Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 207, Decatur, Adams County, 1 September 1945 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
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Yankees Again Beat Senators tn Twin Bill New York, Sept. I—(UP)—Pennant litteiw and a fear tl,at ,hey are being hexed, gripped three top Major League contenders, the Detroit Tigers. Washington Senators and Chicago Cubs today. The Yankees are hexing Washington. The Indians are haunting Detroit. The Cardinale an- scaring the daylights out of the Cubs. The Yankees swept their third straight double header from the Senators last night, 3 to 2 and 3 to 1, to climax the most remarkable comeback of the season. The double win put them four games , ut of first place with 12 victories out of 15. The spree began after a nine game losing streak. longest suffered by the Yankees during either the Joe McCarthy or Miller Huggins regimes. ■Ernie Bonham won his third game in a row in the oponer, while young Allen Gettel had a shutout against the Senators until the ninth inning of the second game when he yielded the only run in a six-hit job. George (Tuck) Stainback paced the Yankees at bat with two hits in each game. The Tigers loot their fourth straight to Hie Indians and faced | the cheerless prospect of meeting bullet Hob Feller today for the second time in a week. Another fast-baller, Allie Reynolds, beat
I hem 7 to 2 yesterday. The National League race was tightened by the Cards who beat the Cubs for the fourth time and the 11 tit in 14 games this season, 4 to 1 behind Harry Brecheen’s two-hit pitching. Henry Sauer’s homer was the only damaging blow off Breeheen, who blanked the Cubs after the first inning. Sauer al.o got the other Cub hit, while (ieorge Kurownki and Buster \dants hit Cardinal homers to account for all but one run. Brecheen, who hit two doubles, drove in, the other run himself. The victory left St. Louis three games out of the lead. The Red Sox and Athletics split at Philadelphia, Russ Chistopher pitching a six hitter and hitting a homer to win the first game 6 to 3, after which rookie Randy Heflin to-sed a five hitter to give Boston a 4 to 2 win. The Browns and White Sox were rained out after two innings at ■Chicago and scheduled a double header for tonight. Pittsburgh made an early lead stand up to beat the Reds at Cincinnati, 6 to 5. Bob Elliott driving in three runs to pace the 10-hit attack. Ken Gables, with relief help from Xavier Rescigno, won his 11th game. The Phils used a two-run pinch, double by Rene Monteaudo as a (Springboard to a 6 to 5 victory over the Braves at Boston. Johnny Antonelli. Phils’ third basemen hit his big league homer.
Yesterday's etar — Lefty Harry Breeheen of the Cards, who held 'EmBBOKmi SUN. MON. TUES. Continuous Sun. from 1:15 BUD ABBOTT LOU COSTELLO “NAUGHTY NINETIES” ALSO —Shorts 9c-40c Inc. Tax O—O TONIGHT — “Roughly Speaking” Rosalind Russell, Jack Carson ALSO—Shorts 9c-40c Inc. Tax | CORT TUES, "mann^^Suß^9c-15c Inc. Tax “ROAD TO ALCATRAZ” Robt. Lowery, June Storey & “TWO O’CLOCK COURAGE” Tom Conway, Ann Rutherford Evenings 9c-30c Inc. Tax —o TONIGHT — John Mack Brown, "Ghost Guns" & Ist, Chapt "Jungle Queen” 9c-30c Inc. Tax
the Cubs to two hits in a 4 I* 1 victory in the National League "showdown series.” MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. G.B. Chicago 76 45 .628 St. Louis -—.— 74 49 .602 3 Brooklyn 68 53 .562 8 New York 67 57 .540 10% Pittsburgh 67 62 .519 13 Boston 56 68 .452 21% Cincinnati 49 73 .402 27% Philadelphia —- 37 87 .298 40% AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. G.B. Detroit —- 69 53 .566 —- Washington 69 56 .552 1% St. Louis 65 56 .537 3% New York 64 56 .533 4 Cleveland 63 57 .525 5 Chicago 60 61 .490 8% Boston 59 66 .472 11% Philadelphia 38 82 .317 30 YESTERDAY’S RESULTS National League Philadelphia 6, Boston 5 t Pittsburgh 6, Cincinnati 5 < St. Louis 4. Chicago 1 Only games scheduled. 1 American League > New York 3-3, Washington 21 I Cleveland 7, Detroit 2 t Philadelphia 6-2, Boston 3-4 < St. Louis at Chicago, postponed, s
