Miguel De Cervantes, mounti ing eight 6-inch and four 4-inch I guns each, joined the bomltardj nient. Most of the shells seemed to be I reaching the fonts, and some to Ibe doing slight damage to the town proper. o — Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

Leading Indians on Warpath v ’t , f “ | Hal Trosky | —wo —“•“‘"AW* •’■*’ 't^HUii J? W v ~ , ** y E’ n, *x j, jwk viy • s /•>* • Lk ” , ■ %A A B A \2 -2..., jiß^gllllll lto> Weatherly kf' Tt> • /» \ »W: \ , j ■ JSMBI \ miHHK * I?W\ ’ - '&’' * )_ t. Chief reason for the present victory march of the Cleveli nd Indians is Hal Trosky, first baseman and one of the leading ho l le run hittens in the American league, and Roy Weatherly, rookie r ght fielder, whose surprising show at the bat has adaed punch to t he Indians’ offensive.

,1 STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE ’ | ' W. L. Pct. ! Chicago 55 32 .632 ' St. Louis 54 35 .607 , Pittsburgh 46 42 .523 ■ New York 47 4.i .522 ■Cincinnati 44 42 .512 Boston 42 48 .467 . 1 Philadelphia S 4 54 .386 Brooklyn 31 57 .352 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct. | New York . 59 32 .648 Cleveland .52 40 .565 i Chicago 48 41 .539 'Detroit .49 42 .538 Boston ... 50 43 .538 Washington 47 44 .516 St. Louis 29 60 .326 J Philadelphia 29 51 .322 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. Pct. Milwaukee 57 41 .582 St. Paul .... 60 44 .577 Minneapolis 55 46 .545 Kansas City 52 47 .525 | Columbus 53 50 .515 Indianapolis 47 53 .470 , Toledo 41 60 .406 l Louisville .38 63 .376 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS National League Cincinnati at Boston, rain. Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, rain. St. Louis at New York, rain. Chicago at Brooklyn, rain. American League Cleveland. 16; Philadelphia, 3. Boston, 7; Detroit, 4. Washington, 10; St. Louis, 4. I New York at Chicago, play later I date. American Association St. Paul. 7; Louisville. 2. I PLAN MOVEMENT vide such opportunities. Landon leaders in Topeka, have I been talking mysteriously of "suriprises" when mid-west Democratic ' speakers begin parading to the platform to speak for Gov. Alf M. Landon and his running mate, Frank Knox of Illinois. Dispatches mentioned Newton D. Baker and former senajor Atlee Pomerene of Ohio as possible Landon Dinio- , crate in 1936. COMPLETE WORK ' -PPQjyTJXEEP-.EBSP! PAGy j might look its best for the thousands of visitors who will visit it. The work of repairs at the local project will continue under the direction of Miss Marion Neprud, community manager. This work is done under a different division of the Resettlement Administration. o Young Democrats To Hear Senator Duffy Indianapolis. July 25.—(U.R)—Senator Ryan Duffy, of Wisconsin, will be one of the principal speakers

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, JULY 1930

5 v 6 7 With SO MANY GfllAr fworruj . \ S ■t rrAKs ouit rouno MiLtfts uill - x V Jgy “ 4 "Bl -- — : V|X : ss tjlr H • QyeLOCK ' r-,, en OF gXF W ' ' HAS * iS MASTMy . J over uncl£ SAMX BESTMW ; j 1 VJOODERSOM, ANOTHER BemsHOt. HAS ■WHAT TROUNCED HIM FOUR TIMES '

at the two-day rally of young Dem-1 ocrats of Indiana at Gary. Aug. 7-1 8, it was announced today. , His address on the final evening , • of the meeting will be broadcast I on a nation-wide radio chain, and I will be a reply to the speech of ■ acceptance given by Gov. Alf M. Landon of Kansas, Republican presidential nominee. M. Clifford Townsend, Democratic candidate for governor, will be another of the speakers. He ‘ will be introduced by Gov. Paul V. : McNutt. ______o _ Jewelry, Money Holdup Reported Bedford. Ind., July 25. — (U.R) — ! Authorities today investigated the i reported theft of 110.000 in jewelry land $550 in cash from M. Kushner ■ and M. Singer, representatives or [the Prutinsky Company, New York. The men told Sheriff Lincoln ( Dunbar they were en route from Cincinnati, O„ to St. Louis, Mo., last night when their car was , crowded to the side of U. S. road 50. three miles east of Shoals. j Two gunmen jumped on their j j automobile, the men said, and fore-1 I ed them to drive slowly to a side ■ | road, where the robbery occurred. 1 o Auxiliary Records Membership Record Indianapolis. July 25. — (U.R) —! 'Membership of 412,163, a new rec ! ■ ord. was reported today by the! American Legion Auxiliary. Previous high membership was J 412.063, established in 1931, Mrs.! Gwendolyn Wiggin MacDowell,' national secretary reported. The 1936 membership also set a • new record of 8,824 units, she said.

Renews Fight to Escape Chair I ■ MF IS' l ißim wJ JjSjr’ji * ' *•" ! ”> 43&JiR! ■*’ ”WWBbW 'i ,d "™W' ' A V ’I W?s > i - I;, b Mrs. Dorothy Sherwood Maintaining that she drowned her son "to keep him from starving", Mrs Dorothy Sherwood refused to plead guilty to manslaughter when she appeared in court at Newburgh, N Y., above. She had previously been sentenced to die in the electric chair but was granted a new trial She is scheduled to stand trial on first degree murder charges, Sept 14.

