Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 260, Decatur, Adams County, 2 November 1936 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
WILDCATS BEAT MINNESOTA IN MAJOR UPSET Northwestern Wins, 6-0; Notre Dame Again Beats Ohio Evanston, 111.. Nov. 2— (U.R) —| This waa the football capital of, the nation today and Northwestern’s fighting, slashing Wildcats; were undisputed rulers of a new ' domain. They licked the Gophers! After ; four years, the Wildcats came Wong an<! licked dreaded Minnesota —the auper-team without a •weakness. They did it on the sponger, shower-soaked turf of Dyche stadium with a fumble by co-capt. Julie Alfonse of Minnesota, a heart-breaking penalty inflicted against co-ca.pt. Ed Widsetii. and a one-yard touchdown plunge by ; Steve Toth. It was a 6 to 0 victory, beating j the Gopbern for the first time in : 28 games dating back to Novem-1 her. 1932. A string of 21 consecutive victories against the nation’s finest teams was shattered and I Minnesota's dream for a third (straight national championship went along. There was little talk of the mythical championship looming ■ for Northwestern. There was too I must jubilation over the conquest ; of the confident Gophers. But the I upset left Northwestern the major | undefeated team in the nation. Os I three remaining games with Wisconsin, Michigan and Notre Dame, there’s just one more to point for thia season. The Irish are tough and getting better. Notre Dame showed Saturday it Tonight and Tuesday Feature Starts at 7 o'clock returns I will he announced from I the stage Tuesday niirht! 1 See a great show and hear 1 the latest returns! • — 4> FREDRIC MARCH and KATHARINE HEPBURN in “MARY OF SCOTLAND” With mighty cast of thousands. ALSO — Robert Benchley Comic "HOW TO VOTE." 10c-25c Wed. 4 Thurs.—Joel McCrea. Jean Arthur "Adventure in Manhattan”; —o Coming Sunday—William Powell, Carole Lombard ‘My Man Godfrey’: Tonight and Tuesday 2 Slam Bang Action Hits! JAMES DUNN in “TWO FISTED GENTLEMAN" & “A FACE IN THE FOG" Lloyd Hughes. June Collyer. Onlv 10c -20 c —o Fri. 4 Sat. —Chas. Starrett in “Code of the West." —o Coming Sunday—JACK HOLT in Zane Grey’s "End of the Trail.” I CORT | -wvw soar - Tonight - Tuesday- - Powell-Joan Blondell “STAGE STRUCK” Frank McHugh - Warren William Jeanne Madden - Yacht Club Boys. PLUS —Porky Cartoon - News. 10c-35c WED. - THURS. Mickey Rooney - Patricia Eiiis "DOWN THE STRETCH" COMING Kay Francis - Geo. Brent "GIVE ME YOUR HEART” Roland Young - Patricia Knowles.
waji made of the same stuff that ■ carried the Ramblers over Ohio State. 18 to 13. in 1935. by whip- , ping the Buckeyes 7 to 2. before the largest crowd ever to jam the ' new stadium at South Bend. fifi.Otht. j , Two nfXcomer* with real blood , o’ the Irish —Jack McCarthy and iNevin McCormick led a 76-yard drive in tho second quarter. McCormick scored from the threeyard line after three long passes by McCarthy had moved the ball within striking distance. Ohio State picked up its two points earlier in the period when | Charley Mamrick, giant Buckeye , tackle, blocked a punt by Joe O’Neill and knocked it into the end zone for an automatic safety. Indiana defeated lowa. 13 to 6. ■ on a 35-yaird touchdown gallop by ! Roy Eads after intercepting a for- ■ ward piles. a. line play by George Fowler and a stout defense against Ozzie Simmons. Boh Zuppke’s Illinois eleven won its first Big 10 game from ■ Michigan. 9 to 6. on Michigan mis- ■ plays. Dave Strong placekicked a field goal a.fter a Michigan fumble and Ken Nelson, the famed punt blocker, knocked one of Cedric . Sweet’s attempted punts over the] j goal line. Chicago, apparently with nothi ing on the ball, defeated WisconI s!n. 7 to 6. on Warren Skoning s touchdown and an extra point kicked by Bill Gillerlain It ruin|ed one of the most enthusiastic 1 ; homecomings in years at Madison. COLLEGE FOOTBALL Northwestern 6. Minnesota 0 I Notre Dame ", Ohio State ". Purdue 7, Carnegie Tech fi. Indiana 13. lowa 6. Illinois 9. Michigan fi. Chicago 7, Wisconsin 6. Manchester 44. Rose Poly 0. Wabash 20. Evansville 0. Butler 64. Franklin 0. Ball State 0. DePauw 0 (tie) Fordham 0, Pittsburgh 0 (tie). Colgate 14. Army 7. Pennsylvania 16. Navy fi. Dartmouth 