Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 41, Number 246, Decatur, Adams County, 18 October 1943 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
. n n 1 COLLEGE FOOTBALL Chicago Bears Beat Purdu* 3‘» Ohio Stat* • f* | i/> <r No(r« Ihiui* .’»•», Wi*< 0. Eagles By 48 To 21 n ji • r .« Minn-not a 13. Camp Grant 7 Keaskins imotner IIlln ., ; Wi-eleyaii 37. Indiana Green Bay Packers st..-., t. .< »>. « <» * |>< I’auv. 43, Wabash (By United Prexx) l "* a Pi'FHxht 21 Mi.mimrl fl. The Chicago Bear# are playing Army I olumbla n. tor keeps. 1 1 p ' ““ •toted. They ■ til i 11 vir P fo Football tory over the Philadelphia-Pitt* Chl<ago Bear# 48. Phil Pltt_2l. burgh Eagle* yesterday Ami. at Washington 33. Green Hay ~ the same time, they served notice Ib'troit •, • htcago <as llna.s " that they mean to keep first rank j sortt 20. Bn-ok.yn ". in the pro football western di', isi .n | Notre Dame Wallops 7 triumph over the Green Bay Pack j i,; Wisconsin, 50 To 0 other league game. Detroit defeat- ■ ed the Chicago Cardinals. 7 to 0. Sign Mutial Purdue Wins After The St la.uis Bed Birds, at — ... . . . .» making sure their star hitt* r trailing Al rlOli doesn't fly the coop. f The St in.uls dub lias signed Indianapolis. Oct 18—(I I . Stun Muslal to a three year eon Hooder college football teams broke a little better than ev.-n in Mtislal is this year's major lea mt of state rattle.'! last weekend gue batting .hampion l " mt ' " ,11 " 1 J"*;’"' 1 1 1 „ miii ,nhin*! victory hy j»moth»riiig ;• Release S.rrmon. w .,, k W.-.onsin. 5» to (• The The Bouton Bed H. x have turn <1 Plg||l(l|l{ |rl . b lllled lh( . ir r^tlla „ thumbs down on Al Simmons, the f<|r J:)w( thl . veteran out fielder He has been released by Boston ( .; i ., wh ,. 1 ,. however. Indiana j after batting only .203 this season h(i(| w „,,. <( , |ly to Simmons Io years old. I<d the Am- h . t ||>e|r fJrMf Hlr |„ K m ,.„ play erlean league in hiding in 1930 and u r | 1 . v ,. ! . 1!1( | th( . j., lrdlle Boiler-] 1331- mekrs puncher! across a 30 to 7 Hockey victory in the last half against Fans of the flying puck will have <>h|o State The Scarlet Scourge a chance to see the world champ- led. 7 to 0. at the half way mark lons dash bef< re the regular hoc- But M n attack engineered by quarkey ..eason begins. terback Sam Va.anti had Coach The Heftolt Bed Wings will take Paul Brown's ft.shmen confused! to their home ice next week against throughout the final half Fullth.- Cleveland Batons in file first ba. k Tony Butkovich scored three of a seri- s of pre-eeaaon practice time- and halfback Boris hiinaii games chess tallied twice. Louis To Rest llowev. Indiana University It took a global war to tire out was aide to nothing mure thaft Joe Lvuis. hold its own at lowa City Coach When the world heavyweight B McMillin found that his freshchampion hangs up his gloves, on man ace, •'llunchy'' Hoerns.-hmey the west coast, he will have visited er. wasnt quite enough to stifle 48 .amps in his exhibition tour m alert and aggressive group of which started in August. lowa llawkeyes They Insisted Th. war department says the upon playing a77 tic. brown bomber will have a well- Indiana State didn't fate as well] earned rest in November. as other 11- osier teams. The 0 Sycamorv-s went to Bloomington. 111, to help Illinois Weslevan celeOperation of local governments brate homecoming Aid they took In cities of 100.000 or more in the , j- t) , 0 defeat back to Terre I' S amounts to an intimated 13.- Haute. mw.uwi.WM> a year. Within the state. DePauw re-
