Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 47, Number 231, Decatur, Adams County, 1 October 1949 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Yellow Jackets Defeated By Portland, 7J

Jackets Drop lough One To Portland Team The Decatur Yellow Jacket* last night played a superb statistical football game, easily embarrassing the heavier Portland Panther* The Jacket* rolled up 17 first downs. the Panthers one: the Jack?’* threw 14 passes and amazingly completed nine of them had none of them intercepted, while the Panthers did practically no good in this department, and the backs went for gains, time after time, while the Yellow Jacket defense. for the most part, halted the Panther backs before they could do much damage But it was not enough Portland won the football game 7 6 by simply mak Inga touchdown on a7O yard run and a conversion while the Yellow Jackets were able to make only a touchdown Decatur marched down the field from the opening kickoff, racking up four first downs on their way to an early touchdown. Jennings climaxed a 70-yard Decatur drive by going the last seven yards for th- score It took the Yellow Jackets* 13 plays, with. Bowman and Bair alternately carrying the ball, plus a five yard penalty, to score the initial touchdown of the game For the remainder of the fit st half they made the score hold good: in fact. Portland never seriously threatened at any time, and Decatur threatened again Just before the half time whistle When play resumed after the intermission. Portland made all the yardage it needed when Hole ert Kunce. on the first play from scrimmage, tore through the middle of the Yellow Jacket line, twirled, squirmed and dodged his way from the 3f>-yard line to midfield. and from there he galloped without anyone touching him to the goal On a fake placement play. Gibson grabbed the ball and plunged for the vital extra point that won the hall game The Yellow Jackets threatened late in the game, but the clock ran out on them with the ball on the two yard liae The loss evens the Yellow Jack et’s season record at three wins and three defeats The team travels next Friday to New Haven for auother NEIC game The starting lineups: Decatur Portland LK Strickler Schoeff LG Stuckey ... Hay LT Fruchte Black C Doan Priest KG loch McLaughlin KT Peterson Kelly HE Bassett Wilkinson QB Smith Strohl LH Bair Gihson RH Jennings Kunce FB Bowman Pitzer Score by quarters: Itecatur 6 0 0 o—6 Portland o 0 7 o—7 Substitutions: Decatur—Sheets. Plumley. Meyers. Substitutions: Portland - Jack son. Bright, Stout. Gehringer Lookout. Henlser. Brigham, Ables Touchdowns: Jennings; Kunce Conversion: Gibson Trade in a Good Town — Decatur WAMMMAMMMMMWVWW

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Little World Series j Will Open Tonight Montr* Oct. 1-- (IT* — The Monti- ovals, who took charge of the Ir. > rnational League playoffs the way the Canadian moanties handle a man hunt, will play the Indianapolis Indians of the A- , merican Association tonight in the first game of the best-of-seven Little World Series. The Royals, who swept four games from the Rochester Red Wings and took four out of five from the pennant winning Buffalo I Hixons to win the International League playoffs, were in top condition to try for their second straight Little World Series title Commodores Lose To Berne Bears Friday The Berne Bears, although limited to only four hits, defeated the Decatur Commodores baseball team, 10-5. on the Berne diamond Friday afternoon. The Bears sewed up the game in the third inning, when eight runs scored on only two hits, with the aid i>t two walks, a liit batsman, and five Decatur errors Berne picked up single tallies in the second ami sixth innings i Bill Glllig’s home run was the big blow in Decatur's second inning. when three runs scored. The Commodores' closed out their scoring with single tallies in the fourth and fifth frames Decatur's nine-hit attack was led I by Jim Meyer. Dick Gage and Gillig. each of whom obtained two safeties Berne AB R H E Townsend, cf, rs .. 3 2 1 o Nussbaum, c 4 0 12 Winteregg. 2h 3 10 0 Krehbiel. lb 12 0 0 Augaburger. p. If 4 11 o Lehman. 3b .. 4 110 Neuen. rs. cf 3 U 0 o llabegger, ss 2 10 1 Nagel. If 2 1 0 0 I.iechty, p .. 1100 Totals 27 10 4 I Commodores AB R H E Voglewede, If 4 0 11 Laurent, ss 3 0 1 2 Meyers, ss 1 0 0 0| Kahle, c .. 4 0 0 11 Meyer, p 4 1 2 ft I Gage. 3b 4 2 2 <1 Gillig. lb .. 3 2 2 0 Coyne, cf . 3 0 0 0 Mendez. 2b 10 11 Hackman. 2b I o 0 0 Costello, rs 10 0 1 Adams, rs ..100 0 , Gase, rs 10 0 0 Total* 31 5 9 6 : Score by innings: Commodores 030 110 0— 5 Berne 016 001 x 1 • STEEL MEN ! (Cunt. Frosn Page One) mliF They were worried They waited anxiously beside their radios for news of an 11th hour settlement that never came. "We'll all feel it," Ralph Fineberg, manager of a fruit market in the center of the town, said "The stores that will really feel it are those selling clothing. Jewelry and furniture.” . Officials of Steelworker Local 1397. however, had more pressing problems. They had to help run a kitchen next to union offices to feed the pickets There would be sandwiches and coffee. Soup would come later when the weather turns cold. Joe Bresko. president of the Incal. felt ft may be cold before the strike ends. But he said he was willing "to fight for the 30cent package that the union proposed in the very beginning ” OUTLINE DUTIES tfNsnt. From P«ro One) •ions with cltv and etate officials. The Hopley report contained what some critics called a "scare" section on what an atomic bomb would do to a large American city. Among other things, the report said, it would cause 100.000 casualties. 40,000 of them fatal. Since issuance of that report, the atomic energy commission and the armed services decided to get out one of their own tentatively dubbed "atomic weapons effects handbook " It will be the most , authoritative ever prepared, it is < Intended to give civil defrost planners a factual understanding of the forces with which they may have to deal Presumably the "effects' deacribed will be those of the more powerful now bomba now beipg produc rd