Eight More Polio Cases At Rockford Toll Os Victims Is Increased To 218 < i Rockford, 111., Sept. I—(UP) — ' The toll of Rockford and Winnebago county infantile paralysis < victims rose to 218 today after i eight more patients were admitted to local hospitals. Twenty-six , have died. ; Meantime, officials scheduled a , meeting for today to discuss fur- < ther postponement of opening ( schools and the football season. Two new patients were from Rockford, where a total of 124 | cases have been reported in the , current polio outbreak. Four others ] came from outside the city, while ■ one was brought from Belvidere in ( Boone county and another from Harvard in McHenry county. Members of the of educafloh art’ll the polio executive committee were to meet with school superintendents and football coaches to determine whether to extend postponement of school and athletic sessions. Originally scheduled to open last Tuesday, Rockford schools were ( previously ordered to remain closed until Sept. 10. County schools also were advised not to open until that date. The football season was to have ' begun last Monday but was postponed until next Tuesday. A polio serum cimic will be held at Rockford hospital next Friday under auspices of the Samuel Deutsch convalescence center of Michael Reese foundation, Chicago.
SURRENDER (Continued From Page One) ed, however, to the “Japanese surrendt r ceremony on the battleship Missouri in Tokyo Bay.” The president's V-J Day address ] will comprise about 1,000 words, Ross said. The ceremony will signal the final end of World War II which plunged the world into its bloodiest conflict six years ago. Tomorrow probably will be V-J day. To the world's millions it will mean that peace—the peace that | men fought, were maimed and died so again come to the torn and ravaged earth.
To most it begins an era of hope that nations as well as men can learn to live in harmony in the future. Those seeking to make that hope come true have before them the dreadful warning of the atomic bomb should their efforts once again come to nothing. The president’s proclamation will end, as far as history is concerned, the war against Japan that began three years, eight months and 25 days ago with the Japanese surprise attack on Pearl Harbor. And in so doing it will bring to a close the entire second world war that engulfed the world in bitter strife exactly six years ago when Germany invaded Poland on Sept. 1, 1939. There are many who will regret, none more than President Truman himself, that the late President Roosevelt who saw the country through the darkest days of the war to within sight of victory was unable to live until the final goal was achieved.
Two More Leading Germans Interned Two Field Marshals Facing War Trials
Herford, Germany, Sept. I—-(U.1 —-(U. p )_Two more German field marshals—Walther Von Brauchitsch and Fritz Von Mannstein — today appeared well on the road to the war criminal trials at Nuernberg. Both men have been interned, Field Marshal Sir Bernard L. Montgomery’s headquarters disclosed last night. Neither was included in the original list of Germans who would be tried, and the British press bitterly protected their omission.
(Brauchitsch is a particularly vulnerable target for the British because it was recently discovered that he signed plans ordering the deportation to Germany for slave labor of all British males between 17 and 45. He also signed most of the documents in the secret book “military government of England —which revealed how Germany would handle the British situation after winning the war. ■But Brauchitsch, long considered as “too conservative” by Hitler, is believed to have thrown all his influence against the invasion of Britain because he believed Germany’s limited naval power inadequate.
