Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 252, Decatur, Adams County, 25 October 1938 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
SPORTS
JACKETSPLAY BLUFFTON TEAM HERE TOMORROW — Decatur To Close Home Season With Bluffton Tigers . | Decatur's Yellow Jackets will play their final home game of the ' season Wednesday night at Workman Field, meeting the Bluffton Tigers, with the opening kickoff scheduled promptly at 8 o'clock. Tomorrow night's title will be one of the toughtest of the season j for the Jackets, as Bluffton, boasting one of its strongest teams in many seasons, has lost only one game this season, meanwhile pil- i irig up several lop sided victories. Bluffton’s only loss was to Fort Wayne Central, with Central later forced to forfeit to Bluffton because of the use of an ineligible player. The Tigers handed Decatur a
ESS3] — Last Time Tonight — First Show at 6:45 “MARIE ANTOINETTE” Norma Shearer, Tyrone Power and cast of thousands. ALSO —Betty Boop Cartoon. 10c -25 c - Wednesday Only - I Bl I a* -- *’ Drama that "' <• | stabs through to your inner--3# ROSS-STUART ' Jr •Jr Joan Marsh * Bobart Paige Scrunplayby Gladys Lahman and HtAR Charles Kenyon. "That Weak In Ly r ics b y O scar g F Paris" Hammorstoin, II and **A Mist Is Ovor The Milton Drake; Music ’’p Moon" by Ben Oakland. "Home In Your Directed by Erie C. Arms" Kenton. Produced by "When You're In Willlam Perlberg. Th*» Room" A Columbia Picture ■— "Victory Song" - Thurs. Fri. Sat. — Another Big Special! “I AM THE LAW”j Edw. G. Robinson, Wendy Barrie, John Beal. —o Coming Sunday—“BOYS TOWN”j Spencer Tracy. Mickey Rooney. —-" ' — 11 lai ♦ e| — Last Time Tonight — “NIGHT HAWK” Robt. Livingston. June Travis & “HELL in a CIRCUS” Conrad Nagel, Leila Hyams. ONLY 10c-15c WED. & THURS. Always a Big Special I “NAVY BLUE & GOLD” James Stewart, Robert Young, Tom Brown, Lionel Barrymore. ONLY 10c —o Coming Sunday — “DEAD END” Joel McCrea, Sylvia Sidney, & original “Dead End” Kids.
20-0 defeat in the Jackets’ first game of the season and the locals will seek to even the score tornor- ; row night. The opener for Decatur, howI ever, was Bluffton's third game of I the year and the Tigers had a coni siderable edge in experience over ' i the Jackets. After the Bluton game Wednes- ! day night, one contest remains on the Decatur schedule, at North, ! Side of Fort Waytie Friday night, I November 4. I The reserve teams of the two 1 schools will meet in a preliminary I game tomorrow night at 7 o’clock with the prelim halted in sufficient time to insure starting the varsity contest promptly at 8 o’clock. The probable starting lineups: | Decatur Bluffton ’Gaunt .... LE Willey M. Friedt LT Neuhauser I Brown ... LG Rose Shoe C Mettler 1 Davidson RG Stogdill Highland RT Fryback Andrews RE Biberstine McConnell (JR Richey Maloney . LH Kinsey Stapleton RH Hiatt Walters FB Baker Officials: Geller. Welborn and, Craney, all of Fort Wayne. MONROE OPENS SEASON NOV. 4 Bearkatz Schedule 15 Games; Play Home Tilts At Berne The Monroe Bearkaz will open the season Friday night. November 4, meeting the Kirkland Kangaroos at Kirkland. Fifteen games have been scheduled for the Bearkatz, who will again play all their home games at Berne. The complete schedule follows: 1 Nov. 4—Kirkland at Kirkland. Nov. 11 —Geneva at Berne. Nov. 18 —Pleasant Mills at Decatur. Dec. 3—Hartford at Berne. Dec. 6—Poling at Hartford. Dec. 16 —Monmouth at Berne. Jan. 6 —Geneva at Geneva. Jan. 13—Jefferson at Berne. Jan. 27 — Monmouth at Monmouth. Feb. 4—Jefferson at Geneva Feb. St—Berne at Berne. Feb. 14 —Poling at Berne. Feb. 17—Pleasant Mills at Berne. Feb. 24 —Hartford at Hartford. Feb. 25—Kirkland at Berne. o 500 Sheets S*/jXll Yellow Second Sheets, 35c. Decatur Democrat Company, ts | CORT - Last Time Tonight - “MOTHER CAREY’S CHICKENS” Anne Shirley - Ruby Keeler. ALSO — Fox News and j March of Time. 10c-25c WED. and THURS. I KAY # i i rianas i I L'lOßrien i But b ?r h n,ad^^ 1 Womenji HAre !Ti Po I 1 W ; That" Sunday—Joe Penner in “I’m From The City.”