APPLES Cortland Apples A (hnhl C(M»king and Eating Apple. $2.75 a bushel. Bring your own container. GERBER’S MEAT MARKET MAAAARAAMWWVMAAWWW r* ■—» . . - WWWWJM Tonight & Tuesday In Corgeous Technicolor! BING CROSBY DOROTHY LAMOI'K in “DIXIE” ALSO—Short? 8c 30c Inc Tai —o Wad. A Thur*.—Henry Fonda. “The Oi Bow Incident" First Show Wednesday at S:3O Continuous Thursday from 1:30 —o Coming Bun.—Wallace Beery. ' Salute to the Marines" | CORT Tonight & Tuesday “THUMBS UP” Brwnda Joyce Richard Fraser & “PETTICOAT LARCENY” jmk Carrot, Ruth Warrick •cMo Inc. Taa —oWed A Thur*. — "Honeymoon —O-0— Coming Sun.-" Spitfire’. Slowed Swnr A -O Holmoo Face* Death
Lilncd the traditional Monon Bell by walloping Wabash. 33 to 0. A bitterly fought game had iieen expected But It turned out to lie a rather colorless exhibition. f> Investigate Black Markets In Meat Chicago, Oct IS —(UP) —A federal grand jury is Investigating Idack markets in meat In Illinois, Wisconsin and Minnesota United States district attorney Albert Woll says the grand jury will pry in'o slaughter of farm animals without a permit. And he says the exceeding of slaughter allowances by some farm puckent will also lie Investigated In all, 28 witnesses have been xubpenaed to appear before the federal jury They Include members of McHenry county's war food board in Illinois and the board In Barron county. Wls. Willkie To Address Freshman Solons Washington. O< t is (UP) Wendell Willkie will go to Washington tomorrow to test congressional reaction to hie proposal for a pi tit-war United Nation ' council. The 1940 Republican psesldential candidate will speak liefore th< Republican freshman ctub. an organisation of newcomers to congress However. Republican lawmakers of longer service al-o will be on hand to hear the speech — , — —- Amount of fluid milk available per capi'a In 1943 will be l<* pounds, ae compered with 3.sfl pound* laet year.
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Power Displayed By College Grid Teams 176 Points Scored By Three Elevens By I'nlted Press Tie- so-called experts who said the war had taken all the power out <>f out football front have dis-1 covered their mistake. There was power on land and: in the air last weekend as the greats of the gridlion dashed with the near greats and tin- teams that a-pired to greatness Three power teams Notre Dame, Army and Penn —scored 176 points against Wisconsin. Columbia and Lakehurst Naval, respectively. They all go again this week i i Penn takes on Columbia in New York. Notre Dame meets an Improved but outclassed University of Illinois eleven, and Army tangles with Yale. Something’s going to give there and the ln>ys witli the power will do the pushing Around the circuit, the picture for the coming weekend stacks up something like this: In the east. Bates meets the coast guard, and Cornell plays Colgate at Syracuse It's Frank Un and Marshall against Marienberg's Mules at Lancaster. Navy piays Georgia Tech In a game . under the lights and Pittsburgh ! . encounters Bethany. Pittsburgh still is smarting from the licking i U took from Illinois aid will be t on a Dee-saving mission, r In the middlewest: powerful i lowa Pre Flight, fresh from a vic- , tory over Missouri, meets Drake . at lies Moines. Indiana and Wls ' I cousin trade end runs and passes J Mighty Michigan meets the Gold--1 en Gophers of Minnesota in a P I renewal of the little brown jug- !« scries. Other games bring to-1 r gether Nebraska and Kansas. Ohio: i. State and Northwestern, and Purdue and lowa. In the southwest — Oklahoma A A M plays Texas Christian, and T-xas meets Rice. It’s Texas A A M against the North Texas' Aggies, and Texas Tech and New