11. Yale 7. Pro Football Green Bay 21. Chicabo Bears 10. New York 14. Detroit 7. Boston 13. Chicago Cards 10. Pittsburgh 10; Brooklyn 7. MUSSOLINI IN •vV i ; N1 ■nt • " ■ about the alternative to death and that he was surprised when his hearers, drilled for months into the belief that the league already was inorieund. doomed to death. He seemed to sense the feeling of the crowd afld quickly added his impression that reformation was j impossible and that it would be I better for the league to “die in ' peace." Mussolini went cMit of his way i to urge Great Britain to reach an I agreement, on his terms, for Medi- : terranean peace. The Mediterranean. he said earnestly, was Italy’s 1 life line. Italy did not mean to 1 cut it. he said, but it did demand , that its rights be respected. o Fourth Annual Crow Contest Is Planned Indianapolis, Nov. 2—(UP)—lndiana’s fourth annua! crow- control ! contest will get under way New I Year’s Day with eash awards and j game birds to be given participating conservation clubs during the five months that the campaign is in progress, Virgil M. Simmons, commissioner of the Department of Conservation, announced today. Clubs interested in the contest may apply for entry blanks at any time. The campaign against crows, inaugurated in Indiana in 1934, is similar to that carried on by conserva-' tionists in other states as a means of controling the number of these predatory birds. Crows are regarded as the major -enemy of song birds, quail and pheasants due to their raids on the nests of the more I desirable birds. In the three years I that Hoosier conservationists have waged war on crows, bird lovers and , farmers have given their support to I the movement. 0 State Corn Husking Contest November 6 Marion, Ind., Nov. 2 The Grant county school band of 200 pieces will head the colorful agricultural parade Friday, November 6. on the H. J. Bartele farm, seven miles southwest of here, which will mark i the opening of the annual Indiana . corn husking contest. Starting gun for the contestants will be tired at 12 o’clock, noon. John Whybrew of Green township won the Grant county contest, husking 29.55 bushels in 80 minutes, and thus winning the right to compete in the state meet with the defending champion. Lawrence Pitzer. Ten other contestants will be selected after November 3rd. according to 'i the amount of corn husked in counI ry meets.
PACKERS BEAT CHICAGO BEARS Green Bay Ties Bears For First Place In Pro League Bv United Pre>s Green Bay's mighty Packers were deadlocked today with the Chicago Bears for leadership of the western division of the national league. The Packers who have rolled up 151 points while defeating six out of seven opponents, handed the Bears their first loss yesterday. 21 to 10, in a thrill packed game before 30,000 spectators at Wrigley field. The Detroit Lions, 1935 professional champions, suffered their third loss of the year. 14 to 7. by the New York Giants, but held third place in their division with a pcrcentagir of .500. The Chicago Cardinals took their seventh straight shellacking. 13 to 10, from the Boston Redskins. Pittsburgh won a 10-7 decision from the Brooklyn Dodgers. Two tie games mwred the, Amercian league schedule, with! the leading Boston club the only i one to turn in a win—l 3 <o 0 over ' Rochester, formerly the Syracuse team. Brooklyn and the New York Yankees deadlocked 3-3. while Pittsburgh and Cleveland finishes! all square. 7-7. MARKETS AT A GLANCE Stocks: irregular, metal shares soring. Bonds, irregular in qniet trad-’ ing. Curb stocks: irregularly lower! in quiet trading. Chicago stocks: irregular. Call: money one per cent. Foreign exchange: irregular. Cotton: off one to three points. Grains: fractionally lower. Chicago livestock: bogs strong, cattle and sheep steady. Rubber: 2 points higher to 2 lower. REBEL PLANES CONTINUED FROM »*GE believed would be a decisive battle. Loyalis’ troops, thrown baek heavily by nationalist attacks over the week-end. had their front line only 3\ miles south of Getafe. the great Madrid airport, on the main ■south road »o Toledo. But on the Aranjuez road tour miles to the east a loyalist counter attack threw the rebels back on Valdenioro. and it was there, 40i> .