[FADING GRID STARS LISTED Outstanding College Grid Performers Are Selected By Harry Ferguson United Pres;. ..ports Editor (Copyright 1938 by United Press) New York. Oct 25 U.R) AllAmerica time still Is more than a month away, but the United Press I presents today the consesns of | observers all over the country on i the outstanding players for the | first half of the 1938 football | season. Some of those chosen will no | doubt falter and fall back into obscurity before the season ends, ; and injuries may hurt the chances of others. It is probable, too, that , many first-class players, partlcui larly in smaller schools. have been overlooked in this mid-sea- : son survey. The poll was based on performance only — and on performance this year, not on great things done last year or the year before Generally. It revealed a wealth of fine backs from coast to coast i it also revealed a shortage of outstanding guards. Tackles, ends and centers seemed to run well up ■ the average of other seasons. Here, without any attempt to . predict an all-America berth for ' any of those mentioned, is the I list: Ends — Daddio. Pittsburgh. a| j great performer on one of the great teams of the season; Wyatt, i’ennessee. who played a big part in his team’s victory over Alabama by piling up three and four interferers at times; Boyd, Baylor. an outstanding pass receiver who weighs 190 and is fast; lly. socki. Villanova, strong on offense . and defense and an accurate kick- ■ er for the point after touchdown : Tackl-s— Volets. Northwestern, I a keen play diagnostician and a, fierce tackler, he frequently cuts through the line and pulls run-. tiers down from behind; Russell. Auburn, one of the fastest line-1 men in the country: Gatto. Louisiana Sfate. a rock on defense; Hale. Texas Christian, a 60-minute ; man who specializes in breaking , through the line and running interference; McGarry. I tah. a| fine place kicker as well as a | great tackle; De Varona, Califor-; nia, outstanding in every game on I an undefeated team; Wolff. Santa Clara, the keystone of what many consider to be the best line on 1 the Pacific eoast. Guards—Heikkinen. Michigan, a l 195-pounder who piled up Minne-1 sota s power plays and almost: gave Michigan a victory: TwedeL, j .Minnesota, continues the great playing this year that he started as a sophomore on the crack 1936 I team; Bock. lowa State, a bril-; liant blocker who usually plays i every minute of every game. Centers—Brock. Nebraska, who • in the Minnesota game, smeared( four successive plays when Ne-l braska was making a goal line • stand; Aldrich. Texas Christian.: a smart player and the backbone | of the line that has helped T.C.U. I go undefeated through the first, half of the season; Bull. Colo-1 rado, a vicious tackler and one j of the best at backing up the line i on defense; Hill. Duke, a red-head; who appeared to be 50 per cent ■ of his team's defense in the Geor- 1 gia Tech and Colgate games. Backs —The nominations flood-1 ed in so heavily that lack of space permits nothing more than the mere naming of names. Here they are: Goldberg, Stebbins and*. Cassiano. Pittsburgh; Hackney, Kansas State; McCullough. Ok lahoma; Eshmont, Fordham; Kischer, lowa State; Cafego. Tennessee; Brunner, Tulane; Mosley, Alabama; Moore. Minnesota; Sheridan. Notre Dame; Harmon, Michigan; O'Brien, Texas Christian; Todd, Texas A. & M.; Patterson, Baylor; Dwyer, New Mexico; Bottari, California; Christensen, Brigham Young; Boise, , Idaho; O’Mara. Duke; Watson. ; North Carolina; Humphrey, Yale; MacLeod, Dartmouth; Mountain, Princeton. * DAY’S COM MOR ERROR I '• Mustache is pronounced l is-tash’; not mus'-tash. < LOANS $lO to S3OO On Your OWN Signature No Endorsers Absolute privacy. No questions asked of friends or employer—No embarrassing inquiries. LOCAL LOAN COMPANY Incorporated Rooms I and 2 Schafer Building I Decatur, Indiana Phone 2-3-7
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. OCTOBER 25. 1938.
