Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 214, Decatur, Adams County, 11 September 1951 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

| SPORTS|

Commodores' j Baseball Men I Drill Daily Seventeen prospects for the Decatur Catholic high school basfebi»ll .‘team are working out daily. Coach Dave Terveer announced ■ today. - I Ffchdairientals, team play, rule?; interpretation and conditionir% - are being stressed in the • fail dril.% which help supplement W team’s work in the regular spring f season. I , Several intrd-squad games a& planned, as well as a few gamei with neighboring schools whicl play fa:i basehall. The seasof ■ will run only until Oct. 1, the first day pn which basketball practice ; * may s be launched tinder rules cf the Indiana- high school atbleti| i association. * i The Commodores - lost three ■ baseball players by i. Cpynf, Disk Gage and Voglewed® Os the 17 candidates for the teairj nine are lettermen. . The- complete roster of players * Jnjlows: , ■ “Louis, Laurent, Roh Gage, Jacl O’Leary, <Phjl Brunton, Stevi i Gass. Ted Gage. Bill Bowers, Dot Eyangon and Tom Smith, all let lermen; John York, Dick Pscion Tom -Zeser, Tim Murtaugh, Chad les Voglewede. Coynei Don Wehihoff and Walt Mowery; | Pirates Sell Two Players On Waivers Pittsburkh. Sept: 11. —(UP)—i General manager , Branch R(ckej| Os Th 4 Pittsburgh Pirates sold two players to Atnerieatfe league clubs for the waiver pric<s> of slo,ooo—outfielder Dino Restelff li to the Washington Senators an<| first baseman Glenn (Rocky) Nell son to the. Chicago White Sox. 3 I ~ '■■ ■ . | I LITTLE RUSH (Continued From Pajce-One) | i —- —r- a* -r ‘ I pl? up like they used to." he added; “If a |guy has the money he's not worried. If he doesn’t, he’s not g» • Ing tor buy anyway.” - . : ® - ' Dealers in the* Chevrolet-ForjjP ; Plymdbth bracket agreed that ahnouncpinent of higher . ha? ‘ stirred up buyers to some extent, but few reported any rush to buy khat matched last summer’s ■j Korean wa? scare purchasing: kilt kil l FCWsan r I f (AIR CONDITIONED) < I ■ M k * ;J ’ W • — —*—c M- Last Time Tonight — | . ' DOOMIN’ ROUND . ■ .T . -■’J THE MOUNTAIN” J; Bud "Abbott, Lou CostelloALSO—Shorts 14c-44c Inc. Tax_| WED. & THURS. e—M —j— —4 OUR BIG DAYS! v | First Show Wed. at 6:30 j Continuous Thur, from 1:30 BE SURE TO ATTEND! - 0 j - j. v -2, . I A lonely man and a lovely girl 8 ■ (find each other in the world’s | . most romantic P |aca — Ca P r * ! 9 ’» JBL ' FONTAINECOTTEN [■roil FUHCOISE ROSAY - JESSICA TANDY ; —ao—o Erl. A Bat.—Fred Mac Murray, ’ “A Millionaire for Christy” • -—o—O Coming Sun.-r--“ The Frogmen" ” ■ . . 7,