BOOK NOTES Miss Ruth Winnes, city librarian, j announced today the new books reI ceived by the local institution. The books are: i River House by Willoughby, Barrett. Give me one ettmmer by Loring, EniHie. The Son of Marietta by Fabricius. I Johan. Golden peacock .'by Atherton. Gertrude. Mystery flower by Lutz, Grace L. Clansmen by Boileau, Ethel. Mother of the bride by Rosman, ' Alice. Splendor of eagles by Miller, Helen Topping. April gold by Lutz. Sparkentbroke by Morgan, Charlas. Murder in the bookshop by Wells, ' Caroline. The World over by Wharton, Edith. Let the king beware! by Morrow, Honore. The doctor, by Rin-hart, Mary I Roberts. Private duty, by Baldwin. Faith. Five furies of Leaning Ladder, by . BBower, B. M. Outlawed by trange, Oliver. , Tail smoke by Haycox, Ernest. The way of the TransgreHßor by i Farson, Negleyo Swimmer Loses Hope Os Reinstatement i Berlin, July 25—(UP)—Mrs. ElI eanor Holm Jarrett today conceded she was defeated in her effort to •be reinstated on the United States I Olympic team. o Trade in a Good Town—Decatur.

Ohio, Sunday!

libtna unuF INTO FOURTH Lose To Boston To Drop In Standing: Nationals Rained Out New York. July 25-Thc Boston Red sox pulled the Tigers out of third place in the American league and into a. tie for fourth by coming from behind to win a 7 to 4 10-lnning decision over the world « champions witlt a three-run rally in the extra frame. The result enabled the idle < nb cago White Sox to take third place in the loop, and brought the Red box out of the second division. Trailing 31 going into the eighth inning, on the strength of Charley Behringer's homer in the fourth and another pair of Tiger tallies in the fifth, the Sox finally solved Vic Sorrell, and completed the win against Roxie larwson. The Cleveland Indians fired their heaviest-hitting barrage of the season at the helpless Philadelphia Athletics, and picked »P half a game on (the American league leaders with a 16 to 3 victory. They smash'd out 22 hits, including Earl Averill’s seventeenth homer, to score in every inning but the fifth and pull up to 7»4 games behind the idle New 1 ork Yankees. If Washington's sluggers had not opened up on Earl Caldwell in the last two innings to pound out a 10-to-4 victory over St. Louis, Monte Weaver’s 4-hit pitching would have gone for naught and the three Senator errors in the seventh would have loomed very large. Those three misplays by Kuhel. Lewis and Travis, plus Julius Soifers’ single, brought in two runs to break a tie and give the Browns a 4-to-2 advantage. But it didn’t last long. Cliff Bolton's homer with two on base accounted for three IVhshington runs in the eighth—enough to win—and five more runs came over the plate in the ninth. All National league games were called off because of rain. o Gold Lure for 25 Years , Williams, Cal. (U.R) —Ira Fouch ’has started again on his annual pilgrimage to Trinity County in search of lost gold. Twenty - five yearn ago he discovered a gold bearing ledge there. The next year he could not locate it again. Since then he has made a pilgrimage every year in search of it. o Funeral Preview Staged East St. Louis, 111. (U.R) — Hickman Holloman, S 3, was curious about the procedure of his funeral so he called on his friend, the Rev. J. B. Mtirrie, and ar-

Check Over Your Printing Supplies THERE IS ALWAYS SOMETHING YOU NEED AND TO WAIT UNTIL YOU ARE ENTIRELY “OUT” MEANS INCONVENIENCE AND DELAY. ORDER NOW! FOR S ALE F Yellow Second Sheets 8 1 ixll. W®' wrapped in 500 sheet packages. White Mimeograph paper S' _• xll, wrapped in 500 sheit packages. Onion Skin 8 1 2 xll and 8' 2 x13 f 'WF an d '4, wrapped in 500 sheet Bm||BHBB packages. : Jy Manuscript covers 9xls’ 2 ln sheet boxes. White Bond paper B'2xll a rl 'l > a " i 8 2x13 and 14, wrapped in 500 wl 11 - sheet packages. Cardboard in white and colors. JOB PRINTING OF ALL KINDS Phone 1000 DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT

Embassy Shields U. S. Refugees I .. I jn a* ** K al Airicricaii emba-'y I Seeking safety from revolutionists « g and government forces who have .JL- | turned Spain's capital of Madrid I into a virtual battleground. Amer- I ■ Leans tn the city sought refuge in || the United States embassy, above. £ | Meanwhile, Claude G Bowers, be- | | I(jW . V S. ambassador to Spain, | ni ,w on vacation in the San Se- Bl l.astmn section where fighting was F / I I the most intense, reported the rev- /Bl olution had i a^^" lar£e Claude Bower. I

ranged a funeral which was preached in the Baptisft chnrch in Holloman's prwu>nce. “That was fine,” he commented. "Now 1 won't need a funeral when I die." Town Rushes Water System Pilot Grove, Mo. — (U.R) — Pilot

BASEBALL Sunday-July 26 Mutschler’s — vs — Chattanooga This is the second of a three game series. Chattanooga won the first game in 11 innings. Both team are evenly matched and a good game is assured. Don’t Miss This One! Worth man Field Game 3 p. m.

——————lll.ll.l l ..... I, Grove, an interior Missouri to«J believes it has established a rs] ord nf some sort in building ad starting in operation a modtJ waterworks within a year. Tk| town depended on l istens is! wells previously. I