, W.■ - , ... .. 11 -m - ' FIELD GENERAL - - • - By Jack Sords ZrJ'f Axiyasifr) /J ( ttTWMYWAf ’ / J J -a > “ i / WiU-CAttM ) — —-j I I* \yf ■ I lUeMFDW-/ Jg ,w UjL . JF. > JdMgMedT IM J ZL— MoTrb * n\ • 1 191 Jzfl \ 1 r ISMC KATVWS IVNO-CATt. IM TY
J I Today’s Sport Parade | By Henry McLemore I« • I New York. Oct. 25.—(UR)—The I Fordham football team 7s going to . i the dentist on Saturday. The team has made an appointment with Jock Sutherland, D.D.5.., : for 2 p. in. in the Pitt stadium at Pittsburgh. Doctor Sutherland will be assisted, not by a white-uni- ' formed nurse, but by eleven cleat-' | ed. padded helpers, who carry out I the doctor’s orders. The Fordham i ■ boys need expect no painless ex- i I tractions, no lack of the dr’il, even, (after they've said “ouch!” because: I the other patients who have gone i i to the doctor for treatment on five ! I previous Saturdays have come' : away saying not to believe the: doctor when he says “this hurts [ me worse than it does you.” Doctor Sutherland has develop-1 ;ed himself quite a football team i at Pittsburgh this year. This is! jno novelty, to be sure, because ; about the only thing that can ; ; match the sun in regularity is! ! good Pitt football teams. But the 1938 one appears to be sort of : special, probably because Doctor I I Sutherland finally came around to using the forward pass. Up until this year Pittsburgh scorned the pass as though it were something unhealthful, but now the boys are I tossing the ball around with the ; abandon of a girls’ volley ball : team. That they are tossing it' i with fair success was proved last i week when they outpassed South- | ern Methodist, the team that was ! supposed to have a monopoly on ' aerial cuteness. No one knows just what caused ; the Doctor to turn to the forward ‘ pass, but the general belief is that he got sick and tired of reading newspaper articles which hinted that development of an aerial attack was beyond his powers. Pitt's development of passes can ' be likened to The rattlesnake developing horns in order to be ableto butt you to death in case his
Through the Line for Temple * wKT .. mllPfc &&-;?- f jjr j» A fighting Temple eleven that refused to be beaten eame surging back in a thrilling fourth-period rally with a 51-yard aerial to tie undefeated Boston College, 26-26, in Philadelphia. Jack Berrier, Temple L. H. B, is pictured gt ing through the line on an off-tackle play.
' poison might not be sufficient to I turn the tragic trick. Already a i terror through the ferocity of their , running game, the Panthers now : are doubly frightening. When the i lines get weary of pulverizing an ; opponent on the ground, the pass- : ers start running the foe to death with forwards. The meeting of Fordham and Pittsburgh stands as the grade A game of the week. For the past . three years they have battled to scoreless ties, with Pittsburgh's offense all but battering its brains ; out against Fordham’s “seven i blocks of granite.” This year it will be different. The “seven blocks of granite” have graduated from the Rose Hill , quarry and coach Jimmy Crowley, probably as bored by the scoreless deadlocks as the spectators, has I turned out a team whose watch- : word is “touchdowns." In four ' games the Rams have leaped about ! with the agility of chamois late . for dates, to run up 1.607 yatus from scrimmage and 69 first downs. The east has seen few better attacks than that which Fordham showed in crushing Oregon 26 to 0 last Saturday. In Len Eshmont, 1 the sophomore whom Crowley says Is potentially the greatest ball carrier of all times, the Fordhams have a breakaway runner who can score from any part of the field. And Pete Holovak is almost as good. I But in Pittsburgh, the Rams will face a team that is entirely different from their opponents to date, Upsala, Waynesburg. Purdue, and Oregon. Backs who galloped against dear old Upsala are not sure things to do much against the Pitt forward wall. My guess is that Pitt will win by a score of something like 21 or 26 to 6. (Copyright 1938 by UP.) o Standing Room Only At Purdue-I. U. Game Lafayette. Ind., Oct. 25 —(UP) — There was only standing room a-