Robinson, Turpin Battle Wednesday | New York, Sept. 11—(UP)—With $425,006 already in the till, only Wet weather could prevent a $600,®0 gate for the Randy TurpinSugar :Ray Robinson championship, tight tomorrow night, promoter Jim ' Morris said today. • U“Mostly fair” weather was fore- • ch st for'tpmorTow, although a few I showers were indicated for today. .< As middleweight champion TurN {fen and challenger Robinson pre- | pared to break camp and come into f New York for their 15-round bbut f at the Polo Grounds, support for Turpin lowered the betting i another half-point. j >• The quotation favoring Robinson I dropped from ”9 to 5” to 8 'ln to 5. A week ago Sugar Ray was a 13-5 choice. He may go into the ring & 7-5 or less. •> no trend toward Turpin was reflected in a United Press mill of 31 sports writers at the Intel national boxing club. TwentyOhf' favored Robinson, and only 10 vjded for the chahipion from Learn'tagton. Eng., who had wijested the tftle from Siigar Ray at London oh July 10. + I |The, two principals were scheduled to spend tonight in New York wfojle awatling tomorrow’s weighiri at ’ headquarters of the boxing commission ip the N ew York state hbilding. 1 i . , leaving his camp at Pbmpton Lakes, jN.J., planned to! sl>ep at the. Harlem home of his mother, as he had done fpr all of his important bouts in the past. iTurpin. departing from his conditioning quarters at Grossinger l N.Y., intended to ire main at a downtown hotel. 'i . ■Before leaving Pompton, Sugar ' Rpy and his board of strategy de- • chifd to concentrate on a ripping I ajtack 'to the. body in hopes of ; Ikiiocking out Turpin within seven i ; f rounds. However, Randy announc- ' l ed ho battle jHans at his camp. | , 2- - ; MISTAKEN > (Continued From Pace One! jj-r-———— r- —j--—■ ■■ —r—r-■H—-mr ,'radar and a pilot of the 3d Ijoinber command reported that 1 He strafed lights at 1:36 a. m. in what he believed to be a different Sfi-ea. But his target must have lieen Kaeshtig. the statement said. Ihe plan? was identified as a Blight bomber. I , —Hi ■ Chicago Trucker Is Fined For Speeding *City police arrested Fred Scott, of Chicago, for speeding his truck ajong North Thirtenth street Mon- ' (fay, and the litter appeared in j justice of the peace; court, where | was fined $5 and fcosts, totalling 1 115.75. ' Decatur//Jiifffffr g ' | Box Qffice Opens 7p. m. -. ■ ' F/rst Show dt Dusk f Last Time Tonight - in Gorgeous Technicolor. 1 “BLUE LAGOON” ‘Jean Simmons, Donald Huston i ~O~—O j. ] WED. & THURS. —-‘■■••"■ya l 1 : BICHAkO LONG » MEtMHUU Q Q " Fri. A Sat.—Randolph Scott, i “Fighting Man pf the Plains” i ‘ A Eddy Arnold, “Hoedown” Sun.—" Pardon My Sarong” » I With Abbott A Costello' ’ ’ O—O : Children Under 12 Free

STAR IS RISING ' - - - - By Alan Move //e eTAR rec> W/TH A GAME iVMW/A/O HOMER 1 \ -1 ;A6AJHSI PHILLIES OH 9 Af/7»54/ P /RV/H ’ RIGHT F/ELPER OF THE G/ANTS, GREAT all-aroc/ajd /s f/Hally ? “ *’■ [RE/HG G/t/EH THE ' ' RECOGHIT/OH IT RUHHiNS Hy SCORIMG FPQM AWHILE 7HE HATTER RUH<S PURIHG THAT y/AH HE/HG THROWH our AT /6-GAME W/H STREAK i^r—& ALSO oHE OF THE ft/TR /7/ TOP COHTEHPERS for the LEAGUE R.PJ. TITLE S hf Ki»O Svndtcct* I- . ..—■■■ ■ , ■ J

MAJOR ’ NATIONAL LEAGUES t W. L. Pct. G.B. Brooklyn —; — 87 48 .644 New York 83 55 .601 5% St. Jjouis 71 63 .530 15% Boston 68 67 .504 19 Philadelphia 65 73 .471 23% Cincinnati a 60 79 432 29 i. Chicago 57 81 .413 31% Pittsburgh •. 57 82 .410 32 AMERICAN LEAGUE \ i W. L. Pct, \ G.B. New York 86 49 .637 Cleveland 88 51 .633 Boston *IBO 54 .597 5% Chicago ...-75 63 .543 12% Detroit 63 74 .460 24 Philadelphia 59 80 .424 29 Washington -2__ ,53 81 .396 32% St. Louis 41 93 .306 44% YESTERDAY’S RESULTS J National* League No games scheduled.' » American League , No gabies scheduled. 18-Year-Old Sailor Is Suicide Victim Galena, 111., Sept. 11.—(UP)-* An inquest was to be held today in the death pf an 18-year-old sailor who apparently killed himself at the end of a 10-day-l»ave. Relatives went to search for Matthew Joseph Gantenvein yesterday when he didn't show up at a railroad station. He was to have returned to duty at Glenview naval air station. His father found Gantenvein in the bathroom of ! his home at nearby S.cales Mounds, fatally wounded. There was a bullet wound in his chest and a revolver lay beside him. | INSURANCE Leo “butch” Ehinger v FIRE WIND AUTO 7?O No. 3rd St. Phone 3-2004 UMBERLOST DRIVE•IN THEATRE •A . X GENEVA SHOW STARTS at 7:15 and 9:45 ;; A ' • \ Tues. Wed. Thur. Sept 11-12-13 This Program Recommended For Adults and High School Students. “A MODERN MARRIAGE” (Damaged Souls) — ALSO — “THE THING” (Frorrt Another World) Coming Sun. & Mon. Sept 16-17 WALT DISNEY’S ‘Alice In Wonderland’