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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA
. WEEKLY FOOTBALL SCHEDULE Games of Saturday. Oct. 23. 1913
Home IM2 Team Score EAST Bates-Coast Guard DNP Brown-Rhode Island DNP Villanova-Bucknell DNP W Virginia-Carnegie Tech DNP Cornell-Colgate 6-18 Columbia-Pennsylvania 12-42 Lafayette-Ix-high 7-7 Maryland-Penn State DNP FAM -Muhlenberg <-7 Union-Renssalaer 38-6 Vale-Army DNP C C N Y -Swarthmore DNP Springfield-Connecticut 14-21 Pitt-Bethany DNP Tufts-Camp Edwards DNP MIDWEST Western Conference Indiana-Wisconsin DNP Purdue-lowa 7-13 Michigan-Minnesota ' 14-16 Ohio State-Northwestern 20-6 Big Six Conference Nebraska-Kansas 14 7 Kansas State-Oklahoma 0-76 Other Games Baldwin-Wallace-Bowling G DNP Notre Dame-Illinois 21-14 Marquette-Great Lakes 0-24 Oberlin-DePauw DNP lowa State-Ottumwa Naval DNP Cornel) Coll -Grinnell 9 7-12
NOTE ONF axana did not play tach other in 1942.',
Mexico On the west coast. A A. Stagg's college of the Pacific team meeta Southern California. California plays St. Mary's PreFllgtK. On Sunday. Marquette meets Great Lakes, at Milwaukee 72,000 Women Are Employed By G. E. Schenectady. Oct. 18 — General Electric and iUi affiliated companie* at present have approximately i 72.V00 or 39 percent women in ita employ, four times the number before the war. a statement iasued by j the company today -revealed. This i number la equivalent to the total i number of all employe* of the com--11 pany in 1939. Tw > of its apparatus | plants have passed the 50 percent
Home 1942 Team Score 111. State Norm -Carbondale 7-0 W 18. Tr.-Charleston 45-0 Miami-Ohio Wesleyan 28-25 SOUTH Southern Conference V M I -Wake Forest 0-28 Other Games Camp Davis-Davidson DNP Georgia-Louisiana State DNP Daniel Fteld-Presbyterian 14-21 N/Car Navy-Georgia Navy 14-14 SOUTHWEST Southwestern Conference Texas-Rice 12-7 Other Games Arkansas-Memphis Naval DNP Okla A A M-Tex . Christ tan DNP Texas A A M-N Tex Tr. DNP Texas Tech -No Tex A AM DNP Blackland-Randolph Field DNP Denn. A.A.8.-S. Plains Army DNP ROCKY MOUNTAINS Colo Col) -Kirtland Field DNP PACIFIC COAST California-St. Mary s Navy 12-8 So Californla-Coll. Pacific DNP Washington-March Field DNP INTERSECTION AL Navy-Georgia Tech 0-21 Tulane-So Methodist DNP Tulsa-Utah < DNP
mark In female employee, fw which is engaged In the manufacture of electric meters and aircraft instruments now employing 56 percent women. Emploa* now total approximately K 2.000 which Is two and one-half times the total in 1939. At present approximately 36.000 employes are in the armed oervlcea. o •till Solicitous Fort Worth. Tex-(UP) —Somebidy who wanted to get rid of a dog. but didn't want to aee the dog injured, left the animal tied to a tree near Fort Wurth, with thia sign nailed to the tree: "Please do not turn the pup loose unless you | want It, on account of cam running ' over It.” - o Eleven republics make up modern Soviet Russia.
