Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 236, Decatur, Adams County, 6 October 1951 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Yellow Jackets Lose To New Haven, 38-7

Jackets Lose After Taking Lead At Half 7 Coach Bob Worthman said today Pit’s back to fundamentals next week” for the Yellow Jacket football squad th preparation for j their game next Friday against the 'Warsaw Tigers at Worthman field. But'the Jacket coach wasn’t displeased with she showing bis: team made at New Haven last night despite the fact the Decatur teahi absorbed it# fifth defeat in six games by a 28-7 score. Only two sehiors studied the opening line-up for the Jackets, and roach Worthman strung along with, his underclassman backfield. Standout runner Jim Moses joined #ix others on the injured or sick list who didn't make the game. It was ,a matter of a couple-of slippery New Haven backs pluls' a fine 80-yaed pass play that ruined the Jackets opportunity for scoring their second season’s victory. •. The Jackets look Chuck Gladieux’ opening kickoff in play on their own 20 yard marker and consumed . 25 playa, 14 minutes and six first downs to acoije the first half's lone marker. I ,;' Driving down the field, with quarterback Genq\ Morrison utilising mostly running plays, but interspersing the action with seven passes enroute; the Jackets drove their tally across when sophomore '.back Roger Blackburn raced (through his right tackle for the Bcore. 1 • , A Morrison to Blackburn pass was good for the extra point and she end of the Jacket Scoring. New Haven wasted little time in the third quarter in evening matters, when they ran Burdette Custer's kickoff to. their own 40. and

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nine plays later had the tying marker. • They almost tied it up at th® start of the second quarter when four plays aftfr Decatur’s' first score the Bulldogs had the ball on the 10 yard marker of the Jackets. A Gladieux fumble into the hands of Norm Schieferstein, wl|o raced the ball to the 25, ended the threat, however. j Gladieux proved the mainstay in the Bulldog offense, scoring their first and fourth touchdown. The former came on a plunge’from the and he made the final score of the game with a 46-yard jaunt after taking a lateral from quarterback Tom Tinsley. tn between these scores, Tinsley stood on bis oWn 20 yard: line in the third quarter, and heaved a 40 yard pass* to halfback Jim Cook. Who took the ball without losing stride and raced the remaining 40 yards to the goal untouched. Gleri Parker, another flathy haltback, took the ball in the final frame on the Decatur 31 and raced for the - touchdown, shaking off three Jacket tacklers enroute to go over standing up. 1 . The Jackets offensive mkved down the field in the second quarter and got to 1 the New Haven five before stalling/, with fullback Jim Rawley and Blackburn sharing most of the groundwork in a drive that started on their own 25 yard line. : Lineups r i f Decatur ■ New Haven L^—Helm j Wisfeman LT—-Grote . Boese LG—Roop f’senbarg’er C. —Thomas 4* Coe RG —Conrad ' { Strader RT—Knittie Kpox RE—Custer v Durbip QB—Morrison Tinsley LH—Blackburn ; 1 Gladieux RH—R. Pollock Cook FB—Rowley s ‘ Parker Score by quarters: Decatur 7 0 0 0 — 7 New Haven 0 ■ 0 14 14 —28 Decatur scoring: Touchdown: Blackburn: point after touchdown: Blackburn (pass); New Haven: Touchdown: Gladieux (2): Cook, Parker: Point after touchdowns: Gladieux, 2, (placements); Cook (pass). Substitutions: Decatur: Engle, Callow, Kiser, Norm Pollock. Schieferstein. Vetter, Kbhne, Schrock. Kolter; New Haven: Frisby, Huffer, Peck, Springer. Branstrator, Hildinger, Piper, Weller, Lake, Randolph. '' ■ .. • ; I COLLEGE FOOTBALL Notre Damn 40, Detroit 6. Chattanooga 75, Evensville 7. Boston U. 39, Louisville 7. Miami (Fla.) 35. Florida State 13 Mississippi 34, Boston College 7. Trade in a Good. Town — 1 Decatur