BE. j ■l' ■' fio / i SIX-YEAR-OLD Frankie Kiermler Is shown in Cooper Hospital, Camden,. N. J., where he is about to undcrg6 his 13th skin grafting operation that doctors promise will make him *’•B good as new? The youngster, whOIjO legs were burned to the muscle from hjs ankles to his hips, has already undergone 12 operations and 30 transfusions. {lnternational) Go to'the enuren or your choice next Suhday. . j. j.■ . ’

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DECATUR IaILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA ---~-■ - - - - —

111 ■' 111 ' y-* Major league Teams Enter i Home Strefch York. Sept. 11 —(UP)— T&e contenders start hammering d<*4 n Hie homestretch in the penni»|lj races today and it lopked nice the big question was. will it l»ih 'the Indians or the Yankees alainst the Dodgers in the world snr|es? Mind it’s very likely that quest&&. won’t be answered until the 14s|'couple of of the season — of perhaps even the last day, last ii|)dng, and last pitch. mut~ the final act of the basehall diWne begins today as the Yank&es. who lead the American by .004 percentage points, plays host to the St. Louis Browns In ; a twi-ni fht doubleheader at Yankee Stadium and the Indians Shibe Park, Philadelphia, for? a similar program against th<W pesky Philadelphia A’s. - f . M's true, that the Boston Red Soil,, who play host to Detroit in a- single game, are still mathematically in the A. L. race, just a>s ;t| ,e New York Giants still have as chance to overt&Ue, the Dodgers in the National l&pgue. Mut the chances of the Red Sox the Giants aren’t very good, according to a study of the statistic* and schedule booiks made during yesterday’s “off day” in the baseball wars. They each need a “mirhcle.” 1 M Take the Giants. |- T.hey trail the Dodgers by gam|s. The New Yorkers have 16 games to go and, if they woji all 1(1, would finish the season with 9SL victories. To beat that, the Dpdgers would have to win only 13 of their remaining 19 > games. 'Atyd, of course, it’s not likely the Giants will win all 16. Let’s, say they win at the terrific rate ot .IS| out of really sensational bail. iWhy, then the Dodgers would to win oply 10 out of 19—r whkjh Ik only a shade over .500. The Red Sox, like the Giants, games«out of first place, unlike thf| Giants, they h£.vq two teams to catch instead of oije-rthe Yanks and the Indians. They wil get a chance to pull the Yanits down, because they still hswe eight games to play against tIX New Yorkers, but they have offjy two more against the Tribe. ;Here is the big factor that favors the Yankees —they play 16 o?; their remaining 19 games at hpm»\ where they have been sensational. The Indians must play li- of th«jir remaining 15 on the rdad. | »|knd here is the big factor that favors the Indians. 10 of their 15 gAmes will be against second diVision teams. Meanwhile the — ... - —

OZARK IKE » \ ■:Fj H' jli UTM—OB 1 j■' "' a foot sliced it high » J OUTSIDE, BUT tOWsTI AND DEEP TO jh r kaiJaX OZARK LAIDLEFT FIELD I < F WW B S TH' WOOD F j x -i r ry - -sfva™ > aw I- —z vz> XR out.or / fe-SBM wfe i ■ *'"Bl fftt ' 1/1