Judge Swygert Takes Office On Wednesday I Induction Ceremony Planned At Hammond Hammond. Ind.. Oct- 18.—(I Pt Judge Luther Swygert will take over the bench of the northern Indiana federal district court Wednesday afternoon with all appropriate ceremony. Invited to attend the planned induction ceremonies are Senator Fred-rick Van Nuys and U. S. atterneys. judges, bar members and the press. prteident Byron Bainbar of the Hammond bar association, sponsors of the program, says the oath of judgeship will be administered to the presidential appointee by Judge Sherman Minton of Chicago. Minton Is judge cf the circuit court of appeals there. Thirty eight year-old Swygert former annuitant district attorney of Hammond—was appointed by I’resld-nt Roosevelt last week. He succeeds Judge Thomas Slick ->f South Bend, who resigned on September 15. Judge Slick is expected to Weici me his successor to the bench. —. —o —- Play With Matches, Baby Sister Killed Sidney. Neb.. Oct. 18. — (UP) -• While Mrs. Lloyd Bowker was In a grocery store, her children amused themselves by lighting matches and throwing them. One of the matches landed in the carriage of their baby aiater. By the time Mrs. Bowker reached the blazing carriage, the child was dead. o Fires Bed in Jail, Man Burns To Death Evansville. Ind . Oct. 10 —(UP)— Thirty-five-year-old Earl Bullock di--d thia morning In an Evati-vllle hospital Death was c aimed by burns suffered yesterday when he set his liedclothlng afire in the Warrick county jail at Boonville. o 30,000 Miners In France On Strike New York. Oct. 18— (UPI —A British radio broadcast says that' 3U.0V0 miners are on strike in two departments of France. The broadcast says 130 men were arrested at Lille for organising the walkouts. o - ■. Ask Exemption On Insurance Premiums Chicago. Oct. 18— (t’P) —The president of the Mortgage Bankers' association believes taxpayers should be exempted from Income tax on money spent for life insurance premiums. President Herold Woodruff of Detroit says such a plan would - act as an economic stabilizer fori ’ policyholders and would contribute t to the government's social secur-
. y BROADWAY NIGHTS ; By AXEL STORM f * re** 4 "* «■* Y* ,
t , NEW YORK.— Cheryl Craw-jC . ford, who revived the long dor- » . rnant "Porgy and Bess” into • 1 unash hit, has Broadway glee5 fully rubbing Its hands with "One 1 Touch of Venus,” the new muaical i starring Mary Martin, which , opened the other night < the Imperial. Kurt Weill wrote the I music and the book la by those 1 two experts in inanity, S. J. Perel- 1 man and Odgen Nash. 1 The long haired members of the critics’ circle have been pulling at each others’ Jovelocks already— i they don’t usually get started with thia scratching and hair pulling until the season is fairly well ad-
UDUI iw M-WUH sa A«ua 7 — vanced—either justifying this puling scaaon as healthy and normal, or damning It Is jejune and amateur. For our money, the tatter is right. So far we've had half a dozen bad plays, half that many ineptly mounted, poorly written, childishly staged musicals and a revival or two that had better been left in limbo. “One Touch of Venus” has made the whole of Manhattan grin. At least they’re in agreement now—Broadway Ims one adult, tuneful, amusing and diverting musical. Some time ago • young lady named Mary Martin took Broad way by the ears and the wolves
wandered in the atreata atarryp> ed, their howling aa musical aa the moaning of a lovesick dachshund. Mary had a little aong, and if its iyrtca weren't white aa snow, they at least afforded some amusement It was called “My Heart Belongs to Daddy." On the strength of this filial attachment Miss Martin could get any thing she wanted in Manhattan, and after a time Hollywood made even brighter offers Mary went west, to the relative Immortality of the silver screen. It's done her no harm. She's sweet and charm I big as when she went away and has brought back none of the mannerisms which young ladles are said to acquire co the Pacific