N. U. BEATS GOPHERS, 6 to 0 0 < ■ ■ 3P?m WF IM ■ELi. ' • F fc ' i ft, 4 ’7® ® ./ -«mK *v ft '•«*» -MFi 4k V£ * W? 1 JSr w C wW* Jr ..A* Jf 4 WM~ wll >|SMia>jk * i3H» V & J X gL '*& ? ■ * ’j4. < : i«? asF \3K ’'Stu *«%&«■ jftwSg- ,«. ■■■'*»“-■ . av Mt -MMS Wf ja£jßi& »Sg •*-■* * - ' ate*. >• J ■• .' <k iJU 7. .3Li.,3r .. ' ~ .-..'- ~ ; - ,; S%R'W“ j In a game that was expected to definitely establish the 1936 champ ionship of the western conference and have an important bearing on the mythical national title too, Minnesota's mighty Gophers and North western’s rampaging Wildcats, both undefeated this season, met at Dyche Stadium, Evanston, 11!.. Saturday in the stand-out football attraction of the nation. Northweeern won, 6 to 0. Don Heap, No. 22, at left, North western's halfback, is shown as a lanky Gopher pulled him down in the first quarter. NOTRE DAME DEFEATS OHIO STATE • • juts H; Cj * **- wK Wt 5&. .&. - . wjWPsW «tifil 4RK»JUMp.-A -±— J • - M •* -7 ii\Jl \ *MT ni^rH ‘ wßwrt - -—■^- ;^sKf 4 Sci*3I..JEBF W ■ £ M'a au 1 * z' w1 . ■ t -J ~ ■ .'■ ■ .? » *•«■,’*■ ■■■■•> ■■ ' 'TaS j ; i • 21 A fiercely, fighting Irish team defeated Ohio State. 7 to 2, in a the tiling, hard-fought game which enthralled a capacity crowd of 55,000 at the Notre Dame stadium Saturday. Bettridge of Ohio State, No. 6, at extreme right, is shown attempting a left end run on a reverse play in hte first quarter. He waa run out of bounds for a 5-yajd loss.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1936.
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yards apart, tliat the two Spanish armies fought today while the loyalists massed before Gatafe awaited the order to attack themselves, and I straighten out the line. The Madrid air raids have put the common people face to face with i deaeth but they have done nothing for the nationalists as regards to winning the war. The women and ; children are fearful, the men are nervous; but there is no talk of j defeat and raids have stimulated ' recruiting. With the rebels less than 10 miles ! from the city limits, well informed foreign observers, including military ; attaches, expressed the surprising belief toda.v that the nationalists might he held off until Christmas and that they might never feel the I pavements of Madrid under their I feet as conquerors. o — Old Age Assistance Figures Announced — Indanapolis, Nov. 2—(UP)—Old ace assistance award.-, totaling >416.327 66 were granted to 32.229 aged and needy citizens of the state, under the welfare act of 1936, during the past month, figures compiled in the oiicr of the state department of pnblic welfare, here today, indicate. While assistance granted was based -on 'he needs of the individual.
i, which in some cases was much ■ greater titan others, the average I grant was $12.92 per recipient durI ing the month. This represents an I increase of 62.7 per cent over March first month in which assistance i under the Welfare Act was granted. : when the average was $7.94 per i recipient, welfare officials said, il o —"7 Mayor Bangs Will Not Vote Tuesday Huntington. Ind., Nov. 2.—<U.P> Mayor Clare W. H. Bangs, men- ' tioned early last spring as a possible candidate for the Republican gubernatorial nomination, will not 1 even be permitted to vote in tomorrow's general election. Bangs instead will remain in his i Huntington county jail cell, where ! he has been held since July 6 for ' failure to obey a circuit court ord|er that he quit selling current from the city's tiny electric plant. J o Commodities. Exchange Act Validity Attacked i Washington. Nov. 2 —(U.R> —Constitutionality of the commodities and exchange act was attacked today in a, brief filed with the United States supreme court, aski ing that the high tribunal declare the act invalid.