vailable today for football fans hoping to attend the Purdue-Indiana \ gridiron finale here Nov. lit. > C. S. Dean, manager of ticket ' sales, said the last seats in the I temporary bleachers behind the i goal posts were sold out early to- . day. Decatur Bowling League Results CENTRAL SOYA CO. Expellee Bollen 143 128 145 Bohren 145 128 154 Babcock 157 165 144 Mcßride 139 97 102 Rice 112 R. Little . .. 116 141 ■ ■■ I II II > ■' Totals 696 634 687 Truckers Harris 98 89 119 Owens 131 112 88 Sheets 88 136 149 Hawkins 136 138 108 Bucher 195 175 208 Totals64B 640 672 > I Elevator McConn 153 155 156 Omlor 129 170 120 Fleming - 116 112 156 J. Little -..._ 137 104 119 McMillen - 128 135 140 Totals 663 676 691 Laboratory Finlayson 113 164 133 . Goldner 143 164 168 Brewer 192 174 207 Odle 107 124 99 Kruse 117 133 140 Totals 672 759 747 Office Sprunger 169 147 136 McConn 101 128 112 Allweln 154 92 158 ! McMillen 158 120 126 Mac Lean 115 155 98 Totals 697 642 630 Feed Mills Hutker 139 123 115 Reinhard 99 125 89 E. Schultz 145 178 155 Schlickman 149 109 138 Mcßride. 106 J. Little 141 144 Totals63B 676 641 Solvent H. Von Gtmten 99 135 G. Daily 72 73 95 Teeple 121 118 141 Brown 137 171 775 Gallogly 172 150 151 i J. Edgets 88 Totals 601 647 594 Mainenance Wallace .93 68 Winteregg 104 126 Lehman 132 141 128 Keller 130 137 145 Springer 145 132 179 P. Felber 78 85 Totals-4*64 556 663 MATCH GAME Glass Co.. Winchester Wolfe 199 184 158 Cullum 163 146 199 Poe 158 182 219 Estes 193 166 184 Cook 188 178 178 T0ta15...901 856 938 Decatur ■ Appelman 131 165 173 Miller 163 204 209 Mies 188 146 157 I Mutschler 137 201 129
stump 214 160 189 f Totals 833 876 857 ! HARTFORD HIGH LISTS SCHEDULE Gorillas To Open 1938-39 Basketball Card November 1 The complete schedule for the Hartford township Gorillas tn-1 eludes 18 regularly scheduled; games, one four-team invitational tourney and the Adams county ■ tourney. Hartford will open the season Friday. November 4, playing the Berne Bears at Berne. The schedule follows: Nov. 4 Berne at Berne, Nov. 11 —Kirkland at Hartford. Nov. 18—Poling at Hartford. Nov. 23 —Bryant at Bryant. Nov. 30 —Pleasant Mills a4 Hartford. Dec. 3—Monroe at Monroe. Dec. 9—Petroleum at Hartford. Dec. 16—Geneva at Geneva. Dec. 17 —Jefferson at Hartford. Dec. 22—Montpelier at Hartford. • Dec. 30—Blind tourney at Hart- i ford (Bryant. Geneva and Petroleum-. Jan. 6 Kirkland at Kirkland. Jan. 13 —Poling at Hartford. Jan. 27—lioncaster at Lancaster. Feb. 3—Bryant at Hartford. Feb. 10 —Petroleum at Petroleum. Feb. 11 —Jefferson at Hartford. Feb. 17 —Geneva at Hartford. Feb. 24 —Monroe at Hartford.
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IIBCESSW ONIEBhiJ Barnhart J AtNati °nalCoS| Today 1 Washington. Oct. must , forces ln a I "tressing t enWMM I tion “in onfof tQ M i ««nt ripple, O s '.’ ’"‘f " p in “> another tol A- Barnhart, administrator, today tional conference on AlcjiJJ »rage advertising. | -Mr 'Barnhart pointed 0,. J IHuor :i<lmini s t ra t jvp representative, o( tbe *■ | advertising iml u ,tr| e , conference that 'incraZl hers of official, ,f t hs try are beginning to resliuS ue of education in relatio*3 problem of alcohol." ■ “That realization ii i ’he steady upward trj j advertising toward that gosig’ perant e and moderation," J "Those same metnebr, of 4 quor Industry gradually W) dotting the short-sighted tbesty alcoholic beverage advertise stimulate consumption. Lg* unlike any other commodity« cholic beverage advertising n be done in such away ttatli not offend public opinion" |