ity program. • In Woodruff's opinlotr. this plan would not help people escape taxes. Rut he thinks It would aid those who have trouble maintain-1 Ing their established protection! platrs in an abnormal period. o — — Kansas City Yards Swamped By Stock Kansae City. Oct. 18. — (UP) — The biggest run of livestock ever recorded has swamped the Kansas City livestock yards. Pen facilities in the big yards are almost exhausted with the world's record run of <4.800 cattle and calvtw. The cattle streamed in from every section of the vast southwest cow country — driven from the ranges by killing frosts during the week- < nd. However, there's little solace for the man who longs for a thick, juicy beefsteak. Abcut 90 percent of th«run is made up of Stockers and feeders — destined for reconslgnment to sets) lots for further fattening. o Life With Children Ixmg Beach. Cai. —(UP)—When Marinne Shaw, 4. discovered she had started a fire in the house while playing with matches, she promptly telephoned her grandmother at AlhambYa, 30 miles away. Grandma with equal prompit ude telephoned the alarm back to the lx>ng Beach firemen, who rush ed and extinguished the fire. While the fire alarm was making its Corn lie circuit to Alhambra and then back to Long Bea< h, Marlnne's mother was asleep in an adjoining room and awakened only when the fire department arrived. ■ ' "0 Parasols Shade Welders Ixm Angeles. Cal.— (UP) — California shipbuilding yards are assuming the appearance of a happy day at the beach. Owing to the fact that the nun beaming down on flat iron surfaces generates, along with the blow torch, an almost unbearable heat, the welders now work shaded by the fancifully-col-ored parasols* ordinarily used at bathing beaches, so that the whole acene is one of color- -and heat. Marines Mix ’Em Up San Francisco. —(UP)—At least cne battle In the Solomon Islands was won by the leathernecks throwing coronas at the Japs, according to Howard H Hoyt of this city, back on sick leave. The Japs, cornered in caves, he etatw. caught 1 and hurled back handgrenades as fast as the leathernecks could I throw them. Then the latter had the happy idea of throwing coo nuts along with the grenad>-a. It took the Jape so long to distinguish whether the oncoming missile was a coconut or a grenade that soon no grenades were being thrown back at all. » " j,- -r° Bays ’Mkrvil-Afe' Remote PasadenA Cil - (UP>— Prof. W H. Peckerifit 4 the California Institute of TechnnluW Wfirna the public against'expecting a w'orld o( super-develdpment Immediately after the-war ae a f’sdU of the <>r<>gresa being made in eledtrdaics There will be some, he concede!, but t homage of marv»la." be Insists, •'is atiil remote. ' *
coast. As a matter of fact. historians, when they delve into the culture of this century and soma years of the last, will And that the Ink stained Dana made a mistake In gender when he teued his admonition to youth. He, to judge from the results today, very probably said Go west, young gal ” Reporters m those days must have been a> slipshod as they are today. This Is getting no nearer Venua, is it? John Boles is one of the stars Kenny Baker, the young tenor lata of radio (or to be still on it? Ours haa U P ■host), aings Mtas Sono
Osato drew cheers withlher dancing. and Mtas Agnes DsMllle deserves them as much lor the choreograph. It’a not a tonnaltaed, hard-ae-naUa, mechanical chonta line, but a pleasant, funny and always attractive thing . to see the young ladies caper. I For music, there’s Mr- WeUL > We’ve never been one of hta most . faithful adherents because we *• t had a sneaking notion that he M . somewhat eilpUcal and P«*J***; . which ta probably a mean thing to say, since the rest of the world f finds him good. In "Venus’ he 1 pears to have given the customers i just about what they wanted, and
they expressed their appreciau -.. unmistakably. Mr. Baker sang_the songs well, with a fine araor and under a considerable head of. * l Messrs. Perelman and Nash made something quite 1 out of the story of the **”* that comes to life and falls in love with a barter, *» h fu t , scraping their Unea out of t»y > gutv 11 Mr. Nash M oecaMon--1 any a Mt aaetrect in hla iyn® r ho more than makes u® ** u r when the inaanlttee are r AH fat an. there’s • rxM show f at the Imperial We doubt > find it enay to get tickets. B's been s said that the advance Me js a> c ready near the IMXMIOO awk^ o
MONDAY. OCTQtfi,
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