JOLTIN* JOE GOOD JOE - - By Alan Mover ■flK Mk J ilnvr I * | Ta xi/aX ' A? u 3 Wk'*- i a ■ In] • \i i< A \ -1 \ 1 \jSL THE HAS | V-/- V. \ k AAP MAN Y A V S ' :* > Day at the it • EXPENSE OF 1 OPPOSING PITCHERS JOE A Dl MAGGiO, ™ E OF THE HOWEVER HE’S YANKEES, ORDERED THAT WHO'LL 0E HONORED ALL CASH rfgW YORK Donations be turned over ~ j p TO THE CANCER OCTOBER 1. AND / ukjtfl Heart funds • .. - - z,>r<<at«

- MAJOR NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB Brooklyn 96 56 .632 St. Louis 95 57 .625 1 Philadelphia ... 9U 72 526 16 New York 73 79 490 23 Boston 73 79 .460 23 PittsburKh 70 M 2 .461 26 i Cincinnati 61 91 .601 35 Chicago6o 92 395 36 AMERICAN LEAGUE W L PcL GB Boston 96 56 .632 New York 95 57 .625 1 Cleveland 97 65 .572 9 * Detroit 97 65 572 9 | Philadelphia ... 9ft 72 526 16 Chicago 62 99 411 33Afc St. Louis 51 loft .338 44*4 Washington .... 49 103 322 47 YESTERDAY’S RESULTS National League Chicago 6. St. Louis 5. Pittsburgh 3. Cincinnati 2. Only games scheduled American League Philadelphia 4. New York 1. Boston 11. Washington 9 Cleveland 6. Detroit 4 Only games scheduled. H. S. fOOTBALL J New Haven 19, Garrett O. Columbia city 53. Bluffton 6. Auburn 25. Hartford City 0. Warsaw 7. Huntington 7 Hie*. Fort Wayne North 13. South Bend Adams 7. Wabash 31. Monticello 6 Logansport 32. Frankfort ft. Plymouth ES. Peru 6. Anderson 6, Marion 0. Conservation Club Will Meet Tuesday The I nion township conservation club will meet at 7:30 p. ni. Tuesday at the Bleeke school. Rudy Meyer. I of the state conservation public re-! iations department, will speak and show a film. All memliers are urged to attend

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MERCHANT LEAGUE Standings W L Rhoades s i Cash Coal 6 3 Nine Mile 6 3 Alollenkopf 6 3 Meyers .. 5 4 Riverview 3 6 Bait Co. 18 Texaco ... 19 High games: A. Selklng 202-303. RURAL LEAGUE Standings W L Heyerly» ... 10 2 Hayloft . 10 2 Farmers 9 3 Homs CM* I t Shearer ... 5 7 VFW 5 7 Stewart 4 | Old Crown 4 8 Nine Mile 4 8 Reynold* .. 1 11 High games; Hodle 206, C. Oettin 200. COLLKC FOOTBALL Villanova 34. Detroit 7. Boston College 13. Wake Forest 7. Louisville 34. Murray State 14. UCLA 35. Oregon 27. t ADAMS COUNTY <e'o«»L From Page (me) I quently happier than. say. "the listI les* people who seem but a step from the grave." STRIKE OF (Coeit. From Page One' lions that some of the 87.000 workers Idled In miscellaneous.diHputes across the nation soon would lie I going back to work. Guy A. Thompson, trustee for the Missouri-Pacific railroad, asked s,o<wt engineers, firemen, trainmen and couducters to return to work while three referees Judge the 282 grievances which caused them to strike two weeks ago. Trade In a Good Town — Decatur