Mannstein, who directed the masterful retreat before the Russians from Stalingrad to the Dnieper, has been a man of mystery for the past year. It was thought at one time he had been taken prisoner by the Russians. The British authorities revealed that both men had been living in Schleswig-Holstein and that Mannstein, a hospital patient, had been brought into internment in an ambulance. Brauchitsch and Mannstein were major powers in the Wehrmacht at the war’s beginning. Brauchitsch was commander-in-chief of the German armies at the time of the invasion of France and until he was removed by Hitler late in 1941. Mannstein was recognized as one of the Reich’s finest field tacticians. Mannstein. who fell from grace early in 1941 but made a temporary comeback at Stalingrad, has already been indicted as a war criminal by the Russians for atrocities at Kharkov, Kiev, and other places in the Ukraine. (Brauchitsch was understood to have been living on a farm outside the village of Malento, where he had moved with his wife and adjutant after the Red army threatened his estate in Silesia. Until recently he was busiw .engaged in writing a history (if -his RECONVERSION (Continued From Page One) N. Y., told reporters today he hopes he will have the bill ready to .sumbit to the Senate within two weeks. He said there will be changes “but no crippling amendments.” Under the bill the President each January would send to Congress a “national production and employment budget,” surveying the economic outlook for the next fiscal year. It would include a proposed legislative program through which Congress could “stimulate" private enterprise to provide more jobs and if necessary fill an iny job gap with public works.
Two Adams County Students Honored Naomi R. Steury, Berne, sophomore in the school of home economice, and Lewis Murphy, Decatur, V-12 trainee, were among the 464 sluden'e at Purdue University who won the “distinguished student” rating for scholastic achievement during the past term. In order to be rated as a “distinguished student”, the highest scholastic honor offered by the I University, it is necessary for a student to maintain a scholastic index of 5.00, or above, which approximates an average of 90.
In addition to the honor involved, civilian students on the “distinguished” list are entitled to the remission of fees amounting to S3O for the term immediately following qualification. Faith is the vision of the heart; it sees God in the dark as in the day. SURRENDER (Oontlnued Piom Page One) and Cairo declarations. These stripped Japan down to her four main home islands, provided for their occupation indefinitely, and specified that the emperor and Japanese government ■ obey all orders of MacArthur. ; The Japanese foreign office > spokesman said he had no knowli edge of the actual terms. j “I wish you could tell me - what’s in the surrender terms,” 3 the spokesman said. “I wish we knew.”
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MANY AMERICANS (Continued From Page One) that they would cure the men of ills and wounds. Instead the prisoners died or were disfigured
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permanently. The doctors also charged the Japanese with hijacking Red Cross supplies. —o Some people stand for nothing because they fall for everything.
INDIANA SOLON (Continued From Paa* . 7717777 of whom cou ' nments and 500,000 in other foreign service by next July J. During that P erlod “ that 300,000’ men will flow the army through enlistments. On the basis of those figures continuation of the dra t t appears unwarranted, Harness said. Harness said he bel eves the draft could be suspended and a voluntary system given a trial for about four months. "If we legislate to make the army more attractive, we step up recruitment enough, he explained. Harness is a member of a subcommittee which is meeting with army and navy representatives on suggestions to popularize enlistments. The group is reported favoring pay increases among other pro-, posed inducements. o— — The heart has reasons that reason does not understand. COMPENSATION BILL (Continued From Page One) present state rates. Informal estimates -of the lineup in the House committee if the bill is unamended indicate that uot more than 8 members of the 25-man committee will vote for it. JAP DEFENSES SHOW (Continued From Page One) two classes now — the unreconstructed militarists, whose hatred is visible, and the common people, who are relieved beyond description. Japan’s little man doesn't want American bombers to come back.