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' Jffj I I li | , Today's Sport Parada u<»«. u.. 8. »>t. ort.j •M Qm«» Fraley 1 New York, Oct. |L-*HUPI Jolt* ' In' Joe DIM again, the pride of the ' for id brilliant year®, han decided to. call It quit® at the rnd • of the curreut world aeries, \ The Yankee clipper, hltlesa In ‘ seven straight tripa tu the plate in the first- two gamfH of the classic, confided this decision to friends aindng the Detroit Tigers. And, as he tied a Babe Ruth record of playing in 10 world series, he was finding his baseball swansong a sgd one. In the first game, DiMaggio filed to the outfield four times. In the' second game yesterday he hit into a rally-killing double play with two on base and one opt; struck out, and grounded out weakly to third base! > Manager Casey Stengel even considered briefly dropping DiMaggio out of the cleanup spot he has held for so long. “But I tried that during the regular season and it didn’t do any good,” Stengel said; “The simple truth is that we don’t have a number four hitter any more.” The accuracy of that statement" is reflected in Joe’a work for the season. He batted only 263, played in only 116 games and hit but 12 home runs. That isn’t exactly a“ |loo*ooo payoff, which is the sum Joe has received the last two years. The word is that the Yankees will offer him >75,000 for next season, only because under baseball law a player cannot be cut more than 25 percent. Joe undoubtedly could make that much in radio or television. He has been offered as much as 3100,000 a year tor a half hour TV show once a week. The difficulty is that if he decided to keep playing and had a couple of poor years such as this one, his value as an attraction might fall off. Joe is, of course, highly cognisant of this fact. He also is a proud man, and would not want to face the role of a has-been. DiMag is an enigma. With most fading ballplayers, it Is the legs or arms which give out first. Most of them are able to hit fairly well as long as they can walk up to the With DiMaggio, the legs and arms still are fine. But for some reason he can't hit any more. That bat- ( ting eye which once drilled holes in pitchers has lost its efficiency. Joe, a grand guy, incidentally, isn’t ready to official announcement. “This iin’t the time nor the place to make .'any statements,” he said as the Yankees quietly celebrated their triumph over the Giants to go all even at the end of two games. “There's work to be done yet. I’ve plenty of time before next spring.” High School Football Warsaw 33, Bluffton 7. , r Columbia City 13, Garrett 7. Auburn 32, Fort Wayne Concordia 7. Fort Wayne North 33, Fort Wayne Central 6. Richmond 21, Fort Wayne South 0. Hammond Noll 52, Terre Haute Gerstmeyer 0. Mishawaka 14, Peoria (Ill.) Manual 0. South Bend Central 13, East Chicago Washington 6. Elwood 33, Huntington 6* Wabash 28, Plymouth 13. Alexandria 35, Portland 12. MAJOR LEAGUE Standings -, .j W L Pts. Decatur Dry Cleaners 10 5 14 Smith Bros. Furn. £ w .9 6 13 Mies Recreation 9 6 12 Central Soyaß 7 11 Lister’s 8 7 10 Adams County Lmbr. —\ 7 8 9 Schafers6 9 9 Joe’s Barber Shop First State Bank _J6 9 7 Clem’s Hardware 3 12 3 High series: J. Bultemeier 629 (233-158-238); Richards SO7 (210-198-199). ] \ High games: Kftson 208,\ Ellis 201, Bienz 205, P. Hoffman 203, Ahr 202, Schindler 202, Smith 216-209,’ Inniger 201, Korte 210. I RURAL LEAGUE Standings \ W L Heyerly’s -’ ll 4

If you have sometntng to soli or rooms for rent try a Democrat Want Adv. It brings results.

M«illt‘iik..|»ftKiting 10 0 Nhm Mlle Lmbr. ...... 10 Hltertrert Market ...10 4$ ItryiH.hixllirt ~..1... 10 0 llttyhtft .V-- 8 7 Hoaglund Hdwe. .... 8 <7 Old Crown 7 8 Englt-M ..L Q {5 High aeries: Slmerman 613 183-225): Btoppenhugtn 628 (2W--236-192). \-h High games: A. M»yer 201, W. Blakey 211. G. Selking 215, Melcher 214. t 'r C. E. ALLEYS MONDAY NITE LEAGUE i Packers won 2 from Flanges; Qffire won 2 from Stators. ■ 200 scores: August 201, Briede 200, porter 202. G. E. FRATERNAL ‘ f Peterson Elevator took 3 frofu

4 UEUIHP \A7 F P V W IL IL Jx OCTOBER 9-10-11 -12 ■ ■ ' : ' ' \\ : i H : - A ■■ ■ ’ . • ’ ■ \ ' ’ ■ ' ' I ■ :■ ’ HELP MAKE DECATUR A CLEANER, BETTER j SAFER CITY IN WHICH TO LIVE ' —. • 11 , t Drive Starts Tuesday and Continues Till The Job Is Completed! —r —. —■ •R • , ; ' I .1 'I 'i •>. ; ■>. ■* r ;■ ■■' ? ! ! ' c L . - j - ; . ' - ------ U u —■ ' ' I RUBBISH I HOTICE I PLEASE Rubbish, tattle., tin I ” I Hav. yuur rubbi.h cans, etc. be re- ■ tied and left on prem- ■ in the a „ ey moved by, city I ,se ®- Cardboard boxes ■ your cooperation is employes, I I SCHEDULE OF RUBBISH PICK - UP — ; : ; I Tuesday, October 9 Wednesday, Oct 10 Thursday, Oct 11 Friday, October 12 HRB FIRE ■ A .. F ,RE FIRE W“ A ■ ■ North Os Monroe St. North Os Monroe St. South Os Monroe St. South Os Monroe St. West Os Fifth St. East Os Fifth St. Eaet Os Fifth St. Weet Os Fifth St. Tft Pedllpllfe ftf Rnraflir We can all help to make Decatur a cleaner, safer and ’ IWWIIir® better p| aC e In which to live. Please co-operate by clean5 ’ ' ■ — ins your lawns and lots, and in general help to beautify the city by starting now to beautify your own home. Practice clean up week not just now but all year around. Thank . you sincerely. City of Decatur \ ? FLOYD ACKER H JOHN M. DOAN COMMISSIONER , . J MAYOR j

• DBCATtm t)A!LT DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

; G. E. Club: Teeple Truck Line took 3 from K. of C.; West fendi Restaur- ' ant took 2 from Moose-Burke; Elks i

'"oZARK I ; - ■ ■ j . - i JUS'INSIDE xJSxs dump th/S'n t/Hine?... field... */*£*/«'£ £J9s7 . MfeMiag ' MB *IV^ n wQfl J£ . Ze> lag- /— ' .-•;•■ s'll. s> *: * ' <- ' -<<■■ - L - - -'- 3

took'2 from American Legion. 600 series: G. Schultz 607, (226-167-214); H. Murphy, 610 (214-194- • ' ' .v : . '

202); Petrie 602 (263-188-151). , -200 scores: uaumganner 212, L. Hoffman 204, O. Schultz 223, Appel-

9ATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1951

man 210, Steury 234. Note: Petrie’s 263 is high single game to date in this league.