Yanks, Cards Drop Game Off Pennant Pace New York. Oct. 1. H'P*— Both the Boston Red Sox and the ’ Brooklyn Dodgers hoped today to . srap up their league pennants. Mel Parnell, nerveless Boston Red Sox southpaw, faced the New York Yankees unflinchingly with i ihe boast, "by tonight it'll be all over and we'll be the new Amer- ( han League champions." x While Parnell, a 25 game winner. ' sought to bring Boston Its first | pennant since 1946, the Brooklyn Dodgers also were in a position to win the National League flag All the Dodgers needed was a victory j over the Philadelphia Phillies coupled with a St. Ixouis Cardinal loss to the last place Chicago Cubs. The 27-year-old Parnell, who opposed the Yankees' Allie Reynolds in the most crucial game of the season, had every right to he nervous- but wasn't. "All of us are confident we'll i | ahi today," he said casually, "it'll ' tie all over tonight and tomorrow we ll let the clubhouse boy pitch ■ against the Yankees." With the Yankees, however. It was another story. Reynolds, with a record of 17 victories and six ■ setbacks, was fretting about a, sore back that limits his effective-1 ness somewhat It was all or noth- I Big for the Injury riddled New ‘ Yorkers today who hoped, with fingers crossed, to have the recuperating J<>e DiMaggio back in the line-up today after the Red Sox. Ral(»h Branc a, a broad shouldered Mount Vernon. N. Y.. righthander. carried the hopes of the ■ Dodgers against the Phillies, who were countering with veteran Ken ' Heintzelman. a winner. Both the Dodgers and Red a'ox lead their respective leagues by on« game. Eddie Dyer's reeling Cardinals, who lost a 6 to 5 devision to the Cubs yesterday, were virtually obliged to win today to remain in contention. Beaten in > their last three games, the Red Birds today nominated crafty Harry <The can Brecheen. a south-1 paw with a 14 and 10 record, to I work against another southpaw. I Boh Chipman, owner of a six-and eight mark In yesterday's activity, the Yankees fell a game behind Boston by dropping a 4 to I verdict to the Philadelphia Atheltlcs. Fer- 1 is Fain broke a 1-1 tie in the third with 'a 355-foot homer with two | | men on base. The Red Sox. on the other hand I staggered through to a wlerd 11 to j 9 triumph over the Washington Senators. Boston realizing all its ' jbBIRR- vtiE* 11, ■ jf 1 7 I ‘W? SENATE Majority Leader Scott W. Lucas (D). Illinois, urges the Senate Judiciary committee to confirm the nomination of Judge Shennan Minton of Indiana, as an aeeociate justice of the U. 8. Sunrerne Court. floternatroaaJl 1

OZARK IKS — i I J tf’B/ i' > WOT ****** piTtnss {home free if ■ y r'/Wl 18l *! 1 IN THE ) hCAN SLIP iJ P &*(/ A R lv\ 11 A naoAHMrw/x VLyjj i \ o> fi A iZ ) I wCT- -I fcztZj Hg

I run* on but five hit*. Kinder, util- ! ized now a* both a starting and relief pitcher, entered the game j in the eighih and saved the game i for the Red Sox. 801 l Brothers Co. Executive Is Dead I Muncie, Ind.. Oct. 1 il'Pt Service* for Fred J Petty. 51. Ball Brother* Co. official, will he held Monday Petty died hire yesterday He was vice president and secretary of the Ball firm and president and treasurer of Ball Storr *. Inc Ductors said h* died of a heart attack suffered In the i office of George A Ball, boaid I chairman i PICKETS (font. From Paw* T* l * l ’rike iMM • ■ 1 - 1 - < ent wage Increase; a 1125 mini 1 mum monthly pension plan; "ade- ■ quate" company-financed insur--1 ance benefits. Supervisory employe* at mo*t of the plants will do maintenance work nt the plants. As picket Ones began to appear, some super- sory workers entered the plant to remain until the strike Is ended. Inland striker* : said no one would be allowed to ■ pass the picket line after the | strike had ‘begun ! Food, bedding, television sets. : and footballs and other recreational item* were taken into the plant ' I carter to equip the supervisory ! employes for their maintenance ! »>ay. Supervisory personnel at the i Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co. ' plant were equipped with passes | by the union to allow them to pass picket lines during the strike to maintain the plant's facilities. A spot check of some 100 steel workers showed few of them favored the strike. Although they want the pension benefits, they . need their weekly salaries, they. . said. •

* mßbml K 1 ' i ’*'*’ pz Z| "WOW! —With all -those babies I to bathe and change, I II need a Westinghouse Electric Water -Heater I you CAN »I SUHE-ir frV Westing)iouse--F r - I - I Arnold & Klenk, Inc- • I . MADISON ST. PHONE 463 * MM H rr|j For A Superb DAY OR EVENING I 0F ENJOYMENT AND z JM W. * ENTERTAINMENT Eml I ,)ro p ,n A| I 1 J

The model for the Buffalo nickel was kille<l in Montana's Musselshell valley about 50 years ago i and sent to an eastern museum 11, be mounted inn j- ' IM '“"R SEEK TO OUST (Coot. From Paas One* ' the I N charter The I'nited States announced it would support the Yugoslav bid for a se< urity council seat In opposl , tion to the Soviet bloc- candidate - Czechoslovakia Wednesday Soviet foreign mln ' i*ter Andrei Y. Vlshinsky acknowl-i MWWWWWIAMARAffAAMnM STUDEBAKER TRADE-INS USED CARS BEERY-VIZARD MOTORS Opposite Rice Hotel MWMAAnMMAMANMNRRAAM

| Call Us For Prompt, Safe H LONG-DISTANCE ■ MOVING VICE ■ (tEEI'LE trick I _ i TEEPLE TRUCK LINES 1 • Phone 254 or 182

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