Yankees meet such supposedly “soft” opposition only six times in 19 games. Os course, that “soft” sfrhednle could backfire’ on ths Tribe, starting with tonight's double header with those A's. URGE CONGRESS t rnm r«M«> Owt McFarland, Aris., said fee probably would sechdule floor actlim on the bill all next week. The finance commuted bee many changes In the house tax measure which would bring Ip an , additional |7,200.<»(i0.<H»0 In new revenue. The group voted yestw day to tax only the “nnalloeated Income" of cooperatives, rexurdless of site. 7 . T 1 Approprlatlohs-r- Sen. Joseph 'C. O’Mohoney. I,). Wyo., floor mana ger of theJ5q,103,85«,030 military appropriation bill, said he was sure the measure would, be passed In about the same form as brought to the floor. Senate leaders hoped to complete action on the bill today. Sen. Paul H. Douglas, D., 111., who broke down yesterday while leadi»&/> fighLfqr cuts in the bip, said he'would?-continue to urge that $600.000.(MM) to $1,000,000,000 be knocked out.

11 " 1 , n , „„ ... i 1 iy ,1 i H— »i—i> .... DRIVE IT NOWS iuki otter •peciAcatxMM i r . Nsw 120-horsspo war wonder car I •übioct u> »h»na» without notice. It’s a power-packed thrill on any hill! JVew Studeba&er CommanderVS Most advanced V-8 of in America! Puts now punch into every drop of gas! 9 In the 1951 Mobilgas Economy x\ I • g 1 a Studebaker Commandor i Needs n£ premium fuel! v-8 led all other competing . A lot Os car for a little sights in actual miles pergallon! money. 418 months to pay! ( I - Extra marvatoiZl StuMxtker A ataiaatk Drive ! Shifts far itself -m clutch pedal! Extra nst-and warth it! [ VIZARD motor sales Decatur, Ind. 1 * . ■■■-:< i/-- '■'/

Continue To Confer On Welfare Problems Indianapolis, S4pL 11.—(UP) — ’ Governot Schricker planned another conference today with Attorney Gen. J. ipmmett McMapamon to discuss the state’s public welfare situation. The two met, with state welfare . director Maurice O. Hunt attend- . Ing, in the governor’s office yesterday for a long discussion of t problems caused by federal securHy adudnistrator Oscar Ewing’s i withdrawal of $20,000,000 a year in ' fade Val grants for Indiana welfare ■aid. ( ' I ' Short Course For Employes Os PCA ' A short course for production • credit asociatlon bookkeepers, • clerks, an d secretaries starts ’ Wednesday on the PurdUfe Univer- ’ sity campus. It is the first seminar • of its kind in the country and Wil) ’be attended by 175 girls from ‘lndiana, Ohio, jand Kentucky J PCA’s. , * Sponsored jointly by the Purdue ' agricultural economics depart-

TUESDAY, 1 SEPTEMBER 11, 1961 \ _ ■ ■■' Ji • \ ; ‘ ■Hi J.

Man Is Exonerated In Son's Slaying Terre Hafite, Ind., Sept. I£— (UP)-rHetbert H. I Smith, 59, a janitor, wjas exonerated o| (crimeby a coroner’s report today"’ for shooting his son, Herbert H., Jr., 33. to with a shotgun last Friday. | Vigo county corohec D. M. Ferguson returned a verdict of Justifiable homicide in ‘the cage when Smith testified he Shot hig son in self-defense. J ■! Smith slaid his json h|d bqpn drinking And started abusing his mother while I she ! was perparing an evening meal. ‘Smith said the son overturned the supper table and the father opened fire when the son turned ott-blm. "' ■•"" i/u '" p" 'S ment and the Indiana federation of PCA’s, the program wil igive suggestions for impr(j|ing operations Os jeredit agencies and information .about farmers with whom they wt»rk. :II v i In midwives no?v must iy? registered; and, under the law. are no longer permitted to administer medicine of any kind. 1...;. Jf. 1./..?!. A ■ -