| fHI 0 W e«AUN lfc> | I In many states special committees have been appointed by the governors to study the traffic conditions. I This is commendable. I Out of these studies and deliberations will come recommendations that will apply to each and every community in the state involved. There should be more of the studies made. .Many conditions on our highways today are serious causes of accidents and. unless careful studies are made, will never come to light. It is recommended that every community receiving these reports help the committee as much ns possible in bringing to the front serious conditions in that community. There is not a community anywhere that does not have a traffic problem. These problems should be discussed freely and recommendations made to the committee so that action can be taken by the main committee. I Gei behind this movement, and support it. REV. COUGHLIN «N>NTINUBT> FTIQM PAOB ON») ' The Rev. Charles E. Coughlin des- • ignated President Franklin D Roosevelt as an "upstart" in his 1 last political speech of the cam--1 paign. ‘ | He said he will resume his regu- • iar broadcasts the Sunday before r Christmas "if Bishop Gallagher permits?’ "I may be a radical, thick-skull-ed and a crack-pot — and I have been called all of these,” he said, r “but I can't comprehend how the American Federation of Labor can support Roosevelt.” he said. "As to Gov. he does not • know the problems of production i or the prlilems of distribution as I they affect the country today, but - one thing Landon knows is that the constitution is sacr*d.” i He criticized President Roose- . velt’s domintaion of congress. “This is the United States of . i America,” he said, "not Mussolini’s, ■_ Hitler s or, thanks be to God. Stalin's land. Our congress should I look askance upon any upstart, ! who says: ’this is must legislaI tion.’" I Coughlin predicted the national I security act will be invalidated by . the supreme court. I oI NOTICE . No bunting or treepassing on . our farms. . JOHN HARVEY 10.26 N 2 C. E. HOCKER
'; "First Lady” at ■I : UH ■ j- ' « ■ i bi I Mb Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt is pictured with J. Norman Ma house, prominent socialite, at the Velvet Bull and ElectionM This function marks the opening of the social season in NwM
Township Trustees Hold Regular Meet The township trustees of} Ad- ! ams county met today in the county school superintendent's office to conduct regular routine business. o Commissioners In Monthly Session The county commissioners met today in their regular monthly session. Today was spent in allowing claims for county bills. The session probably will be concluded Tuesday afternoon. o Wallace Attacks Newspaper Story Chicago. Nov. 2. —tU.PJ — Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wal- ■ lace asserted today that anyone who quotes him as favoring a $1 limit on corn prices "is an ignoramus or a liar, or has been deceived by an ignoramus or a liar.” Wallace struck back at version of his recent Bloomington, 111..
PUBLIC SALE Haring decided to quit farming. I will sell at Public .hril the old Harmon farm. 2 miles North and 3'j miles West ofM .Ohio, on County Line Road, anti 5 miles East anti raikW Willshire on the angling road.ou WEDNESDAY. November 4,19-% Commencing at 12 Noon HORSESr—Roan horse, 2 years old. sound, weight 145 f pouK horse, smooth mouth, weight 1500 pounds. CATTLE —6 Guernsey cows, will freshen toon. REGISTERED OXFORD DOWN SHEEP f ewe lambs: 3fP 4 two years old; 2 five years old; registered ram 4 years on,l 'ram; 1 ram two years old. These are extra good sheep. Alton ; ewes. FEED —200 bushels of good com. more or lose, in erm . , HOGS—2 full blood O. I. C. male hogs. r« idy r service;»« eight weeks old. , . IMPLEMENTS AND TOOLS- Ford son Tract.-,r in ‘ irßM " tion; double diec; International manure spreader, new. • Side Delivery and hay rake, like new; Roderick 1.-an y'JJ'" ~ new; Oliver single row cultivator; Deering •' -foot wagon and new 16-foot hay ladders and grain bed: wm - plow; spring tooth harrow; spike tooth harrow; good no harness and collars; platform scales and many oilier numerous to mention. TERMS—Carsh. MARTIN W. ALLMANDINGERO; Roy Johnson. Auctioneer "■ *■ 1M L CLEANS EVERYTH# V? i\\ it’s cleaning furniture, lamp s 01 U l It’s the greatest new idea m KI fl uLiu wsS y/ This Hoover Cleaning Enseffli I I vVM-. 'A with the past .in look Henn xTilASi' I 0 modern design) ... 1" 11 B t:n '“ Bp jL JU-J with magnesium, OM-thin* EfW |AJ aluminum) ... in anunnj pry new to cleaners (D new $1) I I featuresr.Weroviteyouto p I try it.withoutobiigatio®. hoover Decatur Hatched Ph»„. 4M , I II I .IIMI I I—■■■■■■ ""■ '"
spent h pubhshPd in a JM morn : c c -uspjppr quoted ill publicity froyS <llll 1iari.,11.,; h-aUqimnijiW story -.,i.i V\ i „.„ tion of < ,irn when the pr ice reached 41. |S The Bloomington pnbli-li. ,| dmvrial although favored i Gov. Alf M Lui-uon. can r ami.dut,'. it ronlj J doii" ■ ■ , n G 'tyß Dog popirl.itiuii of th« 9 States is estimuied at liffl It takes >m (i.iy- to makeiß Mouse film ■ Vote For I HARRY MOoJ Republican (andidaitkl COMMISSIONS I THIRD DISTRICIj Adams County. I Your Support Is Sofidß