PLAN EXAMINATION (Continued From Page Ono) ary range for the director in counties the size of Adams county is from SIOO to $175 a month. The merit service examination for the position of county welfare director will consist of three parts. Thirty percent of the grade will bo based on a written test, 30 percent on an interview by a special oral board, and 40 percent on an evaluation of the applicant’s experience and training. The state personnel division will certify to the county welfare board the names of the three persons with the highest grades on the examination. Applications for the examination must be made on an official application blank. The blanks may be obtained from the office of the Adams county department of public welfare, from the Vqtl Wayne office of the United States employment service, or from the Indiana state personnel division, 141 South Meridian street, Indianapolis 4. The completed application must be sent to t|je state personnel division. If the applicant wishes credit for cpllege training, he must send a transcript of his college credits to the state personnel division. , o Democrat Want Ads Get Result*
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PUBLIC AUCTId HOUSEHOLD GOODS j 1115 W. Adams St., Decatur, Indiana I HIES., SEPT. 4-5® FURNITURE—Good 2 piece Green Living Room Suite; DiWl Gate Leg Table and 6 Upholstered Chairs; Buftet; hurenaj Rocket f ■ 3 ««• Bed 2 Inner Spring Mattresses; 1 Felt Mattress; Good Spring RUm5S’ Wilton Rug? 9x12 Dining Room Rug; 2Ttai Good Stair Carpet. Goo<UWUton Throw Rug. G, E. CONS,OLE RADIO. HOOVER ELECTRIC SWEEPS PORTABLE IRONER. G. E. WAFLE IRON. MISCELLANEOUS ARTICLES— Rubber Tired ton*’ Lawn Chairs; Floor Lamps; Bridge Lamps; and many TERMS—CASH. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bra ow J. F. Sanmann—Auctioneer C. W. Kent—Sales Manager Sale conducted by Midwest Realty Auction co. ■ Decatur, Indiana. • '
COMPLETE CLOSING OUT PUBLIC SALE We are moving to Decatur, will seß at pu l ’ Southeast of Decatur. Or, % mile South and . County Farm. ■ MONDAY, SEPT. 10, M Commencing at 12:30 P. M. B HORSES—SorreI Gelding 11, wt- 2010.i11® also an excellent saddle horse; Sorrel Mar e Good Western Saddle and two riding bridles CATTLE—Four Hereford cows 3 & 4 yrs. old, One Extra good Guernsey cow 4 yr. old, in januM One good quality Guernsey heifer, bred to (lV s jde, HOGS—Two good Duroc sows with first ld .' F ourlW*" sow with third litter by side, pigs are 4 weeK f ■ gilts weight about 225 lbs. open; One Duroc ?’ i xtra good sF® SHEEP—7 Good Shropshire yearling ewes, lambs. . IMPLEMENTS, ETC- ne W»' Good low wheel wagon, suitable for , e &. 14 ft. hay ladders; Good wagon box W1 . , no wer; '**, plow; Single shovel & double shovel; Loading cW M spike tooth harrow; Lawn roller; Bob f eder s a»d "L feeding rack; hog crates; Troughs; P° ul r > stef i Double set hip strap work harness; Horse c ero sene Log chains; wagon jack; hay rope: »t) g many small tools. HOUSEHOLD GOODS gfW ili Plano and stool; Library table; R ‘ )C * r c upl> oarli Is chair; 6 leather seat dining chairs; glass d Mal’ e r drop-leaf table; Oak kitchen cabinet: sou , W cook stove with copper reservoir; Go°“. Bed with Trunks; Large pedestal and cactus; °. g , w 0 fe»th« r Feather tick; two full size beds complete. cotn , ’ r ‘ fonier; Hall tree with mirror; Quilt fra ® ' ru gs; ° lll L||! goleum rug 9x12; Brussels carpet 15x15; t Large Electric Floor lamp; Table lamp; Cream c n. cream serving kettle, new; Cooking utensils, u . cle9 not ® new; 50 ft. Garden hose; Fruit jars; Many ai TERMS—CASH. -X A 0. T. JOHNS! Johnson —Bohnke —Liechty—Auctioneers. E. W. Baumgartner, Berae Bank—Clerk. 1 ■’ X. .» i 4 ■ ■* • •
SATURDAY,
N 0 Wmanl 1 ’T"» «'«?*| - Eliminate an L I mlnatQ fy ireatmen ?l al commerce. 3- Reduce tariff, M I barriers. < in general m, ]' economic oi >jecli ; tic Charter. 0 W The United State, J in its try to wipe out debts among , hft For example, Brltainjl claims on Poland, nCI etc, while inau £ j claims against Brito ! Tl >ere are nancial (settlements 0 < J Britain will want to .J the machinery anj /! equipment it has J bulk of lend-lease ij and food and pet ro ie nin 3 all items consumed a, J Trade in a Uooq Ton j - BUS - Y a n Wert Countyfi Sunday and 50c Round % ’ KENNETH KIU Bus will leave Democrat office. i ' 11,11 11
